The Walkman Is Back..It's Only $700!!! FOH Sony

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TOKYO—Thirty five years after its debut, Sony Corp.'s 6758.TO +0.09% Walkman is enjoying a little comeback.

But while the original cassette player of 1979 heralded the age of mass-market, portable music, the new $700 Walkman is aimed at premium buyers, as technological advances help more audio-on-the go users head upscale.

The ZX1, as Sony's gadget is called, is in many ways the antithesis of Apple Inc. AAPL -0.52% 's slender iPod, and the Walkman's own svelte predecessors. It has a heavy, bulky body that houses 128 gigabytes of storage for ultra-high-quality music files. Sony says each ZX1 is manually carved from a block of expensive aluminum, which helps reduce noise.

"The message for our designers and engineers was: please create a good product without worrying about the cost," said Kenji Nakada, Sony's sound product planner.

WSJD is the Journal's home for tech news, analysis and product reviews.

Unlike many earlier Sony attempts at high-end consumer electronics, the ZX1 is selling well—at least in Japan. The new Walkman quickly sold out after hitting Japanese stores in December. Since February, the product has made its debut in Europe and other parts of Asia, although its launch date in the U.S. hasn't been set.

Despite the success, the ZX1 remains a niche product: Sony declined to give sales figures but analysts estimate only several thousand units have been sold so far in Japan.

And nobody expects the new Walkman—however successful—to go far in turning around Sony's chronic losses. The company said it lost $1.3 billion in the fiscal year ended March, and expects to stay in the red through March 2015. Televisions and games remain Sony's mainstay products in consumer electronics.

Still, the ZX1's popularity does highlight what industry watchers say is a shift among some portable-audio buyers, as advances in Internet speed and data storage allow consumers, who long opted for convenience over sound quality, to have both. Older-generation digital-audio players managed to store tens of thousands of songs in slim devices by compressing the audio files, a process that sacrificed sound quality.

"An entire generation missed the visceral emotion of listening to uncompressed audio," said Sony Chief Executive Kazuo Hirai, during an electronics show in January.

Now, faster and bigger storage memory chips as well as speedier Internet connections allow gadgets like the Walkman ZX1 to play, store and transfer heavier music files that the industry has dubbed "high-resolution audio" without losing too much of the sound data from original recordings. Longer battery life also allows the Walkman to play heavy audio files and last around 16 hours, although that is still about one-fifth of the hours possible for other portable players playing compressed files, according to Mr. Nakada.

Sony claims the format provides better sound quality than CDs, from deep bass tones to high-pitched sounds, including the moment when the singer takes a breath. High-resolution audio files contain more than three times as much audio data than CDs.

Sony has rolled out more than 25 types of high-resolution audio devices since September, including a cheaper Walkman model; it says the products made up more than 20% of all audio sales for the October through March period.

Other firms are also experimenting in the area. South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. 005930.SE -0.37% , LG Electronics Inc. 066570.SE +0.54% and Taiwan's HTC Corp. 2498.TW +2.54% are all coming out with smartphones that claim to support high-resolution audio files.

In the U.S., sales of premium headphones have doubled in the past three years, according to research firm NPD Group. Japanese research firm Fuji Chimera Research Institute Inc. projects that high-resolution audio devices will account for about 20% of sales in the global audio market by 2020 in terms of value from less than around 5% now.

Sony's latest Walkman on display at consumer electronics retail chain Bic Camera in Tokyo. Kana Inagaki/The Wall Street Journal

"People are becoming more quality conscious with high-definition television and this is the same parallel in the audio world," said David Chesky, the founder of HDtracks, a U.S. digital-music store that offers high-resolution audio files. The firm has more than doubled its revenue each year since its launch in 2008.

Tento Koyama, a 19-year-old university student, is one consumer who is willing to pay extra for sound quality. In mid-May, Mr. Koyama lined up for one hour to take part in a headphone festival event in Tokyo where Sony's ZX1 Walkman was displayed.

"I think this one is the best Walkman in its history," Mr. Koyama said, after listening to the ZX1 at a crowded Sony booth. "I don't mind the price."

Still, analysts say hurdles remain high for mass adoption since differences in sound quality are harder to detect than differences in TV picture quality.

"To get it to the mainstream, it's an effort to actually get people to listen to the difference," said Benjamin Arnold, an industry analyst at NPD Group.

And just as with TVs and smartphones, Sony already faces a growing challenge from rival audio device makers.

After trying out the ZX1 Walkman for about 40 minutes at a consumer-electronics store in Tokyo, Mr. Tamaki, a 34-year-old employee at a publishing firm who only gave his last name, said he's leaning toward buying a high-quality portable audio player by Iriver Ltd. 060570.KQ -0.95% , a South Korean firm founded by former Samsung officials. That product cost twice as much as Sony's ZX1.

