2 \chapter{\label{ref:rockbox_interface
}Quick Start
}
3 \section{Basic Overview
}
4 \subsection{The
\daps{} controls
}
7 % include the front image. Using \specimg makes this fairly easy,
8 % but requires to use the exact value of \specimg in the filename!
9 % The extension is selected in the preamble, so no further \ifpdfoutput
11 \includegraphics[height=
8cm,width=
10cm,keepaspectratio=true
]{rockbox_interface/images/
\specimg-front
}
15 Throughout this manual, the buttons on the
\dap{} are labelled according to the
16 picture above. When a table of button actions says ``Long'' before the button it
17 means that you should make a long press on that button, in other words, press it
18 for approximately
1 second. In detail the buttons are described in the following
22 Additional information is available for blind users on the Rockbox website at
27 If you lay the
\dap{} on the table with the joystick pointing
28 towards you, and the curved sides at the top, you will find the following
29 if you start from the top-right corner and follow the side of the
\dap{} in a
31 On the right side the buttons
\ButtonOn{},
\ButtonOff{},
\ButtonMode{} and
32 the
\ButtonHold{} switch. Next comes on the bottom the USB port,
33 a small hole for resetting the
\dap{}, charger plug. On the left side located
34 is the button
\ButtonRec{}. At least the top has headphone mini-jack plug,
35 remote port, optical/line in and optical/line out.
36 The joystick in the middle of the
\dap{} is
37 used to navigate menus by pressing it up, down, left and right. Pressing the
38 joystick down is labelled
\ButtonSelect{} throughout this manual. Its
39 directions are labelled
\ButtonRight{},
\ButtonDown{},
\ButtonLeft{} and
42 The internal microphone is located on the left hand side of the nit towards the
43 top, and there is a small reset hole on the bottom of the unit between the
44 power and USB sockets. To perform a hard reset, insert a paperclip into this
48 Hold or lay the
\dap{} so that the side with the button pad and
49 LCD is facing towards you. The buttons on the button pad are as follows: top
50 left corner:
\ButtonOn{}, bottom left corner:
\ButtonOff{}, top right corner:
51 \ButtonRec, bottom right corner:
\ButtonMode{}. In the center of the button pad
52 is a button labelled
\ButtonSelect{}. Surrounding the
\ButtonSelect{} button are
53 four directional buttons used to navigate up, down, left and right.
55 On the top panel of the
\dap{}, from left to right, you can find the
56 following: headphone mini jack plug, remote port, Line-in, Line-out.
58 On the bottom panel of the
\dap{}, from left to right, you can find the
59 following: power jack and two USB ports. The USB port on the right is used
60 to connect your
\dap{} to your computer. The USB port on the left is not
64 \opt{ipod4g,ipod3g,ipodcolor,ipodvideo,ipodmini
}
66 The main controls on the
\dap{} are a slightly indented scroll wheel
67 with a flat round button in the center. Hold the
\dap{} with these controls
70 The top of the player will have the following, from left to
72 \opt{ipod4g, ipod3g ,ipodcolor
}{remote connector, headphone jack,
\ButtonHold{}
74 \opt{ipodvideo
}{\ButtonHold{} switch, headphone jack.
}
75 \opt{ipodmini
}{\ButtonHold{} switch, remote connector, headphone jack.
}
77 The dock connector that is used to connect your
\dap{} to your computer is on
78 the bottom panel of the
\dap{}.
80 The button in the middle of the wheel is called
\ButtonSelect{}. You can
81 operate the wheel by pressing the top, bottom, left or right sections,
82 or by sliding your finger around it. The top is
\ButtonMenu{}, the bottom is
83 \ButtonPlay{}, the left is
\ButtonLeft{}, and the right is
\ButtonRight{}.
84 When the manual says to
\ButtonScrollFwd{}, it means to slide your finger
85 clockwise around the wheel.
\ButtonScrollBack{} means to slide your finger
86 counterclockwise. Note that the wheel is sensitive, so you will need to move
87 slowly at first and get a feel for how it works.
89 Note that when the
\ButtonHold{} switch is pushed toward the center of the
\dap{},
90 hold is on, and none of the other controls do anything. Be sure
91 \ButtonHold{} is off before trying to use your player.
