Slashdot Mirror


Apple releases iPod

The BrownFury writes "At an invitation only event Apple has released their new MP3 player called the iPod. iPod is the size of a deck of cards. 2.4" wide by 4" tall by .78" thick 6.5 ounces. 5 GB HDD, 10 hr battery life, charged via FireWire. Works as a firewire drive as well. Works in conjunctions with iTunes 2. Here are Live updates". No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame.

1,075 comments

  1. Pc by JohnHegarty · · Score: 0

    Will it connect to a pc?

    1. Re:Pc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you mean will it connect to Windows?

    2. Re:Pc by JohnHegarty · · Score: 0

      Ok , will it connect to a computer running and x86 family processor ?

    3. Re:Pc by stilwebm · · Score: 2

      I suppose that depends less on the processor platform and more on the file system being supported on the software platform. Since it uses firewire, it probably acts like any firewire hardisk. But, the player may not be able to read every filesystem you throw at it, so it may require sytems that can read and write HFS+ and/or FAT32.

    4. Re:Pc by 4mn0t1337 · · Score: 1
      It *is* a FireWire device.

      If you have FireWire on your PC, then yes it will connect.

      But, the interface for the music portion is iTunes 2, which isn't available for Windows, so you would have a little trouble loading tunes that way.

      In the "unused" space (not filled with music) on the drive, it behaves like a firewire drive and you can mount it on the desktop and use it for file storage. So, if you can read Mac disks (HFS+), then you should be able to mount that portion of the disk.

      Don't know if you can thus load MP3's on it and use it on a non-Mac...

      --

      ______
      Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.

    5. Re:Pc by Spagornasm · · Score: 1

      An even more interesting question is this: If Apple is now selling its own MP3 player, does that mean it's going to stop selling 3rd party players? Right now on their website, when you try to buy one of their computers, you're given the option to buy a Creative Nomad or a Rio 600. Are they gonna stop that, and demand that buyers buy only the Apple MP3 device?

      --

      When nuance becomes the only objective we lose the ability to function
    6. Re:Pc by mr100percent · · Score: 2

      "We have thought than when we get a little spare time, we will look at taking it to Windows. We know the experience won't be as good, but we will probably look at that down the road."

      --Steve Jobs

    7. Re:Pc by clf8 · · Score: 1

      Buying an mp3 player from Apple is an option, you're not required to get one from you. And iTunes (and numerous other mp3 players) will continue to support those devices.

      Besides, unless it's a part of a bundle, prices at the Apple Store usually aren't the best. Having all your software and hardware play well together is great, but they're not going to stop supporting the Rio or Nomad. But it is an interesting question if there will be some sort of Windoze interface to add music to it. I'm sure playlists have to be a certain format, but if you could mount it as a firewire drive and look at the contents, you could potentially use it as a drag and drop device.

    8. Re:Pc by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      The interface is IEEE-1394 (aka firewire & iLink). If you've got the port you've got connectivity and it shouldn't matter what processor you're running. No doubt Windows will be supported somehow since MS has come out in favor of IEEE-1394 and are integrating driver support into Windows.

      Since there aren't any iTunes available on other platforms, you're probably going to have to connect it up as a removable hard drive and drag copy your mp3 collection manually.

      DB

  2. An iPod? by Wind_Walker · · Score: 1, Funny
    Ok, I guess I'll be the first to make the obligatory bad pun.

    Will people who enjoy using this be iPod People?

    *ducks rotten tomatos*

    1. Re:An iPod? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess the moderators don't ever watch MST3K. Shame on them. They'd be laughing as much as I am if they only knew....

    2. Re:An iPod? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Pew-MayMan." (The Pumaman)

      or "Ugh, I think he's over-flossing." (Mole People)

    3. Re:An iPod? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah dude, but imagine a beowulf cl....
      nevermind
      boyd425

  3. lame? by zephc · · Score: 2

    5 GB still is more than my whole mp3 collection

    --
    "I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
    1. Re:lame? by JohnHegarty · · Score: 0

      5 gb is more than you would need for a good mp3 site

    2. Re:lame? by thegrommit · · Score: 3

      Heh. While it has less capacity than the Nomad, it's also substantially smaller (and lighter). That 5GB would be enough for my current collection. Price it low enough, and I'd buy one. It would make a good substitue for my CD/MP3 player and a pile of CD's.

      Sidenote - As a firewire drive, I'm assuming it should be pretty straightforward to hook it up to whatever your hardware religion is.

    3. Re:lame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, it's not priced low enough: $399. $250 and it'd be a "maybe", $175 and it'd be a fersure.

    4. Re:Lame? by Coolfish · · Score: 2

      I have like 20GB of mp3's anyway, not like they're really going to fit on anything out there

      creative has released a 20gb jukebox.
      http://www.americas.creative.com/

    5. Re:lame? by crayz · · Score: 2, Informative

      OK, well the Jukebox is like $250 MSRP(maybe $220 on the street), and this thing has:
      - firewire
      - much smaller form factor
      - 4x more anti-skip
      - much better LCD

      So asking for it to be $175 is being a bit unfair.

    6. Re:Lame? by questionlp · · Score: 1

      There is a 20GB version of the Creative Nomad Jukebox as well as the 20GB Archos Jukebox. There is a company that has 20-40GB hard drives for the Nomad Jukebox that you can install yourself or ship the unit to them and they will install the drive (as well as transfer the data to the new drive) for you.

    7. Re:lame? by Snocone · · Score: 3, Informative

      Sidenote - As a firewire drive, I'm assuming it should be pretty straightforward to hook it up to whatever your hardware religion is.

      Yep. This is almost certainly the same .2x1.8" Toshiba mechanism as found in the SmartDisk FireLite for instance (I just posted the link in some other comment).

      And their price is $399.95 as well ... but they don't play MP3s.

    8. Re:Lame? by 90XDoubleSide · · Score: 1
      I have like 20GB of mp3's anyway, not like they're really going to fit on anything out there

      creative has released a 20gb jukebox.
      http://www.americas.creative.com/

      Original post:
      the Nomad is too big for me to carry around.

      Read before you reply ;) The whole problem this product is trying to solve is that current jukeboxes are too big to always carry on you. But I still don't think many are willing to pay $400 for an MP3 player, no matter how many features you throw into it.

      --
      "Reality is just a convenient measure of complexity" -Alvy Ray Smith
    9. Re:Lame? by Cujo · · Score: 1

      There were a lot of rumors that the iPod would be Airport compatible. That would have been a near miracle in something this small, but would mean you'd never have to plug it into your machine (where the hell is that Firewire cable?). It would also mean it would load songs much more slowly than Firewire, however. Still, with Airport, I would have bought one immediately. Without it, I'll wait until Apple drops the price a few bucks.

      Still it's cool that it's so small, and it synchs with iTunes over Firewire. Very convenient. And 5 gigs is plenty. My Rio is about the same size and only holds 64 mB, which is enough for a morning run or a turn on the Stairmaster. 5 gigs would easily cover a transcontinental flight in both directions.

      Of course, it's aimed solely at the Mac market.

      --

      Helium balloons want to be free.

    10. Re:Lame? by Havokmon · · Score: 1

      ... but would mean you'd never have to plug it into your machine (where the hell is that Firewire cable?).

      I leave my Serial cable (for my digital camera), and my USB cable (for my moms camera) laying along side the case.

      I have to sit down at the computer to do anything useful with the 'external device' anyways. Not that wireless isn't useful, but for an MP3 Player, I'd prefer they spent that money on more disk space. Load the whole thing up, and you don't need to 'dock' and freshen your stores. :)

      --
      "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
    11. Re:lame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      plus the jukebox, noamd whatever devices are HUGE! part of me dug the idea of a portable hard drive/mp3 player, but the size was a turn off.... the size of portable CD players (and their battery comsumption) is what first made me start using minidiscs a few years ago. i dig this ipod, but i dont know if i dig it for $400.... but that's me and i am broke. i am a mac user so i will get all the fun with itunes sync. for the price.. this has a good size/storage ratio... the question is, do i need somehting like this to replace my minidiscs?

    12. Re:lame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah.. that doesn't sound like much of an mp3 collection =P

    13. Re:Lame? by rthille · · Score: 1
      I have like 20GB of mp3's anyway, not like they're really going to fit on anything out there

      Well, they'd fit on this:

      Runs Linux!

      And at 9.9 OZ and 150x80x26mm (5.9x3.15x1.0 in.), it's not too bad, size-wise.

      Of course, with a USB interface, it would take about 3.79 hours to load up (at theoretical 12Mbits/sec).

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
    14. Re:lame? by rbruels · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and wait a minute -- FireWire download (10 seconds for a full CD of music or so) versus USB on the Nomad.

      Fuck USB. ;)

      Ryan

      --

      "All your base are belong to this file I send in order to have your advice."
    15. Re:lame? by rgbscan · · Score: 1

      I have to agree this is a let-down. For all the secrecy and even Steve Jobs promise of something "revolutionary", as an Apple fanatic I am unimpressed. I was expecting something quite a bit cooler then an MP3 player.

      Chris

    16. Re:lame? by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 2
      Replace the 5 gig drive with a 20 gig drive, change Firewire to USB, keep the ability to use it as an external hard disk, drop the presumed heavy integration with iTunes, knock the battery life down to 8 hours from 10, knock $50 off the price, and you've got this [thinkgeek.com].

      iPod is a good product, but nothing to get excited over.

      I'll stay with my RioVolt [thinkgeek.com]. Instead of a hard disk, it uses CD-R or CD-RW, and can play regular audio CDs.

    17. Re:lame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > 10 seconds for a full CD of music or so

      You really believe that, don't you? 65M/s sustained write?

    18. Re:lame? by RedX · · Score: 2
      Replace the 5 gig drive with a 20 gig drive, change Firewire to USB, keep the ability to use it as an external hard disk, drop the presumed heavy integration with iTunes, knock the battery life down to 8 hours from 10, knock $50 off the price, and you've got this

      You forgot to make it slightly larger that the iPod and to almost double the weight of the iPod.

    19. Re:lame? by Lennie · · Score: 1

      yeah great !:
      'We cannot deliver this product outside of the U.S.'
      so it says at thinkgeek, well great product :(

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
    20. Re:lame? by mcspock · · Score: 1

      He also forgot to make the firmware crash frequently - i've been told this is a problem with the archos player. Also he forgot to make it ugly.

      --
      -- Patience is a virtue, but impatience is an art.
    21. Re:lame? by useEvil · · Score: 1

      I had the Nomad Jukebox. The 6gb drive was great, but it was too big and not very portable. The battery only lasted 2hrs. It didn't have a wired remote. It really defeats the purpose of being portable.

    22. Re:lame? by useEvil · · Score: 1

      The Archos player had really poor sound output. USB is really slow. The archos was a pain to navigate.

      The only drawback with the Rio Volt, is that you have to burn a custom cd to make a play list. I never listen to my mp3 cd collection the way I burned them. Carrying around a stack of cds and changing them everytime I wanted to listen to a song wasn't very ideal.

    23. Re:lame? by jimbolaya · · Score: 1

      They aren't claiming it can transfer 650 MB in 10 seconds, they are claiming you can transfer a music CD, encoded in MP3 (likely 160 bps, since that's the rate they use else where) in 10 seconds. By my calculation, that's about 5-8MB/s. Still much faster than you'd get with USB, though significantly slower than the theoretical 50MB/s (400Mbit/s) transfer rate that Firewire is capable of.

      --

      There ain't no rules here; we're trying to accomplish something.

    24. Re:lame? by fobbman · · Score: 2

      Oh, and add a bunch of time to your file transfers. The difference in speed from fireware and USB is extreme.

    25. Re:lame? by am+2k · · Score: 1
      As a firewire drive, I'm assuming it should be pretty straightforward to hook it up to whatever your hardware religion is.

      Yes, but how you do you read/write to it if it uses HFS plus as its file system?

    26. Re:lame? by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Taco is whats lame..

    27. Re:lame? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      So, basically, destroy all its advantages and turn it into an Archos MP3 player.

      Apple would do this...why?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    28. Re:lame? by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      Firewire? You sure? Last I checked, it was only USB, and took hours to fill. How about a link?

    29. Re:lame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, especially after saying on NPR that /. was full of morons that said "we should build giant lego robots and send them to attack Afghanistan."

    30. Re:lame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I meant iPod("this thing"), which should have been clear since every attribute described things the iPod has over the Jukebox

      - crayz

    31. Re:lame? by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      Do you want revolutionary? Ask yourself, what chip is this running? Ask yourself, what is the OS on this thing? This is v0.8 of Apple's PDA folks. They're just waiting for the hardware and the economy to get a little better.

      DB

    32. Re:lame? by zfractal · · Score: 1
      I think the key here is Firewire.



      I transfer MP3 to my Nomad II (64MB via USB) and it still takes too long. I shudder to think of what it would be like to transfer 5GB over USB!

    33. Re:lame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's a reality check for why the iPod is so expensive. It uses Toshiba's new 1.8in hdd which costs a buttload. I'm sure volume pricing is lower but the storage alone is a healthy chunk of the manufacturing cost. So for those of you whining about the iPod's storage/cost versus the Nomad, please get a clue.

    34. Re:Lame? by edrugtrader · · Score: 2, Informative

      i have a 40GB archos studio 20 (i upgraded the hd... just swap them out)

      your 20GB will fit fine on there... AND they have it on thinkgeek... this is bound to be moderated up.

      http://www.archos.com

      --
      MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
    35. Re:Lame? by 10seconds · · Score: 2, Informative

      The PJB-100 now works with the latest Toshiba 40GB hard drives. Smaller than a Nomad, 10-hour battery, great community, open source software (but not the firmware unfortunately).

    36. Re:lame? by Nathan+Brazil · · Score: 1

      I'd also point out that the Linux USB support for the ISD IDE-USB bridge is pretty shaky right now, at least when I tried it. No idea where the FireWire support is, but it seems a lot more likely to get attention than a corner-case USB driver.

      --
      echo Prpv a\'rfg cnf har cvcr | tr Pacfghnrvp Cnpstuaeic
    37. Re:lame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't use HFS+ necessarily. ISO? mac OS can read and write to many filesystems...and it can format drives as such.

    38. Re:lame? by am+2k · · Score: 1

      ISO 9660 is a CD-ROM format, not for HDs. Yes, it could be UFS or FAT, but why should it? It was certainly not a priority to make it cross-platform (and the Apple Store Hotline even told someone that it's mac only).

    39. Re:Lame? by Some+Dumbass... · · Score: 1

      I totally agree that 5GB is enough storage! At about 1MB/minute (an underestimate, I know), 5GB is, what, three days worth of music?

      1MB/minute x 60 minutes/hour x 24 hours/day =

      1440 MB/day.

      ~5000MB / 1440 MB/day = ~3.5 days worth of music.

      Anyone want to explain how a person is going to need more than three days worth of music? Really, that's three days with no repeats

    40. Re:lame? by GMontag451 · · Score: 1

      I would think it would support at least UFS, because iTunes 2 has a Carbon version, and OS X can run on a UFS volume.

    41. Re:Lame? by JohnPM · · Score: 1

      Well your 20GB of mp3s would fit on my 20GB Neo jukebox portable. I've owned one for 4 or 5 months and I love it. I've only managed to fill 8GB so far though, so I do agree that 5GB on the end of firewire (fast frequent reorganising) would be about right, especially for the size, weight and batter life.

      --
      Karma police, I've given all I can, it's not enough, I've given all I can, but we're still on the payroll.
  4. Oh by trash+eighty · · Score: 1

    well thats nice but not exactly insanely great. it goes well with an iBook. but as i got no firewire enabled macs i'll have to give it a miss.

    1. Re:Oh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      buy a firewire card...it's cheap...

    2. Re:Oh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firewire = IEEE 1394 [?] which is standard on all Sony vaio's and is fully supported by linux. There's no need to buy a mac. (And you can't really blame apple for coming out with something that works best with a mac...)

    3. Re:Oh by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

      You can firewire-enable your Mac with a PCI card for about $40. I'd recommend this in any case if you're buying any external storage, since it's the direction things are going. If you have a USB iMac, though, you're out of luck.

      USB would be a nice optioin, since the interface looks both powerful and intuitive, just like most other things from Apple.

  5. So now everyone that laughed at the iWalk... by Teancom · · Score: 2

    can make those who defended it eat crow. All in one day! It just doesn't get better than this....

    1. Re:So now everyone that laughed at the iWalk... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iWalk was such a joke - I'm shocked that anyone believed that

    2. Re:So now everyone that laughed at the iWalk... by Serk · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't that be iCrow that they'll hafta eat?

      --
      Never ask a geek why, just nod your head and slowly back away. -Rob Malda
  6. whoopdeedoo by themeistre · · Score: 1

    Its cool...but its not that cool...

    --
    Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity" -MLK
    1. Re:whoopdeedoo by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      It's not cool at all. It's just another Mac attempt to have the coolest looking, hippest sounding gadget on the market. It adds nothing serious to the current options. For instance, no Ogg Vorbis support (and yes, I realize it probably decodes mp3 in hardware, but...) and it doesn't appear to be cross-platform. I guess this falls into the Dilbert principle of "the best target market is stupid rich people." Since they'll fall for anything and have the money to burn on it.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    2. Re:whoopdeedoo by trunc · · Score: 1

      Yes.. No OggVorbis support, but it is firmware upgradeable for "future audio formats" as stated in the tech specs. I'm pretty certain that when there is a 1.0 final coder/decoder for the Ogg Vorbis format, then you will see more support in more digital audio products. And it does double as a firewire hard drive...

    3. Re:whoopdeedoo by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      Apple said they will add cross-platform support in the future, see my previous post.

  7. Not all lame by Lord+Kenja · · Score: 1

    Less space (1 gig). But it is also a great deal smaller than the Nomad. This one will easily fit in a jacket pocket.

    Nothing huge. But it moves a bit further than anyone else right now.

    1. Re:Not all lame by Cheezlbub · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's about the same size as a nomad II, which has a practical limit of 128 MB on flash memory...

      5 GB > 128 MB obviously, and it looks nifty, and it will work with OS X out of the box. Not lame, not worth the hype - certainly - but cool in it's own right.

      k

    2. Re:Not all lame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm..400Mbps data transfer, 32meg solid state RAM buffer, headphones that on their own would cost a a pretty penny. A drive that sells form Toshiba for $399 by itself. When you break it down, the price is actually pretty cheap.

  8. Apple site has info on new device... by surajrai · · Score: 1

    Apple has just updated their product page about this device. Looks very cool and will probably get it to match the colors of my ibook.

    So...Apple has been on Slashdot quite bit lately no?

    Just shows how cool they are. Yeah!

    1. Re:Apple site has info on new device... by Corrado · · Score: 4, Informative

      Lazy People click here.

      --
      KangarooBox - We make IT simple!
    2. Re:Apple site has info on new device... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...Lazy People click here [apple.com]....

      Score: 4?!? What a FUCKING KHARMA WHORE!

  9. FireWire Sexy though... by sfgoth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    FireWire (400Mbps) data syncing _and_ recharging at the same time. That's cool.

    I wonder if it's hackable for a bigger drive...

    Plus, you can use it as a portable disk. No "content protection". Yay!

    1. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by Fly · · Score: 1

      I agree that Firewire is cool for this gadget. Though some people may think Firewire relegates the iPod to Mac-only status, I do not think this to be the case. Most people I know with new Sony video cameras do not use Macs, and yet they are able to connect the camera's firewire port to their machines, which happen to be PCs with a firewire adapter. Usually the firewire on the PC is just a PCI card.

      I think it's great that there is a new mp3 player that will take advantage of firewire. Complaining that the device is firewire only is like complaining that some fancy 166MB/sec hard disk is SCSI-only. There are plent of alternatives, and just that one's system cannot use a particular device does not make the device lame.

      --
      end of line
    2. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by adavidw · · Score: 1

      It might be hackable for a bigger drive, but that question is moot since it uses a 1.8 inch drive. At that size, 5 gig is the current max.

      -Aaron

      (The probable drive they're using is here:)

    3. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by 4mn0t1337 · · Score: 2, Informative
      Most people I know with new Sony video cameras do not use Macs, and yet they are able to connect the camera's firewire port to their machines, which happen to be PCs with a firewire adapter.

      One thing to check is if the laptop/computer/adapter is the 4-pin flavor or the 6-pin. The Vaio's (and other Sony products) use iLink (their name for IEEE 1394) that is only of the 4-pin kind, which is *unpowered.* (The thought being that devices, like camcorders, have their own power supply.)

      From what I understand the iPod charges off of the IEEE 1394, which would require the 6-pin connector.

      --

      ______
      Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.

    4. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by Majix · · Score: 2

      Creatives replacement for the aging Soundblaster Live series, the Audigy series, have Firewire connectors. Dunno if the card is any good, but it's certainly going to help bringing Firewire support to the PC crowd.

    5. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ultra-thin hard drive. 1.8 inch hard drive is .2 inches thick. 5 Gigabytes."

      I wonder who makes such a small hard drive? The biggest IBM microdrive is 1GB. I want a 20GB iPod!

    6. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by Snocone · · Score: 3, Informative

      I wonder who makes such a small hard drive?

      Toshiba, as found in the SmartDisk FireLite.

      http://www.smartdisk.com/Press%20Releases/5GBHardD rive.asp

    7. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by Unknown+Bovine+Group · · Score: 1

      I'd like to throw my hat in the ring in support of firewire. I have a firewire pci card purchased for use with a DVcamcorder. I'd love to have more devices that use firewire instead of stinky ol USB.

      --
      m00.
    8. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the bigger question is: whether or not it can be updated tu use new codecs. Surely, when these disk can gain more density, it can be upgraded. To me, it's more important that it may be able to play .ogg. I seems that it probably could, as it has the ability to play .wav and .aifc, implying it's not using one of the mp3 only DSPs. Hopefully it is firmware upgradable, becuause I have been in the porcess of updating all of my collection to Ogg, and I really like the idea of this device. Very well done.

    9. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by buserror · · Score: 1

      Since it acts as a firewire disk too, it must be sbp2. OSX has native support for those... and so has Linux...

      The files are probably stored in exactly the same way iTunes stores it's 'library' (basicaly, a hierarchy of folders for artist/album/song, and an index file) so I'm sure it will be trivial to make xmms & crew support that.

      I strongly suspect the formatting is HFS or HFS plus. Maybe that will generate a boost for HFS Plus support in linux, right now HFS is working quite well, but HFS plus is flaky.

    10. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by itachi · · Score: 1

      There's an optional standalone power adapter, so I can't imagine that the pinnage would be too much of a problem...

      itachi

    11. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fire Wire 2.0...4.6Gbps over fibre ..*drool* I hope they make an upgraded version of iPod for that.

    12. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by Parsec · · Score: 1

      one could also purchase a powered firewire hub

    13. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by DavidRavenMoon · · Score: 1
      There's an optional standalone power adapter, so I can't imagine that the pinnage would be too much of a problem...

      Not optional...it's standard. The option was getting a second adapter

      --
      -- if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic - Lewis Carrol
    14. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by hattig · · Score: 2
      This device uses a sexy new small HD format, the 1.8" HD. Just 0.2" thick, and it currently holds 5GB of data.

      When can I add these to PDAs? That is more space than my laptop has! And in a couple of years that will be a 20GB 1.8" hard drive...

      So, I think in the short term is will not be hackable for a bigger drive. I can't buy 1.8" HDs anywhere to replace it with. But in two years time they might be a lot more ubiquitous, and this device may be upgradable then.

      Still, it did not deserve the rap that was given to it - it is a nice, SMALL, mp3 playing device and data transportation device. Apple could have used a 40GB 2.5" hard drive, but that would have been heavier, bulkier and noisier. Things that are not good for the "Apple Experience".

    15. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by 4mn0t1337 · · Score: 1
      I realize that it can be charged by connecting it to mains.

      The reason I brought this up is that with 6-pin you can travel without having to carry yet *another* cord/cable/charger. I have enough in my laptop bag and don't need more.
      This will also allow you to charge in a situation where you don't have a wall socket, but your laptop has some extra juice you don't mind using up...

      --

      ______
      Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.

    16. Re:FireWire Sexy though... by itachi · · Score: 1

      D'oh! I stand corrected.

      itachi

  10. Is anyone waiting... by leviramsey · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...until Apple releases their new line of pastel contact lenses:

    The iEye! [ducks]
    1. Re:Is anyone waiting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux is a trademark of Linus "Not as sexy as Elvis" Torvalds [From an IBM ad]

      Linus isn't as sexy as that CalFed guy? Man, he must be really ugly!

    2. Re:Is anyone waiting... by david614 · · Score: 1

      It'll be tough wearing them alongside the "rose-colored" glasses that you will need for this to seem like a worthwhile product.

      What a let-down, geez!!

      D

      --
      ELITISM: It's always lonely at the top. Uninvited company is rarely welcome.
    3. Re:Is anyone waiting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, but I'd love some sort of naval themed device called... wait for it.... the iAye.

    4. Re:Is anyone waiting... by RedX · · Score: 2
      until Apple releases their new line of pastel contact lenses

      Pastel contacts might be closer than you think if this company has anything to do with it.

    5. Re:Is anyone waiting... by benedict · · Score: 1

      Ay yi yi.

      If eye were yeux, I'd watch it with the puns ...

      --
      Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
    6. Re:Is anyone waiting... by EEEthan · · Score: 1

      I'm waiting for mirrored contact lenses personally, so I can pretend that I'm in an William Gibson novel.

      Or how about lenses with apple logos for pupils? They might sell.

    7. Re:Is anyone waiting... by alexburke · · Score: 3, Funny

      ...until Apple releases their new line of pastel contact lenses:

      The iEye!


      Arr! iEye, Cap'n!

    8. Re:Is anyone waiting... by karb · · Score: 2

      I always thought mirrored contacts would be cool for sports or driving. No worrying about damaging or dropping your eyewear, no frames to cloud your peripheral vision. :)

      btw, I've searched a few times on the internet for them, and never found any :(

      --

      Jack Valenti and the MPAA are to technology as the Boston strangler is to the woman home alone

    9. Re:Is anyone waiting... by jpostel · · Score: 2

      If jokes in French were meant to be funny, then God would have given people in France a sense of humor.

      just kiddin ;)

      Je pense que je suis francais, donc je ne pense pas.

      --
      Ummm, Jon, aren't you supposed to be dead...? - Otter(3800)
    10. Re:Is anyone waiting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I waited, but it never came.

    11. Re:Is anyone waiting... by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      http://www.lensquest.com/index.cfm/ProductID=333/d o=detail

      Not quite what I remembered seeing from several years ago, these aren't TRUE mirrors.

      I do recall a site that had REAL mirror lenses. I will have to ask a friend about them tomorrow.

      Send me mail at ckaminskipoboxcom@yahoo.com, I'll hook you up with the link when I get it.

    12. Re:Is anyone waiting... by mvanhorn · · Score: 1

      I know that they do make them, I was quoted a price of $1400.00, though. Check out your local high-end eyeglasses place, e.g. myoptics.
      If it's in a mall, it probably won't have them though.

  11. mediocre by greysky · · Score: 0, Troll

    People need to realize that all apple ever really delivers is mediocre equipment that, while it may look really cool, is less technically advanced/powerfull/whatever than competing products that cost 20-25% less.

    1. Re:mediocre by Arcturax · · Score: 1

      That's a rather broad statement there. Apple has put out some mediocre, and yes, downright crappy products in the past, but some are really really good. Their current G3/G4 lines are quite nice actually, especially the iBook. The Newton was awesome before they killed it. Also think about some of their software products. OS X for one is shaping up to be a damn fine OS and seems to be making far faster progress then Linux has to date. Hypercard was also a fantastic product which they really should bring back from the dead.

      This MP3 player has some important innovative features. Yes the price is outrageous right now, but it will come down in a few months, probably after the next revision, think 3-6 months down the road. The VCR was prohibitively expensive when it first came out and look how ubiquitous it is now. Give it time to come down in price and for Apple to get user feedback and make refinements on the product.

      Apple's problem isn't really the odd mediocre or crappy product, but the fact that they seem determined to kill or otherwise screw up every really great thing they have ever made. I'm hoping that they will break that trend with their current great products and resurrect some of the now dead ones (Newton + Hypercard).

      --

      --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
    2. Re:mediocre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, a 5g MP3 player that runs for 10 hours, and has firewire doesn't seem "less technically advanced/powerfull/whatever".

      I think people need to realize that all apple ever really delivers is the next great idea that in a few quarters everyone else produces for 20-25% less.

      Anything else would be revisionist history.

      Who wants to be first to add linux/win32 support for this thing? Oh wait, most PC laptops don't have firewire built in. (Noted exception: sony)

    3. Re:mediocre by singularity · · Score: 2

      I have been looking at getting a portable MP3 player. Will I get the new iPod? I am uncertain. I will definitely consider it, however.

      What you need to realize is that while other products may be more "technically advanced/powerfull/whatever," Apple products win, almost hands-down, in the ease-of use department.

      Ease of use is something that I am willing to spend a little extra money on. Sure, I might be able to find a 10 gig system that is cheaper than the iPod, but if I hate the menu system and the syncing on the cheaper one, I am not going to enjoy it as much. If it is bad enough, I will think to myself "I wish I had payed the extra $50/$100/$200 to get the iPod."

      --
      - (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
    4. Re:mediocre by generic-man · · Score: 1

      Compaq laptops have Firewire built in, although it's only 4-pin. My Presario 1720US has one Firewire and two USB ports.

      --
      For more information, click here.
    5. Re:mediocre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not FireWire, per se. Thats i.Link. True FireWire provides power along the line as well (thats why it has 6 pins)

      Love,
      Rosyna
      rosyna at unsanity.com

    6. Re:mediocre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what? We're talking about an MP3 player here, not a laptop.

    7. Re:mediocre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, being first to market with USB and 1394
      was a really backward move for Apple.
      That Steve Jobs, if only he knew how to run
      a company like you do...

    8. Re:mediocre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But my iBook is far cheaper than that machine, and ships with it. Apple had byfare the best feature set of any computer company. Who ships with Gigabit ethernet standard on all towers? Apple. Who ships gigabit ethernet on all highend Laptops? Apple. Who ships computers that can have 802.11b for on $99? Apple. What company allows networking over firewire? Apple. What company's keyboards have USB hubs built in? Apple. Who ships consistantly ships the most enviromentally friendly machines? Apple. And the list goes on. ;p

    9. Re:mediocre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets not forget that you can't provide power through PCMCIA add on firewire ports. The sad part is, i can compare your laptops feature set to the PS2 more easily than the iBook. 2 USB, 1 4 pin firewire port...with ethernet and a hardrive comeing soon. Sounds liek you got gyped. Those PS2's ae light weight also.

    10. Re:mediocre by generic-man · · Score: 1

      Who ships with Gigabit ethernet standard on all towers? Apple.

      And Compaq, and IBM, and Dell...

      Who ships gigabit ethernet on all highend Laptops? Apple.

      And Compaq, and IBM, and Dell...

      Who ships computers that can have 802.11b for on $99? Apple.

      Many 802.11b (pronounced "eight oh two dot eleven bee") cards can be purchased for less than $99. However, Apple users frown upon them, because they have protruding antennae that hurt their bums.

      What company allows networking over firewire? Apple.

      I would like you to know that I use Windows XP (short for "experience") on my lap-top. In the Network Connections folder, there is an option for "1394 Net Connection." To an Apple user, this means "networking over firewire."

      What company's keyboards have USB hubs built in? Apple.

      And Microsoft, and Compaq, and IBM, and Dell...

      Who ships consistantly ships the most enviromentally friendly machines? Apple.

      My Compaq Presario gets consistently gets more than 30 miles per gallon on regular fuel, not like the premium 93-octane that you have to put in your iBook (short for "Internet Book").

      Who invented the first computer? Apple. Who invented the mouse? Apple. Who created the idea of "software"? Apple. Who created the very first printer? Apple. And the list goes on. :p

      Touche.

      --
      For more information, click here.
  12. A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else. by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 1
    Agree with the article poster - Lame. Not only is this a lackluster MP3 unit (which by virtue of being firewire will be limited to Apple Mac owners), but it has virtually no UI wizardry that might define it as an Apple product.

    A total waste of time.

  13. As always, it comes down to price. by Onan · · Score: 1

    And $400 is a bit too high, I'm afraid. It's not completely offensive, the thing does have some distinctive features: data and charging over firewire, ten hour battery, very small and light, and, for those of you who swing that way, seamless integration with iTunes.

    I'm guessing that they'll drop the price to $300 after Christmas (perhaps at macworld expo in January), which will be more reasonable. Still a bit of a premium on a sheer dollars to bytes scale, but perhaps worth it for the other features.

    1. Re:As always, it comes down to price. by Corrado · · Score: 1

      $400!!!! for a freakin MP3 player!?!?!?

      What kinda crack are they smoking!?!

      --
      KangarooBox - We make IT simple!
    2. Re:As always, it comes down to price. by Snocone · · Score: 3, Insightful

      $400!!!! for a freakin MP3 player!?!?!?

      No, $399.95 MSRP for a freakin' .2x1.8" 5 GB Toshiba FireWire bus-powered hard drive.

      http://www.smartdisk.com/Products/Storage%20Produc ts/Hard%20Drives/FWFL.asp

      Apple's version throws in the MP3 player for free.

      Not such a bad deal looked at that way, yes?

    3. Re:As always, it comes down to price. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iCrack

    4. Re:As always, it comes down to price. by Meech · · Score: 1


      Sometimes it is all about conspicuous consumption. People will buy the thing just because it costs $400, and then they will be either the coolest or wicked awesome, I haven't decided.

  14. I happenned again. by pi+radians · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Apple is being distroyed by the rumors that are being created. When they announce that they are going to have a new product, everyone thinks it's going to blow their worlds. Rumors start flooding in about even the most outragous products ( I even heard a few "sources" mention teleportion) This is getting plain stupid.

    Apple is a normal company. Why does the public constantly expect them do the impossible?

    --

    sin(6cos(r)+5A)
    1. Re:I happenned again. by Lxy · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      because it's not impossible. This Mp3 playing thing just sucks. Yes, it runs OS X, but so what? WHAT THE HELL happened to the Newton? That thing was the PDA that could have changed the market completely in Apple's favor. No, Jobs killed it. Instead he releases the Hello Kitty laptop and now this pathetic attempt at an MP3 player. Steve Jobs is an idiot. I want a Newton.

      --

      There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
      :wq
    2. Re:I happenned again. by aussersterne · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Apple is a normal company. Why does the public constantly expect them to do the impossible?

      I think over history, Apple has shown with some regularity that they can pull "the impossible" out of their hat. Now with Jobs and NeXT genes on board, that sense is even more intense.

      Whether Apple's products are brilliant successes or bizarrely interesting failures, nobody can deny that what they're doing as a rule seems more interesting that what Dell/Gateway/Microsoft et al are ever doing. And occasionally (Macintosh, NeXT, Newton, iMac) Apple/NeXT have done things that were completely mind-blowing and heretofore impossible.

      I'm speaking as a longtime PC owner and Linux, not a Mac owner (though I do love my Newton)-- I have a healthy respect for the real innovation Apple has brought to the industry (compare to Microsoft's "innovation"...) and I have trouble understanding why Slashot users are such haters when it comes to Apple and Steve Jobs.

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    3. Re:I happenned again. by schwatoo · · Score: 1

      They have an MP3 player that runs OSX? Cool? What is the URL... Where do I order that?

      --
      I have trouble with passwords among other things.
    4. Re:I happenned again. by tswinzig · · Score: 2

      I even heard a few "sources" mention teleportion...

      Is that like half a telephone?

      --

      "And like that ... he's gone."
    5. Re:I happenned again. by big.ears · · Score: 2

      You are misattributing the source of the rumors. These rumors are not being created by mindless masses who expect Apple to save the world--they are being created by Steve Jobs and his faithful band of marketeers. He probably is just trying to get press by being the only other thing going on in technology this week (aside from WinXP launch). "And in other news...". They've been leaking that they have a revolutionary secret new product that they can't tell anyone about for a while--these rumors are part of their marketing scheme.

      Apple invented the mythos that they weren't a normal company, and that they could do the impossible. If they continue to perpetuate these ideas, and if (as you claim) it hurts them, then its their own fault.

    6. Re:I happenned again. by nanobug · · Score: 1

      Many slashdot users are Linux users, and *nix users do not like the unhackability of the Apple O/S (at least until OSX). It is an insult to their intelligence to be told 'you don't need to know the details, just click on this nice GUI interface'.
      Maybe OSX will change this attitude over time, but maybe not - the bias is already firmly ingrained in some people.

    7. Re:I happenned again. by rnd() · · Score: 2
      In my case, I have been burned after buying a Powerbook from Apple. I came to find out after discussing my experience with a coworker (who used to work for Apple) that Apple outsourced all Powerbook tech support around the time that the 5300 (the model I purchased) came out.

      I speak as a former Apple customer, and not as a Slashdot user. Apple will have to do a lot more than come out with a flashy product now and then to earn back my business.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    8. Re:I happenned again. by Fear+the+Clam · · Score: 1

      Yes, it runs OS X, but so what?

      It doesn't run OS X.

      WHAT THE HELL happened to the Newton? That thing was the PDA that could have changed the market completely in Apple's favor. No, Jobs killed it. Instead he releases the Hello Kitty laptop and now this pathetic attempt at an MP3 player.

      John Sculley killed the Newton. He also fired Jobs.

      Steve Jobs is an idiot.

      No, that would be you, FactMaster.

    9. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I constantly expect them to suck.

    10. Re:I happenned again. by Sebastopol · · Score: 2

      Apple is a normal company. Why does the public constantly expect them do the impossible?

      Oh, gee... maybe because they constantly claim to be revolutionary giants, and b/c iZealots are always trumpeting how ingenious and superior Apple is compared to every other company? Look at their marketing: they licensed the images of dozens of artists, scientists and writers when they launched their horribly pretentious "Think Different" campaign.

      Anyone notice how this form factor looks identical to Intel's now-cancelled MP3 player?

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    11. Re:I happenned again. by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

      After spending much time with a windows-oriented friend of mine (not a devotee, he hates it, but it does the things he needs), I think I have an inkling of why people who are predisposed to Slashdot hate Steve.

      My friend, let's call him Dan, is looking to buy a new laptop. He wants an operating system that works (probably not Windows), a sensible hardware platform, and a good price.

      He likes the iBook a lot, but hates the color. He doesn't know why there's no choice other than white, and he doesn't know why the iBook isn't like the Titanium PowerBook.

      I tried to explain that the iBook is the consumer device, and is geared to what Steve thinks that market wants. He finds Steve's whims and "vision" to be ridiculous and limiting, and wishes that Apple would release notebooks in sensible colors that real people want. I tried to explain that all sorts of people find the iBook much more appealing than any other option, and they are buying it in spades. He still wants it to be black.

      The wacky, headstrong attitude of Steve & co. is appealing to people who "get it." Those who aren't on the bus have no ability to understand why anyone would want a computer that's blue with white polka dots. I further think that it's near-impossible to explain that "groove" to people who don't get it naturally.

      (Those are often the same people who have super-fancy E/GTK/etc. themes for their Linux desktops that are slow and awful. They love those, but they don't get how OS X is different, or how an OS X theme for Enlightenment makes the "on the bus" crowd's stomaches do acrobatics.)

      I don't mean for that to sound as snobby as it came out -- there really isn't a right or wrong mindset, but there are differences.

      --
      There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
      Max V.
      NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
    12. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      WHAT THE HELL happened to the Newton?


      It DIED because cheep-assed windroid propellerheads would rather buy less expensive pieces of second rate trash (cough Nomad cough) than finely engineered Apple products.

    13. Re:I happenned again. by coolgeek · · Score: 2

      I agree. When I heard that the Apple invitations to the press conference read "This coming Tuesday, Apple invites you to the unveiling of a breakthrough digital device", I was expecting at the minimum practical speaker independent voice recognition, and at the extreme, some kind of direct neural interface. This is such a letdown. There is nothing "breakthrough" about streamlining an interface, reducing the size and upping the bandwidth on what have basically become commodity items. The size is cool and so's the design and all that. IMO, they should have released this before the new PB's. Now, _THAT_ got me excited. I had a really hard time keeping my credit cards in my pocket last week. WHEW! The only reason I don't have one of them 133Mhz monsters right now is I decided to wait for the DVD/CDRW combo drive. After all that frenzy last week, this iPod thing sort of lets the air out of my Apple tires, so to speak.

      --

      cat /dev/null >sig
    14. Re:I happenned again. by pi+radians · · Score: 1

      yes.... no.

      i'm drunk. i meant teleportation.

      --

      sin(6cos(r)+5A)
    15. Re:I happenned again. by firewort · · Score: 2

      Their offer to repair your 5300 for 8 years after your original purchase didn't help?

      Their offer to give you a big discount on a new Powerbook if you sent them the 5300 didn't help?

      I don't know what kind of warranties you normally get on products, but the whole 5300 fiasco was handled pretty darn well, if you ask me.

      In fact, people were buying up 5300s just to get the discount on the new PowerBooks.

      --

    16. Re:I happenned again. by mmontour · · Score: 2

      I have trouble understanding why Slashot users are such haters when it comes to Apple and Steve Jobs.

      Here's my theory - it's because the good Apple stuff is priced just out of our reach. We love cool tech, but we hate cool tech that we can't have.

      Of course some of the Apple stuff has just been too "cute" to be taken seriously (like the original "toilet seat" iBooks). However I have spent quite a bit of time drooling over stuff like the G4 Powerbook, G4 Cube, and even the old NeXT (not strictly an Apple product, but close enough).

      Note that I'm not an Apple-hater. I am very happy with my iBook2, and I agree with you that it's a real pleasure to see a company for whom "innovation" actually means something. I'll trade a few% of raw CPU speed for some good engineering design any day.

    17. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



      Man, what a bunch of pansies.. Ever hear of a disassembler and a hex editor?

    18. Re:I happenned again. by DaveWood · · Score: 2

      Hmm. Let's recap.

      Apple stole Xerox's OS interface metaphor and released the Lisa/Macintosh.

      It was unquestionably a wonderful product. However, Jobs et al managed to squander a 10 year technology lead by failing to develop a good licensing strategy, pricing badly, marketing terribly, and failing to go after big business customers until it was too late. Despite an overwhelming technical superiority and an early window in which it might have successfully competed against wintel, Macintosh stagnated, and became an expensive 5%-of-the-market niche machine, a status which it retains to this day.

      Apple has always been at war with its engineering talent. Its R&D and development elan has gradually eroded ever since its storied beginnings (Woz etc) on the basis of Apple's (and many say Jobs') keystone cops management style - especially on the software end. For over a decade, stewardship of the OS and platform came down to maintenance, incremental improvements, and hardware and functionality kluges. Microsoft, IBM and Intel, meanwhile, slowly but steadily closed the UI gap.

      Meanwhile Jobs, who is by all accounts an arrogant, fairly ignorant and antagonistic manager, took off/was booted out and started NeXT, another company with a variety of similar problems. NeXT was to sell a new kind of computer. It had some interesting hardware/software ideas and a completely stupid/unrealistic idea about how to package/sell/market them. NeXT packages cost deep in the 5 figures, eliminating any chance at a mass market. Jobs actually _discouraged_ porting of 3rd party applications to his system, saying "the NeXT developer community will do things its own way, and it will be better than anything else out there." If you can believe that.

      Unfortunately, there never was a NeXT developer community. NeXT lost money prodigiously, canned its hardware platform, tried selling an x86 port of its operating system (competing with Windows... real bright), and then was weeks away from receivership when Jobs magically conned Apple into buying it from him (for a ridiculously inflated price) on the theory that NeXTStep would magically morph into Mac OS X. Unfortunately, it has.

      The ex-NCR exec who had (fairly successfully) cleaned house at Apple after its disastrous slide in the early nineties (during which it had been so close to bankruptcy it had to take investment from Microsoft!) saw Jobs coming, was unable to prevent his return, and split.

      http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/ 19 97/q4/970709.pr.rel.amelio.html

      My understanding is that Jobs inherited the iMac/G3 from Amelio - he did not create them. But he was happy to take credit for them anyway. Depending on how you interpret Pixar, Jobs has a consistent track record for failure. Regardless of what you think of Jobs, Apple's glory days were over before Regan left office.

    19. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "unhackability" of MacOS? I'm afraid you're thinking of the wrong crowd.

      People with OS experience, who actually program, who take time to study what they're doing, they would be intelligent enough to know that, while the basic GUI presented to them doesn't reveal everything, they have the entire box to bend to their will. (Ever hear of something called "Applescript"?)

      Then, let's not forget the devout Mac following, of which there are a ton of developers who can provide you with the little tools that can make your Mac even more "hackable" than the typical Windows/Linux box. When I'm on my Mac, I can tell you exactly what is stored in any specific part of my RAM. Can the *nix-oriented "/. crowd" do that on their PCs? Can they even do it on their Linux boxes? (Sure, it's possible, but would these people know how.)

      Macs never "tell you" what to do and what not. It's just that there are some users who aren't intelligent enough to do their own thing. Their ignorance shouldn't be held against some of the greatest computers ever.

    20. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dont you just love how people like to re-spin history with their own synical twist to it trying to tell us stuff that we neither care or want to know. Any person who cares enough about Apple and is smart enough to be on slashdot knows the history. Weve all formed our own opinions, we dont need yours Thanks.

    21. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are correct that Apple can pull "the impossible" out of its hat. One recent example is their ability to convince people that basing entire application frameworks on software that has no error checking is actually a good idea.

    22. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      some kind of direct neural interface

      Yes, Apple needs to revive this project

    23. Re:I happenned again. by dirtyeye · · Score: 1

      I like the fact that apple isn't all big and powerfull, the way that mirosoft is and redhat is heading. its got that smaller thing going for it, not just another _________!!

    24. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but it's safe to say the the 5300 sucked. No other Powerbook had the same types and amounts of problems as the 5300 did.

      Avoiding Apple computers because of a simgle flawed product is like avoiding Fords because they used to make the Pinto.

    25. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think over history, Apple has shown with some regularity that they can pull "the impossible" out of their hat.

      True, it takes a innovative company to throw away an 11-year lead in the user interface (Macintosh v. Windows 95) and a six year lead in the handheld market (Apple Newton vs. everything else) and remain in business.

      -- Spaz!

    26. Re:I happenned again. by benedict · · Score: 2

      Apple *licensed* the interface from Xerox.

      --
      Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
    27. Re:I happenned again. by capologist · · Score: 1
      I think over history, Apple has shown with some regularity that they can pull "the impossible" out of their hat. Now with Jobs and NeXT genes on board, that sense is even more intense.

      Over history, perhaps Apple has shown that, but has it shown it over recent history?

      Early in Jobs's second tenure at Apple, the claim may have been justified. Apple had recently created the first Power Macintosh G3s, which compared favorably in price and performance to contemporary x86-based PCs. It had followed that up with the introduction of the iMac, which was a tremendously successful product. Then it created the B&W G3, which was an impressive machine (including an innovative case design that I think was pretty significant). It announced Mac OS X, which was very exciting. All in all, it did a heck of a lot to generate excitement, all within the span of about a year or two.

      Since then, Apple's track record is far less impressive. OS X has only just arrived, far later than we expected it to, and while it's impressive, it's not nearly as impressive as would have been to deliver it on the originally announced schedule. The tardy operating system aside, the only really jaw-dropping product created by Apple in the last three years or so is the Cinema Display, and even that was over two years ago. The Cube garnered was an impressive feat of design and engineering, but a commercial failure. Meanwhile, both iMacs and Power Macs have fallen behind and now compare unfavorably in price and performance to x86-based Windows PCs, certain AltiVec-optimized PhotoShop filters notwithstanding. The iMac has become particularly stale; its look is no longer considered fashionable, and its display is considered too small for today's consumers.

      During that great run a few years ago, Apple wowed us anew with every press event, WWDC, Seybold conference, etc., and we came to expect it to make the impossible the routine. And now, Apple fans are still in the habit of reacting with a frenzy of anticipation before each such event, despite the fact that such anticipation has been consistently met with disappointment for about three years now-- considerably longer than the impressive run that justified the habit in the first place.

      Not that Apple hasn't produced any quality products in the past three years-- certainly, it has-- but it has consistently failed to live up to the hype. It has been, as pi radians said, more like a "normal company."

    28. Re:I happenned again. by benedict · · Score: 2

      As someone pointed out, this device passes the Grandma Test. Do any of the other MP3 devices do that? (I haven't tried them, I don't know; I'm asking seriously.) If not, then this *is* a breakthrough, but in the realm of design, not technology.

      --
      Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
    29. Re:I happenned again. by Mister+Black · · Score: 1

      Some dude took his iBook apart and removed the the white coating inside the plastic shell. You could paint that part black if you wanted.

      --

      You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door. There is a small mailbox here.
    30. Re:I happenned again. by glenmark · · Score: 1
      Apple stole Xerox's OS interface metaphor and released the Lisa/Macintosh.

      Er, no, Apple didn't steal a thing. GUI work was underway at Apple under the direction of Jef Raskin long before the two infamous visits to the Xerox PARC facility (for which Xerox received a chunk of Apple stock). The only real reason for those visits was to convince Jobs that a GUI was the way to go for Mac/Lisa. The SmallTalk environment which Xerox showed off bore practically no resemblance to what would become the Mac interface and had a very primative GUI. The whole "desktop" GUI metaphor, pull-down menus, icons for objects (rather than actions), and drag resizing of windows were all invented in-house at Apple.

      --
      *** Quantum Mechanics: The Dreams of Which Stuff is Made ***
    31. Re:I happenned again. by Ravendon · · Score: 1

      You are kidding, right? Unhackablility? Ever hear of ResEdit, Super ResEdit or Resourcerer??? Please, Macs are infinitely more hackable and easier to program then x86 system. And if you don't like the MacOS, then why whine about it and not get BeOS, BSD, Linux, VMX, DOS, Windows NT 4 and run them instead? They all run natively on Apple hardware. Geez, sounds like someone likes to talk the talk, but have no clue about hacking hardware or software. I'd suggest, get an older mac like an se/30, download super resedit, a soldering gun, some wires, some wiring boards, some oak panels and 2x4's, a hacksaw, x-acto knife, dremel tool, hammer and nails, some spray paint. Then screw around with it. You can pick up the se/30 for cheap so you won't lose much money on it. Then you will have all the tools to hack the software AND the hardware. Play around with it. Trash it. Doesn't matter. Just learn. Try stuffing the contents of the se/30 into an amber monitor. I've done it, man did it look sweet. Amber.....sigh. Harkens back to the days of dos 2 and endless games of Lode Runner. Anyway, play around with it. Macs are meant to be hacked.

    32. Re:I happenned again. by rnd() · · Score: 2
      I got it "repaired" twice, but it still didn't work properly.


      The discount wasn't really all that big, and I wasn't about to spend more money after the way Apple handled the 5300.

      The 5300 fiasco was actually not handled well at all: The first 5 times I called tech support and even after I sent the machine in for the first time, Apple insisted there was nothing wrong with it.

      Even though I had come to the conclusion 5 days after purchasing the 5300 that it was garbage, I could not return it (I purchased it from the Computer Kickoff office at the University of Michigan).


      I will never purchase another product from Apple, because ultimately Apple does not care about its customers. I don't expect a company's hardware and/or software to be perfect. I only expect the situation to be handled with honesty and concern for the customer.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    33. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Weve all formed our own opinions, we dont need yours

      Has there ever been a more honest appraisal of the Mac zealot's mind?

    34. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Apple *licensed* the interface from Xerox." ...

      ... after Xerox threatened to sue their butt when Apple went around suing everyone else that dared to use pixels on their computers.

      Just face it: Apple is one of the most lawsuit happy, monopolistic companies in the history of the United States. Microsoft is nothing compared to the arrogance of Apple.

      I will NEVER EVER buy anything from Apple, and and I urge everyone else to boycott them as well. I definitely recommend against them to all my friends and family.

    35. Re:I happenned again. by King+Babar · · Score: 2
      Hmm. Let's recap.

      OK, but let's not be too revisionist, okay?

      Apple stole Xerox's OS interface metaphor and released the Lisa/Macintosh.

      Total horse droppings. They paid for the right to take a look at what Parc was doing and to hire the people who did it. They paid money, and they actually shipped products that people bought. I mean, would you have rather had Xerox sit on this stuff for another five years? I saw the Xerox Star system, back in the day, and there has never been a company that had less of a clue as to what they really had than Xerox.

      It was unquestionably a wonderful product. However, Jobs et al managed to squander a 10 year technology lead by failing to develop a good licensing strategy, pricing badly, marketing terribly, and failing to go after big business customers until it was too late.

      Wow. First off, as for "Jobs et al", you should really be aware that it was almost all "et al"; Jobs was out of Apple in 1985, one year after the Mac was introduced. One can argue whether earlier licensing would have been a good idea or not, but note that outside licensing would probably have slowed down technological development for the simple reason that the more backwards compatibility you have to provide, the more backwards you become.

      More interestingly, it was their big joint (cross-licensing) venture to develop "Pink" with IBM that really screwed them over with respect to advancing the software part of the platform. The bright side of that was gaining the PowerPC platform.

