Sony Walkman E-340 Series 16 GB Video MP3 Player
- 16 GB capacity for about 4,000 songs
- Up to 30 hours of audio or 4 hours of video on a single charge
- 2-inch, 262,144-color LCD with 240 x 320 QVGA pixel resolution
- Supports MP3, WMA (DRM), AAC, and Linear PCM audio formats; AVC, MPEG-4, and WMV (DRM) video formats; JPEG image files
- One-year limited warranty
Enjoy your favorite music and videos wherever you go with the full-featured E series Walkman video MP3 player. Boasting long-lasting battery life, the slim and compact E345 Walkman player delivers up to 30 hours of music or up to 4 hours of video playback on a single charge. In addition to supporting multiple audio codecs and video formats, you can listen to your favorite FM programming via the built-in FM tuner. Plus, a user-friendly interface makes navigating through your music, pictures and videos a breeze.Enjoy hours of continuous music and video wherever you go with Sony’s slim E340 Series. Enjoy a 2-inch QVGA screen, wide format support, an FM radio, and Sony’s time-proven audio technologies in a slim, easy-to-use media player. Enjoy hours of continuous music and video wherever you go. Click to enlarge. Headphones and Mini USB cable included. Click to enlarge. Available in black and red. Click to … More >>
Sony Walkman E-340 Series 16 GB Video MP3 Player
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3 comments
Louis Duval on September 14, 2009 at 8:41 am
the last thing to buy is SONY MP3 any model.
First they are linked to WINDOWS MEDIA, so if for any reason you’re with another player, the software don’t recognize it, unless, you’re configurate your entire system.
If you want to download MP3’s from a DVD or a CD of your personnal collection, if WINDOWS didnééééééé,t get it properly, SONY wouldn’t accept it, compare to some other reader where they are looking for compatibility before saying NO!
So please,think twice before doing it so.
Peter Just on September 14, 2009 at 10:15 am
I’ve only had this puppy for a day, so I can’t comment on the very important subject of its reliability. Also, I don’t have much interest in using the Walkman for video replay, so I don’t have much to say about that, either. But my first impression is favorable. The design is sleek, the controls are intuitive, the interface is efficient, and at 16GB the storage capacity is as large as you’ll get in a sub-compact flash drive player. The FM radio tuner is surprisingly sensitive.
The obvious point of comparison is to the iPod Nano, which also comes in a 16GB version. The Walkman is a bit wider, thicker, and heavier than the Nano, but it’s also a bit shorter. There are three big differences in my view: the Walkman has a radio, it has much better audio quality and it’s significantly less expensive. To me those differences are absolutely decisive, especially the difference in audio reproduction: It takes the Sony to make you realize how truly mediocre iPod sound is.
If you want this thing primarily as a sub-compact MP3 player for listening to music I can recommend it based on a brief acquaintance so far. I’d also recommend springing for a really good set of earbuds (Shure, Ultimate Ear, and Etymotic are among the better producers). The earbuds shipped with the Walkman or an iPod are pretty miserable.
rivered on September 14, 2009 at 11:57 am
First off I don’t have this player but I do have the previous model. Windows XP detects it as a separate device immediately, no software needed. And I’ve had it connected while I had my Cowon mp3 player connected, I could swap files back and forth. Personally I think sony makes great mp3 players, the sound quality and battery life is amazing.