Sony Walkman Bean NW-E305 (512MB, Coconut White)
Pricing not available
CNET Editors' Review
CNET Editors' Rating
- Reviewed by: Rick Broida
- Reviewed on:
The good: Excellent FM reception and battery life; retractable USB connector.
The bad: Poorly designed USB cover; awkward controls; tiny screen muddles interface; noticeable hiss during playback; music-store support limited to Sony Connect; slow file transfers.
The bottom line: Sony's half-baked Walkman Bean tries hard to be hip, but bad design elements and hissy audio make it one square audio player.
The 512MB NW-E305 comes in Coconut White and Tropical Ice Blue, while the 1GB NW-E307 comes in Black Licorice and, especially for the girls, Cotton Candy Pink. Sony has already lowered prices since announcing the Beans in August; you'll pay $119.95 and $149.95 for the 512MB and 1GB versions, respectively.
It'll come as little surprise that the Bean is shaped like, well, a bean--specifically, a kidney bean, with rounded edges and a slight bend in the middle. Although we applaud Sony's attempt at innovative design, there's nothing particularly practical about a bean-shaped audio player. If anything, the device is harder to hold and manipulate than it should be. It is adorable, though.
The Sony Bean has a small but very bright one-line OLED screen, a five-way D-pad controller, and three buttons, two of which are maddeningly stiff and shallow. A sliding plastic cover reveals a retractable, pop-out USB connector. That's handy, but the cover itself is a problem. When you close it all the way, it engages the player's Hold mode. To disable Hold, you have to nudge the cover back a notch, at which point it wobbles loosely and easily pops open again.
Although the screen gives the Sony Walkman Bean an immediate edge over the iPod Shuffle, its tiny size limits its value. Song navigation is fairly straightforward: press the up or down arrow on the D-pad to scroll through your playlist. But it takes considerable effort to figure out the complicated one-line menu system. Sony's kooky terminology doesn't help. For example, an option called Sound has three settings: Off, 1, and 2. You'll need lots of luck figuring out what any of that means without consulting the electronic manual.
Hide ReviewUser Reviews
See all user reviewsMost Helpful User Review
stars 5 of 5 users found this review helpful
"fairly solid player with intuitive controls, OLED screen" By omniL
Pros Awesome battery life, battery charges very rapidly, good sound quality
Cons Must use Sony's Sonic Stage software to import music
Summary I just bought one of these for my mother. The OLED screen is amazingly clear and bright and easily read even with the mid-day Arizona sun glaring off of it (unlike my 15GB 3g iPod). I have not tested the included headphones, as they are almost always cheap and have ... Expand full review
Most Recent User Reviews (Showing 2 of 17 reviews)
Where to Buy
Pricing not available
Specifications
See full specsQuick Specs
- Digital Storage / Capacity: 512 MB
- Flash memory installed: 512 MB
- Digital player supported digital audio standards: MP3 ATRAC3 WMA ATRAC3plus WAV