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Review of MP3 (& WAV) player, USB Vendor 0x066f,
Product 0x8000
Labelled MSD Univadis - Probable chip designer
SigmaTel
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Manufacturer unknown, but China.
(Promotional items, The one I reviewed was
badged by a German Pharmaceutical company MSD & labelled Univadis to promote their
German language info service restricted to
doctors).
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Features
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Capacity nominally 512M on sticky label. Actually a
bit less: (Not a lot by modern standards, For Comparison,
at 2009.10.21, another similar size player in Tengelmann,
was about 24 Euro).
fdisk da0
cylinders=118 heads=64 sectors/track=32 (2048 blks/cyl)
Media sector size is 2048
Warning: BIOS sector numbering starts with sector 1
The data for partition 1 is:
sysid 6 (0x06),(Primary 'big' DOS (>= 32MB))
start 48, size 242256 (473 Meg), flag 80 (active)
beg: cyl 0/ head 1/ sector 1;
end: cyl 630/ head 7/ sector 48
The data for partition 2 is: <UNUSED>
The data for partition 3 is: <UNUSED>
The data for partition 4 is: <UNUSED>
Block size 2K (unusual, normally sticks are 512 bytes).
Unit I tested was. 242304 x 2K = 496238592 bytes,
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File system from factory:
1825 May 22 2007 ./HERO.lrc
4167053 May 22 2007 ./HERO.mp3
1744 May 22 2007 ./PrettyBoy.lrc
6692864 May 22 2007 ./PrettyBoy.mp3
471 Dec 27 2002 ./SETTINGS.DAT
7770 Dec 27 2002 ./VOICE/V001.WAV
HERO.lrc: ISO-8859 English text, with CRLF line terminators
HERO.mp3: MPEG ADTS, layer III, v1, 128 kBits, 44.1 kHz, JntStereo
PrettyBoy.lrc: ASCII English text, with CRLF line terminators
PrettyBoy.mp3: Audio file with ID3 version 23.0 tag, MP3 encoding
SETTINGS.DAT: data
VOICE/V001.WAV: RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, IMA ADPCM, mono 8000 Hz
SETTINGS.DAT A binary file. Safe to delete as proven by me:
{ Deleting, Un-mounting, Power On, Settings, Power
off, Mounting, Observe A new settings file (different,
probably on a different song number).
( Intriguingly both new & old have date of Dec 27 2002 ).
*.lrc Lyrics in Ascii, to some standardised format.
VOICE/V001.WAV Sample noise, tapping.
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USB Connectivity to PC: Seems a lot more stable than
my Clipman, Connection doesn't seem
to keep coming & going (like Clipman, which could crash OS, (Unless its
just I'm now more careful?))
Speed: 1,812,634 bytes/sec via a Belkin USB-2 Cardbus
adapter (might have been a raw read ?).
Speed. Via a Belkin USB-2 Cardbus
adapter, to a single large file on the file system: date ;
testblock -v
-n dummy ; date Will write then read. Block size 61440
(0xf000). 9 mins 28 sec = 348 sec, for 483,901,440 bytes =
1,390,521.4 bytes / sec = 11,124,171 bits/sec. That's 3
times faster than Clipman
- Software Looks like a USB stick (except block
size) so no special software needed. Runs fine with FreeBSD-7.2 Which is Free Software
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Manual is not consistent with player.
- Manual says its shows software version number, But it
does not, instead it shows space used & remaining.
Even if you remove SETTINGS.DAT & reboot, it still
wont show revision number (which might have been nice, to
get a clue what formats are supported, per Wikipedia
article).
- Manual says it lists Chinese as a language, as well
as English & Spanish But player has no Chinese, but
does also have German & French etc
- Manual lists lots of frequencies to record at, But
player only allows 8 KHz
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See Also:
- Pictures Out of Focus.


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