Zune HD 16 GB Video MP3 Player (Black)

CE (Microsoft Zune Players)


Microsoft Zune Players

List Price: $199.99
Price: Too low to display


  • HD Radio gives you access to many local stations with crystal-clear digital sound at no extra cost
  • NOTE: In order for headphones to work properly, insert jack into device port until it clicks into place
  • IMPORTANT PRODUCT INFORMATION: To get started using Zune HD, download the latest software to your PC from zune.net/setup and charge your Zune using the supplied cable for at least 30 minutes before use
  • 3.3-inch OLED screen with 480 x 272 resolution and 16:9 display
  • Watch supported 720p HD movies, TV shows, and videos in high definition

Zune HD 64 GB Video MP3 Player (Black)

CE (Microsoft Zune Players)


List Price: $349.99
Price: $349.99


  • Buy, stream, and update your music, download free games, and surf the web via a Wi-Fi connection
  • HD Radio gives you access to many local stations with crystal-clear digital sound at no extra cost
  • 3.3-inch OLED screen with 480 x 272 resolution and 16:9 display
  • 64 GB capacity for up to 16,000 songs, 20 hours high-definition video, or 25,000 pictures
  • Watch supported 720p HD movies, TV shows, and videos in high definition

Zune Home AV Pack v2

CE (Zune)


Zune

List Price: $99.99
Price: $26.92
You Save: $73.07 (73%)

  • Wireless infrared remote gives full access to Zune from anywhere in the room
  • AC adapter's small, compact design great for portability and sharing power outlets
  • Charge your Zune with the longer, integrated sync cable and dock
  • Display photo and videos on your TV with composite AV output cables
  • Includes faceplates for each Zune device size

Zlive Speaker System and Docking Station for Zune (Black)

CE (GPX, Inc.)


GPX, Inc.

List Price: $59.99
Price: $43.06
You Save: $16.93 (28%)

  • RCA video output for viewing videos on your TV
  • Auxiliary input for use with external audio devices
  • Charges your Zune while it plays
  • White backlit see-through LCD display
  • Certified Zune docking station

Zune HD AV Dock

CE (Microsoft Zune Players)


Microsoft Zune Players

List Price: $89.99
Price: $68.54
You Save: $21.45 (24%)

  • Send music to your home audio system
  • Charge your Zune HD player while docked
  • Watch supported 720p HD movies, TV shows, and videos in high definition on your HDTV
  • Control your Zune with the included wireless remote
  • Allows syncing of supported HD videos

zune????????????

ok so my on my zune software thing all of the songs were wiped out but i still have all of my songs on my zune.will all of my songs on my zune be wiped out if i plug it into my computer if so is there any way of preventing that?


Basically, the sync process is more for the actual zune that for the files you have in your computer. Check your settings to make sure it says sync your files automatically to your zune.

If your music and files where wiped out by that computer then you have a problem you need to work around - if you did not then you should not have a problem.

Example: I moved my files to an external hard drive and forgot to change the settings - will the files on the zune where all erased to reflect the folders that were empty (because i did it) - I realize my mistake and let the process go all the way through to not mess things up because I knew I could fix it without a problem.

Check your sync settings - you can have your sync set to manual - but that would mean that each and every file you would have to drag to the little zune icon - if you have it on automatic with the appropriate folders selected it will put everything back in place - then you can go in and change your sync setting the way you want it.


Wut you can do is go to settings in there somewhere it will say let you choose wut songs to sync if you choose that i think itll let them stay on


If your Zune program is set to auto sync then yes it will start to delete them from the device when you open the program and connect your Zune. Unfortunately you have to connect your Zune to change the sync settings. I suggest that you open the Zune program and click on device.status before connecting your Zune. Then when you connect your Zune click cancel sync when the sync process starts. You will still lose some of your files but not all of them. Then click on settings>sync options and change the sync options to manual. That should work.

How do I stop my zune from automatically transferring my downloaded content on to my cumputer?

