Ihr Warenkorb ist leer
Ihr Warenkorb ist leerAmanda Sawyer
Bewertet in den USA am9. Februar 2025
this little thing is amazing comes with a case and protector my son absolutely loves it easy to use keeps great charge comes with cord too!!!
T. C. Reynolds
Bewertet in den USA am28. Januar 2025
The D26 MP3 Player arrived on schedule and was safely packed. All parts pictured in the ad were included in the box. The setup was exactly the same and as easy as setting my Android phone. Setup took minimal time. I deleted several apps that I would never use and added some new ones that I will use. Most importantly I downloaded the Musicolet App from the Play Store. This app allows you to see file folders on the SD card. The file folders become your playlists. The app also has an equalizer and a sleep timer build in. When hooking the D26 MP3 Player up to headphones or a powered bluetooth speaker, the equalizer makes a difference you can actually hear. I am in the process now of downloading MP3 files from my computer to the D26. The SD storage card on the D26 is much larger than most other small MP3 players I have tested or used - 116 GB is available which can hold a LOT of music, videos and pictures. The player came 92% charged so I don't have a good estimate of the battery life yet. Currently there is a % discount off the price which makes this MP3 player a fairly good buy for what it does and the storage capacity it has.
Rock
Bewertet in den USA am27. Februar 2025
great product, bought it as a gift...she loves it!!! If you read the description, it tells all and is worth the money. In fact, I'm buying myself one1
Uhrmann
Bewertet in Deutschland am 16. April 2025
Die Medien konnten nicht geladen werden.
Abel
Bewertet in Spanien am 16. April 2025
Al principio funcionó bien pero al cabo de una hora se desestabilizó le hice un reset a fábrica, se volvió a desestabilizar y después del segundo reset ya no arranco
Mason Taylor
Bewertet in Großbritannien am 15. Mai 2024
A recap:I bought this item a few weeks back since on paper it looked as if it offered everything I wanted in a standalone digital audio player: huge memory and battery capacities, the ability to play a wide variety of high resolution music files and a very competitive price.In practice, though, despite fulfilling all these requirements and sounding distinctly promising, the fact that its software would only operate in Shuffle/Random Play mode made it frustratingly unusable when trying to listening through whole albums or multi-movement classical works.I tried everything to sort this out, but in vain: I even contacted Swofy for guidance, and, to give them their due, they replied overnight, suggesting that I return the item, which I did, though not without a tinge of regret.On the strength of this I left a one star review, alerting potential buyers to this unfortunate playback anomaly.Two days later I received a second email from Swofy, apologising for the curtness of their first and suggesting that there was indeed a solution: by this time, the player was long gone, so I added an update to my review, including their recommended remedy, hoping that another reviewer might be able to verify this.I was then contacted again by Swofy, this time to see if I’d be willing re-evaluate the player in the light of a solution to the Shuffle issue being available. Since I had already retuned my original order, they offered to supply me with a new one free of charge.I didn’t feel there was any reason for turning down the offer. Aside from the software issue, my initial reactions had been very favourable, so it wasn’t a bribe. Nevertheless I’m mentioning this since together with their previous communications it suggests that their customer support team are on the ball.While waiting for the replacement’s arrival, I did some more research. Although my interest in the M503 was simply as a high capacity offline digital music player capable of handling higher resolution files, it offers a lot more in practice, being in effect a mini Android-based tablet with WiFi and Bluetooth: preloaded apps include Spotify, Audible, Deezer and Amazon and Apple Music as well as that Hybi music player which had frustrated me so much.There are however other Android music apps available, some free of charge in their basic version. More of these anon....The new player arrived the following day, still sealed in its original packaging, and thus clearly a regular production model rather than a specially selected one.It was fully charged and ready to go (as indeed was my original purchase).As before, the Hybi app had the same issue which I still couldn’t suppress: Swofy's suggestion wasn't very clear. However, I was able meanwhile to download and install two other recommended free Android player apps - Oto and Musicolet - which allowed me to use the player as I wanted while I looked for the answer to the Hybi shuffle conundrum.I used a 512Gb card that I’d transferred around 300Gb of FLAC files from my library, and spent couple of days on a very pleasant trawl through many musical genres from the past six centuries and across the globe.As before, the player sounded good - not as subtle as a more expensive DAP, understandably: occasionally a tad shoutier on loud high frequencies (using Austrian Audio’s wired Hi-X15 headphones) but nevertheless providing the sort of listening experience that made me want to play through many favourite pieces and tracks without ever experiencing listening fatigue. I found I started trying the openings of favourite works only to discover that I’d stayed with them to the end - always a good sign.Over a couple of days of quite concentrated listening, the M503's sound improved further; way beyond what I'd expect from a player at this price bracket.I finally found the solution to the Hybi shuffle issue - it’s explained in the accompanying images, since it’s easier than a verbal explanation. It’s very hidden away, so I’m not surprised I couldn’t find it without help from a rather esoteric audiophile website.In my case it was immaterial anyway, since I prefer the other two. They all occupy very little memory space, so keeping all three is no big issue. They all offer gapless playback: its lack is a common bugbear even in more costly players: comprehensive equalising facilities, too, should you feel the want - Oto’s -5db at 14kHz is particularly good at taking the sting out of fiercer old recordings. It also has a very attractive interface, but Musicolet's search facilities offer more options, which can be a blessing when there can be so much on the card, and it seems it will be the one I'll be using most unless I'm alerted to something better still....All this means that the reason behind my awarding the original one star rating has been resolve , finally allowing me to revise it upwards. As previously mentioned, I’m using this solely as an offline music player with wired headphones, so I can’t comment on the M503’s Bluetooth or streaming capabilities.As a budget standalone player, however, it’s highly recommendable: you get an awful lot for your money.For a start, good build quality and presentation (there’s even a useful protective case included, though I’d recommend avoiding the free earbuds - they’ll not do it or your music justice). The battery is big enough to give a whole day’s use: that and the high capacity potential in themselves could be deal breakers, but the most important attribute - its sound is the crowning glory: involving and detailed without being fatiguing, allowing you to concentrate on (and enjoy!) the content and its performance.CONCLUSIONMy original purchase was made in the hope that I could find a budget player that would be the perfect companion for journeys and trips. After a false start due to what to many will seem a bizarre programming system, I’m happy to report that this player has now exceeded those expectations and fully deserves a top recommendation and rating.Well done, Swofy!
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