Kingston K-PEX Portable Media Player (2GB) review

In this review

On the K-PEX's left spine is the USB port. Unfortunately, it's a nonstandard port, so you can't just use any old cable. More positive is the miniSD slot on the right spine, where you can expand the K-PEX's capacity to up to 1GB. Bundled with the player are earbuds, a nonstandard USB cable, a USB host cable, a rubbery protective case, and a software CD.

Kingston K-PEX
The K-PEX's bundled accessories: the K-PEX is sheathed in its rubber case

Kingston K-PEX
An expansion card slot is always a plus. The K-PEX has a miniSD card slot

The K-PEX user interface has a notably old-school feel that reminds us of earlier Archos products -- you can even change the font to one of 12 Windows 3.1-style colours. The playback screen is packed with file and setting info and ID3 tag info scrolls across the screen. One should note that this UMS device is folder based (ideal for those who can neatly organise their music), so you can't browse for tracks by song or album.

Features
The K-PEX can do almost anything. It can play back MP3, protected WMA (but not subscription), OGG and WAV audio files. It can play back video as well as photos with background music. It's a USB host, so you can offload images from a digital camera, it can be used as a text viewer, it has an FM tuner, it's a line-in and voice recorder, and finally, it plays games. The device even has a built-in mono speaker located on the back.

What it can't do is record video and record from FM. In addition, you must use the bundled software, which supports AVI, MPEG-1 and -2 and WMV, to transcode any video file so that it works on the player. Still, this USB mass-storage device packs plenty of power into a small space.

Performance
Performance is mostly positive. Bootup time is lengthy (30 seconds), though system navigation is mostly hiccup free. We did notice an audible pop when we backed out of the playback screen into the current music folder, and we did notice a firmware bug that skips you to the next track when you press the reverse button (hitting reverse again will take you where you wanted).

Photos and video look nice on the TFT display, though larger photos will take a bit of time to render on the screen. Though you won't get thumbnail views, there is a standard slide-show mode. The Windows-only Kingston MPEG transcoder software is a lightweight drag-and-drop utility that works well enough. Transcoded files have the .mpx extension. Our collection of unprotected WMVs worked fine, though we had trouble with one of our standard AVI files.

We're pretty pleased with the sound quality, which was comparable to our Creative Zen Vision:M. We're also fans of the real-time equalisers. The included earphones aren't shabby, either. Battery life is rated for 17 hours per charge playing audio.

Additional editing by Nick Hide

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