| Brand Name: | SanDisk |
| Number of Items: | 1 |
| Remote Control Description: | None |
| Brand Name: | SanDisk |
| Number of Items: | 1 |
| Remote Control Description: | None |
Product Details
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| Sansa e200 series players mix great design and durability with an excellent user interface. View the e200 Series Demo. |
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![]() Choose a Sansa e200-series player with the capacity that's right for you. |
Form is Function
The Sansa e270 has a sleek, thin design with a large 1.8" TFT color screen for easy viewing. The strong alloy metal casing means the device is durable and scratch resistant. On the front, easy to use, backlit controls let you access what you want quickly and intuitively. The player also includes a microSD slot for expanding your memory capacity, and supports SanDisk TrustedFlash and gruvi content cards, which can be shared with mobile phones. The user-replaceable lithium-ion battery provides up to 20 hours of enjoyment.
MP3 Player
The Sansa e270 will play MP3, WMA, and secure WMA formats. Other formats can be converted using the Sansa Media Converter (included). The e270 also uses PlaysForSure technology. Look for the PlaysForSure logo if you want to make sure the digital music and video you purchase will play back on it every time. Match the PlaysForSure logo on a large selection of leading devices and online music stores. If you see the logo, you'll know your digital music will play for sure. Choose from a large number of digital music and video stores, including MTV's Urge, Rhapsody, Yahoo!, MSN Music, MusicMatch, MusicNow, Napster, Wal-Mart Music Downloads, and many more.
Video Player
View your favorite video clips anywhere, anytime. Use the included SanDisk Media Converter software to convert most popular video formats (such as MPEG-4, WMV, or DivX) into the MJPEG format playable on the e270.
Photo Viewer
Share slideshows of your favorite photos with your friends. SanDisk Media Converter also supports most image formats, allowing you to convert and downsize your images for display on the e270.
On-Board FM Radio
The e270 includes a digital FM tuner for listening to your favorite radio stations. Keep those favorites readily available by adding them to your presets. You can also record live radio on-the-fly for future listening.
Voice Recording
Have a thought you need to get down before it evades you? Use the built-in microphone to record voice memos. Capture interviews, classes, short notes to yourself, or anything else you might feel inspired to record.
Choose the Capacity for Your Needs
The Sansa e200 series is available in capacities of 2, 4, 6, or 8 GB. Each model contains a the microSD expansion slot, meaning you won't be limited to internal memory capacity.
What's in the Box
Sansa e270 digital audio player, travel pouch and lanyard, stereo headphones, Lithium-Ion rechargeable battery, USB cable, and quick start guide.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
116 of 121 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very happy except for one Issue/risk,
By Howling Panda Productions (San Francisco Bay Area, Calif.) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: SanDisk Sansa e270 6 GB MP3 Player with SD Expansion Slot (Black) (Electronics)
June 15 2006 - Unlike some of the reviewers, I couldn't care less about music "services" be they iTunes, Rhapsody, etc.
Why pay 0.99 to anyone for DRM crippled tracks? The artist doesn't benefit. I listen to CDs I have bought and ripped. For that purpose, this unit works beautifully with *any* OS including Mac X, WinXP, even Linux. The e270 can act like a flash/keychain drive: just go into the Settings menu and change the USB mode. The e270 also shows the album art (folder.jpg) while playing tracks. The e200 series has a beautiful display, better than the Nano. I wouldn't whine about the design being imitative: the Nano has better quality buttons/wheel, the e270's controls are comparatively flimsy-feeling and are harder for large fingers to operate. Besides, didn't Apple copy from *Creative's* mp3 players in the first place? The courts are reviewing that question now. THE ISSUE. My only issue is that the USB cable is proprietary, mandatory, and irreplaceable. And, Sandisk is currently unable to provide a replacement if you lose it. Without the special Sandisk USB cable, you can't even recharge the on-board Lithium battery, and also there's no wall wart for AC power available either. By contrast, my previous Sandisk e140 player (a 1GB model) uses an AAA battery --and the same USB cable most digital cameras use. Battery- and connection-wise the e140 is a better solution, but the drawback is a dim monocolor display. If you have good eyesight, the e140 is a great economy player; but the e270 is the ultimate luxury toy. Everyone who sees my e270 is smitten. UPDATE July 6th - Sandisk says it is _now_ able to ship me a replacement "e270 to USB" cable, so give them credit for that. Also, according to internet rumor, Griffin makes an e270-compatible wall-wart (AC Power) solution. Finally, no solution is available yet to the "cannot play-tracks-in-album-order" issue, a problem I failed to mention above. This might drive you seriously insane when you play Mozart or Beethoven on the thing when the IV movement isn't played fourth. Or, when an mp3 audio book can't be played in chapter order! We're waiting every day for the firmware update from Sandisk that fixes this track ordering bug.
