https://www.syl-via.com/products/aiwa-t7-retro-bluetooth-cas...
It's surprising to see these kinds of retro cassette players still being updated in 2026.
If you want a small music player/recorder, there are many SD-card based models, and some of them are absolutely tiny, while providing much better sound quality.
How many of those come with Bluetooth support though? Seems to be more or less the main idea behind this device.
I guess they could be "Concert-grade vinyl players" too with the right accessories, but that's missing the point a bit, don't you think?
A great youtube channel on both modern cassette players and legacy audio formats is Techmoan. I never knew I was interested in this topic before watching those videos.
Buttons, controls, and overall design (basically) match. Aliexpress/Alibaba's visual search is a funny way to discover and find everyone's drop shippers these days...
EDIT: Seems 120min tapes are available on amazon and walmart, but boy, they cost a premium.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolby_noise-reduction_system
Are they not sure if it does Bluetooth?
Is it overpriced at $80? Is it just a weird retro thing grasping for tactile sensation like vinyl and cds that only covers the consumption side of music? yes and yes.
Music also used to be scarce. Tapes/CDs were expensive, recording off the radio requires time coordination and is incredibly linear. Assembling a mix tape involved hours of effort. Then the tape would wear out, or suffer from noise from generational copying. Music was finite.
Now with a bit of coaxing an LLM will make you a mixtape from spotify or youtube. We have no scarcity, no attention, no room for individual taste.