🎧 Elevate your workout vibes with the ultimate portable music companion!
The SanDisk 16GB Clip Sport Plus MP3 Player is a lightweight, water-resistant device designed for active lifestyles. With Bluetooth connectivity, it allows for wireless music streaming, while its 16GB capacity can store up to 4000 songs. The built-in FM radio adds versatility, making it perfect for workouts or leisure. Its durable design ensures it can withstand the elements, making it a reliable choice for music lovers on the move.
Brand | SanDisk |
Manufacturer | Western Digital Technologies, Inc. |
Series | Clip sport |
Colour | Red |
Item Height | 2.6 Inches |
Item Width | 1.74 Inches |
Standing screen display size | 1.44 Inches |
Screen Resolution | 128 x 128 pixels |
Product Dimensions | 1.73 x 4.42 x 6.6 cm; 36.29 Grams |
Batteries | 1 Lithium Polymer batteries required. (included) |
Item model number | SDMX28-016G-G46R |
Connectivity Type | Bluetooth |
Wireless Type | Bluetooth |
Voltage | 1.5 Volts |
Tuner Technology | FM |
Power Source | Battery Powered |
Are Batteries Included | Yes |
Lithium Battery Energy Content | 220 Milliampere Hour (mAh) |
Number of Lithium Ion Cells | 1 |
Included Components | USB 2.0 transfer cable, Quick start guide, Wired earphones, SanDisk Clip Sport Plus wearable music player |
Manufacturer | Western Digital Technologies, Inc. |
Item Weight | 36.3 g |
K**N
Works well
It's as described, love it
A**J
4 Star Product, -1 Star for Amazon service
Amazing product. Very nice sound quality. Plays only mp3. Control buttons are not very smooth, but very easy to use.A four-star product, but reducing one star for Amazon service. As the product is ordered from the global store, I had to upload documents for customs clearance several times. Even after that, the parcel was not delivered to my address because of the courier service it came through. I had to change the address to some other town and collect the parcel from there. This is very pathetic service because it could have been moderated by Amazon and delivered through regular amazon service available in my town. Amazon should have taken responsibility for that parcel.
N**P
Worth for the money spent..
Good product.
M**A
Good
Sound quality is good but not bad 😔
D**.
Wonderful music player.
This is a real great piece of equipment. I was on the lookout for a water resistant Bluetooth music player for my long runs, and this fits the bill!Battery life is a good 5-6 hours, though I haven’t measured it precisely. Sound quality when paired with my JBL Endurance Bluetooth earphones is pretty good.The player has a EQ function which is quite useful. The user interface is convenient and easy to navigate.I’m not sure the display is too useful if you’re a runner, because you won’t be looking at it.I haven’t used the stock earphones which came with it, so I cannot comment on them. All in all, a wonderful investment.I just hope it lasts a few years.
B**N
Sandisk supreme
This is my third purchase of Sandisk.The MP3 device works well and can be easily clipped on to your attire and will be an entertaining companion for joggers and walkers.Its internal storage of 8 GB is supplemented by an SD card slot which accords well with 32 GB memory card(I have not tried a bigger storage card).It holds charge well and charges quickly.A worthy buy if you are an audiophile as it supports all mp3 versions.
P**U
A feather-weight player
Excellent product. Very lightweight. I use it while cycling. It's very convinent as I can change the tracks by feeling with my fingers, without having to look at the screen every time. Go for it if you are looking for a lightweight mp3 player to be used while working out or jogging. You won't even notice its existence. I have been using it for a few months now without ever facing any issue.
P**K
MP3 not working
MP3 stopped working. When i connect it with Laptop, laptop does not recognize the MP3 player. I contacted Sandisk team on helpline number. they said they dont sell this product in india. I told them i bought it from amazon india. Now they are telling to go to the seller and ask for replacement as it is still under warranty. Now both parties are passing ball to each other.Amazon should interfere and sort it out.
D**.
Save yourself $25, find a different MP3 player.
