ibiza rhapsody H1B008BK 8 GB Wi-Fi/MP3 Player by Haier (Black)
- Wireless MP3 player keeps you connected on the go
- 8 GB hard drive; 2.5-inch color LCD; 15-plus hours of battery life
- Hot button for instant access to millions of songs, podcasts, and videos
- FM and Internet radio; 1,000 categorized podcasts; over-the-air updates
- Comes with free 30-day trial for Rhapsody To Go
Product Description
Download and manage your favorite music, videos, pictures, and more with no PC connection!the market. There is no need for a computer hookup, letting you download content directly and easily! From music and podcasts to photos and videos, the ibiza Rhapsody provides the freedom and options that you desire. Amazon.com Product Description
The ibiza Rhapsody keeps you connected no matter where you go. Boasting PC-free, wireless operation, this compact MP3 player offers 8GB of storage and a "hot button" that instantly connects you to millions of songs, podcasts, and videos. Easy to operate, with simple navigation and selection you can manage with one hand, the Rhapsody is slim, light, and ultra-portable with a long battery life. And its intuitive, user-friendly design helps you fit more fun into your busy life. 
Wireless portable media player with access to Rhapsody music service. View larger. | 
Unlimited access to millions of songs. View larger. | 
Video playback supports all major download services. View larger. | Stay Connected On the Go Whether you're traveling to work or school, or hanging out at the local coffee shop, take advantage of the Rhapsody's Wi-Fi capability to access the Internet. Browsing is a snap with the easy-to-read 2.5-inch color LCD, and the 320 x 240 resolution lets you enjoy vivid videos and photos. Need to find something right away? The content menus are streamlined and straightforward, so you never have to hunt for what you want to see or hear. Personalize and Share Let your Rhapsody showcase your individual style. Airskins let you automatically personalize your player with styles, graphics, pictures, and colors of your own choosing. Have you found a cool picture or song you can't wait to show off? No problem. The included Rhapsody software quickly loads on your computer so you can transfer your favorite images and songs, making everything easy to share with friends and family. Or you can save data from your PC to the Rhapsody, organize pictures into portable digital photo albums, and enjoy click-and-drag access while you're out and about. Entertainment Anywhere and Everywhere With the Rhapsody, you'll never run out of entertainment options. Instantly tune to a host of your favorite, preset FM radio stations; enjoy free AOL videos on demand; and bring with you nearly 1,000 categorized podcasts, including free up-to-the-minute news and sports. Over-the-air updates mean you'll never miss the newest available information or services. Free Trial to Rhapsody To Go Never run out of new music again. The Rhapsody comes with a free 30-day trial (credit card not required) for Rhapsody To Go, a four-million song library. Play or save your favorites in seconds. You also can listen to free, nonstop Rhapsody channels in any genre, completely free of advertisements. At the end of the trial period, your membership will be automatically canceled, with no cost to you. Or, you can choose to extend your membership and listen to up to 25 new songs a month, or play 25 Rhapsody channels without any monthly fee. What's in the Box Device, headphones, wall charger, CD, and gel skin covering.
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ibiza rhapsody H1B008BK 8 GB Wi-Fi/MP3 Player by Haier (Black)
- Electronics: 0 pages
- Publisher: Haier America
- Label: Haier America
- Studio: Haier America
- Average Customer Review:
based on 2 reviews
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Avg. Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Great product, a few annoying quirks 2008-10-25
Comment: Overall, I truly like this player and its self-contained nature.
Read this review if you're already sold on the player's features in general (Wi-Fi, excellent Rhapsody integration, podcast support), but would like to learn about real-world use and problems (which may or may not be problems for you):
- Hardware reliability: The third player's the charm (so far), after the first one's hard drive died within minutes, and the second one's headphone connector gave up the ghost within hours. Annoying, but the player's promise made me hang in there, and my current one has been operating fine for several weeks now.
- Wi-Fi reception: Don't expect to get the same range as with your laptop; my player gets intermittent or no reception in places where my laptop still connects reliably. Also, from what I hear, reception is even worse on the hard-drive-based model.
- Battery life: The battery drains noticeably more quickly when there's a lot of Wi-Fi activity. Note that the player automatically initiates Wi-Fi downloads of podcasts periodically, unless you explicitly turn it off.
- Touchpad: The touchpad takes some getting used to, and may continue to misbehave slightly in situations where your fine motor skills may be compromised for whatever reason: A selection is made by pressing the center of the touchpad, which can be tricky, because it means that your finger always has to return to the center first; if you attempt to click while off-center (as that is where moving the mouse pointer has just taken you), you may end up inadvertently moving the mouse pointer away from what you were aiming at just before the click takes effect, resulting in selecting something other than you had intended.
- Fimware stability and DRM: I've had two crashes so far that required resetting the player. This may not sound like a big deal, but it potentially is, due to the licensing requirements of Rhapsody content: after every reset, the player needs to reconnect to the Rhapsody servers before you can start playing Rhapsody content again. That can be a real nuisance, if, say, you've loaded up your player with downloaded Rhapsody content before a vacation during which you'll have no Wi-Fi access. (Podcasts and non-DRM music you've manually copied to the player are not affected). I'm not sure there's a solution for this, however; just hope for nearby Wi-Fi and improving firmware stability.
- Navigation within tracks: the fast-forward/rewind buttons operate in increments that are too small for my taste; the increments get larger the longer you keep the buttons pressed, but navigating longer spans in a long track is very time-consuming.
