🎵 Elevate Your Sound Experience with AGPTEK!
The AGPTEK MP3 Player is a versatile music device featuring Bluetooth 5.3, a 2.4-inch curved screen, and 32GB of internal memory, expandable up to 128GB. It offers high-fidelity sound quality and multiple functions including FM radio and voice recording, making it a perfect companion for music enthusiasts.
Compatible Devices | Headphone |
Supported Media Type | TF card |
Supported Standards | MP3 |
Battery Average Life | 50 Hours |
Memory Storage Capacity | 32 GB |
Screen Size | 2.4 Inches |
Additional Features | Voice Recorder |
Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 0.35"D x 1.57"W x 4.16"H |
Item Weight | 0.1 Kilograms |
Color | black |
A**E
Good bit of kit
I purchased one of these last year, when Samsung updated my phone, and removed the ability to play my stored music. Despite being a 'silver surfer', I moved all my music to my laptop and on to this little beauty, works really well, and easy to navigate around.My wife is now suffering the same with her Samsung, so this purchase is for her, delivered on time and it's working just as well as mine. Pity it's not available in different colours to make sure we don't mix them up.
R**E
Good player with some issues you may struggle with
AGPtek mp3 players are mostly well built, capable players, let down by some poor ui design and lack of available usage information.This is the best player I've bought yet, but some of its issues are properly awkward.So. First, Bluetooth. Unlike the player it's replacing (an A02S) its bluetooth functionality seems greatly improved. For one thing, it seems to find devices fairly quickly and, unlike some players, you don't seem to sacrifice a ton of functions in order to make use of it. And it's reasonably intuitive. It seems to need to be activated every time you use it, though, and you have to navigate back to the music functionality afterwards.Sound quality seems pretty good - but the equaliser is best ignored.Add on card management - spotty. The player only looks in one place for stuff to play. So if you've navigated (via the folder option on the menu) to your plug in card, it won't play anything stored in internal memory until you've accessed it via the folder option. At which point, you lose the card.If you have a playlist stored in the internal memory but you last accessed the plugin card, you can still try to open your playlist, but the player will tell you that it's empty.Making playlists is complicated, for that reason. The easiest approach is to use the player to build a playlist from a track you've navigated to, then edit the created playlist in a text editor using what you can see about how the player made the playlist as a learning tool to help you extend it.You will be best served by ensuring your mp3s are named with the track number preceding the rest of the filename, with an appropriate number of leading zeroes, if you want your albums to play in track order.The touch sensitive part of the screen is restricted to just the button elements in the bottom half. I keep trying to use it like my phone - I imagine I'll get used to it! The touch sensitive buttons really are very easy to activate by accident, so I find it's a good idea to tap the power button (switching the screen and buttons off) before putting the player down or in a pocket or whatever. If there's a button lock function that leaves the screen on, I haven't found it yet.The front panel attracts fingerprints like crazy. I hope there's a good screen protector out there...Oh, playback resumes where you left off after power down without fuss. It also starts playing if it was playing when you switched off, or not if you paused it first. I'd rather it always started paused but that just means I need to remember to pause it before powering down...Oh, and unlike my older Agptek player, the display doesn't include the track progression data (like, track 6 out of a playlist of 15 should show something like 6/15 and just doesn't.)The bookmark feature remains limited to a time offset with no tie to the specific track being played, which is another old complaint, so it's less useful than it might be, along with the failure to merge internal and external music databases.Because of the database limitations, you may prefer to keep related things grouped in folders and build playlists yourself. That's a bit of a pain but it's educational... 😀But if you can cope with (or don't care about) the technical limitations, it's still an amazing player for the price. 32gb and feels robust and solid (although I wouldn't recommend bouncing it off solid objects, those screens are probably not shockproof...)If Agptek are paying attention, your firmware definitely needs work but there's the basis of something amazing and brilliant here...
R**1
MP3 player
Brought one each for my grandsons. They love them. Use them when they go jogging. Music playback quality. Charges fast. Good storage capacity
M**Y
Good product
Wife really impressed with this, not had chance for extended use yet, waiting for holibobs.
S**M
Yeah it's alright
Product is nice enough, has the basic features that we wanted for our kid to have with a few extras that were harmless and not very useful but made it feel a little special. The device is now 18 months old but has now decided that it can't charge and so the it's a dead weight now. It's nothing special and does the job, but it's longevity is not great.
D**N
Sounds fantastic
I love this, it's very stylish, the sound is perfect well worth the money
W**M
Excellent price
Works well - takes a bit of getting used to as it’s not touchscreen.
A**R
IT BROKE IN 3 DAYS (edited)
I BOUGHT THIS MP3 PLAYER FOR MY RESIDENTIAL TRIP AND IT ALR BROKE I'M VERY UPSET AS I PAYED 41 POUNDS FOR THIS.
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3 weeks ago
1 month ago