      As far as pricing badly goes, there was certainly some of that; Apple had also become notorious for completely mispredicting demand for their products.

      The chasing big business question is an interesting one, since the history of the Mac is trying to get into that market (first through "innovative" products like Lotus Jazz, then via the agreement with MS that gets Excel out for the Mac before the PC...it went on and on, but it really didn't get too far. You could blame Apple, or you could just realize that being #2 to start was a nearly insurmountable barrier in the business world, especially when #1 is MS itself.

      Despite an overwhelming technical superiority and an early window in which it might have successfully competed against wintel, Macintosh stagnated, and became an expensive 5%-of-the-market niche machine, a status which it retains to this day.

      For starters, I think this just goes to show *yet again* that overwhelming technical superiority does not necessarily mean very much. I think the early window you're talking about was very short indeed if it was in the post-1984 era. The biggest relative gap between the two platforms probably occurred in late 1985, when the Mac was the Mac featuring built-in networking with Appletalk and the world's first PostScript printer. Microsoft Windows 1.0 was released in November 1985. It may have sucked, but it looked more like a Mac, and that was enough to guarantee the Mac permanent minority status.

      Apple has always been at war with its engineering talent. Its R&D and development elan has gradually eroded ever since its storied beginnings (Woz etc)

      Oh, I suppose you could think that. But note that Woz is out of Apple by 1985, and it was *since* then that the adoption of really good outside ideas like SCSI, PostScript, built-in networking, etc. happened. And then there are all of the inside Apple inventions: Quickdraw, TrueType, Firewire, ADB (followed up by USB), the continuous reinvention of the notebook...yeah, I suppose you could say their engineering sucks.

      [snip] especially on the software end. For over a decade, stewardship of the OS and platform came down to maintenance, incremental improvements, and hardware and functionality kluges. Microsoft, IBM and Intel, meanwhile, slowly but steadily closed the UI gap.

      Intel closed the UI gap?? Nevermind. Yes, MS did clone the Mac. But IBM and Apple were supposed to be co-developing the ultimate OS (Pink) for an embarassingly long time; that stupendously failed effort was what really got them behind the curve. In other words, it wasn't a failure to try, but a (spectacularly) failed attempt. For that, Apple and IBM deserve some blame, to be sure. But I don't see how this would have allowed them to seize the majority market share away from Wintel.

      Meanwhile Jobs, who is by all accounts an arrogant, fairly ignorant and antagonistic manager, took off/was booted out and started NeXT, another company with a variety of similar problems.

      Note that Jobs was out of Apple by 1985. Also note that the first thing he did was buy...Pixar. Yes, the people who did Toy Story ten years later. That was a move that undoubtedly demonstrated his ignorance.

      NeXT was to sell a new kind of computer. It had some interesting hardware/software ideas and a completely stupid/unrealistic idea about how to package/sell/market them. NeXT packages cost deep in the 5 figures, eliminating any chance at a mass market.

      Yes, I would have to say that Mach + NextStep + Display Postscript + removable writable media TWELVE YEARS AGO would qualify as "interesting". As for "deep in the five figures", you're full of it. The Cube cost $10,000 for non-educational markets in 1989, and went way down from there. Moreover, it isn't surprising that NeXT never hit the mass market because...it wasn't aimed at the mass market AT ALL. Now, I think you're right that Jobs grossly overestimated the market he did aim at, but that sure wasn't the same market as the Mac.

      Jobs actually _discouraged_ porting of 3rd party applications to his system, saying "the NeXT developer community will do things its own way, and it will be better than anything else out there." If you can believe that.

      That was arrogant as hell, to be sure, but you don't actually argue with the fact that it could have been...true. Where NeXT competed the best was in vertical financial markets (rapid application development with a pretty face), and in that (admittedly limited) environment, I have never heard that it didn't completely rule.

      [snip] and then was weeks away from receivership when Jobs magically conned Apple into buying it from him (for a ridiculously inflated price)

      Yes, and we all know how horribly Apple has been doing since they brought Jobs back. Come on. You might have issues with OS X (I sure do), but *the sucker works*. Which is way more than we can say about the decade of failure (Pink, Copland, others) in OS development that preceded it.

      The ex-NCR exec who had (fairly successfully) cleaned house at Apple after its disastrous slide in the early nineties (during which it had been so close to bankruptcy it had to take investment from Microsoft!) saw Jobs coming, was unable to prevent his return, and split.

      First of all, Amelio was from National Semiconductor, and, gosh, that's an outfit that has just whipped Intel, right? You're right that a lot of costs got cut under his regime, but some of the more painful things actually happened under Jobs, including the MS investment, the canning of the Newton, the final turfing of Hypercard, and yet more layoffs.

      [snip] Depending on how you interpret Pixar, Jobs has a consistent track record for failure.

      How *I* interpret Pixar is pretty simple: they made Toy Story, Toy Story 2, and Bug's Life. They make great stuff, have a market cap of close to $2 billion, and have outperformed the S&P 500 over the last 5 years. I guess that defines "failure" upwards.

      Regardless of what you think of Jobs, Apple's glory days were over before Regan left office.

      I find that hard to believe. For starters, I believe they sold more Macs last year than they sold during the entire Reagan administration.

      Look, I'm not arguing that Apple is a perfect company, since it isn't, but if you want to lay into them, do get your facts straight, and do learn to think critically. Apple has been a relatively poor stock to own over the last 15 years, and that's a serious condemnation. But to argue that they can't do anything right...is just silly.

      --

      Babar

    36. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, yeah, yeah. Blow me, loser.

      - Steve

    37. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I think that anybody who makes the color of the case a factor in their purchasing decision is pretty lame. This goes for Mac users and non-Mac users alike. Tell your friend to get a grip. If he likes the form factor and feature set of the iBook, but can't stomach the color, he should check out the Dell Inspiron 2100. It has pretty much everything the iBook has except for Mac OS X and the optical drive is external.

    38. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...and is smart enough to be on slashdot

      Bwaaahaha! Hehe! ROTFL! You just totally ruined your credibility there.

    39. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Raskin opposed the desktop metaphor, opposed using a mouse, and had a bunch of other half-baked ideas for the Mac project that were promptly abandoned when Jobs was put in charge after being tossed off the Lisa project.

      Oh, and Xerox had the desktop metaphor before Apple, and their GUI was not primitive at all. Speaking as somebody who actually used an early Xerox Star, I can tell you that its GUI was actually rather full featured compared to the Mac GUI. Of course, there's no way that the equivalent of the Star GUI could work on low end hardware like the Mac, so it's probably not a fair comparison.

      Apple did invent a lot of innovative GUI features in house, but almost all of the innovations were credited to ex-PARC employees recruited by Jobs. You've really got to be careful reading Raskin. He makes up a lot of history to take credit for things that weren't his idea and fluff his ego. Read some of the other Mac developers accounts of the project history.

    40. Re:I happenned again. by gig · · Score: 2

      Geez, man ... the Apple that made the 5300 bears almost no resemblance to the Apple of today. I would wager that not even 50% of their workforce is the same. Certainly, their board and upper management are almost entirely different ... I think only their CFO is the same from those days. A new PowerBook probably doesn't have even one port in common with the 5300, never mind the fact the new ones run a completely rewritten OS that now qualifies as a UNIX.

      Besides, they made up for the 5300 by extending its warranty to 7 years, and also offering trade-ins for new PowerBooks on more than one occassion.

      > Apple will have to do a lot more than come out
      > with a flashy product now and then to earn back
      > my business.

      Well, they are opening up retail stores throughout the US in an effort to earn back your business. All you have to do is go to one and you can work with their products all day, all plugged in and ready to go, with software on them and camcorders and other peripherals attached. To me, that says that they're pretty proud of their products, and not just the way they photograph. Check it out and then you can make criticisms based on THIS geological era of computer technology.

    41. Re:I happenned again. by ordinarius · · Score: 1

      Innovation, shminivation. I'm tired of people quibbling over the definition of innovation. Lets give credit where credit is due. Apple doesn't do the impossible. I don't know if they are truely innovative or not. Frankly I don't care. What Apple does do is pay attention to product design, and then leverage that attention with marketing to enable them to charge a premium. Considering what tight-wads the average consumer tends to be, I think we can agree, this ain't easy folks.

      The Reuters article on the iPod release quoted Chris Le Tocq (whoever he is) as saying, "I think Apple is making as much on one of these as on a $1000 notebook". Like I said, premium.

      The problem is that one can only charge a premium for so long. You can bet that if Apple successfully carves out a market for $250+, Firewire/MP3 players over the next 6 months, there will be 10 different models pretty much just like it for quite a bit less. Apple will then have to cut their prices or come out with iPod2 for people to lust after. But over the short term they'll make a nice chunk of change from those early adopters who can't wait for the prices to drop.

      But make no mistake, creating and marketing a product for which people are willing to pay a premium ain't easy. For us free software types make special note of the word "PAY". As in blow the dust off the wallet and wake up George. The fact that Apple has been able to do this not just once, but multiple times in the past is frankly pretty friggin' amazing. We'll see if they're able to pull it off again.

      - ordinarius

    42. Re:I happenned again. by gig · · Score: 2

      > Anyone notice how this form factor looks identical
      > to Intel's now-cancelled MP3 player?

      The form factor is identical to many other devices, that's not the point. The point is that it will work. It will really work, it will work reliably, and it will be fun to use. It won't try to squeeze gigabytes of data through USB, in the first place.

      The knocks on this device here on Slashdot stink of envy. Intel's mobos don't have FireWire yet and the whole x86 platform is suffering for it. Blame Intel and Microsoft, not Apple. Apple put FireWire ports on Macs well over two years ago. So Mac users who now find themselves wanting to move multiple gigabytes of data to a music player are much better off with iPod and FireWire. It has been trivial to attach and even boot from a FireWire hard disk on the Mac for a long, long time. I have had three different brands of external FireWire storage and one of those drives is semi-retired because it's "only" 16GB. It's old news.

      The complaints about the iPod's price are embarrassing, given that the same hard drive that is in iPod is available for the same price as just a standalone FireWire hard drive. Yesterday, you could pay $399 for a super-slim, one-of-a-kind 5GB FireWire hard drive (smaller than a notebook hard drive) that you can hide in your hand. Today, you can pay $399 and get the same FireWire hard drive with music playback built-in. That is where you see whether the thing is overpriced, not by comparing it to a $250 device that is three times the size, twice the weight, has 1/30 of the connectivity bandwidth, and is also not as easy or as much fun to use.

      I mean, do you non-Apple users get that you can boot a Mac off an iPod? It's not a prettier Nomad ... if you think of it that way, you will continue to be mystified as to why people flock to Apple's products. It's about building a device the way it wants to be built. Your 6GB Nomad Jukebox doesn't WANT to hook up through USB ... no device with that much storage will ever make sense hooking up through the keyboard port.

      Also, remember that this is the first generation of a new type of device. This is the baseline ... small enough, high enough capacity, fast enough connectivity, excellent integration with PC's (especially Macs). People who ignored MP3 players will now get it. You put all of your favorite songs on here in a few minutes and listen to them whenver you want. From now on, people will measure these things against iPods, just like PC's are measured against Macs (which is why Windows XP looks like bizarro Mac OS X).

    43. Re:I happenned again. by benedict · · Score: 2

      This page is quite partisan, but if it's accurate, your claim doesn't hold water:

      http://www.mackido.com/Interface/ui_history.html

      As for the boycott stuff, well, it's true: Apple technology is proprietary, and Apple can be quite ... proprietary about it. That doesn't offend me, but it's a matter of taste.

      --
      Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
    44. Re:I happenned again. by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

      I think Mac OS X is one of the factors (i.e., he wants to get away from Windows.)

      But I agree totally. I'll probably never make a decision on color. General style, yes. Like the old iBook -- it looks too much like a toilet seat for me. But not the color.

      --
      There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
      Max V.
      NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
    45. Re:I happenned again. by maxphunk · · Score: 1

      As a Mac user and Slashdotter, I thank you.

      --

      "The chief enemy of creativity is 'good taste'" -Pablo Picasso
    46. Re:I happenned again. by damiam · · Score: 1

      If you're worried about processor speed, wait for the G5 processors in January, ranging from 866Mhz-1.6Ghz - faster than any x86 processor available.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    47. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares if they licensed it or not? The simple fact is that Apple did not come up with the idea of a graphical user interface, Xerox did.

    48. Re:I happenned again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't blame Microsoft for the lack of FireWire -- there's been OS support since Win 98.

    49. Re:I happenned again. by firewort · · Score: 2

      Well, I won't argue with you, you got burned by Apple on that one.

      Can you think of other companies that have given you a better support experience?

      I've had bad experiences at the hands of Dell, Gateway, and basically anytime I haven't bought parts and assembled my own machine- but you can't do that with a laptop.

      IBM has given me good service, but then, if I want MacOS, I can only run 8.1 through an emulator.

      Apple remains a little rough on service, and in spite of that they get top marks in being the best at customer support.

      The hinges on powerbooks from the wallstreet models til now are prone to failure, the ibook seems more sturdy. The repair costs are obscene. If you're out of warranty at all, it's game over. (an iMac belonging to a friend of mine died at 14 months, two months out of warranty.) Even under AppleCare, the extended warranty, there are some things Apple refuses to deal with.

      I think people expect more from Apple than they do from IBM or the other manufacturers of computers. Apple has a strong loyalty among it's customers, who are surprised when Apple treats them coldly, as customers, instead of with generosity. It doesn't help them any that they used to have free phone support and were more lenient- and if they could afford to be, I'd say that they ought to move back to that practice.

      My best answer in situations like these has been to be persistant and insistant on a good outcome for me, and to carry insurance on the computer, so that even if the warranty leaves me out cold, I'm not taking a huge loss on the machine.

      Have you given any thought to either picking up a dead 5300 for cheap on ebay and fixing yours with parts from it? or selling yours?

      Victor Marks
      victor AT ripal dot co dot il

      --

    50. Re:I happenned again. by DaveWood · · Score: 2

      Well, I'm going to disagree with you. It does seem as though most of your points are matters where reasonable people can disagree, so I have to say at the outset your argument is respectable. Nonetheless,

      They paid for the right to take a look at what Parc was doing and to hire the people who did it.

      Fine. I've heard different things about their dealings with Xerox, but whether you're right or not, it's not an important point. The point is that they didn't invent their much vaunted UI technology. They appropriated it.

      Neither is it relevant that Xerox will go down in history as having been the most profligate and stupid company in history (so far) in the handling of their corporate R&D. There have been books written about it. Whatever.

      Jobs was out of Apple in 1985

      In September, yes I know.

      outside licensing would probably have slowed down technological development

      It would also have contributed towards sanitizing the "market" for Macintosh products, pushing the prices down, eliminating the the frequent supply and sales channel problems Apple faced, legitimizing the platform in the eyes of institutional buyers, insuring its longevity, etc.

      Is it impossible to have an open standard and drive a market without compromising your engineering standards? Is that really your argument?

      And please don't argue that "Apple's has plenty of longevity by itself" - we're not talking about hindsight, we're talking about the hundreds of proprietary platforms that bite the dust along with the company that owns them over the last 30 years. Many buyers of computer equipment had already learned that painful lesson by the time Macintosh hit the stores, and were not eager for remedial classes.

      it was their big joint (cross-licensing) venture to develop "Pink" with IBM that really screwed them

      I could run out of fingers counting their technical debacles. Pink was one of many failed initiatives, and there was an underlying factor behind all of those (continuous) fiascos. Bad management.

      Apple had also become notorious for completely mispredicting demand for their products.

      I'm glad you noticed. But, that is what happens in a market with one supplier...

      The chasing big business question is an interesting one, since the history of the Mac is trying to get into that market ... You could blame Apple, or you could just realize that being #2 to start was a nearly insurmountable barrier in the business world, especially when #1 is MS itself.

      You could say the game was rigged and Apple never had a chance, but that would be ignoring Apple's many notorious mistakes...

      Microsoft Windows 1.0 was released in November 1985. It may have sucked, but it looked more like a Mac, and that was enough to guarantee the Mac permanent minority status.

      I don't want to seem unkind, but I think that statement is ridiculous. I'm going to guess that you've never actually tried to use Microsoft Windows 1.0.

      Suffice it to say, nothing Microsoft did in a technical capacity posed any significant threat to Apple until the advent of Windows 95... though some more charitable people might claim Windows 3.1/WfWG was a legitimate entry...

      Wintel succeeded by aggressive engagement of the sales channel, forging important alliances, marketing well, and exploiting IBM's connections and reputation with many large business concentrations. They fought very smart and very dirty, and they had some advantages that Apple didn't and could never have. But all of the people I talked to in the IS sales and services sector at that time say the same thing. "Apple just wasn't there." "They didn't engage." "They didn't come to the show floor." "Only showpiece advertising, no real marketing." "The pricing was way out of line." "I couldn't get my calls returned." And I could go on. A lot of frustrated people who feel like they wasted their time because Apple made as if to move into the market, and then disappeared. If Apple had created a platform and invited licensees, it might not have mattered. But it looked to me as if they had voluntarily surrendered the market.

      Woz is out of Apple by 1985, and it was *since* then that the adoption of really good outside ideas like SCSI, PostScript, built-in networking, etc. happened.

      Did I say Wozniak invented Postscript?

      Quickdraw, TrueType, Firewire, ADB (followed up by USB), the continuous reinvention of the notebook...

      As I say, maintenance, incremental improvements, and hardware and functionality kluges. Yes, they had to rev their disk interface, and yes, they had to get rid of bitmapped fonts, and yes, they had to move their proprietary desktop peripheral connectivity along, and yes... they developed their multimedia API a bit... Postscript is great and all, but Suitcase/ATM is still crashing machines daily to this day. Ah yes, built in networking. I always did have a soft spot for localtalk, even though that serial hardware's interrupt kept smashing through the OS with 750ms pauses every 2 seconds when data was transferring...

      Still, it was cheap, and it worked. I give them a lot of credit for that. Many of the developments in those days (like AppleTalk, and some of their earlier filesystem work) had a real panache about them.

      But let's not forget that they made it to 2001 without real memory protection, or process encapsulation, or a comprehensive approach to multitasking, with "Preferred" and "Minimum" memory allocation boxes in Application info dialogs, with little bits of 680x0 code still hanging from the System, which, while it was one of the best things going for over a decade after it was created, hasn't changed fundamentally since the Pascal days, except now even MacOS ships with 50 extensions, and it takes 4 minutes to boot, just like everything else.

      Let's not talk about Quickdraw GX. Or OpenDoc. Or eWorld. Or CyberDog? CHRP? PREP? PPCP? Kaleida? Dylan? Taligent? A/UX servers? the "Apple Video Conferencing Solution"? Can I still buy a Perfoma 6917.5? Hey, at least I can still send an iCard.

      Notice I don't mention the Newton. I liked the Newton. Apple's two cardinal mistakes with the Newton were: not admitting to themselves that handwriting recognition was a loss and just licensing Graffitti, and canning the division, ceding the market to 3com etc.

      Intel closed the UI gap??

      No, Wintel did.

      Apple and IBM deserve some blame, to be sure. But I don't see how this would have allowed them to seize the majority market share away from Wintel.

      I can do nothing other than disagree. If they had matched a unix-stable, well-engineered core to the Apple GUI any time before 1996 (you could argue as late as 1998 or even as late as the relase of Win2k, I suppose), they could have ruled the world.

      As for "deep in the five figures", you're full of it. The Cube cost $10,000 for non-educational markets in 1989, and went way down from there

      The color cube was "down from there" at $17,615 without options. You're right, though, and I aplogoize. Reading it again, "deep" sounds like >$50k, which it wasn't.

      Moreover, it isn't surprising that NeXT never hit the mass market because...it wasn't aimed at the mass market AT ALL. Now, I think you're right that Jobs grossly overestimated the market he did aim at, but that sure wasn't the same market as the Mac.

      My point is that he had no market, and he had no clue. My point is, frankly, that Steve was clearly smoking the crack rock.

      Speaking of which, about his comment that he "didn't need" 3rd party applications ported to his platform, you said:

      That was arrogant as hell, to be sure, but you don't actually argue with the fact that it could have been...true.

      Yes, I do argue with it. Because it is fucking insane. And so is Steve.

      in vertical financial markets ... (rapid application development with a pretty face) ... I have never heard that it didn't completely rule

      I did, actually. I heard nobody bought it and they went out of business. Schools (universities, really) were the biggest NeXT customers if I am informed correctly.

      Yes, and we all know how horribly Apple has been doing since they brought Jobs back.

      Jobs getting credit for Amelio's reforms was one of the big themes of my post. I'm surprised you missed that.

      You say of OS X:

      *the sucker works*

      I say, it's an unmitigated disaster. That comes from having used it, having been through its APIs and documentation, and having talked to a number of people who have tried to develop against it.

      They kluged up its APIs for Adobe, to make porting to the native layer easier. Just awful, but I can understand it. Apple is Adobe's bitch, after all.

      The funny part is that Adobe took one look at it and said, "call us back in a year or two, when you finish it." Hence, there is no scheduled OS X native port of Photoshop, etc. that I am aware of.

      Saying anything spells Apple's doom will get you flamed back and forth across the screen around here, not to mention it makes few people sadder than me, so I won't say it. I'll let you draw your own conclusions.

      First of all, Amelio was from National Semiconductor

      Ah yes. Got me there, you clever devil.

      that's an outfit that has just whipped Intel, right?

      Huh?

      some of the more painful things actually happened under Jobs, including the MS investment, the canning of the Newton...

      Yep, I know.

      Pixar

      Fine, you liked the Toy Story movies.

      For starters, I believe they sold more Macs last year than they sold during the entire Reagan administration.

      With MacOS 9 installed. And what was that percentage of sales relative to all PC sales, by the way?

      But to argue that they can't do anything right...is just silly.

      Who'se arguing that? I'm just saying they're the last people on earth to deserve a cult following.

      -Dave

    51. Re:I happenned again. by Sebastopol · · Score: 2

      The point is that it will work. It will really work, it will work reliably, and it will be fun to use.

      From now on, people will measure these things against iPods

      Settle down now, or I'll take away your gadgets and give you time out. Sorry to have angered you into posting such a lengthy reply, but it's stuff like your last comment that makes it so fun bait you iZealots. You really believe Jobs is the messiah.

      And all devices will have the same form factor in the same way that all car shapes are determined by laws of aeordynamics.

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    52. Re:I happenned again. by Refrag · · Score: 2

      "Unfortunately, there never was a NeXT developer community."

      As I recall, John Carmack did a good share of his development for Quake on a NeXT workstation.

      --
      I have a website. It's about Macs.
  15. What's really lame... by qon · · Score: 1

    Is that iWalk thing you dopes fell for. Photoshopped Apple 'product' shots are a time-honored tradition. Do you guys ever check your sources?

    q

    1. Re:What's really lame... by Rand+Race · · Score: 1
      As I discovered in the boring days when K5 was down and I had no better thing to do than troll /.'s submission que; When it comes to Apple they apparently do not bother to check shit.

      --
      Insanity is the last line of defence for the master diplomat. But you have to lay the groundwork early.
  16. Re:Linux cost analysis by Merlin_Z · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    You, sir, are a coward and a troll. I only hope this gets moderated down to a _very_ low score. Promptly.

    --
    "Let me control a planet's oxygen supply and I don't care who makes the laws" -Great Cthulu's Starry Wisdom Band
  17. Solid State? by Quasar1999 · · Score: 1

    What happens when I drop it? Is it solid state? If not, it doesn't make it note worthy in my books.

    --

    ---
    Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
    1. Re:Solid State? by xmath · · Score: 1

      Would reading the page really have taken that long?
      http://www.apple.com/ipod/specs.html

      32 MB solid state memory to prevent skipping.

      - xmath

    2. Re:Solid State? by punchdrunk · · Score: 1
      From the apple site:
      With an industry-leading 20 minutes of skip protection, iPod keeps playing without missing a beat. In addition to its 5GB hard drive, iPod has a 32MB memory cache. The cache is made up of solid-state memory, meaning that it has no mechanical or moving parts, so it's not affected bymovement of the device.

      Since they specifically state that the memory cache is solid state and there is a limit to the skip prevention, it sure sounds like a normal hard drive.

    3. Re:Solid State? by Quasar1999 · · Score: 1

      So in other words, if I drop the thing, the cache will probably still work, but the harddrive would be toast... ???

      What makes this any better than the Nomad?

      --

      ---
      Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
    4. Re:Solid State? by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

      That's great, but I want to know if I can go jogging with it and not cause a head crash. Skip protection is good, but I don't want the hard drive to be damaged.

      --
      There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
      Max V.
      NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
    5. Re:Solid State? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please. 5GB in solid state? No one even comes close to that. All current MP3 players that hold more than 256MB onboard do so on a small hard drive.

      So what happens when you drop it? You risk breaking it, just like any other MP3 player.

    6. Re:Solid State? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      can you read? or like so many slashdot mac bigots do you simply bash apple knee jerk without looking in depth as to what makes their prducts better than most everyone elses.?

      firewire for one. lighter for 2. seemless comptiability between itunes and the device.

      price is kinda high, but its not a "lame" device

  18. Lame? by Havokmon · · Score: 1

    Because it's smaller and has a wire?

    How would wireless benefit you?

    It's like the argument that mail servers witl web-based configs are better than sendmail. What does it matter if I sit down, open a web browser, and type in an URL, or sit down, open vi with a parameter to edit configs?

    You sit down at your Mac, and initiate a transfer to the MP3 player sitting right next to you. It's not like the MP3 player is going to be in your car.

    Though it could be, and that would be cool. Too bad your PC is in the basement on the other side of the furnace. Don't try and deny it.

    --
    "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
  19. I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Brand+X · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I need a fast, really small, 3GB+ hard drive, for software project transfers. This will do nicely, I think. Back in the day (early 90s) I used to use something called a Pocket Rocket, a SCSI HD about the size of a TV remote. When it comes to stuff that, for size reasons, really needs to be sneakernetted, this is the ideal solution. Any songs that I want to listen to can fit in the remaining 2GB with ease...

    --
    -- Still waiting for the Nike endorsement
    1. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by schwatoo · · Score: 1

      I have a LaCie 30GB PocketDrive. It has Firewire and USB interfaces and runs off the bus power if you're running it over Firewire (comes with a tiny adaptor if you have to run it over USB). I swear by it. It's one of the few devices that have changed the way I work (Airport being another). The really cool is that I originally bought a 6GB version but had an accident with it (ahem). I sent it back to them and they sent me back a 30gigger in return. Sweet!

      --
      I have trouble with passwords among other things.
    2. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Brand+X · · Score: 2

      Yup, I was looking at that very drive originally. But I don't need that much space on it, and the price for the cheapest (10GB) I've found is already $250... $370 for the 30GB, and the 48GB is around $700... also, the LaCie seems to have a somewhat larger footprint (27x87x143mm vs 20x62x102mm) and the smaller the better with this one. All in all, though, the LaCie looked good, and before this announcement, I was all but ready to order one.

      --
      -- Still waiting for the Nike endorsement
    3. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by jungd · · Score: 1

      If size matters, then why not buy a Sandisk microdrive from IBM? I believe they come 1GB. They're tiny (they're used in digital cameras).
      Of course you'll need a card reader (probably USB I guess). They're cheap enough you could just buy one for each end of the sneaker net. :)

      --
      /..sig file not found - permission denied.
    4. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Lysander+Luddite · · Score: 1

      I don't see any indication that you can use it for anything but music.

      It uses firewire to synch with iTunes. In fact, Jobs said when you plug it into the Mac it launches iTunes. The 6 line LCD interface screen doesn't appear to allow for file browsing. I don't see any indication you could use this for anything BUT iTunes.

      I too would like to use this as a portabel storage medium but it doesn't appear to be work that way.

      If you have any additional info that suggests otherwise, please let me know.

    5. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by megaduck · · Score: 2

      Apple itself says that this can be used as a FireWire HD.

      Check out the spec sheet under "Capacity".

      --
      This .sig for rent.
    6. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by David+Ham · · Score: 1

      Yeah. If you go to this here page on apple.com it says, under the top picture and to the left, "doubles as a FireWire disk for files and applications." And if you watch the video here, they talk about it as well.

      --

      --
      you must amputate to email me
      i read all replies to my comments

    7. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. What a deal. $400 for a 5 gig firewire drive. If you were smart you'd get one of those 30 gig 2.5" drives for $150 and a firewire case for $100.

    8. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by fenix+down · · Score: 1
      I'd like to forward a motion that the phrase "gigger" must never again be used on Slashdot.


      Seriously though, thanks for the tip. I might just get one of those. Even 2GB Jazz drives get small when you're working with video. $219 for 10GB is pretty fair, and I'm amazed that they seem to have a sane warranty policy. I'd just about given up on the concept outside of the theoretical. I gave a Handicam to an official-Sony-repair-location-thingamagig about 6 months ago and still haven't gotten it back. At my count they've spent about 3x the price of the damn thing trying to fix it. They can't send a replacement because they stopped making that model, and of course, God forbid they make a decision and send me some cash, or even another model.


      And drifting offtopic, has anyone else noticed Taco sounds pissed lately? "This is lame, that's lame, Christ /. costs a lot..." And don't tell me you didn't see that linux-kiddie shot in the previous article. Somebody send the poor man some hookers or something.

    9. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Lysander+Luddite · · Score: 1

      Thanks. I am glad my perusal of the info was wrong.

      I kept getting timed out beyond the intro page and piecing together the coverage on the mac sites.

    10. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by droleary · · Score: 1

      $370 for the 30GB

      The LaCie site says it can actually be had for $350, so you're saying you're willing to pay roughly $50 more for 1/6th the storage because it has a slightly smaller form factor? I suppose it could be worth it for you, but I certainly won't be buying an iPod until it comes down to at least $299. And if I buy a firewire drive before that happens, I likely won't be buying an iPod at all. They really need to make it so it easily hooks into my car stereo, too, and/or my home audio system. As it sits, this is just a slightly advanced mp3 player, not something that's particularly amazing.

    11. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Geek+In+Training · · Score: 1

      Don't waste your money. You can buy a 20GB VST pocket firewire drive of approximately the same "deck of cards" size for FAR less money and much more space.

      According to pricewatch.com, an outfit named Bason has such a device for $169.

      Then buy a JamMP3 for $32.95 from WalMart for your MP3s, and you've saved yourself $200.

      --
      SlashSigTheorem: Humorous, Political, Critical, Constructive- If you have a .sig, someone WILL complai
    12. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Moofie · · Score: 1

      If you can find a 5gb MP3 player at WalMart for $32.95, I'll buy you ten of them.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    13. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Geek+In+Training · · Score: 1

      He said he wants portable firewire storage. And have an MP3 unit. I was answering those wants.

      See my other posts for multiple other options for MP3/storage... e.g. computergeeks.com portable unit.

      --
      SlashSigTheorem: Humorous, Political, Critical, Constructive- If you have a .sig, someone WILL complai
    14. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by thejrnf · · Score: 1
      Let's say I want to pick up a 1.8" HD right now such as the one used in the iPod. How much will that cost?


      $399 at the Toshiba store. The iPod costs the same and has all the MP3 playing capability.


      Can anyone find a cheaper, equally small drive?

    15. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Red+Avenger · · Score: 1

      Why not get an IBM microdrive. It comes in lots of different form factors, works on a multitude of devices and has a great range of sizes.

    16. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by throx · · Score: 2

      Probably not, but that's not the point. If you are buying a Firewire HDD then you don't care if you get one about 25% bigger if you can get 20G for less than half the price.

      If you are buying an MP3 player, the chance of you wanting all 5G of storage (on the actual player) is fairly minute, and even more remote is the possibility that you have $400 to kick around in spending on an MP3 player - especially one that will only interface to a recent Macintosh (one capable of running OS X) and not anything else.

      It's a cute product but the price point is all wrong to make any market penetration.

      --

      Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

    17. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      definitely true. Maybe sad, but kind of refreshing. I mean, stuff sucks, what do you expect him to do? Planes are hitting buildings, anthtrax and shit is everywhere, no one's making any money.

    18. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      The iMac will never sell.
      Okay, I was wrong, but the iBook will never sell.
      Okay, I was wrong about the iBook too, but the iPod will never sell.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    19. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by astr0boy · · Score: 1

      I'll buy you ten of them
      can i have one too? i only want one of them, email me and i'll give you my address, ;)

      --

      -----
      so i says to mable, i says

    20. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by jaoswald · · Score: 1

      I like the iPod. I think it compares favorably in price with the higher capacity Rios (which surprised me.)

      I think it'll sell as well as the G4 Cube. Oops ;-)

    21. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by arson1 · · Score: 1
      (one capable of running OS X)

      t has to be able to run iTunes, which is available for Mac OS 9 too.

      --


      --
      Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things.
    22. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by throx · · Score: 2

      My mistake - you need OS 9.2.1 or OS 10.1.

      On that note, is 9.2.1 actually available independantly of OS X?

      --

      Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

    23. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by throx · · Score: 2

      The iMac and iBook were at very nice price points for Apple products (just above a similarly spec'd PC). I think you'll find difficulty finding any quote of mine that says they'll never sell.

      Now the G4 cube is far more in line with the iPod - at a price point without the demand to carry it at that point.

      The iPod is not a computer and has nothing similarly spec'd to compare against. When it comes down to it, it is a hideously expensive walkman - something for the filthy rich dot-commers in CA... err... (sigh) oh well.

      --

      Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

    24. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by arson1 · · Score: 1
      On that note, is 9.2.1 actually available independantly of OS X

      Here ya go, free for the taking: http://www.info.apple.com/validate/agree.taf?item= 921&lang=&geo=us

      Or if you are close enough, go to an Apple store and ask for the 10.1 update pack. It includes 10.1 (you need the original 10 disc to install it) and a full verison of 9.2.1. They'll give it to you no questions asked, and no proof of ownership.

      --


      --
      Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things.
    25. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by dburr · · Score: 1

      If it's a firewire device, it would undoubtedly use some variation of the SBP2 protocol. This would make the device appear to the OS as just another hard drive. With that kind of access, you could store *anything* on the device. Now, whether the iPod firmware can make sense of it, is another issue entirely. But even the rival Nomad Jukebox can be used to store any type of file, not just MP3's. The player firmware knows enough to ignore non-MP3-like files.

      --
      Yomigaeru Aiyan Geek!!!
    26. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
      If you are buying a Firewire HDD then you don't care if you get one about 25% bigger if you can get 20G for less than half the price.

      Assuming that you don't care about the size that is. It matters to me. If it didn't, I'd probably own a PPC and not a Palm Vx.
      It would also mean carring round a MP3 player, AND a bigger HD. This thing is 2 devices in one.

      If you are buying an MP3 player, the chance of you wanting all 5G of storage (on the actual player) is fairly minute

      Thank you for telling me what I want!
      For a moment there. I got confused, cause I thought I wanted the hassle free way of storing my entire music collection onto a MP3 player the size of most MP3 playes that requre you to plan exatly what you want to hear for the whole day, and waste time uploading them, and require you to have computer nearby (one that has to have all you music on it that is).
      I also really enjoy listening to the same album 10x on a road trip, or other time I don't have access to a computer.

      Yeah, you have a point about the price, and the OS X only thing. But I think you will find that the 'hint' Jobs gave about making it compatable with Win in the future, is something that has already been planned. And that they just made it Mac only for marketing perposes. Else they'll be shooting them selves in the foot.

    27. Re:I'm buying one purely for the tiny firewire hd by throx · · Score: 2

      Thank you for telling me what I want!

      I wasn't. I said the chances are minute that people will actually need that.

      Look, my real point is there isn't enough going for it to carry a $400 price tag. All these things are cute in an MP3 player and certainly very nice, but it really isn't worth the extra cash.

      Making it Windows compatible will be interesting unless they've used a FAT32 or possibly UFS file system on the hard drive (doubtful).

      --

      Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means

  20. Sing Along Boys and Girls! by webword · · Score: 2, Funny


    iPod, uPod, we all Pod for iPod!

  21. Worse than a Nomad? by spencerogden · · Score: 1

    I would much rather give up some gigs to have a deck of cards form factor. The nomad is just to big to carry regularly, and this unit still has magnitudes more storage than other small MP3 players, sounds perfect.

  22. I would get one but by GiMP · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think this is neat. Firewire is nice, and this can be used as an external harddrive as well.

    The only problem is the failure to play ogg files. I no longer have any mp3s, so this isn't as useful as it could be.

    Waiting for those ogg-compatable players :)

    1. Re:I would get one but by Beowulfto · · Score: 3, Informative
      Upgradable firmware enables support for future audio formats

      So you might not have to wait that long :-)

      --
      There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes. -- Dr. Who
    2. Re:I would get one but by raresilk · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well, with the disclaimer that I don't know much about how portable MP3 players implement their codecs, is it possible that someone could hack this device and add ogg capability? I mean, unless the MP3 codec is completely hardwired into a ROM, this device contains a processor, memory and bus sufficient to call and run one software codec, so why not another? It seems that if it can serve as a portable hard drive, it must have OS capability sufficient to operate as a file server, and may have a reasonably competent version of OS X running in there. Certainly the hard drive provides sufficient space for such an implementation, and the Firewire port would allow you to load an executable onto the device. And there seem to be many on /. who love hacking such embedded devices. Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems theoretically possible, and people have done some amazing hacks on Palm, etc.
      * * *

      --
      No, no, no. This is not a sig.
    3. Re:I would get one but by aozilla · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The only problem is the failure to play ogg files. I no longer have any mp3s, so this isn't as useful as it could be.

      Yeah, I sure don't want to break any patent laws while I'm burning my 5 gigs of copyright violations.

      --
      ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
    4. Re:I would get one but by Chakat · · Score: 2, Interesting
      As a previous poster has mentioned, this thing could in the future be modified to play .oggs. It already can play wavs and aiffs as well as the MP3 feature that everyone's commenting about, so I'd imagine that Ogg Vorbis support wouldn't be too far off.

      Personally, I can personally think of a much cooler hack, though its probably much less probable. Throw a firewire-ethernet converter (they exist, they're just hard to find). Then, throw a hacked version of apache on there (they mention that it runs a tweaked version of OSX, so its not too difficult to believe). Badda boom, you've got one tiny network storage box.

      --

      If god had intended you to be naked, you would have been born that way.

    5. Re:I would get one but by firewort · · Score: 2

      Ogg compatible players? iOmega HipZip works.

      check out the advocacy mail-list archive at xiph.org .

      --

    6. Re:I would get one but by Pfhor · · Score: 1

      Where does it say it runs a custom version of os x? I dug through all their available information I could find, and it said nothing of the sort. Most of these mp3 players have a custom OS running on them, and while they could be using a mach kernel, I don't see apple as being so stubborn to think that it would be the best approach for a $400 device, that probably has a smaller than g3 risc chip. Maybe strongARM 133s or something, like what they used in the newtons (hey it could be where some of the newton people got put to work, cool!).

      What I like about it is you can boot firewire macs off the drive, so you tech support people out there could justify it to your bosses, if you give up ~500 megs of music space, to throw a system folder and some recovery tools on the sucker. (considering that a similar drive is the same price, they may actually go for it also).

    7. Re:I would get one but by velouria · · Score: 1

      I have my entire cd collection as .ogg files, so I was quite keen to grab a HipZip. The disks are expensive and quite small, but I figured I'd live with that.

      The problem is that the player is huge! I don't mind a largish player if it has a large capacity, but the HipZip is easily the largest non-hard drive mp3 player around. Heavy too.

      I've been waiting two months now for any other device to come out with some support for .ogg, to no avail.

      Seeing as every mp3 player advertises upgradability to new codecs, it'd be nice to see more that 1 supporting .ogg by now.

    8. Re:I would get one but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people think that oggs are *better* too, you know. It's not all about patents. And a lot of us have lots of oggs that we don't want to reencode.

      Apple's probably already paying fraunhofer for their mp3 stuff...
      They should look into vorbis instead.

  23. Also acts as a data drive by acomj · · Score: 2

    data drive is kinda neet.. You can haul around some images. videos etc.. Firewire makes syncing fast too..

    Not bad. The big question is whether they'll let /it can be used on "Non" apple computers...

    1. Re:Also acts as a data drive by l-ascorbic · · Score: 1

      Steve Jobs: "We have thought than when we get a little spare time, we will look at taking it to Windows. We know the experience won't be as good, but we will probably look at that down the road."

  24. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by John_Booty · · Score: 2

    It's not limited to Apple users... you can get firewire ports on any type of computer, you know. It would be in Apple's best interests to release drivers to make this thing work with other OS's, unless they want to reduce the market for this thing by like 99%.

    --

    OtakuBooty.com: Smart, funny, sexy nerds.
  25. I'd like an iPod in my Bedpan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I'm going to lay here and rot away, why not rot over an iPod?

  26. LAME? WTF?!? by deander2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Less space then the Nomad yes, but also MUCH MUCH SMALLER. You ever try putting a Nomad in your pocket and go for a walk? The Nomad is only good as a psuedo stereo component, or perhaps in your car. Not to mention the horrible battery life!

    Also, how many HOURS does it take to transfer your 6.4gb MP3 collection onto your Nomad? I know my USB player takes forever to even fill up its 64mb memory. Firewire let's you do it BLAZINGLY FAST.

    This is a marvel of engineering, very useful and I give apple much credit for coming out with this device. //lame my ass.

    Also, did I mention automatic playlist/sing library synching with iTunes2? THIS is what portable music should be.

  27. not lame! by sulli · · Score: 2
    I like it, mainly because it's small, has a nice UI, and auto-syncs with iTunes. I was thinking of buying the Archos jukebox (20GB) but might get iPod instead - though since it requires FireWire it costs me an extra $100 for a FireWire PC card. (Old powerbook)

    Why? It's pretty and light, and it auto-syncs. Style and convenience matter!

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
    1. Re:not lame! by firewort · · Score: 2

      Locally, NC, USA,

      firewire cards are $40 USD for PCI. I think I saw them at about $60 for PCMCIA.

      --

    2. Re:not lame! by infinitey · · Score: 1

      I am afraid that will not be possible. According to the tech specs at the Apple web site,

      http://www.apple.com/ipod/specs.html

      it requires an "Apple computer with built-in Firewire port." That pretty much precludes me from buying one. Maybe they will change their minds about that... (if possible)

    3. Re:not lame! by softsign · · Score: 2
      Think twice. Or at least beware.

      The iPod can draw power through a Firewire connection, but I don't think PCMCIA cards can supply the juice needed. I've got a PCMCIA Firewire (VST) card in my Lombard PB... unfortunately, it can't power an external Firewire drive unless it has a separate AC adaptor hooked up.

      I'd be thrilled to find out I'm wrong, however...

    4. Re:not lame! by Maserati · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing a Linux machine with Firewire and HFS+ coimpaitbility configured would eb able to see it as a mountable drive.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
    5. Re:not lame! by rthille · · Score: 1

      it requires an "Apple computer with built-in Firewire port." They always say that, but I don't have any trouble with iMovie with my desktop (beige) G3 with a 3rd party Firewire card.

      --
      Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
  28. Wow how earth shattering by Minter92 · · Score: 0, Troll

    A freaking mp3 player. Wow yeah Job's thinks that changed the world. What a waste of developement dollars.

  29. Figures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It figures that the monopoly wielding company of Cupertino would want to break the law in other ways by introducing the ability to play illegal MP3s on their systems.

    1. Re:Figures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any more power to 'em! Glory be to Apple and its lack of coziness with RIAA - at least *some* consumer systems will still be able to rip MP3's in a year's time.

  30. Lame how? by TetOn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nomad: 5x5x1.5 at 14oz
    iPod: 2.4x4x.78 at 6.5oz

    I'll give up a gig for size and weight.

    1. Re:Lame how? by SteveM · · Score: 2

      Would you give up 15 gigs?

      Nomad makes a 20 gig version, same form factor. Same price ... as the iPod. See this this page.

      Steve M

    2. Re:Lame how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF do you expect? This is the site that routinely compares iBooks with massively heavier PC laptops to 'prove' Apple ain't all that. They list every spec on the machines but weight. Oh yea, and deride firewire as useless as it invariably is not on the PC (sony 4-pin excluded). Fucking drones.

    3. Re:Lame how? by Segfault+11 · · Score: 1

      Creative is putting a 1394 host in their new Audigy line of sound cards. I don't think it will be coincidental when the next Nomad is found sporting the same interface...

      --

      I registered my hate for Jon Katz

    4. Re:Lame how? by mttlg · · Score: 2
      Nomad: 5x5x1.5 at 14oz
      iPod: 2.4x4x.78 at 6.5oz
      I'll give up a gig for size and weight

      iPod 5GB: 4" x 2.4" x .78" at 6.5oz, $400
      Archos 6GB: 4.5" x 3.2" x 1.3" at 12oz, $250
      Archos 20GB: 4.5" x 3.2" x 1.3" at 12oz, $370

      Just how much is that size/weight difference worth to you?

    5. Re:Lame how? by cryptochrome · · Score: 2

      It's not some arbitrary matter of size and weight. It's the difference between "portable" and "pocket-sized". The iPod is pocket-sized, and that means a lot when it comes to carrying something around with you. For instance, I was never tempted to get a cellphone because they were always too big and the antenna stuck out, until the day I was borrowing a friend's Nokia 8260 and realized I had forgotten the smooth little thing was in my pocket. I tell ya, if I could have found an acceptable calling plan to use it with I would have gotten one myself. As for space, 5gb is more than enough for most people (around 100 hours of music). A larger hard drive than that has a pretty limited value for just music storage.

      --

      ---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?

    6. Re:Lame how? by JEI · · Score: 1

      I've used the 6 GB archos, and frankly, I hated it. I returned it to CompUSA. It broke after about 3 days, wouldn't play or talk to my computer. It was fortunate that it stoped working and didn't work in the store either, else I would not have been able to get my money back. I highly reccomend avoiding Archos jukeboxes, read any messageboard about them, people have many problems, with the units and getting a response from the company.

      --
      Justin Ingersoll
    7. Re:Lame how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh great, so we just have to wait until they release a product.

    8. Re:Lame how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget autonomy and recharge time...
      Nomad: 4 hours autonomy, 2 hours to charge
      iPod: 10 hours autonomy, 1 hour to charge

      I don't think that you can listen to 6.4 gig (or 5 for that matter) in 4 hours... It's all good to have 100G but if you can only listen to 2 at a time and wait 2 hours before being able to listen to rest (and repeat as needed)... then all the sudden 100G don't look that good! :)

    9. Re:Lame how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      can you say USB Universal Slow Bullshit. Only PC people who can accept a ZIP drive with a parallel connection could not understand the difference between firewire and USB. This is about speed.
      How many hours to fill your 20 gig through USB?
      Why on earth would you want to have a 20 gig USB drive.....

    10. Re:Lame how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only PC people who can accept a ZIP drive with a parallel connection could not understand the difference between firewire and USB.

      so fuckin true and so fuckin funny

    11. Re:Lame how? by NeMon'ess · · Score: 2
      it doesn't matter how many hours it takes to fill the 20gigs the first time. Deleting the files is quick becuase the HD does it. Moving the files from directory to directory within the player is fast because its on the drive already. How many people are going to put their music on the 20GB and then delete it? Not many. Most will just keep adding music in perhaps at most several hundred MegaByte amounts. As the owner of a USB based Iomega HipZip, I can tell you that USB is tolerable. It won't matter to me if I spend all night getting 6GB on a USB HD. I'll be asleep.

    12. Re:Lame how? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Archos players are good for 8 hours.

  31. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let my go get you a spoon so you can eat my ass.

  32. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by BluePenguin · · Score: 1
    (which by virtue of being firewire will be limited to Apple Mac owners),

    You can get fire wire controllers for PCs... I think it's beginning to crop up on mother boards as well. These Guys have fire wire goodies and they're just in the first 10 sites you get when you Google for "FireWire".

    :q!

    --
    If I can't see it in Lynx I'm not interested.
  33. Argh by nebby · · Score: 2

    And I was all excited they were going to release a OS X based wireless web pad. Instead we get yet another portable MP3 player .. "groundbreaking" I think was the term I heard them use to describe this new secret product the other day. How "groundbreaking" can something be when I can walk up the street and buy something with similiar (and in some cases, additional/better) features?

    Sigh. One day Apple will live up to the hype. OS X is cool, and their plastic molding team has skills, but the hardware just sucks.

    --
    --
    1. Re:Argh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get with the program man. PC hardware is cool because its cheap, not because it cool. I have a G4 and an athlon 1ghz. The athlon sounds like a fighter jet, doubles as a space heater and looks like a cruel joke when opened. The G4 is almost as fast, very quiet, produces no heat and looks Star Trek inside. The hardware is awesome, truly some of the best PC hardware out there. (firewire on board? gigabit ethernet built in? wireless antenna part of the case? a door in the side allows upgrades without a screwdriver?)

      The only thing wrong with the hardware is its a tiny bit more expensive and a tiny bit slower. But its some good stuff. Of course, most people know this. Apple hardware is great...but even I know that you can't beat cheap crap from Taiwan for price:performance.

      The fact is that pc hardware is like a suped up Camero...500hp with no elegance. Apple hardware is a stock M3. Not as much horsepower, but its a great looking, precision engineered performance car. Won't win on the quarter mile, but it much nicer to drive.

    2. Re:Argh by nebby · · Score: 2

      Umm.. once the case is sealed and the software is running, I don't give a rats ass about what it looks like or how hot it gets. Maybe the noise bothers you, but seriously, for computing, the noise is the least factor I consider when buying hardware. The stuff on the screen and how fast and reliably it comes up is all that matters to me once the issue of hardware is settled.

      All the features you meantion (ethernet, firewire) can be utilized (probably cheaper) on a PC box. The whole setup might not seem as "slick" to you, but again, all I care about is the fact that my screen is telling me the video is being transferred quickly from the camera to the hard drive over firewire. Integrated on a mobo, part of a card, or driven by a bald hamster named Fred, I couldn't care less. I don't know why anyone would, unless reliabilty was affected by the difference (ie, the hamster would soon die..) I don't think this is an issue in PC vs. Mac, however.

      The "quality drive" you speak of is a function of the OS and the applications, as well as the speedy performance of the hardware. It is not a function of how sleek the hardware looks, how quiet it is, or how cool it is on the inside of the case. At least, not to me, and I'd presume most people.

      How do you define "good stuff" when it comes to hardware other than how fast and reliably it performs? A CPU made out of dog snot that doubles the speed and reliability of the fastest chip on the market is better hardware.

      --
      --
    3. Re:Argh by geekd · · Score: 2

      a tiny bit more expensive and a tiny bit slower.

      Lets compare:

      Commodity PC - prices from computer Dept (right down the street from my office here in San Diego)

      $ 91 Athlon 1G
      $125 Abit K7A mobo
      $ 35 case w/ power supply
      $125 harddrive
      $150 CD-rw
      $ 15 floppy
      $ 49 abit Geforce 2 MX 200
      $ 25 soundblaster Live OEM
      $ 15 Generic Ethernet 10/100

      total:
      $630

      Apple cheapest G4 (from store.apple.com)

      733MHz PowerPC G4
      256K L2 cache
      128MB SDRAM memory
      40GB Ultra ATA drive
      CD-RW drive
      NVIDIA GeForce2 MX
      Gigabit Ethernet
      56K internal modem

      total:
      $1,699.00

      so, to you, "slightly" means 2.7 X the price.

      good luck with that. I'd rather buy a house someday.

    4. Re:Argh by geekd · · Score: 2

      Oop. I forgot RAM. add $30 for 256MB

    5. Re:Argh by arson1 · · Score: 1

      You forgot gigabit ethernet.

      I use my macs for content creation, the money I spend on software is usualy a lot more than the computer (even a mac), so a few hundred extra for a mac doesn't matter to me. I get a qualtiy machine (with a warranty and high quality parts) that has a proven track record in a production environment.

      My macs help me make money... a lot more than I pay for them. You see, to some people, and this is true of a lot of mac people, the computer is a tool that we use for an end product, not just something to play games and look at porn on.

      --


      --
      Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things.
    6. Re:Argh by geekd · · Score: 2

      Well, I use my boxes to make money, too. But the tools of my trade are Apache, Perl, Emacs and gcc.

      I'm not saying that Macs aint worth it in some situations. I was just refuting the above post that stated the price difference was, quote, "tiny"

    7. Re:Argh by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 2

      You certainly have a point, but specing a bunch of raw parts is not the way to make it.

      Assembly costs money in the real world, but so does *integration*. (Meaning if you have to hang around message boards to try to figure out why your SoundBlaster is incompatible with your VIA mobo, and then wait for and test drivers, that's a real cost, as is homebrewing cooling solutions. Those are real world examples.)

      However, if this is a hobby and not a business proposition, then Apple's not your vendor. Neither is Dell or IBM*.

      *and I have to say my Intellistation rocks :), but I'm glad I didn't pay the even-more-obnoxious-than-apple $4000 retail price for it. Chech alienware.com if you want to pay top dollar for some AMD stuff.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    8. Re:Argh by geekd · · Score: 2

      Aha. I see your point. When I buy a box, I buy the parts and put it together myself. I enjoy it. But for damn sure my company bought my workstation pre-assembled.

      point taken.

