No mention about price and availability, yet

Oct 10, 2007 06:42 GMT  ·  By

If you haven't heard of the Einstrasse Industrial, I do not blame you. These fellows have kept a low profile on the market, but somehow managed to release a bunch of good-looking portable media players. The special design pattern is given by an unusual combination between pink and silver shades.

The player's uniqueness is also highlighted by the buttons and the compact layout. In addition, the media device's keys show a shade of blue when being pressed.

The portable media player, dubbed L05D, is capable of dealing with a lot of file formats on the market, such as MP3, WMA and ASF files with lyrics support, for the audio media content. In addition, this fellow can also perform some really decent recordings, carefully storing your funny memos from friends in special folders, using WAV and ACT formats.

As a bonus, the manufacturers have added an FM radio functionality, which is nothing weird or totally new for the devices of its kind. There is also an USB 2.0 port file transfer mode enabled, meaning it ensures a fast transfer of data from the PC or laptop straight to the player.

To make sure everyone gets its own size, according to needs and favorite music, they also packed the L05D player in various internal memories capacity, such as 128MB, 256MB, 512MB, 1GB, 2GB and 4GB. The later version can be obtained if the owner uses the integrated TransFlash cards up, which should provide an extra memory boost of up to 4GB a pop.

Since size matters, I thought you might want to know that this Chinese portable media player sports some convenient one of 80 x 41 x11mm, weighing no more than a Zippo, 43 grams that is.

The device is powered by a built-in lithium-battery, rated to last up to 6 hours of playback. Besides playing music and recordings, it can also perform some nice photo slide shows in JPEG formats, as well as a movie playback in AVI file format. All of them nicely displayed on its 2 inch TFT LCD screen display.

Don not worry, even if it 100% made in China, it still offers some language support in various international languages, among which Hebrew, Thai, Romanian Croatian and more.

Sadly, there are still no price tag or availability details from the official representatives, although it does look like an under 200 bucks media player. We shall see! And hey, I never said I liked it! Do you?