95 The main controls on the
\dap{} are a slightly indented wheel with a
96 flat round button in the center. Hold the
\dap{} with these controls on the
97 top surface. There is a
\ButtonHold{} switch at one end, and headphone and USB
98 jacks at the other; be sure the end with the switch is facing away from you.
100 The button in the middle of the wheel is called
\ButtonSelect{}. You can
101 operate the wheel by pressing the top, bottom, left or right sections,
102 or by sliding your finger around it. The top is
\ButtonMenu{}, the bottom is
103 \ButtonPlay, the left is
\ButtonLeft, and the right is
\ButtonRight{}.
104 When the manual says to
\ButtonScrollFwd{}, it means to slide your finger
105 clockwise around the wheel.
\ButtonScrollBack{} means to slide your finger
106 counterclockwise. Note that the wheel is sensitive, so you will need to move
107 slowly at first and get a feel for how it works.
109 Note that when the
\ButtonHold{} switch is pushed toward the center of the
\dap{},
110 hold is on, and none of the other controls do anything; be sure
\ButtonHold{} is
111 off before trying to use your player.
115 The main characteristic of the Ondio case is the dent on its lower right side
116 which is the MMC slot. Holding the
\dap{} with this slot in the described position
117 you'll find the following:
119 On the curved top it has the headphone jack to the left,
120 the
\ButtonOff{} button is in the middle
%
121 \opt{recording
}{ and the line in jack to the right
}.
122 Apart from the already mentioned MMC slot you will find the USB connector on
123 the
\daps{} right side. Placed on the upper side of the device right below
124 the flat display there is the main button pad of the
\dap{}. A strong deepening
125 marks the center of it and helps to operate the directional keys from there.
126 \ButtonLeft{} and
\ButtonRight{} form some sort of a strip and divide
\ButtonUp{}
127 and
\ButtonDown{}. The raised button positioned in the lower left of this round
128 crosspad is labelled
\ButtonMenu{}.
}
131 Hold or lay the
\dap{} so that the side with the scroll pad and
132 LCD is facing towards you. In the centre below the lcd is the scroll pad. It
133 is oriented vertically. Touching the top and bottom half of it acts as the
134 \ButtonScrollUp{} and
\ButtonScrollDown{} buttons respectively. On the left
135 of the scroll pad is the
\ButtonLeft{} button and on the right is the
136 \ButtonRight{} button.
138 There are three buttons on the right hand side of the
\dap{}. From top to
139 bottom, they are:
\ButtonRew{},
\ButtonPlay{} and
\ButtonFF{}. On the left
140 hand side is the
\ButtonPower{} button.
142 On the top panel of the
\dap{}, from left to right, you can find the
143 following:
\ButtonHold() switch,
\opt{h10
}{reset pin hole,
}remote port and
144 headphone mini jack plug.
146 On the bottom panel of the
\dap{}, is the data cable port.
}
149 Hold the
\dap{} with the screen on top and the controls on the right hand side.
150 Below the screen is a cross-shaped touch sensitive pad which contains the
151 \ButtonUp{},
\ButtonDown{},
\ButtonLeft{} and
\ButtonRight{} controls. On the
152 top of the unit from left to right are the power socket, the
\ButtonHold{}
153 switch, and the headphone socket. The
\ButtonHold{} switch puts the
\dap{} into
154 hold mode when it is switched to the right
155 of the unit. The buttons will have no effect when this is the case.
157 Starting from the left hand side on the bottom of the unit, nearer to the front
158 than the back, is a recessed switch which
159 controls whether the battery is on or off. When this switch is to the left,
160 the battery is disconnected. This can be used for a hard reset of the unit,
161 or if the
\dap{} is being placed in storage. Next to that is a connector for
162 the docking station and finally on the right hand side of the bottom of the
163 unit is a mini USB socket for connecting directly to USB.
165 Finally on the right hand side of the unit are some control buttons. Going from
166 the bottom of the unit to the top there is a small round
\ButtonA{} buttton then a
167 rocker volume switch with of the
\ButtonVolDown{} button below the
\ButtonVolUp{}
168 button. Above that is are two more small round buttons, the
\ButtonMenu{}
169 button and nearest to the top of the unit the
\ButtonPower{} button, which is held
170 down to turn the
\dap{} on or off.
}
173 Hold the
\dap{} with the screen on top and the controls on the right hand side.
