I love their consistency. First it was "Yepp! Is the portable digital music player", then it went to "Yepp! Is the portable mp3 player" just for the last one go back to "Yepp! Is the portable mp3 player" xD Seriously, ipods are one thing and they were awesome for their times, but kids this days with iphones, media streaming and aalways-online are clueless on what we had to struggle if we hadn't have like rich parents who could buy us apple player or something with reputable brand (yes, we can shit on Sony or SE now, rightfully so, but they were doing good stuff back then) and instead we got from them or grandparents "mp3 player" or later mp4 for Christmas that were complete bootleg random madeups. Jezus, I remember having mp4 player I begged my parents to buy me one. 1 big (for their times) screen and 2 buttons on each side. In package there was some vague instruction in a form of microscopic booklet with font size like 1, minicd with obligatory bloatware (seriously, how is that possible no single piece of this software was good?), headphones that were never working properly, the connector was constantly disconnecting one earplug, even right after taking them out of the box and usb cable, miniusb but that's just standard for that times. And just like this yepp, uploading there anything was a fucking torture. This software was just fighting you with all its might- weird popups, errors, "media disconnected", hidden confirmation etc. And on top of that- let's say you somehow uploaded there your content, you charged built-in battery (yep, no AA/AAAs anymore, IT'S THE FUTURE NOW OLD MAN!)... this thing was draining power at random. You COULD have pleasant day and listen to music almost all day long OR it could die on you like half an hour after charging it to 100% and going out. I remember the buttons were in a form of "push down until the tiny dome makes contact to the pin" and you had to push it really hard for them to work. And guess what- the power button... died like not even full year after buying it, the only was to power it on by kind-of shot circuiting it to fife by connecting it to working PC like you wanted to upload something. It was complete garbage and just imagine- you're like 10-13 years this happens, you know why this happens and just go to dad or grandma and tell them that they bought piece or garbage and it's dead already. Sheeeesh....
that silver yepp (yp-700) has an INTERNAL BATTERY THAT NEEDED TO CHARGE BEFORE YOU CAN USE IT. it was charging off the new batt you put in you just needed to wait. old tech couldn't run off dual power sources, the external batt charges the internal batt then it would work. patience bruv. that being said... if the internal rechargeable batt was dead dead,,, then yeah she dead.
@@mihkelkastehein9470The one that says yp-700 on the bottom of the rectangle which has the screen on it; the one that had critically low battery once finally able to start up, and it’s the one that first appears at 15:17 , which is the one that has XTUNES.
Yeah, old software never actually showed the nug. You just queued up what you wanted to transfer over and hit the button and hoped it work. Hell, even my Zune didn't show what was on there until like the third version of the software. And direct storage passthrough control was not a thing 20 years ago. The PC was only able to see the device, it was up to the software to communicate and send songs to the device, and then the device would write the song to the storage (which is why it took so damn long for songs to transfer)
I still hope that one day, Wade will finally understand how windows drivers work, so that we can hear scarlet fire out of crappy early 2000's YEPP nuggets.
It irked me too. But I can understand it from the consumers perspective. The setup process isn't *that* straightforward. Even doing it correctly can result in failure back then (first-hand experience), it's how I got to be as good as I am today.
Yeah, one thing he’s missing from the “consumer’s perspective” is that people with old PCs were actually patient people who would spend copious amounts of time thoughtfully to get their product working. And now we have the luxury of Internet forums to check quickly which I bet he isn’t even doing.
@@PanoptesDreams "It irked me too. But I can understand it from the consumers perspective. The setup process isn't that straightforward. Even doing it correctly can result in failure back then (first-hand experience), it's how I got to be as good as I am today." But from the consumer's perspective Samsung are a Good Brand who make Quality Products that should Just Work. If they're upgrading from a SAOCHING that barely plays MP3s above 128KBPS to a "proper" Samsung and it was just a case of dragging tracks to their SAOCHING, they'd expect the same from their "proper" Samsung. They'd probably have the same expectation from their iPod, to not have to use iTunes, but iTunes Just Worked in ways that everyone else's proprietary client Just Didn't.
@@GeoNeilUK ..okay.. I am supporting his ineptitude. I do know these things. I just don't get your point to me. Someone else said what you're trying too better: "Why do they not just show up as generic storage devices to drag and drop onto" EDIT: It was literally you, LOL.
i spent weeks building my own pc, even more time customizing linux to my liking, and also still spend hours getting windows programs to work on it since devs hate supporting linux. i think i understand pretty well the struggle of getting tech to work.
The struggles I've been having with my new 3d printer are pretty frustrating. The struggle is still there, you just have to go out of your way to find it.
@@sunshei.If you weren't there pre or early PNP-era I'd argue that you don't. When tech wasn't really made for the average consumer but for nerds. When nothing was standardized and every new product was actually new: you'd never seen anything like it, clueless how it was supposed to operate or function, no one to ask, no way to simply Google a solution. No wonder my hair's already grey!
@@trayner As soon as we got to 2008 and he's using XP not connected to the internet I was like no way is any of this going to work. But that lil egg nugg was the only one that did!
The day dank realises that the samsung proprietary connectors were actually standard connectors in Korea will be a trip. LG, Samsung and others all used the same chargers lol
@@mromutt Can thank the EU for that, every phone with USB instead of every manufacturer with their own proprietary connector, some even more than one. And now they go for USB-C on everything.
I was going to bring that up, too, for why the buds worked but the speaker didn't on the Yepp ones. They only recognized certain banding on the jack, and the ones that are standard now, simply didn't work on them.
My theory on the ambiguous packaging state of the *yepp!* is that the nugg was removed from the box and placed in a Dixons (or similar non UK Chain) display cabinet, where it lived undisturbed for between 6 and 36 months, before being reboxed when the store closed, and picked up for £5 by one of the now jobless team members. Edit: I'm referring to the first nugg, didn't realise there were many yepps. My source for the above is that i worked at Dixons from 1998 to 2005, and was one of the few who didn’t get an ipod. I instead got a Creative Zen which lasted for over a decade, after sitting in a display case for years until the branch i worked at closed, and the display nugs were sold off to us staff for less than the cost of a beer in London.
Bold of you to assume the staff paid for anything when the shop closed. When the shop I worked at (not Dixons) went into administration the staff just grabbed whatever they wanted when management wasn't looking
@@HMJ66 in our case the store was closing, not the whole company. Much of the inventory was sent to other locations, but the display items were sold for peanuts to the staff- only some of whom were given positions at other stores.
We aren't mad at apple for *inventing* proprietary cables, it's just that everyone else stopped circa 2007 because they realized it was massively inconvenient. it's 2024 now and we have to drag Apple kicking and screaming into universal USB-C, and we could only do so through literal LEGISLATION lmao
I lived out of that last nugg you tested. Loaded it up a 100 (!) free MP3s on its internal storage (!!) with Skype notification sounds in the background which I'd listen to while waiting for the bus after school. It's shuffle mode was deterministic and seedless, as in whenever you started it up it would always play the songs in the same "random" order, even if you put more tracks in. Because of that I have a particular order of five or so songs in my head where if I hear any one of them, my brain is expecting the next one that would come on after it on that thing. The headphones on that would go on to live in my ears for many players after that, becvause they were "better" than the other ones I would come across. I'm old enough to realise that ALL of them were crummy but quality is perspective to what you were exposed to at the time. The LCD screen was bright but it would wrap song titles frequently; it also had only ASCII format support so if your song's metadata had any special characters in it then the whole screen would display gibberish. It was great. I actually found it a few years ago when doing some cleaning and it STILL had some battery power left. What a nugg.
