Spending what I assume is hundreds of dollars chasing analog noise to be encoded digitally over BT. Just fantastic.
It’s stupid that this thing apparently can’t record from a computer or line-in onto cassette.
It’s also unclear whether it can digitize music from cassette onto a computer with high quality, and if it can’t do that that would also be stupid.
Digitising skills be a given but as long as it has a high quality audio jack you can do it through that.
Recording onto cassette is different though because doesn’t that need a specific writer head?
It doesn’t necessarily require a different tape head for recording, but ideally a different head is used. For recording it should have an erase head though, otherwise you’re recording over what is already on the tape. Digitising tape in high quality requires a good playback mechanism that has low wow and flutter, I doubt this thing has that, most recent portable cassette players had the same bad mechanism.
Why stupid? It’s cool to have analog-only things.
Recording from line in was the way to make mix tapes. Seems like it’s missing the record function completely
It also most likely has the same cheap head and mechanics as any other new tape player you can get nowadays. If you want good quality, get something that was good in the 90s.
The article states that the usb-c port is just for charging, so that should answer all your questions with a solid “No, it cannot do any of that”.
Their target market must be in the double digits! And I’m not talking relative.
Actual. It’s really good for children. Something you don’t have to worry about with them, and no internet required. And they have a physical thing the can put in and play and record music with
No indication of can record.
Children’s MP3 players are easier and cost $30.
This is a hard nostalgia fix for nerds with disposable income.
Black metal and grindcore distros are so happy!