26
Dec

Zune Wallpapers / Zune Backgrounds

Download a background image to customize your Zune device. Share it with friends and family with wireless Zune-to-Zune sharing. Change it up daily or whenever you’re in the mood!

downloading instructions

1. Right-click on the image and select Save Picture As…

2. Navigate to the folder where you want to save the image. Select the Save button.

To learn how to set the image as your Zune background, read Change Your Zune Background in the Zune User’s Guide.

NOTE: Images are scaled to a smaller size on this post. Click the image to view the original size that is “Zune Ready”
Shrek 3 - Puss Night Highway

Night Harbor Mountain Snow

Holiday Cabbin Evening Sky

Europe Dusk Over the Hill

Vista Grass Whoosh
22
Dec

Zune 80 GB Review

Intro to the Zune
The Zune is a digital media player created by Microsoft. The Zune allows its users to play a variety of audio and video files as well as pictures and podcasts. The Zune comes with a variety of unique features such as the touch sensitive touchpad, FM radio, and wireless sync with Windows PCs. The Zune comes in a 4GB and 8GB flash player as well as a 30GB (first generation) and 80GB (second generation) hard disk player. This review is based on the new second generation Zune 80GB version as shown in the image below. This holiday season, technology seems to be the finest gifts to give with gifts ranging from digital picture frames, iPod Touch, Zune, XBOX 360, Nintendo Wii, Sony PS3, and of course computers.

Zune 80 Home ScreenThe nice metallic look of the back without being prone to fingerprints
(click for larger views)

What’s in the Box?
My Zune 80GB (with preloaded content), premium headphones, USB sync/charger cable, and of course a product manual and quick start guide. Unfortunately, there was no CD of the software, so users must download it off Microsoft’s website. This not only saves them money, but also insures users install the latest version of the Zune software available. I both agree and disagree with this approach. I know this is the digital age, but there are those users who still unfortunately run dial-up, so downloading this might be difficult and time consuming. In addition, you can’t even use the Zune player without registering it first! Not even the preloaded content! So an internet is definitely required to use this product initially. Why must it be registered first to listen to the preloaded content and the radio?!

 

The Zune 80, Premium Headphones, and USB Cable
(click for a larger view)

Zune 2.3 Firmware
After I received my Zune 80 through Amazon.com at a small discounted price of $240 (excluding S&H), it ran on firmware 2.0. I had previously installed the Zune software prior to ordering it, so I was quite familiar with its capabilities and how to use it. I then connected my Zune 80 to my computer using the provided USB cable Windows XP SP2 along with the Zune software quickly installed the drivers for it and updated the firmware of the Zune to version 2.2 without any problems. I then synced my 24GB of music, videos, pictures, and podcasts to the Zune that took approximately 25 minutes. On December 19, 2007 the Zune team released a 2.3 firmware update to correct battery issues some users were experiencing as well as improving the sync performance which I am glad to report has sped up a little (both via USB and wireless).

 

Zune Navigation and Experience
After the sync completed, I was up and running listening to music, watching video podcasts, flipping through pictures, and listening to the radio. The Zune navigation is very intuitive with the touch sensitive navigation. It was very easy to navigate up and down, and left and right with precision. Some touch sensitive navigations I have experienced have trouble moving up one line or moving down one line to get to the item you want, but the Zune navigation is quite accurate. The Zune pad also makes it easy to fast forward/rewind and adjust the volume either higher or lower.

Music
In the music menu, you can choose from a variety of views to view your music such as artist, genre, album, songs, and playlists. When you view albums, the Zune will display a nice setup of the album art next the album name to give it a nice visual touch. Once you select an album, you have the option to play all songs in the album, add the album or selected songs to a “quick list”. You can navigate through albums by either scrolling up/down or to the left/right to see the songs in each album. When you play a song or album, the album art displays vibrantly with the song information below. In addition, you can still navigate around your Zune without having to stop the music which is a nice touch if you are in the mood to view photos.

