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  2. FiiO X3 Portable Music Player - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FiiO_X3_Portable_Music_Player

    FiiO X3. FiiO X3 is a digital music player manufactured and marketed by FiiO Electronics Technology. The player utilizes a built-in Wolfson DAC, and is capable of reproducing music sampled at 192kHz with a sample size of 24-bits per channel, in addition to functioning as a USB audio interface. The X3 is a mid-level member of the FiiO X Series ...

  3. Pono (digital music service) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pono_(digital_music_service)

    Pono ( / ˈpoʊnoʊ /, Hawaiian word for "proper") was a portable digital media player and music download service for high-resolution audio. [1] [2] [3] It was developed by musician Neil Young and his company PonoMusic, which raised money for development and initial production through a crowd-funding campaign on Kickstarter.

  4. List of Sony Walkman products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Sony_Walkman_products

    The NW-HD1 was announced on June 30, 2004 dubbed as “the world's smallest portable audio device”. It was smaller and was advertised as having better sound quality than the iPod at the time. The HD1 featured a seven line 1.8 inch LED display and had a 20 GB hard disk. The device was brushed in high quality aluminum.

  5. List of hardware and software that supports FLAC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hardware_and...

    Naim Audio HDX Hard Disk Player, [11] NaimUniti, UnitiQute, DAC, NDX, UnitiServe. Meridian Sooloos. Pixel Magic Systems' HD Mediabox (with firmware 1.3.4 or higher) PS Audio Perfect Wave DAC + Bridge (Digital-to-Analog Converter/Digital Streamer) Seagate FreeAgent Theater+ HD, HDTV Network Media Player STAJ100.

  6. Portable media player - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portable_media_player

    The first production-volume portable digital audio player was The Audible Player (also known as MobilePlayer, or Digital Words To Go) from Audible.com available for sale in January 1998, for $200. It only supported playback of digital audio in Audible's proprietary, low-bitrate format which was developed for spoken word recordings.

  7. PonoPlayer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PonoPlayer

    The PonoPlayer was otherwise largely panned as "snake oil" by audio and technology enthusiasts like Linus Sebastian who were critical of the player's design, components, and performance (especially battery life) for its price compared to similarly priced smartphone devices already capable of high resolution FLAC playback. Demise

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