

- #SANSA DISK FUZE MAC OS#
- #SANSA DISK FUZE UPDATE#
- #SANSA DISK FUZE DRIVER#
- #SANSA DISK FUZE PORTABLE#
- #SANSA DISK FUZE ZIP#
#SANSA DISK FUZE ZIP#
If your SanDisk Sansa Clip Zip MP3 player is frozen or locked, perform a hard reset to unfreeze it. As a result, if you purchased a file on iTunes, loaded it to five other devices and then tried to play that file on your Sansa Clip Zip, the file won't play and it will automatically skip to the next track. For example, MP3 files purchased through iTunes are only capable of being played on five devices. If your audio file type is supported by the player and it still won't play, you may not have permission to play the audio file on the device.You may be able to load an audio file that isn't in a supported format to your MP3 player, but it won't play when you select it. The SanDisk Sansa Zip Clip only supports audio files in the WMA, MP3, secure WMA, WAV and Audible formats. If a song won't play on your Sansa Zip Clip, double-check the following:
#SANSA DISK FUZE UPDATE#
If you experience this problem on a regular basis, try updating the MP3 player's firmware as outlined in the Update SanDisk Clip Zip Firmware section.
#SANSA DISK FUZE DRIVER#

The driver needs to be uninstalled and then reinstalled. If there is a yellow exclamation point next to your MP3 player's name, then there is a problem with the device's driver. Your device will be listed under one of these options.
#SANSA DISK FUZE PORTABLE#
Click the expansion boxes to the left of Portable Devices and USB Mass Storage.Click the expansion box to the left of System Tools and then click "Device Manager." The Device Manager appears on the right half of the program window.Click "Manage" to open the Computer Management window.In Windows, open the Start menu and right-click "Computer.".Reconnect the MP3 player to your computer using the USB cable.If you can live without the iTunes integration, you'll find the SanDisk Sansa Fuze an excellent digital audio player. As SanDisk manufactures its own flash memory, it passes along the savings to customers in the form of a player that's $49 and $69 cheaper than comparable 4GB and 8GB iPod nanos, respectively. Between listening to music and watching video, we saw approximately 20 hours of battery life.Īll in all, the SanDisk Sansa Fuze is a terrific value. Unfortunately, the Sansa Fuze doesn't support DRM video, so movies or TV shows purchased from such services as Amazon Unbox aren't compatible. Home movies encoded in the MPEG-4 format played smoothly but possessed a certain grainy quality (all other formats need to be converted with the bundled media software). High-resolution JPEGs suffered from some jaggedness when viewed on the 220 x 176-pixel resolution display low-resolution photos looked much better. Also included is a voice recorder for taking audio notes, which offered solid, if slightly muffled, sound. In a nice touch, you can even record radio content with the touch of a button, as one would do with a tape deck in years past.

We found the reception acceptable while walking around Manhattan, albeit with some minor but persistent static. SanDisk tosses in an FM receiver with 40 presets (twice as many as the Sansa View) for tuning into your favorite radio programming. It even includes a cool automatic bookmark feature that let us pick up exactly where we left off when we took a break from Yann Martel's Life of Pi. In addition, if you enjoy audiobooks, you'll be pleased to learn that you can listen to your favorite Audible titles on the Fuze. We had no problems downloading and syncing music to the device. The Sansa Fuze is compatible with Napster, Rhapsody, and other subscription music services (Sansa includes a 30-day, free-trial membership using the included Best Buy Digital Music Store Media Manager software). The Fuze's customization options include a five-band equalizer that lets you tweak audio settings to your liking. Playback was smooth, and we didn't notice any choppiness. We enjoyed extremely loud audio when listening to Stoned Grace's Cast the First Stone album and found that the bass bounced with a pleasant vibrancy and the highs remained crisp, even through the bundled earbuds. You can also sync music to the Sansa Fuze using Windows Media Player.

Loading MP3, WAV, and WMV files (sorry, iTunes users, no AAC compatibility) was as simple as dragging and dropping them into the Fuze's music folder.
#SANSA DISK FUZE MAC OS#
The Sansa Fuze is compatible with the Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows operating systems, so regardless of your OS, you can still rock out.
