Wolverine ESP 120 GB Portable Multimedia Storage Player | 
| Brand: Wolverine Category: CE
List Price: $529.99 Buy New: $361.92 You Save: $168.07 (32%)
New (10) from $361.92
Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 19083
Color: Charcoal Gray Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: Yes Hard Drive Size: 120 Native Resolution: 3.6 Display Size: 3.6 Removable Memory: MiniSD Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.1 Dimensions (in): 5.3 x 2.8 x 0.9
MPN: ESP/5120 Model: ESP/5120 UPC: 040074161207 EAN: 0040074161207
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Portable multimedia storage unit with 3.6-inch color LCD screen for playback | | • | Perfect companion to any digital camera - download images direct without a computer | | • | 120 GB hard drive stores thousands of digital photos, songs, and video files | | • | Supports JPEG, Bitmap, Tiff, Text, RAW, MPEG-1, MPEG-4, WMV 9, XviD, MP3, WMA, OGG, AAC, WAV, CDA | | • | Full DVR capability with optional cradle to record directly from a TV, DVD, VCR, camcorder, or other video source |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Product Description Designed specifically for busy professional and amateur digital photographers, the Wolverine ESP portable multimedia storage device lets you store and view thousands of photos, songs, and video files in a single convenient device. Digital photographers typically have to purchase multiple memory cards if they want to take a ton of photos while traveling. With the ESP, however, you need only a single card, as the unit's 120 GB hard drive stores the rest. When your camera's memory card is full, simply pop it in the Wolverine ESP's built-in 7-in-1 card reader. With the press of a button, the device transfers all of your photos and digital camera video data into a portable, self-powered mass storage unit. Once the contents of your card are safely stored in the ESP's memory, you can re-fill your memory card with brand-new photos--all without going anywhere near a computer. And because the device is battery powered, you can literally save your data anywhere in the world. It's perfect for traveling, sharing data during meetings, and just about any other on-the-go situation. The ESP also includes a razor-sharp 3.6-inch LCD screen, letting you view stored photos and videos without plugging them back into your camera. Among the compatible photo formats are JPEG, Bitmap, Tiff, Text, and RAW images, while compatible video formats include MPEG-1, MPEG-4, WMV 9, and XviD. And as with many digital cameras, the ESP prints directly to a printer to save time and energy. The device is no slouch from an audio perspective, either, with support for MP3, WMA, OGG, WAV, ACC (MP4 audio), and CDA formats. In addition, the unit's drag-and-drop functionality makes it easy to transfer music files from your computer and play them instantly. As a final bonus, the ESP includes a built-in FM radio with 18 presets that lets you listen to and record your favorite FM programs. Other details include zoom, rotate, and slide show functions; an included A/V cable for connecting the ESP directly to any TV, projector, or stereo system; and compatibility with a separately sold cradle system that lets you record directly from a TV, DVD, VCR, camcorder, or other video source. The ESP measures 5.3 by 2.8 by 0.9 inches (W x H x D), weighs 10.2 ounces with the lithium-ion battery, and is backed by a one-year warranty. What's in the Box Wolverine ESP (with battery), AC charger, USB cable, A/V cable, earphone, carrying case, software CD, user's manual.
Product Description The Wolverine ESP was created for you to enjoy the freedom of multimedia portability anywhere, anytime. Featuring a 3.6" razor sharp LCD and enormous storage capacity to store and play all your digital photos, music and videos in the palm of your hand.Now you can take thousands of photos with a single Memory Card. A single press of a button and all your photos and digital camera video data effortlessly copied from the built in 7-in-1 Card Reader into a portable, self powered gigabytes of mass storage unit. With the contents of the memory card now safely stored, your card is now ready to be reused - and you never had to go near a computer. Because the Wolverine ESP is battery operated you can literally save your data anywhere in the world. It's perfect for photographers, trips, sharing data during meetings, any situation involving a memory card.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
Wolverine ESP July 20, 2008 Linda Sharman (California) 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
Once I figured out how to use some of its features, the wolverine was reasonable easy to use. The manual was not very helpful, so I still do not know how to do certain tasks. Overall, I was disappointed. The LCD resolution is average, but the colors do seem to be true. The switches are not as substantial as I would expect, but they do seem to perform adequately. Next time, I will investigate a little further before purchasing.
