Showing posts with label zune. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zune. Show all posts

05 November 2007

BREAKING: Microsoft Rips Off Companies Other Than Apple!


Microsoft Zune 2 copies LG ChocolateThis was the easiest Photoshop job ever.

Microsoft’s slogan for the new Zune 2 is “You Make It You.” The second part of that, which was removed at some point in the committee-run design process, was “We Make It Like Somebody Else.

This time around, the fabled Redmond Photocopiers (great video by David Pogue here, by the way) turned their lasers on South Korean wireless handset-maker LG Electronics and its popular(?) “Chocolate” mobile phone. If we’re being generous (really generous), we’ll say that Microsoft did this on purpose so that fashion-forward (that term seems so inappropriate here) gadgeteers can purchase a music player that matches their cellphone (that, uh, already plays music). I guess it was too hard for Microsoft to copy the curves of iPhone, even though pretty much everyone else is doing it (check Gizmodo or Engadget for frequent cases of this phenomenon).

Gosh, can no one design their own gadget these days?

Just one more reason not to buy a Zune this Christmas (or EVER).

Special thanks to my one true human love for pointing this out to me last week, and to Microsoft for being exceedingly easy to mock.

03 October 2007

Reasons Not To Buy A Zune This Christmas: 2007


To commemorate last night’s official announcement of the next generation of Microsoft’s Zune music player (not available until mid-November!), here is an updated version of my popular post from last year, “Reasons Not To Get A Zune This Christmas.” Changes are in red, and replacements have been stricken.

First, a little primer: This week Microsoft released generation 2 of their Zune music player in order to directly compete with Apple’s commanding lead in the personal audio market. They still want some of that big, big pie that Apple made not too many years ago, and has, for the most part, kept all to itself. The Zune is the most recent in the long list of supposed failed “iPod Killers”, and honestly, if any company could kill the iPod, it would probably be Microsoft Apple itself. But never fear Apple faithful - I simply do not see that happening anytime soon. But we haven’t reached the commentary phase yet. I am still being objective. So back to the point - what is the Zune? Simply put, it is a portable music player that comes with an 80GB hard drive (and a 4 and 8GB iPod Nano-like version). It has a three (point two!)-inch color screen, plays video, shows your photos, and allows Wi-Fi transferring of songs to other Zune players nearby (and synching with your computer). The Zune comes in three four colors - white, black, green, pink, and brown red, and is controlled by what looks like an iPod clickwheel a feminine hygiene product but is actually just four directional buttons on a circular disc a touch-sensitive directional hygiene product. Microsoft has created updated the Zune Marketplace - like the iTunes Store - for purchasing your music (and later, movies). There is also jukebox/syncing software that lets you manage playlists and listen to music on your PC (it is not currently still not Mac-compatible). Oh, and FM radio, I guess. Woo.

Okay, enough of the unbiased description. Now is where the review part of the review happens. Disclosure: I do not have a Zune. I have not seen or touched one in person. I touched one. It was traumatic. If you want to send me one to do a more proper “review” please go right ahead. I can be contacted at kevin at frivolousmotion dot com. What this means is I am speaking nothing but the truth. Buy a Zune at your own risk, but not after reading this review all the way through. If you don’t, you will regret it. And, even if you do read it, and decide “Hey, it doesn’t sound that bad,” you’ll probably regret it. You will most certainly still regret it.

So here goes. I am now going to abandon paragraphs and things for the super-popular list format.