I have less than one gigabyte of memory on my computer whereas I have 80 on my zune. For this reason, I download my music straight from the zune marketplace to my zune. Whenever I plug my zune into my computer, It automatically transfers all the songs I downloaded on my zune into my collection on my computer. How do I stop this?


You need to go into the zune software and change your settings. This will fix the problem.

http://www.zune.net/en-us/support/usersguide/gettingstarted/default.htm


in the system setting window you can select to sync all content or only the files you select. you choose seperatly for music pictures and video.


go into device settings

How can i delete files from my zune software and keep them on my zune?

So, in my collection and on my zune, i have movies and songs. If i delete the media from my collection in the zune software, the next time i connect my zune, the media will be deleted. How can I delete files from my zune software and keep them on my zune?


Sorry but its not possible with the 2.0 + Software/ Firmware.
I was able to do it before the Firmware update but at this time its just not possible i've tried but haven't had success.
Ill let you know if I find out.

How do I get music from the zune to the computer?

I just had to reformat my computer. When I reinstalled the Zune software, it said it wouldn't manage the music on my Zune or something. How I get it to put all my pictures, videos, and music from the zune back on the computer?


After installing the Zune software and connecting your device, click the 'Device' link in the menu at the top-right, and then select the section you want to copy content from (eg. 'music,' 'videos,' 'pictures'). Single-click on one of the albums, and then press Ctrl+A to select all albums. Then simply click and drag one of the albums to the computer icon in the lower left-hand corner to copy the music to your computer.

The message you received said that your Zune was linked to a different computer since it didn't recognize it after the reformat. This means that the current pre-format content on your device will not be automatically synched with your computer.

Good luck!


Connect your Zune and open the Zune program. Do you get an error message? If you do post exactly what it says. Is there an error code? Knowing exactly what the error message says will help us give you a better answer.


If you don't still get the error message then click on device and copy the music etc.

Does a Zune lose all its songs if its connected to a different PC?

I know some mp3s lose items in its memory when the computer they're connected to doesn't have it. I gave my Zune away to a girl as a birthday gift. It had 400 songs and a couple videos already on it. When she connects it to her computer, does she lose all the songs and videos on it?


Not if it is connected as a guest. I would try connecting it that way first then transfer the music. If it is connected to the computer recognizing that computer as the "home" then it might since the music is not on that computer yet.

What camera is adaptable to a Zune media player?

I want to purchase a digital camera that will adapt on to my Zune music player, so I can add my pictures to my Zune. Is it possible? Do they make such a thing? If so, which brand of camera should I buy?


LIke the first poster said it won't matter. Just convert the pictures to jpeg if the camera doesn't save to that format. That's easy enough to do with any basic photo editing program.

How can I put songs from Zune Pass onto Zune without downloading them for good on computer?

I am trying to put songs from my Zune Pass, but I don't wanna keep the files permanently as it takes up too much space on my computer. Thanks in advance!


download it on your computer than your zune, after that could you not just delete the song's from your computer and still have it on your zune?

Can i get my Zune 80 GB player to work off of windows media player instead of the zune program?

I really hate the zune program that you get to use for putting on music to your zune player. The songs dont match with the titles/album pictures and its very slow! The zune player on the other hand is very cool and i like it. Got any tips?


i don't think so. Ive tried it in the past but Microsoft makes some strict regulations on products

Is the song in zune marketplace as many song as Apple iTune?

I am planning to get a zune because of its zune pass, I want to know is it as many song as iTune?
One more, on the website :
Note
Some songs and albums at Zune Marketplace are only available as a purchase

What do they mean "some"songs?
Will it be lots of song I can't dowmload with Zune pass?

Thx!


It does have a TON of music, at least to me it does, and of course, they're mainly mainstream popular music.

Though the Zune is still a new guy to the market, so eventually more music will come into it.

MOST songs are downloadable. There were only a couple for me that I couldn't download. I tried out the 14-day trial of ZMP, and I liked it. There were a few songs, but not that many. Most songs worked for me.

You do have to remember, this is a music RENTAL system. That means you pay a monthly fee, to keep on using the music you download. You can't just download them, and keep it forever without paying monthly fees. It's more cheaper than buying songs individually though.