Tl;dr (too long;didn’t read)For $50, you are being robbed. If you have standards for MP3 devices, then they took your kitchen sink too. Find a different MP3 player. This one works, and it’s durable, but you can probably get the same from a $20-25 non-branded unit.The waaaay in depth critical review:(Just warning you, I get pretty specific)First off I bought this because I wanted an MP3 that doesn’t need to be recharged 1-2 times every work day in the office as my knock off iPod Nano from Japan does. SanDisk is typically reliable and there were tons of good reviews vs bad ones, and the bad ones mainly complaining of faulty units. So from the specs, at almost x8 the battery longevity, high overall durability and potential to upgrade space... $50 sounded like a good deal... here is where dreams are shattered by reality.This model doesn’t have an SD slot. Wasted money on sd card and I’m out of space after adding about 12 albums and a handful of personally remixed songs. Sure I’ll take some blame in not reading the “technical” fine print. Chances are I might have mixed up reading one of the answered questions about SD card expansion because people posted the answer for all models instead of specific ones. But even then I find it pretty odd that a company known for their memory cards wouldn’t include a port to use one in an MP3 they made. The irony? The SD card I was going to use with this was also made by SanDisk.Battery is not prepped. Instructions tell you to fully charge and discharge 3 times before regular use. Also not a giant issue. I typically want to use devices at full charge anyways and it isn’t dreadfully important keep charged all the time... but this hints that limited quality control has been done for the device itself and possibly why some devices may come “dead on arrival” or “dies young”.Shuffle function randomizes the song order again if you decide to skip or playback the last song or turn off and on the device and then letting it finish off the current song. (It does remember where you last left off in the current song) So if you play song A in shuffle mode, the play list is shuffled once after the song finishes and goes to song X... say you had 400 songs and you decide to go back to song A because you just gotta hear it “one more time.” You press the play back button twice, once to start the current song over, twice to let the player know you want to go back a song...*Gasp!* You didn’t get song A, you got a different song!...and the order is re-shuffled again.So (sarcastically) good news is you don’t have to wait for a whole 399 songs to get song A again in the same play... but in the same way you got a 1/400 chance of getting it again if you press skip, playback last song, or turn your device on again and letting the current song finish. At this point you are better off going back to menu, choosing the song you want and then use the repeat function until you are ready to move to the next song. Speaking of which...Interface navigation is unintuitive and if anything, frustrating. Example navigation:Menu> folder> music> artist folder >album> song name, if I press the back button at ‘song name’, it brings me back to ‘menu’, not ‘album.’ Only slightly helpful thing is it remembers the last folder you accessed in that directory, so you just have to press the center button multiple times to go back to the same folder you were in. This is especially frustrating unless you know exactly where a song you want is. Ripped from discs featuring several artists? Or how about those bonus “track ##” soundtracks that came with your limited edition games? Or a song from a CD of several that you bought in the last trip to a foreign country with a language you don’t read? Good luck finding the specific song you wanted on the first try.***Update: after several months, turns out if you press the back button once from the “current song playing” screen, you can use the left and right keys to navigate in and out of folders easier. Wish I knew that earlier, but accidentally pressing the back button in the directory still brings you back to main menu. With smart devices nowadays, that back arrow is more synonymous with “previous page” than “main menu”... so small learning curve for tablet and device users. Even with this update I’d still say stars stay as is***There is a noticeable delay in response if the screen light is off when you choose to play/pause, skip, playback. And oftentimes there will be a “sound chop” when you turn on the screen even if not using the above actions. (Think of it as if someone hit the pause/play button x2 really fast) This can be noticed when you want to say check on a song’s title or use the quick menu to add the song to a quick playlist or even change the volume (while the song is playing). It is a pretty minuscule gripe to many but if you played games and you experience a sound disruption/action latency of 0.16 of a second to even as much as 0.25 of a second, (each time you wake up the screen for the device) you’d probably be pretty annoyed, especially when