Low Price Creative Labs 20 GB Nomad Jukebox

Creative Labs 20 GB Nomad JukeboxBuy Creative Labs 20 GB Nomad Jukebox

Creative Labs 20 GB Nomad Jukebox Product Description:



  • Hold up to 340 hours of digital music
  • Available line-in jack for recording anywhere with an add-on microphone
  • Manually adjust the amount of bass, treble, and mid ranges with onboard Digital Signal Processing
  • Large 132 x 64 pixel backlit LCD display
  • USB connection to your computer for quick transfer of digital music

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

122 of 132 people found the following review helpful.
4lots of storage, the ability to record, no remote/firewire
By Scott C. Frase
First off, this thing is very cool. My original purpose in getting it was twofold: it should be a replacement to my broken Sony home CD player and it should do live recordings. (By the way, never buy Sony CD players. I've had two and both have died within 3-4 years.) Got it only two days ago, but have played with the recording function quite a bit as I am in a band and needed a portable recording solution that was true CD quality (as opposed to MiniDisc) or better. The Nomad gives me this because it can record at DAT quality, 48khz.What you do to record is essentially this: hook up your mic to the line in and then select "Recording" off the little screen. Now you have a menu with some info and choices to make:MonitorThru (On/Off), SamplingRate(11.025khz-48khz), InputGain(0-15), and Boost (On/Off). There is a problem if you don't use an amplified microphone. The problem is that there is a nasty whine from the hard drive that gets louder the more you crank up the InputGain setting. So the solution, if your going to use a microphone, is to MAKE SURE you pump the microphone through a pre-amp, mixer, or multi-track recorder. Once the mic is fed through one of these, the signal will be hotter and override any of that crappy disk noise. In my first heavy duty recording session at 48khz for 2+ hours, the Nomad performed admirably and did not crash. The one thing I could say is that the Nomad could use a graphical VU meter so that you can tell if your line level is too high. After a bit of manual tweaking, I was able to get the line level correct, but it would be a whole lot easier with a graphical display of some sort.

Here's how you record on the Nomad. From that Recording menu, you select your recording preferences, press 'ARM' to prepare to record, and then the 'Play' button to start the recording. Recordings will be saved as non-lossy .WAV files (nice for creating quality CDs of live performances) into 10 minute increments. Incremental recordings, saved as tracks, are a safety precaution against crashing, something that happens frequently when you have multi-gigabyte files. The Nomad will save the recording to an Album called 'Recording nnn', where n is the next available number starting at 001. The first 10 minutes of the recording will be labeled 'Track 1'. If you go beyond 10 minutes in your recording, each successive track will be named Track 2, Track 3, and on like that. Once I have a recording saved, I use Creative's PlayCenter 2 on the PC (connect it up using USB - where's Firewire when you need it?) to copy the file over to my hard drive to tweak the sound file to my liking in Cool Edit. Make sure you have plenty of room on your PC's hard drive, because 48khz recordings use up a lotta drive space.

One thing about the PlayCenter software. I had a conflict with some CD burning software which would hang my PC (a 600mhz Pentium III/320MB) everytime I tried to install the PlayCenter. I was on the phone for two hours with Creative Labs tech who was very good, but couldn't solve my problem. Finally, after reinstalling Win2K, I found the problem to not be a software conflict, but a hardware conflict between the PlayCenter2 software and the PCI slot position of my ATI All-in-Wonder 128 video card. Once I swapped the video card to a different PCI slot, the software installed fine. Yeesh.

The PlayCenter's interface is nice. You have two windows that represent the source and destination of where music or data is and where you want to put it. So, you can rip a CD, copy recordings made from the Nomad back to your PC, take existing MP3s OR ANY DATA off your hard drive and throw it on the Nomad.Notice I said 'ANY DATA.' Because earlier versions of the firmware and PlayCenter2 don't have the ability to copy any data to/from the Nomad, make sure you download the latest firmware and PlayCenter2 versions ... . You can use this thing as a backup drive aswell!! You can also control all aspects of the Nomad, from deleting songs, to creating playlists, and labeling and organizing your music from this interface.

One of the best things about the PlayCenter is that it has a link out to CDDB, the music database. When you rip a CD (at any quality level you want, from 20kbps all the way up to 320kbps), all the track information is automatically downloaded and the music is categorized for you. One warning: you have to have a speedy CPU, memory, and CDROM in order to avoid skipping or other artifacts when you rip songs. I'd say you'd have to have at least a 300mhz Pentium II pc, 128MB RAM and a 24x speed burner. My box is a 200mhz Pentium with 64MB RAM and a 20x reader and I got artifacts when I burnt a Vivaldi CD at 320kbps. Another great thing about the software is that it allows you to rip to both to the Nomad and a directory on your PCs hard drive at the same time for backup purposes. I don't have that much space on my PC, so I choose not to make the backup. Finally, the sound quality varies according to the encoding rate. Music recorded well and encoded well sounds great, but do yourself a favor and getter a better set of headphones than the ones included. I have an older pair of Sony MDR-V600's and they sound much better than the Creative headphones.