Wolverine ESP in use April 29, 2008 Werner Hennies (Doha, Qatar) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I purchased the ESP 120 after reviewing other similar products. I am cery satisfied with the quality (appearance and workmanship)of the product and the performance. The main purpose for me is to download photographs when on location without PC or laptop. My files are usually large (40 MB+ RAW), and the speed and space (120 GB) for downloads is amazing. It has an FM radio as well. Highly Recommended! Werner Hennies
Professional photographers will love this must have device! December 4, 2007 Aperture Artistry (Gladstone, Oregon) 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
I have the ESP 100gb version of the Wolverine. This is a must have for any photographer that makes their living from their photo files. This device is always with me at every shoot and allows me to effortlessly archive my .raw files immediately after swapping cards in my Nikon D200 - the old card comes out of my camera and straight into the ESP. I never leave a job without the shoot "in the can". The ESP also lets me review the files with the client on a larger screen than the camera (it even has a slideshow mode). Or I can plug it into a monitor using the remote recording/playback cable (which does everything the dock does, except charge the unit, for a lot less money). One of the nicest features is the ability to save hundreds of hours of audio recorded through the on-board microphone. Though the audio files are a proprietary mono format (there is aftermarket software that will allow you to convert the files to play on other devices) the device has come in handy to record interviews with my clients and for other meetings many times with excellent results. I agree that a playlist feature would be nice but it is a small inconvenience for having an archive vault that will fit in my pocket (I never keep the ESP in my camera bag... I keep it on my person so if anyone ever steals my bag or it is confiscated by TSA, I have all of my work safely with me. I just finished a 70 day road trip and took 10,000 .raw files along the way (www.scottyanddeb.blogspot.com). Every file fit nicely on the ESP (close to 80gb total).
128 GB limit on disk drive May 3, 2007 HMMWV (santa clara, CA USA) 29 out of 31 found this review helpful
I just wanted to let people know that the operating system has a 128 GB limit due to address bits, so even if you buy a 160 GB drive for it, only 128GB will be visable. To change the disk you only need to remove 2 screws - the one under the square silver warantee void sticker (which goes back OK) and its counterpart. The drive cover then slips off, you remove the old drive, install the new one (80,100,120,160 GB but 128 max capacity) and put only those 2 screws back in (don't mess with the two deep screws) - now go to the drive which will have a red NFA on it (Not FormAteed) - menu click on it and click format drive - it takes 30 seconds or so for a 160 to be a 128, and then you have the maximum capacity. With the price of drives dropping, their cheaper model plus a 120GB drive at a discount is a 5 minute swapout, plus you can put the 80 GB into a portable USB drive case. I did this when I first bought my 80 GB with plans to upgrade it when drive prices fell far enough and got 128 instead of 80 GB on my mp3 player / camera dumper / usb2.0 disk. I still think the Wolverine is a great overall product and beats the apple version feature wise (but not thickness wise) - being able to dump my CF cards on vacation to the MP3 player is a significant feature that the pod's dont have. Hope that helps - the drive upgrade is simple, 5 minutes, and needs a Philips #00 screwdriver to complete.
Excellent item February 10, 2007 K. Nylander 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
Prior to purchasing the Wolverine EPS 120, I owned an Archos Jukebox v.2 20 gig MP3 player. The player had a small screen and was not very intuitive to navigate. (Replacing the native OS with Rockbox OS helped tremendously.) My primary reasons for purchasing this player were to be able to backup pictures from my Fujifilm S9100, to have a backup of critical data files, and play MP3 and OGG files. So far, the Wolverine does all of these beautifully. I was pleasantly surprised to see that the device could view the RAW files from my digicam. My only complaint is the lack of an easy-to-use playlist. Currently, you have to go through several arcane levels of menus (like loading files and then putting the jukebox into the background to be able to add more files). This may be fixed in future firmware updates.
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