I live in Beijing, a city with some of the world's most unpleasant weather: humid 40°C in summer, dry -10°C in winter, and now it's spring so we're enjoying dust storms.
The dry winters have been a nightmare for my current MP3 player. How can I have a better experience with the one I'm about to buy?
When I say dry winters, I mean:
- shaking hands is routinely a shocking experience
- visible discharges between my laptop keyboard and my fingers
- everyone uses moisturiser to stop their fingers bleeding
- I have occasionally seen magnetic field lines in my porridge oats (like that experiment with iron filings you did at school)
When I say a nightmare for my MP3 player, I mean that it resets itself every few minutes. It resets when I take my gloves on and off, or my scarf moves (and at -10, you need gloves and scarf), or when I pick it up from my bed. It's annoying to lose the end of a 3-minute track; it's very annoying to have to repeatedly fast-forward from the beginning of a 30-minute philosophy lecture to somewhere near the end.
Someone will probably suggest a wrist band - but are they practical on the subway, in the park, etc.?
Any ideas welcome, but particularly MP3 brands or (battery?) technologies that will resist static.
Matt
The dry winters have been a nightmare for my current MP3 player. How can I have a better experience with the one I'm about to buy?
When I say dry winters, I mean:
- shaking hands is routinely a shocking experience
- visible discharges between my laptop keyboard and my fingers
- everyone uses moisturiser to stop their fingers bleeding
- I have occasionally seen magnetic field lines in my porridge oats (like that experiment with iron filings you did at school)
When I say a nightmare for my MP3 player, I mean that it resets itself every few minutes. It resets when I take my gloves on and off, or my scarf moves (and at -10, you need gloves and scarf), or when I pick it up from my bed. It's annoying to lose the end of a 3-minute track; it's very annoying to have to repeatedly fast-forward from the beginning of a 30-minute philosophy lecture to somewhere near the end.
Someone will probably suggest a wrist band - but are they practical on the subway, in the park, etc.?
Any ideas welcome, but particularly MP3 brands or (battery?) technologies that will resist static.
Matt