174 Below the screen is a cross-shaped pad which contains the
\ButtonUp{},
175 \ButtonDown{},
\ButtonLeft{},
\ButtonRight{} and
\ButtonSelect{} controls.
176 On the top of the unit from left to right are the headphone socket and the
177 \ButtonHold{} switch. The
\ButtonHold{} switch puts the
\dap{} into
178 hold mode when it is switched to the right of the unit.
179 The buttons will have no effect when this is the case.
181 Starting from the left hand side on the bottom of the unit, nearer to the back
182 than the front, is a recessed switch which controls whether the battery is on
183 or off. When this switch is to the left, the battery is disconnected.
184 This can be used for a hard reset of the unit, or if the
\dap{} is being placed
185 in storage. Next to that is a custom connector, presumably for planned accessories
186 which were never released, and finally on the right hand side of the bottom of the
187 unit is a mini USB socket for connecting directly to USB.
189 Finally on the right hand side of the unit are some control buttons. Going from
190 the bottom of the unit to the top there are three small round buttons, the
191 \ButtonNext{} buttton,
\ButtonPlay{} button, and
\ButtonPrev{} button (from bottom
192 to top) then a rocker volume switch with of the
\ButtonVolDown{} button below the
193 \ButtonVolUp{} button. Above that is one more small round button, the
\ButtonPower{}
194 button, which is held down to turn the
\dap{} on or off.
}
197 Hold the
\dap{} with the black front facing you such that the m:robe writing
198 is readable. Below the writing is the touch sensitive pad with the
199 \ButtonMenu{},
\ButtonPlay{},
\ButtonLeft{},
\ButtonRight{} and
\ButtonDisplay
200 controls indicated by their symbols. The dotted center strip is devided in
201 three parts:
\ButtonUp{},
\ButtonSelect{} and
\ButtonDown. On the top of the
202 unit, on the right, is the
\ButtonPower{} switch, which is held down to turn
203 the
\dap{} on or off.
205 The
\ButtonHold{} switch is located on the left of the
\dap{}, below the
206 headphone socket. It puts the
\dap{} into hold mode when it is switched to the
207 top of the unit. The buttons will have no effect when this is the case. On the
208 bottom of the unit, there is a connector for the docking station or the
209 proprietary USB connector for connecting directly to USB.
}
212 The
\dap{} is curved so that the end with the screen on it is thicker than the
213 other end. Hold the
\dap{} wih the thick end towards the top and the screen
214 facing towards you. Half way up the front of the unit on the right hand side
215 is a four way joystick which is the
\ButtonUp{},
\ButtonDown{},
216 \ButtonLeft{}, and
\ButtonRight{} buttons. When pressed it serves as
\ButtonSelect.
218 On the right hand side of the
\dap{} from top to bottom, first there is a two
219 way switch. the
\ButtonPower{} button is activated by pushing this switch up,
220 and pushing this switch down until it clicks slightly will activate the
221 \ButtonHold{} button. When the switch is in this position, none of the other
222 keys will have an effect.
224 Below the switch is a lozenge shaped button which is the
\ButtonRec{}
225 button, and below that the final button on this side of the unit, the
226 \ButtonPlay{} button. Just below this is a small hole which is difficult to
227 locate by touch which is the internal microphone. At the very bottom of
228 this side of the unit is the reset hole, which can be used to perform a hard
229 reset by inserting a paper clip.
231 On the bottom of the unit is the connector for the
232 \playerman{} subpack or dock. On the top of the unit is a charge
233 indicator light, which may feel a bit like a button, but is not.
235 From the top of the
\dap{} on the left hand side is the headphone socket, then the
236 remote connector. Below this is a cover which protects the
\opt{x5
}{USB host
237 connector.
}\opt{m5
}{USB and charging connector
}.
}
240 Hold the
\dap{} with the turning wheel at the front and bottom. On the bottom left
241 of the front of the
\dap{} is a raised round button, the
\ButtonPower{} button.
242 Above and to the left of this, on the outside of the turning wheel are four
243 buttons. These are the
\ButtonUp{},
\ButtonDown{},
\ButtonLeft{} and
244 \ButtonRight{} buttons. Inside the wheel is the
\ButtonSelect{} button. Turning
245 the wheel to the right activates the
\ButtonScrollFwd{} function, and to the
246 left, the
\ButtonScrollBack{} function.
