On Sat, 03 Sep 2011 21:00:33 -0400, Reed <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>On 9/3/11 2:04 PM, micky wrote:
>>
>> Posted to rec.autos.tech and alt.comp.hardware.
>>
>> I was trying to look up info about a friend's car radio with usb
>> input, and I came across these two pages, which have similar info:
>>
>> Do these car raidos really have a hard drive, or do they mean an
>> internal flash drive, functioning as a hard drive? I know my car
>> bounces around a lot. (Well, maybe it's me, but I like to blame the
>> car.)
>>
>>
>
><SNIP>
>
>Some GM cars have hard drives. They work like a DVR.
>
>Buick had a TV commercial awhile back hyping their 40MB drive.
Wow, that's amazing. Although couldn't they just put in an 8 gig
flash drive instread, 200 times as big. I know flash dirives wear
out, or used to, so they could make it a replaceable part. Hard
drives wear out too, even if they don't crash from going over bumpy
roads.
>
>http://www.orbitcast.com/archives/gm...o-feature.html
Thanks.
This says it records 20 minutes. However 20 minutes is not enough. I
woudl want 55, because sometimes I listed to the first part of an hour
show, usually on NPR, and want to record the rest. Usually that's
only 20 or 40 minutes but it could be 55.
**I learned today that talk raido takes about 500K/minute, and mustic
several times as much, but they may have only one sampling rate.
I've actually wanted this for decades, and I wanted casette decks in
cars to akso recird what was on the radio. It would have been easy
enough, but I shopped and never found someone who made it.
JCWhitney did sell a dual cassette car radio, which I thought was as
stupid as saving pictures in current car radios. Someone is going to
save his tape copying until he's in the car!! He won't leave his
blank tapes at home, etc. . I'm sure one deck recorded, but it
didn't actually say it would record off the radio, and certainly not
that it had a timer that would record after the car was turned off.
Plus it had no station buttons etc, so much space was used for the
second deck.
NPR makes some little device that you click on,, and it saves the time
you want to start playing when you get to a compute, from which it
figures out the name of the program, but it only saves two times, and
you could just write down the program and the time, plus you have to
contribute a lot of money to get one.