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Is it possible to get too much of a good thing? Some may argue that hedonism and excess are tools of the devil. Well, at CBiz we say, "Bring it on!" The gaudier, the better; the more, the merrier. That's why when Creative Labs introduced a 20 GB version of the Nomad Jukebox MP3 player, we did a jig of joy. After all, we had long since filled up the old, 6 GB model (see Channel Surfing, Sept. 18, 2000) and, while not necessarily growing weary of the 1,200-odd songs on it, we were feeling a pang for something different. The new version, no larger than the 6 GB model, holds an estimated 5,000 songs, or, as one of CBiz's sales reps overstated, "Wow, that's like the entire anthology of music in history." Well, not exactly. It's only about the entire anthology of the Lost Lennon tapes. But it's damn impressive nonetheless. Try this on for size: you could listen to the 20 GB Nomad Jukebox for essentially two consecutive weeks, 24 hours a day, and not hear a single repeated song. Try saying that about your favourite radio station. With the same 14-ounce, Discman-size form factor as before, the Jukebox offers an on-board real-time digital signal processor for top-notch audio playback. The system's EAX processing allows users to control the audio settings to make it sound like the music is being played in a cave, or a stadium, for instance. We're still waiting for an underwater simulated setting, but hey. It's hard to quibble with a piece of machinery that can play MP3s, WMAs and WAVs.