248 On the right of the unit is a slot for inserting flash cards. On the bottom is
249 the connector for the USB cable. On the left is the
\ButtonRec{} button, and
250 on the top, there is the headphone socket to the right, and the
\ButtonHold{}
251 switch. Moving this switch to the right activates hold mode in which none of the
252 other buttons have any effect. Just to the left of the
\ButtonHold{} switch is a
253 small hole which contains the internal microphone.
}
256 Hold the
\dap{} with the buttons on the right and the screen on the left. On
257 the right side of the unit, there is a series of four connected buttons that
258 form a square. The four sides of the square are the
\ButtonUp{},
259 \ButtonDown{},
\ButtonLeft{} and
\ButtonRight{} buttons, respectively. Inside
260 the square formed by these four buttons is the
\ButtonSelect{} button. At the
261 bottom right corner of the square is a small separate button, the
262 \ButtonPower{} button.
264 Moving clockwise around the outside of the unit, on the top are the
\ButtonVolUp{}
265 and
\ButtonVolDown{} buttons, which control the volume of playback. The buttons can
266 be distinguished by a sunken triangle on the
\ButtonVolDown{} button, and a
267 raised triangle on the
\ButtonVolUp{} button. To the right of
268 the volume buttons on the top of the unit is the slot for inserting flash
269 memory cards. On the right side of the unit is the connector for the USB
270 cable. At center of the bottom of the dap
{} is the
\ButtonRec{} button. To
271 the left of the
\ButtonRec{} button is the
\ButtonHold{} switch. Moving this
272 switch to the right activates hold mode, in which none of the other buttons
273 have any effect. On the lower left side of the unit is the headphone socket.
274 Immediately above the headphone socket is a lanyard loop and the microphone.
278 Holding the Jukebox in front of you there should be two buttons to
279 the left of the unit and a single multi-way circular button to their right.
280 The buttons are as follows.
%
281 On the left hand side, the higher of the two small buttons is the
\ButtonOn,
282 the lower of the two buttons is the
\ButtonMenu{} button. The large circular
283 button on the right - push towards the top serves as
\ButtonPlay, push towards
284 the left is called
\ButtonLeft, push towards the right
\ButtonRight{} and push
285 towards the bottom is labelled
\ButtonStop.
289 Holding the Jukebox in front of you, there should be three rectangular buttons
290 in a horizontal line towards the middle of the unit, and below this to the left
291 there is a circular four button array with the circular
\ButtonPlay{} button
292 as a fifth button in the centre. These are the navigation controls. Below the
293 rectangular buttons and to the right of the circular buttons are two small round
294 buttons one above the other.
296 The
\ButtonOn{} button is the topmost of the two buttons located below and to the
297 left of the navigation controls whereas the lower of these two is called
\ButtonOff.
298 The small round button in the middle of the large circular button array is called
299 \ButtonPlay{} button. To the right of the
\ButtonPlay{} button there is the
300 \ButtonRight{} button, left of it is the
\ButtonLeft{}, above it
\ButtonUp, and
301 below the
\ButtonPlay{} button there is the
\ButtonDown{} button placed. In the row
302 of three rectangular buttons the following buttons can be found (from left to right):
303 \ButtonFOne,
\ButtonFTwo{} and
\ButtonFThree.
306 Holding the Jukebox in front of you, there should be three rectangular buttons
307 in a horizontal line towards the middle of the unit, and below this centred on the
308 middle button there are four radial arc shaped buttons placed in a cross formation
309 with the circular play button as the centre of the cross. These are the navigation
310 controls. Below the cross and to the left are two other buttons.