 

Zune playing a Michael Buble song…
(click for a larger view)

Videos
The quality of videos played is quite crisp and clear and even for me as someone who likes to watch anime (Bleach and Naruto) with subtitles, it is easily to read (assuming you convert the AVI’s properly and with good quality settings). Videos are only played in landscape which isn’t bad because it maximizes the visible viewing area. Unlike how music is categorized in various views such as artist, genre, songs, playlists, and album; videos are only categorized in two groups—all videos and music videos. Unfortunately there is no way to add your own category yet. I would love to see the ability for users to create their own category such as movies, anime, and TV shows for example. So there is not much organization with videos as I would like.

 

Playing anime with subtitles… text and video is very readable and clear.
(click for a larger view)

 

Pictures
Pictures are organized relatively straightforward—either by date or folder. The quality your pictures are displayed are in fairly good quality. Although you can tell a little that photos are a little pixilated when the Zune resizes them to fit on the screen, but it is subtle and not annoying as you can just zoom in with the touchpad and navigate around your picture. In addition, photos are only displayed in landscape, so if you have photos taken in a portrait style, you have a lot of black spaces on the left and right of the photo. The Zune isn’t quite “smart” enough to recognize the style of the picture to adjust, so you will have to rotate your photo manually if you want it to fit right.

Social
I have not yet used the Zune Social as there is no one around me yet with the Zune. But when the New Year starts, a lot of my friends and colleagues will have the Zune so I can test it out then. I will update this section once I give it a try in the 2008 year.

Radio
I love the radio feature. Unfortunately where I love, the radio station I listen to does not have RBDS (Radio Broadcast Data System), so I am not able to pick up the station name along with the currently playing song. But the radio still works great.

Podcasts
The podcasts are organized into video and audio podcasts. They play like any video and audio file and sync seamlessly with the Zune.

 

Watching NBC Today
(click for a larger view)

Settings
There are several options under the settings menu. They include wireless, display, music, pictures, sounds, touch, radio, language, and about. The wireless setting allows you to sync your media library wirelessly which the Zune’s iPod competitor lacks in this area.

Battery Life
The battery life varies from user to user, but with my volume set to 5 and with wireless off, listening/watching a mixture of music, radio, and videos, I receive about 23 hours of battery life. The battery life is quite good as I switch through songs a lot and watch some video podcasts. Charging it is a breeze and easy—simply hook it up via USB and it begins charging. One thing that perplexes me is why Microsoft does not include an electric charger—one that you plug-in to an electrical outlet? I know you can purchase it separately, but why pay another $30 for a $250+ product? I think including some sort of extension of the USB cable to be able to plug- into a wall should be included as we don’t always carry our computers around with us. Having a wall charger makes it ideal to take the Zune with you when you travel.

Conclusion
The Bad
Although with the recent 2.3 firmware update, there are still quite a few bugs present in the Zune device such as not being able to turn on the wireless feature through the social menu, random restarts, and the same media being re-synced on every connect, the Zune team still has many improvements to make to the Zune device through firmware updates. Since the holiday season is here and millions will be getting the Zune, I predict that Microsoft will push another Zune firmware update by the third week of January or early weeks of February in 2008 to correct these popular issues.

Unfortunately, the Zune does not support some free license codecs such as DivX/XviD, FLAC, OGG, so AVI media files will need to be converted along with a few other unsupported media file types.


The Good
Regardless of the bugs as I stated above (and those listed on the Zune Community Forum), the Zune player is a very good media player for music, pictures, videos, podcasts and radio. I definitely recommend purchasing the Zune if you are looking for an iPod alternative or can’t afford the $400 price tag of the iPod Touch. This Zune 80 is a light weight and compact player (although not as light and compact as the Zune 4GB and 8GB flash drive models) still fits in your pants or shirt pockets. This player is the ultimate media player that plays videos, music, radio and podcasts.

Another reason why I purchased the Zune is because I am getting a little tired of seeing everyone with the white iPods, so with the Zune, I get the same functionality and a little more. This will definitely be a head turner as people ponder at what media player I have and how large and clear the 3.2 inch screen size is. The Zune firmware is still a work in progress, but the Zune team seems to keep their hand on the pulse by releasing the much needed 2.3 firmware update this past week and I have no doubt that they will release some more good updates in the future. This is unquestionably a media player that will be a head turner this holiday season and into the next year.

