
2nd Mar 2007, 6:05 pm
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Senior Member
Valued Member
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Singapore
Posts: 2,962
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Personally i feel that it is mainly how the end-user handles the player. i have heard of many stories from friends that their players/mobile phones/electronic stuff gets damaged etc, but for me i seldom get my stuff damaged.
Maybe it's the way i handle my electronics stuff, i don't physically abuse them, avoid knocks & drops, some basic knowledge like, you don't take your player out to press the buttons in the rain, or not leaving your player to bake under the sun or in a car during summer, or even using the player in a bathroom with all the moisture steam from the hot water, etc etc..
Another reason would be the quality of components used in the players. Although i own both a nano-clone & a Teclast T29, i can't tell if the component quality is better in the T29 or not, as my nano-clone has yet to die on me at this moment.
So the durability of a player depends on both component quality (which is difficult to gauge), and as well handling by the end-user (which often is the cause of many problems).
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Why are clones called MP4 Players, when they don`t play .MP4 at all?
It`s like an MP3 Player which plays Music CDs only.
T39 doesn''t sound as good as my T29
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