Califone Personal Media Player 8101

I found a nice, new tech tool for all those budding podcasters out there: The Califone Personal Media Player 8101. No, it’s not as cool-looking as an iPod, but it is extremely functional. Here’s my quick pros / cons list, for a more in-depth review, scroll down a bit:

Pros:

  • Battery Life is excellent – upwards of 6 to 8 hours recording/playing time, if not more. (I never was able to run it all the way down!)
  • Two headphone jacks – no splitter needed for use with two students.
  • Memory/storage – built-in 512 megabytes plus an SD card slot for expansion.
  • Light – it’s a little larger than I’d like, but the unit is very light.
  • Recording – built-in microphone for recording podcasts, lectures, interviews, etc.

Cons: my only beef is that the recording quality could be bit better.

 

In-depth review: The Califone 8101 experience:

Unpacked – includes USB cable, headphones, and unit. Great!

First impressions – Good size, for smaller or larger hands. Buttons clearly marked and easy to figure out what functionality is. Very light for its size. Headphones acceptable and have volume adjustment for independent levels.

Instructions: no ‘step-by-step’ that teachers would appreciate, but then again I really didn’t need it. You plug it into your computer, it recognized it and started charging.


Manual – nice size, but type is SMALL! I’m only 39 and I had some problems focusing on the micro-sized type.
Note to Califone: PLEASE increase your font size!

Recording: recorded for an hour, didn’t miss a beat and I don’t see any wear on the battery. Already better battery life than 30gig iPod for recording – might be because of no moving parts – flash memory vs. HD. Audio quality is OK. I wish the sample rate was just a bit higher than 8kHz. Bitrate of 32bps works – mono is fine since it only has one microphone. The WAV format is nice. 1 hour = 14.megs – nice sizing. Still says I have 69 hours left on my 1gig SD card. My first recording try was in a meeting. Two ‘low-volume’ talkers and one more boisterous person. I would suggest positioning the device strategically for the volume of each person’s voice as there is no ‘auto-gain’ available. You can’t win them all.

I took the recorder to several venues including very large, auditorium spaces as well as small, conference room spaces to test it out. While it did pick up sound in the larger areas, recording quality was much better in the smaller venues like a conference room or an interview situation. The quality of the recording isn’t up to par like an iPod/Belkin Tune Talk combination, but if you are careful about placement and background noise, you can get acceptable recordings from this device – and with just a little tweak here and there in Audacity (or your favorite audio editing program) you can make good-sounding recordings.

Another bonus: it has a removable SD card so you can expand the built-in 512 megs of storage space. It’s simple to use as both the internal memory shows up as individual drives on your computer. To load it up with your favorite music or audio book just takes a drag of the audio files onto the card or internal storage.

Overall, the Califone mp3 player is a great little device. I would certainly recommend it to anyone needing an ‘all-in-one’ recorder/player. While I’m not 100% pleased with the audio recording quality, I am astounded by the battery life – it’s incredible! (I didn’t run it all the way down, but I was able to record at least 6 to 8 hours on a single charge.)

This device is worth checking out.

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14 Responses to “Califone Personal Media Player 8101”

  1. Jamie Pheno says:

    While the product is somewhat different than other offerings, I was rather shocked at the high retail price tag.

    Also, they advertise some sore of output limit of 85 dB to protect children’s ears. You did not comment on this feature.

    Your thoughts?

    Thanks,
    Jamie

  2. k12dave says:

    Hi Jamie,

    While I really like this gizmo, it certainly ain’t perfect. The recording quality does leave a bit to be desired. It’s no where near the iPod + Belkin Tune Talk Stereo combination. However, even the cheapest iPod Nano is $150 + $50 for the Belkin… so you are already looking at $200+ if you want to add a splitter to it.

    The Califone 8101 is only about $100. You can find it for just under that at the link below.
    https://www.schooloutfitters.com/catalog/product_info?pfam_id=PFAM3812&products_id=PRO11496

    As for the hearing protection: it seem to work. I’m no scientist so I don’t know what levels are acceptable, etc. for this sort of thing – but when I turned on that feature, it worked.

    I have no use for it though – I like my Ozzie LOUD. ;)

  3. Kerry says:

    Jamie,

    When comparing prices, keep in mind that the Califone 8101 comes with a one year warranty… while many other MP3 players will have just a 30 or 60 day warranty.

  4. Kim says:

    Have you had any problems importing the WAV files into iTunes? I was able to import to iTunes and then to Garageband (after converting it to an MP3 file in iTunes) in July with a preview model.
    We purchased some over the summer (from Camcor, Inc. – great price) and now I can’t get the files to open in iTunes. I can get them to open in PowerPoint, though.
    We are really excited to use them (K-5 school.)

  5. k12dave says:

    No, I haven’t. Though I normally open them in Audacity and do my editing there, then export them as MP3s.

    I’m not sure I understand what you mean by ‘open’ the files in iTunes. Normally I drag audio files (such as WAVs) into my iTunes library. I can then play them in iTunes, or convert them into other formats, then drag them out to the desktop. Is that what you mean?

  6. Tony says:

    Jamie,

    There is one feature on the iPod (using GarageBand) that we find very useful when students listen to recorded tests and exams… the ability to create a “chapter” for each question of the test so students can easily return to a previous question. Does the 8101 have this capability? Does any PC MP3 player have this capability?

  7. k12dave says:

    I think the iPod may be the only device that uses that ‘enhanced’ type of podcast – but I could be wrong. If anyone knows of a device, hopefully they’ll post it here.

    As far as I know, the 8101 doesn’t have that option – it’s actually a product of the type of file created on the Apple platform’s enhanced podcast files. (I believe they are .m4p files.)

  8. canli izle says:

    The Califone MP3 player has been selected for inclusion in the “2008 Readers’ Choice Top 100 Products” annual survey. I have one and strongly reccomend.

    canli izles last blog post..261 Metreden İstanbul

  9. Macbook says:

    Looks and sounds like an awesome little gadgets.

    Might give it a look.

    :)

    Thanks

  10. amator says:

    Yeah ” When comparing prices, keep in mind that the Califone 8101 comes with a one year warranty… while many other MP3 players will have just a 30 or 60 day warranty. ” ;)

  11. amator says:

    Yeah ” When comparing prices, keep in mind that the Califone 8101 comes with a one year warranty… while many other MP3 players will have just a 30 or 60 day warranty. ” ;)

  12. fatih says:

    Yeah ” When comparing prices, keep in mind that the Califone 8101 comes with a one year warranty… while many other MP3 players will have just a 30 or 60 day warranty. ”

  13. Nice gadget, but I love my ipod. nothing beats that to be honest.

  14. It looks a little too big and bulky to me, especially at today’s standards. If I get past the looks, it doesn’t seem like a bad product.

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