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of a different opinion
I use Rockbox and irivium on my H-140. Though I agree with Febs on what you can do with Rockbox regarding playlists, drag & drop and a database, I still find using irivium too easy to give up. I was using it before I started using Rockbox a few years ago now. Unless somethings changed, creating an on-the-go playlist with Rockbox is just too difficult and time consuming to do every time I want to make a playlist. If you've been using irivium for any length of time, you won't want to give up the flexibility you get, ease of use and viewability (easy to read) using irivium. I think the only problem I'm having regarding making playlists with irivium is that it doesn't (as far as I can find) create ".m3u" filelist names, so manipulating them outside of irivium is not possible.
I still drag & drop, but I rip with Realplayer because it appends the track number for order, creates a folder, names it, or automatically finds the correct folder to put albums and songs for an existing artist everytime. Based on a previous poll, very few people use it. I know there might be something "open" and others consider better, but it's what I like at the moment.
Prior to Rockbox, I used the iRiver database function. But then, initial versions of Rockbox didn't have that capability, so I've used "filetree" since converting. Just the other day I got another firmware version of Rockbox from March because buggy things started happening with the February version I was using (I don't like changing every week, day, or month just because a new build shows up). Anyway, I saw that I could setup the old 'database' way of viewing things as in the iRiver firmware (with a couple of other functions). I looked at it, played with it a moment and then, went right back to filetree.
irivium can be used independent of Rockbox. When the H-140 is hooked up to my computer, it is irivium's. When we're (me and the jukebox) out in the street, Rockbox rules.
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H-140 running Rockbox
Shure E2c's
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