Rating: 84 out of 100


My Zune.net profile: http://social.zune.net/member/JulianV86
Source (my blog): http://www.shadowsillusion.com/blog/

20
Dec

Zune 2 Software Review

Intro to Zune Software
The Zune software manages and organizes your media library, whether it is audio, video, playlists, podcasts, or photos. It syncs your media files to the Microsoft Zune over a USB cable or via wireless. The software allows you to organize the metadata as well as pull metadata tag data for most content automatically. Compared to the previous Zune software version, version 2+ has been overhauled and “is built from the ground up.”

Installation
Although I have heard that some users came across a few issues when install the software, I however, did not have any problems. I am running Windows XP (Service Pack 2) with all the latest updates and the installation ran smoothly. The installation was quick and easy with very little work.

Zune Software
Okay, now for the juicy part of the review. One thing that you notice once you open up the Zune program is its clean and simple look. Don’t let the word simple fool you. Sometimes simple is better, and in this case it is. There are three main key parts to the program, the menu/navigation, media content, and playback controls.

The menu lets you navigate between your media connection, device, marketplace and social. These are further broken down into subcategories of music, podcasts, videos, pictures, and downloads. The Zune software does a good job in laying out your media files so it is easy to navigate and scroll through.

Zune 2 Software - Music Collection
(click image for full preview)

Search
The search bar at the top right is a pretty handy feature if you want to find a particular media file. In addition, it searches simultaneously on the Zune Marketplace so you can purchase the song if you do not have it. My only slight criticism of the search is that it does not do a live search as found in Windows Media Player 11 and iTunes. The reason for this is that it also has to search the Zune Marketplace for what you type, so that will be a bottleneck.

Zune 2 Software - Search
(click image for full preview)

Playback
Putting the Zune software in a “Now Playing’ mode is really nice. In addition to displaying the album art, song, and artist to the song that is currently playing, it creates a wall of album art in your collection as the backdrop as shown below.

Zune 2 Software - Now Playing Playing videos, pictures and podcasts are similar to playing audio files, just without the wall art backdrop.

Podcasts
The Zune Podcasts is extremely handy. As someone on the go all the time, I do not have much time to sit in front of the computer or TV and watch or read all the latest news in computing, world and economy. Thus far, every morning I hook up my Zune to sync the latest podcasts from ABC World News, CNN News, The Economists, BusinessWeek, NBC Nightly News, MSNBC, Wall Street Confidential and many more as shown in the screenshot below.

Zune 2 Software - Podcasts
(click image for full preview)

Although there is not quite the surplus of podcasts available to Zune compared to the iPod, you can be certain that there is still a vast amount of podcasts available and growing. There are many genres of music ranging from news, music, movies, comedy, health, sports, travel, business, international, politics, religion, etc.

Marketplace
I have not used the Zune Marketplace to purchase/download songs, but with my experiences with the Podcasts, I am sure downloading them is a smooth and easy process.

Conclusion
The Bad

Some things that the Zune software lacks are the ability to create smart playlists. Although there are workarounds to this by simply creating playlists in Windows Media Player with the file extension of *.m3u, but why go through the hassle, why not just have it built in? The playlist does lack great functionality. I would love to see the ability for users to create their own playlists such as playlists with most played songs, playlist by genre, year, rating, etc.

The software does not support any advance metadata tag editing. The most you can do is edit the artist, album, and song name in a basic manner. Thus you need to use Windows Media Player to do your tag editing (or similar software). This can be somewhat tedious to go back and forth between the two to make sure they are in sync.

In addition, I wish there was a more detailed status of the conversion process for videos with an estimated time remaining for the conversion and/or syncing process. Sometimes I have to wait 10-15 minutes per video on conversion (for 200MB+ video sizes), so it would be great if I knew how much time I had left.

The Good
Overall, the new Zune software is near solid, but like many software there is always room for improvement. The design is simple, yet elegant and the available content is great. It is easy to navigate and find what you are looking for while being visually appealing. I will keep “the good” brief as I have praised the software for many good things as I have stated above in my review. In addition, for the many of you who have large media libraries, the software seems to be able to handle it fine (for me at least), but it depends on your computer specifications/hardware. I am curious to see what the Zune team brings in future updates of the software.


Rating: 82 out of 100


My Zune.net profile: http://social.zune.net/member/JulianV86
Source (my blog): http://www.shadowsillusion.com/blog/

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