
Unless
you have been living on mars there is no doubting you'll know
what the BBC iPlayer is, what you may not know is that its
spreading like a popular virus and infecting all sorts of
devices and services. First iPlayer was web only, then Virgin TV
took it and some handheld devices and now we see it on the Sony
NWA-S639. Well when we say "see it" we mean it works running on
the 16gb MP3 and MP4 player from Sony, not that Sony has any
amazing deal with the BBC.Back to the device up for review
the Sony NWA-S639, this is a 16gb MP3 player pitched squarely at
the iPod Nano market and that's quite an intense battle ground.
measuring 42 x 89 x 7.5mm and styled a bit like a mobile phone
(not accidentally) the Sony fits nicely in the hand, weighing
46grams it wont dent your top pocket as its around half the
weight of a candybar mobile phone.
Sony have this strange way of building a base MP3 player and
the adding features and styling to differentiate the upper
models, the same is true here as the New S630 series looks not
dissimilar to the S600 but you do get a much nicer brushed
aluminium front panel and not plastic. At just over 7mm thick
the 630 series is also a lot slimmer than previous models and is
now not out of place amongst its competitors and in no way
needing of a visit to fat fighters.
Inside its sturdy and yet seductive shell lies 16gb of
storage good for 3,800 MP3 tracks and this being the most open
Sony player yet it handles MP3, WMA and ACC audio without
needing conversion or locking you into the old Sony Atrac
formats. The S630 goes beyond being a mere MP3 player and claims
to bull a fill DAP (digital audio player) supporting a few video
formats including WM9, MPEG-4, MPEG-4/AVC and MP4, which is
where the iPlayer comes in but more on that later.
We started by loading up the S630 series via USB, which was
both quick and efficient. Gone are the days of having to load
the bloated sonic stage software Sony used to push and now if
you choose you can just drag and drop onto the device folders.
Or our chosen approach which was to use windows media player 11,
which many of you will already have and is also included on the
disk supplied in the packaging. This simply detects the player
and shows it as a portable device allowing you to sync all or
part of the collection from your PC.
One
we had a collection of files on the S639 it was time to fire up
and being some serious testing. First impressions are good, the
user interface is intuitive but weirdly we found it had a
marmite effect in the office (you either love it or hate it),
quite why was unclear but those with iPods hated the buttons and
missed the click wheel interface, those who had avoided the
Apple liked the Sony and thought it easy to use like a mobile.
The menu system is quick to navigate and is a mixture of icon
driven and lists which we soon got the hang of, our only gripe
is why the settings are buried so deep in the menu system, its
best to go down there and set everything 1st or you'll be in and
out continually.
So onto some listening tests, we have to say that Sony keeps
getting better and this latest evolution of their network
walkman sounds great. testing with 192kbps MP3 tracks and our
trusty Shure E2C earphones (not the ones supplied) music of all
genres sounded great, punchy and yet balanced. Right up to the
upper limits of volume and of course within what EU laws permit
the Sony NWA-S639 delivers. Sony do packs the S630 series with
an array of toys that while fashionable in Japan may not
translate as well here, if you use the Top Gear cool wall rule
explaining the magic of DSEE and the dynamic normaliser to
a girl is sure to send her running. Plus in our tests these
features made no noticeable difference to a well encoded MP3
file. Again we see Sony has not provided gapless playback which
is a shame and will upset all those who listen to mixes and
mashups as you will get a gap between each file.
One feature worth a mention is the SenseMe this lets the S639
sort out your music into categories such as Pop Ballad, Relax,
Extreme, Energetic, Classical, Electronic, Acoustic, Daytime and
Lounge. Nothing new as its been on the Sony Ericsson walkman
phones for a while and seems to take ages to do its processing
(several hours if you have the full amount of tracks) but it is
quite accurate and a nice way to browse music.
New to this series is podcast support and this is accessed
from the UI via a new podcast icon, its taken Sony a while to
catch on to podcasts but we are placed they have now and you can
easily find those that you have transferred to your network
walkman in one place. If you run out of music and podcasts there
is an FM radio which seems to have ok reception.
Video
is the big seller for the NW-S630 series and the perhaps
overblown iPlayer inegration. Now we though that iPlayer being
stamped all over the adverts would mean you could connect to the
BBC servers and watch TV. However with no WiFi or Bluetooth this
was not on the cards. In fact what we are talking about here is
downloading for a "mobile device" from iPlayer which gives you a
7 day license to watch the video on your Sony player. It is
fairly manual but again you can use windows media player to sync
over the iPlayer videos to the Sony and this works well.
Soon we were watching spooks on the 2.0" QVGA LCD screen in
landscape mode, while its not a TV the 2" screen does its best
and would easily help pass the time on a train journey or in the
car (providing that you are not driving). Also another plus
point for the Sony not immediately apparent is that it works
well while inside a protective case, something you may want to
consider if you use it a lot out and about. The buttons operate
just fine through a sleeve or covering unlike the iPod.
Sony claim an audio only battery life of over 40 hours, but
you should be aware this is with all the features switched off
and with low bit rate MP3 files as well, so we'd doubt real life
operation would see 40 hours, that said around 15 hours of
playback over 3 days saw us at 50% battery usage. Also worth
noting that the battery is non replaceable and while lithium Ion
it will eventually die and lime the iPod you will need a new
device if you don't want to send it on holiday for a new
battery.
For those eco warriors dropping in to Lordpercy.com turn away
from the screen now, there is a nifty feature for instant on,
instead of waiting for it to boot up the Sony just goes into a
sleep mode for 24hrs and leaps into life at the press of a
button. this does consume some battery power (like standby mode)
but it saves waiting all those extra seconds when you switch on.
Overall Sony have done a great job with the NWA-S639 or the
Sony NWZ-S639FB to give it the exact title, perhaps this is Sony
biggest failing when pitched against the iPod, but while style
and marketing may not be up to the Apple standard the player is
more than a match.
Plus the 16gb version is available right now (December 08)
for just £88 and at that price its a steal.

Published - 09/12/2008
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