Legit Mods and Ends Reviews
Oakley Thump 2 512MB Sunglasses Review
| Manufacturer: | Oakley |
| Product: | Polished White/Black Iridium/512MB (05-164) |
| Date: | Fri, Jun 09, 2006 - 12:00 AM |
| Written By: | Ken Brown - |
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Re-Introducing Thump

Today we take a quick look at Oakley?s Thump 2 wearable electronics. In one of the first of many anticipated new products to hit the market this year utilizing the concept of ?all-in-one wearable electronics?. We have cell phones combined with multi-megapixel cameras, PDAs and cell phones, MP3 players and cell phones. Now for those who love outdoor activities we have an MP3 player built into ?sports performance? sunglasses.
Oakley Thump was introduced a few years back as the world?s first digital music eyewear. The latest version that we get our hands on offers up to one gigabyte of memory for your favorite MP3s. That?s around 240 (or 16 hours) of your favorite tunes in an eyewear frame with a built-in 75MHz DSP. Along with the electronic tech, you get premium Oakley optics and 100% UV filtering.
Oakley has delivered a pretty cool piece of hardware here as they allow you to not only transfer MP3, but other music file-types as well: AAC, WMA, and WAV are all supported. You can even use your Thumps to backup files and transport any digital file from one computer to another.
What?s in the box?
Besides the stylishly polished white frames and black iridium lenses, Oakley includes a cloth case (?software?), and a USB cable for charging the Thumps and file transfer. The set that we are evaluating is the 512 MB version that has a list price of $349.
Thump 2 Features:

Setting Up Oakley Thump to Play Music
Upon removing the Oakleys from the box, we charged up our Thumps for a little over an hour. A full charge takes no more than 3 hours if the battery is completely dead. The supplied USP cable serves not only to transfer data, it draws power from your computer to recharge Thumps internal battery. The USB cable plugs into the bottom of the Thumps behind the ear boom on the right side.
Using a PC or Mac, it was simple to load music files onto the Thump 2s. Just plug the glasses up (did I just say ?plug the glasses up??) via the USB-mini connection and both WinXP and OS X load the Thump as a removable drive. I loaded a few .mp3s that I had on my desktop there and the transfer rate was very good. I even copied a picture or two on to the Thump 2s with no problems at all.