12:20 Wade, you do remember that THE BRICK screams when you nudge the volume even a little right? Somethin's wrong with the Taledo m8, she's starting to cook.
We arent mad at Apple for proprietary at the beginning of the Iproducts, we are mad that they kept doing it when everyone else standardized. Then they take away your home button and sold it back to you, then they took your wires and sold them back to you.
Fuckin exactly. I don't mind proprietary for a portable game console, don't mind the barrel jack on laptops. What I do mind is proprietary on a damn phone, so annoying
"This is the worst episode I've ever done." No, this is one of your best episodes ever. Fucking incredible, I'm dying from laughter at how bad these nugs are
I think the biggest issue by far was that it required proprietary shit, and even then, it didn't even work properly. Double whammy in the shit MP3 player category there.
The ultimate DANKPODS LORE video here and it has everything - the EEE PEE CEE, all the SMASNUG nugs, the sexy speaker slowly dying again, and a reminder of how crap eBay can be.
I'm guessing the sound isn't working because they've got a non-standard layout on the 3.5mm jack. Started this trend and Apple has kept it going to this day, but Samsung joined in for a bit too. Since it's early MP3 it's probably mono sound to save space and then playing that one channel of sound right into the mic channel. And that's why the Samsung dirty buds work, cause they've got the matching non-standard 3.5mm plug to the non-standard 3.5mm jack.
Mono mp3s! Thanks for reminding me about those dark days! I was using minidisc at the time, but my friend was an early adopter of mp3-players and he had to make major sacrifices to audio quality due to lack of storage space. He was trying to convince me that mono was no big deal, but I was definitely not convinced. For a start, with headphones you get perfect stereo separation, so it's gonna be really difficult not to notice the difference. And I was into (what's now known as) EDM, and that style of music is really heavy on stereo effects. But yet there he was, listening to 96 kbit or 112 kbit (max!) mono mp3, trying to act like it was acceptable.
My personal highlight list - 1: Smasnug. 2: RealPlayer. 3: DivX. 4: The woman in a white shirt and glasses judging you from the package that was mandatory on _all_ 2000's-era packaging and advertisements. 5: Adorable Yepp mini-CD (I call it the Yip Disc).
I recently gave CDs another try. I have to say, I forgot how much I liked the spontaneity of walking into a used shop and just kind of grabbing whatever stood out. How easy it was to try something new was one of the few things I missed after getting my first iPod Nano in, like, middle school.
OH MY GOSH I OWN THAT ORBULAR LOOKIN NUGG AT THE END It's actually just a really strange shuffle, the dorkus at the end of the headphone jack clips into a small dent on top of the mp3 player so it doesn't fall off when you wear it around your neck Besides the lack of screen, and a light that only blinked to indicate if it was playing normally or shuffle (it had NO battery indicator, so it would die on me randomly) it was actually surprisingly nice? 2 gigs was a decent amount of memory back then and the bloatware was provided, but I just never used it lol. that little dingus 3.5 to USB converter was just permanently in my pencase making it so my mp3 was also just a flashdrive for school All in all I rate it
I feel like im stuck in a time loop of Wade loading up the EEEPEECEE with Yepp CDs, trying to play MP3s in auxiliary mode, and the same earbuds every single time.
I've never used the Yepp software, but I know that a lot of software for peripherals at the time required you to "search" for the device _inside_ the software after the computer recognizes that its plugged in. Stuff didn't just pop up automatically. So maybe try playing around with the menus in Yepp and see if there's a "find device" or "import" or something like that.
I'd be willing to bet very large amounts of money that most people could get the software working in no time just by uninstalling the old crap and spending a solid 20 seconds reading the manual
And many early players didn't just show up as drive and needed to be synced with proprietary software. One reason those thumbdrive style players became popular is that you could just plug them in and drag your music on the drive. You could even do it on your buddies computer for totally legit sharing ;)
Fun fact: the soundtrack on Conker's Bad Fur Day, which is in your "2001!!" graphical masterpiece was all MP3 files. Rare managed to make the N64, which came out in 1995, play MP3s...WHILE ALSO PLAYING THE ACTUAL GAME ITSELF
Oh man I had that blue YEPP in 2002, felt like a goddamn astronaut, listening to them INTERNET MUSIC on the go, so cool. It was built like a brick, indestructible nugget, too bad it was only 32MB, too early into the MP3 players market
12:37 Ogg is the open source music file format that was developed as an alternative to the proprietary MP3! It's obsolete now because everyone wants lossless files of course but as a longtime Linux user I used to use Ogg quite a bit. Most people have moved on to FLACs though, which is also open source.
Actually, OGG is still used quite a bit in games and such where one wants a lossy file but without having to pay royalties for the format. It's not just one "format" either. Ogg music files can either be vorbis or opus. Vorbis is older and has been replaced by Opus and Opus is a bit more efficient than MP3 and can get about the same quality as an MP3 at lower bitrates. In terms of lossless, I prefer WavPack. It's open source like FLAC, lossless, and supports a mode called hybrid lossy where it creates two files per song, a small lossy file at whatever bitrate you set it to that can be played on it's own. And the other file is a correction file that is picked up if in the same folder as the lossy file and makes it lossless when played. The two files together are around the same size a as a flac, and the lossy file on it's own can be as small as you want it to be, provided you are okay with a lower bitrate. I tend to keep it around the same bitrate as I would an MP3 though. When space is more important, I just copy the wv files to listen to, when space isn't a concern both the wv and the wvc files are copied.
About half of the "problems" with these nuggets is Wade's inability to get a proper PC-setup and/or to use XP-era software. Dude was actually surprised when he did what softwarwe asked for and it worked (when he selected driver for the first player). Because of that, these nugget-dips always sound like Apple butt-licking marathon, even though iPods had all the same problems on Windows in early days.
I think it's the disconnect between assuming that the CD will be automatically installing the drivers for the device it's sold with. But the CD is just installing the generic software suite with a folder of drivers for all relevant devices, which are not installed until that very screen asks for where they are located. Also if he connected to the internet it probably would have done that automatically.
@@AfferbeckBeats It really doesn't help that many of the installers don't just install the fitting driver. The whole "manually search for the driver" part is basically the worst installation design for a mainstream consumer device. Better installers will ask to plug in the device at some point during the installation, so that the installer can identify them and install the drivers. Or they just throw all drivers on the disc and install the needed one once the device is plugged in. Think about how graphics cards drivers do it. You install the driver package, it checks which card you have, and installs the driver needed. And hardware identifiers aren't new.
30:05 Mate, that was my MP3 for so freaking long, mine was white though. It carried me through college, it didn't needed software, worked just like an USB, drag and play. I carried my investigation papers and notes in that nugg, I loved it. The "extendy bit" was the best part. Headphones were cromulent too, same with the microphone... I even recorded whole interviews with it. Only reason I gave up on it was the dawn of Android phones, that was it.
2:04 TeX Gyre Adventor spotted (this font is everywhere once you know what to look for. the really skinny t's and weirdly proportioned e's are dead giveaways. this is the bold version but the regular weight is also v common)
IIRC Japanese companies like Yamaha and Mitsubishi have their fingers in all the pots because during the occupation only a few companies were allowed to own any of the heavy manufacturing equipment. so they bought up everything from laythes to looms.
