Get Better Gear!
- Kensington Windshield/Vent Car Mount with Sound Amplified Cradle for iPhone from Kensington, $39.99
- SigFx Energy iPhone Case Contains Smart Battery from SigFx Energy, US$69.95
- NAVIGON AG - True GPS Software for the iPhone from NAVIGON Inc., 89.99
- Tweetie 2 from atebits, $2.99
- Snood: Flawed Casual Play from Electronic Arts, US$3.99
Top 5 Free Apps
iTunes New Music Releases
Top 5 Paid Apps
Discover New Music
- Ladytron
Buffy the Vampire Slayer - Once More, with Feeling
- Various Artists
Most musical episodes of TV shows frankly stink. They are usually little more than ill-conceived vehicles intended to let the stars show off what musical talent they have. Once More, With Feeling,
- Asylum Street Spankers
The Asylum Street Spankers are...well...The Spankers. Hailing from Austin, where I saw them live dozens of times, the band played entirely acousti
- Nine Inch Nails
- For years I wanted to make music that sounded like something between Love and Rockets and Ministry. In 1989, Trent Reznor beat me to it with this genre-defining album, and it smacked me upside the hea
- Wolfmother
Black Sabbath, The White Stripes, The Stooges. There aren't many bands worth their salt that want to be compared to other bands, but when I listen to Wolfmother's self-titled American debut, I can
Reader Specials
Visit Deals On The Web for the best deals on all consumer electronics, iPods, and more!
In-Depth Review
MicroMemo
Friday, August 11th, 2006 at 11:00 AM - by Brad Gibson
A new breed of third-party iPod voice recorders are coming and they will for the first time turn Apple's portable music player into an compact, handheld, professional recording device. The first one to soon hit the market is from Xtreme Mac and I found it a complete solution that opens the iPod to a whole new world.
![]() XtremeMac MicroMemo |
Let me explain. The MicroMemo is different in two very big ways from previous iPod voice recorders. First, it hooks up via the dock connector on iPod's with video only instead of through the remote socket and headphone jack. That means the audio quality of a recording it much better sounding than devices that came out a few years back and sounded like you were talking into a tin can attached to a string.
Because of that new connector interface, the MicroMemo's second difference is its ability to record CD-quality audio with either the included microphone or a non-phantom powered, professional mic you plug in to a 3.5mm mini jack on its side. Regardless of which mic you use, you can record 16-bit audio up to 44Khzgood enough to broadcast on any radio station or online podcast. I'm predicting now this will be a hot product for radio stations throughout the world and you'll see radio/podcast reporters flocking to use it.
The MicroMemo comes in either black or white and snaps on snug to the iPod's bottom. When you connect the unit, the iPod automatically switches to Voice Memo mode, ready to record, pause, stop and save recordings as .wav files. The files come up on your iPod labeled with the date and timenot so easy to categorize and find if you record a lot of audio filesbut that's the fault of Apple and the functionality programmed into the iPod, not XtremeMac's fault.

The 4.25-inch tall mic that comes with it is adjustable and locks snugly into the mini jack connector on its left side. There is a small mic or line switch on the left side of the device, allowing you to also record line level from devices other than a mic. The switch is rounded off and recessed to protect it from being accidentally changed. You'll need a fingernail to get underneath it, and some might find it difficult to get at, but few users will change this switch and I'd rather have it this way than it switching after being caught on something like a bag or piece of clothing.
If you want to listen back to your recordings immediately, the MicroMemo's two tiny .25-inch speakers will kick in when you push and hold the XtremeMac logo button on the front for a few seconds. Their quality isn't greatit's more tinny sounding with little bassbut what can you expect from a device that is handcuffed to being small and compact? The MicroMemo speakers are good enough for a quick check, but your better bet is to check via your iPod earbuds. Even better, transfer files to your desktop or laptop for editing and listening through much bigger speakers. One important note: you can't monitor through your earbuds when you're recording live. That would be a nice feature, but I don't think this is a functionality of the MicroMemo, but that of the iPod.

The quality of the audio recorded was excellent in our tests (listen to our two test files below). The omni-directional mic that came with it sounded fine and picks up voices from feet away, but our $150 professional mic (shown in the photo below) sounded even better with a more robust mix of highs and lows. Whichever mic you use, you'll be impressed.
The Bottom Line
The addition of the mini jack on this product opens up the iPod to a whole new realm of possibilities for those who want a palm size recorder that captures great audio. The MicroMemo adds that functionality in a low-cost product that is easy to use and durable. When you think about what it delivers for its size and price, I can't see many people disagreeing this is a winner of a product.
Clip captured as an AIFF file and converted to Apple Lossless in iTunes to save space without any compromise to quality.
Just The Facts
Pros:ability to plug-in professional non-phantom powered microphone via mini jack, excellent quality audio, removable mini mic
Cons:audio quality through speakers leaves much to be desired
Recent Headlines
- Apple TV 3.0.1 Update Fixes Missing Content Bug
- Taiwan Leak Shows Verizon UTMS/CDMA iPhone for Q3 2010
- iPhone Moves Into RadioShack
- Dictionary, Dictionary, Dictionary, And More
- The Latest App Store Games: Gravity Sling, RocketBird, Ground Effect, Checkers!
- iPhone Game Developer Sued for Collecting User’s Cell Numbers
- Apple May Be Bringing RFID to the iPhone


















Post Your Comments