What is a decent first portable player ?


Hello all:
Hope I posted this in the right spot.
This is my first foray into portable audio and I am looking for some different views

I'd like to have a portable system with decent earbuds or headphones for use at work.

Quality does not have to be fantastic just listenable. I'm thinking mp3 at a higher bitrate would be ok. Just the fact that I have music at work is a big plus.

Music taste is about 60% Rock 37% Jazz 3% classical and other

Cost is a factor as well. I could be talked into a $250 ipod if they feel the user interface is superior to anything else.

Currently on the shortlist is a Cowon d2 8gig or similar. Just found one on amazon at $129.00. The fact that has a FM tuner is a big plus as I can record radio programs.

Earbuds would be something from denon or grado.

My wife has a ipod nano I can try - but I have not yet.

So everyone can get an idea my current 2 channel system is:
Basis Debut Table
Parasound belt drive cd transport
Classe DAC-1 D/A converter
Classe Six preamp
Levinson 23.5 power amp
Revel F52 speakers
Stax headphones (tube driven amp but can't recall the model)
Transparent interconnects
Symposium stand (made a HUGE difference)

So, if I want high quality I have the home system. Eventually I would like to get a Alesis Masterlink or similar to start recording my lp's to cd. From there I can rip to mp3 or flac for portable use. ( I think, yes ?)
I'll start by ripping my existing cd's.

Anyone have any other ideas ? Any other portable players and headphones or earbuds they like (comfort and sound wise)?

On a related note:
How would I tag things I record from lp ? What program is good to use ?

Thanks in advance to all who reply,

-John
io_systems

Showing 1 response by djohnson54

John,
My daughter and I share a Cowon iAudio7 and it sounds pretty good depending on the earbuds used (definitely don't used the ones supplied). In general Cowon products have a reputation for good sound. I stay away from the Apple products because I don't want to be locked into iTunes.

Depending on your operating system, you might be able to right-click on the file and edit the tags directly in the properties dialog. There are probably hundreds of free software programs that let you edit the tags on mp3, etc. None that I know of will automatically recognize cuts from an LP (you probably already knew that) so this process is going to be VERY tedious. I've done a couple of LPs and I don't have that kind of patience.

Dick