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Portable multimedia

By Mark Gibbs, Network World
April 10, 2006 12:06 AM ET
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Last week BackSpin touched on the immense pain in the butt that having content in a proprietary format can be if you want to use it on a system that doesn't support that format.

As was pointed out, should you want to play your iTunes digital rights management-protected music on players that aren't iPods you are SOL unless you want to jump through hoops such as burning an audio CD and ripping the tracks to MP3 or whatever format you need.

We have looked for an alternative and only found tools that work with pre-iTunes 6-protected files, or that resort to using iTunes to play the file and grab the sound card output and save it in a file. If you know a way to convert protected iTunes 6 files to another format, let us know.

The reason we want to know is that we just got our hands on a Wolverine MVP 60GB Portable Multimedia Storage and Player, and we wanted to load some music we just purchased from iTunes so we could be entertained on our next airplane flight. Unless you guys come up with something we'll have to resort to our old content.

The Wolverine weighs 10 ounces, sports a good-quality, 2.5-inch, 720-by-480-pixel color LCD (pictures and movies look very good, and video at up to 30 frames per second is smooth), and has a USB 2.0 interface for uploading and downloading content. The Wolverine MVP claims to have a battery life that will transfer 20GB of data, eight hours of music playback, or three and a half hours of video playback on a single charge, but so far we haven't managed to use it for more than four hours at a stretch.

Physically the Wolverine is a little on the large side (5.04 by 3.01 by 1.2 inches). The front face contains the screen and controls - power on and off, escape and menu buttons along with a joystick.

The Wolverine is, to say the least, versatile. It can display text files, photos (JPEG, TIFF, BMP and some RAW formats), play videos (Motion-JPEG, MPEG-1, MPEG-4 and xvid), and play audio content (MP3, WMA, AAC and WAV) as well as record audio.

For anyone who needs to back up memory cards the Wolverine is really useful. It has slots for seven types of media: Compact Flash, 3.3V MicroDrive, Secure Digital, Multimedia Card, Memory Stick and Memory Stick Pro, Smart Media and XD. When a memory card is inserted the Wolverine automatically recognizes it and pops up a menu offering to back up the entire card or just the image files on it.

Two card slots (SM and SD/MMC/MS) are located on the left side of the Wolverine, along with a remote-control infrared sensor port (it comes with a remote control), a thumbwheel for photo zoom or volume, depending on the content being displayed, a mini-USB port, and an AC power socket. The right side houses a Compact Flash/MicroDrive socket (under a rubber cover) along with sockets for audio in, audio out, and composite video out (you can select either phase-altering line or National Television Standard Code output).

Aesthetically there isn't much. The Wolverine is ugly. Its color is described as "Ferrari red," which is not quite accurate - a loud, cheap plastic red would be more accurate.

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