Performance
Fortunately, these inadequacies are overshadowed by the A829's amazing
sound quality. It really is one of the best-sounding players we've ever
heard. It's on par with offerings from Creative and Cowon and Sony's signature bass-heaviness is immediately apparent through our Denon AH-D5000 reference headphones.
A deep, warm tone underneath Ingrid Michaelson's beautiful song Masochist was our first clue that we were dealing with a sonically impressive player, and the clarity and power with which the rest of the song was delivered sealed the deal. The same can be said for Linkin Park's unusually mellow and U2-esque track Shadow Of The Day. It was full of detail and depth -- just what we were hoping from Sony's expensive Walkman.
The same cannot be said for video. While the player is full of potential -- thanks to the great screen and H.264 support -- it was almost impossible to get video on to the player as a result of the strict properties it requires for video files. We were very confused, and it took hours of trial and error with four different software packages. We finally succeeded and the results were terrific. Video is crisp, smooth and easily comparable to the iPod nano -- but you'll work much harder than necessary to get it.
Finally, battery life is rated at 36 hours for audio and 10 hours of video. Check back soon for our update about whether we achieved these figures in our tests.
Conclusion
Sony's NWZ-A829 is a terrific player and
easily one of our favourites of the year so far, despite being very expensive. It blew us away with
its stellar audio performance and screen quality, and it's beautifully
designed and easy to use as well. It's unfortunate that its awkward
video support was a major turn-off, and we're certainly frowning upon the removal of the bundled Bluetooth headphones.
We'd say that Apple's iPod nano is marginally easier to use and offers simpler video functionality. It's more affordable, too. Also consider Creative's Zen if you still want the same memory for half the cost, and iRiver's Clix 2 offers a few extra features over the Sony. All of these are at the expense of the Bluetooth capability, though.
Edited by Jason Jenkins
Additional editing by Shannon Doubleday
User reviews2
Add your review
musicmmonster 7 January 2009
Good: Individual Bass Setting
Bad: No Gapless Playback
Comment: Just purchased this player only to find out sony have dropped ATRAC codec (only in europe I believe) which allowed gapless play. Being a big fan of compilations I found this very disapointing not being able to listen to one song mix into another. Never the less, I plugged it in, ripped some tunes and the sound quality was amazing! The standard heaphones are great and there is no need to upgrade! Bluetooth can be long winded to end or pair. Why no ATRAC or line out SONY?
richard aitken 23 September 2008
Good: Excellent sound and picture quality
Bad: Problems with converting video files
Comment: This product is now under £200. Sony say they don't bundle the bluetooth headset to keep the price down. Try any video converter to convert the files, it is free and easy to use.
See all 2 user reviews