| I own one of these. Using it is the physical manifestation of delayed gratification and I love it. - Getting new music or Podcasts requires plugging it in to a real computer, transferring files, and updating the media library. It takes a while. - Without a touchscreen you can't "scrub" through files and must fast-forward with the buttons. Fast-forwarding to your place in a 90-minute podcast takes a while. - If you plug it in while in the middle of a podcast, or reboot it, it will lose your place many times. It has a setting to not do this but it is unreliable. - Due to the above two points I really got in the habit of ensuring I had enough time to listen to a full show in one shot, and that made me subscribe to less podcasts. This is a plus. - You cannot view show notes for a podcast or click on links in those notes. You must sit down at a PC to do this. - This device helped me to not take my phone with me everywhere. That's a plus. - It doesn't "fast charge" or anything. The battery indicator is imprecise so sometimes it will shut off while you're using it. The battery lasts forever so that's OK. You have to want to use something like this. It is better for you brain than a smartphone. I encourage everyone to try it. It is high quality, built well, and inexpensive, so very much worth a shot. If you want a bluetooth and USB-C version, the Fiio M5 is also good. |
As I see it, none of what you listed has practical benefits. That's why we have Spotify and all the software to overcome these drawbacks.
Perhaps "slow tech" is a thing, but certainly not widespread or advantageous.