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Pocket Tunes 4.0: Even Better Music On Your Treo

Treo Pocket TunesAs I’ve stated many times in the past my iPod has gathered dust since I much prefer listening to music directly on my Treo –  an activity that is quite possibly one my most frequently used particularly as I now use multiple 4GB SD cards and will soon also receive my first two 8GB cards.

For this there is no doubt that I have to thank the fantastic Pocket Tunes application without which I very much doubt that I would have made the Treo my preferred portable music player nor so enjoyed listening to my music while on the go.

A few days ago the long anticipated new Pocket Tunes 4.0 was finally released and while it brings some much appreciated improvements and new functionalities it disappointingly and somewhat upsettingly falls very much short of the expectations that I had for this latest full release.  The six major changes in version 4.0 include:

1. Brand New User Interface
The developers of Pocket Tunes excitedly and with much fanfare promote the arrival of their “sleek new user interface” but this leaves _much_ to be desired.  Considering that the entire new UI consists of just ONE screen you would have thought that a smart usability designer could have achieved near perfection here but it’s simply not the case.

  

For starters there is the mindnumbingly annoying Pocket Tunes splash screen (above right) which appears for a few seconds_every time_ you start the application – I guess that someone might be suffering from logo depravation.  Next are details such as the fact that the clock at the top right of the screen is too small as well as the Repeat and Shuffle buttons and importantly the new Album Art – an entirely new feature in v4.0.  Additionally buttons that previously existed in the very good “High Fidelity” UI from version 3.0 such as Playlist and Equalizer are no longer available.

  

I wish that I had the capabilities to design my own Pocket Tunes skins as with just 10 minutes in Photoshop I was able to at least somewhat improve the standard “Sleek Blue” that it now includes.  Here above left I have increased the Album Art size by over 50%, increased the size of the clock, reduced the size of the volume bar so as to accomodate two more buttons on that line and finally simply marginally shrink the main Play bar at the bottom.  Given a little more time I am sure that I could come up with something even better which again begs me to ask why Pocket Tunes has not come up with a ‘great’ new UI to start with.

Moreover, I really have to ask why Pocket Tunes only has the ‘one’ screen when clearly there could be three or four at least.  The first would give you access to all the buttons, the second would display mostly all the song list for your album(s) while the third would provide you with a large Album Art view such as my draft version above right.  You should be able to easily cycle across all the screens with just one additional button – I’ll be waiting for someone to actually design some working skins…

Finally, whoever was responsible for Pocket Tunes’ new UI intervention has completely missed to make any changes to the Menu options with Prefs, Actions, Tools and Help unfortunately remaining virtually the same.  For example after using Pocket Tunes for nearly three years I have yet to figure out exactly what “Copy from PC Prefs…” is about (since they don’t include an “i” information button for every preference).  Other issues include the fact that the “Stop playing after … minutes” still resets to zero every time I disable it instead of remembering my previous selection (I typically leave PTunes playing for 20 minutes when going to sleep).  The fact is that Pocket Tunes’ entire menu screens are still a complete mess and need an urgent revamp.

  

As if all this wasn’t bad enough PTunes has also failed to make much needed small improvements to its “Choose Songs” screens above.  For starters the “All” selection still searches for music across your entire SD card (taking up to 15 seconds to do so) instead of just speeding the process by only looking for files in your Audio folder (above right).  The other thing is that if for example you have a specific ‘Classical’ folder which contains multiple albums and click “Select All” PTunes does not understand that you would like to play all the albums in that folder and instead does nothing – you can frustratingly only play one album folder at a time.  I could go on and on about small faults like this that still plague PTunes.

Having said all this there are some ‘minor’ improvements in this new UI that are better such as the easy large one button direct access to “Choose Songs” (bottom left of the screen) and “Internet Radio Catalog” (bottom right) as well as the new display of ‘time elapsed’ and ‘total song duration’.  I also like the fact that the previous separate Play + Pause + Stop buttons have now been cleverly combined into just one button – saving precious screen space in the process – and that they are still within easy thumb reach at the bottom of the screen.