"This one is better than Sony's," he concluded.
 
Ain't nobody buying that shit! 128gb of memory, most folks stream music these days anyway.
 
No details into the DAC, headphone amp, capacitor type, micro SD slot, screen type, what headphone come with the unit? That article was some basic shit. for $700?
 
Sony on that if we set the price high people will just buy it because it's expensive bullshit
 
Not a smart move for a company losing money. And I recall them trying this before like 5 years ago.

Sent From My Galaxy S5
 
Not a smart move for a company losing money. And I recall them trying this before like 5 years ago.

Sent From My Galaxy S5

all they need to do is get a bunch of famous people to wear them..show them walking around town with it..pics on instagram..pics on facebook or twitter and the sheep will follow..have somebody like kanye say listening to music on ur phone is so played out...watch all the delusional fucks start saying that shit and buying this in droves..i need to be on this marketing venture to laugh at the sheep
 
Sony can such an Android dick. I got a Galaxy SG4 with 80gigs total space. All my music is on it and I still got 50gigs to spare. Playing all that shit with WinAmp Pro.
 
I"m not sure how much was spent on R&D, but this is only for a certain type of prosumer, and I'm sure this device will not be heavily produced. The fact that sony didn't even consider the US market is another tell tell sign. I'm sure they know this wouldn't sale here, so they are going to have to make demand up somewhere else then have US users demand it comes here.
 
all they need to do is get a bunch of famous people to wear them..show them walking around town with it..pics on instagram..pics on facebook or twitter and the sheep will follow..have somebody like kanye say listening to music on ur phone is so played out...watch all the delusional fucks start saying that shit and buying this in droves..i need to be on this marketing venture to laugh at the sheep

:yes:
 
switch the logo to apple or beats and the sheep would be lined up for this

easily...they'd have to bring the price down a bit...call that shit the iPod 2 or w/e...but ya this is sony's attempt to get a jump start on w/e it is apple has planned
 
all they need to do is get a bunch of famous people to wear them..show them walking around town with it..pics on instagram..pics on facebook or twitter and the sheep will follow..have somebody like kanye say listening to music on ur phone is so played out...watch all the delusional fucks start saying that shit and buying this in droves..i need to be on this marketing venture to laugh at the sheep

If it's that's simple, why haven't they already done this? Are you saying a multi-billion dollar corporation doesn't have the personnel or capital to market a product they have already invested a considerable amount of money in? Like the 14 billion Samsung spent on marketing last year? Oh, wait. :lol: Send them japs a PowerPoint and make yourself a rich man. :lol:
 
They would have been better off releasing a new Sony Walkman CASSETTE model for the hipster crowd. My cellphone makes this obsolete.
 
look closely...
that little bitch is loaded....

audiophiles read this...

The ZX1 plays 24-bit, 192kHz Free Lossless Audio Codec (FLAC) audio files, the ultra-high resolution audio format that will also be supported by the Neil Young-backed, Kickstarter-funded PonoPlayer due out in October. Like the PonoPlayer, Sony's device also 128GB of internal storage, contributing to the expensive price tag.

I would never pay 700 fucking dollars for one but I could see why the purist would..
 
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so they want me to pay 6 bills for something,

I do for free on my blackberry z10,

and it makes phone calls...

sony is still on that losing streak,

the only good sign, is japan is a leader/trendsetter in

what takes off electronically around the world.

but I think they finally met their match with apple...

but who knows, Im still shocked at the numbers

amazons kindle did...
 
look closely...
that little bitch is loaded....

audiophiles read this...

The ZX1 plays 24-bit, 192kHz Free Lossless Audio Codec (FLAC) audio files, the ultra-high resolution audio format that will also be supported by the Neil Young-backed, Kickstarter-funded PonoPlayer due out in October. Like the PonoPlayer, Sony's device also 128GB of internal storage, contributing to the expensive price tag.

I would never pay 700 fucking dollars for one but I could see why the purist would..

Pono starts at 300 I think maybe 400.




I'm sold on Pono!!!!


http://www.ponomusic.com/#home
 
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so they want me to pay 6 bills for something,

I do for free on my blackberry z10,

and it makes phone calls...

sony is still on that losing streak,

the only good sign, is japan is a leader/trendsetter in

what takes off electronically around the world.

but I think they finally met their match with apple...

but who knows, Im still shocked at the numbers

amazons kindle did...

Most likey you paying for the digital to analog converters in that bitch. That could add 300 or 400 dollars alone. This product is not for the casual listener. Mostly seasoned musicians. Audiophiles and vinyl snobs.
 
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