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SanDisk on Monday released the Sansa e280, an 8GB digital music device that can be expanded to store 10GB of data with a SanDisk 2GB MicroSD card. The device is being offered for $249.
That marks a significant difference in price-to-storage ratio when compared with Apple's 4GB iPod Nano. That iPod model retails for $249, according to Apple's online store. (There is currently no 8GB or 10GB iPod. Apple's player with the next-highest capacity, the 30GB iPod, runs on a hard drive rather than flash and sells for $299.)
The Sansa players enable people to increase storage capacity and change which songs are kept on the device by inserting different MicroSD cards. SanDisk is a leading manufacturer of flash memory. Its expansion cards currently hold about 500 songs, but greater-capacity cards are planned, according to SanDisk.
While the Sansa line supports Microsoft PlaysForSure and Rhapsody To Go, the device has a nonproprietary digital rights management system and allows any songs in the MP3 and WMA formats to be uploaded to the device.
Other features on SanDisk's MP3 players include a digital FM tuner from which people can record and a built-in microphone that enables the device to act as a voice recorder.
The Sansa's potential success, however, lies not in a feature matchup with the iPod but in SanDisk's strength as a company, according to Ted Schadler, vice president and principal analyst at Forrester Research.
"(SanDisk) gets memory cheaper than anybody, and they have tremendous distribution reach because they have their SD cards everywhere. Because they have a tremendous retail presence already with their memory cards, they can bring these products to those same retailers and get shelf space. And that's a huge advantage," Schadler said. "Three things make a difference: price, quality of the product--which is steadily getting better--and their reach. SanDisk has all those coming together now."
Because of the strong ecosystem surrounding the iPod, said Schadler, there is no release that is going to make a significant dent in Apple's monstrous share of the MP3 market overnight. As the market matures, things will change, but it will be an uphill battle. Music stores will consolidate their efforts around a small group of manufacturers, and a "two-horse race" will eventually develop. SanDisk is in a good position to possibly be that second horse, but Schadler said the release is a sign of SanDisk's "relentlessness" as a company, not a break in the MP3 player market.
SanDisk, which holds the second-largest market share in digital music players behind Apple, also announced significant price changes on its 2GB, 4GB and 6GB digital music players that undercut their iPod capacity-equivalents.The 2GB Sansa e250 has been reduced to $139 from $179.99, compared with the 2GB iPod Nano's $199 price. The 4GB Sansa e260 for $179 (originally $229.99) and the 6GB Sansa e270 for $219 (originally $279.99) also offer more flash memory for the money than the $249 4GB iPod Nano.
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What really kills it for the Sansa line besides the very, very bad name (Sansa should have stayed as the internal code name) and the scroll wheel that requires major musculature is the lack of audio quality. I keep on reading reviews that complain about the poor audio quality of the Sansa but figured the perspectives were simply subjective statements from self appointed "golden ears" trying to prove their worth and skills to the world. I was so wrong. I borrowed a friends, put in my nice Sony headphones and compared and contrasted the audio output of the Sansa versus the iPod versus the Creative Vision M and found the Sansa to be hands down the worst of the bunch - using uncompressed and compressed audio, FYI.
Kudos to Sandisk for showing that they can bring a music player to the market, but not truly compete with the major players.
http://www.techknowcafe.com/content/view/630/44/
bad. Are they the greatest media player ever? Of course not. They're ok. I think Sony's bean shaped ones are strange.
nano line will look like going into the holiday season. If the price of
flash memory has come down enough to allow those sorts of
capacities then it is only a matter of time before we see those
capacities and prices in the iPod nanos. Despite Apple's reputation
as an expensive computer manufacturer, their iPods have been very
very cost-competitive for years.
ahh...WMA IS a proprietary format...
AAC (without Apple's FairPlay DRM) IS an open standard and it won't play that or Ogg Vorbis files so I really don't understand that statement!!!!
and did some crazy iPod trade in program before they called it
quits.
This is desperation time for Sansa and probably their last punch
before they TOO kneel to the iPod.