Finally, as before Pocket Tunes provides extremely good one hand interface navigation using the 5-way control on your Treo – Up/Down to control volume, Click Left/Right to skip songs backwards or forwards and Press+Hold Left/Right to fast forward.

2. Album Art
When your music includes album art images, Pocket Tunes will now display them beside the song's title.  Tap on the album art to enlarge it to take up the whole screen (below left), or tap on the song title to see the album art along with information about that song (below right).  For maximum compatibility with your album art, Pocket Tunes displays JPEG album art that's embedded in the song file or included as a separate file in the same folder. 

  

3. Internet Radio Catalog
You can now choose from the hundreds of Internet radio stations pre-populated in the new catalog and easily accessible via the “Internet Radio” button at the bottom right of the screen.  Select from dozens of categories including Pop/Rock, Talk, Hip-Hop/Rap, Jazz, Classical, and many more.  Also included are high-fidelity aacPlus stations that sound wonderful on any wireless network.   

  

You can add your own stations manually (as I did above for Energy 92.7) or by browsing the web using your phone's built-in web browser.  You can even share your favorite stations with friends using Bluetooth, infrared, or email.  The radio catalog is updated often, so select the Get Updates menu item regularly to download the latest and greatest stations to your phone.  The new Internet Radio Catalog is without a doubt a very welcome addition to Pocket Tunes.

4. Improved Internet Radio Playback
Pocket Tunes already offered the best way to listen to Internet Radio on your Treo and in 4.0 you can enjoy many additional enhancements.  Pocket Tunes now collapses "cluster" stations into one entry on the screen.  If one of the servers for that station isn't working, simply expand the list and select another one.  In addition, 4.0 improves compatibility with software that makes your home music collection available on your phone.  PTunes has also added numerous other under-the-cover improvements such as improved detection of the streaming format, better synchronization when displaying the current song name from a radio station, improved buffering and skip prevention, and lots more.  However, here again the UI does not for example show you the kbps data for the stream…

5. Playback of AAC and aacPlus Files
Pocket Tunes now natively supports AAC and aacPlus formatted files and streaming audio.  AAC and aacPlus enable smaller files and better quality, allowing you to fit more music on your device.  If you've copied your music collection from your CDs using iTunes or WinAmp, you will appreciate the ability to play those files on your phone without converting them like other music players require.

6. Even Better Audio Quality
The audio quality on Pocket Tunes 3.0 was undoubtedly extremely good but this has now been further improved with drastic improvements to the volume boost feature with which you can now enjoy louder, virtually distortion-free playback in the loudest environments.  Also, with the new support for aacPlus you can enjoy crystal-clear CD-quality radio on your existing cell phone data connection.  Or use software like WinAmp to rip your CDs to aacPlus for maximum fidelity. 

Standard Pocket Tunes Features
Version 4.0 builds on an already packed set of features and functionalities that Pocket Tunes 3.0 offered including:

  • Access millions of songs and audio books from popular online music stores: Pocket Tunes Deluxe supports all music stores that use Microsoft's Janus technology such as Napster, Real Rhapsody, Yahoo! Music Engine with support for both subscription and purchased content.  (I will review this separately soon but you can read my previous post Yahoo! Music Unlimited On Your Treo for more information).
  • Listen to all your tunes on your phone: Easily play music stored on your device's storage card, internal memory, or hard disk.
  • Keep your music synchronized with what's on your PC: Pocket Tunes integrates with Windows Media Player, Real Rhapsody, and many other music players on your PC to allow you to quickly and easily copy music to your device.  Just plug it in, start Pocket Tunes, and you’re ready to go.
  • Find music quickly, auto-sorted by album, artist, and genre: Pocket Tunes sorts your music by album, artist, genre, and playlist to allow you to quickly find what you're in the mood for.
  • Broad range of supported music files: Pocket Tunes plays MP3, AAC, aacPlus, WMA*, WMDRM (Janus), PCM WAV, and Ogg Vorbis files.
  • Use your Palm device normally while music is playing: with “background playback” you're free to run any other application on your device while playing music or listening to Internet radio.
  • Integrated with your phone: Pause you rmusic or change the volume using the buttons on the side of your Treo.  When calls come in, Pocket Tunes automatically pauses the music until you hang up.
  • Control your music playback while using other phone functions: Access the popup console while using other applications or phone functions to play, pause, change tracks, adjust the volume, and more.
  • Mix, shuffle, then repeat: Quickly create playlists or pick songs one-by-one.  Turn on the shuffle and repeat options to combine your music in ways you had not expected.
  • Personalize Pocket Tunes: Choose from dozens of skins (many of them are free) at www.pocket-tunes.com/skins/ to make Pocket Tunes your own.
  • Fine tune your music: With features like crossfade, gapless playback, a high-fidelity equalizer, high quality volume boost, and many more, Pocket Tunes allows you unprecedented control over your music listening experience.
  • Listen to audio books: Pocket Tunes provides unique features (like bookmarks and auto-bookmarks) to make it a powerful companion when listening to books on the go.
  • Support for StyleTap on Treo 700: Owners of the StyleTap Platform can now run Pocket Tunes on their Palm Treo 700w smartphone (Requires StyleTap v0.9.126 or greater).
  • Tons of playback options: Not everyone uses their audio player in the same way.  Configure Pocket Tunes to start playing on startup, stop playing after a certain period of inactivity, stop playing on low battery, and more.
  • Ringtones, alarm clocks and more: Pocket Tunes integrates with dozens of third-part applications to enable great capabilities such as custom ringtones, alarm clocks (such as with my preferred great MobileClock) and much more.

Conclusion
The developers of Pocket Tunes claim that it is “the most feature-rich audio player for your Treo smartphone” and I am very happy to continue to support this since I have yet to find another player that comes close to its feature set.  I envisage Pocket Tunes 4.0 to remain my preferred Treo audio player for some time and I will likely encourage others to use it.

Having said this however I expected quite a bit more from this new full version 4.0.  I am rather disappointed and annoyed feeling that the people at Pocket Tunes have been somewhat resting on their laurels instead of truly further pushing the unique digital music boundaries that I believe that the Treo offers.  I honestly feel that they are slowly beginning to squander a golden opportunity and I will unfortunately now more readily look at competing offerings.

For example, I still cannot understand how no company has exploited the option to transform the Treo into what could likely become the single best “portable music discovery device” in the world.  With up to 8GB of SD storage, unlimited wireless data capabilities, full PC synchronisation and significant on-device processing capabilities there is no reason why I could not periodically download a couple of gigabytes of music (DRM protected even) and conveniently listen + rate (or even buy) them while on the go.  As far as I know nobody has even attempted to turn this into a standalone business or add-on service yet.

I hope that future Pocket Tunes updates in 2007 may bring some more meaningful improvements as this application may currently still be the best-of-breed on Planet Treonauts but it certainly has a way to go before it can achieve real success.  The day that people specifically express a preference to buy a Treo because Pocket Tunes is installed on it will be the day that its developer can pop the champagne.  In the meantime they should concentrate their efforts on ensuring that it delivers more than just ‘cosmetic’ improvements.

[Note: If you already listen to music on your Treo or are considering doing so you may also want to read my previous post about Music Listening Options Roundup.]