  34. PS by Minter92 · · Score: 1

    Still want one though :)

  35. Okay...so... by oranjdisc · · Score: 1

    ...what REALLY knocks me out about this is that it's essentially an insanely small, light, portable firewire hard drive. In case you didn't get this, any space not used by MP3s is mountable on the desktop. So I could transfer a bunch of design files to it, plug in my headphones, walk to a company I'm freelancing for, take off my headphones, plug it in, and transfer a couple of gigs worth of stuff. That sounds really, really cool to me. And the fact that it recharges via FireWire. USB is looking pretty lame right now.

    1. Re:Okay...so... by maxmichaels · · Score: 1

      wait till USB 2.0 becomes standard. Firewire will be looking lame

    2. Re:Okay...so... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      USB 2.0 is only slightly faster than FireWire 1.0 (480 Mbps vs. 400 Mbps), and, IIRC, does not have support for guaranteed-bandwidth transfers. It's not going to displace FireWire given all of those digital camcorders already on the market.

      FireWire 2.0 will run at 800 Mbps.

    3. Re:Okay...so... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wait till IEEE1394b becomes standard. USB 2.0 will be looking lame.

    4. Re:Okay...so... by sh00z · · Score: 1

      Wow. I'm impressed. USB 2.0 is 20% faster than Firewire. About the time the Wintel world starts supporting it, Macs will have 1394b, or FireFire at 3.2 Gbps.

    5. Re:Okay...so... by gig · · Score: 2

      You should be able to install a full Mac OS X system on an iPod and boot from it, just like any FireWire hard drive.

    6. Re:Okay...so... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've got this image of a hip designer-type, skating down the street on the way to his next freelance assignment. He's listening to music on his iPod (does the headphone cable reach his ears from the pocket of his combats ?)

      He gets there - parks his 'board - and sits down at a Mac. Plugs in the iPod to the FirwWire port of the Mac, and boots with the Alt key pressed down. He selects the iPod from the starup screen - the Mac then boots from the iPod and not only does he have access to all his applications, but it's running his own, preferred system setup.

      All this is possible

  36. Speed matters by JHromadka · · Score: 1
    Well I read the specs and think that the iPod looks pretty cool. While I was personally hoping for something I could better hook into our home stereo, being able to transfer files at firewire speeds is pretty sweet, not to mention that you can also use the iPod as a regular 5GB hard drive.

    And for those who poopoo the significance of firewire, speed matters. In the handheld world, I compared 2 MP3 modules whose biggest difference is the speed of file transfers. Our readers cared more about speed than the size of the modules themselves, and I think iPod users will too.

    --
    "The objective of securing the safety of Americans from crime and terror has been achieved." -- John Ashcroft
  37. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yea it does. The management on it is many times better then any other MP3 player out there. On top of it when it is in FireWire mode it will mount on the desktop of just about any FW enabled machine so that files can be transfered like it's a hard drive. I bet you could even transfer other files along with MP3's. Plus it's integration into iTunes it cool. I agree. It's not revolutionary but it's a nice step with a little bit of innovation. Says a lot about Apple that they are attempting a new product like this in a market like the one we have now.

  38. Lame? by John_Booty · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yeah, what about Lame? How else would you encode your mp3's?

    Seriously, this device is far from lame in my eyes. 5GB is plenty of storage. I have like 20GB of mp3's anyway, not like they're really going to fit on anything out there. And uh... I never really need more that 5GB at a time, ya know.

    The recharging via Firewire is cool too. The size is a plus... the Nomad is too big for me to carry around. And being able to use it as a portable harddrive is cool, too... burning CD's to ferry files back and forth is a pain. I'm gonna buy one if it works with other OS's.

    --

    OtakuBooty.com: Smart, funny, sexy nerds.
  39. Looks impressive by alexhmit01 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I like it. iTunes, for those that haven't used a Mac, is REALLY slick. It is a great UI and makes things really easy and intuitive. My fiancee recently got an iBook, and she loves how easy it is to rip CDs into her machine and burn CDs. Rather than swapping applications, she does it all within iTunes.

    Us geeks, who always acknowledged that Macs had a great UI (but we called them idiot machines) miss out on some of the impressive stuff that Apple does.

    The Macintosh way is to organize things by things the users do, not the underlying file system. This is a HUGE paradigm shift from the Unix (everything is a file) paradigm, and from the Microsoft (everything is about something).

    On a Windows box, you run a program to rip your CDs into MP3s. If you want to burn a CD, you use a program to convert them to WAVs, then you burn the WAVs to CDs.

    On a Mac, you pop an audio CD in to your computer and add the songs to your library. If you burn a CD, you pop a blank in and hit burn CD. Now with iTunes 2, you'll have the option to make MP3 CDs (which previously would be done as burning a data CD).

    In UNIX, you focus on the files. In a Mac, you focus on the activity. My fiancee doesn't have to think about file formats, she thinks about music. She barely touches her Windows PC or MIT's UNIX network anymore.

    This device extends the Mac functionality. Instead of firing up Creative Lab's software and pick and choose which songs you want on it. Want to listen on the computer? Fire up WinAmp. Want to rip CDs, fire up that application.

    With the iPod, it integrates into your system. You plug it in, it keeps your songs available. No need to mess with a clunky interface, the thumb-rolling thingy-ma-bopper looks like a clean way to use the device.

    The Nomad Jukebox 20G with the batteries is about a pound. My brother loves his, but it mostly sits in the car now. He used to take it to the gym, but it wastoo big and bulky.

    I realize that most Slashdotters are looking at the specs, but realize what this actually does. Its tiny, it'll fit in a jacket pocket (or pant pocket), its convenient.

    Take it jogging, to the gym, etc. Sit in the park, walk around.

    The Nomad Jukebox is too damned heavy.

    This device rocks, I expect them to sell plenty.

    I think that they should sell a Windows version of it with a Windows version of iTunes and a Firewire card, but that's just me.

    1. Re:Looks impressive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but the easiest interface for ripping CD's is not, unlike what one may think, that of the mac : It's KDE's !!

      Simple : clic on the CD icon of konqy and poof! you get a view with the songs in MP3, OGG or WAV format in their respective subdirs, with the names fetched from freedb. just copy what you want. everything is transparent to the user. It simply doesn't get easier than that.

      IMO this device is just a portable hard drive. Which is cool, btw, but it would have been infinity more useful if it had been a super-clever way to carry data around, and not an mp3 player, which in fact limits its potential (extreme) usefullness.

    2. Re:Looks impressive by Jenova_Six · · Score: 1

      On a Windows box, you run a program to rip your CDs into MP3s. If you want to burn a CD, you use a program to convert them to WAVs, then you burn the WAVs to CDs.

      Or you use MusicMatch Jukebox, which rips, does CDDB lookups, catalogs, organizes, plays, converts, and burns to data (mp3) or audio CD, all in one convenient interface. Or any one of at least a half dozen other Windows programs that can do what iTunes does.

      Hell, even Easy CD Creator 4 can burn an audio CD from mp3s (automatic conversion to .wav).

      iTunes is pretty, though. I'll give you that.

      Jenova_Six

    3. Re:Looks impressive by stripes · · Score: 2
      I'm sorry, but the easiest interface for ripping CD's is not, unlike what one may think, that of the mac : It's KDE's !!

      Simple : clic on the CD icon of konqy and poof! you get a view with the songs in MP3, OGG or WAV format in their respective subdirs, with the names fetched from freedb. just copy what you want. everything is transparent to the user. It simply doesn't get easier than that.

      I'm not so sure. Put an audio CD in my Mac and iTunes starts (unless it is already running) and rips the music into VBR MP3s, with the names from CDDB. Sounds a little simpler since I don't have to even look at a window let alone find the ones with the "right" format.

      Note that that isn't the default, the default *also* plays the music, and I think is CBR. I had to click in four places to change it (open prefs, both new prefs, and "Ok").

      It's too bad the Mac doesn't give me the option of doing OGGs though. I'm not sure if they really are better, but I like them better.

      IMO this device is just a portable hard drive. Which is cool, btw, but it would have been infinity more useful if it had been a super-clever way to carry data around, and not an mp3 player, which in fact limits its potential (extreme) usefullness.

      If you read the spec page you'll see it also acts as a firewire disk. However it costs about $100 more then LaCele's existing 5G FW drive, so it would be kinda over priced...

    4. Re:Looks impressive by Broken+Bottle · · Score: 1

      I'm a PC / Linux guy myself adn I've never been a supporter of Apple and their dumb (imo) decisions, but that was the best arguement for using Apple products I've ever read. Unfortunately for them, you probably don't work in Apple's marketing department. This means that instead of getting the word out on how pratical this product is when used inconjunction with Apple computers, they're going to slap pictures of Jim Henson and Ghandi ont he walls of their new stores and let the public come to the conclusion on their own.

      Maybe Apple's new retail outlets should merge with Sharper Image so they can sell all sorts of high priced, cool, but ultimately impractical stuff.

      Chris

      Chris

    5. Re:Looks impressive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that MusicMatch Jukebox has known problems with its MP3 encoder, and basically produces garbage.

    6. Re:Looks impressive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The nice thing about this is definetly the size and firewire. The integration in itunes sounds cool too. I really can't see jogging or doing anything very active with it though since it has a harddrive.. Maybe this gadget is designed better but on my nomad with a 4MB buffer you definetly can't jog!

    7. Re:Looks impressive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I think that they should sell a Windows version of it with a Windows version of iTunes and a Firewire card, but that's just me."

      I completely agree. But I also think they should port OSX and start cozying up to all of the OEMs. Lots of profit, but lots of risk -- they couldn't even support their own CD burners when OSX released, what makes you think they're going to try to support anything or body else, ever?

      Besides,
      "This device extends the Mac functionality."
      And Mac is all about selling Mac and nobody else.

    8. Re:Looks impressive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AAAAAAA!

      There is a difference between a sentence and a paragraph. Group each idea (usually at least three sentences) into paragraphs, not each sentence.

    9. Re:Looks impressive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has a 20MB buffer for skip protection and to prolong batter life (Hard Drive fills up the buffer and then shuts off)
      http://www.macworld.com/2001/10/23/ipod.html

    10. Re:Looks impressive by gig · · Score: 2

      I'm sorry, but the easiest interface for ripping CD's is not, unlike what one may think, that of the mac : It's KDE's !! Simple : clic on the CD icon of konqy and poof! you get a view with the songs in MP3, OGG or WAV format in their respective subdirs, with the names fetched from freedb. just copy what you want. everything is transparent to the user. It simply doesn't get easier than that.

      No ... you can take an iBook out of the box, put in a CD, iTunes launches and the music just appears in your iTunes music library, with titles and tags. That's it. It is so nicely presented that anyone can learn it just by poking at it for a moment.

      The music also appears as MP3 files in your Music folder, but you don't even need to know that. You don't have to know how to work with files and folders, even. There is nothing easier, especially when you consider that an iBook is ready to go out of the box, no software to install, and in many cases, the titles and tags are even coming over wireless Ethernet.

      It's actually kind of sweet when a geek thinks their Linux based solution is the easiest ... however, Apple is in a whole 'nother league. You say "look how easy it is to work with MP3 files" and Apple says "look how easy it is to listen to music." while bypassing any need to work with files at all, or know what MP3 means. The true beauty, though, is that if you want to hack, you can hack. The files are still MP3, still stored in folders, if you WANT to get in there. The iPod integrates with iTunes to make it easy, but is also a standard FireWire hard disk, so anyone can use it for anything. There will be a Linux solution for putting MP3 files on an iPod in no time. Maybe someone will boot Linux from it. Macs should certainly be able to boot from it.

    11. Re:Looks impressive by krswan · · Score: 1
      I think that they should sell a Windows version of it with a Windows version of iTunes and a Firewire card, but that's just me.


      Apple won't do much to make this pc friendly, and here is why. This cool $400 toy is going to convince people to buy Macs. That is one of it's purposes. Even if Apple doesn't make a penny on the sale of iPods, they will sell more computers. The Apple Store is running under the same idea... offer cool gadgets (digital video cameras, etc...) and classes that show people how easy they are to use with Macs, and people will buy more Macs.

      I'll wager that iPod is just the beginning... I would like to see an Apple device that uses 802.11 to connect my Mac to my AV system to share audio and video files as was rumored.
    12. Re:Looks impressive by arson1 · · Score: 1

      finally someone who "gets" it. gig- I couldn't agree with you more.

      --


      --
      Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things.
    13. Re:Looks impressive by greggman · · Score: 1
      On a Windows box, you run a program to rip your CDs into MP3s. If you want to burn a CD, you use a program to convert them to WAVs, then you burn the WAVs to CDs.

      for your information, Windows Media Player is ONE CLICK to rip, ONE CLICK to copy to any supported portable player, and ONE CLICK to burn a CD. Those features have been available for at least a year.

      My impression of Mac people are that most of them haven't looked at a Windows PC since before 1995 and hence are still comparing their Mac experiences to Windows 3.1 or worse DOS.

    14. Re:Looks impressive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah but that LaCie firewire drive does not play mp3s and have a headphone jack. Is that worth an extra $100...to buy a mp3 player? I think so.

  40. Well since its not the iWalk by evilned · · Score: 2

    Oh boy, another overpriced mp3 player, just what I need. I really dislike memory or hd based players as you can buy a burner and an mp3cd player for less than the cost of these devices I'll go buy a portable mp3 cd player and be done with it.
    But, since its not an iWalk, let the Apple buying palm rumors return.

    --

    "My head hurts, My feet stink, and I dont love Jesus." -Jimmy Buffett

    1. Re:Well since its not the iWalk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh boy, another overpriced [unix box], just what I need. I really dislike [IRIX] based [computers] as you can buy a [cheap-ass x86] and [a copy of RedHat] for less than the cost of [SGI] I'll go buy a [cheap-ass PC] and be done with it.

  41. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by (H)elix1 · · Score: 2

    Ah, not so.... My x86 boxes have SCSI and FireWire. Heck, check out the specs on this from a few days ago - note firewire - think drive for car, with the option to go personal...

  42. Not "innovative"? by Geoff · · Score: 5, Interesting
    A few comments have already come in saying that this product isn't "innovative" enough. You can get more-or-less the same thing elsewhere.

    But what does being highly innovative get Apple? Think Newton. It still runs circles around the Palm, but was a commercial failure. It was too innovative.

    But, how about if you took the idea of an MP3 player, made it look nice, gave it a Firewire port for fast transfers and easy recharging, and made the whole thing sync seamlessly with iTunes.

    Sounds like a pretty good idea to me. I imagine they'll sell quite a few. It's the right feature set at the right time.

    Geoff

    --

    Computers are useless. They can only give you answers. -- Pablo Picasso

    1. Re:Not "innovative"? by punchdrunk · · Score: 1
      But it certainly isn't "groundbreaking" in any real sense.

      Remember, due to the rumors people were expecting something more like an apple PDA/mp3 player.

      Besides these devices will soon be illegal anyway with the SSSCA (or its offspring), and cds won't be rippable either. And we all know that therefore there will be no mp3s. Just look at how the RIAA managed to kill file-sharing by taking out Napster ;)

    2. Re:Not "innovative"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Besides these devices will soon be illegal anyway with the SSSCA (or its offspring), and cds won't be rippable either.

      Oh, come on. Note that Apple has not included ANY DRM or other shit in iTunes or iPod. Apple is a strong advocate on your side here - don't assume that the Dark Side will win.

    3. Re:Not "innovative"? by sulli · · Score: 2, Funny
      Think Newton. It still runs circles around the Palm, but was a commercial failure

      Egg freckles?

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    4. Re:Not "innovative"? by dburr · · Score: 1

      Here's the thing about Newton. When Newton came out, electronic PDA's *DID NOT EXIST YET*. People were still using Rolodexes and Day-Runners. This was just TOO new fangled for them. Combied with crappy marketing, it was no wonder that Newton bit the dust.
      I have a feeling that if Newton came out after Palm did, that it would have run circles around Palm.

      Now, with the iPod, MP3 players ALREADY EXIST. And when people start seeing this baby pop up in stores, I betcha alot of people will look at their Nomad/eXpanium/Rio/d'Music/whatever and say "Why the hell did I buy THIS??!"

      --
      Yomigaeru Aiyan Geek!!!
    5. Re:Not "innovative"? by Keeper · · Score: 2

      Other problems the newton had:

      * Really poor battery life
      * WAY too big
      * Slow as hell
      * Crappy handwriting recognition (albeit, some alternatives popped up over time)

      But it was a fun device to play with, I'll give you that. Just wasn't very usefull.

    6. Re:Not "innovative"? by dburr · · Score: 1

      That's an interesting point, yes. Back when the Newton was invented, the tools to fully realize it weren't there yet. It would have been kind of like trying to build an Athlon with vacuum tubes.
      If Newton were to re-emerge now, in the era of Lithium-Polymer batteries, better handwriting recognition software, lower power CPU's, etc. I think it would do rather well. The Newton was truly a device before its time.

      --
      Yomigaeru Aiyan Geek!!!
    7. Re:Not "innovative"? by 5KVGhost · · Score: 1

      "Here's the thing about Newton. When Newton came out, electronic PDA's *DID NOT EXIST YET*."

      Not quite true. If memory serves, Sharp had been making their Wizard line of organizers for a while before the Newton was introduced. And I know Radio Shack and Casio also had fancier organizers that, looking back, definitely fit the PDA idea, within the limits of the technology available at the time. They weren't nearly as versatile as the Newton, but they also weren't as bulky or expensive, and they didn't rely on spotty handwriting recognition for input.

      The Newton was a great concept for its time (though the execution left something to be desired). Apple did not invent the PDA concept.

    8. Re:Not "innovative"? by hurst · · Score: 1

      Those problems you list were mostly fixed by the Newton 2000 series, released in like 1996!

      *poor battery life

      Well, yeah. Compared to a Palm. It lasted long enough for me, it's not like it died before the day was over.

      *WAY too big

      Yep, not pocket sized. But if you thought of it as a laptop replacement (which the 2000s pretty much were in 1996) they weren't too bad. But the large size was also a feature. It had a huge screen for a PDA, and you can write/draw all over the entire thing.

      *slow as Hell

      Not the 2000/2100s. 162MHz (this is 1996, remember?) StrongARM RISC processor. 8MB of RAM. Handwriting recognition happened instantly.

      *crappy handwriting recognition

      I have the worst doctor/childlike handwriting in the world. It was so bad that it almost flunked me out of high school (funny it didn't matter in college) The Newton 2000 and 2100 could read anything and everything I wrote. This was with the out of the box software, not 3rd party.

      Bringing this back on topic: I am somewhat disappointed that Apple didn't release the second coming of Newton. If they wanted to, they could make an insanely great PDA with the advances in LCD battery and processor technolgy. But I suppose the marketplace for that sort of thing doesn't look so great considering Palm's troubles.

    9. Re:Not "innovative"? by gig · · Score: 2

      > But it certainly isn't "groundbreaking" in any
      > real sense.

      > cds won't be rippable ... therefore ... no mp3s.

      I disagree with everything you said.

      First, it's the first MP3 player I've seen that passes the Grandma test (similar to the Turing test, and almost as hard to pass). Regular, everyday people are making MP3 collections out of CD's on their iBooks and similar, and now they can take 1000 songs with them in a shirt pocket only 10 minutes after unwrapping the iPod box.

      Second, this is a 128MB-sized player with 5GB, that can also transfer 5GB in the time it takes other players to transfer 128MB. The two disparate sections of the portable music player market are united.

      Third, it's a music player from Apple that doesn't have copy protection (read: actually more pleasant and useful than the CD's it's replacing). Apple is showing everyone how to do this right. The RIAA can take a long detour into fascism if they want to, but iPod will always stand for the fact that the right solution was there in 2001.

      Finally, who gives a fuck about the RIAA? Are they the only humans on the planet who can make music? NO. Are they the only humans on the planet that can lead us into a new age of digital music delivery? NO. If Madonna's music costs $9.95 and only comes in Microsoft format, then there will be a pseudo-Madonna with similar licks in cheap MP3 in no time. There is a market for digital music that works, and iPod is going to be one of the platforms for listening to that music in a human-centric way. It's positive motion that is much more important than RIAA press releases.

      Besides, Mac OS X is going to create a new revolution in content creation, and a lot of great artists who are laboring away in clubs right now, or in rehearsal studios, are going to make great records with just a stock Mac and one add-on, like the MOTU FireWire audio interface that's already out. As easy as it's been to make music on a Mac, it's only been easy compared to Windows. Mac OS X promises to open things up for many, many more musicians to forgoe corporate tie-ins and just make the music they want and make it available to anyone, without having to learn Computer Science first. The revolution is still on.

    10. Re:Not "innovative"? by gig · · Score: 2

      The problem with the Newton was that it was released way too soon. That's all. It got a bad name before they shook the bugs out. It was John Scully's thing, and he wanted to be first and he was first. The 2100 is a great device (I have one) but people are still surprised that it works right because they heard more about the first ones that didn't quite have it together.

      With iPod, they obviously were willing to wait for a number of other elements to catch up. This thing makes all the other music players look like Newtons. Others are either too big or have too small a capacity, and they are ALL too slow to transfer files.

    11. Re:Not "innovative"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too innovative? You mean like when I write "pick up beer" it knows that I really mean "f1gx vf hoon"?

    12. Re:Not "innovative"? by aussersterne · · Score: 2

      That's bull, you've bought the anti-hype about Newton. I don't know why people still feel the need to beat on Newton after all these years. It's like a religion.

      I'll tell you about my Newton 2100:

      * Rechargable battery life 12+ hours continuous on-time
      * 480x320 display, which you still can't get in any other PDA
      * 162 MHz StrongARM CPU (slow did you say?!)
      * Perfect handwriting recognition from Paragraph which is now used by Microsoft in Transcriber for PocketPC!

      It is the perfect PDA and I've owned PocketPC, HPC Pro, PalmOS and even full Windows Tablets (i.e. Fujitsu Stylistic). My Newton is small enough to fit in one hand, yet I:

      * Took all of my class notes on it in college(using the recognizer!)
      * Browse the Web and send e-mail in real time on our Ethernet network
      * Use VNC on Newton to access my Linux desktop

      The Newton was/is a great device that was killed by public ridicule from people who had never even tried to use one.

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    13. Re:Not "innovative"? by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      This does a lot of things my ipaq does - maybe a little smaller, but I really do use my ipaq for mp3 music, keeping appointments, calendar stuff and keeping contacts - as well as a lot of other stuff. I think the only downside is its lack of firewire support, and the disk drive size - I guess you can get a kingston 5 gig hdd now though that will work in it.

    14. Re:Not "innovative"? by Keeper · · Score: 2

      I'll tell you about the Newton *I* used. The first model Apple came out with.

      The batteries lasted 2 hours.

      The display was indeed large. Which made the whole unit something you couldn't carry around with you in your pocket -- a Newton is HUGE compared to a Palm.

      The CPU wasn't slow, the UNIT was slow. It was unresponsive, took way too long to interpret text written on the screen, and generally felt like Win98 running on a P90 with 16mb of ram.

      The handwriting recognition that came with the unit didn't work well enough to do anything serious with it. It was fun to play with, but was WRONG more than 50% of the time. After weeks of training. As I said, other software developed later eliminated this problem for all intensive purposes.

      Aside from the handwriting recognition, the UI on the unit was actually quite good. I liked it quite a bit.

      Sound is something I need to give apple props on as well. It actually played real sound and not some cheap beeps.

      The Netwon was a neat toy, but it most definately would NOT be usable as a PDA in my every day life in the form I saw it in. Obviously my needs arn't necessarily the same as yours, and I'm glad you make good use of yours. I, however, can't make good use of one.

    15. Re:Not "innovative"? by pacc · · Score: 0
      But what does being highly innovative get Apple? Think Newton. It still runs circles around the Palm, but was a commercial failure. It was too innovative.

      Earth still runs circles around the sun, but not from a center of gravity point of view.
      From this standpoint I guess the iPod is pretty good compared to the other Higly Innovative jukeboxes.



  43. umm by crayz · · Score: 1

    You guys were all singing the praises of the Nomad Jukebox when it debuted at $700...

    1. Re:umm by jchristopher · · Score: 1
      You guys were all singing the praises of the Nomad Jukebox when it debuted at $700...

      Yes, two years ago.

    2. Re:umm by crayz · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and this is significantly better than the Jukebox.

  44. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by schwatoo · · Score: 1

    No. Definately not lame. But very very overpriced. Take it down to $300 and it would be much more reasonable. Gotta love Cmdr Taco and those one liners.

    --
    I have trouble with passwords among other things.
  45. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by rekoil · · Score: 1

    Firewire is not an Apple-only technology - it's the same thing as Sony's iLink and IEE1394 (the "official" name of the protocol). However, it's unlikely that Apple will write software for other platforms to support it, and unknown whether or not the iPod communications protocol can be reverse-engineered (possible DMCA issues?) so that third-party commercial and/or open source software will be compatible.

  46. Maximum operating altitude: 10,000 feet (3000 m) ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, tech specs give a max altitude of 10,000.
    Have they really tested this???
    So, I can't listen to my music when the plane will go over 10,000 feet? :)

    Greg

  47. cool but much too expensive by Dr.+Awktagon · · Score: 2

    This is exactly this sort of MP3 player I'd like to buy, decent space, tiny size, light, simple interface and doubles as a hard drive.

    Unfortunately $400 is about twice as much as I'd want to pay for something the size of a pack of cards. Too bad, it's an otherwise well-designed product.

    Waiting for iPod 2.......

    1. Re:cool but much too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, er, Apple should double the physical size of the thing and you'd buy it for $400?

    2. Re:cool but much too expensive by FFFish · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Unfortunately $400 is about twice as much as I'd want to pay for something the size of a pack of cards."

      Damn straight! For four hundred smackaroos, I expect something at least as big and heavy as a brick!

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    3. Re:cool but much too expensive by meza · · Score: 1

      Congatulations your lucky day. For only $589 I can offer you a device not only as big as a brick but as big as two bricks and one iPod. It looks vary much like Apples iPod glued in between two red bricks but it is acctually the superPod_iBricks_eGlueXP and has new functions such as beeing thrown on bad peoples toes.

    4. Re:cool but much too expensive by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      Agreed. For that price I can get a transister radio and a vacation in Hawaii.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    5. Re:cool but much too expensive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I point at thee!!!!

  48. Umm...ok? by Hassman · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    yea, transfering a whole CD in 10 seconds is lame...idiot.

    --
    -Mark
    Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
    1. Re:Umm...ok? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, ur an idiot.

      Stop picking on everyone / everything and try to come up with something better then those "bad things" as you \all/ say things are.
      Until you come up with something useful in life other then "idiot"...shut up.

      I thought geeks were suppose to be innovative, intelligent and useful people.

      You all proved wrong to a new mankind.

      And btw, it's not because you can hack into a system, know about bits and bytes and play with your dick that you are an "Intelligent" being.

      As I said, try to do something useful before criticizing anyone that come with a "nice" product....but not as nice as you would do, of course!

  49. oh no not again by jchristopher · · Score: 5, Interesting
    First, let me preface this by saying, "this is not another Apple is going under" post. Apple has plenty of cash, I think they have some great products, and they aren't going out of business.

    That said, I am both a shareholder and consumer of Apple products. When I read the announcement and specs I went straight to the Apple Store. At $199-$250, I would have bought two, immediately. Instead, at $399, I am buying zero, and expect that many other people will feel the same way.

    I am very sad that Apple seems to be repeating the same mistake they made with the Cube - great, nifty product that anyone would love to own, except that it's burdened by an unbelievably poor price/performance ratio.

    A laptop hard drive of that size in the quantity Apple buys is about $30 these days. I am more than willing to pay a premium for Apple designed hardware and software. This thing will undoubtedly have a great interface. But that is not worth $200 extra (double the price!).

    I know Apple prices it's products to maximize profit. But I wish they'd realize they could make the same amount of money, and have more marketshare, if they'd sell 3 times as many at half the cost instead.

    All I can say is, as an Apple "fan", I'm sad.

    1. Re:oh no not again by adavidw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A laptop hard drive of that size in the quantity Apple buys is about $30 these days.

      Actually, these aren't your regular laptop hard drives. These are 1.8 inch, considerably more expensive. (Which of course leads to the discussion of whether apple would have sold more big $250 units or small $400 units)

      -Aaron

    2. Re:oh no not again by MrBogus · · Score: 2

      As an Apple stockholder, you should appreciate this as a 'press release' product. Apple hasn't gotten anything substantially new out for a while (Sliver G4s were a big yawn even for the fanbase), and this keeps them in the business pages.

      Maybe it will serve to kickstart the firewire device market. Couldn't hurt Apple's position in the long run. And as an Apple Store upsell item, or just free advertising when people get on the bus with one on their belt, it seems to serve it's purpose.

      This thing seems to be aimed at the style-uber-alles G4 Cube market, where they'be already been burnt bad, so I doubt they are planning to make any real money off it. But how much real money is any computer company going to make off an MP3 player? Not much.

      --

      When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    3. Re:oh no not again by Gibecrake · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually what you are sad about is that Apple is apparently forging new road. That new road this time is a completely new hardware paradigm. That 5gb Hard Drive they crammed in there is not the run of the mill Maxtor crap you can get at staples for a dollar. This is a hard drive smaller than the ones in the smallest portables to date. This is state of the art, not status quo packed into a big shiny box.

      PC manufacturers typically have less expensive products because they buy what is common (parts-wise) and make a sucky product. Apple chose to buy the best, in order to make the best.

      So now instead of the 500 dollars you were going to spend on two (one for each ear maybe) you will have to settle for one. Oh that's right, you can only buy two of them or nothing, I guess Johnny get none...So sad.

    4. Re:oh no not again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Always laughable, yet somewhat sad, to see a true believer justify his own rape (again) by Apple.

    5. Re:oh no not again by StaticLimit · · Score: 2

      Maybe it will serve to kickstart the firewire device market. ... or just free advertising

      IANABM (not a business major?)... but when you want to kickstart a technology market or get your logo out there on people's bodies, you sell at a loss. You can't break into a market or build up a market selling luxury goods. If Apple wanted a bunch of cool firewire devices to push firewire, this would cost $250.

      Now sure, I'll stop by the Apple site and check it out, but I stop by there every couple weeks anyway to marvel at the pretty things they sell (or download QuickTime again because I never install it when I rebuild my machine and I need to watch that Lord of the Rings trailer). But Apple doesn't make money from banner ads. They need to be happy with their niche market, or they need to compete on price, lose money, and drive out the competition. They've been in this niche for years, they make money there, and I think that's where they plan to stay.

      - StaticLimit

    6. Re:oh no not again by jgilbert · · Score: 3, Informative


      At $199-$250, I would have bought two, immediately. Instead, at $399, I am buying zero, and expect that many other people will feel the same way.


      At first I thought it should be more in the $300 range. However, after looking at the link someone supplied for a device from smartdisk (that most likely uses the same harddrive), I have to realize I was wrong. The smartdisk device is a 5GB firewire harddrive. That's all and it's the exact same price. Suddenly, it looks like a good deal!

      http://www.smartdisk.com (It's the firefly)

      jason

    7. Re:oh no not again by daviddennis · · Score: 2

      It's not a question of sales. It's a question of cool. There was never any question as to which route Steve would take in designing his baby.

      You have to realize that Steve, the man behind the thing, is the same fellow who thought we'd all buy $3,999 Cinema Displays because they were cool. And guess what? Plenty of us did, but it was probably a mistake for the Cube to only come into its designer own with one.

      It will be interesting to see how many do buy this thing. I'm looking forward to checking it out at the Apple Store in Glendale, but I suspect I'll save my pennies for one of the ultra-fast G5s said to come out early next year. A better use of my money, cool factor or no.

      D

    8. Re:oh no not again by MrBogus · · Score: 2

      If I worked at Apple, I would make sure that there was an early adopter penalty on all 'style' products, because they have a significant number of customers that will have to buy this thing RIGHT NOW.

      Then, once you've fleeced that crowd, sell it at cost/loss to move some Macs.

      --

      When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    9. Re:oh no not again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm. No.

      This drive isn't superior to your run of the mill maxtor, its simply smaller. Guess what... It's slower than your run of the mill maxtor.

      Does smaller make state of the art? No. Has this drive proven to be more reliable or durable than other drives? Nope.

      Ooooh firewire... Great, nifty, whoohoo. USB 2.0 is cheaper and faster. USB 2.0 drives are coming in MUCH cheaper than firewire, and have a higher transfer rate. And, get this, are backwards compatable so they work with about 90% of the computers on desktops out there.

      Don't give me the BS about Apple having superior hardware, they don't. They use what they like, and what they try to market as being better.

      I'll spend my money on something worth it, instead of feeding Apple.

    10. Re:oh no not again by spagthorpe · · Score: 1

      I think you need to look at some competition in the market place for the this unit, and come back to reality. How much do to see other multi-gig drive MP3 players going for? How many of them are this portable? I have no idea what the street price is going to be for one of these, but I plan to be in line to buy one. It is a bargain.

      --

      WWJD -- What Would Jimi Do?
      (Smash amp, burn guitar, take home the groupies)

    11. Re:oh no not again by guuyuk · · Score: 1
      The hard drive is probably a Fuji/Toshiba 5GB 1.8 inch drive, which retails for about $399 in a Type II PC Card package (see link shamelessly stolen from ibookzone.com - http://www.toshiba.com/taecdpd/products/features/M K5002mpl-Over.shtml
      (no spaces in the URL, btw)


      Hopefully the iPod will come down in price when the drive gets cheaper/larger capacity.

      --
      We're sorry, the phone number you have reached is imaginary. Please rotate your phone 90 degrees and try your call again
    12. Re:oh no not again by Kanasta · · Score: 2

      A firm maximises its profit by producing where Marginal Cost MC=Marginal Revenue MR. At any higher price, they'd sell fewer units and make less profit from the remaining quantity sold. At any lower price, they would sell more units but not with increasing MC they would end up with less profit again.

      So to change the price at the profit maximising price, you would have to move MC or MR.

      We will assume that Apple is a monopoly for small mp3 players for Macs. That gives us MR=Demand D. Make D steeper and MC will =MR at a lower price. That means make fewer people want to buy the iPod.

      What about MC? Well, if you can source components or factory space for Apple at lower than their current cost, maybe you'll have some luck. More likely that won't happen.

      Of course, the other way to look at it is that the market is for all mp3 players, not just ones that sync with iTunes. In an oligopolistic market we can expect competition to eventually change each firm's MR curves and bring prices down.

    13. Re:oh no not again by gig · · Score: 2

      If you want a $250 portable music player with five or six glaring compromises, then you can choose from a wide range of models and manufacturers. Apple even sells six models at the Apple Store. If you want a $399 model with no compromises, then you buy Apple's music player. Duh.

      Don't just compare it to music players, though, compare it also to FireWire hard drives. If you carry both of these, then you are wetting your pants over an iPod.

    14. Re:oh no not again by I.+M.+Bur · · Score: 1

      But I wish they'd realize they could make the same amount of money, and have more marketshare, if they'd sell 3 times as many at half the cost instead.

      Ehmm... They will make 1.5x the money with these figures...

      But I agree that the price is "a bit" too high. I would really like to see a pack with this thingie, a PCI/PCMCIA FireWire card and iTunes for let's say $250...

  50. Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by corky6921 · · Score: 3

    I submitted this as an article as well, but I must have been slightly behind the other guy.

    I have two major problems with this. First of all, yeah, it's tiny (the length of a credit card and less than an inch thick.) However, what happens when it gets dropped on the floor? For now, hard-drive based players are bulky for a reason -- tiny laptop drives are FRAGILE and need to be protected! The spindles won't hold up to much abuse, and MP3 players are subjected to a large amount of abuses on a daily basis, from being shoved in a backpack to being put in a pocket while the person is running. How well does the Apple player stack up?

    Secondly, the Apple player is competing with many others on the market. Steve Jobs makes it sound like Apple is the only player in the arena, but in reality, there are several. Sure, Apple is the only one doing Firewire, and Firewire offers a faster transfer rate. But that's all for moot if my player pukes once I throw it in my bag.

    If you're interested in finding a really tiny player, check out the Flash-memory based ones. Flash memory is getting a lot cheaper. MyDivaPlayer.com is offering a 128MB player that also accepts Flash memory for $135 after discount. Plus, these things are about half the size of the iPod. Flash memory players can be neat as well -- infinitely expandable storage, rewriteablity, and most players automatically plug-n-play as removable drives on Windows systems. Plus, you can do voice recording and cart around lots of other files as well, so the players double as mini Zip disks. :) Sure, hard-drive based players do this as well, and they have a much higher storage capacity -- but they are much more bulky and require careful care and feeding.

    1. Re:Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      128mb for 135 dollars. This does not act as any kind of portable hard drive, has a slower upload time and has 1/25th the ammount of storage. Your player is not nearly as great of a deal as you think.

      To me, just the hard drive aspect makes it a promising idea...

    2. Re:Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by schwatoo · · Score: 1

      It has 20 minutes of skip protection. Even if you do drop it and your HD does get scratched you've still got a fully working MP3 player... Um... For the next 20 minutes anyway.

      --
      I have trouble with passwords among other things.
    3. Re:Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by Score+Whore · · Score: 1

      Actually tiny laptop harddrives are NOT fragile. They are more robust than their desktop counter parts. Look up the specs sometime.

    4. Re:Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by mcg1969 · · Score: 1
      For now, hard-drive based players are bulky for a reason -- tiny laptop drives are FRAGILE and need to be protected!

      Umm, no. The reason hard-drive-based players are bulky is that the hard drives and the accompanying electronics are bulky. Period. The players I have seen (including the PJBox, which I own) have no special shock protection whatsoever. If you drop one of these things on the floor, that hard drive is going to suffer.

      But all is not grim. Small hard drives are built for mobile use, and consequently are more rugged (and more expensive). The drive head control systems are tuned to favor protecting the platters. That's not to say that they can take the same abuse that a solid-state system could; they can't. But they do take more abuse than a desktop hard drive, particularly when the drive is not spinning and the heads are parked.

      In addition, hard-drive-based players do not keep the drive spinning continuously, but rather buffer several minutes of music in memory, keeping the drive off in between. This not only reduces the chance of a head crash but greatly increases the battery life of the unit as well.

      So with just a bit more care than your average solid-state player, you can carry enough tunes to keep a cross-country road trip from getting to monotonous. I'd say that's a good deal.

    5. Re:Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by stripes · · Score: 2
      For now, hard-drive based players are bulky for a reason -- tiny laptop drives are FRAGILE and need to be protected! The spindles won't hold up to much abuse

      Smaller drives tend to be more durable then larger ones. Less area to flex I guess. Laptops are frequently shoved in a backpack (they normally don't run inside a backpack for long though). IBM's microdrives are used in digital cameras, and take as much shock as this thing is likely too. In fact one of them survived when it's owner didn't (one photog who died when the 2nd WTC building collapsed had 3 cameras on him, both film cameras popped their backs and lost the film, the microdrive in his EOS-D30 made it, and so did the 30 or so exposed 35mm film cans; alas he did not)

      As for the rest of it, yeah, Apple is competing with others, and the iPod is not a killer product. It has some interesting features, but lacks some others.

    6. Re:Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It passes a 24" drop test to concrete, which is figuring that you're holding it in your hand at your side and it slips out.

    7. Re:Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
      what happens when it gets dropped on the floor?

      Well, it would probably break, just as if you were to drop a $2700 laptop onto the floor, or a $5000 digital camera, or a PDA, cellphone...

      I think the solution is obvious. Don't drop it.
      I've been handeling (like alot of people) fragile electronics for ages. I have yet to drop a thing.

      Anyway. I usaly have my MP3 player snug in my pocket, Not held out in front of me, between my thumb and index finger.
      Suddern though: Hmmm... can anyone see a belt clip on this iPod thing?

    8. Re:Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by robvasquez · · Score: 0

      Back in 96 or 97 I dropped my brand new, $140 Sony Walkman CD player on the floor, straight off the Kitchen table.

      Let's just say it took me a little while to put back together. At least I got to learn how a CD player works.

      It did work, but it was broken beyond being able to use it normally. I superglued it back together and took it back to Target and got a new one.

      qurob@!!SPAM!!HotMail.com

    9. Re:Yeah, but can I drop it on the floor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I heard the hard drive used can withstand 1000G when not spinning, 200G when spinning.

  51. Not entirely lame by imadork · · Score: 2
    The clueless can use it in permanent "hotsync" mode, and have it automatically synchronize your MP3's between your iPod and your computer. Combine that with the charging-through-firewire and the relative simplicity of iTunes, and you have a product that even the village idiot can enjoy. (at least, the Village Idiot with a Mac.)

    For the clueful, it can be used as a 5GB firewire hard disk if you need it to. This can come in very handy -- my wife already wants one, and this is one of the reasons.

    However, there are two critical problems I see with it. The first, of course, is the price. Expect this story to be the sequel to the Cube, which everyone thought was cool, and too expensive to actually buy.

    Second, expect the RIAA (and Apple Records) to SUE THE PANTS off of Apple! (And hear the Village idiot cry when his new, un-rippable CD's won't work on his new iPod).

    1. Re:Not entirely lame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Second, expect the RIAA (and Apple Records) to SUE THE PANTS off of Apple!

      Why? There are lots of these things out there. The industry lost to Creative years ago.

    2. Re:Not entirely lame by imadork · · Score: 2
      Second, expect the RIAA (and Apple Records) to SUE THE PANTS off of Apple!

      Why? There are lots of these things out there. The industry lost to Creative years ago.

      Because Apple Records sued Apple Computer over trademark infringement, and settled when Apple Computer said it was in the Computer business, and would never go into the Music business!

      The sucess of this product relies on CD's ripped through iTunes, and the existence of this product means that Apple will have to fight any legal resrctions on ripping CDs that the RIAA may try to buy in congress. Therefore, I predict the RIAA will sue, to avoid having a big company lobby against them in congress, and offering a "legitimate" view (i.e. non-Napsterized) of how their bought-and-paid-for laws will restrict technology.

      After all, if someone can "hotsync" their 5GB of MP3's between their home computer and their work computer, that could be making an illegal copy, and the RIAA won't stand for that. They'll use any legal means necessary, including resurrecting the long-dead trademark dispute. (I'm sure that Apple Records is a member of the RIAA).

    3. Re:Not entirely lame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Copyright law states that you can have one copy of any software or music that you own, as long as it's for personal use only. It does not state what form that backup has to be in.

      The RIAA is based on an outdated business model, and will have to change to survive in the modern age. Any orginization that bitches about the amount of money they are losing while trying to distract people from the FACT that the only place they are losing money is on casset singles is not worth listening to.

      As a musician I belive the RIAA needs to grow up and evolve to survive in the modern business age.

      Th RIAA was crying the same tune back in the 80's when they said "home taping is killing record industry profits." and they survived.
      I'm sure they will survive this new apocalype of the entertainment industry.

      Personally, I back up every thing. I back up all my cd's to MP3 at a high sampling rate. 10 to 17 albums per cd is about what I can store in mp3 format. I back up all my software, This way when I am traveling if and when someone steals my software and or music (don't laugh it's happened) I still have the orginals.

      I don't lose money on having to buy another copy of the OS, nor do I have to replace that out of print CD I love so much.

      Screw the RIAA, & congrats to Apple for having the balls to release a product with ease of use and non restricted file storage as part of deal.

    4. Re:Not entirely lame by stripes · · Score: 2
      Because Apple Records sued Apple Computer over trademark infringement, and settled when Apple Computer said it was in the Computer business, and would never go into the Music business!

      That was settled a long time ago. Either when Apple came out with the IIgs, or a bit later when the made CD-ROMs standard on their "new" machines. They settled out of court with Apple records, payed a ton of money ($20mil?), and can now do whatever musical crap they want.

      The sucess of this product relies on CD's ripped through iTunes, and the existence of this product means that Apple will have to fight any legal resrctions on ripping CDs that the RIAA may try to buy in congress. Therefore, I predict the RIAA will sue, to avoid having a big company lobby against them in congress, and offering a "legitimate" view (i.e. non-Napsterized) of how their bought-and-paid-for laws will restrict technology.

      Could be, but Apple isn't special there. Other people make MP3 players and the like. Plus Apple is well liked in the music world, their laptops are very popular for running MIDI shows and the like, lots of artists own them. I'm not sure the RIAA wants to make Apple their next target.

      After all, if someone can "hotsync" their 5GB of MP3's between their home computer and their work computer, that could be making an illegal copy, and the RIAA won't stand for that.

      Technically you can't, it will only hotsync with one host, hotsync only sends MP3's to the iPod, and erases ones the iPod has and the host doesn't. Of corse you can run it in the non-auto mode and drag songs to/from it, or operate it like a normal FireWire drive. Once you do that though it is just a disk drive that happens to also play music. It doesn't violate any copyright law that a normal FW drive doesn't...

    5. Re:Not entirely lame by Refrag · · Score: 2

      Rio won their lawsuit, but decided to bend over, grab their ankles and implement SDMI anyway. I don't think Apple has anything to worry about with that precedent set.

      --
      I have a website. It's about Macs.
  52. breakthrough? try hango. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    umm.. i've been using my personal jukebox for > 1 year.

    It's got a 40 gig HD. battery lasts 10 hours. Software is open-source.

    How is this apple thing a breakthrough? Firewire is nice and all, but...

    1. Re:breakthrough? try hango. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How is this apple thing a breakthrough?

      From the site you pointed to:

      I have about 900 mp3 files on my hardrive - It took me barely 4 hours to copy them all down onto the PJB

      Hmm, 4 hours to copy versus 10 minutes, seems we already have a winner in "breakthrough" and without having to look at the site for more than 15 seconds.

    2. Re:breakthrough? try hango. by G4-Ben · · Score: 1
      This from the web site link you provided:


      Strengths:
      -- They are not kidding when they say 100 CD's. I have about 900 mp3 files on my hardrive - It took me barely 4 hours to copy them all down onto the PJB. The sound quality is good - and with the size of the hard drive encoding above 128kpbs is now a valid alternative. Structuring and arranging my MP3 files on the hard drive is simple and intuitive



      I think it's hard to say firewire is just nice when it comes to the time needed to upload files.



      -Ben
  53. Think before you gripe.... by mblase · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not only is this a lackluster MP3 unit

    Considering that it's got far more memory than your average 128MB MP3 portable, and that it's clearly smaller and more portable than a Nomad, I think this is a hasty judgement.

    which by virtue of being firewire will be limited to Apple Mac owners

    PCs have access to FireWire, as does Linux. The direct connection to iTunes is the only Mac-only feature that I can see; I should hope Apple will be smart enough to enable compatability with PCs, or if not, develop a Windows version of iTunes to do the same job.

    but it has virtually no UI wizardry that might define it as an Apple product.

    It has a six-line LCD display, backlit, a simple four-button interface, and a circular scroll wheel to navigate your songs (which can organize by CD, artist, or your own custom playlists). You call that "virtually no UI"?

    Methinks some people's "first post" ambitions are getting in the way of a decent review of the features.

    1. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 3, Insightful

      $399 for 5gb? Screw that. I'd rather pay $100 for a Rio Volt. 700mb of songs per CD with an unlimited number of CDs, provided you change them.

      Yeah, this should compete favorably with the solid state units, but they've already lost to the CD-MP3 units, IMO.

    2. Re:Think before you gripe.... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      No, that's virtually no UI alright.

      The LCD display is too small, it remains to be seen what the power consumption or usability of the backlight is, the four buttons (five, actually, I suspect) are likely insufficient, and probably rather modal. I dare not imagine how badly they've ginnied up the volume control. Apple's support for ID3 is woefully insufficient on iTunes and on iPod. (so is everyone else's, more's the pity)

      I will grant them a half-point on the auditory feedback on the wheel (but no tactile feedback! for shame) and a half-point for displaying multiple languages simultaneously (but no plug ins for future language expansion? tsk tsk)

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    3. Re:Think before you gripe.... by TotallyUseless · · Score: 2

      i hope you have large pockets, and walk really slowly if you plan on listening to your mp3 cd player while walking around or moving in general. Those cd players are great, if they aren't being moved around much.... Whereas the iPod fits in a shirt pocket, doesnt weigh much at all, and wont skip regardless of how much it gets jostled. Not to mention holding several times the amount of data you can put on a cd, without having to lug a cd case around.

      --

      Time for some tasty Shiner Bock!
    4. Re:Think before you gripe.... by SethJohnson · · Score: 1


      As for the firewire stuff, I think the technology abstracts the device to be immediately compatible with PCs and linux boxes that can handle normal firewire communication.

      My intuition tells me that firewire is simply mounting the device as a hard drive and you'll be able to drag-n-drop files between it and your Mac. iTunes probably can get involved for organizational needs, transferring files, and will probably write simple text file playlists that are placed on the hard drive in a format expected by the iPod. There's absolutely no reason some highschool kid can't figure out a way to write a similar utility for those Mac-alternative platforms that will write these playlists. Since Apple didn't manufacture the drive, it's likely got some firewire drivers available for PCs.
    5. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Josuah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The direct connection to iTunes is the only Mac-only feature that I can see; I should hope Apple will be smart enough to enable compatability with PCs, or if not, develop a Windows version of iTunes to do the same job. Have you seen the new Windows XP commercials? It looks like Microsoft is bundling something like iTunes (and also something like iMovie, gee, who woulda thunk) with it's latest OS. So, I think it would be up to Microsoft to support firewire MP3 players in its new software. Plus, I don't think Apple would or should port iTunes to Windows. The fact is, iTunes is part of the Mac OS experience Apple is promoting in an attempt to show that using a Mac is faster, simpler, more productive, and more powerful. Porting iTunes to Windows would make the Mac OS lose one of its selling points and would no doubt provide a worse experience of the software than a user would have using it on a Mac. Providing a port that results in a worse user experience is not something that Apple would ever do.

    6. Re:Think before you gripe.... by LoudMusic · · Score: 2, Insightful
      but it has virtually no UI wizardry that might define it as an Apple product.


      With your reply ...


      It has a six-line LCD display, backlit, a simple four-button interface, and a circular scroll wheel to navigate your songs (which can organize by CD, artist, or your own custom playlists). You call that "virtually no UI"?


      Hey, how about you read what you're responding to first. They clearly stated "define it as an Apple product". He didn't say the UI sucked, he said it didn't look like Apple. That's very true, but I don't see the relevance ... (: Maybe they're trying to say that Apple bought this product, not created it. I've got no problem with that. They essentially bought iTunes as well, used to be SoundJam. Tada! Instant product.

      ~LoudMusic

      --
      No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    7. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I'd rather get this than an mp3-CD player (assuming cost wasn't an issue). It's a lot smaller, and I think burning CDs whenever you add to your collection is a pain. Plugging it in and letting it automatically download everything (assuming you have less that 5GB of mp3s. I do, so its not a problem for me) would be much simpler.

    8. Re:Think before you gripe.... by wembley+fraggle · · Score: 1

      I'll agree that 400 bux is pretty steep. But CD-MP3 units aren't dynamic at all. For example, you can't easily swap in/out just a few songs to make your playlist much better. Also, the playlist features for the iPod seem to be much more useful than most CD-MP3 units. Plus which, look at the size! CD-MP3 systems can't get smaller than a CD-ROM, unless you go with the 50Mb solution you get from mini-CD format, which is a whole lot smaller.

    9. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Were you expecting a 10" color display? It's just for displaying song titles. A 2" 160x128 screen should be plenty IMHO. Heck, 2" is at least as big as any other similarly sized mp3 player.

      While 4 buttons might be insufficient for some people (like you), it should be enough for most. Your argument also applies to just about every portable mp3 player available too. Most of them don't have more than 4 or 5 buttons and a volume dial, and they've been selling just fine, even though most of them have less storage space and smaller screens.

      Hopefully Apple just used a normal volume dial and not some software controlled one like some cd and minidisk players use. Those do suck, and whoever invented them should be punished somehow.

      I agree with you about the tactile feedback. It should be there.

      But I don't think the non-expandable languages will be much of a problem, unless it doesn't ship with English. I'm sure there's a few people who need the ability to add Esperanto or Klingon to their mp3 player, but they're unfortunately in the minority.

    10. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 2

      I realize that there are drawbacks to a CD-MP3 player. It's a tradeoff, like any purchase. Nothing's perfect. However, for the price, I can ignore those drawbacks because I don't feel a smaller size and better skip protection are worth the extra $300.

      As for the point about space.. One CD will last you a long car trip, three CDs will hold most people's entire collection. (One CD in the player, the other two in a dual-CD jewel case.) You are seriously overstating the limiting factor of "only" 700mb of songs at a time.

    11. Re:Think before you gripe.... by copec · · Score: 0

      I was thinking the exact same thing. When you plug it in it will just show up as another drive attatched to your system.

      BTW, a firewire card now is all of $20-$30 dollars. The cables cost more then the cards!

      I bought a 4pin to 6pin firewire cable for my sony notebook, and it costs $60.

    12. Re:Think before you gripe.... by maniac11 · · Score: 1

      I dare not imagine how badly they've ginnied up the volume control.
      The volume control is achieved via the circular knob in the middle: just like your home stereo. The UI is quite elegant as seen in this video (Quicktime 5 only).

