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The Sony NW-A800 series was the first video-enabled Network Walkman. [15] Announced on March 1, 2007, [ 16 ] this series has a metallic build. A chrome-like strip surrounds the edge of the device, and accenting of the same style surrounds the buttons and makes up the logos on the front.
NW-HD5. Sony's next model, the NW-HD5, was announced in April 2005 and released July 2005 [35] and was an updated design from the HD1 / HD3, boasting a simpler control system, an upright handheld format, [36] a user-removable lithium-ion battery, better file format compatibility, a unique "Follow Turn Display" that would automatically align ...
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The NW-A810/800 MP3 players have been critically praised for their audio quality, mostly due to its patented Sony technologies such as DSEE (Digital Sound Enhancement Engine) and Clear Stereo. DSEE is claimed to restore higher sound frequency lost when creating compressed MP3 files, to reproduce the CD audio quality.
Sony NW-ZX507 playing music. The first model, NW-ZX1, featured a 4-inch display and a high quality digital amplifier that sold for about $900. It runs on Android. [1] It was introduced on September 25, 2013, alongside the NW-F880 series and first released in Japan on December 7, followed by overseas markets in 2014.
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Nobutoshi Kihara (木原 信敏 Kihara Nobutoshi, 14 October 1926 – 13 February 2011) was an engineer at Sony, best known for his work on the original Walkman cassette-tape player in the 1970s and was commonly called Mr. Walkman in the press.