Really? I didn't know that. Any idea what sizes of HD it can support? Does it need to be the same as it came with. Mine is a 60GB one for example. Or can you stick a larger one in there? And does it need to be a specific make or spec?
Really? I didn't know that. Any idea what sizes of HD it can support? Does it need to be the same as it came with. Mine is a 60GB one for example. Or can you stick a larger one in there? And does it need to be a specific make or spec?
If you haven't played a classic game in years, it's never too late to start!
One of my mates put an 80GB HDD in his 30GB model. A search online shows that someone's used a 120GB HDD successfully. It needs to be a 9.5mm ATA-100 drive (laptop style). There's a guide on how to do it here.
Currently using a Creative Zen Nano Plus.
* Compact and lightweight – Measures 33.5 x 65.5 x 13 millimetres (1.3 x 2.6 x 0.5 inches) and weighs just 34 grams (1.2 ounces.) with AAA battery.
* 1GB memory, storing up to 500 songs in WMA* or 240 songs in MP3*.
* Versatile recording from built-in microphone and FM radio. Supports direct MP3 encoding via line-in.
* Up to 18 hours playtime from a standard AAA battery.
* USB 2.0 for PC downloads at up to a song per second.
* Easy to use, with blue backlit display and multilingual user interface.
*Based on four-minute songs at 64Kbps in WMA, 128Kbps in MP3.
This device actually save lives.
If I didn't have this on my way to work each morning,there would be a lot of dead school kids.
Sam440EP & AOS4.1, 250 gig SATA HD & DVD Rewriter.
Towered A1200 3.1 rom, OS3.9 and OS4.0
PPC 166 mhz 060 50mhz, 192 meg.
Buffered Interface, 40 & 80 gig HDs, CD & DVD Rewriters.
Mediator 1200TX, Voodoo 5500, Radeon ATI 9200, Audio, USB, Ethernet, TV/FM.
Card reader and 19" TFT Monitor.
The only MP3 players I have are my two mobile phones and my two PSPs.
But my main MP3 player is the custom PSP, as I also have lots of Miggy music on there too.
This is not a signature
This is interesting. Until now I had been accessing my old creative Zen Xtra using the third party software from Red Chair. But that was installed on one of my older systems. Today I decided to see how MediaMonkey worked with the Zen, but I discovered I needed to install some drivers so that Windows would recognise the device first.
After installing the drivers and connecting the Zen to the PC it appeared as a drive letter (as it used to). Before this was just to use the Zen's HD to store files but not to access the music on it. But now when I go into the drive I can see all of the music on the Zen and drag and drop. That is much easier and made me very happy!
It is a bit annoying that it doesn't support folders/directories though as it means all of the tracks are such displayed in one big directory together making it very hard to navigate them. Still, it's much better than before. And with MediaMonkey it is easy to manage them if needed.
If you haven't played a classic game in years, it's never too late to start!