      --
      Guvegrra?
    13. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tactile Feedback:
      When turning the scroll whell you can feel each individual clicking as it turns. True there are no "bumps" or anything on the wheel but you do get feedback when turning it.

    14. Re:Think before you gripe.... by IronChef · · Score: 2


      Why could you possibly care about language support plug-ins? Either you area Man of the World, Concerned about Your Fellow Humans, or, I suspect, you just want to take shots at Apple where you can.

      If I am mistaken and you are shopping for an MP3 player for your grandmother who speaks Farsi, apologies in advance. But that seems like an unlikely scenario.

    15. Re:Think before you gripe.... by dhovis · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth you:
      PCs have access to FireWire, as does Linux. The direct connection to iTunes is the only Mac-only feature that I can see; I should hope Apple will be smart enough to enable compatability with PCs, or if not, develop a Windows version of iTunes to do the same job.

      Given that this thing is essentially just a firewire hard disk with an integrated MP3 player, I think that it would be easy to use with any other platform.

      My experience with iTunes tells me that iTunes stores music in nested folders of the form Artist:Album:Song.mp3. I supect that this thing just has a "Music" folder, with the MP3s stored this way. It probably has some new playlist format, but that can probably be reverse engineered (worst case scenario) if you want to be able to use that feature.

      The only potential problem is that the HD is probably formatted in HFS+ format, so the system you are using would have to be able to read that.

      --

      --
      The internet is the greatest source of biased information in the history of mankind.

    16. Re:Think before you gripe.... by TotallyUseless · · Score: 2

      Well, in my case at least, it would take 9 cds. Instead of taking the time to burn 9 cds, I could plug this thing in and wait 10 minutes for it to load most of my collection, and I don't bother having to carry around a cd case, which can be a hassle if your using it somewhere other than in your car. I would also be interested to know how long it takes for a nomad to transfer 5 gigs over usb.
      The price is a sticking point, although not an insurmountable one. It is close to being priced well. within the $50-$100 range. Hopefully they will lower the price somewhat once they get some out the door.

      --

      Time for some tasty Shiner Bock!
    17. Re:Think before you gripe.... by gutter · · Score: 1
      Check this link:

      http://www.apple.com/itools/redirects/itools/index .html

      for a tour of the interface - looks pretty sweet to me.

      --
      Check out DRM-free movies at http://www.bside.com
    18. Re:Think before you gripe.... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      'Cos I'm a man of the world. Happily, most of my mp3s are either English or Japanese. But there are the ocassional Russian, Hebrew or Chinese songs in there, and hell -- there are a damn lot of languages in this world of ours. Apple's had big internationalization pushes before. (indeed, that was one of the prime reasons for the dual forked filesystems)

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    19. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Migelikor1 · · Score: 1

      One major thing a lot of people are forgetting is that this is not a closed system like an itsy bitsy Rio 600. It is a 5Gb hard drive, 32Mb of ram, and a big battery, enough kit to let it act as a computer, not just a data playback device. TO that end, Apple made it very clear (read the press releases shithead) that the firmware is easily upgradable to accomodate "other music formats and language packages." In other words, you can throw new programs onto the little computer, and since it's a powerful, high end device, they make it accomodate the user! *Sarcastic Gasp*

      --
      My Karma is so good, I'm the Dalai Lama...or something.
    20. Re:Think before you gripe.... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Yes, but you don't use the volume knob on your home stereo to control which song is being played EITHER. Apple's pretty much screwed things up -- the knob is unforgivably modal.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    21. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Apple's support for ID3 is woefully insufficient on iTunes and on iPod. (so is everyone else's, more's the pity)
      Okay, let's face it. ID3 SUCKS. I much prefer oggs xml approach to the issue. Indefinitely expandible == good. Any implementation of ID3 tracking I have seen sucks (even XMMS and FreeAmp), can you point out a good example, so that others can be led in the right direction?

      I will grant them a half-point on the auditory feedback on the wheel (but no tactile feedback! for shame) and a half-point for displaying multiple languages simultaneously (but no plug ins for future language expansion? tsk tsk)

      It uses a pizeo (mechanical to electrical energy => some acting force) for that clickety noise, you can bet it has tacticle feed back--and it's probably rather obious too.
      We don't know alot about the expandibility of this device, to be sure. I'd like it to play oggs (I think it is a superior format). As it is, quicktime has no official support for ogg files, and the iPod most likely uses a subset of quicktime. It dosen't say that it's not firmware upgradable (you can bet it is, because it dosen't have a mp3 only DSP). Maybe you speak 182 different languages, including 13 dialects of Swahilli. Do I think that Apple has a big market there? NO.

      I suspect that Apple's big market for the iPod is in Japan. iBook is a hit over there, what a great companion, and guess what? IT SUPPORTS JAPANESE! It will probably be able to support Korean too, as that Is a big (and rapidly growing) market.

      Your arguments are clearly biased to the extreme against Apple. Furthermore, I bet you hate everything about the world (not like I like it much either) -- so much so that you can't use logic!
    22. Re:Think before you gripe.... by sgt_getraer · · Score: 1
      ...I should hope Apple will be smart enough...

      Oh, how many times have I heard that phrase?...

    23. Re:Think before you gripe.... by jacoplane · · Score: 1

      Actually, mini cds can hold 185mb each

      Take a look at the Philips Expanium. Looks pretty cool and should be pretty cheap. I don't really need 5gb of mp3s with me all the time. A couple of minicds should be more than plenty for me.

    24. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      EXACTLY! you people are insane. You crush Apple on points that do not even exist, leaving bad impressions on peopel who might not read the RE:s to your stupid posts. Take into account this:
      The scroll sucks!..okay..why? because it moves in increments that are heard and carefully done? uh..okay? the volume probably sucks!...uhm..why? because its on a circular pad? uhm...invalid point, as shown above, being that most stereos also use this control system.
      and dont get me into the language stuff. read ur stuff, and get it straight, oh yeah, and dont assume...Apple did not buy this off an OEM. if you didnt notice, apple has their own division for the model and tech. solely for this, want proof? go to apple.com/ipod/ and check out the movies, they interview a guy there that works in that department.

    25. Re:Think before you gripe.... by jafac · · Score: 2

      I guess this might also be cool if I could stream video or stills from my miniDV camera to this drive - thereby reducing my dependency on the exhorbitantly-priced Sony Memory Sticks.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    26. Re:Think before you gripe.... by maniac11 · · Score: 1

      You mean like the clearly marked |<< and >>| (backward and forward) buttons? Come on man, if Apple is good at one thing, we all know it to be user interface... heck, the wrote the book on it.

      --
      Guvegrra?
    27. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Triv · · Score: 1

      Ah, that's all well and good for you maybe, but I don't HAVE a cdrom burner. If the choice is to shell out $200 for a burner and $100 for a capable mp3/CD player, I'd rather spend an extra hundred for the HD capability instead of getting yet ANOTHER portable cd player.

      Now, if someone thought of a portable mp3/cd player that doubled as a cd-rw, we'd be in business. :)

      Triv

    28. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The iPod can also function as a portable hard drive. It is a dual use device for some.

    29. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HFS+ is open sourced via Apple's Darwin project (MacOS X's internals)?

    30. Re:Think before you gripe.... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      No, they're using the wheel for both volume and scroll selecting. Meaning that if you needed to change the volume while choosing a song, or otherwise mucking with the settings, you're just SOL.

      I think Apple has done a bang-up job on UI... in the past. But they've been stagnating for years, and plenty of people are unhappy with OS X -- as the constant stream of half-baked UI changes can attest to. Perhaps if they'd read their own book once in a while, these things wouldn't happen.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    31. Re:Think before you gripe.... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Heh.

      First off, let's have no attacks on my Apple credentials. I've used Apples and Macs since the 80's, I've worked in repair, and as a reseller, I've owned plenty of Macs (and just picked up some vintage parts for my collection the other day) and generally find MacOS to be the best of the OSes presently available, though that's not to say that it's the greatest thing ever. I think I'm not particularly assailable on that front, thank you.

      Anyway, I think that you have not read the current ID3 spec. ID3v2.4.0 is about as damn-near infinitely extensible as you could wish for. I was involved in a project to IMPLEMENT the damn thing in its entirety (and since Ogg support was slated for inclusion, we would have tackled it as well) and let me tell you, it's no picnic.

      Nevertheless, we, a very small shop, were making progress, up until the meltdown, when our project was canceled and I left work.

      Do all present implementations of ID3 suck? You bet. I heartily agree with you. In fact, I said as much in the portion of my post that you _quoted_! However, this does not mean that it must always necessarily suck. I don't think that mine would. If Apple had a strong HI Group anymore, I don't think that theirs would.

      But I'd start by reading the spec. The whole, many, many, many page long spec. Then bitch at various companies that are in positions to deliver (I won't mention mine publicly) and convince them to, or develop something yourself.

      Re: codecs, it says in the specs that additional codecs can be put into firmware. I never said that they couldn't! I think that's almost a great feature. It could only be improved by allowing very rarely used codecs (e.g. MOD) to be stored on the disk, and loaded into RAM and used when a song that needed them was brought up. This guards against the firmware being totally filled up.

      However, third party expansion for codecs is not mentioned. And nothing is mentioned about languages -- in the absence of anything to go on, it is safer to assume a lack of expandability, though if someone can demonstrate otherwise, I'll gladly conceed that point. Particularly since Apple is not to be trusted with full control. They've screwed this kind of thing up in the past.

      Re: tactile feedback, we'll see. Given that it needs an electronic clicker, I'd be surprised if it had tactile feedback as well... normally they're provided through the same mechanical part. (kind of like putting baseball cards in the spokes of a bike wheel)

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    32. Re:Think before you gripe.... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      No, it's a closed system like an iPod. I'll be surprised if it's capable of acting like a general purpose computer, or if Apple ever releases the specs for it to do so. Far more cost, space and power efficient to specialize. I bet you could count all the chips involved on the fingers of one hand, and none would be a modern general purpose CPU.*

      Re: languages, I checked over the tech specs and there was no mention of expandability. They _do_ claim that codecs are expandable, but I am curious as to by whom they are? Third parties is the way to go -- Apple's not going to be willing or able to support everything out there. (I still have a decent collection of MODs, XMs, S3Ms, etc.)

      I'd like to know the precise source for your information, since it contradicts what's on the main Apple pages for the iPod. Do you have URLs?

      *Of course Gameboys ran on a Z80 variant for _ages_ so a lot can be done with an ancient CPU. But this is likely no ARM.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    33. Re:Think before you gripe.... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Ah? But I got my hand stamped 'SANE.'

      The scroll sucks for all purposes slightly in that it does not appear as though a user can feel it operating. The clicks would probably not need to be reintroduced with an electronic clicker were this so.

      More importantly, however, the scroll is used for both volume control and scrolling through lists. This is bad, because it may not be evident to a user which mode it is in, and he may have a need to, say, adjust the volume while selecting songs. Apple knows perfectly well that there needs to be a damn good reason for modal UI... this isn't one of them.

      Wheels are great for volume control (as I have always maintained -- I hate digital volume control) and great for selection, but if I had to split them up, I'd have a different, Palm-like double teardrop button for scrolling.

      Re: Apple's internal departments, I never said that it was an OEMed product. Indeed, I don't think that something like this could have come from anywhere else....

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    34. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it does! it uses the same font ( Chicargo ) wich was used in Mac OS 6-7.6.2 i belive.

      and it's VERY apple like. The UI is soo simple and staight forward, everybody can use it..

      It IS a mac

    35. Re:Think before you gripe.... by Migelikor1 · · Score: 1

      I just checked the apple website, and you're right, to my surprise, they don't mention the capacity of the device for new fiemware updates. I got the info from a real world hard copy sheet of paper, which apple sent to some people in the tech community. (My brother is one of them.) The exact phrase is: "The iPod does much of its processing in software, and as such is open to future firmware updates, the likely purposes of which will be to add language and format compatibility." I very much appreciate that you took the time to look at the site, though your first post did not suggest that. There is tactile feedback on the dial (it clicks a little, like a scroll wheel), though you wouldn't know it from the site, it's a counterintuitive assumption that it doesn't. What did you expect, an ad that said: it's white and made of plastic? no, they talk about its goodies.
      The talk of hacking the software packages of these things is still way on the horizon, though my brother tells me that it's theoretically possible. Third parties will be encouraged to submit their codecs (though I'm not clear on how.)
      On a funny note, did you catch that there is no support for Microsoft's format? slap in the face for the "strategic ally."

      --
      My Karma is so good, I'm the Dalai Lama...or something.
  54. Idiocy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps you didn't notice Apple itself referring to this product as a "breakthrough" when they first announced the media event?

    Think, McFly, THINK.

    -AC

  55. Apple vs. Apple by The+Second+Horseman · · Score: 2, Funny

    So at what point does Apple violate the terms of the agreement with Apple Records for ripping off the name and logo? At what point have they engaged in music-related business?

    1. Re:Apple vs. Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This Slashdot! Apple Records has no right to prevent people from using the term Apple. How can you trademark such a commom word? If Microsoft tried to prevent Corel from using the word Office I am sure we would definitely hear about it on Slashdot.

    2. Re:Apple vs. Apple by mcc · · Score: 5, Interesting

      So at what point does Apple violate the terms of the agreement with Apple Records for ripping off the name and logo?

      1989.

      Here's a nice summary of the whole thing. Basically, in 1981 (after years of squabbling) apple computer entered into a written agreement not to compete with apple records in any way. In 1989, Apple records decided that apple's computers had reached the point of qualifying as "musical editing equipment", and sued apple claiming that the agreement had been broached and Apple was infringing on Apple's trademark.

      (I for some reason thought for a very long time that this was because 1989 was the year apple started putting built-in sound input ports on all shipping machines, but the apple-history site claims that the first apple machines to ship with onboard sound input-- the IIfx and the IIsi-- didn't come out until the beginning of 1990, so maybe that isn't it. Or maybe Apple Records was, in 1989, reacting to advance news from apple describing the upcoming IIfx and IIsi machines. I don't know.)

      Anyway, all of this ended in 1990 when Apple and Apple settled; Apple computer had to something like 26.7 million dollars to Apple records, and in return Apple computer gained the right to do pretty much anything with the name "apple". The iPod would be, i am certain, covered under that 1990 agreement.

      (There was, after the 1990 agreement, some rather long drawn out legal proceedings involving who paid for the settlement and legal bills from all this, Apple Computer or their insurance company; i think their insurance company finally won. I can't say i really care either way, though.)

    3. Re:Apple vs. Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      please mod the parent up up up up up. so many people are posting on this subject without having any clue wtf they are talking about, and this person not only gets it right, but provides links to sources. Note to the author: if you don't get modded up, you get my gratitude anyway, for whatever that's worth.

    4. Re:Apple vs. Apple by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

      I thought they settled that when QuickTime came out.

      --
      There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
      Max V.
      NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
    5. Re:Apple vs. Apple by dorzak · · Score: 1

      1988: Apple started shipped the Apple //gs, which was not in the Mac family, but did have sound out. The g was supposed to be for graphics, and the s for sound.

    6. Re:Apple vs. Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I patented Oxygen years before it was made.
      I and I alone am aloud to use it.

  56. Does anyone else see this as a non-event? by Shwang_Shwing · · Score: 1

    Apple makes a portable music player... whoopee. It has some advancements over typical MP3 players, but my god it's NOT revolutionary.

    1. Re:Does anyone else see this as a non-event? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why it wasn't billed by Apple in any way as a "revolutionary event". They quietly announced to some press outlets that they would be releasing a nifty new digital "not-a-mac'" product today, and that's just what they did. It's those press outlets and Slashdot readers with a penchant for rumors that decided to play it up a lot and make it sound like a "revolutionary event".

  57. System Requirement for the IPod by luvbug412 · · Score: 1

    How lame can it get?!?! Just found the requirements on the website To add insult to injury: Mac OS 9.2.1 or Higher FireWire built-in Itunes 2 *Not released till early Nov to the general public*

  58. In the Tech Specs... by Beowulfto · · Score: 1
    Upgradable firmware enables support for future audio formats

    How many other players have that? Plus acts as a firewire data drive, (full data transfer in 10 min!), has 20 minute skip protection. I have been waiting to get a portable MP3 player. Guess it has payed off big time. My order is already in!

    --
    There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes. -- Dr. Who
    1. Re:In the Tech Specs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *Mod parent up for ogg whiners!

    2. Re:In the Tech Specs... by What+He+Said · · Score: 1

      I don't know how many, but my Rio Volt has upgradeable firmware ...

    3. Re:In the Tech Specs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Rio _had_ upgradable firmware, that is until Diamond stopped putting out revisions.

  59. iPod or iPoo? by compugeek007 · · Score: 1

    why release a propritary mp3 player when it should be so easy to add USB connectivity to it as well. It may suck compared to firewire - but I want my MP3's from my Windows 2K server, or my Linux server.

    I think Apple is trying to pull a little "Mi[ro$of7" marketing on this one.

    --
    Jesse Wolfe Sr. Manager Systems Integration
    1. Re:iPod or iPoo? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so join the 21st century and get a firewire card

    2. Re:iPod or iPoo? by Cujo · · Score: 1

      Firewire isn't really proprietary: Apple gets a tiny fee for every Firewire device sold, but the standard is open: IEE1394. For example, it will be used on spacecraft in the near future to transfer data between redundant recorders.

      You can get a Firewire card for a PC for about $70 - and you'll need it if you ahven't got the sense to do digital video on a Mac.

      --

      Helium balloons want to be free.

    3. Re:iPod or iPoo? by Kranium · · Score: 1

      FireWire is not a proprietary interface.

    4. Re:iPod or iPoo? by compugeek007 · · Score: 1

      Thanks - I was not aware that Firewire was PC compatable. Just never have seen it implemented, but then again, we have germs don't we?

      --
      Jesse Wolfe Sr. Manager Systems Integration
  60. Well fuck you too! Just because you don't like it by SensitiveMale · · Score: 0
    What an ass.


    Wireless? For an MP3 player? just so you can hear music 150 feet way? How fucking stupid can you be?


    Look at what it is.


    It has the BEST interface to date.


    It connects with FireWire for blazingly fast DLs and NO charging cable! It charges over the FireWire connection.


    It works as a FireWire drive so you can carry your files and such with you.


    Show me another device that has ALL of the above.


    You biased, short-sighted bastard.

  61. Perfect player, but very pricey by 90XDoubleSide · · Score: 1
    The argument that it is not a step forward because it is not as big(capacity) as a nomad is rediculous; the nomad is huge(physical bulk) (talking about the jukebox, of course. Nomad IIs are quite nice, but they have the capacity drawback; this player is about the size of a Nomad II). This product fixes the major issues with the jukebox: size and bad user interface, it gives you wickedly fast downloading via FireWire (look at the movie at http://www.apple.com/itunes/theater/ipod.html) and can be used as a HD for files like some of the other HD based players, but in typical Apple style they make a near perfect product and the only issue is that no one can afford it.

    The other news that you may have missed is that iTunes 2 will be released in "early November" and will FINALLY feature an equalizer and is supposed to burn CDs twice as fast. This free upgrade may be of more significance to us poor Mac users ;)

    --
    "Reality is just a convenient measure of complexity" -Alvy Ray Smith
  62. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by stripes · · Score: 3, Insightful
    but it has virtually no UI wizardry that might define it as an Apple product

    You mean other then the scroll pad, and the seriously small number of controls and options on it? (yes, cutting down on choice is a UI feature, and one that Apple is very good at)

    Having it all go through iTunes is also a good UI choice (a no brainer for Apple of corse), you don't need to deal with another little lame MP3 manager (my most despised part of my Rio). Of corse once you have more then 5G of music you actually have to do work...

    Still, not the product for me. I don't really need all that much music when I'm not already next to my laptop, or my car stereo...

  63. "bash" may be your favorite shell... by Archon · · Score: 1

    ...but lately it seems as its the favorite form of response for many of the people to this product. It's very small, very light, made of stainless steel so likely very rugged, using FireWire so it's _very_ fast, and most importantly for Apple consumers -- it integrates nearly seamlessly with their existing hardware and software thus _very_ easy.

    It may not be what a lot of you technogeeknophiles want, but for the majority of Apple customers, I think they'd be more than happy with it. It's a good portable audio media player compliment to their system, likely the best you could find at the moment, plus it makes a convenient portable FireWire drive.

    So I don't get all the vitrol. No, it's not a PDA. It's not a toaster, either. So get off your high horses and evaluate it for what it is instead of what it's not.

  64. Re:LAME? WTF?!? and hard drive by deander2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    oh yeah, and did i mention that it doubles as a portable firewire HARD DRIVE?

  65. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Cutriss · · Score: 1

    Agreed. AirPort-ready would be cool, but it'd take forever.

    Now...Recharging through FireWire? 10 hours drain, 1 hour recharge? That is awesome...

    --
    "Mod, mod, mod...and another troll bites the dust."
  66. Hah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like more than a dozen people actually have 1000 hours of LEGAL music. That's like 1000 CDs. Or, about $15,000 worth of CDs. Apple joins the piracy tool supporters of the world.. right on! Fight for your "freedom!"

    1. Re:Hah! by khuber · · Score: 1

      1000 _songs_ is more like 100 CDs, dude. 5GB
      ain't what it used to be.

      -Kevin

  67. Re:Maximum operating altitude: 10,000 feet (3000 m by jlgolson · · Score: 1

    A plane is pressurized. If the plane lost cabin pressure you wouldn't be able to use it, but you would have bigger worries than your mp3s. This just means when you go hiking in Switzerland, you can't use it over 10,000ft.

    This thing is awesome.

  68. Net Address by masq · · Score: 1

    Pix and Info

    http://www.apple.com/ipod/

  69. Only Works With Macs? by cancrman · · Score: 2

    Well? Is that true?

    I read the cnet article and went to the apple store but there was no mention of anything.

    The mention of firewire and iTunes make me suspect it is only a mac peripheral. And that would suck.

    Any help here?

    Pete

    --
    The sole purpose of the Internet is to get porn and bomb making plans into the hands of children.
    1. Re:Only Works With Macs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since it doubles as a FireWire disk, it *should* mount like any other external FireWire hard drive on Windows boxes, or on Linux with the FireWire kernel modules. Mount it as a hard drive, transfer the songs, unplug and play. Simple as that.

      Of course, we will only be able to be sure about this when this thing ships in 3 weeks, but I don't see a reason why it shouldn't work as described above. The only thing you will miss is the iTunes integration, but i can live without that... (my iMac does not have FireWire, but my PC does)

  70. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by depeche · · Score: 1

    It should be noted that 'FireWire' is IEEE 1394 and is availible BUILT IN to many Sony PC products under the 'iLink' name, and is availble to any other PC user in the form of a IEEE 1394 card.

    It seems like a good way to provide non-content protected MP3 technology to the masses, which is good for those of us who don't want the masses to support RIAA crippleware or other protected options. Remember, if you don't support the reasonably good products, the even worse ones will take over.

  71. firewire by Maskirovka · · Score: 1

    While I don't see it in the system specs for this device, I think it might be possible to hook it up to other devices such as DV camcorders and firewire hardrives for data syncing. One of the advantages that firewire has over USB is that it's computer independant. For example, I mightput a 100gig hardrive in my car, and use the iPod to pull music and playlists off of it. Which would be way cool.

    Maskirovka

  72. Ships in 3-4 WEEKS by sulli · · Score: 2

    I just checked at the Apple Store. Oh well.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  73. When will they learn? by LoudMusic · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It's Apple, and Mac-heads will buy it. But they're the only ones!

    From the website:
    "Holds over 1000 songs"
    - I've seen better for less.

    "Weighs just 6.5 ounces -- fits in your pocket"
    - That's neat, but not enough to be a major selling point.

    "Plays up to 10 hours with 20 minute skip protection"
    - What skip is it protecting against for 20 minutes? We're not talking about optical (CD) media here ...

    "Auto synchronize all your music with iTunes"
    - Now that is kinda cool (:

    "Transfer a whole CD in less than 10 seconds"
    - ... using FireWire? Which most Windows people don't have. Just cut your market by 85%

    "Charge with the included power adapter or over FireWire"
    - Interesting, actually making good use of the firewire port, which most Windows people don't have. Just cut your market by 85%

    "Breakthrough UI with an innovative scroll wheel"
    - ABOUT DAMN TIME! Too bad they can't put it on a friggen mouse!

    "60 mWatt amp power high-fidelity sound earbude"
    - Ok

    "Ultra-slim 5-gigabyte hard drive doubles as FireWire disk"
    - 5 gigs? Come on ... I can get a 20 gb for less.

    Apple is selling an overpriced, under spec`ed item to its tiny market ... AGAIN. When will they learn?

    ~Loudmusic

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    1. Re:When will they learn? by AtaruMoroboshi · · Score: 1

      >"Weighs just 6.5 ounces -- fits in your pocket" > - That's neat, but not enough to be a major > selling point. Actually, that IS a major selling point. If I'm going to lug this thing into work every day so that i can listen to Minibosess on the way, it better be damn tiny. I've got my laptop (ibook) and palm pilot (visor deluxe) to worry about, and I don't want anything more bulky to bring with me. The iPod will fit very nicely in the pocket next to my palm pilot, and makes it an extremely attractive purchase. I'm probably going to wait for apple to upgrade these a little, or to drop the price to $350 or $300, but I'm definitely going to buy one as soon as it's practicle. If i wasn't still paying off my iBook, I'd have already ordered one.

    2. Re:When will they learn? by veddermatic · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Breaking news: Aplle doesn't CARE about windows, or about market share.


      Last time I checked, they only sold hardware and software to the "tiny percentage" of Mac users, and yet they somehow manage to stay in business... unthinkable! We all know that market share is the only indicator of a company's success!


      At the end of the year, look at who had a higher profit margin.... Dell, Gateway, or Apple.


      Apple is making an MP3 player for the Mac users. It's an AMAZING product tied into the hardware they deliver (when will all Winderz boxes ship with firewire), OS X, and iTunes


      If you have a Mac, this is a SWEEEEEEET thing. If you don;t have a Mac, guess what, Aplle does not care.

      --
      Department of Homeland Security: Removing the rights real patriots fought and died for since 2001
    3. Re:When will they learn? by LoudMusic · · Score: 1

      I'm probably going to wait for apple to upgrade these a little, or to drop the price to $350 or $300, but I'm definitely going to buy one as soon as it's practicle. If i wasn't still paying off my iBook, I'd have already ordered one.

      You're still paying off your iBook ... doesn't that mean anything to you? And now you want to pay too much money for something else. By the time you pay off your iBook, it will be outdated and need to be replaced, the iPod will be either revamped or dropped off their product list, and you'll be dreaming about some other Apple product that just got announced that you'll have to get a new computer to support.

      ~LoudMusic

      --
      No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    4. Re:When will they learn? by AtaruMoroboshi · · Score: 1


      well, by "i'm paying off my ibook" i mean that i've actually spent quite a lot of money lately because i moved and bought a new mac. My previous mac lasted me four full years, so do the math.

      I just know that the second generation of apple products is usually substatially better than the first, but this one looks really nice.

    5. Re:When will they learn? by LoudMusic · · Score: 1

      So you're willing to make payments on something that is essentially treated as a toy? Granted you might to a little work on it, but nearly 90% of the time you spend using it, it's a fancy toy, right?

      Might just be the way I was raised. I can't stand doing that. If there's something I want, just because I want it, I save until I can afford it. That way I've payed the least amount for it (brand new) and I can stop thinking about it. I get to just enjoy it. When you make payments you end up spending more than the list price, usually a lot. Also by waiting, the price comes down, and new revisions come out.

      Just my view on 'stuff'. I do, however, think that the latest iBooks have been Apple's "best bang for the buck" product ever. If you're gonna have an Apple, this iBook is the way to go.

      ~LoudMusic

      --
      No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    6. Re:When will they learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So don't buy it. Apple builds high end computers and consumer electronics with compelling industrial design and charges a premium for them. This isn't a secret, so why the outrage?

      Dumbass.

    7. Re:When will they learn? by phillymjs · · Score: 2

      "Weighs just 6.5 ounces -- fits in your pocket"
      - That's neat, but not enough to be a major selling point.


      Oh yeah? The Newton 2000, which kicked the shit out of any Palm organizer then available, lost out to the Palms for one reason (among people for whom price was not an issue): It wouldn't fit in their pocket.

      ~Philly

    8. Re:When will they learn? by AtaruMoroboshi · · Score: 1

      i waited two months on the iBook, and i use it heavily for music. I am an electronic musican, so the laptop is pretty much a requirement. I write two songs a week usually, and i do everything on the ibook.

      the whole making payments thing is why i'm holding off on the iPod. Once my credit card bill is cleaned off (pretty soon), i'll probably get one.

    9. Re:When will they learn? by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

      "Apple is selling an overpriced, under spec`ed item to its tiny market ... AGAIN. When will they learn?"

      Uhh...when they stop making millions of dollars of profit?

      --
      There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
      Max V.
      NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
    10. Re:When will they learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm an ex-NeXT user, now a Mac OS X user. I don't care at all about wintel PCs. I care about great products that give me the best user experience out-there along with fun. I don't want to use crap just because 95% of the world is using crap. Will buy the iPod, seems to be just GREAT !

    11. Re:When will they learn? by yellowjacket03 · · Score: 1

      Breaking news: Aplle doesn't CARE about windows, or about market share.



      I guess that's why they are opening 20-30 stores across the United States. They have been doing fine for years without a retail presence, so why should they start now? You're a fool if you believe that Steve Jobs isn't interested in increasing market share.


      At the end of the year, look at who had a higher profit margin.... Dell, Gateway, or Apple.


      Profit margin has nothing to do with you. Dell has a greater marketshare, but since Apple has been milking suckers for years, their margins are higher. FYI, that's a BAD THING for you, the consumer. I like Apple stuff myself, but I won't be paying twice as much because it has some cool stuff that I can live without.

  74. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Brian+Feldman · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't mind if they released iTunes of some sort for the PlayStation 2 and I could either use some of my CDs to transfer mp3s onto it via the PS2, or maybe it would even (if it were a full-featured package) support ripping audio CDs directly to mp3s via the DVD-ROM drive as well, too. I wouldn't mind buying one of these if it had software to work with the PlayStation 2... otherwise, I don't especially feel like trying to hack together my own firewire drivers for the device so I can use it on FreeBSD, in addition to buying a PCI firewire card.

    --
    Brian Fundakowski Feldman
  75. More function for the money by jasonbw · · Score: 1

    $400 is a bit steep. Now, if it had a Fm modulator so i could listen to it in the car, then, well, drop the price to $300, it might sell decently.

    Oh, and make Win and Linux drivers for it.

    1. Re:More function for the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fm modulators suck! I have one and they introduce way too much noise. Cassete adapters are the way to go unless you have a line in...

    2. Re:More function for the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Win and Linux drivers? Are you illiterate? It follows the standard Firewire hard drive spec!

  76. iPod: All style, no substance by mttlg · · Score: 2

    Well, I was hoping for something along the lines of the Terapin Mine, especially after seeing how well the new iBook and TiBook came out, but this thing is destined to fail. For $400 you can get a 5GB MP3 player that will only (officially) work on Macs running the very latest versions of the MacOS, but will run for 10 hours. Or, for half the price, you can get a smaller MP3 player and enough batteries and flash cards to keep most people happy, and which won't depend on the computer you use, and for the rest of the price you could get a low-end 3GB Digital Wallet for more storage. I can't offload my digital pictures to an iPod. I can't move files to any computer I want on an iPod. I can't use standard rechargeable batteries in an iPod. I can't find a reason to buy an iPod.

    1. Re:iPod: All style, no substance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you can put anything you want on it since it works as a firewire drive. You can move shit to any computer that supports firewire. Sure, all recent macs do this, but pcs certainly can. My PC does, and so does my roommate's. The problem is your computers are too crappy to work with it. You want to transfer 5GB over data to "any computer you want" using what? USB?

    2. Re:iPod: All style, no substance by BOFslime · · Score: 0

      usb isn't really ment for data transfer. I don't know abou others but 100Mbit ethernet's work'n just fine.. and when you can find cards for $5 bucks (dlink 530TX), and make your own patch cables.. its hell of a lot cheaper than IEEE1394 (firewire, ilink).

    3. Re:iPod: All style, no substance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yea, ethernets nice and portable too! i love lugging around my box and hub when i want to transfer files to a friends computer! jackass

    4. Re:iPod: All style, no substance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3GB digital wallet - $199 on pricewatch
      Nomad 32mb mem - $133 on pricewatch

      You are paying like $60 more for 2 more GB of storage or mp3 playing or as harddrive. Hmm, $60 can get you 64mb more flash and a few more batteries.

      I think it is probably easier to just get the ipod don't you think?

    5. Re:iPod: All style, no substance by cactopus · · Score: 1

      yeah and one doesn't have to carry so much junk around either.

    6. Re:iPod: All style, no substance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like the Newton and the Cube, the iPod fails miserably because mttlg couldn't find a reason to buy it.

    7. Re:iPod: All style, no substance by mttlg · · Score: 2
      3GB digital wallet - $199 on pricewatch
      Nomad 32mb mem - $133 on pricewatch
      You are paying like $60 more for 2 more GB of storage or mp3 playing or as harddrive. Hmm, $60 can get you 64mb more flash and a few more batteries.

      Archos 6GB MP3 Player/USB hard drive - $249 from the manufacturer
      Archos 20GB MP3 Player/USB hard drive - $369 from the manufacturer

      So you're paying $150 more for a slightly smaller size and Firewire (their 6GB Firewire drive (no MP3) is $229), or $30 more for a slightly smaller size and Firewire, with 25% of the space. And your combination, at $60 less (the price of a 128MB flash card and 4 high capacity NiMH AA batteries) can also be used to store digital camera pictures, which is a big advantage. So where's the advantage of the iPod? Sure you can transfer the MP3 files over faster (which you wouldn't be doing frequently anyway), but only if you have an "Apple computer with built-in FireWire port" running "Mac OS 9.2.1 (or later) or Mac OS X v10.1 (or later)." Ok, you can use it as a $229 portable Firewire hard drive, but that is only an advantage if you need a Firewire hard drive and an MP3 player at the same time - otherwise you can get two devices, one for each use (12GB total), for $80 more, or some other combination to fit your needs. So really, this is only a good deal if you specifically need the exact capabilities of this device.

    8. Re:iPod: All style, no substance by NickV · · Score: 2

      "Slightly smaller size"? You obviously have never once even been near the Archos Jukebox, and saw nothing but pictures of it. I had one for a week and returned it... the UI was unusable, and man it was big, bulky, chugged batteries (and took forever to recharge) and transfering songs took forever. USB also doesn't yield itself well to constant data transfers, and it takes abour 2 hours of constant transfer to fill 6 gigs with USB. Most USB ports seem to break mid-transfer, since they weren't designed for that kind of data flow.

      And it isn't just transfering MP3s faster... it's transfering MP3s ALOT faster. It takes 2 HOURS to transfer 6 gigs over USB, it takes about 15 minutes through Firewire.

  77. People need to realize that... by jcoleman · · Score: 3, Insightful
    ...Apple is the Mercedes Benz or BMW of the computer industry. They deliver the best-designed products with "why didn't I think of that?!" features that eventually become commonplace on the Fords and Chevrolets of the computer industry.

    How many computer makers let you into the case without turning screws? How many include an incredibly useful and easy-to-use external connection port like FireWire? How many include digital video editing? How many ship an optical mouse standard? How many include a full productivity suite? How many include a DVD-R/CD-RW drive as standard? How many have given up CRTs and moved on to LCDs, the displays of the future? One.

    Apple is the innovator in the industry. If you can't see that, then you're blind. Everyone else has been playing catch-up since 1984.

    1. Re:People need to realize that... by Shwang_Shwing · · Score: 1

      Yeah, they've innovated themsleves right into a niche market company...

    2. Re:People need to realize that... by ryber · · Score: 1

      That nich company is still managing to pull in a profit while those around them fail. Nice nitch if you ask me.

    3. Re:People need to realize that... by ayeco · · Score: 1

      People need to realize that MBs and BMWs are in the shop as often, or more often, than new Fords or Chevys.

      I do say, data storage too? Why of friggin course! Why din't I think of that? I like it. can nomad? Maybe. (name it .mp3 and i bet it would. right?)

    4. Re:People need to realize that... by ostiguy · · Score: 2

      Best designed?

      How bout them cracking cubes? Or warped TiBooks?

      Apple just created a consumer electronic device that only works with 5% of computers out there. Great idea.

      ostiguy

    5. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is an mp3 player an innovation? I remember seeing them in stores over a year ago. And if everyone is trying to 'catch up' with Apple why don't they start making crappy products like Apple does? Do you think right now there are people sitting around at intel marvelling over the speed of a motorola processor?

    6. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The iPod works with any IEEE 1394 enabled system. Be it Sony VAIO, a 2001 iBook, or a Gateway with a FW card. If you use a 4 pin iLink port, you simply use the included charger. This mounts like a HD on everything else...

      So some cubes had stress lines in the molding, (havent had a problem with my TiBook, nor heard of such a thing). What about Compaq and Dell and their exploding batteries. Not every unit was affected in any case (though they were in the case of the batteries) Only about 3% of the Cube cases had mold lines visible, big deal, these are not design flaws, more like production flaws.

      Try reading a little before you speak up hear.

    7. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, easy access cases were available for PC's long before Apple ever incorporated them. I remember buying a case for a 486DX-33 that had a hinged door built into the side.

      LPT and USB ports are extremely useful, easy to use and have been around on PC's before FireWire was on Macs.

      Digital video editing software comes with Window ME. You can also pick up a copy of Personal Studio for relatively cheap (and in my case, I get the Windows version free because I bought the BeOS version).

      Modern optical mice really aren't much better than your standard ball mouse. Back in '84 I had an optical mouse for my XT, which utilized a special metal-grid mousepad for high precision. Now that was a _real_ optical mouse, not like the cheap ones now. The only benefit to having a modern optical mouse is that you don't have to clean it. BFD. Anyways, this point of yours is completely moot since all varieties of mice are so cheap. You can buy a cordless, optical, force-feedback mouse with scroll wheel and four buttons for $50.

      Windows ME comes with MicroSoft Works, which IMHO is a pretty full featured productivity suite. If I need more, I can just download StarOffice for free.

      My Pentium 4 PC at work came with both a 50X CD-ROM drive and also a DVD-R/CD-RW combo drive as standard.

      CRT's are still being used by Apple though. Besides, there isn't an LCD screen to date that can match the screen redraw speed of a CRT. If I'm watching a fast action movie, or playing a fast action game I don't want it to get blurry on me.

    8. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, like the nice -62% profits they pulled this quarter.

    9. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, keep telling yourself that. That must be why my P4 or Athlon will dust any processor that Apple has.

    10. Re:People need to realize that... by Perrin-GoldenEyes · · Score: 1

      " People need to realize that MBs and BMWs are in the shop as often, or more often, than new Fords or Chevys."

      In what world? My father has had MBs for the last 15 years, and I can't think of a single time he has had it in the shop for a malfunction that wasn't driver caused (IE backing into my 4-Runner :-P). Obviously he takes it in for routine maintenance, but that's it. I don't think Ford (fix or replace daily) can even come close to that record.

      --
      -Perrin.
      Now I want you to go in that bag and find my lightsaber. It's the one that says bad mother-fscker on it.
    11. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow another crack smoker ....

      Give me dual 800 Mghz PowerPC chips and OS X any time over any Windozeproduct.. Watch my photoshop fly.

    12. Re:People need to realize that... by Sj0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      just IMHO, LCDs aren't the displays of the future. I use one quite a bit since I use a laptop as my primary computer, but I prefer the better refresh of a CRT(hey! Where'd the mouse go!?). The technology I'm keeping an eye on is that organic display technology. As far as I can tell, it's going to be big when they start putting the safe, low power (even lower than LCD) monitors out there with this technology.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    13. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PhotoShop? Give me a break. Don't tell me you actually hold merit to Apple's "in-house PhotoShop benchmark tests".

      Give me a dual P4@2GHz and any OS I want (thats right, unlike you, I won't be stuck with only one OS). Watch everything of mine fly.

      Hell, give me a single P4@2GHz. It'll still be faster than dual PPC's@800MHz

    14. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the horses mouth

      Requirements
      Apple computer with built-in FireWire port

      Mac OS 9.2.1 (or later) or Mac OS X v10.1 (or later)

      iTunes 2 software (included)

    15. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      try looking at a quality Flat Panel display. You must be confusing laptops and/or el cheapo flat panels. A good quality flat panel looks awesome

    16. Re:People need to realize that... by To+Mega · · Score: 1

      Yes, but what filesystem format will it use? FAT, FAT32, or something else windows compatible? Or will it use HFS to be easily compatible with Mac OS machines? I think the latter.

      You probably won't be able to plug it into a Windows machine and have it work right away. But Linux does have HFS support. Hmmm.

    17. Re:People need to realize that... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      I'll have to take your word for that.

      ...

      but a 25-30 inch CRT is S W E E T.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    18. Re:People need to realize that... by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      You're right. High quality vehicles don't break nearly as often as lesser ones.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    19. Re:People need to realize that... by David+Ham · · Score: 1
      PhotoShop? Give me a break. Don't tell me you actually hold merit to Apple's "in-house PhotoShop benchmark tests".

      No, I trust they're just making the shit up. Pulling numbers out of the air so they can sell a few extra units. Doesn't explain why anything graphics-related on my Dual G4 SMOKES my Thunderbird...

      Hell, give me a single P4@2GHz. It'll still be faster than dual PPC's@800MHz

      Care to provide some benchmarks? Maybe point us in the direction of ONE article that shows comparable applications being faster than dual 800MHz G4's?

      Maybe if you jumped off your horse for a few minutes and actually spent time really USING a high-end Macintosh, you'd come to appreciate the fact that their hardware is top of the line, the operating system is superb, it's *all* easy to use and, yes, it's *fast*.

      --

      --
      you must amputate to email me
      i read all replies to my comments

    20. Re:People need to realize that... by CoffeeJedi · · Score: 1

      Do you think right now there are people sitting around at intel marvelling over the speed of a motorola processor? ummm... actually... yes, stupid public and a higher mhz number do not a faster processor make

      --
      May you be touched by His Noodly Appendage. RAmen.
    21. Re:People need to realize that... by ChuyMatt · · Score: 1

      OK... You people never were in debate in school, were you? the link is right there on this page. READ what it says and comment on that. NOT on what _you_ think it going to say. It is an external firewire drive. Move the files over there. done. *sigh* Maybe we need to have /. post an article that is outrageous with a link telling the people who follow it to not post anything that day and see how many people feel like fools the next day for their idiotic posts (first posting aside). Bet there would be a lot.

    22. Re:People need to realize that... by Darren.Moffat · · Score: 1

      Into the case without turning screws
      Most Sun machines (except the current lowend Ultra 5/10).

      FireWire
      Sun Blade 1000

      Optical Mouse
      Sun was doing optical mice back in the 80's.

      Giving up CRT in favour of LCD
      Bad idea, you need both to properly cover the market, this has been hashed out on /. many many times each have their benifits but currently neither does everything for everyone.

      BTW Sun has LCD screens for standalone use and
      a SunRay integrated into an LCD screen.

    23. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh come on... Those crappy Sun mice required a special mousepad to use. If you lost the mousepad during some move, you were screwed until you received a new one. No comparison.

    24. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever owned a new Mercedes Benz, BMW, or Lexus for that matter?

      I have never had this stuff in the shop-- only for
      60,000 mile checkup, and after a wreck! I've never had a BMW but I would expect it would be the same. Also-- if you can ever get a standard transmission in this country-- they are some of the funnest cars to drive.

    25. Re:People need to realize that... by eAndroid · · Score: 1
      People need to realize that MBs and BMWs are in the shop as often, or more often, than new Fords or Chevys.


      That's only because I drive it like a crazed maniac.
      --

      I can't spell or type, but that doesn't mean I'm unusually stupid.
    26. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But does your dual G4 smoke a dual P4 2GHz?

    27. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Modern optical mice really aren't much better than your standard ball mouse. Back in '84 I had an optical mouse for my XT, which utilized a special metal-grid mousepad for high precision. Now that was a _real_ optical mouse, not like the cheap ones now. The only benefit to having a modern optical mouse is that you don't have to clean it. BFD. Anyways, this point of yours is completely moot since all varieties of mice are so cheap. You can buy a cordless, optical, force-feedback mouse with scroll wheel and four buttons for $50.

      You, sir, are an idiot.


      Anyone forced to use the crappy ball mice which come with PC's will appreciate a "real" optical mouse, and btw, the modern mice are indeed real optical mice - more so than the old style optical mice, precisely because they have advanced to the point where those kludgey old grids are no longer necessary.

      You obviously are clueless, or you would know this. Go and get an nice optical mouse and compare it to contemporary ball mice; there is no comparison!

      Anyone who has used one of the new optical mice from Apple, Microsoft, or Logitech will realize how nice these are; not having to shell out an extra 50-60 bucks to get one is a definite plus. It is only a matter of time before optical mice are standard issue on new PC's: once again, Apple is leading the trend, not following.

    28. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, clock speed doesn't count for everything, but the highest end P4 or Athlon is still faster than the highest end G4 processor.

    29. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blade 100 has firewire as well, along with USB, and under a grand.

      I totally agree- SUN needs props for what they done as well.

      Apples are cool for a while, but just like the fruit, they go bad after time.

    30. Re:People need to realize that... by gig · · Score: 2

      Umm, easy access cases were available for PC's long before Apple ever incorporated them. I remember buying a case for a 486DX-33 that had a hinged door built into the side.

      ALL of Apple's machines are easy-access, not just one particular desktop box. The iMac has a little door that opens with a quarter and exposes the RAM slots, the notebook keyboards are also pop-up doors that expose the internals.

      The idea that you have to trade hackability for ease of use is antiquated. All of Apple's stuff is like this ... the iPod syncs easily with iTunes for a non-technical user, but is a standard FireWire drive that anyone can write files to with any system that supports FireWire. Mac OS X has a killer GUI, but you can treat it like BSD if you want to, as well.

      LPT and USB ports are extremely useful, easy to use and have been around on PC's before FireWire was on Macs.

      The first wave of successful USB peripherals all came in translucent blue for a reason. I had a USB PC in 1996, too, but the ports didn't work with Windows. NT didn't get USB support until Windows 2000. You plug a USB printer into a Mac and it is auto-detected and ready to go ... we've been doing USB printers for years. iTunes comes with Mac OS X and it works with 35 third-party USB CD burners, and six or seven brands of USB MP3 player, without installing anything.

      Digital video editing software comes with Window ME. You can also pick up a copy of Personal Studio for relatively cheap (and in my case, I get the Windows version free because I bought the BeOS version).

      Windows ME comes with Windows Movie Maker for editing movies, NotePad for editing text, and MS-DOS for giving commands to the computer. Mac OS X comes with iMovie2 for editing movies, emacs and vi for text, and BSD UNIX. There is no comparison. How many emacs users want to switch to NotePad? iMovie2 is really useful software and Windows Movie Maker is a sad joke on the people who are struggling to use it. I feel sad when I think about people trying to do audio or video on Windows ... I've seen all the solutions, and it is just sad.

      Modern optical mice really aren't much better than your standard ball mouse.

      Funny, I was thinking the opposite last night while I ran my Apple Pro Mouse over the sofa with my PowerBook in my lap and it works just fine! Haven't had to clean this mouse, either, and there are no pieces to break off, not even buttons. I don't even carry a mousepad anymore. This mouse has been a pleasure to use.

      Windows ME comes with MicroSoft Works, which IMHO is a pretty full featured productivity suite. If I need more, I can just download StarOffice for free.

      Bah! Works always breaks with the next Windows update, and there are no upgrades. AppleWorks is a real application. You get AppleWorks 6 included with your iMac or iBook and it is just as good as the AppleWorks you can buy separately. Nothing is missing and you can upgrade it later. It is scriptable and has a decent community around it.

      My Pentium 4 PC at work came with both a 50X CD-ROM drive and also a DVD-R/CD-RW combo drive as standard.

      Is that a DVD-RW/CD-RW drive or a DVD/CD-RW ("combo") drive? The SuperDrive in the PowerMacs reads DVD's and CD's, and writes DVD-R's, DVD-RW's, CD-R's, and CD-RW's, and does it from the Finder. Also, iDVD is included, which enables you to make DVD video discs, including the interface, encoding, and burning. The key is that there is software included that makes it easy for the user to make the drive do everything it's capable of.

      CRT's are still being used by Apple though. Besides, there isn't an LCD screen to date that can match the screen redraw speed of a CRT. If I'm watching a fast action movie, or playing a fast action game I don't want it to get blurry on me.

      Blurring is mainly a result of using an analog interface (VGA), which are still common. Apple has been shipping all-digital LCD displays for years. I play games on LCD's just fine ... I haven't used a CRT for over two years. An analog LCD means you are taking a digital signal, turning it into analog, sending it to the display, where it is turning the analog signal into digital, and the displaying it. It takes time and it makes analog LCD's slow. Get a digital one with decent quality and you're fine. All of Apple's displays fit this bill ... no worries.

    31. Re:People need to realize that... by rm+-rf+/etc/* · · Score: 1
      Most Sun machines (except the current lowend Ultra 5/10).


      Like? Ultra 4/5 required two screws, SunBlade 100 requires two screws, older sparcs required...2 screws. Maybe enterprise hardware does without screws... Apple's cases have been screw free and have had easy access for 3 years now, come on.


      SunBlade 1000


      Is that available in a $1200 laptop form or a $800 all in one form? Was that available 2 years ago when apple started shipping firewire?


      Sun was doing optical mice back in the 80's.


      Could you use it on your jeans when you're in the server room without a mouse pad?


      As for CRT's, well, I agree there. But I think apple made the right move anyway, we never bought apple monitors because other CRT's were cheaper. I'm betting apple wasn't selling a whole lot of them anyway, why deal with the overhead when you can let the third party market pick up the slack? I do think it's a mistake not to have other brand CRT's available from the apple store though.

    32. Re:People need to realize that... by gig · · Score: 2

      Think about the kinds of calculations Photoshop does ... displaying, resizing, filtering images. These kinds of calculations are COMMON in today's software. A Web browser has to be able to display and resize images as quickly as possible. A GUI needs to be able to display and resize images as quickly as possible. Also, when you wait for Photoshop, you really wait. You don't set something up and go away while it renders or encodes or compiles. You watch a progress bar. Cutting down that progress bar is much more important than a higher MHz stamp on the CPU ... real performance counts.

      Even if you're not using Photoshop, it is a good benchmark.

      Besides, there are much greater bottlenecks in Windows than there are in any hardware. Strap a 4GHz CPU to Windows and it will still slow you down.

    33. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention the fact that the mousepad was a grid that had to be oriented in the right direction. If you pushed the mouse straight forward, but at an angle to the grid, the pointer tracked sideways. And the mousepad was so tiny that you usually had to pick up the mouse multiple times when going from one corner of the screen to another. If you increased the tracking speed to avoid this, the poor resolution of the coarse grid proved equally frustrating. Basically, they were easily the worst mice ever. I used to admin Suns from 1992 to 1998 and I don't think I ever met a user who liked those mice.

    34. Re:People need to realize that... by gig · · Score: 2

      A high-quality, all-digital LCD display is S W E E T. Don't look at a crappy VGA monitor with an LCD bolted onto it and make a judgement on all LCD's. Apple's displays are from-the-ground-up digital-digital-digital (digital graphics adapter output, digital cable, digital display) flat panels ... they are plenty fast for gaming and video editing, and ideal for graphics. I mean ... think about Apple's core customers ... news organizatons are buying PowerBooks just to run Final Cut Pro.

      I know the CRT's out there are the best they've ever been, but we got rid of our last CRT almost two years ago and we haven't missed them at all. The power, the heat, the noise, the radiation, the glass, the weight, the size ... I don't miss it, not when Apple's displays are just so easy on the eyes. You get used to the display being totally flat and when I use a CRT now I feel like I should be on Captain Nemo's sub or Flash Gordon's ship or something, surrounded by vacuum tubes.

    35. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rather than spouting off about something you clearly know nothing about, why not head over to www.spec.org, read their background info, check out the contents of their benchmark suites, and compare results for yourself.

    36. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "How many ship an optical mouse standard?"

      And a how many buttons on that cute little mouse?

      "One."

      Damn straight.

    37. Re:People need to realize that... by zfractal · · Score: 1
      Umm, easy access cases were available for PC's long before Apple ever incorporated them. I remember buying a case for a 486DX-33 that had a hinged door built into the side.



      Mac II, circa 1986. Just pop open the top.



      Granted, the original Macs (128K, SE, etc.) were a real pain.

    38. Re:People need to realize that... by itachi · · Score: 1

      Go down to the nearest Apple store, take a look at the large flat panels that they have. Unbelievable. Truly amazing. I really wasn't that impressed by the notion of the 22" cinema display until I saw it up close and personal. I have a really nice 21" CRT at work, and it is tiny by comparison, not to mention far more eyestrain inducing. If I had the cash for the 22" Cinema Display, I'd buy it in a second.

      itachi

    39. Re:People need to realize that... by KyleJ61782 · · Score: 1

      At least they don't share bugs with the other 95% of the computers out there...