  1. Brown? What?!! What kind of retro-hipster freaks are you targeting Brown to? Are you planning on making Zune the “Official Media Player of the UPS” for crying out loud?! Eww.
    They killed Brown. No more poop jokes. Now, just Maxi Pad jokes (see above).
  2. It is bigger than the current iPod (even compared to the 80GB 160GB version).
  3. It is heavier than the current iPod (even compared to the 80GB 160GB version).
  4. It has a shorter battery life than the current iPod (which doesn’t even begin to approach the 24-hour life of the new iPod Nano). I haven’t heard any battery life claims yet.
  5. Crippled Wi-Fi sharing that restricts shared music to three plays or three days before deactivating and prompting you to purchase it. This applies even if you are the artist who recorded the song and want to share it with your Zune-carrying friends, and even though the Zune Marketplace will be filled with DRM-free music. Someone else said, “Microsoft puts the DRM in DRM-free.”
    Corollary to 5: Where are you going to find someone else with a Zune so that you can share? Are you seriously going to approach a stranger and try to send them the newest Timberlake tune? Do you want that random guy/girl on the subway to punch you in the face? (Worst pickup line of the new millenium: Is that a Zune in your pocket...) But seriously, for Microsoft to make the main feature of the device (the file sharing) something that relies completely on the device becoming ubiquitous is a major gamble. Without it, the Zune is basically a bigger, less pretty, and more socially irresponsible iPod.
  6. What looks like a clickwheel ain’t a clickwheel. It is a multidirectional click pad (four poles, plus center) that works in a context-sensitive way context- and touch- sensitive panty liner. What does that mean? It means that you won’t always know what to push to do what you want. Sometimes left will go back a song, sometimes it might changes menus, sometimes it might vote for Al Gore. Not cool. And because you have to flip the player on its side to watch video, that means the directions switch by 90 degrees. Confused yet?
  7. Wait, you have to turn it to watch videos? Whatever, I do this on iPhone and it’s not a big deal.
  8. Installing the Zune sucks.
  9. You can’t use real money in the Zune Marketplace. You have to buy blocks of points (79 points equals 99 cents - easy conversion, right?) in increments of $10 (starting at $5 for 400 points). How much music do you have to buy to totally use up all your points? I won’t do the math, but the answer is: A lot.
  10. The application crashes all the time. Hopefully not anymore!
  11. If you buy a subscription plan (something like $15 a month lets you listen to unlimited tracks - though you can’t burn them to disc or keep them if you stop your subscription), certain tracks from what sounds like a lot of albums aren’t available. Meaning, you need to plop down at least five bucks to purchase the popular tunes individually. That is not cool. EDIT: I have no gripe about the subscription model - lots of places do it like that. But disabling certain songs unless you purchase them individually is not cool.
  12. None of the songs you bought in the iTunes store are playable on the Zune.
  13. None of the songs you bought for other players via Microsoft’s OWN PlayForSure format are playable on the Zune. This is absolutely insane.
  14. It doesn’t have calendars, contacts, podcasts, notes, games, etc. Not that I use those, but for some people those things are big. Sound the sirens! Zune supports podcasts!
  15. Lots of the album art is too small for the screen, and it looks bad when scaled.
  16. No Mac support. I suppose it could work if you have a new one and can boot XP from it. But I’m not sure about that. This is an oversight that goes way beyond competition, and way beyond PC marketshare. There’s a lot of potential users (Zunies? Zunesters? Zuners? Zunesketeers?) who happen to use Macs at home, and may have older-gen iPods and looking for a replacement. And what about all the people who have recently switched to Mac after trying and loving an iPod? Doesn’t MS want to win them back? Guess not.
  17. No small version. The iPod Nano is the biggest selling mp3 player, and the iPod didn’t really start to take off until the Mini was released. Why couldn’t Microsoft have developed a cute little device for the kiddies?
  18. EDIT: No true smart playlists. Way to give power users the boot. I guess these are just ultra-hidden.
EDIT - I just read this on O’Reilly:

Feel uncomfortable with Microsoft's watching your every move in Zune? Opt out. Say "No." Stand up for your rights.

Unless you make the affirmative choice to keep Microsoft out, you are by default enrolled in Microsoft's "Zune Customer Experience Improvement Program." This program assumes you want to improve Microsoft's bottom line (and nosiness) by allowing it to monitor your Zune software usage.

There’s more, but for now I think that will suffice. Maybe if I actually try one out I’ll post some more thoughts. Ultimately, I think this is a case of too little - too late (again). Microsoft has introduced another line of less-functional, less powerful versions of a mega-popular product, and included basically no innovations only one innovation that is seriously crippled to begin with! If they had truly wanted to compete with Apple for a share of the market, we should have seen a cool-looking device (the new ones look much better than the first generation, but that’s only because they look a lot more like iPods now) that offered more disk space with a slimmer profile, better syncing, more options and features, even cheaper music(!) and eliminated some of the crazy DRM that pisses me off about Apple from time to time. Instead MS has agreed to pay Universal a dollar for every Zune sold. Clearly they aren’t bending over backwards for the consumers (as Apple appears to do by fighting to keep prices stable) - it looks like the opposite, in fact, and anything that doesn’t immediately suggest that Microsoft is a full year or more behind Apple and playing a ridiculously flawed game of catch-up.