Oh, and even if you don't sync your Zune to the computer after the current ZunePass expires, they won't work anyways.

Hope this helps. E-mail/IM me for more help.

What is the difference between a Zune Video MP3 Player and a Zune Digital Media Player?

There are two versions of Zune (besides size+color) that are on amazon. One is the "Video MP3 Player" which is the normal one I see around, but the other one is the "Digital Media Player" which is more expensive, more than double the cost of the former. Does anyone know the difference between these?


First they made Zune Video MP3 player! And then they changed the look Slightly and They call it Digital Media Player-that one is New! thats why th price is more! I love Zune! I have the old one and the new!

#%*@#! The top 10 tech 'fails' of 2009 CNN

(CNN) -- It was a big year for technology: Twitter and Facebook's popularity exploded, while new smartphones, e-readers and a host of other gadgets cropped up to compete for our plugged-in affection.

But into each electronic life a little digital rain must fall.

We polled a handful of the most tech-savvy folks we know for their thoughts on the worst moments in technology from 2009 -- the most epic "fails" of the year.

Your mileage may vary. If you think something doesn't deserve to be here, or think we missed a noteworthy clunker, let us know in the comments section. And now, in no particular order, our 2009 Tech Fails ...

Y2-what? Zune gets off to a bad start

Technically it was a New Year's Eve surprise. But many owners of Microsoft's Zune media player started 2009 with little more than a paperweight with LED lights.

At midnight on December 31, all Zune's 30-GB MP3 players froze up. Microsoft explained the problem as a problem with the way the device's internal clock recognized (or didn't recognize) leap years.

The glitch only lasted a day, but didn't help a device that was already failing to gain ground on Apple's iPod.

TwitterPeek fails to pique interest

The reaction of many in the tech community to the release of the TwitterPeek device was a collective, "Huh?"

Sure, there are some people who don't have smartphones and don't want to pay for expensive mobile plans. But is there really a market for a $199 device that does nothing but let you manage your Twitter feed?

"I already have a $200 device to update Twitter," said one techie we spoke to. "It's called my iPhone."

The folks at Peek, makers of TwitterPeek, had already made the Pronto -- a device that handled only texts and e-mails. Maybe a combination of the two gadgets is in the works. But even then, would enough people be interested? Probably not.

Facebook backtracks on owning your stuff

OK ... so every time Facebook makes even the most minute changes, it sparks an outcry among its 350 million members, not to mention (irony alert) dozens of new Facebook groups geared at making the site change back.

But a terms-of-service change in February went further, implying that Facebook owned the rights to anything users uploaded to the site. Another change suggested that Facebook held those rights forever, even if people quit the site or took the material down.

Facebook responded that it simply needed those rights to be able to post information to other users. But when the backlash continued, the site eventually switched the terms back to their former wording.

Sidekick punts user info

In what one observer called "an almost incomprehensible data disaster," T-Mobile told users in October that a server error at a Microsoft subsidiary had lost users' personal data it had stored for the devices.

All of it.

Phone numbers, contact lists, calendars and other information was gone -- and even new data would disappear if users turned off or recharged the phone.

Users were offered free service and rebates in the wake of the mess, as T-Mobile scrambled to recover what little of the data it could. But that didn't stop the lawsuits, Internet griping and ill will generated by the snafu.

Hacking Twitter

It started as a story about someone hacking the accounts of several Twitter employees. Then, after Twitter said the attack was limited to personal information, not sensitive, company-related stuff, the hacker behind the attack struck again -- in a different way.

He sent 310 documents to leading technology blog TechCrunch . The blog published a small portion of them and sent the documents to Twitter, which is when the company learned that they included financial projections and notes from high-level executive meetings.

Twitter responded by reportedly closing the security holes that allowed the attack.

Enough with the updates, already!

This was the year that online social media exploded. That's good news for the future of Facebook, Twitter and the like.

But sometimes it just got to be a bit too much.

Members of Congress abandoned any pretense of paying attention to President Obama's State of the Union speech by updating their Twitter feeds as he was speaking.