      Kyle

      --

      I refuse to have a battle of wits with an unarmed person.
    40. Re:People need to realize that... by glwillia · · Score: 1

      Umm, easy access cases were available for PC's long before Apple ever incorporated them. I remember buying a case for a 486DX-33 that had a hinged door built into the side.

      Really? Apple has incorporated them since 1987, with the Mac II. With the exception of the early compact Macs, I can have most modular Macs completely disassembled in about 5 minutes, including my 7600 and LC II, without removing any screws.. My friend's dual-800 G4 is also incredibly easy to use; just open the hinged door and voilà, immediate access to everything. I have NEVER seen a PC that has a case that well-designed.

      LPT and USB ports are extremely useful, easy to use and have been around on PC's before FireWire was on Macs.

      Well, Macs have always had serial ports, which work much like parallel ports, and while it is true that you could get USB on a PC before the iMac, there was nothing to plug into it, and Windows 95 OSR2's support was awful.

      Windows ME comes with MicroSoft Works, which IMHO is a pretty full featured productivity suite.

      It does? Microsoft's website doesn't say that it does. But, even if it does, does it compare to AppleWorks, which many of my Mac-using friends use in lieu of MS Office, which they can pirate with ease?

      Maybe your PC did come with both a DVD-R/CD-RW combo drive. I would venture to guess that it didnt before January 2001, when Apple made it standard on certain G4s. It took Apple to get a lot of units out in the field and drive down prices by volume (when the G4 with SuperDrive came out, the going price for a DVD-R/CD-RW drive was more than the whole G4 with SuperDrive sold for).

      Yes, CRTs are still being used by Apple. And you can still use a CRT (with a standard HD15 connector) with a Mac. But who do you think will increase demand and market acceptance, and further R&D, on LCDs? The same manufacturer that brought USB, FireWire, DVD-R, and the GUI to the masses (yes, they didnt invent these technologies, but they were the first to really use them in a commercial setting, and in many ways, their implementations are still the best).

      Im not a Mac zealot by any means; I dont even use a Mac as my primary computer. But I am glad that there is still one manufacturer that innovates as opposed to slapping together a bunch of no-name Taiwanese components and calling it an integrated system.

    41. Re:People need to realize that... by elakazal · · Score: 1

      People also need to realize that Apple isn't saying "CRTs are bad and no one should use them." They're saying "We no longer choose to make CRTs...we're going to leave that to other people." An awful lot of computer users, particularly those who know what they need/want, buy monitors from brands other than the computer maker's. Standard CRTs from other companies still work with Macs, and most likely will for a very long time. Apple is not a huge manufacturer of monitors (it's not small, but there are lots bigger) and the differences in CRTs are, while real, fairly small. Apple has simply decided to let other companies fiddle with that stuff, and move into an area where there is more room to innovate and produce cutting edge equipment. And whether or not you admit it, and clearly a large number of you don't, Apple is, in general, a considerably better innovator and risk taker than 99% of the Wintel world. Even when the PC universe comes up with a good idea, they hesitate to use it, because in their world, compatibility is paramount. The Macintosh has always been primarily compatible only with itself, and so Apple doesn't have to fret about those sorts of things. Look at USB... PC makers were free to incorporate it for years before Apple took the plunge...and they might never have done it if Apple hadn't. Apple made the leap of faith and the result was the development of lots of USB devices which encouraged the PC makers it was safe to try it themselves.

    42. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you have a crappy laptop

    43. Re:People need to realize that... by Jonathan · · Score: 2


      Umm, easy access cases were available for PC's long before Apple ever incorporated them. I remember buying a case for a 486DX-33 that had a hinged door built into the side.

      Really? Apple has incorporated them since 1987, with the Mac II.

      Of course the Apple ][ I used in 1981 had a pop out plastic cover and no stupid screws. Never been a Mac person, but the Apple ]['s had such cases since before the IBM PC even existed.

    44. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, they're easy on the eyes for all day coding and that sort of thing, but they still suck for games and DVDs. Fast moving objects still exhibit a noticeable loss in intensity, color saturation isn't that great, and the displays are still hopelessly directional. Apple has some of the better flat panel displays on the market, but they're still not going to replace CRTs any time soon for some uses.

    45. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple II, circa 1979?

    46. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the calculations used in PhotoShop are so common in "today's software", then why doesn't Apple ever use any other of "today's software" as a benchmark?

    47. Re:People need to realize that... by NickV · · Score: 2

      Huh? Wait... -62% profits? Where'd you get that from?

      According to Apple's Fourth Quarter Earnings release they went down 22% in revenue this quarter from last year in the same quarter.

      In fact, Apple reported a net profit of $66 million this quarter, (to contrast, they made $172 million this quarter last year) and in the end of the year they posted a lost of $25 million out of $5.36Billion in revenue. Pretty healthy considering their case reserve.

      On the other hand, PC companies (aside from Dell) are BLEEDING money like crazy. Gateway, for instance, lost $20.8 million this quarter. Compaq lost $120 million this quarter.

      Compared to those, Apple is rolling in successful times.

      Oh wait, I just realized I spent WAAAAAAAAAAAAAY too much time answering an AC's one line troll. Doh!

    48. Re:People need to realize that... by David+Ham · · Score: 1

      Gosh, I guess it really doesn't matter, since the P4 can't BUY a Dual P4 at this time.

      --

      --
      you must amputate to email me
      i read all replies to my comments

    49. Re:People need to realize that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess you haven't heard of the SuperMicro P4DC6 and P4DC6+ mobos. $628 on Price Watch.

    50. Re:People need to realize that... by David+Ham · · Score: 1

      I have. Those are for Xeon processors. Plain vanilla P4 ain't be doin' dual.

      --

      --
      you must amputate to email me
      i read all replies to my comments

  78. What did Apple come out with? by kaisyain · · Score: 2

    All they did was take small, firewire hard drive technology that someone else developed and then add a little layer of glitz to it. It seems to me that virtually all of the "marvelous engineering" was done by the hard drive manufacturer...not by Apple. They just added a layer of candy coating.

    1. Re:What did Apple come out with? by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

      When you buy a car, do you purchase the engine, then get the rest of the car on pricewatch?

      The point of the device is that Apple took fairly standard components and did something with them that is appealing, and makes people go, "gee, now I want one."

      --
      There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
      Max V.
      NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
    2. Re:What did Apple come out with? by SideshowBob · · Score: 1

      and Apple had nothing to do with the development of FireWire, right? Not.

    3. Re:What did Apple come out with? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats what this whole market is about. Taking what others have done and making it better to make money. Go Apple!!!!

    4. Re:What did Apple come out with? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Burn!

    5. Re:What did Apple come out with? by Refrag · · Score: 2

      There's something to be said for bringing stuff to the market. Which is one thing (aside from great design) that Apple does better than anyone else in the industry. After all, where would we be if Apple hadn't brought the GUI and mouse to the market?

      We might be playing Wolfenstein on MS-DOS XP with just a keyboard.

      --
      I have a website. It's about Macs.
  79. Neodymium transducer magnets? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Even the headphones that come with the iPod are phenomenal. They've been engineered with Neodymium transducer magnets for enhanced (20 -- to 20,000-Hz) frequency response and stunning, high-fidelity sound.

    I think they're making that up. They called up the Star Trek guys and said "we need some technobabble..." Or can someone explain just what the heck a Neodymium transducer magnet is?

    1. Re:Neodymium transducer magnets? by phillymjs · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Neodymium magnets are nothing new. I remember that being listed as a feature in Sony headphones years ago. From a little quick reading on Google, they are just damned strong little magnets.

      ~Philly

    2. Re:Neodymium transducer magnets? by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

      I think the point of the earbuds is that they don't sound like a cat in a pillow. (Want to listen to my Rio? I can't stand the sound that comes out of the thing.)

      --
      There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
      Max V.
      NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
  80. Firewire ports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The new Creative Labs Soundblaster Audigy cards have a SB1394 port which is a renamed FireWire / IEE1394 port. Or you can buy one for 75$. Furthermore they will be common next year as Intel tries to kill serial and parallel ports.

    1. Re:Firewire ports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen generic PCI firewire cards for as low as $30. Haven't heard any announcement about 1394 being included in the standard Intel or VIA chipsets tho - up to this point, Intel has been in opposition.

  81. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, give Apple some credit for biting at least 3 other companies' ideas, and being 3 yrs late jumping on the bandwagon. Innovative my ass.

  82. Ignorant by phillymjs · · Score: 2

    ...which by virtue of being firewire will be limited to Apple Mac owners...

    You mean, people who own Apple Macs like these?

    Since the iPod can double as a normal portable hard drive. I'm sure it will likely be pretty easily used on a PC. And if it's not, big deal. It might be nice for the other half to see how THEY like having their perfectly-good platform ignored, and having to hack a product to make it usable on their systems.

    And if you haven't noticed, it is possible to buy a FireWire card for a PC that doesn't already come with it.

  83. stainless steel? what a boring color! by rnd() · · Score: 2

    I won't buy one until the unit is available in at least lime, strawberry, and grape color.

    --

    Amazing magic tricks

  84. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by JWhitlock · · Score: 5, Informative
    Maybe it's not so lame. But Apple sells this device, while a VA Linux company sells Nomad

    (OK, it's a semi-troll - it's just fun to theorize about CmdrTaco / VA Linux / OSDN conspiracies)

  85. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
    Agree with the article poster - Lame. Not only is this a lackluster MP3 unit (which by virtue of being firewire will be limited to Apple Mac owners)
    My HP Pavilion at work (don't laugh...I didn't buy it, but with an Asus motherboard inside, it's not that bad...if only it didn't have a Maxtor HD) would disagree with you...it has a FireWire port up front. I've also thought about putting the WD 100GB drive I bought recently into a FireWire case so I can move it between home and work (would need to add a FireWire card to the home box to do that...maybe $30 or so for that).
    --
    20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  86. Lame? by MasterVidBoi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Lets see, in a portable mp3 player, you're looking for a few key features:

    Size
    Battery Life
    Capacity
    Price

    The Nomad blows the iPod away in capacity, as do CD-R players, but they are both far larger and heavier. The Nomad in particular isn't really portable. The iPod is practically small enough to hide it in the palm of your hands. Of course, then there is the battery life problem.

    Then there are the solid state players, with 32 or 64 megs of memory. They are small, have great battery life, and are cheap, but they don't hold enough music to make even their low cost worth paying.

    Apple termed it wrong, the iPod isn't a breakthrough. It's just another evolutionary step in consumer electronics, but an important one. While there are other players with larger capacities, smaller sizes, or cheaper price tags, the iPod is the first to really hit that sweet spot between each of those requirements. (OK, I admit, at $300, it would be a much much better deal.)

  87. If it used linux.... by SensitiveMale · · Score: 0, Funny

    I bet you would be proclaiming it to be the second coming.

    1. Re:If it used linux.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no kidding

  88. Least lame of any mp3 player yet. by node+3 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    It may be lame but compared to *every* other mp3 player out there, it's the least lame there is. It's small, FireWire (copy a CD in less than 10 seconds? You know how slow my Sony mp3 player was to load?). It even charges over the FireWire port.

    So it's only 6GB. First off, that's a *lot*. It's about 100 CD's. How many CD's, MiniDiscs, 64MB flash cards, etc, does it take to equal that? Only a couple of HD-based systems are as convenient, and they all have other, more critical problems.

    All other HD based players' problems tend to be slow speed (USB, let alone performance), large size, poor battery life, and horrible interfaces. All but performance is *definitely* better in the iPod just based on the specs and demos. Performance has yet to be seen.

    iPod lame? Perhaps. It's just that everything else is more lame.

    -node 3

    1. Re:Least lame of any mp3 player yet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So it's only 6GB. First off, that's a *lot*. It's about 100 CD's

      No, it's not 100 CDs' worth of space. A standard 74-minute audio CD holds approximately 750 MB of data. A 74-minute CD-ROM holds about 650 MB due to error correction overhead.

      How many CD's, MiniDiscs, 64MB flash cards, etc, does it take to equal that?

      About 10 CD-ROM discs, 50 MD-Data discs, or 100 flash cards, if you're talking raw data storage.

    2. Re:Least lame of any mp3 player yet. by omega9 · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that, once ripped, each CD's worth of music will take up 650-750MB of storage? Aren't you forgetting the whole idea behind MP3's, to compress the songs?

      In my experience, a ~3.5 minute song ripped at 128k MP3 can take around 4MB of space. Given a 15 track CD that's only 60MB. If you have a 650MB CD-R to work with there's a good chance you can fit ~11 CD's worth of music on there. I picked up one of those Kenwood car CD/MP3 player 6 months ago and this is the exact thing I have been doing. I can fit about 10 hours of music on a single CD-R.

      Using the same numbers (rough, I admit), you could fit ~85 CD's into a 5GB package, which sure beats the hell out of carrying multiple minidiscs, SD, or flash cards.

      --
      I'm against picketing, but I don't know how to show it.
    3. Re:Least lame of any mp3 player yet. by node+3 · · Score: 1
      Since you're AC, I can only assume you're attempting to troll. Otherwise you've missed out on the nuances of conversation. Certainly I'd store mp3's on an mp3 player, not iso images of a CD, wouldn't you think?

      Making average assumptions about bit rate and length of audio CD, a 6GB iPod will hold the audio from around 100 CD's. A CD will hold the contents of 1 CD, an mp3 CD will hold 10 CD's, a MiniDisc will hold the contents of 1 CD, an LPMD will hold the contents of 4-5 CD's (although it's quality is maxed out at about 2 CD's/LPMD).

      All told, quite impressive for such a small package. Arguably the best portable audio solution out today.

      -node 3

    4. Re:Least lame of any mp3 player yet. by Altus · · Score: 1

      true, in terms of raw data, but the ipod holds MP3's

      lets see 74 min at 1meg per minute (an aproximation of MP3 size that has served me well in the past)

      thats......

      a metric ass load of music.
      (for the record that is a technical term)

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    5. Re:Least lame of any mp3 player yet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, I'm not forgetting about MP3 compression. You lose sound quality when you go from Red Book audio to MP3 at typical data rates, and the iPod does have the ability to store and play .AIFFs for a true apples-to-apples comparison.

      Apple is marketing this device as a data storage device as well as a MP3 player. Are you going to be able to get away with lossy compression there?

    6. Re:Least lame of any mp3 player yet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you're AC, I can only assume you're attempting to troll.


      If you're going to insist on evaluating HDs using 10:1 lossy compression, then you should give CD-R discs the benefit of the same advantage, in which case the HD is the equivalent of only 10 CD-Rs.


      Calling me a troll won't change the relative storage capacity of the media.

  89. stupid name, great idea by mox358 · · Score: 1

    it's not the iWalk or newton or whatever. I wanted that too, but it's still in the pipeline then... this is here now and it's hardly lame. the size of a rio, the style of apple, and the space of a nomad jukebox. it's expensive, but with apple you pay the price to be years ahead of the pack. iPod, depsite having a stupid name, should sell well. it'll make a good xmas present...

    --
    No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame. - Initial /. Thoughts on iPod
    1. Re:stupid name, great idea by bwalling · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure you can safely say the iWalk is still in the pipeline. It looked great. I'd be getting on as soon as it came out, but I don't think there is any real evidence of its existence. Problem is, if the iPod is $399, how much would the iWalk be?

    2. Re:stupid name, great idea by mox358 · · Score: 1

      well... obviously i have no inside information, this is all speculation here... but it's well known apple posses handwriting recognition technology well beyond palm's capabilities, WELL beyond, and they have a team still working on it, plus they have publically stated they want to develop their own "digital devices" to fill in gaps left by 3rd party mac hardware developers. again, when the PDA market matures, and the price drops (a point you made, and i acknowledge as correct) then i would think iWalk will be relased in a similiar fashion.

      --
      No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame. - Initial /. Thoughts on iPod
    3. Re:stupid name, great idea by bwalling · · Score: 1

      I hope you're right. An OSX based PDA would be very cool.

  90. Macs only? by jchristopher · · Score: 2

    One thing I haven't seen addressed here yet, is that this device appears to be "Mac-only". That's their choice, but it seems to be a really poor one. They just chopped of their potential marketshare by 95%.

    1. Re:Macs only? by mox358 · · Score: 1

      there was a comment made that they would look into supporting windows when they got some free time... their words, not mine...

      --
      No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame. - Initial /. Thoughts on iPod
    2. Re:Macs only? by MrBogus · · Score: 2

      If it functions as a standard firewire disk, I have no idea why it wouldn't be supported by Windows/Linux/etc. It's probably only some added-value software that makes it 'Mac only'.

      Of course, marketing to PC people would involve explaining that they most likely do not have a powered firewire interface. Probably more trouble than it's worth.

      --

      When I hear the word 'innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    3. Re:Macs only? by swb · · Score: 1

      Standard firewire disk? What format is the disk in, tho? Does the firmware on the device require the disk formatted in something unique to MacOS? Does it require the files to be in some specific Mac format or some other "added" files in order for the device's UI to properly work?

      I guess time will tell when people finally get ahold of one, but I would almost guess that its not just a pile of MP3s on a disk..

  91. Hackable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you notice in the "About" menu under the iPod, there's a version number, which implies that the firmware is can be update, although it's nothing new for mp3 players, this isn't simply an mp3 player. Being a 5GB FireWire hard drive as well, makes me think this has the possibility of being hacked into a PDA or running a Linux similar to that on the Palm.

  92. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by SteveM · · Score: 2

    The Nomad is also available at the Apple online store for $249 ($10 more than ThinkGeek).

    Steve M

  93. Archos is bigger (Noman is MUCH bigger) by jbridges · · Score: 2

    The iPod is suprisingly small, compare to the Archos (which is quite a bit smaller than the Creative Nomad):

    Dimensions: 115 x 83 x 34 mm. (4.5 x 3.2 x 1.3")
    Weight: 350 g (12.3 oz.)

    Of course the Archos is cheaper, can record, and supports up to 30GB (just swap drives). The Archos drivers have no digital rights protection, and no special software. The device just appears as a standard USB external drive (FAT32) when you plug it in.

    Firewire is quite appealing, consider copying a few GB at USB speeds... ughhhh.

    1. Re:Archos is bigger (Noman is MUCH bigger) by sulli · · Score: 1

      No DRM on iPod, as far as I can tell. This is actually a big selling point. Of course it's firmware "upgradable" but you don't have to upgrade if you don't want to.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    2. Re:Archos is bigger (Noman is MUCH bigger) by Robert1 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the iPod is bascially a waste of cash.
      5gigs vs 6gigs, for several hundred less, without rights protection. Plus the Arhcos can serve as a USB harddrive, great when you wanna transfer something large from one comp to another. Best of all you can use whatever space is left on the unit, leaving your mp3s intact and listenable.

    3. Re:Archos is bigger (Noman is MUCH bigger) by jbridges · · Score: 2

      For the same price, I can have an Archos 20GB, (IBM 20GB Laptop drive is around $100, leaving you with a 6GB drive to sell off or use for some other project).

      But, don't underestimate the advantage of HALF the weight! I've tried to put an Archos in my shirt pocket, and it's not practical, something thinner and half the weight would be acceptable.

      As for the talk of using a RIO Volt, it's not entirely practical to carry around. Even with the improved firmware the skip protection only works on long tracks without much seeking around. Each time you switch tracks you need to stand still or walk very carefully.

  94. Apple released a friggen WHAT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    another expesive mp3 player?? you've got to be kidding me... I dont give a rats hind end about specs... and apparently niether do many electronics consumer purchasers, or we'ld all have HDTV, DAT, G4 w/ superdrives, etc, etc... if i can find an mp3 player with 1 hour of music, a clip on case, and a USB connetion for 99 bucks, why... why... in the name of God, why would i want to pay 300 more for a few more features... the players out there are "Good Enough"!!!!!! Why enter this market?

    this is Pippen all over again... horrably expencive, underpower, woafully unsupported, in a market full of Segas, playstations and nintendos... of course, it had the potential of leveraging apples huge library of games =0 ...

    probabably closer to Apples "revolutionary" $600 "Cd Player" (single speed, 1 bit, pathetic) back in the early 90's... Ohh that was impressive.. you could plug it into your stereo, or you could plug it into your computer, or both (if, IF, you could find a reliable 20' long SCSI cable)... In a workd of $600 cd player/ CD ROMs, one that could do both was a good idea.. but by the time apple did it.. 4 bit cd players had dropped below $200, 4 speed cd-roms rom were almost as cheap.. and soon after every new computer and boom box had one in it anyway....

    1. Re:Apple released a friggen WHAT? by phillymjs · · Score: 2

      I dont give a rats hind end about specs... and apparently niether do many electronics consumer purchasers...

      Yeah, all those consumers are much more discerning than to simply buy based on specs, like getting the computer with the highest megahertz rating they can afford and looking down their noses at anything slower. Oh, wait...

    2. Re:Apple released a friggen WHAT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the players out there are "Good Enough"!!!!!!

      That's the same attitude that keeps Windows in use on your computer.

    3. Re:Apple released a friggen WHAT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      blah blah blah

      Slashdot is always good for a the most rigidly monotheistic viewpoints out there. sanctimoniousnerds.org

      if slashdot.org.mention apple
      slashdotties.comments=bad
      else
      nothing
      end if
      end

      The iPod is too expensive and Slashdotties are worse than Microsofties.....

      Just mention Apple on this site and sit back and enjoy the completely predictable spectacle that will ensue....

      Mention M$ and you'll get the same thing...

      You should find the thread where a guy actually complains about firewire. That's a really good one!
      bwahahahaha

      you beautiful fucking nerds. I love you guys.

  95. It'll come down to follow through by caveDan · · Score: 1

    Apple's success with this device will be defined by what the follow it up with. This device has some interesting features and a price tag at the high end of the MP3 player spectrum. Combined with a set of complementary offerings the idea of a home media/data/communications/entertainment system based on Apple products becomes an attractive, if expensive, proposition.

  96. Some background by taniwha · · Score: 1
    I found myself (briefly) designing this sort of hardware about 6 months back - my guess is that the Apple unit is designed around an off-the-shelf laptop drive (the dimensions give it away). 10 hrs is shortish - there are similar units out there with 14+ hours (the nomad of course is trez-sucky).



    We actually looked at (but didn't build) a design much smaller the Apple unit (it's a PCMCIA drive with a similar form factor battery, lcd etc - the size of a credit card but 1/2 inch thick - probably 10 hr battery life) - the trouble is that the parts cost is ridiculous - final retail would end up near $7-800.



    There's a basic problem in the harddrive biz - prices don't go down below a certain floor (the disks just get denser for a partiocular form factor) this limits the lowest price that will see consumer uses.



    Personally I suspect that Nomad is being sold pretty close to cost - they're pushing for market share, they really can't be making much (if any) money.



    IMHO USB is not a big deal - mainly because USB can happily keep up with a ripper - and with 5G (or 20G) you tend to load all your CD collection (damn I really really want that 100G drive) and carry it around with you

    1. Re:Some background by Kranium · · Score: 1

      Yeah, except the FireWire is used for synching, tranferring files, and recharging the device. You wouldn't want to do any of that with USB.

    2. Re:Some background by altman · · Score: 1

      The apple one *does* use a PCMCIA hard drive - well, at least the insides of one. It's a 1.8" drive, not a 2.5" laptop drive (the whole unit is narrower than a 2.5" drive, which kinda gives it away....). These are not cheap at all.

      Their claimed transfer rate (5G in 10mins) is over 8MBytes/sec. Damn impressive.

    3. Re:Some background by taniwha · · Score: 1
      The apple one *does* use a PCMCIA hard drive



      oops you're right - that explains the price - I missed the narrower width

    4. Re:Some background by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 2
      Yeah, except the FireWire is used for synching, tranferring files, and recharging the device. You wouldn't want to do any of that with USB


      USB is fine for syncing. A typical song would take around 4 seconds to transfer over USB. That sucks when you first get the thing and are downloading months worth of rips to it, but is is fine for keeping the device up to date with your new rips.

    5. Re:Some background by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah - Nothing better than sending files through the keyboard port! Don't you have some 486-filled dumpsters to dive in?

  97. Too many by stoopidguy · · Score: 1

    Don't we have enough of these mp3 players? 5G is awfully small for an mp3 player to begin with; I have over 140GB of live trance sessions on my computer ATM.

  98. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by LoudMusic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Raise your hand if you have iTunes ...

    Raise your hand if you have a FireWire port ...

    Raise your hand if you have both ...

    Raise your hand if you have $400 to spend on a cute Apple device ...

    There is Apple's market. Pretty slim, eh? I don't see many sales in the future of iPod.

    ~LoudMusic

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
  99. Engineering Perspective by starfoxmac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Apple product has 83% of the storage space, 20.% of the volume, and transfers files 16500% faster (assuming 2.4 Mb/s USB spec and 50MB/s firewire, im unsure).
    Just because Apple didn't choose to significantly increase its volume by adding a 802.11a antenna, just to add a *very* slow transmittal solution (compared to its firewire), means it's "lame?"
    I don't have a religious bent for or against Apple; when intelligent people make these kinds of comments, it confuses me.

    1. Re:Engineering Perspective by bgarcia · · Score: 1
      On CmdrTaco calling the iPod lame, starfoxmac sez:
      when intelligent people make these kinds of comments, it confuses me.
      So... where's the confusion?
      --
      I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar.
    2. Re:Engineering Perspective by Ether · · Score: 1

      >(assuming 2.4 Mb/s USB spec and 50MB/s firewire, im unsure).

      I'd like to see, hell, I'd like to _own_ a portable hard drive that gives 50 MB/s read/write speed. I'd have to invest in an asbestos pocket protector. Even 50Mb/s seems high for a low-rpm mini-hd. (as a point of comparison, 7200 RPM SCSI 160s average around 20-30 MB/s sustained.

      It would be cool if you could share music locally "Portable_Music_Share", on a wireless network, then when the portable comes into range of a 802.11b, it loads portable music into the playlist (or load a playlist off of it), then streaming. 802.11 is more than capable of streaming. Then reading the ID3v2 tags, grab music you might like off of the share if you had available space (tivo-esque).

      --
      --I hate people when they're not polite -"Psycho Killer", Talking Heads
    3. Re:Engineering Perspective by barnaclebarnes · · Score: 1

      Having Firewire as the _primary_ interface is great. Its fast, and thats what you need for moving large amounts of data in a hurry. And belive me it is painful waiting for a CD to download to your device when you are late for your train.

      It would have been nice to see Bluetooth in there for 'ad-hoc' transfers. you the ones where somebody has a song on their Bluetooth enabled phone that you want to check out and they just 'beam' it to you. It would make the device more friendly to the non Mac world.

      BTW: Does it only have one mouse button? :)

      --
      [Please type your sig here.]
    4. Re:Engineering Perspective by bryanbrunton · · Score: 1

      >>when intelligent people make these kinds of comments, it confuses me

      Who accused CmdrTaco of being intelligent? That's the same guy who gave a good review to The Phantom Menace.

      Clearly, CmdrTaco has limited anaylytical and thinking skills.

  100. Someone show me a decent MP3 player by Scutter · · Score: 2

    Oh goody. Another over-priced MP3 player with too many bells and whistles. And a price that's way higher than it should be.

    All I want is a decent MP3. I want one that supports some sort of smart media card, supports at least 128MB, and has USB. And most importantly, doesn't cost $400! Is that too much to ask? The Diamond Rio 500 came closest to that, but of course it's not made anymore (and cost too much anyway). Instead, SonicBlue produces the vastly inferior Rio 600 or the way over-priced 800. If I can buy a camcorder for $300, a freaking MP3 player oughta be under $100.

    I don't need a built-in CD player (that's why I have MP3's fer crissakes!) I don't need a built-in hard drive. I don't need a goddamn built-in toaster oven. I just want a little MP3 player that holds more than 5 songs that I can stick in my pocket when I go for a walk. I certainly don't need to put my entire MP3 collection on it all at once.

    Let's see a cheap MP3 player that does one thing exceptionally well, instead of an overpriced MP3 player that does half a dozen things poorly.

    --

    "Tell me doctor, with all of your defenses, are there any provisions for an attack by killer bees?"
    1. Re:Someone show me a decent MP3 player by Uttles · · Score: 2

      You are so correct it hurts. I'm an "apple person" but I have to say this is nonsense. For a car, yes 5 or 10 GB is good, but for something to tote around with you, I'd be happy with 150 Megs or so, enough to carry a couple dozen songs or so.

      --

      ~ now you know
    2. Re:Someone show me a decent MP3 player by SuperGrut · · Score: 1

      I disagree. I can put my entire CD collection on this thing. That means wherever I go I can play any song I have without having to carry a bunch of disks around or reattaching to my computer.

      If I bought one of these I would put every song I have on it and that would be it until I got new songs.

      --
      The city is being overrun by a herd of Lucy Liu's.
    3. Re:Someone show me a decent MP3 player by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's see a cheap MP3 player that does one thing exceptionally well, instead of an overpriced MP3 player that does half a dozen things poorly.


      If this music player doesn't have any nasty copy prevention or access control surprises, it sounds like it does do one thing very well. It just is not as cheap as you would like.

  101. wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    looks like the 'hot shit'

  102. Sosumi by arete · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Apple (AAPL) essentially already violated that. The engineers, at least, seem to think they violated it when they added sound effects, speakers, and microphones.

    Therefore, one of the original sound fx was called Sosumi ("so - sue - me")

    Your daily dose of apple trivia.

    --
    Looking for freelance Actionscript (Flash/Flex) or ColdFusion work and/or freelance developers. Email me, put Slashdot
  103. Windows, Maybe by Lysander+Luddite · · Score: 1

    According to Maccentral, Jobs said he would consider looking at Windows down the line, but right now iPod and iTunes are Mac only.


    "We have thought than when we get a little spare time, we will look at taking it to Windows. We know the experience won't be as good, but we will probably look at that down the road."


    FWIW.


    Link here.

  104. MAXTOR OWNS YOU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You laugh at Maxtor, but then you talk about getting a WD drive? HAHAHAH! As far as I'm concerned Western Digital takes a shit and puts it in a 3.5" box.. thats how much respect I have for their hardware. WD drives fail.. Maxtor is where it's at.

  105. Anticipation by maniac11 · · Score: 1

    Although I immediately felt a little let down by this release--after all the hype--after thinking about it a little more, I'm convinced that this iPod is cool.

    I use iTunes, so the seamless integration is nice. I have different mp3s in my work library than at home. I don't have a portable HD or burner, so I never bothered to sync my two libraries... with the iPod, I definitely will.

    The price point is a bit high, but then again, I've been shopping for a portable player for a long time and they're all pretty expensive.

    I'm guessing that this thing runs OS X underneath. Assuming this is so, the hacks could be pretty awesome. Firewire devices are becoming more and more prevalent... maybe this tiny little device will come in handy.

    --
    Guvegrra?
  106. This is rev 1, wait until there's iTheatre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you think about it this is a start: the next
    step is to develop a brick that acts as a complete A/V unit over Ethernet or AirPort, so that you can store and forward digital video
    to and from your Mac wirelessly.

    So, fgsample, you play itunes on your mac and
    a bunch of stereos in your big ass house play
    the same tunes.

    Second, have, say, 60gig hdd as a solid state video capture and playback system. You can
    then use iMovie to store tv shows and watch
    them later on your computer or elsewhere.

    But that is a year or so away.

    1. Re:This is rev 1, wait until there's iTheatre by CoffeeJedi · · Score: 1

      mod parent up!!!!!

      --
      May you be touched by His Noodly Appendage. RAmen.
  107. Re:Apple vs. Apple - reply to another poster by arete · · Score: 2

    I'm replying to someone who might've been already modded into oblivion, but I'll try anyway.

    Normally, it's difficult to trademark a word like Apple, but you can go ahead and try. It's NOT incredibly hard to defend a name like "Apple" in a relatively narrow field, like music. (It'd be much harder if, say, you were "Apple Sauces, Inc.) Furthermore, this already happened, and Apple Computer signed a settlement agreeing not to delve into music.

    When they did, they said "so sue me"; see my post above.

    --
    Looking for freelance Actionscript (Flash/Flex) or ColdFusion work and/or freelance developers. Email me, put Slashdot
  108. iPod and Digital Camcorder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, you just made me think of a very convenient use for this device. (Assuming my knowledge of firewire is correct.)

    How about using it as a storage device for your firewire camcorder or digital camera (if there are firewiere still cameras). Since firewire devices are peerless, it shouldn't be much of a problem to connect the devices.

    1. Re:iPod and Digital Camcorder by sfgoth · · Score: 3, Insightful


      How about using it as a storage device for your firewire camcorder or digital camera (if there are firewiere still cameras).


      5GB is about 22 minutes of DV video. It's easier just to pop in another 15GB DV tape.

      Since firewire devices are peerless, it shouldn't be much of a problem to connect the devices.

      They're peerless when they provide a unique service on the bus. FireWire video cams are DV publishers/consumers. The HD claims to be a mass storage device. The camera would need UI for selecting a mass storage device other than the one built in (the DV tape).

      For example, hook 3 DV cammeras together with FireWire. Hit play on one, record on the other two, and you should get two perfect digital copies. Hit play on two of them, record on the other, and unless the recording camera provides a UI for selecting from multiple DV streams, it's probably random which one you'll get.

  109. Competition for Archos by Simulant · · Score: 1

    Hardly a breakthrough. Fry's is currently selling the 6gig Archos Jukebox for $229. It uses USB vs the IPod's firewire but is approx. the same size w/ slightly less battery life (5-8 hours)and also acts as an all purpose, portable, USB harddrive. (drive is upgradable to 20 and 30 gig). I love mine. Can you put a 20/30 gig drive in the IPOD? Firewire would be nice but The AJB is a bargain.

  110. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Rombuu · · Score: 2, Funny

    This is a marvel of engineering

    Yes it certainly puts the Apollo program, the Golden Gate bridge and the Great Pyramids in their place...

    Its a freakin' firewire hard drive... whoppy shit.

    --

    DrLunch.com The site that tells you what's for lunch!
  111. What they should have announced: by slyfox · · Score: 1
    Here's what I think Apple should haved announced:
    • A new device that will serve as a bridge between your home TV/stereo and your Mac. It will do all the work of a non-portable MP3 player, DVD player, VCR, and maybe a gaming console.
    • It should connect to your TV and stereo via standard audio/video input and output. It should connects to a Mac via firewire, Ethernet, or airport (802.11). There should also be also a two-way remote control for the device as well.
    • The device I'm proposing should allow a Mac to read and write video/audio from a home TV/stereo. This allows the device to serve MP3 audio from the Mac's harddrive, play quicktime video on the TV (including iMovie created video), record and play back TV similar to the TiVo, use it to play Internet-multiplayer games on your TV, and display your digital pictures on the TV. I believe the system would even allow the Mac to display a DVD from its drive on to the TV as well. In addition, if you have a VCR, you can use the device to import VHS home video into iMovie.
    • Now, let's look at the hardware required. All the box needs to be able to do is encode and decode digitalaudio and maybe perform some lightweight compression/de-compression. The box has an embedded (slow & cheap) version of a PowerPC in it. The box has some amount of DRAM, but no hard drive, since it can just use the Mac's hard drive. It has just enough flash memory to net-boot from the connected Mac. What operating system does the device run? Well, Darwin, of course! Since the digital hub device boots from the Mac, it has almost no hard state, and thus the software can be upgraded by installing new software on the Mac.
    • The above description is actually quite similar to many of the hardware firewall devices that use an embedding chip and Linux or *BSD. You can buy these for under $100. Apple's new device would needs to add a little bit of support for encoding and decoding, but I would guess the final street price of the device would be under $200.
    • The biggest challenge with this device would providing enough bandwidth to send TV quality video between the two systems. Apple's wireless has 11 Mbs, or ~1MB/second bandwidth max. DVDs hold ~5 GBs of data for ~2 hours of viewing. That's ~0.7MB/second for the compressed stream. It should be pretty easy to downgrade the signal from DVD quality to a TV quality signal, compress it a bit, and send it from the Mac to the Hub staying well below the 1MB/second bandwidth limit.
    • Clearly, this new device could take full advantage of Mac OS X/Darwin. Darwin could be used on the device, and Mac OS X's stability and multitasking support is needed to run the software for it on the host Mac in the background. In fact, multiple processors would work nicely for this application...
    • There have been rumors that Nintendo and Apple might be teaming up. A device like this would be the perfect opportunity for Nintendo to avoid fighting against the XBox and the PlayStation.
    With a move like this, Apple could take control of the home entertainment system. (Yes, this is similar to the post I made on the previous topic today.)
  112. a Mac site running on NT Maybe ?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's /.-ed

  113. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Mad+Browser · · Score: 2

    While most Mac owners may not hang out here on Slashdot, there are quite a few of us around... Apple shipped 850,000 machines in the last year alone... This will sell...

    --
    RateVegas.com - Vegas Reviews
  114. Lame? by speleo · · Score: 1

    Yep, pretty lame. A pocket size 5-GB harddrive that can play MP3s as well as double as a backup device. And with a 10-hour battery life and firewire. Lame.

    I've ordered two.

  115. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Moofie · · Score: 1

    Come on. You wouldn't have bought one anyway...it says Apple on it, so it's automatically uncool.

    Apple's market for this device is...Apple's market. Why are you surprised?

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  116. not Windows/Linux compatible by bigpat · · Score: 1

    Under the requirements it lists MacOS. Useless for those of us that don't have a new mac. This isn't a serious attempt to mass market a consumer mp3 player, but rather just a way to get more money out of their customers.

    whether it is cool or not doesn't matter to me, I can't use it.

    1. Re:not Windows/Linux compatible by ruiner13 · · Score: 1

      It'll work with OS 9 too, so old macs will still be supported, all you need is a firewire card. So any mac with PCI will work, which is any mac released since about '95. I think that is reasonable.

      --

      today is spelling optional day.

    2. Re:not Windows/Linux compatible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple's spec page says "built-in FireWire port" (the PCI expansion cards aren't officially supported game).

    3. Re:not Windows/Linux compatible by ruiner13 · · Score: 1

      they always say that to cover their asses if it doesn't work. if the finder recognizes it, it'll work.

      --

      today is spelling optional day.

  117. oooooo, neodymium! by CausticPuppy · · Score: 2

    I think most sets of $20+ headphones have Neodymium magnets and 20-20kHz frequency response. Next thing you know they'll be bragging that their circuits use "state of the art semiconductors etched by particle-waves travelling at 3 hundred million meters per second."

    --
    -CausticPuppy "Of all the people I know, you're certainly one of them." -Somebody I don't know
    1. Re:oooooo, neodymium! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do they really use particle-waves travelling at 3 hundred million meters per second?

      wow!!! I am actually quite blown away by that.

      ;)

  118. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    right on.

  119. Interesting Idea by wundadog · · Score: 1

    This one costs too much for me, but then, I'm a library CD checking cheapskate. But there are a couple interesting features:

    First, this is an interesting addition to Apple's digital hub idea. To the extent that this is intended to be a relatively low volume perk to Apple devotees, the price suddenly seems less important that its coolness. In other words, this is a good idea as long as Apple does not expect to sell more than a few to people who already use Mac products. Surely, they have done some thinking about the demand for a product of this type at this price range (i.e., pretty low). Even so, I think Jobs also indicated that this is just the first in a line of other similar products. Would you be interested in buying a Mac if there were a whole host of these types of little, happy toys available? I would.

    Second, does anyone know about any "digital rights management" on this thing? I didn't hear anything about it, and that is good news in light of Microsoft's and the RIAA's plans for our music collections.

    So, "lame?" Maybe for most of us, but this could be pretty smart move by Apple if they have planned right.

    1. Re:Interesting Idea by zestymonkey · · Score: 1

      I think you're on the right track, wundadog. If iPod is indeed the first in many new Apple-only toys that are better than the other toys out there, this could help redefine Apple's place in the market. *When* this iPod or a better model comes along at a cheaper price, it's reasonable to assume a few persons with money to burn might invest in a cheap iMac with Firewire just to use this thing.

      Maybe I'm just stupid.

      --

      return;
  120. To CmdrTaco: by ruiner13 · · Score: 2
    Why don't you moderate yourself down to -1 for that lame ass remark. This thing's component's, individually, aren't revolutionary, true. However it is the combination of them and the finess of the execution that is. An MP3 player. A hard drive. Firewire. No power supply needed. SMALL AS HELL. Now combine those. I think you are just pissed because you didn't think of it first. I agree, it is a bit expensive. However, I think the price will come down.

    Wasn't the 6GB Nomad $400 when it first came out? Could you use that as a HD? Could you fill it up in under a minute? Could you charge it over the same cable you were loading it up with? Did it automatically sync with your computer? Nope.

    Get off your high horse and realize that just because the individual comonents aren't unique, the combination of them all is, and that's why it'll sell, regardless of whether some /. moderator thinks so.

    --

    today is spelling optional day.

  121. Holy Skip Protection, Batman! by Unanimous+Howard · · Score: 0

    This thing has _20_minutes_ of skip protection!
    Actually it has 32MB RAM cache. This must be a for battery saving/drop protection. Spin up the disk only when necessary.
    But I have to wonder why would you want to buffer more than one song?

    1. Re:Holy Skip Protection, Batman! by altman · · Score: 1

      Simple, it extends the battery life by only needing to spin the disk up every 20 minutes. In the 10 hour battery life, it's only done 30 spinup cycles!

    2. Re:Holy Skip Protection, Batman! by mcspock · · Score: 1

      That's cool, assuming you play straight through your playlist. That style of buffering assumes you aren't skipping tracks too often, since it has to look at the next 4-5 tracks in the queue and prebuffer them.

      It's still pretty impressive though.

      --
      -- Patience is a virtue, but impatience is an art.
  122. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by SirSlud · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since when is Apple concerned about market share? They do what capitalism was born to do. Cater to a small market, and do it the right way.

    I don't have an OSX box, and consequently, no firewire and iTunes, but if I /did/ (and many do/will have OSX within the next year), this piece of gear was BORN for that market. All while keeping Apple gear at the front of the pack in terms of usability, transfer speed, and respectable battery life.

    Apple has never been about selling the most number of units. Just look at the market leaders for cars, OSes, books, movies, CDs .. you'll understand why having a big market share essentially garauntees tha you you have to give up innovation. Heck, Intel shipped their latest chip with features /disabled/ .. so I, for one, am glad that apple is content to own just a small slice of the pie, because its the most /delicious/ slice.

    And no, I dont own any Apple gear. I wish I could justify it tho; unfortunately, MS keeps underselling quality, thus keeping wk2 on the the corperate desktop, and *nix just happens to serve the 'net industry better than anyone else.

    --
    "Old man yells at systemd"
  123. I don't get the entire concept by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

    I just don't get why anybody wants a portable music device like this, or at least enough people to justify such a product's existence.

    When I look around, most people are not walking down the street (or wherever) listening to music devices, be they tape, CD, or MP3 players. Ocasionally, I'll see a jogger or some spikey-haired teenager listening to one, but they're hardly as commonplace as PDAs.

    Do people think that many people just NEED to have gigs of music with them at all times? I don't get it.

    --
    If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    1. Re:I don't get the entire concept by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to walk down the street in Tokyo. Really small portable music players (mainly an MD player, which have HUGE market there in Japan) are everywhere. Do not assume US life style elsewhere on the planet.

      Look at how well iBook is doing over there, this thing will sell like hotcakes in Japan. Apple must have global market in mind when it develops this.

  124. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    firewire on car stereos....

  125. Ogg Support, DAMNIT! by nate.sammons · · Score: 1

    Argh, this would be far cooler if you could plug in new codecs, like, say, Ogg.

    -nate

    1. Re:Ogg Support, DAMNIT! by CoffeeJedi · · Score: 1

      two words:

      firmware update

      or is that three? well, whatever, i could happen

      --
      May you be touched by His Noodly Appendage. RAmen.
    2. Re:Ogg Support, DAMNIT! by Mister+Black · · Score: 1

      yeah it would be neat but here's the problem: ogg doesn't have the market penetration that mp3 has. nobody downloaded ogg files off napster. ogg wasn't reported on cnn, wsj, nytimes.

      what you should be happy about is that there is no MS/RIAA imposed digital rights managment bullshit that limits the device.

      --

      You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door. There is a small mailbox here.
  126. something similar up the street by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what and where?

  127. Heard it before by AllieA · · Score: 1



    Yes, we know it's overpriced and underpowered, but it looks pretty so buy it.

    Upgrades will be available when we fill the plastic mold machines with a different pigment. Buy those too.

    Apple: Our boxes are prettier than your boxes.

  128. If You Can't Beat Them ... by SteveM · · Score: 2

    Innovative my ass.

    From the Microsoft Press Dictionary:

    Innovate [verb]: To copy what has been done by others.

    Steve M

    1. Re:If You Can't Beat Them ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Innovate [verb]: To copy what has been done by others.

      Don't you mean 'to rush for months to copy what has been done by others but downplayed by us to buy us time to integrate it in our next OS and crush the creator'

  129. Count me in by brindle · · Score: 1

    Count me in on all of the above except the $$ thing.

    My next machine will most likely be an ibook. I paricularly like its feel, its OS (darwin/OS X), and its hardware. No way in hell do I want to sit round while I transfer mp3's from my computer to my portable player. Thats for low tech luddites.

    -b

    PS USB is a bit slow for this application.

  130. It's sounds cool... by dasspunk · · Score: 0

    Big shock that /.ers would be bitching about this device. It's not a Windows or Unix product so let the bashing begin. Sometimes it seems that /. is less like news for nerds and more like the nerds version of Oprah.

    This isn't Apple's main product after all but an enhancement to their existing line just as all of the other "i" products and web services are.

    If you don't own a Mac, then buy one of the other mp3 players... or maybe you should pull that half-hacked iOpener out of your closet and build your own (just like you said you would).

  131. THE REQUIREMENTS -- ! by LoudMusic · · Score: 1

    Requirements
    Apple computer with built-in FireWire port
    Mac OS 9.2.1 (or later) or Mac OS X v10.1 (or later)
    iTunes 2 software (included)

    Yes it can act as a FireWire hard drive. But it's NOT A FIREWIRE HARD DRIVE. Chances are Linux and Windows won't know what it is when you plug it in, and I bet Apple never writes drivers for it, nore will they write iTunes for other OSes.

    Pay attention to what Apple is doing! They're in their own little world and they don't want to talk to anyone else!

    ~LoudMusic

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    1. Re:THE REQUIREMENTS -- ! by DeeKay · · Score: 1

      > Pay attention to what Apple is doing! They're in their own little world and they don't want to talk to anyone else!

      Yeah rite.. I bet THAT'S why OS X is based largely on open Standards like XML, TCP/IP, NFS, POSIX, Java etc and ships with stuff like Perl, Apache, SMB, PHP etc preinstalled! >:-(

      And i guess THAT'S why my Mac can mount FAT16-drives and other PC-media (ZIP, CDs etc) and read Windows-Fileformats (even under OS9!)

      When will the pawlovian Mac-Bashers finally realize that elementary approaches DO change at Apple sometimes?

    2. Re:THE REQUIREMENTS -- ! by Mister+Black · · Score: 1

      My bet is that it is a FireWire HD but that somewhere in the ROM is the firmware plus a version of itunes. The iTunes version on the iPod just reads/plays everything that it recognizes as a mp3 file on the HD. Everything else it just ignores. That seems like the simplest way to me.

      My bet is that you will never see a version of iTunes for Windows/Linux. Which means that there would be some other way (winamp plugin). But then again Apple may make a version of iTunes for Windows just to piss of Microsoft.

      --

      You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door. There is a small mailbox here.
    3. Re:THE REQUIREMENTS -- ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      From the Apple FAQ:


      Q. Can I use FireWire mode with noncomputer products?

      A. Yes. First you will need to reset your iPod. When the Apple logo appears on the screen, hold
      down the Previous/Rewind button and the Next/Fast-forward button simultaneously until the
      FireWire icon appears. When you finish using iPod in this "forced" FireWire mode, disconnect
      and reset it again before normal operation.

  132. But is there Windows support? by sleight · · Score: 1

    Evil question, I know, but can anyone other than a Mac user make use of this puppy? Are we non-Mac guys going to have to wait for people to write Linux/Windows/Whatever software for it before using it on our non-Mac machines???

    1. Re:But is there Windows support? by mikefoley · · Score: 1

      Here's the catch. Apple doesn't give a shit about Windows! You want Windows? Buy a Mac and run Virtual PC. To them, it's that simple. Mac users don't give a rats ass about hacking. They buy a "computer" to get their work/fun done. That's it. Period. I know, my wife is a graphic designer Mac user with a new 867MHz G4. It's a tool. She'd think an iPod would be fine. Would she think it's too expensive? Of course, but would it "just work"? Yup. I just came from the Apple store in Peabody, MA. They hadn't announced the iPod yet so I didn't hear about it till I got home. However, we did talk about Windows and Linux. The iManager (:-))of the store basically was saying what I've said above. There are people that want a computer for fun or work, they don't want to "hack" and Apple is there for them. FWIW, I've considered getting an iBook just because the piece of shit Compaq notebook is driving me up a wall. Now if I only had the money....

      --
      What's my Karma Mr. Burns? "Excellent"
  133. I dont know about you all but... by jea6 · · Score: 2

    ...I really wanted an iWalk.

    --

    sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn't get it.
  134. CmdrTaco again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Less space than a nomad. Lame."

    Well so are you. I don't see YOUR mp3 player in the stores anywhere.

  135. Needs to be hax0r3d - Macs only (so far) by Tide · · Score: 1

    Ive seen some speculations here, so just to point out a few things. iPod uses HFS+ and will most likely only be able to read HFS plus as well as iTunes databases. The music files are 'hidden", and can not be seen in hard disk mode (except via command line). It wont ship with any PC or Linux drivers, so the people that want one should start thinking of good hacks now.... how to read and write HFS+, write to iTunes databases, and the file folder structures.

    FreeAmp Plugin? Elrod?

    --

    People think Microsoft is the answer. Microsoft is just the question, "No" is the answer.
    1. Re:Needs to be hax0r3d - Macs only (so far) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple has released HFS+ filesystem code under some sort of Open Source license as part of Darwin. So if you're interested in writing Open Source drivers to get this gadget to work with Linux, you probably won't do all the work of reverse-engineering the HFS+ filesystem.

  136. Invasion of the Body Snatchers by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2

    So does this mean the iPod will take over the bodies of the users and turn them into mindless drones?

    OK, I have too many Apple punchlines going through my head to pick a best one. Please post your best punchline here. Moderators to vote which one is the best. :)

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  137. Don't have a Mac? Too F'n bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    To be honest, this is going to be a low margin product and probably won't make Apple too much money. But for Mac users that want a way cool MP3 player they'll be the envy of their Windoz friends. Its about time. You don't like it? Fine. You love it but don't have a Mac? Tough Tooties. Welcome to what used to be our world!

    1. Re:Don't have a Mac? Too F'n bad by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 2

      How will they be the envy of their windows friends? There have been at least 2 HD based MP3 players/data storage units out for windows for over a year. Today is the day that mac people stop envying windows users as far as I can tell...

      --
      Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
    2. Re:Don't have a Mac? Too F'n bad by gig · · Score: 2

      How will they be the envy of their windows friends? There have been at least 2 HD based MP3 players/data storage units out for windows for over a year. Today is the day that mac people stop envying windows users as far as I can tell...

      Most of the portable MP3 solutions out there work on Macs as well, if not all of them. There is a Nomad Jukebox plug-in built into iTunes, at any rate, along with many more for Rio's and whatever else. I've been using a NomadII with my Mac for a long, long time.

      What you have to understand, though, is that Windows or no Windows, my new PowerBook came with USB, FireWire (1394), Gigabit Ethernet, and AirPort (802.11). Why did I get a machine with that much connectivity to then sit down and plug a music player into the keyboard port and wait two hours to fill up 5GB? Because that's the only reliable method on Windows? Nah. Not good enough.

      I actually have all my MP3's on an external FireWire drive already. What Apple has done is build a music player onto a drive. I can use an iPod just like I do the drive I have now, only when it's away from the computer, it's an MP3 player and a dessert topping. I won't have to sync a damn thing.

  138. Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by DaveWood · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Goofy internal projects, expensive gaffes trying to "diversify" into areas it has only a tenuous relationship to, a complete inability to understand markets, and a constitutional immunity against learning from their mistakes.

    There is no future in a $400 (about $250 too expensive) firewire-only (5% of computer users) hardrive-based (read: fragile) mp3 player. Any one of these critical flaws might doom the product - take them all together and you have another classic corporate farce.

    When you see silliness on this level, though, normally you expect to see a raging egotist who is immune to common sense and criticism in some position of power in the company... oh wait, Steve Jobs. Never mind.

    This just reinforces my steadily growing sense of foreboding about Apple. Yes, I've said this before and been wrong, but I'll say it again anyway. They're living on borrowed time.

    1. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      firewire-only (5% of computer users)

      Guess what? When the imacs came USB was at like 0.1% of computer users.

      Apple is powerfull enough to impact the market by the technologies it chooses. Don't be a fool and ignore history.

    2. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's one heck of a cool website.

      BTW, well said.