61 of 67 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best gadget I've bought in years,
This review is from: SanDisk Sansa e270 6 GB MP3 Player with SD Expansion Slot (Black) (Electronics)
I was hesitating on buying the iPod Nano because I'm the guy who usually bought something and the next week something newer and better came out. I think this time I finally got it right. The e270 is sexy. I've seen the Creative Zens get cosmetic scratches within minutes of pulling it out of the box, this tiny e270 looks great, appears durable, and I'm confident it will survive my abuse. Dragging and dropping music is a cinch, the iPod and Zen software my friends use took some getting used to...and the out of the box conversion software to put videos and graphics on this baby is just too easy. The variety of accepted formats wasn't impressive, but it took my mp3s and wmas with no problem. It converted my jpgs with no issue. There were 5 out of 40 music mpegs had an error during conversion. And a movie in .avi format was broken down into 12 .mov files. I took this with a grain of salt and assume future firmware improvements might fix this. The menu works better for me and I prefer the e270's dial over other mp3 players. Improvements I would like to see would be the ability to put the videos in subfolders without disappearing from the menu, a different style headphones, a freebie screen protector and some way to wear it other than the supplied carry pouch or lanyard. I'm still trying to pick up an FM station, can't determine if the weakness lies with the built in antenna or the AFN stations in Iraq. The flash memory was the basis for this buy, the drive players were too bulky and sensitive to my treatment. The added feature of a micro SD slot is probably excessive, but not unwelcome. I am VERY happy with this purchase. Now how about making some accessories for this thing!?
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Almost there, SanDisk....almost,
By
This review is from: SanDisk Sansa e270 6 GB MP3 Player with SD Expansion Slot (Black) (Electronics)
My e270 has been a mixture of the enjoyable and the frustrating...with a few changes this little gadget could be simply outstanding. Instead, the Sansa e200 series falls short of what it should be, but remains a good value for those with the technical savvy and patience to put up with it.
For crying out loud, SanDisk, when are you going to support folders, or creating play lists on the fly? The e200 will organize your music for you, IF your tags are in order. You can create a "go list" list on the fly, but that's it. Your music (MP3, WMA or WAV only) can be browsed by artist, song title, album, genre and a "go list". There is another category, "my top rated", but if you rate your songs with the Sansa, it'll freeze... how much simpler life with the Sansa would be if there was support for folders or multiple play list creation. The list of EQ settings that the player ships with are also limiting...there is a custom EQ with the latest firmware, but it isn't as robust as the EQ choices on my older e140, and some users report that it's buggy. So far, I haven't had that problem. The sound is good, with good earphones. The earphones the e200 comes with have been relegated to under the pillow use by me...the ones I got with the old e140 were much better, and the Koss KSC75 clip-on's better yet. Video? Yep, but the MOV QuickTime format is as bloated as a beached whale. The bundled media converter will chop your video in to 10 minute chunks with iffy sound and in widescreen format. All this can be changed (except the MOV format) with some file editing, but why should a user have to dig through the anythingbutIpod forums to find this out? What could have been an outstanding feature with MP4 support is merely a novelty. Voice recording? Yes, in WAV format. You can record FM on the fly, (when is a Sansa player going to have AM support, anyway?) and there are photos with a slideshow function via the media converter. Left out of the package as of the 01.02.15A firmware- An alarm function and a sleep timer. The Sansa is fine with me from a control standpoint. The voice record button is placed where you can hit it by accident, the scroll wheel should be progressive, and the buttons around the wheel are hard to find with my fat fingers, but for something this size it's all livable. Battery life is as advertised, but you are a slave to your USB port unless you buy an aftermarket adapter. Don't lose the cable, its Sansa only. I enjoy my e270; the six gigs of storage, plus the expansion possible via micro SD are plenty for my use. A lot of the niggling problems I've encountered have been solved with the use of a good MP3 tag editor (MediaMonkey is great for this) and some searching through Sansa forums.
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