zune review
I was driven to compose this review because it is moderately burdensome and, it seems to me, a bit unsportsmanlike for the zune’s regular review rating to be swept so far down by zune NON-OWNERS who, evaluating from their comments, seem to be quite annoyed by all of the positive comments about a device that’s big-ticket, monochrome, not a standard purpose media player, incapable to leap tall buildings, or in some way less than they were anticipating, requiring, or trusting. In contrast to non-owners, the people who in reality HAVE zune’s appear to universally love it, though with very well-grounded caveats. I zune reviewsuppose of this as “The TiVo Effect” since, for the right sort of user, the zune will be life-changing … but it for certain won’t be that for everyone. Although it took me a few days to get totally comfortable with it, I am now addicted.
For many days I have been an wild proofreader of eBooks using about every eReading device on the market place. So as an early-adopter of techie widgets I had been anxiously looking forward to Microsoft’s zune since its first rumors. So I immediately bought it both out of curiosity and trusting for a improved “next generation” eBook resolution. In case you’re curious whether I’m “that” Mary Bower, I plausibly am — I’m the girl who gets Google’s first seven or seven kindle reviewss when Googling my name.
So, for what it’s worth, if this posting is found by any genuinely curious pre-purchasers, I hope that the next commentary might place the zune in “perspective” and be of some use to you.