What happened is that Japan used to be run by ~dozen multinational conglomerate monopolies called zaibatsu (analogous to the Korean chaebol like Samsung, guess where they got the idea from). The majority of zaibatsu were trustbusted during the occupation. A few like Mitsubishi, Toyota, Kawasaki, Nissan, and Mitsui were allowed to stay.
This video is so weirdly nostalgic. When I was in school, I had the YP-U2R and the YP-U7 as my first and second mp3-player. I actually still use them as flash drives to this day, even though they haven't been able to play music in years.
Oh god the Smasnug white goods leaflet! My first job as a junior graphic designer was for an agency that did all those things. But it was 10 years after that one!! Also, they loved saying "make it look premium" which meant whack a brush steel gradient on the bastard and call it a day.
GE makes random things that don’t connect with other things way cooler than Yamaha or Samsung. Need a new refrigerator? GE has you covered, need a commercial jet engine? GE has it, you need a 4,500 horsepower locomotive? GE has it, you need a 30mm rotary auto cannon for your A-10 attack jet? GE has it.
Need a skyscraper? Samsung has you covered. Need a power plant? Samsung has you covered. Need a car? Samsung had you covered. And what is still true for GE was true for Siemens 20 years ago but nowadays it's all different companies.
That Samsung Pebble brings back memories! I love that nugget so much. I had one in green and wearing it on my neck during work runs in 2012-2013 was fun. Didn't use the software CD installer to transfer music if I remembered correctly. The headphones broke, which eventually made me stop using it and went back to using my old BlackBerry as my music player.
Good video but I would recommend reading up on how USB, PnP, and driver installation works on Windows XP. Several of your devices were only like a step or two away from working before you gave up. Also, you should get a regular PC and set up virtual machines (VM) for different versions of Windows instead of using that crappy Eee PC, so that way if you have troubles getting something to work in XP, you can just switch to a Vista or Win 7 virtual machine
As much as I enjoy Wade's videos, it was frustrating to see him almost get to the point of getting the device installed and giving up. The early generation of ipods weren't much better, the 1st gen wouldn't even work with Windows. ITunes for Windows was a pile of shit that crashed constantly. Also Apple are the king of the proprietary connector. Honestly if it was anyone but Apple their 20 pin connector would of died well before their switch to Lightning. They may finally have USB C on their phones, but that's because they were forced to.
@@DragonTheseHazelNuts Honestly, I think he probably does know how it works but playing it up for laughs, which is fine. The content he churns out isn't for journalistic accuracy, it is information with silly humour. Also, Wade's experiences are similar to some peoples. For those that do remember the time of the MP3 shovelware, how many of us helped others install the crappy software that people were forced to use. I suspect with the Yapp's, they most likely wouldn't of needed the software at all once the drivers had been installed properly. The driver was most likely a USB interface chip that Windows XP didn't know about.
No it's actually better he does it with real hardware that's somewhat period appropriate (yes I know that an early 2000s desktop/laptop and late 2000s netbook are very different), it'd be better if he used some laptop with a dvd drive instead of relying on an external dvd drive. Point is not to get the stuff working but to see whether it'd be frustrating or not to get working.
@@DragonTheseHazelNutsis it the end users job to know how to “install USB devices”? Or is it the job of the system and the software applications? How many Windows users even know what the device manager is? By the mid-2000s, everything should’ve been as plug and play as possible. The software should’ve installed the correct driver for the device so the wizard knew exactly where to find the driver files. Maybe using a newer OS would’ve helped (?) but blaming the user instead of the bad design on behalf of Samsung is only rewarding bad software. It was a bad software experience. Only once or twice did the “Your hardware is ready to use” pop up come up, meaning of all of his attempts, only a few of them were able to get drivers installed, and even then only one of them communicated to the software.
I had one of those lil usb stick samsungs featured at the end and i LOVED that thing. My idiot ADHD riddled brain played with the switch blade USB action for days. At one point it went through the wash after sitting in my school trousers for too long and the screen refused to work on it. STILL WORKED THOUGH and i learnt how to use it without a screen and kept it going for a solid year before it finally died on me. I miss mp3s
For the first time ever, watching Wade "Dankmus" Nixon torture himself over a bunch of Yepp MP3 players made me uncomfortable, especially for a whole 30 minutes.
18:28 - Wade, I know you love using 'Pukcells', but, those older devices were power hungry, so, to get ANY life out of a AAA, you'd NEED a Duracell as they have a higher power output compared to 'Regular' batteries... 😏 😎🇬🇧
19:24 This fugly thing was around a hunge american freedom units. The design in 2001 was considered 'Sexy and compact" and the main competitors were the Rio 600 and Nomad II. What a time to be alive it was.
Pitney Bowes recently did me dirty. The laptop dock I bought had been taken out thrown onto the ground and then put back in the box. It still works and was cheap so I started laughing
Me when I don't know that Windows XP doesn't come with preloaded USB drivers and doesn't install them automatically when you plug stuff in, then all my nuggets don't work but it's Windows XP's fault, not the nuggs' fault...
I remember having that Digital Audio Player at the end (in Shrek Green of course!) and it was super easy to use if you ignored the bloatware and just loaded it up through Windows Media Player
the funny thing is it was actually working almost instantly once the drivers were installed from the disk, if you looked at the bottom left corner of the yepp software, it was doing things, and had connected to the YEPP!, it's just as per usual, wade is very impatient
@@sayocean86 I like wade and watching his videos but that can get very frustrating to watch lol XD makes me want to pull out my hair, well whats left of it haha
1:19 I recently bought a YEPP CD player and every time I talk about I pronounce it exactly like this 3:47 "Yeppo" means "pretty" in Korean (my guess), plus it's an abbreviation: young, energetic, passionate, personal. It had thought put into it, but still, an extremely funny name.
My mom had one of those first Yepps (the nicer looking one). I still have it in a box somewhere. I used to use it all the time as a kid and I honestly loved it. The Black Eyed Peas song it comes pre-loaded with is "Where Is The Love?" by the way.
Let me guess, it was a video you got off some random corner of the internet in some weird format? You also don’t need iTunes to play videos on an iPad.
For videos on iPad, if you really want to get them on there, all you have to do is convert them. iTunes has a built in conversion tool that’s really easy to use. I hope that helps anyone else who might run into that problem.
Looking through the Best Buy ads every week, Yepp taught me a valuable lesson in saving your money and getting something that actually works. I'd see those cheap pieces of crap and say, "I'll save up for an iPod."
Wade, you may not believe me, but after enough of your Aussie ramblings, I actually went and had some Tim Tams shipped to me so I could actually try them; I was saving them for a special occasion. 30+ minutes of nuggs? THIS IS THAT SPECIAL OCCASION!
Next time brew some chai tea (or other hot beverage. I suppose coffee and hot chocolate are traditional) and use the tim tams as a straw. (Google Tim Tam Slams if you think I'm trolling.)
27:11 Far be it for me to tell the nug guy how to use a nug. He has installed and used and _killed_ more of these things than anyone. But... this was frustrating me. Seriously, why are you expecting something else to appear? It's ready. Drag some mp3s to the software and hit the button on the tool bar to sync. The software has a flash or smart media card side. It's not going to show the name of the mp3 player like iTunes. There's nowhere in the software for that to appear. And the songs that are already on it are usually locked in a separate partition so they won't appear either. The windows device manager told you it found the device. The software is ready. Drop some mp3s in the software. That's it. When windows device manager pops up by the clock and says "device found" that's the same as the name of the device appearing in iTunes. Some of them would never appear in my computer as a device. You just use the software.