you didn’t intend to stop listening to it.The battery capacity is modest. Supposedly goes up to 18 hours on full charge. Which is supposed to be one of the reasons a person would use this as opposed to a smartphone device or a cheaper MP3 player. After about a couple months, I get about 12-14 hours on a full charge. My guess is batteries last longer if you leave it playing undisturbed. But checking on songs, fiddling with the menu on occasions, turning it off and on when you do and don’t need it, probably burns the battery significantly... or poor quality controls failed to spot a battery life dying faster than it should. Oh and to turn it off and on, you hold the center button. It goes to standby off screen, then turns off on its own if it does nothing for a while. I don’t remember this in the manual and figured this out after a couple weeks of use. (I just let it turn itself off when I started using it)***Update: it doesn’t take “too long” to charge. A couple hours and it’s almost 100% from nothing... (like 60-80%?) but the power drains from the status are based on estimated use. For example, the battery reads at 30% and I saw it go down to 20% indicating low battery as I was fiddling with the screen. Then I went back to work. Couple hours later, it shows I’m back to 40% (I’m not charging it.) So be careful with long term menu fiddling if you want to maximize battery life.***The screen is definitely tough, I’d probably have to put intent or purpose behind a force to crack it. That being said it is EXTREMELY prone to scuffs and scratches. The screen gets imperfect fast, but doesn’t hinder the playability of the item nor has it gotten so scratched up that it cannot be read from. (Depending on your eyesight) That being said, keep it away from hard objects that can cause any minor abrasions such as keys, coins, plastic card edges and punched text, scrubby side of the sponge, etc. The screen is thick enough where if you scratch it, you can look at an angle to see behind the scratch.The clip is not good at holding onto things that are “thin” like ribbon lanyards. To put simply, the spring causing the clasp to grip firmly is not very strong, and requires something like a collar or sleeve to grip sufficiently with the “tooth clasp”. The weight of its body + bouncing from jogging is enough to pull itself off on its own if not secured to something using the “tooth” or something thick enough to challenge the metal coil spring. Overall the plastic looks and feels “toy-like”. (“Cheap”)It has a Bluetooth function but I have yet to successfully connect any of my earbuds this way. They aren’t premium brands like Sony or Bose nor are they proprietary like air pods but rather cheap store brands off the grocery store. Yet my Apple devices are able to pick those up with ease.Bottom bottom line, if you give it to a kid, don’t worry, they won’t really know the difference unless they are audiophiles that previously owned a better player or technophiles that know what a standard MP3 player should be capable of doing. They will be glad to have anything that plays their songs and it’s tough to withstand casual use by children. As long as they don’t lose it, “lend it to a friend” or try to teach it how to swim...it should last with them for a long while.If you are an adult and want a reasonably competent music playing device for your money, look elsewhere. Comparing this to a 500 yen (less than $5) iPod nano knock off I got from japan... the only things this player beats the knock off at is: the battery capacity, higher overall durability and features like option to “repeat” a song or use “shuffle” (flawed as the shuffle is, having it as an option is technically better than not having it) or to add songs to a playlist without using a computer to do so. The knock off beats it at response time, ease of navigation, on/off switch, SD card slot (has no memory on its own but cards are cheap), weight, material quality (thin metal casing and it never fell from the same lanyard once whereas the SanDisk fell over 3 times in my last few jogs from the parking lot.) So physical durability isn’t an issue if it never falls on the ground from jogging. (Knock off isn’t water resistant though) I’d have rather bought 3 of those “knock offs” and just cycled them for work or anything else.One good point that I cannot deny is the earbuds that came with it. The cable is ribbon like and thicker than most so it feels like the build is solid and geared to last. It is less prone to tangling but still possible to get a knot here and there. With the costs of basic earbuds out there, I’d be willing to buy this for up to $10 by itself.I expected better from SanDisk. I expected much better actually. I weighed my needs along with reviews and answered questions so it felt like a worthy purchase. With this you are probably better off buying a cheaper $15-25 MP3 player with SD slot, $5-10 on a decent pair of buds, and with the left over money either buy an SD card to expand or get more songs to play on the player that isn’t this one.