312 The
\ButtonOn{} button is the leftmost of the two buttons located below and to the
313 left of the navigation controls whereas the rightmost and little lower one of
314 these two is called
\ButtonOff. The round button raised slightly higher than the
315 others in the centre of the navigation controls is the
\ButtonPlay{} button. To
316 the right of the
\ButtonPlay{} button there is the
\ButtonRight{} button, left of
317 it is the
\ButtonLeft{}, above it
\ButtonUp, and below the
\ButtonPlay{} button
318 there is the
\ButtonDown{} button placed. In the row of three rectangular buttons
319 the following buttons can be found (from left to right):
\ButtonFOne,
\ButtonFTwo{}
324 \subsection{Turning the
\dap{} on and off
}
325 To turn on and off your Rockbox enabled
\dap{} use the following keys:
328 \opt{IRIVER_H100_PAD,IRIVER_H300_PAD
}{\ButtonOn}%
329 \opt{IPOD_4G_PAD,IPOD_3G_PAD
}{\ButtonMenu{} /
\ButtonSelect}%
330 \opt{ONDIO_PAD
}{\ButtonOff}\opt{RECORDER_PAD,PLAYER_PAD
}%
332 \opt{IAUDIO_X5_PAD,IRIVER_H10_PAD,SANSA_E200_PAD,SANSA_C200_PAD,GIGABEAT_PAD,MROBE100_PAD,GIGABEAT_S_PAD
}
335 \opt{IRIVER_H100_PAD,IRIVER_H300_PAD
}{Long
\ButtonOff}%
336 \opt{IPOD_4G_PAD,IPOD_3G_PAD
}{Long
\ButtonPlay}%
337 \opt{ONDIO_PAD,recorderv2fm
}{Long
\ButtonOff}%
338 \opt{recorder
}{Double tap
\ButtonOff\ when playback is stopped
}%
339 \opt{PLAYER_PAD
}{From the Main Menu, select
\textbf{Shutdown
}}%
340 \opt{IAUDIO_X5_PAD,IRIVER_H10_PAD,SANSA_E200_PAD,SANSA_C200_PAD,GIGABEAT_PAD,MROBE100_PAD,GIGABEAT_S_PAD
}%
346 \label{ref:Safeshutdown
}On shutdown, Rockbox automatically saves its settings.
348 \opt{PLAYER_PAD,RECORDER_PAD,ONDIO_PAD
}{%
349 In the unlikely event of a software failure, a hardware power off can be
350 performed by holding down
351 \opt{PLAYER_PAD
}{\ButtonStop}%
352 \opt{RECORDER_PAD,ONDIO_PAD
}{\ButtonOff}
353 until the
\nopt{ondiosp,ondiofm
}{\dap{} power light
}%
354 \opt{ondiosp,ondiofm
}{\daps{} display
} goes off.
%
357 \nopt{gigabeatf,m5,x5,archos
}
359 \subsection{Starting the original firmware
}
363 Rockbox has a dual-boot feature. To boot into the original firmware, shut
364 down the device as described above. Turn on the
\ButtonHold{} switch
365 immediately after turning the player on. Once Rockbox displays the
366 message ``Loading original firmware ...'' you may turn the
\ButtonHold{}
367 switch off. Rockbox will boot into the original firmware.
369 \note{The described method of dual-booting works with Rockbox bootloader
370 version
2, which was released
16 December
2006. If you have the older
371 bootloader, boot the original firmware by pressing
\ButtonMenu{}
372 immediately after turning on your Ipod. Do not release the
373 \ButtonMenu{} button until you see the ``Loading original firmware...''
374 message on the screen.
}
376 Regardless of which method you use to boot to the original firmware, you can
377 return to Rockbox by pressing and holding
\ButtonMenu{} and
\ButtonSelect{}
378 simultaneously until the player hard resets.
383 Rockbox has a dual-boot feature. To boot into the original firmware,
384 when the
\dap{} is turned off, press and hold the
\ButtonRec{} button,
385 and then press the
\ButtonOn{} button.
390 Rockbox has a dual-boot feature. It loads the original firmware from
391 the file
\fname{/System/OF.mi4
}. To boot into the original firmware,
392 press and hold the
\ButtonLeft{} button while turning on the player.
393 \note{The iriver firmware does not shut down properly when you turn it off,
394 it only goes to sleep. To get back into Rockbox when exiting from the
395 iriver firmware, you will need to reset the player by
\opt{h10
}{inserting a
396 pin in the reset hole
}\opt{h10_5gb
}{taking out battery
}.
}
401 Rockbox has a dual-boot feature. To boot into the original firmware,
402 press and hold the
\ButtonLeft{} button while turning on the player.
407 Rockbox has a dual-boot feature. It loads the original firmware from
408 the file
\fname{/System/OF.mi4
}. To boot into the original firmware,
409 when the
\dap{} is turned off, press the
\ButtonPower{} button once and then
410 a second time when the m:robe bootlogo (the headphone) appears. Hold the
411 \ButtonPower{} button until you see the ``Loading original firmware...''
412 message on the screen.
