Reddit Reddit reviews SanDisk 8GB Clip Jam MP3 Player, Black - microSD card slot and FM Radio - SDMX26-008G-G46K

We found 24 Reddit comments about SanDisk 8GB Clip Jam MP3 Player, Black - microSD card slot and FM Radio - SDMX26-008G-G46K. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Portable Audio & Video
Electronics
MP3 & MP4 Players
SanDisk 8GB Clip Jam MP3 Player, Black - microSD card slot and FM Radio - SDMX26-008G-G46K
Super lightweight wearable personal music playerDeep rich sound quality with a built-in micro SD card expansion slotPlay audio files in lots of formats (MP3 WMA (no DRM) AAC (DRM free iTunes) and Audible (DRM only)Big bright readable screen and large navigation buttons up to 18 hour battery life2 year limited warranty
Check price on Amazon

24 Reddit comments about SanDisk 8GB Clip Jam MP3 Player, Black - microSD card slot and FM Radio - SDMX26-008G-G46K:

u/JKrusas · 10 pointsr/running

I have a Sansa Clip which is nice and small, and has a clip on the back to secure it to my armband.

u/harazappa · 8 pointsr/Fitness

What do people use to listen to music in the gym?

https://www.amazon.co.uk/SanDisk-Clip-Jam-MP3-Player/dp/B00VXMY262/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1493808960&sr=8-1&keywords=sandisk+clip

I have one of these. It's tiny, has a slot for a microSD card, cost £25 and clips onto my waistband. No bother when running or lifting.

u/rannelvis · 6 pointsr/chicago

Instead of cassettes, I suggest one of these Sansa mp3 players. If you need more than 18 hours of battery life, recharge it with one of these

u/redavid · 5 pointsr/running

They're not going to suddenly disappear from eBay, Amazon Marketplace, etc. Can always just buy another.

There's not much available these days. The iPods killed them before the smartphone killed the iPods, but there's still the Sandisk Clip, or perhaps the Mighty if you have a smartphone to transfer your Spotify music to it.

u/Acebats · 5 pointsr/paydaytheheist

In his character image you can see a Sony m-430 without the brand name (for obvious reasons), Nervatel from the Discord spent ages looking at all the details to narrow it down to that specific model. In the trailer you can see a cassette player like you describe. The trailer one is modeled after a (to my knowledge currently unknown, as the animator forgot the model and no longer has the file) cassette player.

At the end of the day we have two models that Jacket has been seen using in promotional materials, the grey one in the trailer obviously being bigger and having enough room for the electronics and the black one being much smaller.

Your communication point is a fair one, however I don't think I'm misinterpreting the fact that you're limited to what is contained on the cassette player you purchased. I'm not suggesting you put every single line out of the hundreds-thousands of lines on cassettes, but you get the specific ones you want, including any communication ones (heck put a "yes" at the start of the cassette and a thank you after it, easy to access) and put them on. Recording them yourself allows you to get all the lines you want on.

But having "well over" 36 lines is a very small amount compared to the amount of varied lines in the game.

However, I do have a little life hack (for about $50) for anyone that wants to get specific lines quickly on the fly that they can consider if they don't want to record on a cassette.

Buy a small mp3 player (like a clip jam) and a mini speaker and conceal them in the inner pocket of the Jacket and have your "yes" line ready to play with "thank you" queued up. This also allows you to have complete controll on what lines are on the device.

At the end of the day it's the buyer's choice if they want to pay $150 or about half that, but in my opinion $150 is an absurd amount

u/andyd273 · 4 pointsr/audiobooks

See how this looks.
http://www.amazon.com/Sandisk-8GB-Clip-Player-Black/dp/B00VXMY262

My wife had an earlier version called the sansa clip, and it had audio book support and a good battery. This one says it's compatible with Audible too.

u/Eliolux · 3 pointsr/ItalyInformatica

Con questo vai sul sicuro

u/IsItPluggedInPro · 3 pointsr/ShittyTechSupport

I also don't know if you are serious, and this sub isn't for real advice, but nonetheless, here's how you can do it.

  1. Get one or more of a simple, easy to use mp3 player such as the SanDisk Clip Jam.

  2. Buy a name-brand (such as SanDisk, Samsung, or Kingston) microSDHC card up to 32 GB.

  3. Buy songs/tracks as DRM-free AAC files from iTunes and MP3s from Amazon.com. The tracks/files from those two services do not rely on having an account anywhere after you download them.

  4. Download and save the the tracks/files from iTunes and/or Amazon MP3 somewhere on your computer.

  5. Copy the files to the microSD card.

  6. Insert the microSD card into the player.

  7. Give the player to your parents.

  8. Show them how to use the player. Show how them to insert and remove the microSD card. To give them additional or different songs, exchange microSD cards with them as needed or give them additional microSD cards as needed.

    Alternative

  9. Install Chrome on their computer.

  10. Install and configure the Chrome Remote Desktop add-on on their conputer and your own computer.

  11. Test Chrome Remote Desktop to control their computer from your computer. You will use it at the very least to assist them if they have questions/need help.

  12. Show them how to how to use mp3 player and how to connect it to their computer.

  13. Either:

  14. Use Chrome Remote Desktop to connect and control their computer and using an account of your choice, open Amazon MP3 or iTunes, and buy and download the tracks.

  15. Or, teach them how to buy and download the tracks. Amazon and iTunes lets you create sub accounts that you control, so you could create a sub account for your parents and load money into it.