Oh, wait. I stand corrected. I'm looking at that screen again and noticed another detail. The bottom left corner says, "LPT port not stable. Please retry!" I don't know why the software is trying to use a printer port which is what an LPT port is. My guess, that first nug with the big serial port would've used the LPT port. So when they design the software the first time LPT Port would have been accurate. But as they release new hardware and kept updating the software, they just never changed that terminology and that one error message once they switched to USB...? Idk. Either way, there's a problem with the port on the machine, the port on the nug, both, or the cable, or all of those.
Yes! You featured the literal nugget in the thumbnail! I'm happy because I found not just one but two of them at a thrift store. Not all the accessories, but the manual and the cable were there, In the End by Lincoln Park was loaded on it. The sound quality and controls are abysmal. You missed "CD encoding is limited to 50 tracks". It took until 2008 to make a player that was just a normal storage device, they must have been terrified of the music industry.
0:06 Samsung also has a fishing company (which they started off as), a ship builder and has built some of the largest ships, a truck company, a building company and helped with construction of large skyscrapers and a military contractor and is responsible for a lot of the military equipment used in Asia.
@@PEPSIMaxMusicYes and no... Wade obviously has an Apple bias from his experience and preference, but Apple really did put a lot of work into making the experience 'just work' compared to a lot of MP3 players of the time. It's not like the phones of today where they work basically the same and it's just preference. I was an Apple hater at the time and still had to admit that the iPod/iTunes experience was better. (I do not believe that that is still the case.)
'iTunes was a saint' iTunes is still Wanted on war crimes charges for putting a damn U2 album on my computer that I could not delete, then forcing that onto my 8gb and 16gb Gen 3 ipod shuffle, that I also could not delete. I will not forgive. I will not forget
WAKE UP AUSTRALIA MAN IS YELLING
more like go to sleep, its 0:30 at me :c
GOOD MORNING NIGHT CITY
im up :)
VEGGIEMITE
SMASNUG NUGS, YEPPS AND AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
"Hey, can you actually, like, see my dingus?"
-Dank, 2024
Some stuff should not be taken out of context...
i showed you my dingus please respond
@@BJsTrashChannel Everything must be taken out of context
- M Y - D I N G A L I N G -
At least buy them dinner first
"Yepp! Is the portable mp3 player"... You can hear his sanity slipping the farther he goes 🤣🤣
farther? i hardly know her!
yeppTM is
the portable MP3 Player.
@@NigelMontezuma yepp™ is the portable MP3™ Player™
I love their consistency. First it was "Yepp! Is the portable digital music player", then it went to "Yepp! Is the portable mp3 player" just for the last one go back to "Yepp! Is the portable mp3 player" xD Seriously, ipods are one thing and they were awesome for their times, but kids this days with iphones, media streaming and aalways-online are clueless on what we had to struggle if we hadn't have like rich parents who could buy us apple player or something with reputable brand (yes, we can shit on Sony or SE now, rightfully so, but they were doing good stuff back then) and instead we got from them or grandparents "mp3 player" or later mp4 for Christmas that were complete bootleg random madeups.
Jezus, I remember having mp4 player I begged my parents to buy me one. 1 big (for their times) screen and 2 buttons on each side. In package there was some vague instruction in a form of microscopic booklet with font size like 1, minicd with obligatory bloatware (seriously, how is that possible no single piece of this software was good?), headphones that were never working properly, the connector was constantly disconnecting one earplug, even right after taking them out of the box and usb cable, miniusb but that's just standard for that times. And just like this yepp, uploading there anything was a fucking torture. This software was just fighting you with all its might- weird popups, errors, "media disconnected", hidden confirmation etc. And on top of that- let's say you somehow uploaded there your content, you charged built-in battery (yep, no AA/AAAs anymore, IT'S THE FUTURE NOW OLD MAN!)... this thing was draining power at random. You COULD have pleasant day and listen to music almost all day long OR it could die on you like half an hour after charging it to 100% and going out. I remember the buttons were in a form of "push down until the tiny dome makes contact to the pin" and you had to push it really hard for them to work. And guess what- the power button... died like not even full year after buying it, the only was to power it on by kind-of shot circuiting it to fife by connecting it to working PC like you wanted to upload something. It was complete garbage and just imagine- you're like 10-13 years this happens, you know why this happens and just go to dad or grandma and tell them that they bought piece or garbage and it's dead already. Sheeeesh....
@@algnedpe7271 Sorry but
*Him
that silver yepp (yp-700) has an INTERNAL BATTERY THAT NEEDED TO CHARGE BEFORE YOU CAN USE IT. it was charging off the new batt you put in you just needed to wait. old tech couldn't run off dual power sources, the external batt charges the internal batt then it would work. patience bruv. that being said... if the internal rechargeable batt was dead dead,,, then yeah she dead.
Which one do you mean the one that had XTUNES on it or the first silver one i dont get🤗
@@mihkelkastehein9470The one that says yp-700 on the bottom of the rectangle which has the screen on it; the one that had critically low battery once finally able to start up, and it’s the one that first appears at 15:17 , which is the one that has XTUNES.
So it needs a gumstick battery AND the whatsit on the side, assuming you can even find a working Twincell in this day and age.
27:48 “Please do not return this product to the store”
Wow were they ever desperate
The eeepeecee did end up recognizing it, unfortunately wade was too busy yelling
Was also too busy not clicking the right buttons because "lol did not read"
too busy glazing apple as well lol
Too busy being awesome.
Yeah, old software never actually showed the nug. You just queued up what you wanted to transfer over and hit the button and hoped it work. Hell, even my Zune didn't show what was on there until like the third version of the software. And direct storage passthrough control was not a thing 20 years ago. The PC was only able to see the device, it was up to the software to communicate and send songs to the device, and then the device would write the song to the storage (which is why it took so damn long for songs to transfer)
@@Malaphor2501 I'm having flashbacks from this description how did we make it out alive
Australian man gets increasingly irritated at old mp3 players, the tv show
Also his Python reviews the tech sometimes. Most normal Australian channel.
i'd watch that on netflix for free
Samsung is like that one kid in class that has an answer for any random topic
And every answer is wrong
@@Z29vZ2xlc3Vja3Munah stop the hate - it's a correct answer, just not the one the teacher's looking for
@@rbaeThey gave the right answers but by using different solutions.
@@AmirRazan Just some are worse than better. (I love samsung but they be kinda goofy sometimes)
What’s Samsung? I’ve only ever seen smasnug
I still hope that one day, Wade will finally understand how windows drivers work, so that we can hear scarlet fire out of crappy early 2000's YEPP nuggets.
Or he could just use a store own brand cheapo MP3 player that just shows up as a Mass Storage Device, like all good MP3 players should.
It irked me too. But I can understand it from the consumers perspective.
The setup process isn't *that* straightforward.
Even doing it correctly can result in failure back then (first-hand experience), it's how I got to be as good as I am today.
Yeah, one thing he’s missing from the “consumer’s perspective” is that people with old PCs were actually patient people who would spend copious amounts of time thoughtfully to get their product working. And now we have the luxury of Internet forums to check quickly which I bet he isn’t even doing.
@@PanoptesDreams "It irked me too. But I can understand it from the consumers perspective.
The setup process isn't that straightforward.
Even doing it correctly can result in failure back then (first-hand experience), it's how I got to be as good as I am today."
But from the consumer's perspective Samsung are a Good Brand who make Quality Products that should Just Work.