There was the groom who updated his Facebook relationship status at the altar. And the women who tweeted during childbirth. [In fairness, the most high-profile tweeting new mom was Sara Williams, wife of Twitter CEO Evan Williams].

And that's not even mentioning all those friend requests you got from your grade-school teachers and members of your mom's knitting circle.

Hyped-up Conficker fails

This is a failure we're glad to report.

The Conficker worm was, by all accounts, a serious bit of malware that infected as many as 10 million computers worldwide. Instead of attacking those computers, it was designed to control them, paving the way for later attacks.

When researchers spotted the date April 1 in the worm's coding, speculation began mounting that a major April Fools' Day attack was on its way. Instead, it was mostly quiet -- a false alarm of Y2K proportions.

"I think the joke's on us a little bit, which you would have expected, having an April 1 date," Holly Stewart, threat response manager for IBM's X-Force, a computer security service, said at the time.

Attacks cripple Twitter, Facebook

On August 6, the concept of computer addiction didn't seem so silly.

A massive denial-of-service attack hit Twitter, Facebook and the LiveJournal blogging site. Twitter was by far the hardest hit, completely blacking out for several hours.

The attacks were believed to have targeted a blogger in the country of Georgia who had been critical of Russia. The attacks, the blogger said, coincided with the one-year anniversary of renewed violence between the two countries.

What was telling was how freaked out people became. Users described feeling naked, jittery and upset without the ability to post on Twitter. When the site came back up, the top topic of conversation was the hashtag for "When Twitter Was Down."

Gmail crashes

We heard some different views on this year's string of outages or slowdowns of Google's popular e-mail system.

Some thought coverage was overblown.

But as more computing power moves "into the cloud," people and businesses are relying on programs like Gmail not just for e-mails, but to archive documents, chat with friends or co-workers and store contact information.

Gmail went through several high-profile crashes in 2009, including one in February and two in September. While e-mail crashes are nothing new to any provider, 2009's were the first since Google begain offering offline support.

Response to the crashes simultaneously showed how many people depend on Gmail and how easy it is to make fun of those people. Social-networking blog Mashable responded with a list of five things to do while Gmail is down (No. 1: "Immediately flood Twitter with tweets alternately proclaiming, 'Gmail is down!' and inquiring, 'Is Gmail down?' ")

I got Google Wave -- now what?

OK, so it's a little early in the game to call this one a total fail. But after the breathless anticipation that greeted Google Wave and the hot rush to get an invitation for its beta testing, lots of users found themselves asking, "OK ... now what?"

Google, for its part, released an 80-minute tutorial video -- leading some observers to argue that if you need an hour and 20 minutes to explain what your product does, you might be in trouble.

It's designed as a platform to allow users to communicate and collaborate in real time -- a tool some predict will be used effectively by developers in the future.

But for now, it's inspired the creation of a Web site -- Easier to Understand Than Wave -- on which users compare the online tool to other sometimes obtuse subjects (Both Ozzy Osbourne and the geopolitical climate of Southeast Asia are easier to understand than Wave, users voted, while Sarah Palin and Scientology are both more difficult).

The Nook Is The New Zune (BKS, AMZN) The Business Insider
'S Walt Mossberg, who called it "annoying."

We can't remember a bloodier beating since Microsoft first unveiled its Zune in 2006. (Except maybe Pogue's thrashing the BlackBerry Storm last year, which he references in his Nook review.)

And indeed, the Zune and the Nook have a lot in common:

The Nook is an extremely close replication of the Kindle, both physically and in concept, just as the Zune was an extremely close replication of the iPod. Not much innovation here, either in design or technology.

Both the Nook and the original Zune have crippled media-sharing services that are supposed to set them apart from rivals. The Nook's ability to "share" books with a friend sounds cool until you find out you can only share some books -- with publishers' permission -- with only one friend each. Once, ever. For two weeks. This is not very helpful. Just like the Zune's original "squirt" sharing, where you could share a Zune track with a friend, but they could only listen to it three times, over three days, before they had to buy a copy.