    3. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For that matter, haven't Sony and just about every other camcorder maker adopted FireWire as a standard I/O mechanism for consumer-level digital camcorders?

      Next time you look at a Sony laptop, desktop, or camcorder, check for the "iLink" port.

    4. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by saintlupus · · Score: 1

      They're living on borrowed time.

      Wow, I believe that's the 15th anniversary of the first time someone told me that. Thanks for your acumen and insight, oracle.

      --saint

      (No, I don't want an iPod, but I'm getting really annoyed at this shit lately.)

    5. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by jgalun · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Apple is in the rich person's market now. Create expensive, beautiful, top of the line products. Market them to rich people as part of a "lifestyle" in elegant stores. Have extremely high profit margins.

      The iPod is an integral part of Apple's "digital lifestyle" idea, and fits perfectly into their Apple stores. Apple may not be brilliant, but they are not Commodore. Commodore had no plan. Apple has a plan - it just might be the wrong plan.

    6. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by TWR · · Score: 2
      Put up or shut up.

      Pick a date by which you think Apple will go out of business. I'm willing to put $100 that you're wrong.

      Apple's got $4Billion in the bank, almost all of it earned during The Jobs Years; what do you have?

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

    7. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by schwatoo · · Score: 1

      Or heck, just sell iMacs in Sears for $800 a pop... I'd like to see the profit margin on that one.

      --
      I have trouble with passwords among other things.
    8. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by Pfhor · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ok, listen the 1.8" drive apple is using in the damn iPod is $400 by itself (to purchase it in a firewire enclosure). The sucker has 32 megs of ram to load music then spin down the drive (which is something I was waiting for someone to start putting in their MP3 players).

      It uses Firewire to transfer files and recharge. It can be used as a portable hard drive.

      Apple is trying to add value to their current product base. Wow, all of a sudden all those machines apple just sold in the last 2 years are now able to interface with currently the coolest MP3 player ever. That is very significant for an "average joe user" trust me. So you don't like it, or don't want to spend money on it, big freaking deal, but I doubt Apple is going to lose big on this, and in a few months apple with probably announce a cheaper one, and put a 20 gig model in the $400 ones place. If the drives get there.

      This is by far the coolest MP3 player out there. And yes, it is upgradable, so people can get Ogg working on it. And It is sturdy, if you have seen how much effort it takes to break one of the first ibooks, and usualy by break, it was a screen that broke, apple knows how to consumer harden their stuff. This thing will rock.

    9. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by Maserati · · Score: 1

      Yeah, they're getting great interest rates on that borrowed time.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
    10. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by FlexAgain · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is no future in a $400 (about $250 too expensive) firewire-only (5% of computer users) hardrive-based (read: fragile) mp3 player. Any one of these critical flaws might doom the product - take them all together and you have another classic corporate farce.

      (i) I'd love a $150 MP3 player, but it isn't going to happen, you can't even get much of a flash memory based MP3 player in the UK for 150UKP let alone $150, $400 isn't cheap, but this is a bleading edge MP3 player and Apple technology to boot. I don't think its as stupid a price as some seem to believe.

      (ii) Firewire is in a bit of chicken and egg situation, devices like this are what will drive its popular support. Being able to transfer a whole CDs worth of MP3s in minutes rather than hours is a godsend. Somebody has to try and lead the way.

      (iii) As others have noted, the buffering will largely ameliorate any fragility, and anyway, how else are you going to get 5G of memory? This is not going to happen with Flash memory any time soon (at least not at a sane price anyway).

      I'm unsure whether this thing will take off or not, but I don't think you are justified in damning it to the degree which you do, or with these arguments.

      --

      --
      Actually it is rocket science...
    11. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by connorbd · · Score: 2

      USB... the Boston area MicroCenter has two tables full of old computers, mostly high-end Pentiums and Pentium Pros. Many -- maybe most -- have USB, but I doubt any of them ever had a USB device hooked up to them.

      Apple *made* USB, probably single-handedly. Intel created it, MS pushed it as a standard, but it didn't become one until the first iMac hit the streets and a flood of cutesy translucent peripherals followed.

      Firewire is in no such state of neglect; Sony's on board, and Firewire made it out in the PC world quite a bit earlier than it did the Mac world. It's a standard now in certain circles (just ask Hollywood), and iPod will only help its mainstream acceptance. (For the record, I don't see much future for USB2, but that's another issue entirely...)

      /Brian

    12. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by krogoth · · Score: 2

      By complete inability to understand markets, do you mean they won't let you plug in a serial cable so it can work on every computer? Should they be a 'good little super-capitalist company' like Microsoft instead? You may not want to buy it, but for their fairly small target market it could be a very successful product (although there is the price issue).

      --

      They that quote Benjamin Franklin on liberty and safety deserve neither.
    13. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      enough money to buy apple
      - bill gates

    14. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by rainer3 · · Score: 1
      ...a complete inability to understand markets.

      This is a completely unfounded statement and just shows that you really don't know what you're talking about.

      From maccentral.com
      The shining star of Apple's product line is clearly the iBook. During a conference call with analysts, Apple CFO Fred Anderson was quick to point out that iBook sales in the education market had tripled in the fourth quarter. In fact, iBook sales were up overall -- way up -- both from quarter to quarter and from year to year. Last year, Apple moved a paltry 89,000 iBooks during its fourth quarter, and during the previous quarter, Apple moved about 190,000 iBooks. For this most recently reported quarter, that number was 251,000. Outside of the Power Mac G4, the iBook was Apple's biggest moneymaker -- it pulled in $334 million for the company.

      Apple clearly knows where its markets are and what its consumers want.

      ...Any one of these critical flaws might doom the product - take them all together and you have another classic corporate farce.

      Apple is the only leader of innovation in the computer industry. Intel just closed down its division of computer peripherals. Hp and Compaq have had to merge due to dwindling sales. Apple is the only computer manufacturer who's making money right now. And it's all due to knowing its markets and making high quality products, and being a forward thinker.

      When was the last time Dell, HP, Compaq, Gateway, M$, etc. put out an entire line of products, both hardware and software that were part of a cohesive plan for tomorrow? Never.

    15. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      haha, usb2.0 is a brutal hack, it is to firewire as ide is to scsi.

    16. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by connorbd · · Score: 2

      I don't necessarily agree. Don't forget, we live in the age of ATA/66 and ATA/100 where as long as you don't need the flexibility you're better off with IDE for cost reasons. The analogy with modern IDE and SCSI is more along the lines of AGP vs. PCI -- an AGP slot will transfer data faster, but you only get one of them. It's a tradeoff.

      USB2 is a bag on the side of USB -- it's faster in theory, but lacks busmastering capability (which FireWire has had since the beginning).

      /Brian

    17. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by Pfhor · · Score: 1

      One thing I would like point out is that sony isn't even touching the real spec of firewire. All of their machines have 4 pin connectors on them. They are missing the crucial 2 other pins which provide things like power. Sony isn't / wasnt or doesn't know how to gear i.Link towards other applications besides using it for video transfer it seems. It pretty much means if you don't go out and by a powered Firewire hub to provide the voltage for you, all your firewire / i.link devices connected to a sony box are going to require their own power source. Not a big deal for big hard drives and CDRWs, but things like the iPod, they shot themselves in the foot.

    18. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by SteveM · · Score: 2

      Apple is the only computer manufacturer who's making money right now.

      Both Aplle and Dell are making money. See this Business Week article.

      Steve M

    19. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by SteveM · · Score: 1

      Both Aplle and ...

      For 'Aplle' read 'Apple'.

      Steve M

    20. Re:Apple reminds me more of Commodore every day by rainer3 · · Score: 1

      Yes, Dell is making money, but its profit margins are lower than Apple's.

  139. Hack Me! by gcondon · · Score: 1

    This thing is just begging to be hacked. Its capability to be used as a data drive indicates that it is probably using a standard file system. With 5GB of disk space and 32MB of memory (and FIreWire), this device could be pretty capable. Judging from Apple's current mood, I wouldn't be suprised if the OS was a stripped down BSD. How long before we see non-music apps for this baby? I bet a direct interface for downloading pictures from your digital camera is not far away. An PIM would be nice but seriously hampered by the limited input controls. What else could be done?

    I hope that the next generation includes a color screen. Not only would a visualizer be nice but I'd love to see a MAME port ;-)

  140. Urmm.. If you really feel like comparing to the No by DeeKay · · Score: 1

    How about considering
    a) battery life (4 hour vs frigging TEN in the iPod!)
    b) Uplink: Snail-USB at 1.x MB/s (how long would that take you to fill it up? Let's be nice and say 1-1.5 hours!) vs Firewire (10 mins to fill it up, 10 seconds for an album!)
    c) Firewire-HD functionality: Pretty damn nice bonus feature I'd say!
    d) Automatic recharge via Firewire! Neato!
    e) size: Man, that thing is like HALF as big as the Nomad!

    Now, one can always argue about design and UI, so i'll leave that out.. The Nomad has a slightly bigger HD and costs $100 less, which rocks, still the iPod is anything but lame compared to it if you look at all the pros up there!

    ..and all the PC-people out there: Yes, His Jobsness announced they WILL support Windows eventually! >;-)

  141. Also.... by Auckerman · · Score: 1

    You should take a look at how it WORKS. Hook it up, it begins charging via your Firewire port (10 hours of battery life!) and launchs iTunes. Create some playlists and send them to your iPod. Five minutes to fill up that 5GB.

    Not only that, the interface is amazing. The menu system can actually be read by human eyes and easily browsed via the scroll wheel. Multiple playlists and can be listed via song OR artist.

    Okay, so its yet another mp3 player. But this mp3 player fits in a shirt pocket and Apple didn't cute a single corner, they still somehow got a 5GB drive in that thing that costs the same damn price as the iPod itself, while at the same time making it as simple as possible to use. This is an mp3 player that passes the "mom test".

    --

    Burn Hollywood Burn
  142. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Haha, Apple definatly is good at cutting down on features. And quality.

  143. What about this creepy OSDN bar on top ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Ow gosh, its just horrible. :^)

  144. lame comments by rainer3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The only really lame thing I've read so far are the comments people are posting. A quick scan so far results in only 2 comments garnering a 5 and 2 comments garnering a 4. I would like to go to one of the Apple Stores and try it out, see how it works. Then I'll say whether or not it's lame.

  145. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No. It is an apple product. As for a waste of time,It is a waste of your time.
    You are, of course, entitled to your opinions no matter how stupid and inane. Please take your medication.

  146. Apple doesn't make their products for everybody... by arloguthrie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...they make their products for Mac users. Period. And I don't see this as a problem.

    Apple places itself in the market to be the *prestigious* computer company, the Bang and Olfsen of PCs. Apple owners (which I will be when I start school next year and can get an educational discount) treat their computers as sacred. Apple may have a small market share, but their market share is fervently adamant about their products. (And justifiably so -- I think they make great hardware, and they make it easy enough for novices and powerful enough for nerds, not to mention stylish as hell.)

    It's much akin to the religious fanaticism Open Source folks have toward spreading the Word about Linux and praising Linus Torvalds as a Jesus. I get as much criticism from Apple owners for begrudingly using Windoze as I do from Linux users. To keep this religion metaphor going as long as possible: it's one thing to oppose the evil Satan of Microsoft, but Linux-users and Apple-users arguing at this point is like the Pope arguing with Martin Luther over the 42 Theses -- you're both worshiping the same God, just one has more money than the other.

    Okay, so that made very little sense, but it certainly sounded good.

    This is what it boils down to, folks:

    Apple has made a fairly smart business decision with iPod, saying to themselves, if we can't earn more market share, then let's give the market share we do have more items to buy. And they will becuase they're freaking crazy about our stuff. For Mac users, the iPod is most likely a super convienent, super cool MP3 player.

    Those of you complaining that you can't use it on your PC or your Linux box or your TRS-80, go buy a Nomad because that's the market share you're in.

    And good luck fitting that Nomad in your pocket. (Ha-ha!)

    --
    ----------
    Cheese it! It's the FEDS!
  147. Yes, because the HD is rarely spinning by sfgoth · · Score: 5, Informative

    The iPod has 32MB of RAM, which it uses to buffer data from the HD. So it only has to turn on the HD every 20 minutes or so for just a few seconds to refill the RAM cache. The drive spends most of the time off and heads parked.

    Saves tons of power, and should make it tough as nails.

    1. Re:Yes, because the HD is rarely spinning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet another example of why its worth $400

  148. mp3 player comparison by Snuffub · · Score: 1

    a nomad jukebox will set you back 270 retail for 6GB. This thing is larger than and weighs more than a first generation discman and its just about as hard to run with (i know ive tried) becuase it has under 5 minutes of skip proection (to be fair i dont know if the 20 minutes on the ipod will help or not though)

    Intel's 128 MB player - $299. about the same dimensions as the ipod... so that's why theyre scrapping it....

    samsung 64MB player-$199 slightly smaller, tiny lcd
    i2Go eGo MP3 Player- 399 from buy.com (499 retail) this thing has 340 MB flash memory and is slightly smaller than the ipod. with no lcd.

    All that info was off buy.com as of 3pm today(they had some $100 players with 32MB or less that i didnt look at) you can check yourself if you want as.

    The point is that this is a very good and competitively priced mp3 player even without the large screen easy to navigate menus, firewire connection/recharging and portable hard drive function. Its not revolutionary or all that special and the only complain that i could have about it is that it was so over hyped by apple. (I was really holding out for the apple teleportation device)

    --
    --aiee
    1. Re:mp3 player comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i have a 650 megabyte cd mp3 player. It has roughly 15 hours of battery life from 2 AA batteries. if I want 5-6 gigs I bring 10 cds with me. changing the contents of the player is as easy as switching cds, no need to bother hooking it up to a machine every time I need to change something. here

  149. PDA functionality. by jfisherwa · · Score: 1

    This thing needs to be a PDA also. What CPU does it use?

    Make that screen a little bigger, a touch screen. Add the Newton OS..

    Fitness freaks look out. Not only does it manage your workout, but it stores your workout music. Heck, you could make a fitness program that changes songs (faster or slower beat) for different parts of the workout.

    *shrug*

    I want one of these with a little better quality screen and a car docking-station with integrated GPS (into the car docking-station).

    Jason

  150. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by bsletten · · Score: 1

    Well, I can now raise my hand to both and happily.

    I've only had it for a few days but it has been a pure joy. I've been a FreeBSD guy for years, but it's never been about the hassle; it's been about the stability. I added wireless support for this new machine with about three clicks. It comes with ssh and tools like that out of the box.

    Apple has put out an amazing product here and the iBooks are freakin' nice too. I can't wait to see Titaniums w/ IBM's G5 in the next year or so!

    They are more expensive, yes, but so much better of a product.

  151. The UI is typically great... by SPYvSPY · · Score: 1

    As usual, Apple appears to have crafted an idiot-proof UI for this thing. (See this marketing page.) After many months of enduring portable music device UI's that are about as intuitive as a 1980's casio keyboard, I am so ready to spill the $$$ for a device that it powerful and a pleasure to use.

    Apple-bashers are constantly griping that they can get more for less money. I laugh at these fools because they are usually sitting in the corner scratching their heads while battling it out with some frustrating conflict or bug while the sweet Musak of tech support wafts around their pimply, unwashed ears.

    Screw people that don't like Apple. If you were wondering why Apple would release a Mac-only device -- it's because they don't give a flying flip about people like you. Have fun in your Chevy Nova-quality world of value and pragmatism, losers.

    1. Re:The UI is typically great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have fun in your Chevy Nova-quality world of value and pragmatism, losers.


      In case you hadn't noticed, the most recent car to be called "Chevy Nova" was a Toyota Corolla under the skin. That is to say, the car was of high quality (and at the time, you could get a much better deal on the GM-branded Corolla than on the Toyota-branded version).

  152. Equally cool by iomud · · Score: 2

    Check out the mine, it's certainly more expensive but I think it lends itself to a greater versatility, USB is a limitation though.

  153. Apple's new computer name by ZaneMcAuley · · Score: 1

    iDontCare

    --
    ----- Whats wrong with this picture? http://www.revoh.org:1234/whatswrong
  154. Ogg Support by Voline · · Score: 1

    How upgradeable is the software for this thing?

    Will it be possible to upgrade the software to accept the Ogg Vorbis or other newer codecs? New ones are produced all the time, and MP3 will be changed and improved. Will you be able to upgrade the iPod, or will it become obsolete when everyone switches to a new codec that it can't play?

    1. Re:Ogg Support by Malic · · Score: 1

      According to the tech specs...

      "Upgradable firmware enables support for future audio formats"

      http://www.apple.com/ipod/specs.html

      --
      I swear by MacOS X. Although I use to swear *at* MacOS 9...
    2. Re:Ogg Support by Voline · · Score: 1

      Thanks, Malic. I went over the tech specs, but I must have missed that bit. I'd mod you up for "helpful" if I could.

  155. The price by altman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Note that the Fuji 1.8" 5GB PCMCIA drive costs $400.

    Note that the iPod has a 1.8" 5GB hard drive (probably a Fuji, as Calluna who also made 1.8" drives went bust) plays music, has a display battery and firewire port, and also costs $400.

    Bargain!

    1. Re:The price by altman · · Score: 1, Informative

      Forgot the link!

  156. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by nachoman · · Score: 1

    Slashdot owned by OSDN.
    Thinkgeek owned by OSDN.
    Thinkgeeks sells nomad.
    Thinkgeek will not sell apple products.
    Therefore nomad must be better.

    Seriously, this looks like a great device. Faster, smaller and 5GB is tons of space. Don't dis innovation just cause it's apple.

  157. Maybe ... by eeeuh · · Score: 1

    The line was meant as a JOKE !?!
    geez why is it you apple people have
    to be so bloody zealous all the time ;-)

  158. $400, for now... by sfgoth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Keep in mind it's $400 right now becuase the Apple Fanatics will have to have one. They'll pay anything for the latest cool toy from Apple.

    In 6 months, hopefully the rest of us will be buying the 20GB version for $200.

    1. Re:$400, for now... by schwatoo · · Score: 1

      Actually as an Apple fanatic I think I'll be waiting for the price to drop. The general consensus around my office (half a dozen rabid Mac programmers) is that it's a nice device but too expensive.

      --
      I have trouble with passwords among other things.
  159. Re:Apple doesn't make their products for everybody by arloguthrie · · Score: 1

    Oops. Martin Luther promulgated 95 Theses, not 42. Guess I should know my history before making historical references, a mistake akin to US involvement in Vietnam, after seeing how the French fared there.... Okay, I'll shut up.

    --
    ----------
    Cheese it! It's the FEDS!
  160. doh. by duran.thinkframe · · Score: 0

    according to the website, there is no support for PC, only MAC with Firewire.

    which, really really really blows.

    I have been looking for a good mp3 player for quite some time, and this had me REALLY excited for xmas, too bad I'll have to go buy a mac now if I want it...

    There goes steve jobs, messing up his chances again. doesn't he realize he has to ATTRACT the rest of the computing world, not alienate it.

  161. Um, add FireWire to PC? by s.o.terica · · Score: 1

    Why not just spend the $20 and get a damn firewire card? Ever tried transferring 5GB over USB? *Not* pretty.

    Or did you mean to ask, "why doesn't Apple release iTunes for Windows?"

  162. I suspect you can, I ran a similar experiment by victim · · Score: 2

    I dropped my white iBook a couple weeks ago. Well, not dropped so much as flung. I snatched the briefcase off a chest high pile of boxes, saw the lid come open, nearly caught the ibook with my other hand as it flew past me, hit the door and fell to the floor. (standard cheap office carpet over concrete)

    Its a little bent. It only sits on two feet when on a flat surface, but other than that its fine. Heck, it didn't even reboot. Just woke right up from sleep when I opened it.

    I'll bet they do at least as well with a handheld device.

  163. Mixed feelings by supabeast! · · Score: 2

    he iPod is definately a cool little toy. Firewire support and the incredibly small form factor is truly a plus. Honestly, for what you get, $400 isn't really that horrible of a price. I realize that there are cheaper units with more space on the market, but they are USB devices (S L O W T R A N S F E R S) and are all rather large and clunky. I could actually see myself buying an iPod just because it gives me an mp3 player to stick in my hip pocket and carry around.

    That said, the iPod will still bomb. While it really might be worth the money, people won't be willing to drop $400 for an mp3 player, especially when the US economy is already in the toilet, and getting worse daily. If Apple really wanted to be revolutionary and give us something new, this thing would cost no more than $300, enough money to buy a nice game console.

  164. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by 4mn0t1337 · · Score: 1
    iLink is 4-pin. FireWire is 6 pin.

    They both run the protocol, but the Sony version isn't powered (as all they expect you to plug into it are devices with their own power supplies, like camcorders).

    So you won't be able to charge the iPod on any iLink devices.

    --

    ______
    Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.

  165. Interface anyone? by swgs · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ok, everyone keeps talking about the Nomad Jukebox and other similar players, and must of the crazy apple people have defended the iPod with it's other features.

    but this crazy apple guy (that would be me) has a better defense....have you ever used the interface on the jukebox or other large MP3 players? they have horrible navigation, i cringe everytime at the idea of finding one paticulair song out of over a thousand on one of those players.

    but the iPod is different, its taken a lot of influence from the iTunes software, the interface is intuitive easy to use and fast. You can sort by just about any tag, and furthermore it fully supports ID3 tags, not just ID3 v1.1, but all the way up to 2.3 i believe.

    also, the iPod has a scroll wheel type thing on it to further help you navigate quickly.

    maybe im insane, but ill take an overpriced, well designed, easy to use apple product any day over some cheap generic device.

    SWGS

  166. Apple's new product line by ZaneMcAuley · · Score: 1

    http://www.apple.com/airport/

    Hey, it's also a UFO :D

    --
    ----- Whats wrong with this picture? http://www.revoh.org:1234/whatswrong
  167. linux is whats LAME....you sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    none of you have lives anyway...you are not the target market!!

    and to the guy who said 'apple cut themselves out of 85% of the market'....

    no they did not, they gave 85% of the market ANOTHER reason to buy a real computer. (let me define a real computer as one that makes your life easier- now does linux look so good? NO!)

    you are all pissed because linux SUCKS on the desktop, and will never dent Micr OS oft; mac os has a chance at succeeding, while your os does not.

    and while we are at it, i want a version of linux that runs windows binaries natively, a sparc compatible email profiling platform that also runs natively on linux and a playstation emulator that allows region encoded dvds as well.

    dont have one, well thats what i want so linux is lame...

  168. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 4, Funny

    Raise your hand if you have iTunes

    Bundled for free on every Mac sold in the last 18 months, and installed retroactively on god only knows how many other ones. Easily in the high hundreds of thousands, possibly in the millions.

    Raise your hand if you have a FireWire port...

    Every iMac, PowerMac, iBook and Powerbook sold in the last two years, plus almost every Sony VAIO and a good chunk of Compaq and HP's product lines. Easily in the millions.

    Raise your hand if you have both.

    See above.

    Raise your hand if you have $400 to spend on a cute Apple device...

    Looking at the sales of (picking three examples) Pilots, Rios and Digital Cameras, I'd say the number of people willing to spend $200-500 on a "cute" electronic device is "lots and lots."

    There is Apple's market. Pretty slim, eh? I don't see many sales in the future of iPod.

    I guess you don't. This is why Apple is a company with $4 Billion in the bank, and you're trolling on slashdot. Want fries with that?

    --

    News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

  169. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by sfgoth · · Score: 3, Insightful


    Raise your hand if you have iTunes ...
    Raise your hand if you have a FireWire port ...
    Raise your hand if you have both ...
    Raise your hand if you have $400 to spend on a cute Apple device ...


    What, is there a large market for mp3 players with people who don't own computers?

    Apple knows that their biggest market is existing Apple customers. If Apple sells one of these for every 5 iBooks they sell, they'll be sitting pretty.

    Why should Apple fund a software team to port iTunes to Windows, just so they get a few $400 slim margin sales of an mp3 player?

    Better to let the Windows users wish they had an iPod, and go out and buy an iBook to get it.

    Apple's finally learning to bring the market to them, instead of chasing it all over the map.

  170. iPod makes sense for Apple by First+Person · · Score: 2

    I haven't seen either of these points mentioned.

    One: using firewire, the iPod can hotsync almost instantaneously with your Macintosh. That's very thoughful. The longer that I use technology, the less patient I get. I'd pay a little extra for this speed.

    Two: what is the target market? The answer seems to be age 12-25 (junior high to college). These individuals are somewhat less price sensitive (assuming that their parents are paying) and are more likely to be sold by the flashy technology and design. If you agree (with some minor provisions), then you'll accept that Apple has a chance to win young converts to its platform. If this works, it's very attractive for Apple's future.

    --
    Given one hour to live, the student replied: "I'd spend it with professor FP who can make an hour seem like a lifetime."
  171. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by binarybits · · Score: 2

    They would have to be incredibly stupid not to include Windows support for this device. They've clearly sunk some R & D dollars into this device, and if they want to recoup those dollars they need to sell as many as possible. And remember-- FireWire is Apple's baby. If they can sell a million iPods to PC users that means a million PC's with FireWire ports, which thereby expands the market for Apple's other firewire-enabled devices.

    If they're smart, they're working on a PC version of iTunes, or with existing MP3 players to get iPod compatibility. They can make sure that the Mac version is out first and has the best compatibility, but it's icing on the cake if they can sell a bunch of them to PC users as well.

    This is *not* a zero-sum game. Apple not only gets the revenue from the devices themselves, but if these devices are popular they promote FireWire and they get their name out in front of the public reaping opportunities for future efforts like this. I wouldn't be surprised if they release analogous devices for digital video/DVD playback in the next year or two, thereby expanding on the "digital hub" analogy that they've been pushing since January.

  172. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly. And Apple, who has been making profit during this recession, releases the premiere, soon to be the most widely used, and best distro of unix - OS X.

    VA Linux on the other hand, is going in the toilet.

    Thank you.

  173. It'll probably work by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 1

    This device probably works a lot like most digital cameras and MP3 players. Music is most likely stored in a folder located on the music player's harddisk. Anything in that folder can be played by the MP3 player's software.

    It will be interesting to see what drive format apple picked for this device. If it is HFS+ or UFS some folks might need to install 3rd party software to see the device.

    All in all, this thing is basically a harddisk with a firewire port and some mp3 software (wonder if it is burned into ROM or not). Just like a digital camera that is a flash card with USB... it should be able to be used on any machine with half ass device support.

    At the very least on could drag and drop their music in this devices music directory.

    --
    "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
    1. Re:It'll probably work by mcspock · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but most MP3 players (such as the rio family (excluding the empeg), compaq family, nomad family) use a proprietary usb interface to transfer content, and most certainly do _not_ have a standard "music" folder. You have to use specific software to transfer the content down. They dont implement standard USB bulk storage, so you can only use them on platforms that the vendor chooses to support.

      --
      -- Patience is a virtue, but impatience is an art.
    2. Re:It'll probably work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That sucks. I have a 6gb archos MP3 player, it acts as a standard USB harddrive. Copy your MP3s, source files, etc. to it and away you go. You can also copy FROM it, which I understand most other devices prevent.

    3. Re:It'll probably work by jtrascap · · Score: 1

      Yeah - but remember this:

      - the Archos is a brick, where this is a bar of Ivory. It's gonna be slightly bigger than the FACEPLATE on the Archos controls!
      - The Archos is USB. Firewire is heckka faster
      - Twice the (corporate-claimed) battery life
      - The Controls are, I betcha, better (but this is subjective...the jog-dial on the iPod looks wicked cool)

      Is it worth $150 more for 1GB less? If size and power matters (ahem), than probably yes. The FireWire hookup and controls alone interest me (although I currently listen to MP3s on my Siemens SL45 phone...hee hee hee!)

    4. Re:It'll probably work by Strog · · Score: 1

      I was given a cheapo player(Jamp3) and you can use it as a drive in win2k, linux, etc. but you have to use the software to use it in win9x. It has 16mb built-in and a MMC slot for a whopping 80Mb total so it doesn't even compare.

    5. Re:It'll probably work by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 1

      Well, MP3 players such as the RIO typically use ISO flash memory that can be read through a flash card reader or even the device itself (depends on OS and drivers though). Moreover, most devices (flash cameras and mp3 players) has -some- form of media directory on that card. This directory is my no means a standard, and it usually labled differently on every device...but it usually does exist in one form or another with ISO flash cards.

      As for devices that use harddisks for storage. These are usually ISO as well. Who knows about the iPod though... It might be HFS+ (I think it is ISO though). I looked into this a bit, and devices like the iPod and Archos jukebox can be accessed as external harddisks. The iPod can go into a Firewire disk mode... I'm sure the jukebox could do the same but with USB (all depends on driver set up though).

      All in all. Platform support can usually be a big freek'n myth with MP3 players and digital cameras. Specific platform support is usually the result of some company not wanting to print out a new manual or answer more tech calls.

      Perhaps it is because I use a mac a lot, but I am fairly use to being able to gank just about any "digital device" and have it mount on my desktop as a storage device with a media folder. Hell I move code for work around on my digital camera ;).

      At lot of this has to do with device ROM, how the OS at hand reads that ROM, and if a manufacturer wants there device to be accessed through some sort of goofy interface (ie epson and compaq). But...i'll spare you the geeky details... I need to get back to work ;).

      --
      "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
    6. Re:It'll probably work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi. I make mp3 players for a living. You dont know what you are talking about. There is no ISO anything relating to how a device presents itself - there are standards in regards to USB bulk storage (firewire has similar ones for hard drives i believe), but there is no requirement to implement them. The RIO does a custom USB solution (i've seen the code for it) that involves a desktop driver and a proprietary host-device protocol to transfer data down.

      Your "OS at hand" does not read the ROM on the device, it talks to a software driver (for Rio, compaq, etc) which tells it what it can see.

      In terms of "Platform support can usually be a big freek'n myth", if everything was written according to some "ISO standard" dont you think platform support would just require the host to implement that "ISO standard"?

      In conclusion, the iPod page indicates that the device can be used as a firewire hard drive. Note that this does not mean the contents of the hard drive are stored in a normal filesystem, it just means that the device can present itself like a firewire hard drive with a particular type of filesystem.

      Oh, one last thing, your excuse about sparing the details and needing to get back to work really didn't conceal the fact that you dont understand the topic at hand.

  174. lame? No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
    not lame:

    recharges/transfers with firewire

    integrates with iTunes

    mac ease of use
    lame:

    expensive

    As a happy iBook/Mac OSX user, I would definitely consider getting one of these (if I was made of money). The size limitation doesn't bother me so much seeing as how 1.) you can (theoretically) completely fill the drive in 2 minutes and 2.) it'd take you a lifetime to listen to the entire contents of a Nomad, while taking almost four hours to fill. Plus, the Nomad takes rechargeables/AA.

    The biggest problem with it is the cost, IMHO

    Sean

    1. Re:lame? No. by connorbd · · Score: 2

      Agreed. It's only lame because it's not the Monster Mac PDA the /. brass were hoping for. It's a bit underwhelming IMHO, but I think the huge hard drive and the Firewire make it for me.

      One idea, though: not everyone can afford the iPod. How about a cheaper version with flash RAM instead of the hard drive but the same internals otherwise?

      /Brian

    2. Re:lame? No. by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      What's the going rate for flash RAM? isn't 5 GB well over $400US? What's so bad about a HD, besides the 4 min of skip-free protection?

  175. Steve Job is the man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey do not bust on the man. Thanks to him, Apple is finally making really good products. I am sure that we will see more from jobs & co in the coming months..

    Long Live OSX

  176. High fidelity by cmpgn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    For the best audio quality, simply carry around uncompressed WAV's. The specs indicate that WAV is one of the supported music formats. Assuming 700 MB per CD, 5 GB of storage still gives you enough room to hold 7 uncompressed CD's. Pretty cool if you ask me.

  177. YOU ARE THE BITCH OF MAXTOR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't put that WD drive in a plastic case.. they are fragile enough without being lugged all over the place.

  178. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, it will sell because Beelzejobs could package his own turd with an Apple logo and you'd buy that too.

  179. iWalk v. iPod by srvivn21 · · Score: 2

    Exibit 1: iWalk
    Exibit 2: iPod

    These two products look nothing alike, exept for their rectangular shape. Perhaps the iWalk is fictional, but it is not related to the iPod in any way.

    (It is my understanding that your post is implying that someone took the iPod, and "photoshopped" a new name on it. If that is not what you intended to imply, perhaps you should expound on your points a bit more...)

  180. What type of battery? by flatcat · · Score: 1


    Just wondering what type of battery is used?
    User replaceable? Cost?

    Just a couple of the gotya's that can ruin a great product.

    How can anyone complain about the HD size? To me it would look like the batteries would run out before you get to listen to all the songs. Looks like a kick ass walkman replacement.

  181. Firewire Connection to Car Stereo Receiver by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    What would REALLY rock is if Apple entered into a deal with one/more major car audio manufacturers to place a FireWire connection on the front of the car stereo. Then, by connecting the iPod via a Firewire cable to the car stereo's FireWire jack, the car stereo would be able to play the music as if it were a CD changer AND the iPod would run off the car battery...

  182. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by well_jung · · Score: 2
    "So you won't be able to charge the iPod on any iLink devices."

    True, kinda. It comes with an AC charger. You don't HAVE to charge while connected to the PC. But it's a nice option if you can.

    --
    Carl G. Jung
    --
    "With one breath, with one flow, You will know Synchronicity" -La Policia
  183. lame??? by sewagemaster · · Score: 1

    maybe he's saying it's lame since...

    ... it "[A]int an [M]P3 [E]ncoder"???

    the price ($400) is still a little too much for a fresh grad student like me who's going to have a tough time finding a job...

  184. Re:Linux cost analysis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whatsematter? Can't handle the truth?

  185. Re:Trolls and Slashbots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will. Email me.

    tmoran@linksys.com

  186. Technical Question ICO Firewaire transfers by omega9 · · Score: 1

    I'm a little new at firewire, so maybe someone can answer this question for me.

    In our NOC at work we have a habbit of copying CD's that are used often to the network for easy access. We do this by placing the CD directly into the file server that will be holding the data, so there's no network file transfers going on.

    Some of our file servers are not SCSI, but they do use ATA100 and still perform quite well. When we copy a full 650M CD to these servers it takes longer then 10 seconds. In this situation we've got 100MB/sec. transfer rate available, but it still takes longer then 10 seconds. I understand fine that there's overhead involved, and that's exactly the point I'm trying to make.

    Even though ATA100 gives you a theoretical ceiling of 100MB/sec. you'll likely never see it. That's twice the bandwidth of IEEE1394 but it still takes longer then 10 seconds. So why is everyone treating this "10 seconds" fact about the iPod as fact? Is fireware really capable of moving data that fast?

    --
    I'm against picketing, but I don't know how to show it.
    1. Re:Technical Question ICO Firewaire transfers by phillymjs · · Score: 2

      Ok, well, keep in mind you're not transferring the full 650MB contents of the music CD to the iPod-- you're transferring the mp3 versions of those songs to it.

      The songs in my mp3 collection average out to right around 4MB each, encoded at 128kbps. The average album these days has, what, 12-14 songs on it? Well that's ~48-56MB, which could be sucked across a FireWire cable pretty damned quickly.

      ~Philly

    2. Re:Technical Question ICO Firewaire transfers by omega9 · · Score: 1

      You're completely correct. I must have severly brain-farted. Makes much more sense now. Thanks!

      --
      I'm against picketing, but I don't know how to show it.
    3. Re:Technical Question ICO Firewaire transfers by stripes · · Score: 2
      The songs in my mp3 collection average out to right around 4MB each, encoded at 128kbps. The average album these days has, what, 12-14 songs on it? Well that's ~48-56MB, which could be sucked across a FireWire cable pretty damned quickly.

      FYI, Apple seems to be using ~160Kbits/sec for their stats (which is fair since that is what iTunes uses by default...or maybe I just changed it).

  187. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by rbruels · · Score: 1

    I think recharging through *AirPort* would be a good idea. I wonder what would happen when your cat walked through the wireless electrical stream, though.

    Ryan

    --

    "All your base are belong to this file I send in order to have your advice."
  188. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by LoudMusic · · Score: 1

    Alright, how many of these people are the type that want a portable Mp3 device? Maybe half. We have 35+ Macs that would support the iPod where I work. Of the "Mac users" that use them, only one or two would even think of buying a portable Mp3 player, and they'd probably get something more "universal". And they didn't have to buy the expensive Mac in the first place!!

    ~LoudMusic

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
  189. not 50MB/s by oneiros27 · · Score: 3, Informative

    50MB/s is the max throughput for firewire.
    Odds are, the drive can't handle the full bus speed.

    If it's using the Toshiba 1.8" drive, you're looking at a top end of 12MB/s, which means a about 50x the speed of USB.

    (assuming it's the same drive that someone pointed out in another post, is listed for $400, without the mp3 playing ability, at smartdisk.com)

    --
    Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
    1. Re:not 50MB/s by droleary · · Score: 1

      If it's using the Toshiba 1.8" drive, you're looking at a top end of 12MB/s, which means a about 50x the speed of USB.

      The video on the Apple site only makes claims of 30x USB speeds and 10s/album (or roughly 6-8MB/s), so that's inline with what you'd expect.

      (assuming it's the same drive that someone pointed out in another post, is listed for $400, without the mp3 playing ability, at smartdisk.com)

      The LaCie site list a 30MB FireWire pocket drive of roughly the same physical size for $350, and one that is has twice as much storage as the iPod for $219. If storage is the main desire, there are better routes to go. To pay roughly $300 more simply to play mp3s seems a bit much.

    2. Re:not 50MB/s by doja · · Score: 1
      which means a about 50x the speed of USB

      Or, as starfoxmac would say: 5000% faster.

    3. Re:not 50MB/s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No 400 Mb/s is the max throughput for firewire

    4. Re:not 50MB/s by oneiros27 · · Score: 2

      For some reason, my last boss would say that type of crap, too.

      50x the speed is 4900% faster, not 5000% faster.

      [For some reason, he was convinced that my shaving something down to 1/6 the time was a 600% time savings. In reality, it was actually that the older method was 500% slower than the new version, and time savings of 5/6 (83.33%)]

      --
      Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
  190. This is really stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple had been touting some amazing new product release this week. For the last week, everyone has been talking about how it had to be somethign revolutionary and stunning that would turn the computer world on its head (which is, afterall, what Apple seemed to suggest in all their limited comments about it).

    And what does it turn out to be? A rather bland duplicate of what every other company has already been selling for ages. Whoo. And MP3 player. Amazing -- and only how many months/years too late?

    Next time some Mac nazi tries to tell me how innovative and forward-thinking Apple is compared to the PC market, I'm going to ram my foot up his ass, along with a printout of this article.

    1. Re:This is really stupid. by TJPile · · Score: 0

      I doubt very much that the weak and otherwise inactive freaks that read Slashdot all day could physically hurt anyone. They get their jollies from trolling /. all day and making others feel stupid. Get some lives please.

    2. Re:This is really stupid. by gig · · Score: 2

      All Apple did was invite some members of the press to a product launch of a "breakthrough digital device (hint: it's not a Mac)". They didn't promise to end world hunger or make the Internet obsolete.

      The breakthrough is passing the Grandma test. A non-technical person can now ditch all of their CD players (home and portable) and have a better experience with an iBook and an iPod. You rip the songs off your CD's with the iBook, you listen to the whole collection from your shirt pocket with iPod.

      What some Slashdot readers probably don't understand is that all the digital dreams of the past few years were based on the flawed assumption that the regular Joe would take a computer science course in order to use the Internet, listen to music, run a video recorder. He won't, and he didn't. You have to build an interface on top of the geek stuff to make non-geeks happy; and you can do this while leaving a backstage door for geeks to get through (the UNIX in Mac OS X, the FireWire hard drive aspect of the iPod).

      Imagine for a second that you didn't know what FireWire is, or even that computers have different operating systems, or use different methods for transferring files. Imagine that you don't know the difference between MP3 and WMF. Wouldn't you like someone to offer you a product that just enabled you to put your CD collection into a box the size of a pack of cigarettes and listen to it anywhere? An iBook + iPod does that and it's only $1698 and the user won't even need an instruction book.

      Geez, this is a nice story in the midst of stories about Windows Media Format files and new kinds of CD formats that only work under certain conditions. Apple knows content, people. Take a moment and ask yourself if this doesn't make more sense as a music playback platform than anything Microsoft is doing.

    3. Re:This is really stupid. by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      When they sell a few hundred thousand of these things and Steve Jobs pulls one of his patented 'oh and one more things' and announces a firmware update that upgrades the iPod to a full-feature PDA, will it be breakthrough and innovative enough for you?

      As a business move it'd be brilliant because you'd have instant marketshare from announcement day. As an engineering move it'd be the first time it's ever been done. As for coolness/nerd factor, sure, lots of people have hacked other people's hardware to do different things but when did the manufacturer ever do something like this?

      DB

    4. Re:This is really stupid. by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

      When they sell a few hundred thousand of these things and Steve Jobs pulls one of his patented 'oh and one more things' and announces a firmware update that upgrades the iPod to a full-feature PDA, will it be breakthrough and innovative enough for you?

      Yes, that will be such a breakthrough PDA with a 2" screen. *can't wait*

  191. USB is like a floppy drive to Apple... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple is behind Firewire 100% it seems. Good for them. You can only use this device with Mac OS 9.2+ and iTunes 2. Tons of machine with those specs have Firewire. Adding USB (and then USB2) would just add to the size and complexity of the device. Did you complain with video cameras didn't come with USB? USB sucks with my 64Mb MP3 player. It must be simply awful with 5Gb. I suppose you are still mourning for the lowly 1.44Mb floppy drive too.

  192. Does it matter? (HACK THE IPOD!) by mcc · · Score: 2

    Apple *says* that you can access the iPod as if it were a normal 5 GB Firewire hard drive.. This isn't that complicated. Writing a windows or Linux client that talks to this thing's hard drive and transfers mp3s to and fro couldn't possibly be even the tiniest bit complicated. Even if they're using some crazy proprietary filesystem for the iPod-- which i don't see why they'd go to the bother-- disassembling iTunes and figuring out how it talks to the machine would likely be effortless. Apple doesn't need to "support" windows and linux-- freeware authors can do that for them.

    Trust me. In about six weeks someone will put up a "hacking iPod" website with DETAILED technical specifications of the thing, along with instructions of how to overload the thing's "upgradable firmware" to play .ogg files, run linux off the iPod's disk, play games on a TI-83 emulator, and do any number of complicated random things. The instant this happens, CdmrTaco will certainly suddenly love the thing..

    (Note: does anyone know, what processor does the iPod run on? The tech specs site doesn't say. Either way, i'd imagine that anything powerful enough to decode mp3s is more than powerful enough to emulate the Game Boy.. and, hell, i'd imagine we could figure out some way to hook up input devices into the firewire port, which would lead to all kinds of crazy things. Emulating the newton or the palm, maybe even.. there are a *lot* of different nifty things you could do with a little portable device with a 5 GB hard drive, a firewire port, a little LCD screen, some buttons and a processor powerful enough to decode mp3s, once you overwrite the default firmware.. damn. The possibilities are almost limitless, and at the least i'm certain in about a year you'll see a LOT of fun little "ipod games" out there. I'm starting to wish that i was frivolous enough to spend $400 on an mp3 player..)

    Anyway, my only thought on the subject is extreme happiness that the people trying to mount the iPod as a hard drive on a linux machines will FINALLY after all these years, give us HFS+ support for linux that actually works. I've been waiting so long..

    1. Re:Does it matter? (HACK THE IPOD!) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most likely it's an mp3 decoder on a chip, ide controller on a chip, firewire on a chip, etc and a small cheap processor that has no particular job but cooridinating them and running the display, rather than anything kind of general purpose processor. The overhead of writing enough code to make an embede processor alone outweighs any of the integration costs of using specialised parts.

    2. Re:Does it matter? (HACK THE IPOD!) by m0nkyman · · Score: 1

      Anyway, my only thought on the subject is extreme happiness that the people trying to mount the iPod as a hard drive on a linux machines will FINALLY after all these years, give us HFS+ support for linux that actually works. I've been waiting so long..

      Dear lord I hope you're right. Maybe they'll get appletalk support both ways too! naah... It'll never happen.

      --
      ~ a low user id is no indication I have a clue what I'm talking about.
  193. ogg? by pecka · · Score: 1

    Yes ist's nice and all, but does it play ogg vorbis files? Thet's what my whole collection is.

    1. Re:ogg? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh what the hell is an ogg vorbis file. Sounds like something out of a really bad sci fi movie.

    2. Re:ogg? by supercooter · · Score: 1

      uh, where have you been? ogg-vorbis.com

      --
      If you see the Buddha walking down the road, run him over.
    3. Re:ogg? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well, whose fault is that?

    4. Re:ogg? by drongo · · Score: 1

      The features state that it is firmware upgradeable to support new standards.
      So, I guess if the demand is there...

    5. Re:ogg? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a Mac product. It is not windoze, unix, linux, commodore, atari, yamaha, etc. bullshit proprietory music format.

      I like the fact that this time around, all you folks get to be the ones who say, "Hey, this won't work on my _ _ _ _ _ _(Fill in the blank)"

  194. No sense of humour! by Juju · · Score: 1

    You guys have no sense of humour!
    Do you really think he would post a story about a gadget that he thinks is really lame? Come on!

    --
    Black holes occur when God divides by zero.
  195. hello? what about the pjb100?! by adamspiers · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Can't believe noone's mentioned the PJB100 (Personal Jukebox) yet. 6GB/20GB models available now, apparently they're messing around with 30GB ones too. It receives rave reviews from everyone who buys it (including me), and the SDK's already open and being actively hacked on here on sourceforge (it already does everything you need, and is stable AFAICS). There are kde and gnome frontends, not to mention my personal favourite, pjb-manager.el for emacs!

    What else? It has a clever power-saving mode which spins up the disk, reads a whole track into memory, and powers down the disk immediately. That means 5 mins anti-shock (or was it 10? can't remember) and 10 hours listening per Li-Ion battery. Support is nothing less than fantastic, with new firmwares containing features such as minesweeper :-) And I can upload via USB faster than I can rip CDs, so who cares about FireWire?

    This is the hacker's choice of MP3 jukebox. It's a no-brainer.

  196. Pretty darned elegant if you ask me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I can store 500 MP3s and all of my OS9/OSX troubleshooting tools, a system install image (oh yeah, Firewire is bootable these days) and some pr0n on this thing that will always be with me and recharges during synch?

    I'll take two, thank-you-very-much.

    Get it down to the size of my Nokia 8290 and give it auto-synch-within-airport-range and this thing will own the geek market.

    Try reading the specs a bit more, and weigh in just how valuable Firewire Disk Mode and size are in a package that small.

    Also plays WAVs and AIFFs for what it's worth...

  197. Modera Taco to -1 for Flamebait - Troll feeding by Juju · · Score: 1

    He is feeding the Trolls... The funny thing is that he is catching a lot of them.

    --
    Black holes occur when God divides by zero.
  198. FireWire support & Linux by alfredo · · Score: 1

    I know that there is some work being done to support FireWire devices in YellowDog Linux.

    10mgs bootloader, 128mgs swap, 2gigs root, the rest music.

    Ahhh, hmmm......I am getting dizzy.

    --
    photosMy Photostream
  199. Llithium polymer by 90XDoubleSide · · Score: 2, Informative
    From the official specs:

    Power and battery
    Built-in rechargeable lithium polymer battery (1200 mAh)
    Playtime: 10 hours when fully charged
    Charges via FireWire connector to Mac system or power adapter
    Fast-charge time: up to 1 hour (charges to 80% of battery capacity)
    Full-charge time: up to 3 hours

    The battery is built in much like a cell phone or Palm, but it gets power over the FireWire cable, eliminating the need for a cradle. The battery will run out long before you listen to all the music since it stores about 1,000 hours of music, but 10 hours is quite respectable and will get most people through a day.

    --
    "Reality is just a convenient measure of complexity" -Alvy Ray Smith
    1. Re:Llithium polymer by arson1 · · Score: 1

      1,000 songs, not hours. Still, more than 10 hours worth.

      --


      --
      Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things.
    2. Re:Llithium polymer by 90XDoubleSide · · Score: 1
      1,000 songs, not hours. Still, more than 10 hours worth.

      Quite right. I feel stupid now, but that's what I get for trying to make a cohesive post before noon ;)

      It should be about 74 hours at 160 Kbps.
      On a side note has anyone else noticed the method iTunes uses to list file sizes? days:hours:minutes:sections, so it would display this as 3:02:00:00. I wonder if it goes to weeks after you have more than 10,080 minutes of music :)

      --
      "Reality is just a convenient measure of complexity" -Alvy Ray Smith
  200. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by trunc · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, Apple's ultimate goal is to get people to buy more Apple hardware. So it's not likely that Apple will be developing a PC version of iTunes. They want to keep their so-called advantages to Mac-only. Maybe, in the future, they will get one program on Windows to definitely support the iPod and release an SDK for other Mac and Windows apps to optionally support it.

    Remember, Apple makes more money on hardware sales, than on FireWire licenses.

  201. Yeah the ibook is fricken tough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    same thing happened to me and i was sure the thing was screwed i tripped on the power cable pulled the ibook off my desk if fell 3.5 feet to the ground and flew 4 or 5 feet horizontally onto thin carpet over concrete. Kida bent, closes unevenly but not a single problem otherwise. The last thing that this happened to was a compaq ipac which was replaced by a psion. apple builds a solid product hence the higher cost being justified.

  202. What I like . . . by MrBomb · · Score: 1

    It's smaller than a Creative Nomad.
    It's the first MP3 Player that uses Firewire instead of the lame and slow USB.
    It can also serve as an external HD.
    Using it alongside iTunes, it will automatically download what tunes ya got on your Mac onto iPod.
    And it's for Mac users only . . .Sorry ya Linux suckas!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  203. Why some people don't like apple. by tcc · · Score: 0

    > I have trouble understanding why Slashot users are such haters when it comes to Apple and Steve Jobs.

    When I had my amiga, Apple-zealots would tell me I couldn't run half of the software that apple was providing, and their software was soooo superior to the amiga's (I didn't find that correct aside from photoshop), So when I've had installed Shapeshifter and emulating a Macintosh Quadra *FASTER* than apple's real hardware Quadra, (both with the same 68040 processor, but shapeshifter was putting the mac bios in fastram whereas the real quadra was on chip and dead slow, just that gave quite a boost in application speed), When I told em "here, now I run all your crap, plus MY amiga stuff, for less than the price of your quadra", they simply bitched and moaned about how the amiga wouldn't take off and it wasn't popular and mac was a much more advanced machine, basically, they couldn't find ONE architecture argument, nor anything making sense to contradict what they were seeing... "it doesn't run that (click click, runing it) oh, and that? probably not (click click, oh it works, wow) oh the benchmarks are probably crappy since it's EMULATING (click click, run the standard benchmark tools for the mac, EVERYTHING was equal or a bit faster) oh well amiga sucks anyways! that was the big Apple fan's logical conclusion.

    So basically, I don't hate the mac hardware, in fact, some of their innovation are really good (I use FireWire, I hate USB for an example), but what I hate is the TOTALLY BLIND userbase, Even when I was an amiga fanatic, I could recognize that the Alpha and Mips system were superior in some aspect and architechture, I could recognize that my amiga had some limitation that the PC eventually didn't keep, I could ACCEPT THAT SOMETHING OUT THERE WAS BETTER. Problem with most of the mac users, they don't accept to be told that their investment could have been a bad choice especially for what they are doing, they don't accept that something out there could be better if Supreme Steve Jobs didn't say it's so, and I could go on for days about this.

    Look in the web/dtp buisness, you'll see what I am talking about, look at the big majority of "MAC" teachers in school, pure bias.. sorry but photoshop on MAC or On PC is the *SAME* thing, the tool is the same, the interface running behind the tool might be a bit different, but it's the same god damn thing, but these people keep brainwashing student that a PSD file will open faster on a mac than on a pc and some other vapor-junk like that that is TOTALLY OS independant (just buy a cheetah and you'll smoke the standard mac for god's sake), THAT is what's pissing me the most, their attitude, and a platform is not only a computer that you use at home, soon or later you need to exchange with a community, and the majority (I know there are exeptions, I know one) of the Mac community is too close-minded for my personnal taste. While I understand that they create a strong userbase that way, they sure keep a lot of people away at the same time.