If they're upgrading from a SAOCHING that barely plays MP3s above 128KBPS to a "proper" Samsung and it was just a case of dragging tracks to their SAOCHING, they'd expect the same from their "proper" Samsung.
They'd probably have the same expectation from their iPod, to not have to use iTunes, but iTunes Just Worked in ways that everyone else's proprietary client Just Didn't.
@@GeoNeilUK ..okay.. I am supporting his ineptitude. I do know these things.
I just don't get your point to me.
Someone else said what you're trying too better: "Why do they not just show up as generic storage devices to drag and drop onto"
EDIT: It was literally you, LOL.
kids today will never understand the struggle to spend an entire weekend getting your new piece of tech to work
I think we do mate
i spent weeks building my own pc, even more time customizing linux to my liking, and also still spend hours getting windows programs to work on it since devs hate supporting linux.
i think i understand pretty well the struggle of getting tech to work.
The struggles I've been having with my new 3d printer are pretty frustrating. The struggle is still there, you just have to go out of your way to find it.
@@wy477x so... do you like to just make your life harder to pretend like you're from old age?
@@sunshei.If you weren't there pre or early PNP-era I'd argue that you don't. When tech wasn't really made for the average consumer but for nerds. When nothing was standardized and every new product was actually new: you'd never seen anything like it, clueless how it was supposed to operate or function, no one to ask, no way to simply Google a solution. No wonder my hair's already grey!
One day he may finally discover the Device Manager in Windows.
shhhh, I actually enjoy seeing the absolute train wreck of an apple layman
Maybe even get "stuff" working by installing service packs.
But hey, what do i know, i switched to Linux because XP made my life miserable. :D
Yeah I'm guessing xp is missing a few service packs and updates
@@trayner haha its also a crappy laptop that is really old to boot! XD hes really playing with a handicap when he makes these videos.
@@trayner As soon as we got to 2008 and he's using XP not connected to the internet I was like no way is any of this going to work. But that lil egg nugg was the only one that did!
The day dank realises that the samsung proprietary connectors were actually standard connectors in Korea will be a trip. LG, Samsung and others all used the same chargers lol
We also had them for a time in the early 2000s here in the states before everyone agreed on going usb mini.
Bro samsung controls korea
Yes, we have at least two different Samsung flip phones in our house, and I found out recently that they use the same charger
@@mromutt Can thank the EU for that, every phone with USB instead of every manufacturer with their own proprietary connector, some even more than one. And now they go for USB-C on everything.
I was going to bring that up, too, for why the buds worked but the speaker didn't on the Yepp ones. They only recognized certain banding on the jack, and the ones that are standard now, simply didn't work on them.
My theory on the ambiguous packaging state of the *yepp!* is that the nugg was removed from the box and placed in a Dixons (or similar non UK Chain) display cabinet, where it lived undisturbed for between 6 and 36 months, before being reboxed when the store closed, and picked up for £5 by one of the now jobless team members.
Edit: I'm referring to the first nugg, didn't realise there were many yepps.
My source for the above is that i worked at Dixons from 1998 to 2005, and was one of the few who didn’t get an ipod. I instead got a Creative Zen which lasted for over a decade, after sitting in a display case for years until the branch i worked at closed, and the display nugs were sold off to us staff for less than the cost of a beer in London.
AHH Dixon's and Woolworths and index sad times 😭
@@HA05GER Dixons sort-of still exists to be fair
Bold of you to assume the staff paid for anything when the shop closed. When the shop I worked at (not Dixons) went into administration the staff just grabbed whatever they wanted when management wasn't looking
oh a creative zen! i loved mine, i had 2 separate gens of it
@@HMJ66 in our case the store was closing, not the whole company. Much of the inventory was sent to other locations, but the display items were sold for peanuts to the staff- only some of whom were given positions at other stores.
We aren't mad at apple for *inventing* proprietary cables, it's just that everyone else stopped circa 2007 because they realized it was massively inconvenient. it's 2024 now and we have to drag Apple kicking and screaming into universal USB-C, and we could only do so through literal LEGISLATION lmao
Nope, Steve Apple can do no wrong.
Yet apple were one of the 1st companies to shove usb-c through our throats. (macbooks)
@@human8985 usb c is not a proprietary technology though.
@@James-cr8mtthats not what he was implying dope
LMAOO FR
I lived out of that last nugg you tested. Loaded it up a 100 (!) free MP3s on its internal storage (!!) with Skype notification sounds in the background which I'd listen to while waiting for the bus after school. It's shuffle mode was deterministic and seedless, as in whenever you started it up it would always play the songs in the same "random" order, even if you put more tracks in. Because of that I have a particular order of five or so songs in my head where if I hear any one of them, my brain is expecting the next one that would come on after it on that thing.
The headphones on that would go on to live in my ears for many players after that, becvause they were "better" than the other ones I would come across. I'm old enough to realise that ALL of them were crummy but quality is perspective to what you were exposed to at the time. The LCD screen was bright but it would wrap song titles frequently; it also had only ASCII format support so if your song's metadata had any special characters in it then the whole screen would display gibberish. It was great.
I actually found it a few years ago when doing some cleaning and it STILL had some battery power left. What a nugg.
12:20 Wade, you do remember that THE BRICK screams when you nudge the volume even a little right? Somethin's wrong with the Taledo m8, she's starting to cook.
You might be onto something
Hmmmm..... that might be possible after all the abuse she went through....😂
At least he has those replacements from cashies. She might not have long left.
@@musicbyimpulse Why tf am I getting genuinely sad about a random guy's speaker starting to break?
@@exzyyd392 Because shes sexy speaker mate!
We arent mad at Apple for proprietary at the beginning of the Iproducts, we are mad that they kept doing it when everyone else standardized. Then they take away your home button and sold it back to you, then they took your wires and sold them back to you.
Fuckin exactly. I don't mind proprietary for a portable game console, don't mind the barrel jack on laptops. What I do mind is proprietary on a damn phone, so annoying
This is what apple fanboys like wade dont get. The fuds great but his apple rose tinted glasses are ridiculous
They did not sell the home button back to you
I mean, in all fairness Wade really isn’t dedicated to sucking modern Apple’s dick thaaat much, it’s more the iPod than anything
Sold back the home button???
What are you talking about?
(not an Apple fanboy or anything I'm just genuinely confused on what you're talking about)
"This is the worst episode I've ever done."
No, this is one of your best episodes ever. Fucking incredible, I'm dying from laughter at how bad these nugs are
I just wish he actually used the right software. Yepp Explorer is the one already had installed. The CDs installed RealJukebox. It's probably that one
14:16 well have you installed the driver from the popup?? Ugh
I feel the opposite, didnt make me laugh like the older ones, felt more like petty yelling.
I think the biggest issue by far was that it required proprietary shit, and even then, it didn't even work properly. Double whammy in the shit MP3 player category there.
old man yells at clouds
The ultimate DANKPODS LORE video here and it has everything - the EEE PEE CEE, all the SMASNUG nugs, the sexy speaker slowly dying again, and a reminder of how crap eBay can be.
I'm guessing the sound isn't working because they've got a non-standard layout on the 3.5mm jack. Started this trend and Apple has kept it going to this day, but Samsung joined in for a bit too. Since it's early MP3 it's probably mono sound to save space and then playing that one channel of sound right into the mic channel. And that's why the Samsung dirty buds work, cause they've got the matching non-standard 3.5mm plug to the non-standard 3.5mm jack.
I was thinking maybe the writable memory went and died.
