SANDISK's BLUETOOTH BANANA SKIN!
I'm publishing this because, the last I knew, SanDisk had done a very strange thing indeed. If you go looking for the full technical description of the SanDisk Clip Sport Plus, you'll find one technical detail manifestly missing (at least at the time of me writing this). Try as you might, you won't turn up what version Bluetooth is being used, as a transmitter, on this MP3 player.
I suppose if I'd dropped the ball in quite the way that SanDisk has, I might try to keep it quiet. It's true that the company can legitimately claim to have included Bluetooth functionality in this MP3 player, but its version 2. So, anything you are thinking of pairing it with had better be extremely backward compatible (or so old that it's not much short of a miracle that it still working)!
It's puzzling that such an old and useless version of Bluetooth should have been baked into one of their more recent devices and I suspect you wouldn't get any sense out of them, if you ever tried to ask them why on earth they decided to use such an ancient version of Bluetooth.
My sole reason for publishing this posting was to make potential customers aware of what they could be buying and the likelihood of them having the hassle of returning the product, once they discover that the damn thing won't work with much that is current technology. It's not the first time that SanDisk have screwed things up quite so badly. I was one of the unfortunate individuals who bought the earlier model of Clip Sport, when it first came out. I discovered, somewhat latterly, that this had a reputation for locking up for no apparently good reason. Fully aware of this design flaw, SanDisk (nonetheless) carried on selling the product.
No comments:
Post a Comment