Please don’t get anyone a Zune for Christmas. If they ask for one (which they might, poor souls), say it is too much money (which it is) and buy them something else cool. Then, sneak a fabulous iPod Shuffle in their stocking (only $79 and awesome! I’ve touched it, so I know.) Really. Don’t make this a bad Christmas for anyone.

Buying a Zune = Coal in your stocking next year and Baby Jesus Crying.

Still true. Don’t be tempted.

01 October 2007

New Zunes Tomorrow? Wednesday?

Apple better look out!

Wait, except they’re just being announced on Wednesday. The probably won’t be available until sometime in 2011. Or 2012. Or the release of Vista SP1. Whichever comes later.

27 August 2007

This Explains A Lot: Zune Edition

From FSJ reader Sam: (Here is something to help explain that, if necessary)

And as an extra bonus, here’s an iPhone Wallpaper that I made (and which I am using right now):

29 June 2007

iPhone Google Search Trends

People seem to really be grasping for reasons not to buy an iPhone.

Take a look at my referring keywords from Google Search this morning:



Notice any trends?

The only surprise for me is that someone is still considering purchasing a Zune (when is the next generation due, by the way?). Luckily Frivolous Motion has a handful of classic posts that will quickly convince her otherwise.

Bonus Google Search Tip!

If you want to search for something like above, but aren’t sure how many reasons there are, type in the following: “* reasons not to buy iphone” (don’t forget the asterisk, which acts as a wild card and tells Google to find something appropriate for that space). Also great for words within a phrase that you might have forgotten.

20 June 2007

100 Reasons Not To Buy An iPhone

Yeah, this is painful for me, too.

  1. Price - $499 or $599 with a 2-year who-knows-how-much data plan.
  2. AT&T - Which wireless company sucks the most? Some say it’s these guys.
  3. EDGE - Instead of faster 3G technology. If you don’t have Wi-Fi hotspots, you’re kinda screwed.
  4. No Flash - This means it’s not the “real” make-you-have-a-seizure Web.
  5. No Java - This has something to do with coffee but I don’t really get it.
  6. No iChat - I guess some people still aren’t cool enough to use GMail.
  7. iTunes Lock-in - Oh wait, I forgot you don’t pay for your music.
  8. No Keyboard - This means it’s hard to type.
  9. Screen - It will be hard to see in daylight.
  10. No Office - Lack of MSWord makes me cry.
  11. No Real Apps - Because I, unlike most people, actually know the difference.
  12. Smudges - My fingers are way greasy.
  13. Scratches - I can’t keep my keys away.
  14. No Games - Well there’s that rumor about Nintendo, but otherwise, what am I supposed to do with this thing?
  15. No Song Sharing - You mean the Zune is better than the iPhone?
  16. Ugly - I don’t like shiny.
  17. No Mirror - Can’t really take emo self-portraits now can I?
  18. No Yahoo Maps - Because even though Google Maps is better, where’s the choice? Fascist!
  19. aka Jesus Phone - Uh...discrimination against Jews.
  20. I’m Fat - Okay, I’m not, but what if you are?
  21. Only 4 or 8 GB - My por...ahem...my music collection is much too large.
  22. Viruses - I can browse to a site that could infect my iPhone, and when I sync it to my PC I’ll get a virus. Sure, I could avoid that site like I do on my home computer, but still!
  23. No Wi-Fi Downloads - I absolutely MUST be able to listen to Shakira at a moment’s notice!
  24. I Have A Phone - It was only $30 and works just fine.
  25. I Have An iPod - It’s an 8GB Nano and works just fine.
  26. I Have An Internet - So there.
  27. Touch Screen Sucks - No one has ever made a good touchscreen. No reason to think they’d start now.
  28. Apple’s Never Made A Phone - WTF do they know? Nokia, Samsung, etc have been making phones for years now and they still suck - how could Apple possibly do better?
  29. I Use T-Mobile - Switching to AT&T costs money.
  30. No Internet Underground - Taking the subway to work means no online access when I’d most want to use it.
  31. Lack Of Tactile Feedback - Means I can’t text while driving. Cause that’s a good idea.
  32. Sealed Battery - I can’t change it myself. Lame.
  33. Too Big - I like my itty bitty Nano, thank you very much.
  34. Ajax Sucks - It is the scourge of the Internet
  35. The Zune Is Cooler
  36. The Zune Is Cooler
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Got any more? I need someone to pull me back. I’m afraid I can’t resist on my own...