417 Rockbox has a dual-boot feature. To boot into the original firmware,
418 turn the
\ButtonHold{} switch on just after turning on the
\dap{}.
422 \subsection{Putting music on your
\dap{}}
424 With the
\dap{} connected to the computer as an MSC/UMS device (like a
425 USB Drive), music files can be put on the player via any standard file
426 transfer method that you would use to copy files between drives (e.g. Drag 'n' Drop).
427 The default directory structure that is assumed by some parts of Rockbox
428 (album art searching, WPS missing-tag fallback) is: /ArtistName/AlbumName/*.ext.
430 \subsection{The first contact
}
432 After you have first started the
\dap{} you'll be presented by the
433 \setting{Main Menu
}. From this menu you can reach every function of Rockbox,
434 for more information (see
\reference{ref:main_menu
}). To browse the files
435 on you
\dap{} select
\setting{Files
} (see
\reference{ref:file_browser
}), and to
436 browse in a view that is based on the meta-data
\footnote{ID3 Tags, Vorbis
437 comments, etc.
} of your audio files, select
\setting{Database
} (see
438 \reference{ref:database
}).
440 \subsection{Basic controls
}
441 When browsing files and moving through menus you usually get a list view
442 presented. The navigation in these lists are usually the same and should be
444 In the tree view use
\ActionStdNext{} and
\ActionStdPrev{} to move around
445 the selection. Use
\ActionStdOk{} to select an item. When browsing the file
446 system selecting an audio file plays it. The view switches to the ``While
447 playing screen'', usually abbreviated as ``WPS'' (see
\reference{ref:WPS
}. The
448 dynamic playlist gets replaced with the contents of the current directory. This
449 way you can easily treat directories as playlists. The created dynamic playlist can
450 be extended or modified while playing. This is also known as
451 ``on-the-fly playlist''.
452 To go back to the
\setting{File Browser
} stop the playback with the
453 \ActionWpsStop{} button or return to the file browser while keeping playback
454 running using
\ActionWpsBrowse{}.
455 In list views you can go back one step with
\ActionTreeParentDirectory.
457 \subsection{Basic concepts
}
458 \subsubsection{Playlists
}
459 Rockbox is playlist oriented. This means that every time you play an audio file,
460 a so-called ``dynamic playlist'' is generated, unless you play a saved
461 playlist. You can modify the dynamic playlist while playing and also save
462 it to a file. If you do not want to use playlists you can simply play your
463 files directory based.
464 Playlists are covered in detail in
\reference{ref:working_with_playlists
}.
467 From the menu you can customise Rockbox. Rockbox itself is very customisable.
468 Also there are some special menus for quick access to frequently used
471 \subsubsection{Context Menu
}
472 Some views, especially the file browser and the WPS have a context menu.
473 From the file browser this can be accessed with
\ActionStdContext{}.
474 The contents of the context menu vary, depending on the situation it gets
475 called. The context menu itself presents you with some operations you can
476 perform with the currently highlighted file. In the file browser this is
477 the file (or directory) that is highlighted by the cursor. From the WPS this is
478 the currently playing file. Also there are some actions that do not apply
479 to the current file but refer to the screen from which the context menu
480 gets called. One example is the playback menu, which can be called using
481 the context menu from within the WPS.
483 \section{Customising Rockbox
}
484 Rockbox' User Interface can be customised using ``Themes''. Themes usually
485 only affect the visual appearance, but an advanced user can create a theme
486 that also changes various other settings like file view, LCD settings and
487 all other settings that can be modified using
\fname{.cfg
} files. This topic
488 is discussed in more detail in
\reference{ref:manage_settings
}.
489 The Rockbox distribution comes with some themes that should look nice on
490 your
\dap{}.
\note{Some of the themes shipped with Rockbox need additional
491 fonts from the fonts package, so make sure you installed them.
492 Also, if you downloaded additional themes from the Internet make sure you
493 have the needed fonts installed as otherwise the theme may get displayed
496 \section{Menu Overview
}
497 \fixme{include an overview of the menu structure here
}
498 %\input{rockbox_interface/menu_structure.tex}
505 The
\dap{} can be powered over USB without connecting to your computer by holding
\ActionStdUsbCharge{} while plugging in. This allows you to continue using the
\dap{} normally.
509 \input{rockbox_interface/browsing_and_playing.tex
}