Archos 604 (30GB)

By James Kim on 21 November 2006

The do-it-all Archos 604 with its improved design and low base price is slightly marred by mediocre audio performance. It's an amazing PVP, but not a great audio player.

Editor's rating:8.0 User rating:9
  • Good: Decent choice of accessory options • Sharp and vibrant display • Can record audio and video with the optional kit • Has a removable battery, a built-in speaker, and a built-in kickstand • Nice tactile controls and well-designed interface • Can view photos and listen to music simultaneously • Compatible with subscription services • It's durable and compact for its screen size • Excellent photo viewer
  • Bad: Limited to 30GB • Must purchase separate kit to record audio/video • Must purchase separate kit to get a power adaptor • Disappointing audio quality • Must download plug-ins for certain types of video files • Weak bundled accessories • Proprietary USB cable
  • Specs: 30 GB • 480 x 272 pixels • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$679.00

Archos's 604 represents the latest in an esteemed line of gadgets from the king of portable video players (PVPs, or PMPs). Superb construction and design, an all-encompassing feature list, and solid performance should make this übergadget a highly coveted item.

Design
The caveats? The 604 is limited to 30GB of storage and you'll need to buy extra accessory kits to get the most out of the player (namely, using the device as an audio/video recorder). Throw in patchy out-of-the-box compatibility with some video formats and some detectable noise in audio quality, and you've got reason to pause. But overall, we believe the 604 makes a worthy successor to the AV500.

Over the past few months, we have seen numerous blog postings regarding the 604 and its brethren, the 404 and the 604 Wi-Fi (not available in Australia for the moment). Archos in fact has created a PVP design for everybody. The ultraportable 30GB 404 has a smaller screen and a price tag to match ($579); the svelte 604 with its 4.3-inch wide screen and removable battery is the flagship model. All 04 models are based on the same general design.

Designed to replace the AV500, the 604 is slightly bigger than the 30GB AV500, but it's more polished and has more screen real estate with less bezel (4.3 inches versus 4 inches). It's quite a bit thinner and lighter than its chief competitor, the 133.4 x 78.5 x 22mm, 298g 20GB Cowon A2, which is more contoured and softer than the blocky 604.

Though it's not as pocketable as the 100 x 78 x 15mm 404, in addition to other video-playing MP3 players, its big screen and removable battery are more than enough reason to make it a mobile companion. The built-in kickstand is also a sweet little extra. We've read some comments about the design being "ugly" but in person, the device is pretty hot.

The 604's brushed metal casing is extremely scratch resistant, and even its gorgeous 4.3-inch 480 x 272 pixel/16-million-colour wide screen can withstand some punishment (though it does attract fingerprints). Like on its predecessor, the primary controllers line the right-hand side of the screen, though this time around the buttons are more intuitive. Unlike the AV500, which featured sets of unlabelled buttons of varying sizes (think Tetris), the 604's buttons are uniform and marked. Personally, I didn't mind the AV500's controls, but the 604 is much better.

Each button is designed to be pressed in either the left or the right direction, including the special set of diagonal buttons that act as page up/down when browsing and skip/reverse about 30 seconds when playing content. Like with the last version, the controls work in harmony with the GUI, with context-sensitive menus and submenus appearing on the expansive screen mapped to a specific button. Despite its simple control panel, the Cowon A2 can be a bit more difficult to use.

Speaking of the GUI, it's been revamped, with slick animated icons and a more modern feel. Backgrounds as well as text and accent colors are customisable, and everything from the audio playback screen (with album art) to the photo thumbnail page (where pics magnify as you scroll over them) is refined. Archos manages to pack lots of info onto the screen without making it feel crowded.

Features
The main menu includes Video, Music, Photo, Browser, Resume, TV Scheduler, VideoCorder, and AudioCorder options. Even without an FM tuner, the 604 is feature rich, though you'll need extra accessories to record video and audio (more on that later). You do get a good voice recorder out of the box, and the built-in mono speaker is decent, though not as crisp as the A2's stereo speakers.

