Sony Walkman NW-E394 MP3 player 8 GB Red
591 ratings
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Price: £88.35
Brand: Sony
Description: This lightweight Walkman can play MP3s for up to 50 hours between charges and with a simple drag and drop interface its easy to load up all your music. The easy-to-use controls let you find the right song view photos and tune the radio in seconds. Sony Walkman NW-E394 MP3 player 8 GB Red - shop the best deal online on appliances4.me
Category: Audio Equipment
Merchant: Quzo
Product ID: 342283
Delivery time: Next Day
Delivery cost: 0
MPN: NWE394R.CEW
EAN: 4548736020917
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Author: Kully Singh
Rating: 5
Review: Am happy with the device. Very simple to use, eq has 5 bars. Pretty basic, only makes minimal adjustments. Sounds OK on Heavy setting and unique setting. The others can sound abit 'tinny'. Bass boost is clear as Sony always is. Unit is very light weight, buttons easy to use. I use for the gym and the car as I was using my Samsung a52s 5g. It is abit on the quiet side but with the right headphones it makes a difference. I use AKG earphones which are loud on full volume. But on my Sony XM3 cans it's abit quietter, sound quality is smooth on them though. Memory is easy to fill and so glad I can do drag and drop rather than Sony music centre (sorry Sony). For those on Chromebook....its excellent, the drag and drop is so simple, and I find it quicker and more stable than Windows!!! I do recommend this device for all types of music lovers. I have everything from wu tang, to limp bizkit, black sabbath to Sean Paul and Buju Banton and each sound nice. For the car it sounds good, and at work it's one less phone screen to look which is what I need. It's easy to switch off and just listen to shuffle without getting more blue light.
Author: crookedt
Rating: 2
Review: GOOD-ish points Attaching the device to the PC is simple. No software required; the device becomes an external drive. It's easy to see where music tracks go (or photos should you wish to use it for that). You can create as many folders as you like, but the number of layers is limited – full details in user guide. Must be connected to PC to move/delete files. Finding tracks is pretty easy: you can browse through track name, album name (if this exists in the file metadata), or folders you create yourself (using your PC). The device takes a while to scroll through lengthy filenames. This can be frustrating when looking through a folder dedicated to one artist where all the tracks look the same until you select them. It plays MP3s *and* M4A (AAC or MP4audio) files – the latter being higher quality but larger files. So it's your choice if you want more tracks or higher quality. The playlist sync function is useless to me because I don't use iTunes. And yet it should work, as the music app Banshee on my PC claims to sync with anything apart from Apple idevices. Battery life: after two weeks using it about 1.5 hours / day it was down to 25%; after three weeks the battery symbol flashed empty. So the advertised 35 hours is about right. Given the choice, I prefer removable rechargeable batteries, so I can have a spare set ready charged. However, the internal battery keeps it lightweight. In practice this device seems to last a decent time and is easy enough to charge using the same mini-USB as my mobile and e-book reader – about 30mins gives it a whiz charge but if you're playing it meanwhile it insists on keeping its screen lit, just to squander the charge. Doesn't show when it's finished charging; the battery symbol continues filling. Tactile stud on play/pause button helps orient your fingers to operate it without looking but buttons can be unresponsive. There is a beep option but that can get irritating. POOR points Before putting the earphones in your ears, connect them to the device and turn it on. For some reason it powers up with an explosion in the earphones which you don't want in your ears. It claims to offer 8GB of file space, actually 7.17GB, even after deleting the supplied tracks. The radio can find only two stations; my windup wireless can find at least a dozen. A low resolution TFT screen?! Good in the 1990s, if you're playing Tetris. There is a pictorial quickstart guide included, but the full user guide is online, and pretty irritating to use. Somebody has had lots of fun making it into a pointless 3-layer hierarchy of dozens of pages, each with just three bullet points. One PDF document of about four pages would've been much more readable. The included earphones are of a low audio standard and allow lots of background noise. The design means they rest in your ears, so any movement and they fall out. The volume warning is actually a volume setting warning: it flashes at a particular number, regardless of the recording volume. Most of all, the sound quality is poor, even with supposedly better quality earphones. It lacks clarity, and fiddling with the graphic equaliser doesn't help. My old Sony digital voice recorder had far better playback. Five days after starting using this device, I noticed a slight ringing in my ears. One month on, I have constant tinnitus and have ruled out other possible causes. This is quite scary when I've been very careful to follow all the safety rules. Not to say anyone else would suffer the same, but if you do experience any hearing disturbance please be wary. Returning this for a refund.