08 December 2006

Way Prettier Than The Zune


My, today is a big day for this blog. There’s a ton of activity surrounding my recent Zune story, with a bunch of comments here and on Digg. As well, some kind folk have posted links to my other Zune articles on Zune Complaints.

And now for something completely different...

The great guys at 37 Signals have posted some pictures from Hemmy.net of this gorgeous creature I had no idea existed. It is a glasswing butterfly. Check out these pictures then head over to Hemmy to see the rest. Really, really gorgeous.

06 December 2006

I Touched the Zune. Still Washing My Hands.


I can’t believe I haven’t yet mentioned that I have touched a Microsoft Zune. It happened at Target the Saturday following Thanksgiving. I happened to be browsing the electronics section, looking for some CD-R discs and a possible Christmas gift for my brother, when I saw it. It had its own little end-of-aisle display between the Nintendo Wii and one of the thousands of iPod docking stations available.

There was a family checking it out. The father seemed interested, and I had just seen a Target employee talking it up to them (clearly there is some employee incentive program related to selling the Zune). I thought it might be my duty to dissuade the family from a regrettable purchase.

My girlfriend was with me, and somehow without exchanging words, we knew what we had to do. Immediately we walked up to the display. “Is that the Zune? Oh man, it is HUGE. Jesus, that thing is ugly!” and so on. I touched it - touched the Zune. It was the black model, which, oddly, is not black, but an ugly muted, rubbery dark grey, with a weird ghost-like blue outline under the semi-transparent outer edges. The controls were weird, too, and I suppose with time one could get used to them, but in the moment I was flabbergasted that the circular pad didn’t scroll. I KNEW it wouldn’t, but I could not stop myself from trying. And then exclaiming, “Man this sucks, why won’t it scroll?” The whole time the family was standing there, watching and listening. (Yeah, I should’ve used cleaner language with kids around, I know - but this was serious.)

Then came the icing. Tina pulled out her brand-spankin’ new iPod Shuffle, which is like the size of four stacked quarters, and she held it up to the Zune. I’ve never seen jaws drop so low. The young daughter and her teenaged brother were like, “Whoa.” And the mother seemed pleased as well. “Is that the Shuffle?” she asked. “Oh yeah, it is awesome. And so small.” She was obviously pleased to see her children interested in something far less than $250. Her husband’s bubble seemed to burst audibly at her question. We smiled. Shook our heads at the Zune, and walked off. Still smiling.

Our work was done.

Related Posts

21 November 2006

Hotdogs and Metaphor

Steve has a successful hotdog stand. Very successful, as a matter of fact. His stand sells over 106,000 hotdogs a day worldwide. These are simple hotdogs. They look and taste great, and offer all the essentials as far as hotdogs go - bun, ketchup, mustard, even sauerkraut and onions if you’d like. And they come in several sizes to suit your hunger. Steve is expecting to sell close to 20 million hotdogs in the Holiday quarter alone, because it is the time of year that family and friends get together and buy hotdogs for each other in a beautiful display of community.

Now, just when Steve is sitting pretty and reportedly enjoying sugar-plum fairy thoughts of extending his hotdog reign even further in the New Year by teaming up with wireless carriers like T-Mobile and Cingular, a challenger emerges.

This upstart isn’t exactly a New Kid on the Block, either. Bill, as our challenger is known, has a mega-successful hamburger business that puts Steve’s small beef operation to shame (at least when it comes to worldwide sales figures and market share), but his business has recently been plagued by the E-Coli bacteria and Mad Cow, and consumer trust in his brand has diminished. Bill hasn’t been too successful in the hotdog realm so far, but sees Steve’s continued dominance in this area to be a threat and wants to take a bite out of the very lucrative pie Steve has more-or-less created from scratch.

