Typical price: £250
What is it: MP3 player with video playback and 30GB hard drive
What we think: A spectacular player. Video lovers finally have a truly portable and functional device for watching full-length movies on the move
Creative Zen Vision:M (30GB) Review
Reviewed on: 23 January 2006
The shameful truth, whispered between electrical engineers in hermetically sealed corridors, is that MP3 players are measured not only by their own worth, but how they compare to the market leader. It's impossible for a consumer to ignore the comparison, so we won't pretend the Creative Zen Vision:M exists in a vacuum.
The Zen Vision:M has received an extremely warm reception from critics. Though it's not as small as the new iPod, and its interface doesn't trump the Clickwheel, the 30GB Zen Vision:M is a real video player -- while on the iPod, video remains a novelty. The difficulty iPod users face in transferring full-length video, and the limited video-playback battery life of the iPod, make the Zen Vision:M a much more viable choice for video on the move.
If you're disappointed by the new iPod's limited video functionality, and want an almost iPod-sized portable video player, this is it. Many of the features on the Zen Vision:M match those you'd find on a dedicated portable PVR like those from Archos. The iPod may be slightly cheaper at £219 (for the 30GB version) to the Zen Vision:M's £250, but Apple only dips its toes in the video shallows, whereas Creative has taken a determined cliff-dive into the waters. So, could this be the video MP3 player we've been waiting for?
Design
The Zen Vision:M has exactly the same footprint as the iPod, but is thicker than its rival by 7mm -- making it easy to slip into your pocket, but not quite as svelte as Apple's player. It's also a barely-perceptible 3g heavier. The screens on both players are identically sized, but a big difference reveals itself when the Zen Vision:M is switched on: it has a 262k colour screen, where the iPod can only display a paltry 64k.
This is the first clue about the Zen Vision:M's more serious AV intentions; the second is the video cable Creative sent us. This allows you to stream video from the Zen Vision:M onto a full-sized television screen. Apple's AV cable is an extra £15, and the resolution of iPod-formatted video is so low you wouldn't want to watch it on TV anyway. The Zen Vision:M's cable attaches to the slim port in the base of the player.
At the base of the player there's an ominous reset button, and on the top edge there's a power on/hold button and a standard headphone socket. The coating on the Zen Vision:M is no more scratch resistant than the iPod's. Although neither player is as volatile as the notorious iPod nano, you'd be advised to carry it in a pouch. After two weeks of fairly casual treatment, the Zen Vision:M was covered in fine scratches, but this is true of every glossy consumer electronic device, from the PSP to mobile phones.
The Zen Vision:M uses mechanical buttons and a central thumb pad to navigate tracks. This leaves the front panel looking less integrated than the iPod's. Apple's patent on the Clickwheel system means the challenge is still on for another manufacturer to design a more intuitive system. Creative's thumb-pad is good, but not perfect -- more on that later.
Features
The menus on the Zen Vision:M will be familiar to anyone who's used a Creative media player before, or indeed an iPod. They're easy to navigate, using a simple hierarchical structure where clicking on an item opens up a series of further items -- pictures, songs or videos.
There's also the option to instantly jump forward to files, based on the first letter of their title. As your library expands to an unwieldy maximum of around 15,000 tracks (WMA), or 120 hours of video, this becomes increasingly useful.
Transferring files to the player is done either via Windows Media Player 10 or through Creative's proprietary software, Zen Vision:M Media Explorer. The majority of users will opt for Windows Media Player, since this is well integrated with the Windows OS. This will, however, restrict you to using the WMA format, which is debatably inferior to high-bit-rate MP3.
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