T**O
Ultraportatile con resa audio ottima. (Versione Plus 32Gb - Uso non sportivo - Seconda impressione)
1/09/2023Una stella in meno:- Il display si graffia troppo facilmente.- Se collegato via Bluetooth la batteria non dura la metà, ma soltanto un terzo del tempo rispetto all'ascolto con cuffie a filo.Oltretutto, lasciando il BT attivo, anche senza ascolto, la batteria si scarica rapidamente.-----------------Testato soltanto con musica Flac e Audiolibro mp3 via bluetooth con JBL Endurance Run 2 Wireless & JBL 125 Tune BT!Acceso e impostato come da suggerimenti su "Resto del mondo".In Impostazioni > Volume > Alto.Volume del lettore settato al massimo e gestito tramite i pulsanti delle cuffie BT.(Ovviamente abbassatelo al minimo con le cuffie a filo!!!)Assolutamente nessun problema di volume basso.Nessun problema di lag, interruzioni, scricchiolii durante la riproduzione via BT. Ottima tenuta anche a 10 metri di distanza.La qualità con brani Flac è ben oltre le mie aspettative. Suona nettamente meglio del mio smartphone.Finalmente riesco a godermi a pieno le mie JBL Endurance regolando l'equalizzatore con la banda numero 4 a -2, e la banda numero 5 a -1.(Ricordatevi di confermare col tasto centrale)Bassi finalmente non troppo profondi, alti non troppo fruscianti e medi nella norma.(Con i settaggi preimpostati per i diversi generi di musica il volume risulta molto più basso. Alzate tutto a palla nel settaggio Personalizzato e diminuite di poche tacche le bande che volete regolare.)Con le JBL 125 Tune invece è perfetta l'equalizzazione di base NORMALE.Lettori Hi-Res da oltre mille euro?Se avete soldi da buttare, fate pure.--------------La resa audio del lettore è a mio avviso veramente ottima. Ovviamente, se usate le cuffiette con filo incluse nella confezione non potrete fare altro che sostenere che si sente da schifo. E avrete ragione!Nessuna divisione delle frequenze con una resa finale cupa.Non son buone neanche per farci il minestrone.Acquistate auricolari decenti!-------------Ovviamente è necessario considerare i limiti imposti dal micro display a bassissima risoluzione (128 X 128), ma su un lettore audio, col display cosa ci volete fare?-------------Il software SandiskMP3Updater non riconosce il lettore (su Win10).Se volete aggiornarlo, cercate in rete il modello corrispondente seguito dal termine FIRMWARE.Selezionate il sito ufficiale Western Digital dal quale potrete scaricare i file da trascinare direttamente nella Root del lettore.-------------Ridimensionate le copertine se non compaiono. (Suggerito 500 x 500 jpg)-------------IMPORTANTE - Prima di collegare le vostre cuffie BT spegnete il BT nei dispositivi accesi che avete nelle vicinanze!-------------Personalmente sono abbastanza soddisfatto.Se cercate un lettore MP3/FLAC senza fronzoli prima di buttarvi in cinesate varie forse vi conviene puntare su questo.----------------PRO ( + ) :- Portabilità- Qualità audio ottima. (con auricolari adeguati)- Connettività Bluetooth (senza disconnessioni)- Memoria interna con suddivisione delle Directory per tipo di file- Equalizzatore a 5 bande personalizzabile- Possibilità di riprendere i brani e gli audiolibri dal punto in cui ci siamo fermati e ricollegare le cuffie BT senza tornate nel menù anche spegnendo e riaccendendo il lettore- Tasti volume sempre funzionanti- Buona retroilluminazione- Impermeabile alla pioggia. Porte dotate di gomminiCONTRO ( - ) :- Display a bassissima risoluzione, non facile da leggere per chi ha problemi di vista- Tasti un po' gommosi e un po' duri da premere- Sezione Impostazioni un po' troppo "ingolfata". L'equalizzatore era meglio su un menù a parte...- Le Copertine, al risveglio del display durante la riproduzione, a volte non vengono visualizzate- Il display si graffia troppo facilmente- Durata batteria con cuffie Bluetooth 1/3 rispetto ad ascolto con cuffie a filo.Lasciando il BT attivo, anche senza ascolto, la batteria si scarica rapidamente.- Cuffie a filo in dotazione PESSIME. Acquistate auricolari di qualità!
E**R
Oh, I LIVE under these!