Seeing the holiday season approaching, Bill introduces his new product. It is a single hot-dog, equal in price and size to Steve's mid-sized frank, and includes all the requisite fixings. The wow factor - the thing that Bill hopes will push his dogs over the top - is a simple sharing feature. All customers of his hot dogs will be able to share their hotdogs with others who also have a Bill Dog. People are impressed with this innovation, simple as it may be, but in practice it fails to impress because there is just not a large enough customer pool to sustain it. It is simply too difficult to find someone with which to share. And even harder to find another individual with any sort of “taste,” after all. Further, it nearly goes without saying that the lack of a lower-priced, cocktail-sized frank (by far Steve's best selling dog) really hurts Bill’s chances. Given the commanding lead Steve has in this market, it is a real uphill battle for Bill, especially given the limits on the single innovation he brings to the field.

What, after all, could Bill do if Steve decided to add the sharing feature to his line of wieners? With the market penetration Steve currently has (and imagine after the holidays!) hardly a day goes by when one doesn’t see a dozen or more people on the street holding their Steve Dogs and bouncing along happily.

In the end, it seems as though Bill has made another misstep in his competition with Steve by introducing a new product and entering a new industry at a time when he might have been better off focusing on improving his other offerings and reclaiming his good name in the hamburger world.

How will this story end? Only time will tell.

What are your thoughts?

17 November 2006

Reasons Not To Get A Zune This Christmas

I am back to work this morning after a three-day sick leave and boy am I glad. This week has been pretty awful, between the sickness, cutting my own toe with glass by scratching it with my other foot, my iBook dying last night (I think the hard drive failed), missing the TechCrunch party yesterday, and the Zune release. The only good things I have to go on are Jaeda finally being eliminated from America’s Next Top Model (though Caridee was in the bottom two, which really sucked!), and watching the movie Slither last night, which was awesome.

But speaking of the Zune, it is now time for all the reasons NOT to buy (or ask for) one this Christmas.

First, a little primer: This week Microsoft released their Zune music player in order to directly compete with Apple’s commanding lead in the personal audio market. They want some of that big, big pie that Apple made not too many years ago, and has, for the most part, kept all to itself. The Zune is the most recent in the long list of supposed “iPod Killers”, and honestly, if any company could kill the iPod, it would probably be Microsoft. But never fear Apple faithful - I simply do not see that happening anytime soon. But we haven’t reached the commentary phase yet. I am still being objective. So back to the point - what is the Zune? Simply put, it is a portable music player that comes with a 30GB hard drive. It has a three-inch color screen, plays video, shows your photos, and allows Wi-Fi transferring of songs to other Zune players nearby. The Zune comes in three colors - white, black, and brown, and is controlled by what looks like an iPod clickwheel, but is actually just four directional buttons on a circular disc. Microsoft has created the Zune Marketplace - like the iTunes Store - for purchasing your music (and later, movies). There is also jukebox/syncing software that lets you manage playlists and listen to music on your PC (it is not currently Mac-compatible). Oh, and FM radio, I guess. Woo.

Okay, enough of the unbiased discription. Now is where the review part of the review happens. (Disclosure: I do not have a Zune. I have not seen or touched one in person. If you want to send me one to do a more proper “review” please go right ahead. I can be contacted at kevinmichaelkeating AT gmail DOT com. What this means is I am speaking nothing but the truth. Buy a Zune at your own risk, but not after reading this review all the way through. If you don’t, you will regret it. And, even if you do read it, and decide “Hey, it doesn’t sound that bad,” you’ll probably regret it.

So here goes. I am now going to abandon paragraphs and things for the super-popular list format.