Also, it would be nice if the player had a navigation mode in which you simpy move the track-position indicator to the desired location. This method would also allow for navigation in streams (e.g. when you stream a podcast episode rather than downloading it), which is currently not supported at all.
- Bookmarking/resuming where you left off:
o With respect to the active play list: You lose your place in a playlist when the player turns off: when turned back on, it always returns to the first track in the list, which can be frustrating. Also, even if you were in playback mode when the player turned off, you are always returned to the top-level menu when you turn the player back on, and playback is stopped (and, as stated, you've lost your place in the active playlist). Even though it is not obvious, however, you can simply press the Play button to start playback, regardless of where you are in the menu hierarchy. Also, as an alternative to navigating the menu system to get to the playback screen, you can hold down the Play button for a second or so.
o With respect to the position inside a lengthy track: the player automatically remembers and returns to the last position inside each downloaded podcast, which is nice, but doesn't for streaming podcasts, or tracks that were manually copied to the player, or any Rhapsody content, whether downloaded or streamed (Rhapsody offers spoken-word content, too); there is some hope, however: the product's support forums suggest that support for auto-resume in user-supplied tracks is in the works.
(The question then arises how to distinguish tracks where you want auto-resume (spoken content) from tracks where you don't (music); podcasts can generally assumed to be spoken content, whereas user-supplied content would have to indicate its nature somehow, and there's no generally agreed-upon convention; it may be easier with spoken Rhapsody content, which, presumably, uses a shared genre designation. A simple solution would be to base the auto-resume behavior on the length of a track: if it exceeds, say, 8 minutes, then auto-resume.)
Unlike some players, the ibiza Rhapsody has no explicit bookmarking feature, and there is no central list of saved locations across all tracks that you can navigate.
I haven't tried spoken content from audible.com, but I would expect the auto-resume feature to work there.
- Podcasts:
o Only the latest 2 episodes of any podcast are downloaded and retained; unfortunately, this number is currently fixed. However, you can opt to keep any given episode indefinitely.
o Older episodes remain listed (not sure how far into the past), available for streaming or manual download. A minor quibble is that you cannot remove episode listings, which would be useful, as it would allow you to reduce list clutter by removing the episodes you've already listened to.
o Some podcasts, even some listed in the provided directory, refuse to play, with no information given as to the cause.
- Deleting content from the player:
You cannot delete a track that is currently playing, such as you would want while sampling downloaded Rhapsody content that you decide you don't like; instead, you have to go to the top-level 'Music' and manually navigate to the same song there, which I find really annoying. It is worth nothing that many other players have the same odd restriction.
- Manipulating playlists:
A related, similarly odd restriction is that you cannot manipulate the current playlist at all. Thus, for instance, you cannot browse it and remove unwanted items further down in the list. Only saved playlists can be modified, and only via the top-level 'Music' menu. (You can, however, easily save the active playlist, and then modify it through the top-level menu; note, however, that such modifications do not affect the current playlist.)
- A few minor quibbles:
o There is little tactile feedback from the Hold/Lock button, so you have to make sure that you slide it to the right all the way for it to take effect.
o When you browse a partially downloaded album through the 'Music' top-level menu, you have the option to connect to Rhapsody and show all this album's songs, whereupon you can download them one by one. It would even be nicer if you could choose to download all missing tracks in one fell swoop. This functionality does exist, but it is only accessible from the playback screen (where you can click, select 'More from this album', and then 'Download this album').
o I've had cases where not all songs queued for downloading downloaded successfully; I received no notification, and so was unaware until I tried to actually listen to the downloads; it is, however, possible (but cumbersome) to browse the download history for problems.
o While it is possible, from an artist's Rhapsody page, to download all the tracks in the artist sampler with one command, it is not obvious how to do it. You have to first display the list, highlight one of the tracks (not the 'Play this list' command), and hold down the touchpad button until the menu with the relevant command appears. (You would expect to access this through the 'Artist sampler' or 'Play this list' menu items.)
Oddly, the songs making up an artist's top tracks cannot be downloaded as a whole (perhaps because the top-tracks lists can be much larger than the samplers).
o Like many (all?) players, you need a narrow, pointed tip to press the player's reset button (to revive it after a crash), which you may not always have handy. They also decided optimistically that the protective silicon sleeve that the player lives in needed no opening for the reset button, so you have to remove the player from its sleeve first.)
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Ibiza 8GB Rhapsody MP3 Player 2008-09-01
Comment: If you subscribe to Rhapsody, this is the MP3 player for you!
PROS: Easy setup without PC, Wi-Fi, Rhapsody, Firmware Updates, Silicone Skin
CONS: Not best looking player, no bluetooth, few accessories, only 8GB flash memory and no memory expansion, expensive
I own other MP3 players but this is the only one that will connect to Rhapsody via wi-fi and you will have access to Rhapsody with Rhapsody to Go subscription. I bought the 8GB version because I was intending to stream the music directly from Rhapsody, so I did not need a player with large memory. Rhapsody is great when it works. Sometimes a song will stop playing in middle of song and skip to next song. I have had that happen when streaming albums and channels. You can also download albums and songs to the player if you want to keep them and play them when there is no wi-fi available.
If you are looking for a player that will primarily stream Rhapsody via wi-fi and not store the music, I recommend the Ibiza Rhapsody 8GB.
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