I have three (so far). I have been using Sansa Clips since they invented them! After many years -- and I was a bit careless with them back then 'cause I had, like, eight. maybe ten?! NOT careless with the gear, but I had so many, I would make up a 'playlist' of podcasts I wanted them to hear (yeah, I'm THAT friend...) and give the whole thing to a friend... Then, suddenly... SANSA QUIT MAKING the Clips! (D@MN you SanDisk!!)Could no longer replace them as they finally wore out (we're talking, like 20 years old! Fantastic gear!) -- and I thought what Sansa offered 'back then' would not do (and I even tried another brand: no go!)A NECESSARY thing for a podcast-only listener is you HAVE to be able to (easily) delete the 'cast when it ends! If you have 100 'casts -- and you pick some topic or someone to listen to today -- and a pod ends: you HAVE to be able to delete it EASILY and RIGHT THEN!! Otherwise -- you will ALWAYS have the same 100 -- and have no way to know what you've already listened too! Deeply frustrating. When my last Clip that would TAKE the memory-chip died... and all I had left were WAY earlier ones that didn't even TAKE a chip (!), I started on a serious hunt for what I could use.(Did I mention I LIVE under these things?! Driving, cooking, cleaning, gardening -- anything that does not require MIND attention, just brains. Even my finicky precision WORK (assembling microscopes and gauges) doesn't require mind! But in the workshop I watch documentaries and lectures I've downloaded onto an external hard drive though an old Roku box.)So, after trying to find ANY other maker -- and no success -- I thought, okay let's LOOK at the Sansa Sport Clip and the 'designed for music' ones. Can I figure out way to use them? OMG! OMG! They FINALLY made this version -- which lets me delete without looking (same 'key' strokes every time!) whatever has just finished. And takes the memory chip.I now have THREE of these (and may pick up a few more, before the world ends). I DL to my computer gazillions of podcasts (GBs!) I want to hear: various topics of whatever I am 'diving into,' occasional diet or house repair, LOTS of pandemic hero-docs (NOT the ortho-docs!!) or whatever. RARELY, a snippet on some public topic. And,. of course the several folks whom I follow EVERY podcast they do or are on.For podcast lengths of under ~35 minutes, I sort them into groups of about 60 minutes total and 'join' them (using Brorsoft) into one 'cast. For those above 35 min., I use them as is.For the ones I'm joining into one -- because they're various lengths and topics, I recorded a nice chime sound and myself counting down from 5 to 1. That gives me TIME to free up a hand and delete that once once I've listened to it.These are GREAT and long-lasting gear!
A**R
Tiny, lightweight but flawed
If you want a tiny, lightweight player for use when exercising, this player may be for you. It even has a sprung clip to attach it to your clothing.But for serious audio listening, especially of a large audio collection, and especially if you are fussy about usability, audio playback and build quality, then I’d give it a miss.I have many albums when one track plays straight into the next without a pause in the music. Unfortunately, this player inserts a short gap of silence between each track, so that the audio gets interrupted. It may be just my particular unit, but to make matters worse it adds a faint click between the tracks.I have many tracks that I’ve ripped from CDs which are part of a multi-disk album. Ideally, MP3 players can (and some others do) recognise that the CDs are part of the same album from the meta-data tags, and play the CDs and the tracks that they contain in the correct order, but this player can’t do this (confirmed to me by the manufacturer). So it’ll play all track 1s across each CD within the multi-disc album, followed by all track 2s etc. Not ideal for audio drama or classical music, where you need the CDs to be played in the correct order. To be fair, you can work around this issue by manually re-numbering the track metadata on your audio files, but this is time consuming to do.Another design limitation is that although you can insert a memory card to expand the memory, for some reason the music content on the card is indexed separately to the music on the internal memory, and you have to navigate between the two to find what you want. So if, say, you want to search for a particular artist, you have to search twice against each database. And if albums by that particular artist are split between internal and external storage, you can’t see all the albums in one place. My previous player from this company, the Sansa Clip, didn’t have this limitation.I sometimes make use of the “Genre” search category to narrow down my choices if I’m looking for a particular style of music, but unfortunately this player doesn’t support this option.Finally, after only a couple of weeks’ use, I noticed that the printed symbols on the buttons were wearing off. One has almost completely disappeared. Probably triggered by sweat on my hands whilst exercising, but has exposed that the build quality of this player is not really of very good quality.I have mixed feelings about this player. Yes it plays music, but the limitations for me outweigh the benefits of its relatively low cost and tiny size. For more serious listening I can’t recommend it.