    I'll always remember when people came to see me to get a second guess suggestion because their DTP teachers we're stongly "forcing" them to buy iMACS for home and commercial freelance contracts as opposed to a PC because "the PC just doesn't do what a mac can do", the guy was ready to make his student's life miserable (ever did DTP on a 15" monitor?) for Apple's sake, when they could get dual celeron 366mhz (so faster 3d for those who wanted to go 3d), with a 19" monitor for the SAME price. He didn't explain de differences nor give his student the liberty to chose their own platform, he forced with no argument, took me WEEKS to unbrainwash them and make them compare the 2 systems (I could have not care, and just sold any of the 2 and make a quick buck, it wasn't my job to be HONNEST with them and second guess their decision, but I did it because I wanted to be SURE they would be satisfied with their decision and not having to spend money twice, some got a iMAC (I was suggesting them a G3 if they really want to stay mac (eventho the G3 was way more expensive, I knew it would be more expensive to buy a G3 AFTER an iMAC ), because they would eventually need to add more stuff... no, imac, teacher is right, teacher says, they do), some took my suggestion, today, those who had an iMAC trashed their system to get a G3 or G4 (and some didn't even finish paying the first loan), for a lot more again, and the others who got my suggestion, they're still in buisness and doing their contracts without having to buy another computer from scratch because the monitor sucked or the 3d performance was bad or the ram banks maxed out or not enough room to add a DVD drive and CD-RW or extra drive), so in the end, those with the OTHER choice saved money and they can still buy another PC today and the total for their 2 systems will still come cheaper than buying a G3 originally which is almost out of date too today).

    --
    --- Metamoderating abusive downgraders since my 300th post.
    1. Re:Why some people don't like apple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I had my amiga, Apple-zealots would tell me ...

      Dude, no Apple users gave two shits about your Amiga. "Amiga Inferiority Complex" -- it's a diagnosed condition, so look it up. It's really sad that you are still suffering from it 10 years later.

      Also, you shapeshifter fucks had the tendancy to run around my University and steal ROMs out of the Macs so that you could find some software for your Ataris and whatever. Annoying. Now go back to crossposting to comp.mac.os.*

    2. Re:Why some people don't like apple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Feel the wrath of apple zealots with moderation status man... hehe

  204. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 2

    I might point out that the Soundblaster Audigy has a firewire port. It's even gold plated.

  205. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by jgalun · · Score: 1

    I think you mean Apple shipped 850,000 machines last quarter.

  206. Re: Apple is dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All major surveys show that Apple has steadily declined in market share. Apple is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If Apple is to survive at all it will be among OS hobbyist dabblers. Apple continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, Apple is dead.

  207. this is just a distraction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    next month is the big release

  208. Comparisons... by Incongruity · · Score: 3, Informative
    Yeah, this should compete favorably with the solid state units, but they've already lost to the CD-MP3 units, IMO.

    Speaking of comparisons... Let's compare the iPod to a sampling of other units that share its form-factor... that excludes all CD-MP3 based units AND it excludes units such as the Nomad. So how does the iPod stack up to it's form-factor matched competitors? What are it's competitors? Looking at the ever-cool ThinkGeek's MP3 player selection, here are the competition:

    1. 20 Gig Personal MP3 Jukebox (Designed by Compaq)
      Price: $499
      Capacity: 20 GB
      I/O Interface: USB
      Desktop OS Compatibility: Windows, & Linux (??)
      Battery Type/Life(playtime): Internal rechargable/ 12 Hrs
      Dimensions: 150 x 80 x 26 mm
      Weight: 9.9oz.
    2. Archos Jukebox 6000:
      Price: $249
      Capacity: 6 GB
      I/O Interface: USB
      Desktop OS Compatibility: Windows and Mac
      Battery Type/Life(playtime): 4 AA/ Max 8 hours
      Dimensions: 4.5" x 3.2" x 1.3"
      Weight: 12oz.
      Additional features: Can function as USB hardrive. Also, Archo's website is unclear as to whether the unit can charge "it's 4-AA rechargables" with the included power adapter but such is hinted at...
    3. Archos Jukebox Studio 20 MP3 Player
      Same as above, with 20GB of storage, for $349
    4. Toshiba Portable MP3 Player - MEA210
      Price: $199.99
      Capacity: 32MB int. Expandable w/ SD card
      I/O Interface: USB
      Desktop OS Compatibility: Windows only
      Battery Type/Life(playtime): 1 AAA/ Max 4 hours
      Dimensions: 2" x 2" x 0.5"
      Weight: 1.5 oz w/out battery
    5. Rio 600 64MB MP3 Player
      Price: $159.99
      Capacity: 64MB int. Expandable w/ add-on back of up to 340 MB
      I/O Interface: USB
      Desktop OS Compatibility: Mac & Windows
      Battery Type/Life(playtime): 1 AA/ Max 8 hours
      Dimensions: 3.5" x 2.5" x 5/8"
      Weight: ??
    6. Rio 800 128 MB MP3 Player
      Price: $219.99
      Capacity: 128MB int. Expandable w/ add-on back up to 340 MB
      I/O Interface: USB
      Desktop OS Compatibility: Mac & Windows
      Battery Type/Life(playtime): 1 Ni-MH AA Rechargable (built in recharger)/ ??
      Dimensions: 3.5" x 2.5" x 1"
      Weight: ??
    7. Apple iPod
      Price: $399.00
      Capacity: 5GB
      I/O Interface: Firewire
      Desktop OS Compatibility: Mac only (?)
      Battery Type/Life(playtime): Internal, (rechargable via external adaptor or via firewire bus)/ 10 hrs max.
      Dimensions: 4.02"x2.3"x0.78"
      Weight: 6.5 oz
      Additional features: may be used as firewire disk

    General discussion:

    First, why exclude such different form-factor units such as the nomad? IMHO, size plays a major part in dictating what one of these units will be used for. A CD player, or Nomad is simply too big for me to take to the gym and use while I am running, biking or using any of the machines. Therefore, it's gotta be small..

    So how does the iPod stack up? It looks like it's middle of the road, but if certain features are or are not important to you, the choice may be easier (for or against the iPod.) For instance, the Mac only (??) status of this unit makes it unacceptable for many consumers (I love my macs but single OS support IS a handicap for any MP3 player and when that one OS is not the numerically superior one, it's a real issue. On the other hand, the iPod is the only unit that supports firewire. That speed advantage can be really big. Additionally, the iPod blows many of the other units away as far as storage goes (such as the Rio's, Toshiba's, Samsung's, Iomega's and Intel's offerings) but it is matched and exceeded by the Archos units.

    My take, overall is that this is a good start and there is a lot of potential in the iPod, but for my $$, right now, I'd buy one of the Archos units.

    1. Re:Comparisons... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just called the 1-800 number for the Apple Store and asked about PC compatability. The rep told me you had to have a Mac.

      I dont really understand why they would do this. Does Apple really expect consumers to buy a Mac just to make use of what is IMO a great product?

      Funny, the rep had to put me on hold to ask his supervisor if the iPod was only Mac compatible. Wouldn't you think that Apple would have given their sales reps at least some basic information about what they touted as a monumental product release? Wouldn't they have expected a high volume of calls from consumers wanting more info about the product seeing as how apple.com has virtually no tech information on the site?

    2. Re:Comparisons... by itachi · · Score: 1

      I'd bet cash money that if you plug an iPod into a Linux/BSD box with HFS+/HFS support, you'd have no problem whatsoever getting them to play nice. Remember, 1-800-applestore gets you phone monkeys. Not even necessarily phone monkeys interested in tech. Give it a week or two, then start Googling for ways to use your iPod with non-Mac OSes.

      itachi

  209. price = lame by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    Now that someone else has mentioned that the 20gb Nomad costs the same as the iPod (would you give up 15 gigs?) I'll mention that the 6gb version you mention costs $130 less than the iPod.

    I'd give up size and weight for $130. Then again, I wouldn't buy either, because even $269 is too much for my cheap ass. (See my thoughts on MP3-CD players.)

  210. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 2

    USB is much faster than most home broadband connections, so the time to fill 5 gig will be much less than the time it took to download the files. :-)

  211. The fine print? by evanbd · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Did anyone else notice this?


    iPod and iTunes are for legal or rightholder-authorized copying only. Don't steal music.


    Apple seems to have the right theory on "content protection"

    1. Re:The fine print? by FastT · · Score: 2

      Agreed, though I'm not sure it's for the reason we hope. The thing is, Apple appeals to a market segment that happily pays $5000 for a niche computer so thay can do things like run Photoshop ($800) and use the iPod ($400). These aren't people who steal music--they have too much money to bother.

      --

      The only certainty is entropy.
  212. Today's word is -eh- by Ether · · Score: 1

    Archos's Jukebox is:
    * Available in 6 or 20 GB options
    * Comes with USB. While Firewire would be nice to have, it's not $100-150 more convenient.
    * 4.5" x 3.2" x 1.3". 12 Oz. Bigger than the iPod, but not significantly. Not $150 bigger.
    * Was $200 at Best Buy a few weeks ago. For the 6 gb version.
    * Has a recorder option on one of the models.

    I'm underwhelmed. It's cool, but not $200 cooler than an Archos. (www.archos.com).

    --
    --I hate people when they're not polite -"Psycho Killer", Talking Heads
    1. Re:Today's word is -eh- by hattig · · Score: 2
      I assure you, Firewire is a darn site more convenient that USB for this kind of product. Being able to upload 2 hours of mp3s (100MB) in under 10 seconds compared to several minutes is damn convenient, especially if you middle name is not "patient". Also, Firewire doesn't use up any system resources while in operation, and I would hazard that USB ports are much more likely to be used up in a modern system than Firewire ports.

      The Archos ways twice as much as the iPod. The iPod is small enough to fit in a shirt pocket. The Archos nearly weighs a pound! Not nice to have that backing against you every couple of steps or whatever.

      The iPod will come down in price - it is a new product based upon new technologies (1.8" HD for example). When it comes down to $300, it will be worth the price. Apple know they can fleece early adopters before Christmas however, and who can blame them?

      Also, the iPod looks a lot nicer. Maybe not important to a typical geek, but important for a lot of people. Especially people who already have Macs!

      The addition of Firewire, lighter weight, better looks etc are worth an extra $100 over the 6GB Archos in my opinion. And Apple will be around for a good few more years in case something goes wrong with it. Now all Apple need to do is write an OS for a PDA based around the hardware in this device...

  213. Ummm... by SPYvSPY · · Score: 1

    I can see that you've sorta missed my point (or maybe you've proven it).

    While Toyota Corollas might be of "high quality" in the sense that they have wimpy engines that can sustain hundreds of thousands of miles of highway driving, they are utter crap otherwise, and totally uncool. I've ridden in them and driven them. While they may be better "old lady" cars than the homegrown Novas, they are still "old lady" cars.

    I personally drive a Honda S2000, just to give you some perspective on where I'm coming from. Like Apple, Honda makes great products that are also cool -- from the lowly Civic SI up to the awesome NSX-R.

    1. Re:Ummm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's nothing special about a Honda S2000. Nothing worse than some poseur riding around like he's a badass in a rice-burner like that. And speaking of wimpy engines, the S2000 is in a class of it's own pulling so little weight to 60 in almost 7 seconds. A Volvo would smoke a S2000. For all the money that was robbed from you, you should have spent 8000-10000 more and gotten a Boxster.

  214. Recording by tillemetry · · Score: 1

    Can you record with a microphone?

  215. Re:LAME? WTF?!? and hard drive by zerocool^ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame.

    And why does everything have to be wireless? I don't understand this.

    1.) plug firewire cable into the back of your computer
    2.) bring other end of cable on to desktop
    3.) plug in MP3 player when needed

    I don't get how this makes life easier. By adding a wireless recieving unit in the thing, it would be bigger, weigh more, and cost more. Probably be more complicated, slower, and use more batteries, too. Or to cut costs you could put an IrDA port in it, although I think less people own an IrDA port for their desktop than firewire, and it would be sitting there transfering data wirelessly so long, you might as well have taken the 4 seconds to plug it in. Why is this a good idea?

    I guess i'm just not getting it. Mabey i'm too practical from a monatary standpoint, but i wouldn't spend $400 on a wireless setup for my apartment when i can run $6 worth of cat 5 myself anywhere it wants to go in the apartment. Wireless is for cell phones and possibly for laptops at how much it costs right now, and i can't even afford it at that. Beyond that its just extra gadgets.

    ~z

    --
    sig?
  216. iTunes 2 software on the drive itself by cryptochrome · · Score: 2

    It needs a way to hook into component stereo systems too.

    I was thinking that if the iPod came with the iTunes software actually on it, then you wouldn't have to worry about whether it was installed on the Mac you hooked up to or not. Thus you could manage your iPod on any mac. And if it came bundled with Windows or Linux apps, (even stripped down compared to iTunes) you've got a great system for exchanging and managing music. Also, it would be great if you could hook two iPods together via firewire to exchange files... Firewire has peer-to-peer capability so it should be possible. The RIAA would hate that though.

    Does anyone know what hardware/software system they use for playback? Can you load new codecs or system software or anything?

    --

    ---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?

  217. Re:Apple's new product line by Mr.+Sharumpe · · Score: 1

    Ummm... the product has been around since 1998 or 1999, when the original iBook was introduced.

    They did a commercial to that effect, though I can't find a link to it.

    Mr. Sharumpe

    --
    -- The above comments are just my opinion. If you are going to flame me, save your time. I am fireproof.
  218. Well... by headchimp · · Score: 1
    ...$400 is a bit much, I mean, can it hook up to my car radio? Best guess is via a cassette adapter from the headphone jack.

    I think Steve Jobs is turning Apple into a Tupperware company. Great designs, long lasting product but over priced.

    He might want to look into selling things like iBowl, iPlate, iFork, iSpoon, etc...

    Until the price lowers a bit more, say around $100, I'll stick to my tape of the Spice Girls...

    Just call me iChimp...

  219. No PC Support? by bADlOGIN · · Score: 1

    It may sound like a silly question, but if Sony puts FireWire on it's systems and Apple wants to expand the impact and capability of FireWire, they should do a PCI add in card that runs under X86. I like Apple, and if this is just bait to get people to use Macs for MP3's that's fine. However, selling a large number of units and using it as a BRIDGE from the PC to the Mac world would be a hell of a lot smarter.

    --
    *** Sigs are a stupid waste of bandwidth.
    1. Re:No PC Support? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a freakin' moron.

  220. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by benedict · · Score: 1

    I expect Apple to totally dominate the four-armed nerd market.

    --
    Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
  221. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and while their at it why dont they just make all their devices sync with my toaster too. I mean the whole Toaster-Sync market is way neglected.

  222. myDiva works with linux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does the 128Mb player work well? Anybody? This looks cool: if it had a FM tuner, it'd be perfect. Still, voice record to WAV would be nice, and 128MB would be enough to have fun on a flight.

    How does one get this to work with linux?

  223. Re:Linux cost analysis by supercooter · · Score: 1

    "a *lot* of maintenance"? huh? I haven't rebooted my P2 300 running redhat 6.1 in over a year and a half. It has *never* crashed. I don't share your experience, if it is in fact your experience. Go buy your iPod. And quit smoking Steve Job's iPot. Go away. Shoo.

    --
    If you see the Buddha walking down the road, run him over.
  224. Roopaq by alexjohns · · Score: 2
    Have you guys seen this? http://www.compgeeks.com/details.asp?invtid=GN835

    A $122 shell that you can put any size laptop hard drive into. 20GB drives sell for just a tad over $100 on PriceWatch. With shipping and handling, total of $250. Probably no Linux drivers, but it's USB instead of Firewire (which I don't have). Seems like a cheaper alternative. Especially if you have an old laptop laying around that you can cannibalize the hard drive off of. Anybody got one? What's the UI like? Thinking of getting myself one for the holidays.

  225. Reality Distortion Field finally let me go. by Geek+In+Training · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I am a recovering Apple fanatic. Now that I've escaped the famous Cupertino Reality Distortion Field, let me tell you why I have such a love/hate relationship with "All Things Apple."

    I still enjoy using and playing with their products. It started with my Mac LC in high school, then my killer Mac Quadra 840av in college. When the iMac came out in '98, I was the first one buying to replace the aging Quadra. My family has purchased somewhere in the neighborhood of 12 Macs (I'm one of seven kids), most recently the iMac DV I helped my sister pick out on her way to college.

    What's my point in all this? Apple almost died once by losing touch with reality. Steve bought them back from the brink, but now he's marketing a device that is very nice when you sell it at $199.95; but at twice that price, it looks like as goofy and unmarketable as a Platypus in an Edsel swinging a CueCat around.

    I still love talking about new Apple technologies and products with friends and coworkers. Apple loves to release clean products with gee-whiz features. Sometimes even at reasonable prices.

    But when the realization hit my wife that the 233MHz G3 wasn't cutting it anymore, and we looked at new computers, I could not bring myself to fork over another $1000 to $1500 to get a non-upgradable unit. I'm really sorry Mac enthusiasts, but here is what I built instead:

    A PC in a cute, customized penguin-shaped ATX case with a Celeron 900, 512 megs of RAM, 16x DVD drive, 16x10x40 CD-RW, 30 Gigabyte ATA-100 hard drive, GeForce2 MX video, SoundBlaster Live audio, and 3Com NIC with a 17 inch monitor.

    For under $800.00.

    I sold the iMac to a friend in trade for a 1976 Mercury Cougar with 60,000 original miles. I guarantee I'll get mileage out of my machine than he'll get out of his. Oh, the iMac runs OS 10.1 quite nicely on the 36GB drive I stuck in, on the 288 megs of RAM I installed. But nothing can beat the commodity cost of PC upgrade peripherals. Right now, I could put an ECS motherboard and 1.4GHz Athlon in the new PC for $200, and keep right on using the rest of the components.

    Yes, creative engineering clearly requires Apple charge a premium... but at this point, it's too high to pay. I have a house to buy and kids to father someday soon, and I'd much rather spring for a 4th bedroom than another overpriced tech toy.

    YMMV.

    --
    SlashSigTheorem: Humorous, Political, Critical, Constructive- If you have a .sig, someone WILL complai
    1. Re:Reality Distortion Field finally let me go. by David+Ham · · Score: 1
      Wow. You are getting INCREDIBLE prices on that 4th bedroom.


      I had an addition built onto my house in 1990 and that alone was SIXTY THOUSAND DOLLARS! In the middle of nowhere! Just for 3 measly bedrooms, a living room, kitchen, 3 bathrooms and a little den area downstairs. Now I find out that I can get an extra room for only $400! I feel so stupid! I had heard that wages for skilled laborers and materials costs were going up with inflation, but I guess I was duped! Gosh, at $400/room, I could have had that addition built for under $4,000! I'm such a sucker!

      --

      --
      you must amputate to email me
      i read all replies to my comments

    2. Re:Reality Distortion Field finally let me go. by Geek+In+Training · · Score: 1

      Gosh, at $400/room, I could have had that addition built for under $4,000! I'm such a sucker!

      Thanks, smartass. I think I was pretty explicit in that my buying PATTERNS had changed, away from buying premium toys at premium prices, so that I can better afford "necessities."

      If you want to buy a $400 MP3 player, good for you. I'll look at it over your shoulder, envy you for obivously being better off than me, and then smile to myself because I have a device that does the same thing for $120.

      I'm voting with my dollars and buying reasonable quality parts at very good prices. You get a nicer product at (what I consider) insane prices. Nobody's wrong here, that's just how the system works.

      And considering my home search involves 3-bedroom/1-baths in the $105K range, and 4-bedrooms/2-baths in the $120K range... in my context, you got ripped off for paying $60,000 for the addition. On the other hand, my parents just paid 80 grand to remodel the kitchen in their 30-room, 80-year old home.

      So again... YMMV.

      --
      SlashSigTheorem: Humorous, Political, Critical, Constructive- If you have a .sig, someone WILL complai
    3. Re:Reality Distortion Field finally let me go. by David+Ham · · Score: 1
      Uh... I got 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, a kitchen, a living room and a den/basement for $60,000... and you're getting 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom plus I'm assuming a kitchen, dining room, living room, and den area/basement for $105K... and I got ripped off? Maybe I read you wrong.

      Anyway, I was just fucking with you. I know how it is - I can't buy as much shit as I want any more, since Jenni lives with me and we're planning for the future and whatnot. I probably won't buy the 5 gig one @ $400 'cause I do agree that it's overpriced. But... it is a hell of a product. A 5 gig mp3 player that's that small, has the interface it does (which is all a matter of preference, but I like it personally), sorts by artist, album, song, and stores playlists... plus acts as a portable hard drive if you need it to, has a 10 hour battery life *and* works over FireWire... all in all, I'd say that's not too bad. Or rather, you could do a hell of a lot worse for that money. And since I have 2 Macs (PowerMac G4 Dual 800 Tower & new iBook), this would integrate very nicely.

      Funny thing is, I'm not even a mac guy. I'm writing this from Linux on an AMD processor. The iBook was my first Mac. I just think Apple's got some really great shit lately.

      But yeah. Pardon the sardonic mood. I'm a turd, I know.

      Good luck on the house. I know it's tough finding the one that just /fits/, both price-wise and in what you're looking for. Hope it turns out well.

      regards,
      --Dave

      --

      --
      you must amputate to email me
      i read all replies to my comments

  226. Versatility... by DarkRecluse · · Score: 1

    Well, I'm going to use it to connect to my car stereo and store navy secrets..."Yes sir, its just an Mp3 player...listen":)

    --
    --"It's Bradford Company, slash your last name, dot your first name"
  227. floppy disk - Zip Disk - iPod by humbads · · Score: 1

    evolution:

    floppy disk -> Zip Disk -> iPod

    If only Jobs had not been so callous as to say:
    ``We have thought that when we have a little bit of spare time we will looking into taking it to Windows,'' he said, adding jokingly that he thought ``the experience probably won't be as good.''

    S.

  228. ROTFL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    mod up!

  229. Cool yes, marketable no. by lushmore · · Score: 1

    There's no doubt it's a cool device. They'll just never sell any of them. The intersection of people who a) have firewire b) have $400 to spend on yet another way to play music and c) are willin g to listen to music on headphones is very small.

    Don't get it for Christmas--get it in January when it will be down to $199.

  230. Re:Nimrod by Tyrall · · Score: 1

    Nope, it fucks with anyone who uses nested threads, regardless of location :)

  231. The Slashdot Formula by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (.001*News) + (200*Opionion) + (200*Bias) + (10*Rumor) = Slashdot

    And to prove this formula, the moderator will probably moderate -1 this message.

  232. iPod is multilingual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    From http://www.apple.com/ipod/specs.html

    "iPod supports English, French, German and Japanese, and can even display different languages simultaneously. So you can view French songs (with native language information tags) alongside German, Japanese and American ones."

    Listen to Kraftwerk as it should be heard!

  233. what worries me is price + timimg = disaster by jamesbrown1000 · · Score: 1

    right now is not the time to introduce an expensive MP3 player, no matter how cool it might be (looks great and is so tiny!) ... the days of people having $400 burning a hole in their pockets died a few months back.

    i wonder why they released this right now, of all times. i mean, it just doesn't make sense. the iMac made sense when it was released. the cube didn't, and it's dead. i worry that this will suffer the same fate.

    --
    Mindy: "Well...desserts aren't always right." Homer: "But they're so sweet!"
  234. iPod is multilingual by aarku · · Score: 1
    From http://www.apple.com/ipod/specs.html



    "iPod supports English, French, German and Japanese, and can even display different languages simultaneously. So you can view French songs (with native language information tags) alongside German, Japanese and American ones."


    At last I can listen to Kraftwerk as it should be heard!

  235. Fill 6GB Archos Jukebox in 2hrs by rokicki · · Score: 1

    I can fill my Archos Jukebox with my entire 6GB MP3 collection in about two hours over USB.

    -tom

  236. Apple.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You guys are missing the big picture. The iPod is silently showcasing Darwin in the embedded market. This would get Apple into a market currently dominated by Linux and Embedded Windows (moreso by Linux). It shows Darwins ability to be used in a multimedia device with updatable firmware, so it can accept new formats if needed.

    Moreover, the iPod is one piece to a total user experience. On one (UNIX) platform you can easily rip mp3s, transfer them to a MP3 player of your choice (does not have to be an iPod), burn them to a cd as MP3 or AIFF, make digital movies, burn them to a DVD or back to tape, author professional DVDs, edit video, produce visual effects equal to what is done in the movies (I worked on Star Wars EP II, they are using mostly Macs for production). iPod is just another piece to a total user experience.

    While I personally feel iPod is at least 100 bucks too much, it has some unique features. Being able to transfer MP3s with firewire vs. usb is great. I am sure someone will devise a way for it to hot sync with a pc, and considering firewire cards are about $35 bucks, and firewire is becoming an industry standard on both PCs and Macs, I applaud Apple for firewire as the preferred connectivity. Also, the ability to use it as an external, portable firewire drive is nifty, although if you are going to use it mainly for that reason there are much cheaper options.

    As for Apples hardware, I do not feel their prices are all that far out of line. The iBook is very competitive for its price, as is the Titanium PowerBook. The dual processor machines are pretty sweet. As for performance issues, I have no complaints. I do understand however most Linux users argument that they prefer to recycle parts from older machines or build machines from scratch. I own more than one mac and I can tell you the quality of the machines is very good, better than my Dell or Gateway boxes. While I do not believe Apples mHZ myth marketing, I do not believe Intel marketing either. We all know that there is more to performance than mHz.

    I am a multi-OS user. I am a MCSE (only because my career forces me to be), a Linux user as well, and at home I choose Macs. The total user experience, especially with OS X is very, very good.

    If Apple made the iPod work on Windows and Linux it would detract from the overall experience in OS X. Why then would you consider OS X?

  237. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Draxinusom · · Score: 1

    iTunes 2 comes with the device, as you would have seen if you had bothered to read Apple's description of the device. Adding FireWire to a PC is a $15 PCI card; every recent Mac has come with them standard. And while $400 is a lot of money, it's only $170 more than the Nomad thinger; would I pay $170 more for a device with half the weight, a quarter of the size, many many many times the transfer speed, and much better engineering and user design? Hell yes.

    That said, I'm not going to buy one, but I think plenty will.

  238. Another silly prediction of Apple's demise... by Green+Light · · Score: 1

    Everytime I hear this, I'm ROTFL.

    Apple's critics have been predicting it's demise SINCE at least 1984! I remember reading pundits like John Dvorak in the '80s constantly saying that Apple would be dead within months, it was doomed because their computers were not IBM-compatible, blah, blah, blah.

    I'm one of the "idiots" (according to those pundits) who bought one of the original 128K 9" monochrome Macs in 1984. I've owned Macs ever since, including a spankin' new G4 with OSX. I have never had a reason to regret owning my Mac collection (and yes, every one of them still work!).

    As far as the iPod goes, they'll sell at least a half-million of these things, which will make it a mild success. I'll wait for the iPod 2, though, with a 20+GB drive and lower price 8^) They (and the copycats) will sell millions of those.

    --
    "Send an Instant Karma to me" - Yes
  239. In other news... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2

    ...Apple Computers is developing a revolutionary device they plan to call the iMod for corporate use. This device is approximately the size and shape of a large all-in-one TV remote. It is designed to fluctuate to the natural harmonic frequency of computers running any version of the MS Windows operating system, thus penetrating its minimal defenses, and deactivating the hostile system.

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  240. Lawsuit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    But... Apple has plenty of lawyers. I think we should PRAY that RIAA sues Apple - because there's several sections of the DMCA that _should_ be interpreted to allow this device - and EFF just doesn't have the clout Apple does.

    If you love freedom to use music purchased in oone format without extra hassle in some other format... we should be supporting Apple in this. Finally, someone we can feel good when Apple unleashes the lawyers on. :)

  241. dumbass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    guess what OS has the longest uptime on the net...

    1. Re:dumbass by gvsu_snow_lord · · Score: 0

      Let me take a crack at that... would the correct answer be.... BSD/OS running Apache 1.1.3?

      In fact looking at the top 10 I only see *BSD... what else would you expect? iPod? In all reality I have no idea what this has to do with the iPod... but I thought someone should point you in the right direction.

      http://uptime.netcraft.com/up/today/top.avg.html

  242. Do you actually own an MP3 Player? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TRY UPLOADING 5 gigs of MP3'S through USB ! It is Terrible.

    Thank Jesus for a Firewire MP3 Player.

    I have a Nike Rio player that was a nice size, solid state, but I am going to dump it for the iPod. Filling the 64 megs onboard (about 30 minutes of MP3's) takes like 8 - 10 minutes by USB - that SUCKS. I want to pick my damn tunes and roll man, not wait for 10 minutes!

    Its about time Firewire was put on a MP3 Player,

    Now if only my Cannon digital elph had firewire - it too has the USB lag that I hate.

    Maybe some of you cheapskates place no value on your time?

    Why complain about the price - who cares - Getting the best product is most important - I can blow $100.00 in a heartbeat. The savings of buing a NOMAD or other "soviet" engineered junk, is not worth my time.

    $400.00 - big deal - what would 10 CD's cost you - about $100.00 right? big deal.

    So if the iPod was $300.00 everyone would be so much happier eh?

    Go buy a VST external Firewire Hard Drive - how much will you pay?
    Now compare to the iPod - Remember you can use this for Data too.

    No battery changes, decent storage, small size, use as a HD, FAST FILE TRANSFERS

  243. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by jbuilder · · Score: 1

    Well let's see here.... I think I can tell you why iPod is iLAME. Here's why I won't be buying one.. Out of the four computers in my house...

    None of them are Macs.
    None of them have Firewire.
    This means that none of them can run iTunes.
    This also means that none of them can charge the thing.

    You want portable music? Get a portable MiniDisc player.

    You can get 5 hours of music on 1 MiniDisc and 1 MiniDisc costs 1.50 (using MDLP mode).

    *And* I can record to it from my stereo, my Wintel box *or* my Linux box. *AND* it's full digital recording from a CD-player or computer with a digital audio output.

    It might not be as fast as Firewire, but it sure as hell is cheaper..!

    --
    Polymorphism -- It's what you make of it.
  244. Penis Envy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's been a long time since I've seen som many people claim to be NOT INTERESTED in soemthing, yet devote so much time to discussing it. How "Lame" are you??

  245. umm Apple invented USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    im almost sure they did

    1. Re:umm Apple invented USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure that Intel invented USB.

    2. Re:umm Apple invented USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Intel invented USB; Apple invented Firewire. Apple was the first to use USB in significant numbers, with the introduction of the iMac. Thanks to the iMac, USB got the push it needed to become mainstream.

  246. Typical Apple product by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
    This strikes me as a typical apple product. It is not innovative in any sense except in the styling. It is 50% more expensive than models with similar capabilities. The 'superiority' of the UI is mainly a function of whether you are an existing apple user.

    The firewire vs USB debate leaves me cold. Try sitting down and ripping 20 CDs, then ask yourself 5 hours later if you care much whether it takes 5 minutes or 30 seconds to load them into the player.

    I have an Archos unit, the USB delay has never bothered me. I have firewire on the machine but fiddling with the drivers is a real pig. I discovered after I bought my first firewire board that the 'standard' isn't. If you have a JVC camera it turns out it does not work with most boards, you have to have the B or the C version. Tedious huh?

    What would strike me as really useful is the ability to record. I would like a portable dictation machine that would allow me to capture 20 hours or so of dictation and then load it into a voice->text converter for offline processing.

    As it is I suspect it will not be a success because Apple are only really marketing to their existing user base. While this is not negligible, it is hardly substantial. Apple are making it very clear that they have no interest in marketing the device to the 95% of the computer user market that have PCs whether they are running Windows or Linux.

    As far as innovative styling goes Sony's Vaio line matches anything Apple have come up with in the computer market in my opinion. I don't think it will be long before there are other MP3 jukeboxes that have similar styling.

    --
    Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
    Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    1. Re:Typical Apple product by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple wants that 95% figure to go down. That's why the iPod is not supported on other platforms yet. Apple is trying to give users reason to want to buy Apple Macs.

      Firewire standards support is pretty good across the different vendors. However, JVC is the absolute worst for absolute compliance. Blame JVC not the firewire standard for any problems you may have had integrating your JVC product into with your computer.

      Driver problems? Perhaps you should get a mac.

    2. Re:Typical Apple product by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      Apple wants that 95% figure to go down. That's why the iPod is not supported on other platforms yet. Apple is trying to give users reason to want to buy Apple Macs.

      Yeah, apple will chain their new products to their failing market share in the desktop computer world. Thus guaranteeing that they will fail.

      I really don't think that anyone is going to buy an iPod then make the switch to Mac because of it.

      Meanwhile people who use Mac and PC will have good reason to buy something that works with both.

      This is exactly the type of interfce manpultion game that is the reason why I will never buy anything off apple. Their whole marketing plan seems to be to keep changing interfaces so that anything you buy today will turn out to be incompatible and unsupported 24 months later.

      Firewire standards support is pretty good across the different vendors. However, JVC is the absolute worst for absolute compliance. Blame JVC not the firewire standard for any problems you may have had integrating your JVC product into with your computer.

      I don't care who is responsible. I know that USB has never given me any trouble while firewire has given me plenty. Conclusion, the stuff ain't ready for prime time in the consumer market.

      When I bought the JVC camera there were no firewire boards arround. So having smug gits telling me that it is my 'fault' I paid $1800 for a DV camcorder that does not meet the 'standard' does not exactly endear me to it.

      I would rather wait ten minutes to transfer my CDs than spend $150 extra so I can risk spending three hours mucking about with broken drivers for a standard that is not quite there.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    3. Re:Typical Apple product by Lovejoy · · Score: 1

      I'm really sorry you're having so many Firewire problems. That sucks.

      I do mean this respectfully: Apple invented Firewire and does a fantastic job implementing it. Firewire is for multimedia geeks and multimedia geeks mostly go with Apple.

      I have a OrangeMicro PCMCIA Firewire card and an Old PB G3 running OS X 10.1. Plugged it in and it worked, period. No fiddling w/ drivers and all that crap. Man I hate that crap. That's WHY I have a Mac.

      As for JVC - if it doesn't work correctly, you should return it and get a SONY. We love ours and we don't have any Firewire problems. Best of luck and I'm really sorry you've had so many problems.

    4. Re:Typical Apple product by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blah blah blah.........

      "This strikes me as a typical apple product. It is not innovative in any sense except in the styling. It is 50% more expensive than models with similar capabilities. The 'superiority' of the UI is mainly a function of whether you are an existing apple user. "

      whatever. Did you even llok at the interface that is demonstraded at the apple site? I suppose a command line would be better.......

      "I have an Archos unit, the USB delay has never bothered me. I have firewire on the machine but fiddling with the drivers is a real pig. I discovered after I bought my first firewire board that the 'standard' isn't. If you have a JVC camera it turns out it does not work with most boards, you have to have the B or the C version. Tedious huh"

      Oh yeah, waiting on a USB plus is practically a pleasure. You're an idiot.

      I'm really dissapointed that all MP3 units don't come with a paralell port!! That would be even better than usb! Joy!

    5. Re:Typical Apple product by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have firewire on the machine but fiddling with the drivers is a real pig. I discovered after I bought my first firewire board that the 'standard' isn't. If you have a JVC camera it turns out it does not work with most boards, you have to have the B or the C version. Tedious huh?


      The PC world sucks don't it.

    6. Re:Typical Apple product by Quila · · Score: 2

      Only styling? It's the best UI I've seen, has massive storage and battery life for its size, synchs seamlessly at firewire speeds, and can be used for regular file storage. Apple also shows its attention to detail by shipping it with some actually good headphones. If I had a Mac, I'd buy one tomorrow. Next year, I guess.

      If you are having lots of problems with IEEE-1394 ('Firewire' is the Apple trademark for 1394, just like Sony's iLink), then you are probably using a PC. Actually, you mentioning boards says it because board-capable Macs have had built-in Firewire for years.

      But I agree that Sony is the only PC manufacturer that even came close to Apple's idea of styling on a computer (remember the pathetic HP and Compaq attempts).

    7. Re:Typical Apple product by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      Only styling? It's the best UI I've seen

      Bollocks

      You hve not used one of the units. You have not seen one of the units. How on earth can you make any assesment of the UI?

      The fact that so many Mac-heads are already drooling over the superiority of the UI before they have even seen it tells me that they are a cult.

      The UI on the Archos device could be tweaked. But it is pretty easy to use.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    8. Re:Typical Apple product by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      whatever. Did you even llok at the interface that is demonstraded at the apple site? I suppose a command line would be better.......

      None of the existing products have a command line interface.

      You cannot evaluate a UI from a web site, you have to have the device and use it for some time.

      I have had the Archos device a year, the UI is not a problem. The apple UI might be better, I doubt it however. When I was using macs four years ago it was clear that their lead in the UI field was long gone.

      Apple's device costs $400 vs $250 for competing devices that are already available.

      But Apple clearly will sell lots as Mac-heads are already convincing each other of the obvious superiority of the device before they have even seen one!

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    9. Re:Typical Apple product by Quila · · Score: 2

      "How on earth can you make any assesment of the UI? "

      Because if you go to the Apple site you can see animations of all of the menu functions in QuickTime.

  247. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Maserati · · Score: 1

    I've found a portable 80+GB Firewire drive to be phenomenally useful in a tech support or sysadmin setting. So I say do it !

    --
    Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
  248. No mouse buttons?! by g0at · · Score: 1

    My god, what were Apple thinking?

    *Obviously* zero mouse buttons is even *worse* than one.

    Now on the other hand, if the iPod had *two* extraneous mouse buttons, maybe it wouldn't be so "lame"?

    Yeesh, taco.

  249. Rip, Mix and Burn by Voline · · Score: 1

    These footnotes are at the bottom of the iPod tech specs page:

    (1) 1GB = 1 billion bytes; actual formatted capacity less.

    (2) Capacity based on an average song length of 4 minutes and 160-Kbps encoding.

    (3) Battery life may vary according to use.

    (4) iPod and iTunes are for legal or rightholder-authorized copying only. Don't steal music. [my emphasis]

    (5) Actual rates will vary.

    What is going on here? Microsoft is playing ball with the Recording Institute Assoc. of America (RIAA) and building digital copyright management (DCRM) into their new OS, Windows XP. They're going to try to order back the tide of file swapping.

    We all know that this is impossible. The demise of Napster has only led to increased use of more purely peer to peer tools that are not suppressible by a court order, like Gnutella and Freenet.

    MS thinks that people are so wedded to Windows that they'll continue to use it although it cripples their ability share files, or even prevents them from exercising their traditional "fair use" rights to music, text or other data that they own. This would work if there really were no alternative OS, or if all the alternatives also built in DCRM. But there are alternatives who aren't going to build in DCRM, and MS is betting on the wrong horse.

    PC users who want to exercise their fair use right to copyrighted material that they've bought, and people who want to share will look for an alternative to Windows so they can continue to do so. Some people will look to switch because they resent MS's heavy-handed Big-Brother-is-watching-your-hard-drive approach.

    Linux rippers and players for DVD and MP3 and other sources do exist. Though the DVD players are "illegal" all efforts to supress them have failed and they remain readily available. Some of the people who are looking to swap files and/or retain their fair use rights will move to Linux. Although this will be slowed because Linux is still an OS that one must be a bit technically inclined to tackle. But as it becomes easier to use this will become less of an impediment.

    And Apple? Notice that their new OS does not include any built-in DCRM features. OS X is easier to use than Windows, powerful, stable, and is designed with "rip, mix, and burn" in mind. Now the iPod gives people another easy way to enjoy their fair-use right to play music that they have bought on any device that they own. Of course this is legal and, as the above quote from Apple urges, you shouldn't "steal music."

    These protestations may be genuine, or they may be as sincere as Claude Raines's police inspector in Casablanca:

    "I'm shocked! Shocked to find that people are buying our products to use for illegal file trading!"

    Either way, Microsoft will soon learn that people, particularly young people, aren't going to have anything to do with an operating system that includes DCRM. File sharing is one of the reasons they buy a computer in the first place. Many of the more computer-savvy among them will head for Linux. Others, and all of the less-technical ones, will switch to Macintosh for iTunes, FireWire, the iPod, iDVD, and the rest.

    Microsoft will realize their mistake, ditch the DCRM, and come out with the WinRipper, but Bill "Hey you hackers are stealing my software" Gates won't see this and react to it until they have hemorrhaged quite a bit of market share. Its impossible to know how much they will lose before they let go of the idea of becoming every computer user's nanny. But their heads seem pretty hard to me. Apple could double or triple their market share before Gates and Ballmer cop on. Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of Fascists: MS, the RIAA, and the MPAA.

    Come on everybody, let's "Rip, Mix and Burn!"

  250. Don't Need OSX by cryptochrome · · Score: 1

    You don't need os X to use this. 9.2.1 also works.

    --

    ---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?

  251. "Lame" by yunfat · · Score: 1
    I take issue with /. flaming a product that hasn't even come out yet, it seems a little gauche to judge something you haven't yet USED.

    It is becoming increasingly typical for the "know it alls" who seem to run things around here to shoot their mouths off about everything in the world they don't understand.


    Anyone who labels the iPod "Lame" has no aesthetic for either technology or beauty, and has the linux users equivalent of "penis envy".


    Can you say "Apple Envy"?

    --
    "Smokey, this isn't Nam, there are rules." -Walter
  252. Technical Answers about transfers, firewire, MP3 by arete · · Score: 3, Informative

    Firewire, in fact, is a total of 50 MB of transfer. Furthermore, it's QOS'd and has significant overhead, so you're likely to peak at 10 MB/s (although you can perform 4 transfers each of which is GUARANTEED 10 MB/s, so you'll have 4 quality video transmissions, for instance) But that is certainly less than ATA 100. Except that no single current hard disk or CD drive can match ATA 100. (and, incidently Apple's hardware is essentially the same now)

    What you forgot is MP3 compression. IF you already have your whole CD transfered into your computer as MP3s, then you can transfer it in those seconds. This works well because the mac stuff is very seamless... So IF you've got your whole music collection already on your PowerMac, then it's 10s/CD.

    This doesn't work for data, of course.

    --
    Looking for freelance Actionscript (Flash/Flex) or ColdFusion work and/or freelance developers. Email me, put Slashdot
  253. Iomega HipZip by rhinoX · · Score: 1

    Has an upgradeable firmware, and the system is running linux.

    --
    The copper bosses killed you, Joe. 'I never died', said he.
  254. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by dburr · · Score: 1

    > Raise your hand if you have iTunes ...

    *keeps hand at his side* Okay, you got me there...

    > Raise your hand if you have a FireWire port ...

    *raises hand high and proud*
    With FireWire cards in the $20-40 range, ANYBODY acn get Firewire these days. Just head down to your nearest CompUSA/Fry's/computer show vndor/whatever.

    > Raise your hand if you have $400 to spend on a cute Apple device ...

    *raises hand* Considering I spent nearly that much on my Nomad (plus extra rechargable batteries, battery charger, extra wall plug, car adapter, etc.).

    And you don't (strictly speaking) need iTunes to use this beast. You can access the FireWire drive itself using the standard FireWire SCSI-2 emulation layer (sbp2) which means, yes boys and girls, YOU CAN USE IT WITH LINUX!!! Unlike the Nomad, which you CAN'T. (read: proprietary protocols)

    I, for one, am seriously considering selling my Nomad + gear on ebay and getting one of these puppies.

    --
    Yomigaeru Aiyan Geek!!!
  255. Intel kit took iPOD name before Apple's did by JohnHegarty · · Score: 0

    Apple may run into problems following its decision to opt for iPod as the name for its new "breakthrough" MP3 player - from Intel.

    Read here for more http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/39/22429.html

  256. Smart Strategy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The general public release of Windows XP is in just two days. Based on that alone, traffic at local computer stores, including those where Apples are sold, is bound to be heavy for the next few weekends. Following on the hot heels of the iPod announcement, this means more buyers will choose not to swallow Microsoft's red pill and will go for Apple's Aqua blue pill instead -- with an iPod chaser in November.

  257. For PC....just wait by Kaypro · · Score: 1

    I think we can all admit this device rox.

    So do we all:

    (1) Go buy a mac and ipod and try to dual boot with yellowdog linux or...

    (2) wait for someone to copycat it for the pc

    I choose the latter...

    cheers!

    1. Re:For PC....just wait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you will wait a long time.

  258. I really want One!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    expensive, but it worth the price....

    I have been looking for a MP3 portable player so long ago, and this is the one...

  259. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone with any moderately recent Macintosh (a couple of million sold) has iTunes and FireWire. That's not a bad market opportunity.

    So the only question is whether there's a decent market for a $399 MP3 player that's essentially a Nomad Jukebox (only $100 less, 30x the transfer date, 1/3rd the size, longer battery life, and much better controls).

    Will it take over the world? No, of course not. Is it a competitive product? Sure it is.

  260. A different approach... by bdowne01 · · Score: 1

    Lame?

    ...well, it may not be up to par with the Nomad, but for some people it'll do just fine.

    Apple takes a different approach towards its products.

    Being on all three sides of the deal (I manage Windows boxes at work, and use Linux / Macs at home)... from exposure, I know there's a good reason ot use each.

    1) Windows is there for the suits who want someone to blame.

    2) Linux is for people who know PC's what they're doing and want something that works well.

    3) Macs are for people who want to get things done without hassle.

    Windows keeps the paychecks coming. Linux does my powerhouse work, and for stuff that I need to work and I need to get done without a hassle (like finances, or writing a letter) I use the Mac.

    People who have bought into Apple's products expect the same type of simplicity and reliablity as they've gotten used to. Sure, this may not be as smooth or slick (which I think it is) as the Nomad...BUT, I can say confidently that it will work, work well, work every time, and without hassle.

    I feel that I've gotten my hands into just about everything, and as far as Apple's approach, I "get it". Sure I love playing around on the Linux box and spending all night tweaking configuration files, and compiling stuff. But when I just want to listen to music or move big files around...hell, I just want to do just that, nothing more.

    The iPod does just that, and it works with all the other goodies that I get stuff done with seamlessly.

    To me, that's damn cool.

    --
    -brain
  261. About that firewire cable by tmark · · Score: 2

    While it is cool that you can charge via a firewire cable, anyone know whether this is the *only* way to charge it ? Because if you can only charge it by firewire then it would seem you're obligated to drag around a computer (with firewire, no less) just to charge the thing. I can imagine being on a road trip in a hotel and I just want to listen to music, I don't have (or don't want to unpack) my computer just to recharge. The real possibilities for this thing lie in being able to *un*tether yourself from a computer.

    1. Re:About that firewire cable by HerrNewton · · Score: 2, Informative

      No it comes with an AC adapter as well. See the bottom of the page

      --

      ----
      Am I the only one who thinks Microsoft is a misnomer? Perhaps Macrosoft would be a better fit?
    2. Re:About that firewire cable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exta (non computer) Power cable http://store.apple.com/1-800-MY-APPLE/WebObjects/A ppleStore.woa/51/wo/ACTe92v3LX4sZsceqC/1.5.0.3.30. 1.15.0.9.0

  262. What if... by stevek · · Score: 1

    This is really just the first step towards an iNewton.. It's already got some Ram, a CPU, all the storage you could want..

    NOW, make the screen a bit bigger and touch-sensitive, add either PalmOS or a new NewtonOS, and you've got one heck of a PDA... Slightly bigger than than the slimmest, but it seems to still be a good size, and access to 5GB (or more) of storage..

  263. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever been hit by lightning?

  264. Nomad Jukebox vs. iPod by aarku · · Score: 1
    Here's the deal... Nomad versus iPod

    CD player sized versus deck of cards
    14 ounces versus 6.5 ounces
    6 gigs space versus 5 gigs space
    Plays & records music versus Plays music and doubles as a firewire hard disk
    Variable playback speed versus static playback speed
    EAX versus "A high-output (60-mW) amplifier" ???? Wow that's descriptive
    USB interface versus Firewire interface
    Line input for recording versus No line input
    DC in for charging versus Firewire port charging or DC in
    MP3, WMA, and WAV formats with support for additional future formats versus MP3, WAV, AIFF, and support for future additional formats
    Updatable versus Also updatable
    Only English support? versus English, French, German, Japanese. (at the same time too)
    No back light? versus white LED backlight
    Customizable play lists versus Customizable play lists
    $240+shipping (at thinkgeek) versus $400 (at apple)

    Sources:
    http://www.thinkgeek.com/stuff/electronics/3652.sh tml
    http://www.americas.creative.com/products/product. asp?Product=102&MainCategory=2
    http://www.apple.com/ipod/specs.html

    It is a very tough decision. Nomad is less expensive, but you definitely pay for the smaller size of iPod and the fast interface. Nomad has some cool features like line-in recording and variable playback rates but so does iPod with its integration with iTunes and neat scrolling system. (Not to mention mutiple language support.) Who knows, it's a photo-finish in my book.

    -Jon

  265. Trademark by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    Er...iPod is already a registered trademark. Do I smell a lawsuit? iPod (www.nfcconsulting.com/nfc_ipod.htm)

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:Trademark by jedwards · · Score: 1

      Apple's iPod isn't a "educational tool to help professionals understand the exciting world of equity indexed products."

      NFC Consulting's iPod isn't an MP3 player.

      Therefore there;s little chance of confusion in the market place.

    2. Re:Trademark by hardscrabble · · Score: 1

      And to think I sold them the .com domain name for a low-ball price!!!

    3. Re:Trademark by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I didn't know that a tardemark applied only to a specific product.

      So I can sell stuff like the Microsoft office cubicle and live a lawer-free life? (I'll make it a smaller version of the standard cubicle, with plush walls...hence the micro and the soft :)

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  266. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And that was classified as an insightful comment?

    I smell the B.O. wafting from this list's raised arms right now...

    I think this is a product meant to evolve - and I think there are plenty to be sold beyond this little mole-cave of geekdom. There's a planet full of college freshman with iBooks that'll be happy to shoot a chunk of their next student loan into this thing.

    This thing smokes the Nomad, and that thing will never catch up.

  267. no error checking? by sigmond · · Score: 1

    What exactly is this supposed to mean? The link provided does nothing to explain or support this assertion. I am sure may of us would be interested to find out that one of the more well respected application frameworks (Cocoa) has a monumental flaw at it's heart.

    Please educate us all.

    1. Re:no error checking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess what he means is that Cocoa doesn't have C++ style error checking... In Objective-C, send a message to an object and the object doesn't have a method to respond to it, you get a 'nasty' runtime exception.

      However, in the much more superior C++ world, if you called a member-function not implemented by the class, your application would explode, hurling bits and pieces of corrupted memory all about. Don't you see how suprior the C++ error checking really is?

  268. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by siberian · · Score: 1

    MP3-CD's are USELESS for those of us who are remotely active. Try taking your MP3-CD unit on a 4 mile run or to the gym or anywhere else that you are moving about and being physical.

    I have a car mp3 player in my car. Its good for driving. I have a Rio for exercise, its good for motion. My rio only holds 128 megs. Enter the iPod, it replaces my Rio.

    Whats the big deal? The Rio has two lines of display, the iPod has 6. The Rio has 128 megs ,the iPod as 5GB. The Rio does USB, the iPod does Firewire.

    Seems like a valid replacement to me. I've already ordered...

  269. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 2

    Alright, how many of these people are the type that want a portable Mp3 device? Maybe half.

    Half of several hundred thousand times $400 is still several heaping boatloads of cash.

    And that's just right now. The obvious larger picture here is that Apple hopes to use the iPod (and, I suspect, similar devices) to leverage sales of MacOS computers, and vice-versa. It's a strategy that's made Sony and Microsoft quite a bit of cash, on the backs of products significantly less well-designed and integrated than this.

    Of course, they're Apple, so they'll probably manage to fuck it up somehow, but the product is good, the strategy is sound, and the sales upside is very, very high.

    --

    News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

  270. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by sh00z · · Score: 1

    My hand's still up, but Apple's too late. I've got a Rio 500 in this form factor, I don't mind waiting for USB transfers, and I don't need more than 128 Megs of songs every day.

    Now, if this puppy had AirPort, and I could sit im my den and load the player as it sits in the car, THEN I'd be lining up to buy one.

  271. Hand raised. by SensitiveMale · · Score: 0

    'nuff said.

  272. Less space than a nomad. by trongey · · Score: 2

    Well, duh.
    iPod: same size as a deck of cards
    Nomad: 14' station wagon with seating for 9
    What kind of a comparison is that?

    --
    You never really know how close to the edge you can go until you fall off.
  273. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by rthille · · Score: 1

    Given how I feel about cats, I think that would be great! Of course having to wear a grounded copper mesh suit around the house would be a pain...

    --
    Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
  274. This is lame... too much I paid $199 for my NEO25 by MrJerryNormandinSir · · Score: 1

    A NEO25 is a better deal. granted I use my lowly USB port to download to it, but, it looks great in
    my Silverado and it sounds great too!

  275. What's Firewire? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And will all my Win95 PCs hook right up to it without having to buy anything extra for them? Is it USB? I have USB ports.

  276. 10,000 foot ceiling? by davidebsmith · · Score: 1

    The specs say "Maximum operating altitude 10,000 feet". So if I put this on my motorcycle (after figuring out how to make a 12 V-> FireWire adapter), I can't use it over any mountain passes in Colorado?

    1. Re:10,000 foot ceiling? by deisom · · Score: 1

      Can't answer your question about the maximum operating altitude, but as regards the power source: the iPod includes a plug that attaches to the Firewire cable so that it can be charged from a regular AC power outlet, so you shouldn't have any problems attaching it to a 12 v jack.

    2. Re:10,000 foot ceiling? by ShaunC · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer: The following is a guess, and only a guess.

      I suspect that the 10,000 foot ceiling may be more of a marketing or perhaps legal restriction than a hardware one. Because the iPod is an electronic device which also contains a magnetic device (the hard drive), it's possible that it could cause a tiny bit of magnetic interference. The FAA and FCC claim that such interference - which is also generated by cellphones and some laptops etc. - can be bad for airplanes.