Video playback is where the 604 shines. According to the specs, it's compatible with MPEG-4 ASP up to 720 x 480 at 30fps, AVI file container with MP4 file format, WMV9, and protected WMV. Unlike the Cowon, it's not DivX certified, and it doesn't play MPEG-2. However, many of our DivX files played without a hitch. You can also download plug-ins that will let you play H.264 and MPEG-2 files -- they will be available soon at about US$10 each (there's mention of AAC and AC3 support too). Though it doesn't cover the same ground as the Cowon, the 604 can handle your files, which in part will be transcoded via Windows Media Player, the de facto jukebox for the Archos. Though we'll comment on video performance later, the 604's screen is amazing, and video controls are superresponsive.

Recording video and audio is a snap, and the results are worth your while. As long as you have the recoding adaptor, you can record (MPEG-4/AVI with maximum 640x480 30fps) from a wide variety of sources such as DVD (it's Macrovision compliant, so you can't watch recorded files on any other device), cable, and satellite. Audio recording (PCM or ADPCM WAV) is similarly intuitive and effective.

Though the built-in recording scheduler works well enough, the process is not as smooth as you'd think. We'd love to see more integration so that you could get content more automatically and more intelligently. Still, the ability to record gives you a free source of good content.

The 604 can also play MP3, WMA, subscription WMA, and WAV files. Support for album art, bookmarking (for videos, too), ID3 tag-based browsing (via the ARC Library), and the solid playlist creation highlight the 604's audio features. We were, however, disappointed with the quality of the newly added EQs and the overall quality of audio (more details ahead). We do like the fact that upon connecting to a computer, the 604 gives you the option of UMS (PC hard drive) or MTP (Windows device) modes. Transferring to and from Mac (drag and drop) and Windows (autosyncing) were clean and quick.

The 604's revamped photo features are neat. One method for browsing is the thumbnail mode, where you get 54 thumbnails, which magnify as you pass over them. Slide-show transitions are professional, and you can zoom in multiple steps. I would say it's a great photo viewer.

Performance
Sound quality is decent at higher volumes (bright highs, average low end, punchy mids). In side-by-side PVP listening tests, the Cowon A2 sounded better to my ears; Archos has a layer of electric noise especially noticeable at low volumes -- and it doesn't have anything to do with the display.

Despite the addition of the much-needed five-band equaliser, the presets don't seem to have an impact. I even minimised each custom EQ frequency, and the difference was minor. They certainly don't measure up to the Cowon's nice EQs and BBE/Mach3Bass settings. Video and photo quality, on the other hand, are spectacular, with rich blacks, no pixellation, and awesome viewing angles. You get the 604 for its video prowess, not for its audio quality.

Video piped out to a TV looks good (depends on your original file), though the presence of compression artifacts lead me to believe that the docking station with its fancy outputs might be overkill.

Processor speed is responsive -- especially scanning through video, though there are some light pauses in the menu, like with the Cowon. Photos and videos load quickly. Battery life may not approach Cowon A2 levels, but we're still impressed with the rated 14 hours for audio and 4 hours of video. In informal testing, we got plenty more than 14 hours for audio.

Topics: archos, 604, 30gb, video, archo, audio, screen, pvp, photo, design

Comments (3)

  • aerochick gave 9/10 on 12/12/2007 11:19 Report abuse

    • Good: Slick! HUGE screen. Easy to navigate. Great sound quality out of headphones. Beautiful picture quality. Can do more than any other handheld device of this sort that I've seen.
    • Bad: Extension kits are expensive. Speakers aren't the best. Cases are limited in the US.

    Supercool--I just bought one for each of my college-kids for Christmas. After getting them all charged and testing them out (par for the course when you buy early for Christmas) I want one. Totally awesome, man!!

  • n7of9a gave 9/10 on 30/11/2007 21:55 Report abuse

    • Good: avi support, mp3 support, accessories are optional so you can spend as much or as little as you like
    • Bad: standard headphones are uncomfortable, volume is not extremely loud

    far out fantastic...i love it and it's changed my life :)

  • n7of9a gave 9/10 on 30/11/2007 21:53 Report abuse

    • Good: avi support, mp3 support, accessories are optional so you can spend as much or as little as you like
    • Bad: standard headphones are uncomfortable, volume is not extremely loud

    far out fantastic...i love it and it's changed my life :)

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