The Samsung Nexus is no bigger than most digital music players, and Samsung adds satellite radio to the mix with a cradle-bound XM radio, but you can listen to live radio only when the Nexus is docked. In addition, it comes up short on battery life.

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Samsung Nexus Mp3 player Review taken from hometheatermag “The NeXus 50 portable is so named because it stores up to 50 hours of XM Satellite Radio programming, which it can compress to proprietary, variable-bit-rate ACT files—retaining full artist/title tags—and record to its 1 gigabyte of embedded flash memory. (A less expensive NeXus 25 model is also available.) One important point up front: This is not a portable XM2go device. Although it can play MP3 and WMA files, it can only receive live XM broadcasts in either the home dock (included) or with the car kit (sold separately)

Samsung Nexus Mp3 player Review taken from PCmag Another cool aspect of the Nexus is its support for the XM + Napster music service. If you hear a song you like on XM radio, simply “tag” it and easily purchase and download that artist or song via Napster. It’s a great way to discover and own the music you like.

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