In the final analysis, time will tell if this thing is actually going to hold up under many recordings. I pray that Creative has some extra hard drives lying around in case this bad boy crashes!! I have yet to figure out the best means of backing this thing up, but I'd imagine it'd be a good idea to have a 20GB drive lying around. Enhancements Creative could make are plenty: Creative needs to get a remote control for this thing as it will be hooked up to my main stereo. Also, Creative should include a digital out for people who want to use this as their main sound source for both home and traveling. Digital out would give us music lovers better audio quality. A line level meter would be appreciated for recordings. Finally, make the data transport mechanism Firewire for quick uploads/downloading of data. All-in-all, this is a nifty little device. I'd really give this guy a 4.5. Let's hope it holds up under repeated use!

17 of 18 people found the following review helpful.
5This one has the best features for a gadget geek like me
By A Customer
I've had my 20GB Nomad JB for 3 weeks now, and I'm obsessed. I've ripped 300 of my CD's into it, and it's still got 5GB free. I'm using MP3 for compatibility with my less-privileged friends, but I tried the WMA format and it's better IMHO. The EAX and equalizer effects are great, esp. when hooked up to some cheesy... Labtec speakers w/subwoofer. This thing's got all the others beat for features! VERY MINOR GRIPES: You can record directly off another device using built-in line-in jack 1/8", but you need a powered mic to record voice. The battery life is right about 4 hours, but charge them a good long time on first charge before using them. Carrying case is inadequate, but who cares? Get a CaseLogic case. GOOD STUFF: The USB connection is plenty fast, takes under 5 minutes to fully rip a 60+minute CD and transfer to it (use a fast 40X CD-ROM or better). I thought the headphones included with were fine -- there's better, but they're okay. The included software is very easy, converting from WAV to MP3 or WMA etc. is easy (right click it), you can store ANY type of file from computer on it in a pinch (I tote stuff home from office computer on it). SOUND IS EXCELLENT. Your title and track info can be displayed during playback, which is nice for party scenes where my non-tech friends want to know what song is playing, they can just look. The CDDB (internet database) service is great, I only had to key in 4 discs out of 300 that I ripped. But check the titles, some folks are submitting and drinking, apparently. WHAT I COMPARED THIS TO: ARCHOS, Dhttp://amzn.com/dp/B00005QCU3/?tag={ucomicscom} and pretty much every other jukebox. In the stores, hands-on. THIS THING ROCKS. No regrets. Go get one. Live a little. Everyone will hate you.Review update: What other guy said is right, if you go WMA you can pack a lot more music on this thing, up to 700 hours. I went MP3 because I dump files to my friends' computers, and some of them have enough trouble with MP3 (get Windows Media player update people!) I DROPPED MINE. Know what? Nothin' happened. Don't try it at home though! There is a hard disk that COULD get damaged, but mine fell about 3 feet onto a hard carpeted floor with no apparent harm. And USB isn't too fast compared to firewire, but heck, 2 or 3 minutes for a whole album? Come on. Last thing I forgot, there's an infrared port on it for "future upgrades" such as an IR remote control. Which would be nice when I'm connected to my home sound system.

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
4A must-have, but not without problems
By W. A. Norris
This was an easy choice for me, because it's currently still the only 20GB player on the market. If, like me, you have lots and lots of music, size matters. As big as this is, I expect I will upgrade in 2-3 years when they have 50-60GB models.

If you really like music, this unit will reorganize your life. You can carry around all (well, an awful lot, anyway) of your music, organize it into as many different playlists as you want, and play it pretty much anywhere. Of course, there are also some annoying problems, but don't let that stop you from getting an amazing device like this.

The best parts: (1) Sound quality. For all but audiophile equipment, the limitation on sound quality will either be the MP3 file (if it's a low-grade one) or the equipment you play it through (mass-market stereos and headphones, etc). If you hook this up to an expensive audiophile system, you will hear its limitations, but it plays compressed sound files anyway, so that's no surprise. (2) It goes everywhere and hooks up to nearly anything. Having line level out as well as a headphone-out jack adds to its versatility. I use it when I work out or go walking, at work with headphones or through the computer, with my living room stereo through an RCA cable, in the car with a casette adapter, and with the boombox I've got in the kitchen, also with a casette adapter. Having the same set of playlists instantly accessable all of those places is simply amazing. (3) A surprisingly usable interface. I had a flash-based MP3 player a couple of years ago, and based on that, I thought it would be really hard to find and play music amongst hundreds of albums. The interface makes this pretty easy.

Things that have bugged me in the 6 weeks I've had this: (1) battery life could definitely be better. I wish it could use lithium-ions. (2) Interfacing with the computer. I'm not in love with the interface of the PC software, the transfer speed is sluggish, and I've had some stability problems, though nothing that renders it unusable. (3) It takes 20-30 seconds to boot up when you turn it on, and sometimes the buttons are kind of slow to react. (4) It's kind of chunky, and heavier than I'd like. (5) It skips a little sometimes when I'm out walking. I'm not a jogger, but if you want to jog with a player, this might not be the one. (6) This may just be me, but I've had some trouble matching it with good headphones. It works great for rock and electronica with the Sony earclips I use for working out, but it sounds really fatiguing when I pair it with my Grado SR-60s at work for listening to jazz and blues. I think I'm going to pair it with a headphone amp from Headroom and try some other headphones (Sennheiser HD570s, AKG K501s, etc.), to see if I can find the right combination.

Overall, though, I definitely recommend this player, even though I hope they will do some things to improve it when they come out with their next model. It is an outstanding device, and I would by another in a second if anything ever happened to it.

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