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Review on MP3 Player DIGMA R3 8Gb 8GB, black by Petar Lyubenov ᠌

Revainrating 5 out of 5

Great value for money, one of the best offers.

After the death of my Sony B183F, I began searching for a suitable replacement. I believe that the Digma R3 is more than deserving of it. I will give first place to the iRiver player-building flagship because of the sheer number of people I had, and this one will take second place. PS Yes, I will lift the veil of mystery that everyone is concerned about: the player plays while charging. In order to do this, with the charger connected, you need to click the menu (M) button, and then, voila, you come to the main menu and can start playback!

Pros
  • Unusually level-headed and sensible player. Sound quality that is acceptable, as well as superfluous equalizer presets (for electronic music, "rock" or "jazz" works well). At least the Samsung EVO model supports 128GB storage cards. When the player is in the pause mode, you can switch between memories. If the player is not paused, you will not see this menu option. It is best to make a playlist with the player so that the "resume" function (the playback stop point) works correctly. All it takes is a couple of on pushes. The following tags are currently being displayed on the screen: author, song, and album. If you want to be able to view the name of the file, you will need to get rid of the tags and keep only the track number. The memory is organized into folders. Folders can be viewed using the menu that is internal to (paused) memory that is external. 256 is the maximum number of files that can be contained within a folder. In flash drive mode, the write speed is approximately 3–5 MB per second, and the reading speed is 7–10 MB per second. The menu provides the option to remove a single file or all of them. The playback stop point is not reset after successfully connecting to a personal computer and recording new files. You don't need to turn off the player; simply pause it, and after XX (us is traversed) seconds, it will be disabled (again, the breakpoint will be saved). This is a handy feature that saves you from having to turn off the player.
Cons
  • It would be wonderful if, when you switch the player off and then back on again, it remembered its previous state (the radio, the player, etc.) rather than simply loading the menu. It turns out that when you turned it on, a menu appeared, with the music item (well, it's the first one), but you still needed to push the Play button (although, as I mentioned earlier, it starts playing as soon as it stops). The list of files is displayed not by their names but rather by the recording timestamps; this is a feature that is common across flash players and is handled by the creation of a playlist.