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Originally published February 27 2005

The Olympus M:Robe combination music player and digital camera is a dud, according to one reviewer

by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor

One reviewer of the Olympus M:Robe, a combination digital music player and digital camera, is less than impressed with this little gizmo. The interface is clunky, the digital camera is almost useless and the touch-screen interface is often difficult to navigate, he explains. On top of that, there is no way to carry it comfortably, since it only comes with a drawstring bag. Designed to be sold to hipsters, it leaves a lot to be desired.


The Web filtered by humans, not bots: News.com Extra. Olympus must think its latest electronic gadget is going to be big, really big. The company gave it a cryptic, hyper-hip name (M:Robe). It gave the product its own Web site (olympusgroove.com), something it doesn't ordinarily do for an individual product. And most startling of all, the company spent $4.8 million to show two M:Robe TV ads during the Super Bowl. What pocket gizmo could possibly justify all of that fuss? The M:Robe 500i is a hard-drive-based music player like Apple Computer's iPod. The twist is that it's also a digital camera. Olympus seems to be the first company to get it through its head that the iPod owes a huge part of its success to its elegant, sleek looks. Its back panel is shiny white plastic like the iPod's front; its front panel features shiny metal like the iPod's chrome back--and it's just as easily marred by fingerprints. Olympus seems to be aiming the M:Robe series at young, hip urban kids with spiky gelled hair. As a result, there's an awful lot of wannabe hipness to the M:Robe's design, right down to the terminology. If you had to break down the M:Robe's price, you'd probably find that $350 of it pays for the electronics, $50 is for the cool quotient and the rest goes to the Super Bowl ads. For almost half-a-grand, you also might expect that the M:Robe would at least match its less expensive rivals in music player features--but no. You can't create new playlists on the M:Robe, can't drag music or photos onto it from a Microsoft Windows desktop and can't recharge the battery from a computer's USB connector.



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