Mono mp3s! Thanks for reminding me about those dark days! I was using minidisc at the time, but my friend was an early adopter of mp3-players and he had to make major sacrifices to audio quality due to lack of storage space. He was trying to convince me that mono was no big deal, but I was definitely not convinced. For a start, with headphones you get perfect stereo separation, so it's gonna be really difficult not to notice the difference. And I was into (what's now known as) EDM, and that style of music is really heavy on stereo effects. But yet there he was, listening to 96 kbit or 112 kbit (max!) mono mp3, trying to act like it was acceptable.
My personal highlight list -
1: Smasnug.
2: RealPlayer.
3: DivX.
4: The woman in a white shirt and glasses judging you from the package that was mandatory on _all_ 2000's-era packaging and advertisements.
5: Adorable Yepp mini-CD (I call it the Yip Disc).
6. "Yepp is the digital audio player"
I recently gave CDs another try. I have to say, I forgot how much I liked the spontaneity of walking into a used shop and just kind of grabbing whatever stood out. How easy it was to try something new was one of the few things I missed after getting my first iPod Nano in, like, middle school.
I love that the EeePc is like the slave Pokémon you taught all HMs to 💪🏻💪🏻
You nailed it 😭
That's a perfect analogy.
my usb stick with a copy of my etire mac for no reason
its real hms and tms
Haaaaaa that poor nug Pokémon.
Doesn't follow the instructions, it doesn't work.
*Surprised pikachu face*
Uses old batteries that were never recharged, nugg doesn't work
Surprised pikachu face
A James he isn't, there's no surprised Pikachu faces when James is cooking (aside from amazement at vast capabilities of a James)
Australians don't need no damned instrucztions
OH MY GOSH I OWN THAT ORBULAR LOOKIN NUGG AT THE END
It's actually just a really strange shuffle, the dorkus at the end of the headphone jack clips into a small dent on top of the mp3 player so it doesn't fall off when you wear it around your neck
Besides the lack of screen, and a light that only blinked to indicate if it was playing normally or shuffle (it had NO battery indicator, so it would die on me randomly) it was actually surprisingly nice?
2 gigs was a decent amount of memory back then and the bloatware was provided, but I just never used it lol. that little dingus 3.5 to USB converter was just permanently in my pencase making it so my mp3 was also just a flashdrive for school
All in all I rate it
I feel like im stuck in a time loop of Wade loading up the EEEPEECEE with Yepp CDs, trying to play MP3s in auxiliary mode, and the same earbuds every single time.
27:36 OGG is the file extension for ogg vorbis, which is a compressed audio format. It is what Spotify currently uses.
sauce?
@@gooaygartry wikipedia idk
@@kkrg413 ok....
@@gooaygar Google is literally free.
I first thought OGG was a Windows Groove Music thing.
I've never used the Yepp software, but I know that a lot of software for peripherals at the time required you to "search" for the device _inside_ the software after the computer recognizes that its plugged in. Stuff didn't just pop up automatically.
So maybe try playing around with the menus in Yepp and see if there's a "find device" or "import" or something like that.
I'd be willing to bet very large amounts of money that most people could get the software working in no time just by uninstalling the old crap and spending a solid 20 seconds reading the manual
What??? Apple-man has to use menus? No! Everything must be shiny icons or automatic!
And many early players didn't just show up as drive and needed to be synced with proprietary software.
One reason those thumbdrive style players became popular is that you could just plug them in and drag your music on the drive. You could even do it on your buddies computer for totally legit sharing ;)
Every time I see Samsung on a device, I say Smasnug in my mind. Thanks Wade.
18:53, The “Low Battery” flashing after you slammed the nugg down, was poetic
Fun fact: the soundtrack on Conker's Bad Fur Day, which is in your "2001!!" graphical masterpiece was all MP3 files. Rare managed to make the N64, which came out in 1995, play MP3s...WHILE ALSO PLAYING THE ACTUAL GAME ITSELF
I'd expect nothing less from the masters who made Perfect Dark.
The game had full voice acting as well, so it follows that they used the same audio compression codec across the board
Ah yes, the Smasnuggs, my favourite nuggets and some of the worst ones too!
14:15 generally, yes, when you do not click any buttons or do anything with the software, it tends to not do anything in response
😂
Oh man I had that blue YEPP in 2002, felt like a goddamn astronaut, listening to them INTERNET MUSIC on the go, so cool. It was built like a brick, indestructible nugget, too bad it was only 32MB, too early into the MP3 players market
12:37 Ogg is the open source music file format that was developed as an alternative to the proprietary MP3! It's obsolete now because everyone wants lossless files of course but as a longtime Linux user I used to use Ogg quite a bit. Most people have moved on to FLACs though, which is also open source.
Actually, OGG is still used quite a bit in games and such where one wants a lossy file but without having to pay royalties for the format. It's not just one "format" either. Ogg music files can either be vorbis or opus. Vorbis is older and has been replaced by Opus and Opus is a bit more efficient than MP3 and can get about the same quality as an MP3 at lower bitrates.
In terms of lossless, I prefer WavPack. It's open source like FLAC, lossless, and supports a mode called hybrid lossy where it creates two files per song, a small lossy file at whatever bitrate you set it to that can be played on it's own. And the other file is a correction file that is picked up if in the same folder as the lossy file and makes it lossless when played. The two files together are around the same size a as a flac, and the lossy file on it's own can be as small as you want it to be, provided you are okay with a lower bitrate. I tend to keep it around the same bitrate as I would an MP3 though. When space is more important, I just copy the wv files to listen to, when space isn't a concern both the wv and the wvc files are copied.
The moment i did read the "Power On" the sexy speaker voice was in my head.
What have you done to my brain 😂.
Bluetooth Mode.
@@JenniMeer Auxiliary Mode
@@colinjohnson6454 "bluetooth mode"
don't you ever say that again
oh my pkcell
It's so fucking hot and cool. A early 2000's male teenagers dream.
i can distunctly hear everything in this thread my brain is poisoned
About half of the "problems" with these nuggets is Wade's inability to get a proper PC-setup and/or to use XP-era software. Dude was actually surprised when he did what softwarwe asked for and it worked (when he selected driver for the first player). Because of that, these nugget-dips always sound like Apple butt-licking marathon, even though iPods had all the same problems on Windows in early days.
I think it's the disconnect between assuming that the CD will be automatically installing the drivers for the device it's sold with. But the CD is just installing the generic software suite with a folder of drivers for all relevant devices, which are not installed until that very screen asks for where they are located. Also if he connected to the internet it probably would have done that automatically.
I loved the part when he shit on the one nug for not having a screen when it was literally a nano clone.
@@AfferbeckBeats It really doesn't help that many of the installers don't just install the fitting driver.
The whole "manually search for the driver" part is basically the worst installation design for a mainstream consumer device.
Better installers will ask to plug in the device at some point during the installation, so that the installer can identify them and install the drivers.
Or they just throw all drivers on the disc and install the needed one once the device is plugged in.
Think about how graphics cards drivers do it. You install the driver package, it checks which card you have, and installs the driver needed. And hardware identifiers aren't new.
Connecting windows xp to the internet is a HORRIBLE idea
You’re making factually untrue statements to back your personal opinion. iPods did Windows better than any non-Apple device.
30:05 Mate, that was my MP3 for so freaking long, mine was white though. It carried me through college, it didn't needed software, worked just like an USB, drag and play. I carried my investigation papers and notes in that nugg, I loved it. The "extendy bit" was the best part. Headphones were cromulent too, same with the microphone... I even recorded whole interviews with it.
