Archos 604 wifi manual




















You can also scroll faster by using the Accelerator buttons. Page Product Care see: System Settings. It allows you to repair the hard drive, format it, etc. Video 1. Exit icon 2. Tab icon and avail- able tabs 4. Only one bookmark per file is allowed. You can bookmark up to 32 files. Page 25 This will be repeated indefinitely. Page Playlists A playlist is a list of audio tracks that the music player will automatically play one after the other.

Page Recording Audio Player to make music files from them. See: Optional Functionalities. Photo 3. A confirmation screen Delete will pop up. To make it disappear again, wait for a few seconds or tap on the Tab icon , in the top left corner. A confirmation screen will Delete pop up. There are several cool effects that you can choose from. Print page 1 Print document 36 pages.

Rename the bookmark. Delete bookmark? Cancel Delete. Delete from my manuals? The WiFi is bundled with the usual sparse set of accessories: a proprietary USB cable, earbuds, and the docking saddle. In addition, it ships with a hard case to protect that investment! The bundled styli are nice to use, especially when you're stationary.

In most cases, you won't even need to hit a button to operate the WiFi. Problem is there is nowhere to stash it unless you have the case. While we recommend using the case for this luxury gadget, I'll admit I wouldn't use it as often as I should.

If you're bound to lose your styli, it's nice to know that the touch-screen works okay using your fingers. Minor interface updates such as scroll wheels that enlarge as you touch them help those using their fingers to navigate. Overall, the body is just too big and heavy to go running with for example , but it is pocket-friendly--just not with the case.

Also, I'd like to see an Archos WiFi with a bigger drive. Wi-Fi opens up some big doors The WiFi arrived with the latest firmware 1. It goes without saying that the WiFi can do nearly everything a portable media maven would want, and it does most things well. Add a digital camera or the cool helmet cam from Archos plus the required DVR Travel pack , and you've got a hard-drive-based camcorder. It also supports album art, podcasts, gapless playback, useful playlist creation, and management.

We'd love to see OGG, Audible, and decent equalizers, but the audio experience here is top rate. The voice recorder is fantastic, and with add-ons you can record line-in video and audio as well as schedule TV recordings into the WiFi with ease and generally excellent quality.

Photo viewing is strong with a gorgeous thumbnail library where thumbnails magnify as you pass over them. Images look crisp though not as crisp as on the unit , and zooming, rotating, and skipping photos is quick and tidy with the Docking adaptor accessory, you can even offload photos from a digital camera. We lauded all these features and more in the review. But you'll buy this guy for its integrated Enabling Wi-Fi is a cinch.

On the main-menu screen, you'll see an enable Wi-Fi option in the secondary set of menu options in the bottom-right corner. Within each network, you can opt for Manual IP configuration. The unit also will scan when you hit the main menu's new Web icon the fourth listed , whereby the Opera Browser will launch.

In general, the wireless antenna has good range. Surfing on the WiFi is surprisingly intuitive and useful.

The screen can be formatted to display an entire Web page as well as zoom in and though text is small, it's legible. The touch-screen truly helps in this regard. Common browser functions such as zoom, navigation back, forward, reload , browser tabbing, search via Google , home page, URL entry, and even bookmarking are based in the context submenu. Opera even allows for blocking pop-ups, and deleting cookies and history. The browsing setup is quite good, though performance is another story more later.

Page two of the main menu features an additional wireless feature called File Server. This allows this "computer" to be seen with write- and read-only access on a network. Enabling the file server allows you to play files remotely off the device; or you can actually play network-based files on the itself. What's missing from the equation is a way to feed the device content in an easy way. You can download files or applications they appear in your Downloads folder , but many standard apps don't open in this Linux environment.

It would be cool to have a dedicated iTunes-like store for purchasing or streaming audio or video; streaming music outside of streaming off a Wi-Fi network, or downloading a file and then playing it so far doesn't seem possible not compatible with PLS files. Visiting sites such as YouTube are a waste since it requires a Flash player.



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