If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then the iPod must be blushing its scroll wheel off right now. After the http://archive.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/10/dayintech_1023 debut of Cupertino’s quintessential wonder-player in 2001, a torrent of upstarts started to flood the market. Some were legitimate iPod competitors. But most were no better than well-shined turds.Here are a few of the best and worst contenders we’ve seen challenge the iThrone for ultimate MP3 supremacy over the years.http://archive.wired.com/gadgets/portablemusic/news/2008/10/submissions_music_player Show us your favorite portable music player. Left: The Toshiba GigabeatYes, yes, yes, we know that Toshiba still makes the Gigabeat line, but solid hardware and a slick UI weren’t enough to prevent the Gigabeat S version from being smoked in sales by the third-gen iPod.
Samsung YP-Z5 =
description A flash-based player, the YP-Z5 had some cool things going for it: a user interface designed by a former iPod engineer, touch-sensitive controls and, uh, a lanyard hook. But a lack of FM radio, voice recorder and adjustable EQ ultimately doomed the player to Samsung’s junk heap.
Dell Digital Jukebox =
description Basically a repackaged Creative Nomad, the Dell Digital Jukebox was meant to take the iPod head-on. But it wasn’t meant to be. Although the hardware was sound, Dell’s online music store was AWOL leaving the Jukebox line to be discontinued in 2006.
Sansa Sandisk E130 =
description Monochrome display. FM Tuner. Blue backlight. Are these the ingredients to an iPod killer? Uh, no. They’re the ingredients to a substandard music player that also had a tendency to suck its single(!) AAA power source dry in a hurry.
Iomega Mixx =
description Looking more bath toy than MP3 player, the Mixx was Iomega’s idea for a "sporty" media device but was punctuated by pokey file transfers and an inability to sync with services like Napster or Rhapsody.
Rio Karma =
description With a two-year run, the 10,000-song-holding Karma went toe-to-toe with the iPod longer than most other MP3 players. But here’s the thing: The Karma must have been a sinner in a previous life; not only cursed with hideous looks, it also sucked down batteries and had crash-prone hard drives.
iFraud: The Best in Dead and Dying iPod Killers
If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then the iPod must be blushing its scroll wheel off right now. After the http://archive.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/10/dayintech_1023 debut of Cupertino’s quintessential wonder-player in 2001, a torrent of upstarts started to flood the market. Some were legitimate iPod competitors. But most were no better than well-shined turds.Here are a few […]