- Born for Music and Sport, Entry Hi-Fi. Supports MP3, WMA, Flac, Ape, audible, Lossless BIG Sound.
- Get fast admittance to your noesis with multi-touch navigation. With a 4-inch filler (480 x 800 resolution), truer and brighter recreation is at your fingertips. Support 720p HD movies, TV shows, and videos in broad definition
- Powered by Android 4.4.2, hold different apps including games, software, and more, much as Facebook, Twitter and google service.
- Wi-Fi unification (802.11b/g/n) for cyberspace access. Buy, stream, and update your music, download liberated games, and wave the scheme via a Wi-Fi unification from today on!
- 4GB module capacity, supports up to 32 GB Micro SD Card! To refrain incompatibility, gratify ingest AGPTek Memory Card. (Please state the micro SD bill and phone is not included in the package.)
Description: The super 4″ full-color pass offers modern touchscreen controls for recreation and cushy guidance of your media. It plays a difference of music, video, photo, and book files, making it the amend all-in-one companion.
It includes an elastic module interval as substantially as USB charging telegram and earphones so you crapper intend straightforward to the fun.
Play your music, check movies and modify feature books on this varied media device. Feature: Powered by Android 4.4.2 , with apps including games, fecundity software, and more
Uses a Wi-Fi unification (802.11b/g/n) for cyberspace access
4-inch touchscreen with WVGA (800×480) resolution
3.0-megapixel rear-facing camera and a VGA front-facing camera for recording occupation You and we ar
List Price: $ 71.99
Check top of page for underway toll or reduction for AGPtEK IMP 4-Inch 4 GB Touchscreen MP3 Player and Video Player, hold up to 32 GB Micro SD Card (Black)
Mp3 Android wifi Player
Michael J. Awlasewicz
August 14, 2016 at 10:12 pm
Great MP3 player with Android.,
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S.E. Poza
August 14, 2016 at 9:36 pm
economical alternative to an iPod Touch,
Customer Video Review Length:: 11:38 Mins
This is a media player with Android operating system which allows you to access and playback videos, audio, and photos in addition to browsing the web and play some games. The device is similar to an iPod touch, though it is presently less than half the price of that device. I will compare it to the lowest end iPod Touch, but my expectations of it are lower due to the dramatic price difference (16 GB iPod Touch is $199 at the time of this review and this 4 GB AgpTek media player is $72). It helps to regard this basically as a tiny Android tablet as that what it largely functions as.
The first point I’d like to address is the limited storage. This does have micro SD slots behind the battery cover panel on the back so you can expand its capacity with a 32 GB card (which averages about $10-$15 for the card). Purchasing a 32 GB iPod touch costs an extra $50, so getting more capacity is very economical. The other benefit to using SD cards to relying on built-in higher capacity is that you can swap cards and store music or other media on a number of cards that you swap according to your wishes (whereas you’re stuck with one internal drive with an iPod Touch). So, being able to use SD cards is a significant merit in my opinion over a built-in larger drive, but that depends on whether or not you find adding in a card (even at a relatively low cost) troublesome or undesirable. I actively prefer the flexibility.
In terms of the look and feel, it’s very similar to an Android phone. It has a tiny bit more heft than an iPhone, but is not significantly different in weight. The back is solid and feels like it would not bend even in a pocket. I tend to keep my devices in my handbag, so I can’t speak to whether or not you could sit on it in a back pocket situation and it would be fine, but it does seem thick enough and does not feel flimsy at all (nor does it feel “chunky” – it’s similar to an average modern smart phone).
The screen is clear, bright, and easy to read, though clearly the legibility of text is limited by the fact that the screen size is 4 inches. Text is quite crisp though and Android does allow you to scale it in size (though you get less on screen as a result). I found that I could easily read the text at the default size, but found the larger size easier for when I was tired.
Given the OS and chipset, I found the speed on this to be as expected. I have other Android devices to compare it to so I know how they tend to work. Everything is are faster when apps are already loaded, sometimes sluggish as they load, and very fast when fully loaded. For example, Kindle may take awhile to load (especially the first time while it loads your library), but once the book is loaded, the pages turn lightning fast with zero delay. I was able to play games on it, though the screen size does limit game playing and this device is not optimized for game play (it’s optimized for music). Game graphics were snappy with no delay. My only issue was my fat, clumsy fingers on the small screen. I recommend a stylus if you are similarly inhibited by limited dexterity.
Voice recognition with this was excellent so the mic is picking up voice clearly. You don’t have to type much if you don’t want to and if you have the proper Android extensions installed as the voice recognition for doing searches or even URLs was great for this. I also tested the mic with Skype and it transmitted sound very well and I could hear the other end clearly. Video playback is also excellent and the sound out of the device itself is more than serviceable. It’s not super loud in that you couldn’t hear it from across a huge room, but it’s definitely sufficient for you to put it on your desk or lie in bed and listen without straining to hear in any way while eschewing headphones. I found that it is audible to a point that you can hear it adequately from up to about 8 feet away. That being said, the volume of the source matters tremendously as different content may be mastered at a lower or higher volume.
Rotation can be pretty rapid. Depending on the app and how stable the orientation (a partial rotation will be more sluggish than a complete 90-degree rotation). I found that I got a two-second response time when I definitively rotated it in a manner that didn’t confuse the device.
The negative points to the player are that it comes with no manual whatsoever, though I will say that it only has two buttons and isn’t all that complicated. To use it, you just need to put the battery into the panel on the back and charge it with the included cable. The short button turns it on. The long button controls volume. Unless this is your first device, none of these points for starting up the device should be an issue. As I always mention as a disclaimer when I review Android devices, I don’t hold the hardware maker responsible for the user…
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