SOUNDS better to me than does WMA.
It's funny, but since I buy music devices to LISTEN to music, I'll be
buying iPods until one or more of these clone makers gets a clue
and drops WMA.
Have I mentioned that WMA hurts my ears?
;)
I have iTunes. I used it for a player on my laptop. It's a nice player but I don't care to use it to rip music with as I'll need to convert it so I can use it with my other MP3 players. Apple's format does not play with a darn on my motorcycles radio that can play MP3.
With Zune, and a wide variety of other players available, this should be a good Christmas for non-iPodSheep.:-)
stopping Apple from adopting it. As yet, there is not enough
demand for it to interest Apple at all. Personally I would rather get
something to keep for my money rather than music that evaporates
when I stop paying the bill on a subscription.
Let me remind you that, like Vista, Zune is not available yet. I'm
glad you're so jazzed about it, but you come across as more of an
Apple-hater than a Zune-lover. Have a nice day!
the industry, while a purchased song need never be bought again.
Long term, rentals are always more expensive than owning.
Let's explain why: just do some simple counting back.
- if you want to offer an article for X-mas sales, stores like Wall
Mart enforce you to deliver the goods latest Dec. 1st
- which means the Zunes should land in the US by half of Nov.
to be able to distribute them all over the country.
- taking into account a sea transportation of 4 weeks from
China to the US, this would mean the players would have to
leave the Chinese factory latest half of October.
- to fill some containers with Zunes, the factory will need at
least 1 week to produce the Zunes (2nd week of Oct.)
- because you don't want to end up with containers of crappy
units, you first do a pilotrun of some 1000 of units, tuning your
production line and releasing the production flow. Which takes
you at least 1 week, so pilot run should start no later than Oct
1st.
- before starting production, you need to get your material on
stock in your factory warehouse. Depending on which
components, this will take you at least between 4 to 8 weeks
Order Lead Time. This means, that the final Bill-of-Material
should have been released Aug. 1st to do correct sourcing.
- If you know all your components by Aug. 1st, you also know
the exact features of the device you are going to build.
- out of experience, we know Microsoft is at least half a year
promoting anything they will sell in the near/distant future, so if
by now we still have to guess how the final unit will look like (the
making of the moulds for the housing really does take time), or
what the features of the Zune are, this means there is no final
BOM yet, ergo there will be no Zune on the shelves at Christmas
2006.
If - for a change - Bill copies the marketing strategy of Steve as
well ("tadaa... here is the Zune, and you will find it all over the
country from tomorrow onwards") then of course everything is
still possible. But I doubt it...
"I would never buy an iPod for several reasons, including the fact
that I don't like having to use Apple software, I don't like Apple
putting restrictions on what I can do with my music, and I am
annoyed with the company's arrogance in their Microsoft-
bashing, and continued sales of the iPod Shuffle, which I belive
has serious design flaws and a limited life span. "
The earlier language usually means the speaker resents having
to pay for music and uses peer-to-peer. In fact, the most
virulent iTunes Music Store critics seem to be people who hate
the idea of paying for stuff. (Are you peeved at iPods because
they aren't free, too?) The second clause of your remark
suggests you are under the impression that you make decisions
about product design in Cupertino. If you tell Apple to withdraw
the Shuffle it is supposed to? Weird. Possibly delusional.
Solution to both issues: Don't buy Apple products.
However, your squealing and stealing reflect badly on you, not
Apple.
- Sandisk Vs Apple ... need more assurance
-
by lxander2298
August 25, 2006 8:21 PM PDT
- The sandisk seems to be the very promising but i have many questions. The most important thing is that sandisk is not competing the mp3 player market ..more like creative is the one challenging , and Microsoft zune aswell.
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Reply to this comment
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(47 Comments)Here is an outline of my confusion .
Support music service from itunes ?
If so does it support podcast on itunes ?
What about file storage ? I know that the ipod can .
Someone help me out with this confusion ... because over all it does sounds very good with the capacity and the price .