Listening to MP3s on my TracFone … and a warning.

I remember my first MP3 player back in 2004. I don’t remember the brand but it was an off-brand made in Japan with an liquid crystal display, a manual that had been badly translated into English and a high price tag that did as much as the rest of the device to show how new the technology was.  It needed its own software installed on the computer to transfer music files which, in an odd copyright protection scheme, could only be transferred TO the device and it used one AAA battery. I don’t really consider myself an early adopter of technology but this new music player was something I just had to have for my workouts and it played WMA files which I was using at the time so I shelled out well over $100 and used the player well into ’05 or maybe even ’06 when it started to malfunction and I finally decided to get another one.

MP3 player on the TracFone LG500g
Loaded up and ready for the next workout …

Now it’s nine years later and I’ve watched as MP3 players have become more advanced, less expensive and then routinely integrated into other gadgets like cell phones and eReaders.  Even in cheapo players, you can pretty much count on features that I remember scrutinizing the advertisements and tech specs for when I was buying one years ago.  The MP3 player in my new LG TracFone wasn’t the deciding factor for buying it but it was certainly a nice plus.

I neglected to order a 4GB microSD card with the phone so I had to wait a few more days as a separate order arrived from California. It finally came in today, I popped it into the phone and started copying music onto it.  I haven’t worked with microSD much before and found the transfer to be a bit slow. It took me around 45 minutes to copy 1.35 GB of files onto the card. This isn’t a huge problem as these aren’t meant to be repeatedly copied to the way flash drives are but I was still a little surprised.

The TracFone MP3 player includes all the standard features:

  • Sorting the songs by artist, album and genre
  • Maintaining custom playlists
  • A choice of equalizer settings
  • Repeat and shuffle

MP3s can even be used as ringtones or startup / shutdown sounds on the phone. None of this is incredibly surprising if you consider that once the phone includes the electronics to play MP3 files, the rest of the features come down to software. The sound is pretty good with the choice of preset equalizer settings such as Jazz, Rock and Piano and, in a pinch, you might even use the phone’s built in speaker which, while not great for listening, is enough to quickly share a new song with someone else.  There is one quirk to the player that in order to play more than one song at a time, you have to have it set to Repeat All or Shuffle.  Other players I’ve used run through the album or playlist by default.

It’s even less of a battery-hog than the player on my EVO.  I’ve played a couple of albums now and have been playing around with the settings to do this write-up and the battery indicator still shows close to a full charge. The EVO is at less than half charge seven hours after being unplugged.

Nine years or so after my first player, I’m just a little amazed by a $17 phone (including the microSD card) that includes a full-featured MP3 player almost as an afterthought.


One warning I will give about the TracFone – A friend ordered one at the same time as I did and has had a great deal of trouble activating it and getting service. Her experience with customer service has been better than some of the stories I’ve seen online but she still had to go through the ordeal of punching in special codes and repeatedly trying to activate the phone.  Finally TracFone sent her a new SIM card which just came in and after one or two more tries, she finally has service. A young relative of hers went through some of the same problems so, evidently, TracFone still has some quality issues somewhere in the system.

As for mine, I’m pleased and I’m looking forward to using the phone on my workouts so I can eliminate some of the bulk and the weight of the EVO.


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