  1. Brown? What?!! What kind of retro-hipster freaks are you targeting Brown to? Are you planning on making Zune the “Official Media Player of the UPS” for crying out loud?! Eww.
  2. It is bigger than the current iPod (even compared to the 80GB version).
  3. It is heavier than the current iPod (even compared to the 80GB version).
  4. It has a shorter battery life than the current iPod (which doesn’t even begin to approach the 24-hour life of the new iPod Nano).
  5. Crippled Wi-Fi sharing that restricts shared music to three plays or three days before deactivating and prompting you to purchase it. This applies even if you are the artist who recorded the song and want to share it with your Zune-carrying friends.
    Corollary to 5: Where are you going to find someone else with a Zune so that you can share? Are you seriously going to approach a stranger and try to send them the newest Timberlake tune? Do you want that random guy/girl on the subway to punch you in the face? (Worst pickup line of the new millenium: Is that a Zune in your pocket...) But seriously, for Microsoft to make the main feature of the device (the file sharing) something that relies completely on the device becoming ubiquitous is a major gamble. Without it, the Zune is basically a bigger, less pretty, and more socially irresponsible iPod.
  6. What looks like a clickwheel ain’t a clickwheel. It is a multidirectional click pad (four poles, plus center) that works in a context-sensitive way. What does that mean? It means that you won’t always know what to push to do what you want. Sometimes left will go back a song, sometimes it might changes menus, sometimes it might vote for Al Gore. Not cool. And because you have to flip the player on its side to watch video, that means the directions switch by 90 degrees. Confused yet?
  7. Wait, you have to turn it to watch videos?
  8. Installing the Zune sucks.
  9. You can’t use real money in the Zune Marketplace. You have to buy blocks of points (79 points equals 99 cents - easy conversion, right?) in increments of $10 (starting at $5 for 400 points). How much music do you have to buy to totally use up all your points? I won’t do the math, but the answer is: A lot.
  10. The application crashes all the time.
  11. If you buy a subscription plan (something like $15 a month lets you listen to unlimited tracks - though you can’t burn them to disc or keep them if you stop your subscription), certain tracks from what sounds like a lot of albums aren’t available. Meaning, you need to plop down at least five bucks to purchase the popular tunes individually. That is not cool. EDIT: I have no gripe about the subscription model - lots of places do it like that. But disabling certain songs unless you purchase them individually is not cool.
  12. None of the songs you bought in the iTunes store are playable on the Zune.
  13. None of the songs you bought for other players via Microsoft’s OWN PlayForSure format are playable on the Zune. This is absolutely insane.
  14. It doesn’t have calendars, contacts, podcasts, notes, games, etc. Not that I use those, but for some people those things are big.
  15. Lots of the album art is too small for the screen, and it looks bad when scaled.
  16. No Mac support. I suppose it could work if you have a new one and can boot XP from it. But I’m not sure about that. This is an oversight that goes way beyond competition, and way beyond PC marketshare. There’s a lot of potential users (Zunies? Zunesters? Zuners? Zunesketeers?) who happen to use Macs at home, and may have older-gen iPods and looking for a replacement. And what about all the people who have recently switched to Mac after trying and loving an iPod? Doesn’t MS want to win them back? Guess not.
  17. No small version. The iPod Nano is the biggest selling mp3 player, and the iPod didn’t really start to take off until the Mini was released. Why couldn’t Microsoft have developed a cute little device for the kiddies?
  18. EDIT: No true smart playlists. Way to give power users the boot. I guess these are just ultra-hidden.
EDIT - I just read this on O’Reilly:

Feel uncomfortable with Microsoft's watching your every move in Zune? Opt out. Say "No." Stand up for your rights.

Unless you make the affirmative choice to keep Microsoft out, you are by default enrolled in Microsoft's "Zune Customer Experience Improvement Program." This program assumes you want to improve Microsoft's bottom line (and nosiness) by allowing it to monitor your Zune software usage.

There’s more, but for now I think that will suffice. Maybe if I actually try one out I’ll post some more thoughts. Ultimately, I think this is a case of too little - too late. Microsoft has introduced a less-functional, less powerful version of a mega-popular product, and included only one innovation that is seriously crippled to begin with! If they had truly wanted to compete with Apple for a share of the market, we should have seen a cool-looking device that offered more disk space with a slimmer profile, better syncing, more options and features, even cheaper music(!) and eliminated some of the crazy DRM that pisses me off about Apple from time to time. Instead MS has agreed to pay Universal a dollar for every Zune sold. Clearly they aren’t bending over backwards for the consumers (as Apple appears to do by fighting to keep prices stable) - it looks like the opposite, in fact.

Please don’t get anyone a Zune for Christmas. If they ask for one (which they might, poor souls), say it is too much money (which it is) and buy them something else cool. Then, sneak a fabulous iPod Shuffle in their stocking (only $79 and awesome! I’ve touched it, so I know.) Really. Don’t make this a bad Christmas for anyone.

Buying a Zune = Coal in your stocking next year and Baby Jesus Crying

If any of you lovely readers happen upon one, let me know what you think! Disagree? Let me have it in the comments!

Thanks to Engadget, TUAW, TechCrunch, Digg, David Pogue and lots of other sites and writers whose previews and reviews I’ve read and cite as influences of this post.

16 November 2006

Quick Zune Awesomeness While I Am Recovering

“Buying a Zune is like shitting in your hand!”