Both the Nook and the Zune have worse media storefronts than the incumbent they're competing with. The Nook has fewer best-sellers, according to Pogue's review. Just as the Zune had far fewer songs than iTunes when it launched. Not helpful.

So will the Nook continue along the Zune's path -- always hopelessly two years behind the leader? Maybe. Barnes & Noble promises to fix some of its flaws in software updates, but obviously Amazon will keep improving the Kindle in the meantime. Barnes & Noble is probably in over its head here.

And who knows whether even the Kindle will be as relevant in a year if Apple or Microsoft comes out with color, multi-touch reader devices next year.

But it's a shame. Because the Kindle could really use a good competitor, to keep Amazon and publishers honest, to lower prices, and to take e-readers to the next level. So far, the Nook is not a threat.

Don't Miss:  15 Gadgets That Changed Everything This Decade >

How can the Zune and Windows Mobile work better?

While browsing the news archives, I found an interesting article on InfoWorld.com that was published last year. In it, Microsoft appears to be looking for new ways to tie Windows Mobile phones and Zune media players together, although a Zune phone remains unlikely. Now with the recent move made in the Zune department, that may become more of a possibility.

Questions were asked as to what would work with the Zune and with Windows Mobile, and a couple interesting ideas came up. One was to scrap Windows Media Player in Windows Mobile with Zune software instead. Another was making one media player work on both devices, therefore saving the hassle of trying to merge two libraries of music.

What are your thoughts on this? To get your minds moving on this topic, here is a link to the article: http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/02/19/Microsoft-looking-to-converge-Windows-Mobile-Zune_1.html

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Microsoft splits Zune team in two - CNET News

Microsoft splits Zune team in two - CNET News Seattle Post IntelligencerMicrosoft splits Zune team in two by Ina Fried Microsoft has quietly reorganized its Zune team, splitting up the hardware and software teams, CNET News has learned. The software and services Microsoft Plans New Zune Strategy Microsoft's Change in Zune Strategy, Emphasis on Broader Entertainment Microsoft's Bach won't talk specifics on touch-screen Zune,  -

Microsoft: Windows Mobile 6.5 - Pocket-lint.co.uk

Microsoft: Windows Mobile 6.5 - Pocket-lint.co.uk Pocket-lint.co.ukMicrosoft: Windows Mobile 6.5 Killing rumours dead, James Blamey of Microsoft confirmed to Pocket-lint that ?there will be no Zune phone?, but that the menu borrows heavily from the Zune Microsoft Recite for Windows Mobile previewed Windows Mobile 6.5 Screen Shot Walk-Through Watch Steve Ballmer’s press conference from the Mobile World  -

Microsoft announces Windows Mobile 6.5 features, new mobile services - Seattle Times

Microsoft announces Windows Mobile 6.5 features, new mobile services - Seattle Times Seattle TimesMicrosoft announces Windows Mobile 6.5 features, new mobile services A new home screen looks "very similar to a Zune, which may be where from the rumors came from about the Zune phone, but ultimately we found from the Zune

New Windows Mobile UI represents big change - NetworkWorld.com

New Windows Mobile UI represents big change The user interface clearly takes a cue from the Zune, Microsoft's music player that has struggled to take off even as it has attracted some praise for its

Microsoft to open high-street shops - bit-tech.net

Microsoft to open high-street shops - bit-tech.net Stuff.co.nzMicrosoft to open high-street shops Surface-enabled displays dotted around to wow people into picking up a Zune or two, and Microsoft's new 'Tags' mobile barcode dotted around the place Microsoft to open brick and mortar retail stores Microsoft retail: Redmond start your copiers? Microsoft to compete with Apple on the high street  -

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        Cell Phone, iPod or Zune Bag 1

        Bag measures 2-3/4" (7 cm) x 5" (12.7 cm) and is stretchy. 17" (43.1 cm) drop that stretches when full. Classy pinks and greens. Bead closure. Wool Blend



        zune

        Zune 4GB

        Gatecrashing

        My time at CES 2010.



        Gatecrashing

        My time at CES 2010.