Innovative music player — not an iPod!
iRiver's ‘clix’ handles music, video, photos, games, FM with aplomb
![]() | The clix looks even smaller in real life. Its innovative design makes navigation a snap. |
iRiver America |
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But there are a brave few people who search out and devices that won’t use Apple’s AAC compression or the iTunes Music Store.
If you’re in that camp, I’ve been testing a terrific little player you should know about. iRiver calls it the clix.
The clix is a tiny 2GB flash media device. It measures just 2.7 inches tall by 1.8 inches wide and is just a little over a half-inch thick. And at 2.5 ounces it weighs less than a ham sandwich on low-carb bread.
I call it a media device rather than a music player because in addition music, clix also handles video, pictures and FM radio stations. Clix has a built-in microphone, an alarm clock and a bunch of built-in games with names like Barn Baron, Critter Crossing, Log Jam and Sudoku.
Working the clix is a snap. Instead of buttons to change functions and/or song titles, it’s an ingenious design where the screen doubles as the navigation buttons.
The clix comes with its own USB 2.0 cable and interfaces with PCs running Windows XP. A separate AC adapter is optional. The batteries reportedly last up to 25 hours per charge. Mileage varies depending on whether you’re using clix for music, video, or games.
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iRiver America The clix can be used in an horizontal or vertical orientation. |
The FM radio was able to receive all of my favorite local radio stations. They all sounded fine through the cheap earphones that come with the device.
I was able to squeeze nearly 200 songs onto my clix. I chose to rip music into 96Kbps WMA files. Your choices are MP3, WMA and OGG files. Compared to a lot of other compressed formats and speeds I thought WMA/96 would be an acceptable compromise between sound quality and storage space. I also listened to larger WMA/320 and OGG/Q10 ripped files. They were the best-sounding choices offered on the clix.
As for multimedia support, the clix can handle MPEG4 simple profile QVGA (15fps), Macromedia Flash Player, TXT, and non-progressive JPEG files.
The clix is a terrific little portable media device with a well conceived design. It’s easy to learn, easy to use and delivers what it promises. It should be noted that it works with some subscription and pay-per-song subscription services.
The headphones that come with the clix sound OK — but nothing to brag about. The clix carries a competitive suggested retail price of $199.99, so how much do you think they spend on those little earbuds? As with every other portable music player on the market you should think about upgrading to a better set of of headphones.
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