(**_
Bon son, prix très abordable
J'avoue qu'en lisant les différentes critiques, je suis assez surprise ou alors le logiciel a été mis à jour et les problèmes évoqués résolus?Je connais bien la marque sansa, pour avoir eu en son temps un sansa fuze, qui était alors un lecteur mp3 parmi les plus interessant (petite taille, prix correct, bon son, lecture des formats ogg entre autres, autonomie). J'ai eu l'impression que la marque avait un peu décliné ensuite (moins convaincue par les sansa clip qui paraissent + "cheap").Et puis il me fallait un appareil un peu plus lisible car destiné à quelqu'un d'un peu agé.Le sansa clip sport me semblait etre adapté avec son "grand" écran (tout est relatif), mais les avis semblaient un peu mitigés.Voyons ce que ça donne finalement....----------------------------------------------------L'appareil est très petit (en gros 5*3cm) et très leger : tant mieux puisqu'il est fait pour se clipser sur un vetement grace à la pince qui occupe tout son dos.En rouge il est tres sympa (plus qu'en noir , et en plus cela fait ressortir le gros bouton central de validation).L'aspect fait plastique bon marché, sans que j'ai de grosse inquiétude (jamais cassé un de ses petits frères, il n'y a pas trop de raison à moins de marcher dessus...).Les finitions semblent correctes sur les connexions (micro usb pour le charger et le relier à l'ordi avec son cable USB fourni)(emplacement pour carte micro sd) (prise jack pour écouteurs) (touches laterales pour monter/baisser le son)Un casque est fourni avec, de couleur assortie (cordon et embouts rouge pour moi donc, assez sympa).La qualité est très correcte si on n'est pas trop regardant (franchement pas mal, mais un tout petit peu grave et très légerement étouffé), sinon il est conseillé comme toujours d'utiliser un autre casque que celui fourni de base avec un lecteur.Des embouts de rechange sont fournis.Connexion non droite, heureusement pour ce type de produit qui doit rester petit.Embouts qui tiennent assez bien aux oreilles (pour le sport) et fil souple fait pour supporter les torsions et éviter les noeuds.Mise en route :Au démarrage, il demande la région et j'ai rentré par réflexe la zone US car les sansa précédents étaient bridés sur le niveau de son pour la France. Là j'arrive effectivement à un son à 2 puissances qu'on peut choisir dans les réglages (théoriquement, si on veut épargner ses oreilles, il faut rester sur les puissances basses).Pas vérifié si en choisissant France ça changeait effectivement quelque chose, mais si en tout cas on veut rechanger le pays, il faut le faire tout de suite (restauration des parametres d'usine et nouveau choix).J'ai changé ensuite la langue (français disponible parmi d'autres) et on peut la modifier à tout moment.Ensuite connexion avec son cable micro usb/USB à l'ordi pour le charger à fond.Comme pour tous les sansa, il est reconnu tout seul comme un disque dur externe et on pourra copier/coller nos fichiers dedans (en se servant pour classer de préférence des dossiers dejà fournis : musique, podcast, audiobook...).Quelques musiques et podcast sont déjà fournies pour tester.Le son : bien, rien à redire à ce prix. Les formats acceptés sont toujours assez étendus à priori (MP3, WMA, AAC, Ogg Vorbis, WAV, FLAC ...), mais je n'ai pas tout testé cette fois ci (en meme temps cette compatibilité étendue est une constante chez sandisk, d'autres devraient en prendre de la graine).Autonomie toujours très bonne dans cette marque donc je suis optimiste, meme si attention à l'écran qui peut théoriquement consommer plus (mais on peut régler la luminosité et le temps avant l'extinction auto). Pour l'instant, mon indicateur ne bouge pas d'un iota. Il faut que je teste mais les autres de mémoire faisaient dans les 60 heures?