Treonauts always play to a different tune


Posted by Andrew on December 28, 2006 at 06:35 AM

Treo Software | Music

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Comments

26
by Alan Johnson | Jan 3, 2007 5:56:42 PM

I'm a PocketTunes 3.0 Deluxe user, and I for one refuse to upgrade until NormSoft manages to fix the glaring UI issues with the program. Besides some of the complaints brought up by the reviewer, I have a few of my own:

-No ability to enqueue songs, or rearrange the now-playing playlist (drag and drop, or otherwise)
-Playlist edits don't update in real time, if made to the currently playing playlist
-Laggy UI when skipping songs. It's understandable that there is a delay before a song starts playing, but efforts should be made to make the UI stay responsive
-More UI configuration options, such as the ability to use the 5-way navigator while songs are being played
-Ability to edit ID3 tags (this really isn't that difficult to implement)

Maybe some of these have been addressed with 4.0, but I haven't heard anything to indicate this. As it is, I see no compelling reason to shell out the money for such an incremental upgrade

27
by LBeans | Jan 4, 2007 3:32:21 PM

Let me preface by saying I own an extensive CD collection and I purchased my iPod before I bought my 700p.

Having said that, I was thoroughly disappointed with Pocket Tunes. As someone already mentioned, it felt like a slap in the face to have to pay to upgrade Pocket Tunes after I had already paid a handsome sum for the phone itself.

I currently have eight or more gigabytes worth of music on my iPod and that represents a small fraction of my collection so my 40G iPod makes more sense right now. Furthermore, I'm a purist, so I don't need album art or fancy interfaces, just play the music and I'm happy.

Until there is a more convenient way to carry around loads of songs and play them on a Treo, my iPod and Treo will have to make friends with each other inside of my pocket.

28
by jadon | Jan 5, 2007 3:24:56 PM

The PlaysForSure (download support for Napster, Yahoo, etc.) is the killer app for me. Pocket-Tunes still needs direct download, which is missing. Using with Quick News for podcasts is handy, but I want more selection. mOcean and Kinoma don't seem to support PlaysForSure.

In all, all of these media players seem very buggy to me. Pocket Tunes sometimes doesn't fast-forward or just stops during playback. I'm still dreaming of the day I won't have to carry a separate audio player.

29
by VVoltz | Jan 6, 2007 7:09:26 PM

OMG, I still don't understand how the PalmOS layout looks like the Cobalt one, well, I haven't benn much on the PalmOS scene since a few years now, has Palm finally got a Treo (because of the square screen) with PalmOS Cobalt? is that some kind of enhancement???

I mean look a those buttons, they are gorgeous!!!!

30
by franz | Jan 8, 2007 5:58:49 PM

I'd love to see a full review of CorePlayer. This blog ranked it 5 stars in the Top 100 list, but I'd like to hear a first hand account of it verses the free player and the competition. I like the FLAC support to have a single lossless file format for all my audio files. I know that it with reduce my storage capacity, but now we have the ability to store 8GB. I also know lossless is overkill on a Treo, which does not have audiophile quality DAC, but I don't want to have to convert everything in two formats. Does anyone have experience with CorePlayer?

31
by jb | Jan 10, 2007 7:30:38 PM

I've read this blog with great interest. Missing from comments, however, is the issue of sound quality. I am still primarily using CDs and own an iPod nano. I was very excited about using my Treo650 to carry and reproduce music, but have been disappointed by the sound quality. Compared to CD and iPod reproduction quality on the same sound systems (i.e. stereo, car, headset), the Treo/ptunes reproduction is dull and muffled.

I really want to make my Treo work for me. Any ideas toward making ptunes on Treo sound as good as a CD or iPod would be appreciated. What have others thought about sound quality compared to CD and iPod?

Cheers

32
by ppzh | Jul 5, 2007 11:55:12 PM

I try to play flac music, but it looks can not open. What version can play flac?

33
by James | Sep 10, 2007 4:22:36 PM

Andrew - any way that we can get that Sleek Blue skin that you edited for larger album art?

I agree with everything you said. I would LOVE to see the Choose Songs menu have album art included there as well, or even a "cover flow" interface similar to the iPhone to *flick* through the albums.

34
by jair | Oct 11, 2009 3:10:51 PM

meu tro travou

35
by jair | Oct 11, 2009 3:11:15 PM

meu tro travou como faço p destravar ele?

The comments to this entry are closed.

 
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