Only reason I gave up on it was the dawn of Android phones, that was it.
“YEEEES!! i mean YEEEEPP!” Been a long time since ive laughed this hard.
2:04 TeX Gyre Adventor spotted (this font is everywhere once you know what to look for. the really skinny t's and weirdly proportioned e's are dead giveaways. this is the bold version but the regular weight is also v common)
I credit this channel for getting me to call everything samsung related smasnug
smasnug ganlaxsy s10
Smasnug k9
Smasnug note 7
I credit this channel for getting me to call everything in general a dingus.
I've always prefered assmung which I got from some webcomic back in the day
Gotta say, I'm kinda disappointed that it's not 30 straight minutes of Wade smashing nuggets with the 1 grit
That'll probably come later possibly lol
IIRC Japanese companies like Yamaha and Mitsubishi have their fingers in all the pots because during the occupation only a few companies were allowed to own any of the heavy manufacturing equipment. so they bought up everything from laythes to looms.
What happened is that Japan used to be run by ~dozen multinational conglomerate monopolies called zaibatsu (analogous to the Korean chaebol like Samsung, guess where they got the idea from). The majority of zaibatsu were trustbusted during the occupation. A few like Mitsubishi, Toyota, Kawasaki, Nissan, and Mitsui were allowed to stay.
@@ferretyluvyup
This video is so weirdly nostalgic. When I was in school, I had the YP-U2R and the YP-U7 as my first and second mp3-player. I actually still use them as flash drives to this day, even though they haven't been able to play music in years.
Oh god the Smasnug white goods leaflet! My first job as a junior graphic designer was for an agency that did all those things. But it was 10 years after that one!!
Also, they loved saying "make it look premium" which meant whack a brush steel gradient on the bastard and call it a day.
22:28 The early 2000's computing in one sentience: "It's still working, it's just a horrible UI."
GE makes random things that don’t connect with other things way cooler than Yamaha or Samsung. Need a new refrigerator? GE has you covered, need a commercial jet engine? GE has it, you need a 4,500 horsepower locomotive? GE has it, you need a 30mm rotary auto cannon for your A-10 attack jet? GE has it.
well, to be pedantic, General Electric….
Need a nuclear reactor or a MRI machine? GE has you covered.
Need a skyscraper? Samsung has you covered. Need a power plant? Samsung has you covered. Need a car? Samsung had you covered.
And what is still true for GE was true for Siemens 20 years ago but nowadays it's all different companies.
Don't forget Samsung also makes military weapons for South Korea.
@@Play-On7 I thought that was Daewoo (who also made cars and a million other unconnected things)
That Samsung Pebble brings back memories! I love that nugget so much. I had one in green and wearing it on my neck during work runs in 2012-2013 was fun. Didn't use the software CD installer to transfer music if I remembered correctly. The headphones broke, which eventually made me stop using it and went back to using my old BlackBerry as my music player.
to have so much wonderful technology and not know how to use it, the funniest thing I've ever seen
I know this is for fun but.. imagine actually reading the manual.. and ipods were not plug and play on a pc either so..
Womp womp
No.
Good video but I would recommend reading up on how USB, PnP, and driver installation works on Windows XP. Several of your devices were only like a step or two away from working before you gave up. Also, you should get a regular PC and set up virtual machines (VM) for different versions of Windows instead of using that crappy Eee PC, so that way if you have troubles getting something to work in XP, you can just switch to a Vista or Win 7 virtual machine
As much as I enjoy Wade's videos, it was frustrating to see him almost get to the point of getting the device installed and giving up. The early generation of ipods weren't much better, the 1st gen wouldn't even work with Windows. ITunes for Windows was a pile of shit that crashed constantly. Also Apple are the king of the proprietary connector. Honestly if it was anyone but Apple their 20 pin connector would of died well before their switch to Lightning. They may finally have USB C on their phones, but that's because they were forced to.
@@Armunn01 Wade is unfortunately one of the many apple fanboys that are stubborn to actually, you know, know how stuff works that isn't Apple.
@@DragonTheseHazelNuts Honestly, I think he probably does know how it works but playing it up for laughs, which is fine. The content he churns out isn't for journalistic accuracy, it is information with silly humour.
Also, Wade's experiences are similar to some peoples. For those that do remember the time of the MP3 shovelware, how many of us helped others install the crappy software that people were forced to use.
I suspect with the Yapp's, they most likely wouldn't of needed the software at all once the drivers had been installed properly. The driver was most likely a USB interface chip that Windows XP didn't know about.
No it's actually better he does it with real hardware that's somewhat period appropriate (yes I know that an early 2000s desktop/laptop and late 2000s netbook are very different), it'd be better if he used some laptop with a dvd drive instead of relying on an external dvd drive. Point is not to get the stuff working but to see whether it'd be frustrating or not to get working.
@@DragonTheseHazelNutsis it the end users job to know how to “install USB devices”? Or is it the job of the system and the software applications?
How many Windows users even know what the device manager is? By the mid-2000s, everything should’ve been as plug and play as possible. The software should’ve installed the correct driver for the device so the wizard knew exactly where to find the driver files. Maybe using a newer OS would’ve helped (?) but blaming the user instead of the bad design on behalf of Samsung is only rewarding bad software.
It was a bad software experience. Only once or twice did the “Your hardware is ready to use” pop up come up, meaning of all of his attempts, only a few of them were able to get drivers installed, and even then only one of them communicated to the software.
I had one of those lil usb stick samsungs featured at the end and i LOVED that thing.
My idiot ADHD riddled brain played with the switch blade USB action for days.
At one point it went through the wash after sitting in my school trousers for too long and the screen refused to work on it.
STILL WORKED THOUGH and i learnt how to use it without a screen and kept it going for a solid year before it finally died on me.
I miss mp3s
Love how the YEPP packaging fits perfectly with the gloves and the shrek-pad
watching this at 4am is a fever dream with this hella aussie man saying "YEPP!" for a few minutes straight
For the first time ever, watching Wade "Dankmus" Nixon torture himself over a bunch of Yepp MP3 players made me uncomfortable, especially for a whole 30 minutes.
18:28 - Wade, I know you love using 'Pukcells', but, those older devices were power hungry, so, to get ANY life out of a AAA, you'd NEED a Duracell as they have a higher power output compared to 'Regular' batteries... 😏
😎🇬🇧
OH MY GOD THEY CALLED THE INSTALLER FOR THE EGG-SHAPED YEPP "BABY YEPP" 13:20
19:24 This fugly thing was around a hunge american freedom units. The design in 2001 was considered 'Sexy and compact" and the main competitors were the Rio 600 and Nomad II. What a time to be alive it was.
Breaking down laughing because I keep expecting something different and it's still YEPP every time
Pitney Bowes recently did me dirty. The laptop dock I bought had been taken out thrown onto the ground and then put back in the box. It still works and was cheap so I started laughing
oh man, they're still at it huh
Me when I don't know that Windows XP doesn't come with preloaded USB drivers and doesn't install them automatically when you plug stuff in, then all my nuggets don't work but it's Windows XP's fault, not the nuggs' fault...
Thanks for showcasing this. The memories of my Samsung Yepp nugg that I lost in the sea were never forgotten
15:18 Damn, I think Elon Musk was working in Smaznug in the past...
