Archos Jukebox MP3 player review I'll ditto Brett. I've had my Archos Jukebox since Christmas, and I can't offer a better solution. I love it. Cost was right at $200 (on sale from $249). The 6GB model holds about 1400 MP3s (depending on coding) which translates to about 90 hours of music. I recently swapped out the 6GB hard drive for a 15GB (purchased for $100, but you can opt for a 20GB model up front when you buy it), and now I can fit MY ENTIRE CD COLLECTION, roughly 140 hours (with plenty of room to spare). I would also recommend getting the travel kit, which includes a cigarette-lighter charging adapter, cassette adapter, and best of all, a remote control. I keep the unit in the tank bag, and have the remote control velcroed to the top of the tank bag. Works great. The only downside I can think of is that it takes an hour or more to load the darn thing via USB...;-). Creative Labs also makes a hard drive unit, also called a Nomad. The main difference that made me choose the Archos is that the Nomad unit uses a proprietary formatting on the drive, and the system can take as much as four minutes to boot up (their 20GB model). The Archos is formatted with a FAT32 file system, and actually mounts as a removable drive to your computer. You can use it for external data storage of anything. It starts in seconds. So, in a work-related pinch, I can connect it to my laptop, wipe my MP3s right off (I have a full set on two other computers) and load data instead. The Nomad does not offer this feature. Loading the Nomad requires using a special software interface. Loading the Archos is as simple as copying files from one drive to another. Thumbs up from me. Archos also offers a model that RECORDS...and soon one with a small LCD screen that will play both MP3s and MPEGs..! Cary Stotland Austin Road Warrior '97 K1100LT - NEW Official Road Rage Test Vehicle http://carys.home.mindspring.com Carpe Beemum! Seize the Beemer! (just not mine, OK? ;-)