  16. Have them connect the MP3 player to the computer.

  17. Either transfer the tracks over to the player using remote control, or teach your parents how to do that.
u/rtechie1 · 3 pointsr/gadgets

MP3 players are a dying category and there is less available each year.

If you want something with 32GB of storage or less, the Sansa Clip Jam. Supports FLAC. The Sansa Clip series has been popular for a long time and has seen little change. This is like an MP3 player from 2003.

But if you want a nice MP3 player, Fiio is pretty much the only game in town anymore. The Fiio X1 2nd gen supports SD cards up to 256GB and is $100.

Your only other option is a smartphone (Windows Phone or Android) with a 256GB microSD card. Windows Phone is generally preferred because the audio stack in Android is inferior. I'd look at the Lumia 532.

u/klepperx · 3 pointsr/audiobooks

I recommend the clip Jam $35, but it may be too small for elderly use.

u/Alpha-Bravo-C · 3 pointsr/ireland

The SanDisk Clip mp3 players are fantastic. They're tiny, have a clip on the back so you can bring them running, will take a microSD card and will play pretty much any audio file you can throw at them. You can pick them up on Amazon quite cheap as well.

u/stereomatch · 2 pointsr/audio

Actually these days you can get flash memory based ones - though they maybe a bit smaller than an old cassette tape walkman. Tape may also be familiar to her.

Those devices would also record - so there may be a way to disable recording perhaps on that particular device.

I searched google for: amazon large buttons recorder flash

And got some links like these:

https://www.amazon.com/slp/digital-voice-recorder-with-large-buttons/avtmdx2au6sr6j2

https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Voice-Recorders-Audio-Video/b?ie=UTF8&node=227758

This one has large buttons:
https://www.amazon.com/Olympus-DP-201-Digital-Voice-Recorder/dp/B006ZW4IVE

Again these are mostly for recording, so have large record buttons.

Here's one that's just a player:

Sandisk 8GB Clip Jam MP3 Player (Black)

These are USB memory stick readers with larger speakers - as an example of this type of device:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B007NIKJM6





u/Warven · 2 pointsr/france

Hehe ok :) Apres de ce que je vois, 90% des modeles de lecteur mp3 sont des trucs chinois cheap (ou du moins qui en ont l'air). Ca donne pas forcement envie :/

En cherchant 30sec je suis tombe sur celui la https://www.amazon.fr/Lecteur-Clip-Radio-Ecran-MicroSD/dp/B00VXMY262 Sandisk est une marque connue donc je me dis que ca peut passer.

u/Alatorr · 1 pointr/Music

Spotify was having a deal recently: 99c for three months of premium. You can save stuff locally (albums and playlists on mobile, playlists only on desktop), or stream. They have a high quality 320kbps streaming option if you are a premium user. I recommend trying it out if the sale's still on.

Alternatively, if you have a couple bucks to spend, you can do what I do. That is, buy a really cheap Sansa Clip (you could probably get a cheaper one, but I didn't search hard), put Rockbox on it, and pop in a 32 GB MicroSD Card. Whole set up will run you about $40 and you will have 40GB of music available to you whenever you want. Best part -- the Sansa Clip can handle FLAC and mp3 (and pretty much anything else you can throw at it).

u/Shike · 1 pointr/audiophile

I think this is discontinued but Amazon still seems to have stock:

Sansa Jam

UE 4000 is definitely discontinued but fair for price.

The warranty on the MP3 player I believe is going to be 90 days - year, the headphones have a two year warranty but are technically discontinued. Also since they're from a 3rd party Logitech may not honor it.

Together both new is around $75 or so?

u/craiga35 · 1 pointr/hardwareswap

I was looking for the exact same thing. Amazon has exactly what you need.


AGPtek

SanDisk


Both are tiny and have clips on the back. The SanDisk not only has the brand name, it also has expandable storage via microSD and the screen, which I imagine helps a lot with the FM tuner that is built into both.

The AGPtek only supports auto-retuning and seeking, manual tuning is not an option. I haven't recieved the SanDisk yet to comment on it's FM performance but it will be here on Wednesday.

u/mnml_inclination · 1 pointr/running

Plenty of third-party iTunes alternatives out there to avoid the headache.

The iPod shuffle is probably the easiest when it comes to small mp3 players with integrated clips.

There's also this one by Sandisk which has pretty decent reviews and is very affordable.

u/Quagga_1 · 1 pointr/HeadphoneAdvice

I have the DT770 (80 ohm) and I'm pretty happy powering it off a SanDisk Sansa Clip+. It looks ridiculous though: bulky headphones VS tiny DAP.

The latest version is called the Clip Jam and it is sold on Italian Amazon for under €50.

u/FromBahrainToKuwait · 1 pointr/Kuwait

If you have a freight forwarding account (Shop and Ship etc.) then here -> http://www.amazon.com/Sandisk-8GB-Clip-Player-Black/dp/B00VXMY262

Else here -> http://www.mrbabu.com/sandisk-8gb-clip-jam-mp3-player-black.html

u/Wuz314159 · 1 pointr/BerksCounty

>Why buy a radio that only uses part of what's available?

because they're MP3 Player / WiFi Enabled / Bluetooth / FM Radios.

Adding AM capability makes the electronics 2× the size because of the antennae.

u/RichieW13 · 1 pointr/billsimmons

> Until that horrible, horrible day comes when podcast ads are unskippable

I use an old Sandisk Clip to listen to my podcasts in the car. I hope that sticking with an old device like this will prevent me from having to deal with forced commercials (if/when they ever come). The problem will come if they stop distributing podcasts in mp3 format.