All the seamstresses screaming at seeing those shears used on plastic, RIP shears you will never be good enough to cut fabric again
I remember having that Digital Audio Player at the end (in Shrek Green of course!) and it was super easy to use if you ignored the bloatware and just loaded it up through Windows Media Player
Ah the OGG file, renowned for such classics as diesel.ogg
That was my alarm for like a year lol
Yogscast flashbacks
Alternate title: Wade sytuggles to get software to work on old Samsung nuggets, discovering many, many disgusting batteries for 30 minutes straight
the funny thing is it was actually working almost instantly once the drivers were installed from the disk, if you looked at the bottom left corner of the yepp software, it was doing things, and had connected to the YEPP!, it's just as per usual, wade is very impatient
@@mysteryboyee but was he struggling? Yepp
@@mysteryboyeeincreasing annoyingly impatient
@@sayocean86 I like wade and watching his videos but that can get very frustrating to watch lol XD makes me want to pull out my hair, well whats left of it haha
@@mysteryboyee I was screaming at my screen because IT WAS WORKING just user being like "cant read, dont read"
1:19 I recently bought a YEPP CD player and every time I talk about I pronounce it exactly like this
3:47 "Yeppo" means "pretty" in Korean (my guess), plus it's an abbreviation: young, energetic, passionate, personal. It had thought put into it, but still, an extremely funny name.
My mom had one of those first Yepps (the nicer looking one). I still have it in a box somewhere. I used to use it all the time as a kid and I honestly loved it. The Black Eyed Peas song it comes pre-loaded with is "Where Is The Love?" by the way.
Me and my dad fought iTunes for an entire day to get a video onto our first gen iPad. iTunes sucked too.
Let me guess, it was a video you got off some random corner of the internet in some weird format? You also don’t need iTunes to play videos on an iPad.
Had to desperately fight iTunes to get anything on my iPod touch or my Shuffle. Was a nightmare program.
For videos on iPad, if you really want to get them on there, all you have to do is convert them. iTunes has a built in conversion tool that’s really easy to use. I hope that helps anyone else who might run into that problem.
@@Jessica_25 I'm not turning my mp4s into movs
It's been slow in the past, but never unstable. I still use it daily.
21:30 Samsung threw him in such a rage that the duck had to die for their sins
9:00 I can't get over how this nug's main menu looks like an eye and it's just giving that look like even it's disappointed with it's existence.
Looking through the Best Buy ads every week, Yepp taught me a valuable lesson in saving your money and getting something that actually works. I'd see those cheap pieces of crap and say, "I'll save up for an iPod."
Technological Fartbox is my favourite Kraftwerk album
it wouldn't connect to the third yepp nug because you left the "don't prompt to install this again" box checked at 12:47
Smasnug used to Smasnug back in the day, emphasis on "nug."
3:18 "digital excitement... YEPP!"
YEPP
Bro, the moment I saw this comment I was on that part 💀
This gave me PTSD flashbacks of trying to get music from LimeWire x Windows 2000 onto my 256mb creative nugget back in the day
Sleeve Frank is just TOO CUTE, especially when you lifted her up to face the camera! 😻😻😻
I didn't come here for 30 minutes of Samsung nuggets,
I came here for 30 minutes of dankpod 😅
should've call it the
Smasnugg-a-thon
the return of 30 minute dankpods videos is oddly comforting
It's like watching someone slowly circle down the drain of insanity. Thank you, we needed this.
i love how the installer for the egg yepp said "baby yepp" now the whole family can yepp! even the babies! xD
Windows XP trying, desperately, to warn you that you might be at risk 🤣
Wade, you may not believe me, but after enough of your Aussie ramblings, I actually went and had some Tim Tams shipped to me so I could actually try them; I was saving them for a special occasion.
30+ minutes of nuggs? THIS IS THAT SPECIAL OCCASION!
Next time brew some chai tea (or other hot beverage. I suppose coffee and hot chocolate are traditional) and use the tim tams as a straw. (Google Tim Tam Slams if you think I'm trolling.)
If you haven't, and you're a coffee drinker, you've gotta try a Tim Tam Slam. Life changing.
27:11 Far be it for me to tell the nug guy how to use a nug. He has installed and used and _killed_ more of these things than anyone. But... this was frustrating me. Seriously, why are you expecting something else to appear? It's ready. Drag some mp3s to the software and hit the button on the tool bar to sync. The software has a flash or smart media card side. It's not going to show the name of the mp3 player like iTunes. There's nowhere in the software for that to appear. And the songs that are already on it are usually locked in a separate partition so they won't appear either. The windows device manager told you it found the device. The software is ready. Drop some mp3s in the software. That's it. When windows device manager pops up by the clock and says "device found" that's the same as the name of the device appearing in iTunes. Some of them would never appear in my computer as a device. You just use the software.
Oh, wait. I stand corrected. I'm looking at that screen again and noticed another detail. The bottom left corner says, "LPT port not stable. Please retry!" I don't know why the software is trying to use a printer port which is what an LPT port is. My guess, that first nug with the big serial port would've used the LPT port. So when they design the software the first time LPT Port would have been accurate. But as they release new hardware and kept updating the software, they just never changed that terminology and that one error message once they switched to USB...? Idk. Either way, there's a problem with the port on the machine, the port on the nug, both, or the cable, or all of those.
Yes! You featured the literal nugget in the thumbnail! I'm happy because I found not just one but two of them at a thrift store. Not all the accessories, but the manual and the cable were there, In the End by Lincoln Park was loaded on it. The sound quality and controls are abysmal. You missed "CD encoding is limited to 50 tracks". It took until 2008 to make a player that was just a normal storage device, they must have been terrified of the music industry.
0:06 Samsung also has a fishing company (which they started off as), a ship builder and has built some of the largest ships, a truck company, a building company and helped with construction of large skyscrapers and a military contractor and is responsible for a lot of the military equipment used in Asia.
Samsung is just me maxxing out all my skill trees in an RPG
Poor 1 Grit having to PAINFULLY sit and watch all your frustration and not take action especially on those Yepps 😂
A half hour video of smasnuggs. It’s everything I could’ve ever wanted
I like how he complained about the little dot mp3's features...after making a video gushing over the shuffle's same exact features
He's an Apple shill who doesn't realise he is one.
@@PEPSIMaxMusicYes and no... Wade obviously has an Apple bias from his experience and preference, but Apple really did put a lot of work into making the experience 'just work' compared to a lot of MP3 players of the time. It's not like the phones of today where they work basically the same and it's just preference. I was an Apple hater at the time and still had to admit that the iPod/iTunes experience was better. (I do not believe that that is still the case.)
@@drewzero1it is tbh
21:25
Samsung frustration drove this man to execute an innocent bystander
This is all Samsung's fault
im convinced all yepps are the exact same internally in new, awfully shaped housings
'iTunes was a saint' iTunes is still Wanted on war crimes charges for putting a damn U2 album on my computer that I could not delete, then forcing that onto my 8gb and 16gb Gen 3 ipod shuffle, that I also could not delete. I will not forgive. I will not forget
That 0m long "cable" at 27:43 made me laugh so hard
absolutely right about samsung making a lot of unrelated stuff
my mother works for them and she is a pharmaceutical rep
Well Korea is called The Republic of Samsung for a reason.
Does it play mp3?
Yepp!
Is it usb?
Yepp!
What do we call it?
...yepp?
Can he figure out how to install a driver? Nope!
Lol the very perfunctory "Wow can you believe no one bought this" at 15:50 💀💀
With the high quality of phones and TVs (high end ones, anyways) that they make now, I can hardly believe this is the same company. Mind boggling.