PortablePlayers/Others
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CD/DVD Audio Players
Freemax's FW-960
- This CD-R portable supports Ogg Vorbis playback out of the box. It has 48 hours of WMA playback if an external battery pack (2 AA batteries) is used. The FreeMax FW-960 is also known as the mpman MP-CD550.
Havin's (link dead) Exonion HVC-400E, Princeton's Pocket Beat airCD
- The Havin HVC-400E, also known as the Princeton airCD is probably on sale in Japan since late November, 2003.
iRiver iMP-250, iMP-350, iMP-400, iMP-550, iMP-700(T)
- Ogg Vorbis is supported only through latest beta firmwares, still some bitrate restriction which may vary depending on the model (min=96kbps, max=160kbps). The iMP-550 supports maximum bitrate up to 256kps (still 96kbps as minimum). Also note the latest iMP-450 does not support OGG for the moment, a future upgrade may correct this... The iMP-700T with firmware 1.40 supports bitrates between 96 and 210 kbps, and .ogg files are generally not as loud as .mp3 files.
Roadstar PCD-5960WOMPT
Samsung's MCD-CM600
- The MCD-CM600 is now available in Korea. It is a CD portable that can play Vorbis, MP3, and WMA.
Mobile Phones
Openmoko
- Openmoko produces phones with hardware and software as open as possible. They run GNU/Linux and software players such as mplayer and ogg123 can be used for vorbis playback. Because it runs GPL'ed software, ogg theora is also supported (but needs to be encoded with low frame rate as described at Openmoko wiki).
Samsung introduced phones on the 2006 3GSM that play .ogg files: SGH-i320 and SPH-S4300
- Also, Samsung i900 Omnia is known to play Vorbis, in Windows Media Player only. Samsung SGH-i200, also plays Vorbis.
SymbianOS based mobile phones from Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Siemens, Motorola, Samsung etc.
- Plays Vorbis files with the third-party, open source Symbian OggPlay Software. For supported mobile phones please visit the project website. The software works very well — even the still-in-development version which is strongly recommended. There is also a plugin to Symbian itself. See also VorbisSoftwarePlayers#Symbian.
iPhone
- Third-party efforts are porting the CorePlayer and the VLC player
Android-based phones
Presumably all Android devices including phones support Vorbis out-of-the-box. Here are some examples with references:
- Nexus One aka the "Goggle Phone" (User Guide page page 329)
- T-Mobile G1 (User Guide page 105)
- HTC Dream (User Guide page 153)
- HTC Magic (User Guide page 198)
- Motorola Droid (User Guide page 34)
- Motorola Milestone (User Guide page 35)
Windows Mobile based phones
Automobiles
See StaticPlayers page.
Others
iPodLinux
- You can install special Linux distribution on almost all of Apple iPods. In combination with Podzilla jukebox software it plays OGG (and many more audio file formats).
PDAs / Cell Phones / Game Consoles
- Other devices that run software to play Ogg Vorbis can be used as portable players as well. Please go to VorbisSoftwarePlayers page for more information.
Rockbox alternative firmware for iPods and other DAPs
- The Rockbox project works hard to provide an alternative firmware for some portable players. Rockbox has a rich feature set that is hard to find elsewhere, including gapless playback, Ogg Vorbis, FLAC and even Musepack support. Currently many models by iRiver, Archos, Ipod, Cowon(iAudio X5, X5V, X5L, M5 and M5l), SanDisk(Sansa c200, e200 and e200R series) and Toshiba(Gigabeat X and F series) are supported.
Rockbox Player - Free/Open hardware audio player (DAP) and recorder
- There is ongoing efforts to design and build a Free/Open hardware audio player (DAP) and recorder, for use with RockBox firmware. Developer interested in participating are encouraged to visit the project page.
- According to [1]