CELL PHONES
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
SMARTPHONES
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
CAMERAS
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
REVIEWS
» Cell phones
» Cameras
» Camcorders
» Archive » Product Guide
» Compare » Expert guides
» RSS & Alerts » Ask The Editors
Home / Review Center / MP3 players /
Review: Samsung YP-K3 music playerBy Philip Berne, Tuesday 15 May 2007
GALLERY
Samsung YP-K3
Enlarge
Samsung YP-K3
Enlarge
Samsung YP-K3
Enlarge
Samsung YP-K3
Enlarge
Samsung YP-K3
Enlarge
Samsung YP-K3
Enlarge
Samsung YP-K3
Enlarge
Samsung YP-K3
Enlarge
 
 
With touch sensitive controls and a slim, slick look, the Samsung K3 looks a lot like Apple's popular device. Is the Samsung player the true bargain?

Review summary of the Samsung YP-K3:
         Gallery »
Samsung YP-K3 It is easier to describe what the YP-K3 isn't, instead of what it is. It isn't the Samsung YP-T9, which was a bit smaller, cooler looking, and packed more features, including voice recording. It isn't the YP-K5, which had attached speakers and a great alarm clock. It also isn't an iPod nano, though it has all the sound quality, it lacks that player's robust file handling, easier navigation, and better software. Still, you can have the YP-K3 for $30 less than a similar iPod nano, so for bargain hunters, it may be worth the price. Release: May 2007. Price: $60.
Pros: Great sound quality. Nice interface. Slick design. Touch sensitive controls better than most.
Cons: Few features. Design is obviously derivative. Transfer software is subpar, and unfriendly. Slow connection makes for long transfers.
Poor
Mediocre
68%
GOOD
Very good
Excellent
Full Samsung YP-K3 Review:
Design - Good

The Samsung YP-K3 looks nice, if not very familiar. More than any similar competitor, it mimics the iPod nano, with a glossy slab front, chrome accents on the side, and the headphone and proprietary USB port on the bottom. The glossy front hides touch sensitive controls, and we usually aren't fans of these controls, but on the YP-K3, they worked fine. Still, hardware controls always feel more sensitive and responsive to us, and the touch buttons couldn't speed up the process of scrolling a long list of song titles.

The interface is standard Samsung fare - menu icons made up of tiny dots that morph from one to the other. The screen itself is disappointing, a 1.8-inch OLED display. Colors seemed a bit washed while viewing JPEGs, and even the visualizer was unexciting. Navigating the menus is very easy, and with few features or customization options, there is little to expect from this simple player's interface.

Sound - Very good

We tested the Samsung player with Liz Phair's "Exile in Guyville," ripped straight from CD, and a slew of Barenaked Ladies live tracks we downloaded from Napster, which the player supports. All the music we listened to sounded excellent, just as we expected from Samsung, whose players have never disappointed in terms of sound quality. Highs and lows sounded clean and crisp, and even the equalizer, which has five presets, wasn't overbearing. FM radio quality wasn't as impressive; we had some reception issues, and the player had trouble locking into all of our favorite New York-area stations.

Features - Mediocre

The Samsung YP-K3 doesn't do much. It plays music and radio, and you can view some pictures on its screen, but that's about it. For file types, the K3 doesn't play AAC files, so even DRM-free tunes from iTunes are out, and there are no options for uncompressed files, though the 2GB player handles compressed tracks better than average. There are no recording options for the K3, neither for voice nor recording from the FM radio. JPEG quality was disappointing, on some of our more abstract pictures, it was very difficult to determine the subject. Colors also seemed a bit faded.

Software - Mediocre

The YP-K3 uses Samsung's Media Studio, which does its job, albeit slowly. The player has a few idiosyncrasies, and viewing options as well as drag-and-drop options are inconsistent, sometimes available and sometimes not. To fill the 1.84GB of available space on the player took about 25 minutes, which is pretty long, so we're guessing the proprietary cable is not USB 2.0. The software only works with Windows, so Mac users can look elsewhere (does Apple make a player?).

Accessories and battery life - Mediocre

The included headphones are white earbuds, just as you'll find with the iPod. They sound find, though we'd never give up our noise isolating, high-end phones for them. As we mentioned, the cable is a proprietary USB, and it also charges the player. For battery life, we used the player for about three hours a day for a work week and never had to recharge. That's pretty good, probably close to the claimed 20 hours of playback. Without a removable battery, though, you'll want to keep your laptop close on long trips.


Price and availability

The Samsung YP-K3 is currently available for $60.

Best MP3 players
Name Score Price
C
Apple iPod 80GB 86% $200
Altec Lansing iMV712 76% $350
Sony Walkman NWZ-S615F 76% $90
Sony Walkman NWZ-A818 73% $160
Samsung YP-U3 70% $60
Samsung YP-P2 70% $250
Toshiba Gigabeat T400 70% $120
Samsung YP-S5 70% $170
Samsung YP-K3 68% $60
Samsung YP-K5 65% $170
Click here to see full and advanced chart »
 
 
 
TOP STORIES
Samsung R0 (YP-R0) Multimedia Player Announced
 
Apple adds improvements to iTunes, bolsters entire iPod lineup
 
iPod nano 5G, the video recording iPod (Hands-on)
Samsung R1 joins the multimedia 'beat' family
 
Sony cranks up the new S Series Walkman with speakers
 
Best touch screen players at CES 2009
Samsung YP-P3 portable media player hands-on
 
Slacker G2 hands-on impressions
 
iPod classic 120GB hands-on preview
iPod classic 120GB video hands-on
 
iPod nano 4G hands-on preview
 
iPod nano 4G video hands-on
Portable: Qualcomm mirasol color displays, Toshiba 240GB HDD
 
iPod nano 4G is thinnest iPod ever
 
iTunes 8 gets HD TV shows, Genius playlist creation
NOW IN MP3 PLAYERS
Samsung R0 (YP-R0) Multimedia Player Announced
 
Apple adds improvements to iTunes, bolsters entire iPod lineup
 
iPod nano 5G, the video recording iPod (Hands-on)
 
Samsung R1 joins the multimedia 'beat' family
 
Sony cranks up the new S Series Walkman with speakers
Best touch screen players at CES 2009
Samsung YP-P3 portable media player hands-on
Slacker G2 hands-on impressions
Next 25 stories
MUST READ
CELL PHONES
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
SMARTPHONES
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
LAPTOPS
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
CAMERAS
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
INTERNET TABLETS
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
GPS NAVIGATORS
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
HDTVs
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
CAMCORDERS
» Coming soon
» Top 15
» Best-rated
About us | Site map | How to advertise | Feedback | RSS Feeds | | Archive
Copyright 1999-2009 © infoSync World