(à vérifier).Noter qu'il s'éteint complétement automatiquement si on ne s'en sert pas.Navigation : ce n'est pas vraiment compliqué, mais des fois un peu confus quand meme.Je me suis énervée au début car je n'arrivais pas à revenir en arrière, sans voir qu'il y a une touche "backspace" justement fate pour ça sur ce modele. Ce n'est pas très compliqué mais on peut avoir un peu de mal au début (après il y a très peu d’arborescence, donc c'est impossible de se perdre, juste de s'agacer un peu car on s'est trompé de bouton entre le backspace et la touche gauche qui sert à remonter aussi certains menus).Options du menu (qu'on peut configurer pour virer celles dont on ne se sert pas) :* Réglages : diverses options de configuration, dont un équaliseur libre et d'autres préconfigurés, une lecture aléatoire/repeat, une option pour varier la vitesse de lecture des livres audio/podcast, un replay gain reglable...)* Musique : accès par artiste, album, liste de lecture, ou aléatoireJe ne comprends pas les critiques : les albums sont bien classés par ordre alphabetique et les morceaux dans l'ordre prévu. L'image de l'album apparait (reconnaissable mais tout petit par contre).Les options suivante sont dispo pour chaque morceau : ajouter la musique aux favoris, info morceau (outre les tag : echantillonnage, compression...), lecture aleatoire ou repeat, egaliseur , supprimer...* Radio : option très sympa, juste dommage qu'on ne puisse donner des noms à ses fréquences (et qu'elles ne les reconnaissent pas apparemment). On peut soit lancer une recherche auto, qui va vous lister toutes les fréquences reconnues, quite à ce que vous effaciez ensuite celles qui ne vous intéressent pas. Ou bien vous les rentrez toutes à la main (ans pouvoir les nommer).En tout cas vous restez sur la dernière ouverte, et vous avez accès à un menu permettant de choisir une autre fréquence parmi toutes celles enregistrées (ou à tout moment vous pouvez changer la frequence à la main).Le son est vraiment bien (alors que c'est le casque qui fait office d'antenne).* Livres : pas testé car j'ai mis mes audiobook en mp3 dans un sous dossier de musique, ce qui du coup ne me permet pas d’accélérer/ralentir la voix (testé sur les podcast de test fournis: ca marche très bien)* Dossier : vous permet d'accéder à tout le contenu de votre sandisk par l'arborescence des dossiers.Cela sépare la ram de l'appareil(=4GO) et la mémoire de la carte microSD que vous aurez eventuellement rajoutée (très probablement si vous voulez stocker un peu de musique dessus ! 4Go de base c'est un peu faible mais au moins le systeme est ouvert et vous rajoutez ce que vous voulez).* Carte : je ne sais pas (pas encore mis de carte microsd). J'ose esperer par contre que l'on peut acceder aux musiques de la carte via "Musique", sans devoir passer absolument par "Carte" ?? (à vérifier). Apres au pire, avec une carte 32 ou mieux 64 (=à peu pret le prix de l'appareil) on a de quoi faire sans passer par les 4 Go autrement que pour des morceaux à tester par exemple.* Sport : chronometre, minuteur (avec une sonnerie), journaux (des temps sauvés je suppose).-------------------------------------------------------AU TOTAL : je n'ai rien à redire à ce sansa clip sport.Sans doute assez pratique pour le sport (se clipse, tout petit/leger, casque qui tient dans l'oreille et se tord sans s’emmêler)Bon son pour le prixLecture d'à peu pret tous les formats audio existantsRadio fournie, qui fonctionne bienPas mal d'options dispo, en général ou pour chaque morceau (Equaliseur, lecture aléatoire, playlist ...)Autonomie qui semble excellente (pas d'idée pour l'instant, ça ne descend pas)Pour quelqu'un d'un peu agé, l'écran permet de s'y retrouver (à défaut de lecteur vraiment plus gros...), et la navigation est en gros compréhensible, même si parfois un peu déroutante au début.Les défauts : je ne sais pas encore (à part le fait que 4GO s'est peu et que l'ajout d'une carte microSD est vite nécessaire).En esperant que les musiques de la carte microSD soient bien classées avec celles de la mémoire interne (franchement bete sinon, mais corrigeable en mettant une bonne carte microsd)Je conseille donc sans arrière pensée actuellement (d'autant que acheté en promo à moins de 30€ : pensez à checker les differentes couleurs, il y a parfois des promos sur certaines).
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