Sony China Announces CE-P MP3/FM Players

Sony China Announces CE-P MP3/FM PlayersDetails of a snazzy new range of Sony flash memory MP3 player/FM radios with a colour display have appeared on Sony’s Chinese site.

As our Chinese translation skills are up there with our ability to understand advanced quantum physics explained in Latin, we may not be 100% accurate here, but it appears that Sony China is introducing a new range of flash memory multimedia players, under the name of the CE-P series.

Sony China Announces CE-P MP3/FM PlayersSporting attractively bijou dimensions of 75.5mm x 45.5mm, the CE-P is smaller than a credit card (but not as thin, natch) and is designed for carrying around your neck, gangsta-stylee.

The first model to be designed by the Sony China Creative Centre in Shanghai, the front of the display is dominated by a 1.5″ 260K color OLED display.

Sony’s designers have turned up the feature set to eleven, with the unit ramming in MP3/WMA playback, a built-in 87.5-108MHz FM tuner and FM radio recording, voice recording, BMP/JPEG picture display and USB 2.0 for file transfer.

Sony China Announces CE-P MP3/FM PlayersThe CE-P series will come in three flavours, offering storage capacity from 256MB to a 1GB.

We’ve no idea about availability in Europe and America, but pricing should be somewhere in the region of $150 (E124, £86) for the 1GB model, $125 (E103, £72)for the 512MB and $100 for the bottom-of-the-range 256MB unit.

Sony China

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Digital Music Sales In 2005 ‘Crazy’

Digital Music Sales Soar In 2005New figures from the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) reveal soaring global sales of digital music while overall music sales continue to decline. This in the same week that Gnarls Barkley and their musical ditty Crazy have become the first digital-only Number One in the UK Hit-parade, as we’d previously highlighted.

The IFPI reported record company revenues from digital sales nearly tripling from $400 million in 2004 to a massive $1.1 billion last year, with individual song downloads rising to 470 million units, up from 160 million.

Despite bumper digital sales, the IFPI said that global sales of music CDs and DVDs were down for the sixth consecutive year (down 3 percent), adding that burgeoning digital sales weren’t enough to offset the decline.

According to the IFPI, 618.9 million CDs were sold during 2005, substantially down 19 percent from the 762.8 million sold in 2001.

IFPI Chairman and Chief Executive John Kennedy pointed an accusing finger at online piracy as well as competition from other entertainment outlets and changes on the way punters get their music.

Digital Music Sales Soar In 2005The growing single song download market (which accounted for 86 percent of purchases), has resulted in many listeners choosing to grab individual tracks rather than download entire albums.

The United States, Japan, Britain, Germany and France proved to have the strongest digital sales and were also the best performing markets overall.

“In Japan, digital has already made up for the decline in physical sales, and other markets should go this way,” commented Kennedy.

As we reported last week, the greater popularity of mobiles over PCs in Asia has resulted in far higher mobile music downloads. In fact, just 9 percent of consumers in Japan download music to their PCs compared to 65 percent in the US, Britain and Germany.

Digital Music Sales Soar In 2005The biggest selling album of the year was “X&Y” by Coldplay, which could be heard being played – not too loudly, mind – in 8 million bedrooms, company cars and comfy living rooms.

Elsewhere, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) said that despite a bumper wholesale revenue of $7 billion, overall shipments of music products – including CD’s and digital albums and singles combined – fell 3.9 percent last year.

Mitch Bainwol, chairman and chief executive of RIAA boasted that illegal file-sharing on many popular online channels had been “held in check” as the industry continues its blitz on piracy.

International Federation of the Phonographic Industry

Leica C-Lux 1 Digital Camera Announced

Leica C-Lux 1 Digital Camera AnnouncedLeica has released details of their new Leica C-Lux 1 camera, an ultra compact number which claims to be the world’s smallest camera with a 28mm lens.

Basically a Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX01 slapped in a snazzier case and rebranded as a Leica, the compact 6-megapixel digicam sports a 28mm-102mm zoom lens, a high sensitivity mode (up to 1600) and a 16:9 widescreen movie mode.

Available in black or silver, the metal-bodied C-Lux 1 is a highly pocketable affair, measuring 9.4cm x 5 cm and weighing just 160 grams with battery and SD card fitted.

Leica C-Lux 1 Digital Camera AnnouncedThe f2.8 – f5.6 zoom lens offers a normal focusing range of 50 cm to infinity, with the macro setting getting close up and personal at 5 cm at the wide position and 30 cm for telephoto.

As with the Lumix, there’s a vast array of scene modes available, including useful presets for portraits, sports, fireworks and night scenery and a rather curious ‘baby’ setting (perhaps it adds an “aaaaaah!” soundtrack?).

The C-Lux 1 offers shutter speeds ranging from 8 to 1/2000 second, with 15, 30 and 60 seconds exposures available in Starry Sky mode (unless you’ve got three legs and an inert body, you’ll need a tripod for that).

As with previous Lumix/Leica cameras, the menu system is one of the best around with lots of well-presented onscreen information.

Panasonic’s capable Optical Image Stabilisation system is also onboard to keep away the wobbles, with a hefty 2.5-inch TFT 207k colour display dominating the rear of the camera.

Leica C-Lux 1 Digital Camera AnnouncedEarly reports have commended the camera on its sharp, high resolution output, but as with the Lumix LX1 (branded as the Leica D-Lux 2) noise levels rise sharply as soon as the ISO hits 200 and above.

There are three movie modes on offer; 848 x 480 pixel (widescreen), VGA and QVGA, all at either 30 fps or 10 fps, with recording times limited by memory card capacity.

Leica C-Lux 1 Digital Camera AnnouncedSupplied with a high-capacity rechargeable lithium-ion battery plus a posh leather case with micro-velour lining, users can expect to pay a hefty premium for the privilege of flashing a Leica-branded camera about.

Cheapskates and the less fashion conscious may want to consider buying the near-identical Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX01 (see DPReview.com review).

Leica C-LUX1 specifications
6.37 Megapixels, 1/2.5 inch CDD image sensor
Leica DC Vario Elmarit ASPH lens
Optical image stabilizer
3.6x optical zoom (28-102mm in 35mm format)
JPEG (Fine/Standard) format
Video 16:9 format 848 x 480 pixels, 4:3 format 640 x 480 pixels
Secure Digital and MultiMediaCard support
ISO 80, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600
Auto focus
2.5 inch LCD, 207,000 pixels
Lithium Ion 3.7 V, 1150mAh battery
USB 2.0 Full speed interface
Dimensions 94.1 x 51.1 x 24.2 mm
Weight 132 grams

LEICA C-LUX 1