      Gadgets with this side effect must be tested and approved by the FCC to determine the amount of interference they cause, and the FCC places restrictions on how/where you can use devices which emit a lot of garbage. They will also come down pretty heavily if you start emitting a lot of garbage without permission. For example, if you want to build a huge ham radio transmitter (or a Tesla coil..) in your back yard, you should hope that none of your neighbors like watching TV or listening to the radio.

      My guess: Apple didn't want to (or was told not to) encourage the use of the iPod on airplanes. If you tell consumers it's not going to work above 10,000 feet, many will pack it in the suitcase or leave it at home, instead of trying to use it in-flight. People (especially non-geeks) are more willing to accept "the dang thing doesn't work if you take it too far up [insert bogus technical limitation]" than they are to accept "you are not allowed to take this on an airplane."

      Of course it could just be that the drive they're using in the iPod likes pressure in order to operate properly, but I don't think I've heard of that before. No way to know for sure until someone gets an iPod manual, complete with FCC compliance statement, in their hands...

      Shaun

      --
      Thanks to the War on Drugs, it's easier to buy meth than it is to buy cold medicine!
    3. Re:10,000 foot ceiling? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Pressurized cabins simulate lower atms than actual. But yeah, probably just a legal thing--check out the stats for all of your electronic devices.

    4. Re:10,000 foot ceiling? by jaoswald · · Score: 1

      I believe you are thinking too hard about this.

      On an airplane, the interior pressure is usually regulated to 10,000 ft above sea level.

      Basically, this is a standard limit, which means that the components have been designed to be able to be shipped by air freight, without being damaged due to pressure changes.

      Sitting in a plane at 35,000 ft, there is really no difference in the operating environment from 10,000 ft (except "in case of a loss of cabin pressure, oxygen masks will deploy automatically...")

  277. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right .... there are really thousands of PC users who are willing to change platforms to buy an MP3 player. And there are really thousands of PC users that are willing to change platforms, pay for an iBook AND a $400 mp3 player.

  278. pocket rocket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the pocket rocket is a vibrator sold by good vibrations for your sexual enjoyment isn't it?

  279. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by sh00z · · Score: 1
    It might not be as fast as Firewire

    I can't decide if this is a complete troll, or just someone who can't count. Yes, you can get five hours of music on a MiniDisc, but it takes exactly FIVE HOURS to put it there! You want to save money? Leave out the MiniDisc completely, and just listen to whatever source you had in the first place! (and yes, that may even include playing vinyl in your car)
  280. Re: Apple is dying by Mister+Black · · Score: 1

    to survive at all it will be among OS hobbyist dabblers

    Are we speaking of the MacOS or of Linux here?

    --

    You are standing in an open field west of a white house, with a boarded front door. There is a small mailbox here.
  281. Lame? You are Lame by MrJones · · Score: 0

    How can you say that?
    Did you read the spec?
    5GB, 1CD in 10 sec, 1hour recharge via Firewire, nice interface, nice font, etc

    Come on man, your comments surprise me

    Attn: CmdrTaco

    --
    Get my e-mail after a captcha test in: http://tinymailt
  282. hey, its StrongARM based by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how long 'til it runs linux?

  283. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by artemis67 · · Score: 2

    Raise your hand if you have iTunes ...
    Raise your hand if you have a FireWire port ...
    Raise your hand if you have both ...
    Raise your hand if you have $400 to spend on a cute Apple device ...


    me: [raises four hands...]

  284. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by jbuilder · · Score: 1

    OK.. so saying 'it's not as fast as firewire' was understating it a bit... ;-)

    Seriously.. Yes.. it takes 5 hours to record a 5 hour minidisc. HOWEVER, it's *still* cheaper and more accessable by the masses than the aPud^H^H^H^H iPod.

    Besides, what are you using the audio output on your computer for when you're sleeping, anyway? ;)

    --
    Polymorphism -- It's what you make of it.
  285. Linux Drivers by lotas · · Score: 1

    Macworld says that Job's said "We have thought than when we get a little spare time, we will look at taking it to Windows. We know the experience won't be as good, but we will probably look at that down the road." Hopefully someone has the sense to build a Linux driver! or even a *BSD driver :)

    --
    Lotas T Smartman www.lotas-smartman.net
  286. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by jimharris · · Score: 1

    I do have a FireWire port, but it's on a WinXP home machine. If iTunes was ported to Windows, then they'd have a much great potential market to sell to. FireWire is extremely nice. I don't like using Macs, even though I have a G4 at work, but you have to admire Apple's styling and engineering ability.

    If I was in the market for a MP3 player and iTunes was available on Windows. I'd really consider this product.

  287. Picture this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't have to recompile your kernel on MacOSX to use the iPod device...

    amazing... :)

    1. Re:Picture this... by onepower · · Score: 1

      oh that is fscking funny. :-D

      --
      Yeah, I use OS X... so sue me.
  288. Sounds nice but� by Snarks · · Score: 1

    I would rather buy 20 gig hard drive based mp3 player that offers about the same for less money. Seriously, there are a few out there already that promise the same thing and more, but cost less or equal to $400. Most of these players support Macintosh as well as Linux and Windows.

    Archos Jukebox Studio 20 MP3 Player. (Supports Macintosh, Linux, Windows)

    Creative Labs 20 Gig MP3 Jukebox (Supports Macintosh, Windows)

    20 Gig Personal MP3 Jukebox (Supports Macintosh, Linux, Windows)

    The only things I can see that is different about this is that they don't use USB for transfer like most players and their claim of a 20 minute buffer. Also since Apple is behind this they will have a lot better Macintosh support. If they actually had OGG support and allowed us to program additional audio format support (like Mods, SID,SPC, etc) I might reconsider :).

    The good thing is that some companies are finally getting it and are now selling reasonable players at reasonable prices. I will be getting a Archos Jukebox Studio 20 MP3 player when I earn enough cash. I just hope that the SSSCA doesn't get passed and forces these companies to either cripple their products or go out of business.

  289. Apple = Volkswagon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nope. They're Volkswagons. Everyone knows that... They go after the exact same audience. I mean, iMac = New Beetle.

    Good lord. They even have the same actors in their commercials.

    (If they were equivalent to Mercedes or BMWs, they would've have a Unix core a long time ago. Instead, much like Volkswagons, their innards were unreliable and took forever to get up to snuff.)

    1. Re:Apple = Volkswagon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm....I don't know about current Volkswagons, but the old air-cooled VW's had very reliable engines, which were very easy to maintain and repair. Sure, they were underpowered at first but they got better, and besides, people were not buying them for their power, but for reasons of thrift. Of course, the new VW's, esp. the new Beatles, are all about style, not substance (let alone thrift!).

  290. Not so lame by dchamp · · Score: 1

    I love all of these people who think FireWire is a Mac-only thing. Tons of people have FireWire cards in PC's for DV cameras, and a lot of new PC's come with FireWire ports... like the Dell Inspiron 8000 laptop I have. Anyone know if there's an optional external charger? For my i8000's FireWire port is the small connector that doesn't supply power. -dc

  291. CmdrTaco, you SUCK by Durindana · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What is the problem with you Linux freeks? It's a small, light, fast, featureful mp3 player that pushes the usability envelope in its niche. Plus it's usable with other OSs (though Apple created FireWire, other cos. have been smart enough to license it). It's a little costly, but so was the first Newton - and the Mac Portable was like $6,000 when it came out. Didn't stop notebook computing from hitting it big. Don't bitch about the product cause it costs too much. And don't say it's lame because there's no AMD hardware or free software running inside it.

    1. Re:CmdrTaco, you SUCK by night_flyer · · Score: 2

      not according to the article I read... its MAC ONLY

      For the immediate future iPod is expected to be an Apple-only device. In its existing forms it is not compatible with PCs that run the Windows operating system.

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    2. Re:CmdrTaco, you SUCK by PRickard · · Score: 1
      night_flyer typed: not according to the article [msnbc.com] I read... its MAC ONLY

      Read that again... MSNBC is the source of your information. They usually take the highroad, but not always. Quote another source not owned by Microsoft and I'll be more likely not to totally ignore your posting.

      --

      == Paul Rickard, Editor of The Microsoft Boycott Campaign ====

  292. Re:Good lord, you're fucking stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thats funny, you're the one who comes off sounding like a dumbass, seeing as you cannot even provide an argument.

  293. Re:LAME? WTF?!? I'll buy one... by macX_rocks · · Score: 1

    I own a 6GB Nomad Jukebox. With ~3GB of MP3s, every time I turn it on (with all songs in current playlist), it takes several minutes (I dunno, 5-10) to "Prepare the Library". I've sorta gotten use to it, but in the back o' my mind, I know it just ain't right. What if I filled the thing up? Would it take 10-20 minutes before I can play music?

    The thing I haven't gotten used to is the slow-ass transfer of ~3GB of song data over USB. I don't have to move the whole enchillada often, of course, but when I do... it takes... a long... long... time. Bring on the firewire. If you don't have FW, why complain about the iPod? It would make as much sense to complain that I can't plug my scanner in to my jacuzzi tub.

    Also, some on this topic have mentioned "almost no interface" for the iPod... man, you wanna see a bad interface, drop some bones on a Nomad Jukebox. It is pathetic. iPod's jog wheel sounds like heaven. Jukebox has a thumbwheel on it... for volume. To go up/down through (potentially) thousands of songs, you get to use up/down arrow buttons... to jump song by song by song. So many other painful elements to the interface, that I feel you'd be hard pressed to make it worse. Whether it be extensive or limited, I'm certain that Apple will make a 'slick' interface for this thing.

    So, I have a firewire Mac, I have OS X (already sweet, well on it's way to greatness)... I'll definitely go for the iPod in November (or wait... Xmas is coming soon). I know that puts me in the niche market... don't care. I enjoy nearly every minute of using OSX... every minute I use the Jukebox (other than just letting it play) I cringe. I look forward to enjoying my MP3 player as much as I enjoy my Mac (with OSX, hated OS9).

  294. Correct... Apple invented FireWire. by BlueTT · · Score: 1
    Intel invented USB but Apple went USB before the PC makers did.

    Apple did invent FireWire, though...

  295. UI far superior to Archos by greenmonk · · Score: 1

    I have an Archos jukebox. its smaller than any other (until now) HD based MP3 player and holds 6GB. I dig it since I can wander NYC and hear anything i want. But the UI is SO BAD that i basically only use random playlists and treat it liek a radio station. This is where the iPod has me VERY excited. No other mp3 device has gotten the UI even close to as functional as the iPod. And it weighs 6 oz. to the Arhos' 12! Those who diss it havent tried the alternatives or dont really care about carrying alot of music around. ME, I'm a digital music junky, and this looks like the device I've been wishing they'd make. Give it a year, and this thing will have greater capacity and a cheaper price. 2002 is starting to look liek the year that form factor and UI FINALLY kick in for digital devices...

  296. Re:Technical Answers about transfers, firewire, MP by Kranium · · Score: 1

    You can actually get about 40MB/s aross FireWire after overhead is subtracted. The hard drive is going to be your limiting factor here.

  297. Lookie Here.... by DigitalVolume · · Score: 1

    The iPod is an overpriced item, but it has some fairly unique features. It's really the first MP3 player in its size class that offers a reusable battery, how much money will you save with thet?, A lot is my guess.

    Also though many feel thet FireWire (aka iLink, or IEEE 1394), is not held on most PC's should note that it can be obtained, and that many PC manufacturers have been including it on their chips for quite some time now, and those without it simply haven't kept up.

    Additionally, the ability to recharge the battery via FireWire is absolutly ingenious. The iPod also makes sounds as you move through the menu hierachy.

    The ability to have it double as a hard disc is not a new idea, but the fact they they used it says that they feel it should have more than just music options. Though I wish it would have wireless options, and/or at leat the ability to have visualizers on the unit (which would really set it apart), I feel that they left the option(s) out because it was not economically viable at the time.

    The fact that Apple made it look sleek to fit its current designs isn't surprising. Neither is the fact that they have made it seamless to integrate into their iTunes product.

    Apple can also play up the fact that you can take this unit anywhere and make a powerpoint presentation, play your music files, show your iMovie, or limitless other things, because the iPod (which is a really dumb name), as previously mentioned can double as a hard disc.


    DigitalVolume

    The Way It Should Be.

    --
    Chris Giddings President, Ripple LLC
  298. what OS does it run? by jfruhlinger · · Score: 1

    Sorry if this has been answered, but I haven't seen ... since the iPod has a little GUI, I'm assuming there has to be some embedded OS or another -- is it an adaption of one already on the market or something Apple cooked up? And what processor is inside, for that matter? The Apple "tech specs" are mum on both these points.

    jf

  299. We all win by rerunn · · Score: 1

    While not perfect nor does it lack the audience of the non apple folks... this device has some neat and innovative features that will surely make its way into the other players.

    SumYoungGuy sitting in Taiwan will see the good features in the ipod like the smallness, decent capacity, xfer speed, etc and build them into his MP3 player.

    My father often says that when he was my age, he would have never in a million years thought there would be the type of technology there is today.... What will the world be like when my kids are as old as Iam??

    It's all GOOD folks :)

  300. Apple Screws up Another New Product by BlackGriffen · · Score: 1

    I'll probably get flamed for the title alone, but hear me out. Unless Apple's hard drive supplier has made some serious advances in hard drive durability, the iPod will be nothing more than a niche market toy. I love absolutely everything else about this product, but the worry that dropping it would ruin the hard drive would keep me from using it as it shold be used. Hopefully there will be a cheap mp3 player based on Panasonic and Toshiba's SD Memory cards (that would be sweet) some time soon.

    BlackGriffen

    1. Re:Apple Screws up Another New Product by biggerboy · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, unless something magical happens, you aren't going to find a 5gig SD memory card anytime soon (or at least one that won't require you to get a second mortgage on a house in the Bay Area)

  301. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Better to let Windows users keep using their Personal Jukebox, or Nomad, or Archos.

    Goth wanker.

  302. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looking at the sales of (picking three examples) Pilots, Rios and Digital Cameras, I'd say the number of people willing to spend $200-500 on a "cute" electronic device is "lots and lots."

    You're not "looking", you're "imagining". Looking is when you have your eyes pointed at facts. Last year, this was true, and even the Linux-based companies were doing OK. This year, no. Count the layoffs, nimrod. I doubt you'll keep your "fries with that" job much longer.

  303. Archos has Linux support by Bj�rn+Stenberg · · Score: 1

    The Archos players are supported by Linux as of kernel 2.4.8.

    See here for more info.

  304. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by BlackGriffen · · Score: 1

    "virtue of being firewire will be limited to Apple Mac owners)," Don't you realize that both Compaq and Sony both use Firewire, they just use it under a different name? I don't recall what Compaq calls it, but Sony calls it i-Link. BlackGriffen

  305. Apple's Digital Hub strategy... by Stenpas · · Score: 1

    umm...this product is designed to compliment Apple's Digital Hub strategy, where your computer is the hub of your digital lifestyle. You can pay a few bucks more and get a product that you know will be easy, stable, and fast or you can go with a competitor which may be at a lower price, but you may not have any idea of if it sucks or not.

    And also, Apple is selling MP3 players at their retail stores. The iPod is going to be right next to competing MP3 players. People will ask those employees "Why should I go with your higher priced solution when there other ones for a lower price?" Apple wouldn't be selling the iPod if it couldn't answer that question.

    Personally, I want to see a review by someone who actually owns an iPod.

    1. Re:Apple's Digital Hub strategy... by night_flyer · · Score: 2

      EXCEPT, it will only work on a Mac...

      95% of the computer population owns a PC

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    2. Re:Apple's Digital Hub strategy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This product, along with the other's of the "digital hub" are going to (presumably) convince you that OS X and its media integration is better than XP.

      This is not a product to win over mp3 player owners, it is part of a stratagy to outwit microsoft and the efforts they are making with windows Xp.

  306. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you know what wouldn't have been lame?
    a mouse with more than one button
    I wonder how long its taken apple to come out with one of those.

  307. Time to Sell Apple Stock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Surely you jest.

    1) In capitalism, a corporation -- you know, with a stock ticker -- has one goal in mind: make its shares tick higher so the shareholders don't sue executive management for gross mismanagement. Catering to a tiny market share would normally get a CEO fired, 'cept that Apple shareholders think of Jobs' second coming as The Second Coming. This should never be confused with "The Second Mouse Button."

    2) Apple sucks at catering to a user group. 3 words: One Button Mouse. If they really wanted to cater, they'd at least give the G4-tower buying users the option of 2 or 5 buttons... ("It's 4x more powerful than a Pentium 4!" "But it takes me 10x as much mouse-twiddling to do the same damn thing!")

    3) Pricing belies a missing user group. You're forgetting that the product that pulled Mac out of the gutter was the iMac -- aimed at a dead baseline consumer. But purchase 2 iPods and you've hit the price point of a starter iMac. (1 iPod is pushing the price point of a low end Duron/Celeron system with 2+ button mouse!)

    It's doomed -- straight out. Why do you think Intel closed it's peripherals division? The cute little computer extenders aren't turning a profit. At all. And Apple is saying iPod and iWalk? If I were an Apple shareholder, I'd be saying "iSell".

    [Somebody was wondering why people don't like Jobs? Priorities and Personification. Precisely, Jobs personifies Apple -- as Gates does Microsoft -- and Apple displays a lack of priorities. Example: OSX shipping on hardware it doesn't support... but those new iMac colors sure are something, aren't they? And notice this sleek newly-designed usb optical mouse... with the ultra-retro single button! Wow!]

    1. Re:Time to Sell Apple Stock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Catering to a tiny market share would normally get a CEO fired,...

      So 99% of all companies should should be looking for a new leader.

  308. I'll tell ya who is lame. by AutumnLeaf · · Score: 0, Troll

    The last several posts on Slashdot's main page regarding Apple product announcements have been followed up by trite, critical comments. Comments of the variety that open source advocates often cry foul when they are made regarding their open source operating system. Hypocrits. There's only one complaint about the iPod I agree with - the typical Apple price tag. Other than that, the product shows a lot of promise.

    If this thing was released for Linux and had a makefile that had to be hacked by hand to get it to integrate with some opensource playlist manager that has forked into two products, the main page announcement would have been followed up with something like "Wow! What a great UI! And it supports BOTH hybrids of the playlist manager. And it's GPL'd!"

    set CmdrTaco = Lame

  309. New Slashdot Poll by AutumnLeaf · · Score: 0, Troll


    Who is really lame?

    Apple
    @Home
    Baby Bells
    BeOS Developers
    FreeBSD Developers
    CmdrTaco

  310. Expensive? Yes, but you get what you pay for! by mattvd · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes, the new iPod is expensive, but you are getting what you pay for:

    Look up a 5GB 1.8" hard drive on PriceWatch. They're currently going for about $350. Add a firewire interface to that, battery, the MP3 player functionality, and some headphones.

  311. AH by bruns · · Score: 1

    CmdrTaco

    No clue
    Less clue in every article.
    Lame.

    :)

    If you are going to blast the damn thing without even owning one, dont freakin post it to the site!

    --
    Brielle
  312. This thing is wireless! by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    http://www.sinclair-research.co.uk/pages/
    The X1 by Uncle Clive, wireless, small and cheap.

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  313. overpriced and too small for that by mj6798 · · Score: 2

    For under $250, you can get a 20G FireWire powered drive (no battery/charger necessary) from one of the name brand Apple add-on manufacturers. Check your local computer store.

  314. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by SubtleNuance · · Score: 2

    Ok, but was it worth all the super-secret big-announcment hoop-la?

    Most everyone will offer a resounding 'No'. The device is basically a marginal, incremental increase in many many products already on market (hipzip, archos, etc). It isnt going to revolutionize anything, it is certainly not a 'deal', its really pretty darned expensive, so why all the fuss? Im a little pissed that Apple had to gall to make such a big deal.

    IEEE1394? Bigdeal - every MP3 player will have USB2 or IEEE1394 in a few months, its inevitable... its not reason to have an 'invite only' launch.

    Apple makes a huge 'event' to introduce a 'me-too' product (for the most part)... im a little pissed that they have the nuts to interfere with geeks and the media and then drop what (most see as) a big let down. I think Apple is starting to over-estimate themselves.

  315. Don't forget by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That Apple states that you have to go into Target Disk Mode when you use it for data storage. This is not ideal as you'll have to restart the computer. A bit more effort would have had it mount on the desktop without needing TDM.

    The thing is very small. This makes me suspect that the drive may be native Firewire. If this is the case this is very big news indeed. However, Apple doesn't mention the issue in its tech specs. We'll have to wait on this one.

    Firewire instead of USB is a no brainer. Please, this thing is an Apple product for Mac users. No windows support out of the box (yet). Get over it or get a Firewire Mac. Sorry, you can't have it all.

    Apple is trying to increase its market share. This forms part of its strategy. There will be more devices to come. At some point those devices may be able to speak to each other without the need of a computer. That's one of the reasons to prefer Firewire. Firewire is proven. USB 2.0 is not. USB is not peer to peer either. Apple is trying to give users good reasons to become Mac users. It's not forcing anyone to buy it. Can you blame them?

    Mac users normally have to wait for drivers from PC vendors to use consumer hardware and that's if they get them at all. Given the situation is it really so bad that Apple decides to give its users something that goes beyond what's available in competing products on the market?

    What's the big deal with HFS+? It's perfect for a mac user. If you don't like it, get onto Micrsoft for HFS+ support in its products and push for more effort on the Linux front. Don't whinge about Apple using its native file format. There's is nothing stopping other platforms using it.

    The iPod wasn't designed for anyone other than Mac users. Get over it.

    There may come a day when it will be supported on other platforms. You never know.

    The device is not revolutionary and its expensive. For that reason I won't be buying one but I'm not going to slag it off based on what I've read here.

    Also remember that this a revision A product. Revision B (after Christmas) should be worth the wait.

    1. Re:Don't forget by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think you have to reboot. This movie shows and already booted OS X desktop. Then the iPod shows up on the desktop. Once you are done with it you dismount(eject) it and it disappears from the desktop. The FireWire target disk mode just tells the FW bus that said device is a HD once it is connected and treats it as such (ie mounts it on the desktop automagically). Be warned: this is conjecture on my part since I don't actually have an iPod to play with.

  316. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by gig · · Score: 2

    > They would have to be incredibly stupid
    > not to include Windows support for this device.

    I think the opposite. They will have plenty of demand from the half million people who just bought iBooks in the past six months already, simply because it matches so well (in other words, the iBook's quality and ease of use is an iPod advertisement). It is also the Apple Store's first holiday season (brick and mortar, anyway). Come in and spend $1698 and get a brand new iBook and a brand new iPod and they work seamlessly together.

    As for Windows, it is not enough for Windows to just support the iPod. The machine also has to have working FireWire ports and software drivers and mass storage support and whatever else. Perhaps a Windows MP3 software vendor will build in iPod support, and then bundle that software on compatible HP or Sony PC's that include the right hardware and software to enable that. If that happens, then iPods will sell themselves to Windows users. If not, then Apple can look at building something like that if it makes sense, and if they can cajole their engineers into putting down their work on elegant Mac OS X so they can foray into Windows, and Windows-style support ("do you have FireWire ports?", "huh?").

    For $399, the iPod is the same price as a FireWire drive that has the same super-slim 5GB disk in it. The music features are free. Windows users who want this have a reason to work to get it ... to get their own vendors supporting it, or at least supporting the systems that it requires (FireWire mass storage).

  317. Re:Good lord, you're fucking stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To your post?

  318. Re:Nomad Jukebox vs. iPod by night_flyer · · Score: 2

    you for got one...

    windows vs mac

    For the immediate future iPod is expected to be an Apple-only device. In its existing forms it is not compatible with PCs that run the Windows operating system.

    --


    Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
    Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
  319. This thingy isn't about market share. by Triv · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's about product placement (and it's a good thing).

    Think about it - how many people have you seen jogging with their iMac hefted onto a shoulder, 80's - style?

    Seriously. It's a way to get the apple name out onto the streets instead of sitting on a desk. This started with lots (and I mean lots) of iMac TV placements and hasn't ended yet. Think about it - how many iBooks have you seen out and about, and how many of these did you notice becuase of the big glowing apple on the back, or the candy-colors? The iPod's got the logo on the back too, big and white. Whether it glows or not is yet to be seen.

    I guarantee (meaning I really, really hope) that the price tag won't hold too long. Probably drop after the holidays.

    And to apple I say 'good for you.' It's a much better way to get attention than the new (and horrifically tasteless) Microsoft / Compaq ads - 'Like stars and stripes - perfect together.'

    Oh, and please - think before you flame, particularly on the frontpage. It's closed-minded.

    Triv

  320. That's the best part... by biggerboy · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter. The real world doesn't care aboutg stuff like that....:-)

  321. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by ScooterComputer · · Score: 1
    I expect Apple to totally dominate the four-armed nerd market.

    Once again, a Slashdotter that Just Doesn't Get It. We Mac nerds use ONE arm to reply to each question...in series, just as they are asked. We also use just ONE button (using our ONE hand attached to that ONE arm) on our mouse to click on things, too.

    It amazes me what creative things we Mac users accomplish...

    But I guess now you will start complaining (like some other dolt did earlier) that since it only has ONE rotating knob, no one will be able to select songs AND change the volume. Sigh...

    --
    Scott
    "Hokey religions and ancient weapons are no match for a good blaster at your side, kid."
  322. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by Hal-9001 · · Score: 1
    ...yes, cutting down on choice is a UI feature, and one that Apple is very good at...
    Is that how they're justifying the one-button mouse these days? ;-)
    --
    "It take 9 months to bear a child, no matter how many women you assign to the job."
  323. Finally by biggerboy · · Score: 1

    The killer app for Firewire.

  324. Portable space heater by Picass0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This thing must get pretty warm after an hour of use. I've had a couple of laptop HD drives get pretty damn hot on me. I don't see any vents on this toy. For $400 I'de get cheesed off if it just decided to stop working.

    1. Re:Portable space heater by modemboy · · Score: 1

      the iPod has 32 megs of memory in it that (unless apple engineers are idiots) should buffer the mp3's. so it should only read from the hard drive every couple of songs, and then only for a moment.

    2. Re:Portable space heater by Quila · · Score: 2

      It has 20 minutes (32 MB) of buffer. I'll bet it just turns on the hard drive for a few seconds when it has to fill the buffer, then shuts it off again.

    3. Re:Portable space heater by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Maybe you forgot to read the specs.
      32MB buffer. HD only spins up once every 20 mins.

  325. Re:A waste of time. Probably OEMed by someone else by stripes · · Score: 2
    Is that how they're justifying the one-button mouse these days?

    Forever. It is the same prinicpal, remove the choices few people use and most people will find the item easier to learn. Of corse a few people will find the thing useless, but if you do it right you gain more people then you lose.

    If you look at the QuickTime "learn more" thing the three "real users" (Moby, "that guy from Smash Mouth", and Seal) all basically say "I'm dumb, and this was designed so even I can use it". Really. It's amazing what people will say about themselves :-)

  326. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by morgue-ann · · Score: 1

    I have a firewire port and $400 and this looks pretty interesting, but oops, waitaminute, it's Mac only.

    WTF?

  327. the ways i sees it by rootofevil · · Score: 2, Insightful

    this thing is perfect for anyone who is getting a computer/mac for the first time. and is going to use it to play their mp3's.

    you get 5gb of storage. you can put ALL of your mp3's on that. most ppls collections dont get above that. and if they do...well there will be a bigger one by then. that way you get back the 5gb from your internal HD, and you can take all your music with you wherever you go. since its buspowered you dont ever have to do anything more than plug in ONE cable. all your file management can go on through iTunes, and playback on the desktop as well. this is ingenious.

    --
    turn up the jukebox and tell me a lie
    1. Re:the ways i sees it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good points. Especially about freeing up space on the local HD. I know its common sense but I hope it doesn't sync those tunes off the iPod when you remove them from the internal disk.

      They say that iTunes 2 will record MP3 direct to CD. I suppose iPod will be able to sync from a CD too.

      Here's hoping-but that price has to come down.

  328. silly goose... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the 1.8" drive only transfers at 12 MB/sec, much less than 1394a's current capacity of ~50 MB/sec

  329. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, Steve Jobs did say at the end of the presentation that they're considering writing some Windows software for the iPod pretty soon. Probably won't be as feature-loaded as iTunes, but it'd give you some access.

    --R.J.
    Monopoly XP T-shirts!

  330. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by jafac · · Score: 2

    Raise your hand if you're willing to spend $400 on THIS particular device, with b/w screen, no handwriting recognition, actually rather TOO big (no bigger than Palm V is my ideal size), no PDA functions - oops, sorry, wrong market. . .

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  331. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by mike_sucks · · Score: 1

    I've got a few spare straws if you need to clutch any further..

    ;)

    --
    -- "So, what's the deal with Auntie Gerschwitz et all?"
  332. the important question: BEWARE APPLE by jafac · · Score: 2

    How easy will it be for Apple to introduce CONTENT PROTECTION via a stealth firmware update or something once a market is established and they gain significant marketshare (not really likely at that price IMO)?

    Once this thing gets out in significant numbers, Apple's media partners are going to be very unhappy with them - and very large Quicktime format standardization deals are going to hinge on how cooperative Apple is at introducing content protection features.

    All Apple has to do is bundle some "gotta have feature" with an OS upgrade, which "breaks" compatibility with iTunes, and then provide an update to iTunes which enforces the content protection, and force the firmware update on iPod to be compatible with the new iTunes. It's not like Apple hasn't snuck unsavory changes into firmware updates in the past.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    1. Re:the important question: BEWARE APPLE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right about the unsavory firmware updates. The solution I see is not to update immediately. Wait a week once any new firmware is released. By then someone will tell you if the device is "broken" or not by the update.

    2. Re:the important question: BEWARE APPLE by pressman · · Score: 1

      This is paranoia plain and simple. Please mod down.

      --
      Pooty tweet
  333. Re:Another who cares product from apple by gvsu_snow_lord · · Score: 0

    yawn.... your post put me to sleep...

    I suppose you need to toss... well lets see your palm or ce devices... your all of your usb devices... your digital camera...

    apple has pushed the computer envelope for every day users... they have the vision and foresight to do things that they would like to own. Apple computer is what 3dfx was to the game console market.

  334. Only YellowDog? by Decimal+Dave · · Score: 1

    I wonder if users can format and partition the HD in this thing...

    There would be a *very* high geek-factor in installing several linux distros, OS X, and Windows onto a pocketsize firewire MP3 player!

    --

    "Leave the strategizing to those of us with planet-sized brains." -Tycho
  335. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by benedict · · Score: 2

    Who, me? You've got the wrong guy, I *like* my one-button optical mouse.

    --
    Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
  336. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by _Quinn · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Stupid question time: how long will it be before I can plug this baby into my PS2? :)

    -_Quinn

    --
    Reality Maintenance Group, Silver City Construction Co., Ltd.
  337. You won't have to reboot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Firewire Disk mode is traditionally on Powerbooks and iBooks where you reboot the computer so it can act act as an external hard drive to another Mac.

    It would make no sense to reboot your iMac or iBook so that it was an external hard drive for the iPod.

    So if anything, it means that you might have to "reboot" the iPod to transfer files (which would probably take 1 second). But I'm guessing this is more a misused marketing term than anything else.

    1. Re:You won't have to reboot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not so sure. For TDM to work the host machine has to be put in Target Disk Mode. The only way I know of to do that is restart and hold the F key until the TDM screen appears.

      I believe a restart will be necessary for use as a data device.

  338. Re:LAME? WTF?!? and hard drive by iphayd · · Score: 1

    A wireless setup is better for those that cannot use a wired interface. That includes: those that don't know how to run cat 5 cable,
    those that don't want to know how to run cat 5 cable, those that physically cannot run cat 5 cable (asbestos home), those that recognize the benefits of wireless (surf anywhere, including the porch.)

    Also, to enable a wireless interface on a Mac costs $100. If the iPod had wireless, it would cost $100 to enable the Mac to talk to it.

    Why would I want a Airport enabled iPod?

    If it was a stereo component, I could put the stereo in another room, connect to my computer wirelessly, and serve the files from there, no HD needed.

    If it was a car stereo, I could pull up into my garage, and it would sync with my computer.

    If it were a personal player (which it is), I wouldn't need to worry about whether I put the new songs on it, as I run out of my house.

    I would have payed $400 for a car stereo that synced with my home computer when I pulled into my garage, but I'll wait for the price to drop on this thing.

  339. Philosophical differences, and the Unix Way by Erich · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I like it. iTunes, for those that haven't used a Mac, is REALLY slick.
    I've used it. It's not insanely great.
    It is a great UI and makes things really easy and intuitive. My fiancee recently got an iBook, and she loves how easy it is to rip CDs into her machine and burn CDs. Rather than swapping applications, she does it all within iTunes.
    Uh, there are rip/(encode/decode)/burn scripts for UNIX... you see, when you have flexible tools it's trivial to make them work together.
    Us geeks, who always acknowledged that Macs had a great UI (but we called them idiot machines) miss out on some of the impressive stuff that Apple does.
    I will NEVER claim that the Macintosh is a "great UI". It is easy-to-learn. It is not easy-to-use for people used to a better interface (focus-follows-mouse? Multiple desktops? Remote display? Auto-select-to-clipboard? Give me my nice custom-configured X interface or give me death!)

    Sure, it's easy to learn the Mac. I did when I was 5. But I need to be more productive now, and the Mac interface makes it too hard.

    Speaking particularly of iTunes, how do I script it into apache? How do I use it from the command line? How do I run it on the machine hooked into my stereo from my desktop with the display that is in the other room? This is trivial and elegant in my UNIX environment.

    The Macintosh way is to organize things by things the users do, not the underlying file system. This is a HUGE paradigm shift from the Unix (everything is a file) paradigm, and from the Microsoft (everything is about something).
    The Macintosh way (much like the Windows way) is to have applications that do everything you want to do. All your word-processing needs in Word. All your web-browsing needs in Internet Explorer. All your audio needs in iTunes.

    The problem with this way is that in the end it is too restrictive. If all you have is internet explorer, what if you want to do an ``internet-explorer -dump http://go-gnome.com | sh'' Or maybe you want to use internet explorer to recursively download a site for mirroring or archival?

    Ahhh... you say... but with OS X or Cygwin I can use bash and lynx! True, true. But at the point you're using lynx and the bourne shell and scripts pulling together cdparanoia, lame, and cdrecord, you're not doing things the Mac or Windows way, you're doing things the UNIX way.

    I do computer architecture as my job. It would be impossible for us to use Mac or Windows machines. Some of the things would work -- the assembler would be fine to do in Windows (and there's one that works in Windows) and the simulator would work ... but there are times when we redirect the trace output of one simulator into another to verify things... piping *that* output into a scrpit that gathers statistics and such. You don't just open up the ``save trace as...'' dialog box when you are about to spit out a 100-gig trace file, you need the flexability of being able to stream it into another application. And you don't want to have to open dialog boxes for 80 different possible configurations and sit there and wait for them to run when you can script together doing all the configurations on all the test files spreading across several machines over the weekend.

    The UNIX way is about flexible tools. Tools that work well together. Tools that are elegant and flexable. Tools that work well regardless of where you are, where you're coming from, or where you're going. This provides power for the UNIX user that surpasses that which someone using GUI tools on Windows or a Mac can ever know.

    Sure, it takes longer to learn. Most of the best things do. The sharper the learning curve, the bigger the payoff. That's why most UNIX gurus use emacs or vi... they're not easy to learn, but they are powerful.

    A UNIX guru can't take working with inferior tools. She can't stand sitting there doing a repetative task when she should be scripting it. She understands that her job is to be the master, and the computer is the tool to do the repetative job.

    --

    -- Erich

    Slashdot reader since 1997

    1. Re:Philosophical differences, and the Unix Way by Morth · · Score: 1
      I will NEVER claim that the Macintosh is a "great UI". It is easy-to-learn. It is not easy-to-use for people used to a better interface (focus-follows-mouse? Multiple desktops? Remote display? Auto-select-to-clipboard? Give me my nice custom-configured X interface or give me death!)

      I surely hope your trolling. focus-follows-mouse and Auto-select-to-clipboard are great examples of bad UI. How often have you accidently overwritten your clipboard by selecting some text? I do it all the time... How often have you typed in the wrong window or not had any window focused because of focus-follows-mouse? I do it all the time... I'll give you multiple desktops and remote display though. They are high on the requests lists, so I wouldn't be surprised if they were implemented.

      Speaking particularly of iTunes, how do I script it into apache? How do I use it from the command line? How do I run it on the machine hooked into my stereo from my desktop with the display that is in the other room? This is trivial and elegant in my UNIX environment.

      Well, I haven't tried it, but I would expect something along osascript -e 'tell application "iTunes" to play' to work. AppleScript has been around since Mac OS 7, and there wasn't long before there was a 3rd party product to use it remotedly. Now-a-days the language itself can connect over networks.
      Trivial enough for you? And yes, you can get answers back using AppleScript as well.

    2. Re:Philosophical differences, and the Unix Way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Focus follow mouse? That shit pisses me off! It's all about what you're used to.

    3. Re:Philosophical differences, and the Unix Way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Auto-select-to-clipboard?

      Paste to replace -- I have done it 20 times a day for 10 years -- can't do it on X.

    4. Re:Philosophical differences, and the Unix Way by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1
      I will NEVER claim that the Macintosh is a "great UI". It is easy-to-learn. It is not easy-to-use for people used to a better interface (focus-follows-mouse? Multiple desktops? Remote display? Auto-select-to-clipboard? Give me my nice custom-configured X interface or give me death!)

      B.S.

      There are lots of things on Mac OS that arn't obvious to the user, but they make it so much easier to use once you know how.
      Mac OS 9 seems to have both down. Easy to learn. And easy to use (even though it does have it's flaws).
      I really can't see how you can say X has a better interface than Mac OS. I've used both X and KDE, and I didn't like either one. Not because it had a steep learning curve, but because it's just plain bad. It's missing some basic things...Where's drag'n'drop? (I expect a bit more that just draging files around)
      Multiple desktops? Sound like a quick fix for a GUI problem. Maybe you should search /. for that GUI review comparing Linux, Win, Mac and give it a good read.

    5. Re:Philosophical differences, and the Unix Way by msouth · · Score: 2
      A UNIX guru can't take working with inferior tools. She can't stand sitting there doing a repetative task when she should be scripting it. She understands that her job is to be the master, and the computer is the tool to do the repetative job

      This pretty much sums up the whole post, and I pretty much agree with the "facta", so to speak. But I am not sure what your point is. The idea for Apple is basically "make art that makes money". It's one thing to make art, but to make art that makes money to have to make art that appeals to either a few people willing to spend a lot of money or a lot of people willing to spend a little.

      The Unix guru market segment is pretty small, and not prone to spending millions for art. So Apple targets the millions that are not Unix gurus but that appreciate (functional) art. Still not as big as the Windows market, but at least they still get to make art.

      If your point was just that Unix is better for people who are willing to spend the time to learn it, I heartily agree. To the majority of people in the world, this is not relevant, they just want to get something done without having to spend time learning how to do it. There is a certain elegance in making this possible, despite the fact that many who do like to learn as much as possible all the time tend to look down on the people who don't, and the companies that sell to them.

      --
      Liberty uber alles.
    6. Re:Philosophical differences, and the Unix Way by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      Uh, there are rip/(encode/decode)/burn scripts for UNIX... you see, when you have flexible tools it's trivial to make them work together.

      Anything can be done in UNIX, but in iTunes, it's easy and simple to do, and it's all integrated. I don't have to run one script with five program prerequisites to rip my CDs and encode them, I don't have to run a separate program to manage my playlists and play my MP3s, I don't have to run separate scripts to burn my MP3s to CD.

      iTunes provides CD ripping and encoding, MP3 playing and managing, and CD mixing and burning. It's insanely easy to use iTunes, and the interface is consistent. Can you say that UNIX/Linux programmers somewhere provide a simple, easy to use, functional, fast, efficient, and versatile program that could honestly compete with iTunes?

      The UNIX way is about flexible tools. Tools that work well together. Tools that are elegant and flexable. Tools that work well regardless of where you are, where you're coming from, or where you're going.

      And the Macintosh way is about functional tools. Tools that just plain work. Tools that are easy to use, and easy to learn. Tools that work well regardless of how many dozens of hours you spend learning C, bourne shell scripting, and logical OR statements.

      The Macintosh is not about being able to do anything in any way you want for any reason. The Mac philosophy is about making things easy for the user, and iTunes does that better than any other software out there - but it also provides a huge feature set that is easy to use.

      This is why I have given up on Linux/UNIX, and just use the household G4: I would rather spend my time using my computer than making sure it works properly.

      You do what you need to do, and you use the tools that need to be used for it, but don't knock the MacOS because we can't do the same things you can. Many Linux 'advocates' need to realize something: sometimes, we don't want to do everything you can. Sometimes, we just want to listen to our music.

      --Dan

    7. Re:Philosophical differences, and the Unix Way by MadHats · · Score: 1

      How do I run it on the machine hooked into my stereo from my desktop with the display that is in the other room?

      Attach an old PowerBook to your home audio system with a $5 phone->rca adapter from radioshack, and install a vnc server on it.

      Then you can control iTunes (and any other audio source you'd like to pipe through - internet radio anyone?) from ANY machine on your home network, including your windoze, wince and *nix boxes, or better yet your 802.11b-enabled PalmOS device!

      This is trivial and elegant in my UNIX environment.

      Just because it's not a UNIX environment doesn't mean it can't still do things elegantly...

      --
      Get lose, you can't compare with my powers.
  340. You can buy a brand new computer for $399 by titansfreak · · Score: 0, Troll

    A brand new PC or an older mac can easily be purchased for $399. If you're a mac-fanatic, get an ibook instead. If you're a portable mp3 player fanatic, get the Nomad instead. Otherwise just burn a CD and use your CD player.
    For $399 they should have made it a full-blown PDA as well, there is no way I can see this succeeding.

  341. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by elakazal · · Score: 1

    1. Apple's main market has always been primarily current Mac users.

    2. This is an expensive electronic toy.

    Who buys expensive electronic toys? The same people who spend a lot on their computers. Every Mac shipped in nearly two years has had FireWire, and iTunes is a free download and has been around a while. The sort of people who have $400 to spend on an extremely cool walkman, tend to replace their computers every couple of years anyhow.

    Will they sell a million or two of these? Nah. They don't have to. Apple's goal is to make Mac users happy they're Mac users, and they do that well. This is just another good reason (for some people) to own a Mac. If non-Mac users like something Apple makes, I'm sure they're happy to sell it to them, but they're not the target audience.

    This thing is priced high because they can right now...the thing's not even shipping, and the rumor is that supplies are low at the moment...they'll let the people willing to spend $400 on it spend $400 on it until they A) exhaust that market, and B) get caught up on production, and then they'll lower it to $300, and get the people who are willing to spend $300. Why sell it to people willing to spend $400 at $300? And after a while at that price, I suspect we'll see it go a bit lower, and a new, souped up one will appear to take the $400 slot. It maximizes profit and spreads demand out so that they can meet it.

  342. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Trongy · · Score: 1

    The linked article quotes jobs as saying that they will look at doing a windows interface. (I thinks that they asmost certainly will if they want to increase market share.)

    FireWire is less common on PC's, but the stand alone cards are getting cheap and the new Soundblaster Audigy has one included.
    USB is too slow for this application.

    With PC (preferably linux) and OGG support, I would consider buying one.

    Chris

  343. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by dbrutus · · Score: 2

    The question really is, if you have Win XP and all you needed was to manually drag your collection to load it to the iPod, would you buy it even without iTunes?

    DB

  344. Inspiron 2100 v. iBook by Matthew+Weigel · · Score: 2

    Minus RAM (maxes out at 256MB!?), Firewire, composite RCA output, battery life (not even 2 hours!?), or built-in wireless. It is oriented towards the extreme low end of consumers, but is priced higher than the iBook. Oh, but it's marginally smaller.

    People buy that?!?

    --
    --Matthew
  345. Nomad: No Firewire, enormous form factor - lame. by nedron · · Score: 1

    Aside from the usual pointless editorial comments, Taco's comments don't make any sense. Does the Nomad have some type of wireless module? Not that I can find. Additionally, the form factor of the nomad makes it virtually useless as a "portable" MP3 player.

    As for the storage size, big deal. The need to use USB makes the storage space irrelevant. At the blazing 3.2Mbps provided by the Nomad's USB port, it would take you about, oh, 15 hours to load it. Sounds like a fun time. If they weren't stuck in the past and condescended to give their users a modern connection like IEEE1394, it would only take about 6 minutes load their drive.

    I think Apple has reached a good compromise in size versus storage. The use of Firewire makes sense because the Apple platform is basically built around Firewire. Also, it's getting tough to find a new Intel system without IEEE1394 ports. Every PC vendor wants to be part of the digital production movement, and that can't be done without IEEE1394.

    All that being said, it would behoove Apple to ensure that people using PCs can use the iPod. It may be as simple as plugging it in to your PC-based IEEE1394 port and copying your MP3s to it with a simple drag and drop operation.

    I'm pretty tired of Slashdot's constant editorial asides. If you don't think it matters, CmdrTaco, why bother to post it?

    I thought this was news for nerds, not CmdrTaco's Soapbox. Maybe it's time to add someone to the Slashdot team that can evaluate news stories that don't have anything to do with CmdrTaco's favorite subjects. Maybe they would have a better chance of being posted without the pithy remarks.

    --


    * As is generally the case, my opinions do not reflect those of my employer.
  346. One Way Synchronisation by walt_r · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, according to the story I read on my.netscape.com (which proves impossible to find whilst surfing around home.netscape.com), the device only allows for one-way sychronisation (ie. download from PC).

  347. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple mentioned approximately 7 million Macs are compatible with iPod.

  348. Scripting powerful, not everything by alexhmit01 · · Score: 2

    Look, I love scripting. I'm sitting here on my Compaq Armada running W2K with Outlook connected to my Exchange Server and SSH connections to our OpenBSD and Linux servers. The right tool in the right place.

    When I ran DOS, I used batch scripts for various things.

    As an NT Admin (boo, hiss, MCSE, boo, hiss) I used the resource kit and batch scripting to automate many administrative tasks. I also used other Windows scripting languages.

    Scripting rocks, in its place. The reason why NT does well in small businesses is because of its interface. Sure, they probably need a pro to set up the box, but the day-to-day tasks can be handled my anyone with any intelligence.

    Adding a new user, home directory, etc., is much more straightfoward on NT 4 (not a use 2K server fan) than under a Unix OS.

    NT w/ resource kit (full of command line tools, many inspired by Unix), or OS X with the developers tools and a couple of useful GNU or BSD tools, give you the best of both worlds.

    When you need to do something fancy, you have the command line to aid you. When you need to just get things done, the UI helps you out.

    MS's problem is that the NT 3.51 had a great kernel, but NT4 and NT5 kept adding to the kernel trading stability for speed. They also throw things together for marketing reasons.

    X Windows (really, the classic X Windows UI) is a powerful engineering tool. It was designed at MIT (an engineering school...) for engineering students and researchers. It was designed primarily to run xterms, lots of xterms.

    Its great for coding, but it doesn't make a great general purpose UI. KDE/GNOME are a step in the right direction, but they aren't quite there. The real trick to GUI design is building the tools based around what the USER does, not how they are represented on the file system.

    NT is too hampered by its DOS roots. (I don't mean codewise, NT's userspace, Win32, evolved API wise from Win16, which was bolted onto DOS).

    Linux/Desktop developers should REALLY look at how OS X was built. The UNIX system is there, providing a stable kernel and API for running daemons. The GUI has its own system, complete with APIs, spaces in the filesystem, etc. They built a full GUI OS that sits on top of a UNIX system. The UNIX core is there, available, but they built a system for users.

    Now, so much of the UNIX functionality is hidden that you can't do everything from within the GUI. Expose more of the system, and you have a more powerful system.

    Don't shun it because its Apple, their second attempt at a UNIX GUI is a third system, evolved (conceptually) from A/UX and (directly) from NeXTSTEP (however it was spelt on Tuesdays...)...

    Could Aqua be more powerful, sure. Could KDE/GNOME be more intuitive, sure?

    CDE, MWM, etc, (Classic UNIX environments) are great engineering platforms...

    Right tool for the right job...

    Alex

  349. And if it HAD everything else you listed... by Bogatyr · · Score: 1

    you'd be whining it wasn't released with Linux support. Some people are never ever satisfied.

  350. blah by Corintheus · · Score: 1

    I find it funny how some people just fail to realise just how good the iPod really is. It's hard drive capacity holds way more than the amount of mp3s i have. And it can act like a hard drive as well. And its bloody tiny. If you can't afford it... don't complain about it. Or just get a raise.

    And don't complain about it requiring an apple computer. If you were apple would you think "hey let's make it compatible with windows machines so all those people out there can enjoy our products without buying more of our hardware"

  351. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by maxphunk · · Score: 1

    There is Apple's market. Pretty slim, eh? I don't see many sales in the future of iPod. I guess you don't. This is why Apple is a company with $4 Billion in the bank, and you're trolling on slashdot. Want fries with that?

    This has to be the funniest shit I've ever read on Slashdot. =)

    --

    "The chief enemy of creativity is 'good taste'" -Pablo Picasso
  352. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can see apple one day bundling this puppy w/ its higher end machines as an added inducement to consumers who will be looking at replacing their older machines - and to differentiate themselves that much more from the rest of the crowded, dull desktop market.

    "Hmm... It costs a thousand more but it comes with this kewl mp3 player/portable hard drive that I can bring too and from work/school/shopping every day. And it interfaces seemlessly w/ the computer!"

  353. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That pie you refer to.. Would it happen to be an apple pie? *snort*

  354. Definitely Lame... by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1
    Apple dropped the ball on this one. This is not a breakthrough, this is not something I, as a Mac user or a computer user in general, cannot live without. And the name is just sad - just damn sad.

    Looking at thinkgeek.com, there's the "Archos Jukebox Studio 20 MP3 Player," with 20 GB of space for a whopping $349. Apple wants to charge $399 for the iPod.

    Someone got to Jobs during a smoke-induced haze, obviously. This has to be the dumbest move I've seen from Apple - and I really, really, really like them...

    Arrrggghh. Moves like this do not help Mac users and lovers justify their existence to the IT world as a whole (and don't give me that crap about Apple being "the BMW of the computer world"...).

  355. Ergonomic Answers to Hardware Problems by PhilosopherKing · · Score: 1

    As pointed out in an earlier post, the 32mb of ram will allow a fairly large buffer (20min.), allowing the HD to be in park most (95%-98%) of the time. Thus reducing the chance of platter damage to almost nil, reducing power usage, and also the heat generated. The only time when this would be untrue is when you are skimming through songs (not just thier names) and it's unlikely that that will be when you drop it, or skim for long enough to generate noticable heat.

    --

    USA-Democracy is 270 million YESes and NOes a day, not one every four years.
  356. PJB-100 still best by poing · · Score: 1

    www.pjbox.com, www.mp3factorydirect.net

    Takes thin 2.5" laptop harddisks, 10 hours battery life, 2 second bootup time, nice and simple menu system, USB interface.
    Been out for almost 2 years but it's still the best HD-based portable player, way better than the Nomad (only 2-3 hour battery life, bigger and heavier, worse sound quality, up to 30 seconds bootup) or Archos.

    I've got a 30 gig drive in mine and use it with Etymotic ER4P noise isolating hifi earphones... Can't beat 300 full albums worth of music at 192kbit in your pocket...

  357. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is even funnier is how seriously slashdoties
    take a comment like this.

    You people are the most rigidly monotheistic computer folks out there.

    Hate to have to be the one to break it to you....

  358. physical build quality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For me, my judgement will be when I actually pick the thing up. I have wanted to buy an MP3 player for a while, but all of the units I have held so far (even expensive ones ) have been constructed in such a horrible plasticky fashion I have not been tempted to part with my cash. Perhaps the extra bucks have been spent transcending this flimsy heritage ? I want to buy a player that feels as if it has been machined from a solid chunk of metal.

  359. NYTimes also has an article... by ctar · · Score: 1
    NYTimes article...Says that you can't download songs FROM the device to other MACs.

    1. Re:NYTimes also has an article... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, if you look into the specs more it is possible. You cannot auto sync to more than one computer at a time, but can do it manually.

  360. Re:Good lord, you're fucking stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice attitude you've got there. I bet you've got loads of friends.

  361. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by LightJockey · · Score: 1

    Like someone has said, every mac in the last 2 years has a firewire port. SO does Vaio. And so will everyone who buys any new sound blaster Audigy card, as they ALL have firewire ports now.

    --
    Mouse, Mice. Goose, Geese. Moose... Moose?
  362. $399 high price? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For that price you get high quality earphones. I bought the Archos 6gig mp3 player and I had to buy new earphones, because the ones included was really crappy, so there goes another $80.

    And lets not even compare the user interface. Only a Windows user could feel that pressing the ON button and Next song is the way to increase volume...

    Jacken

    1. Re:$399 high price? by pressman · · Score: 1

      what?!? alt+f4 isn't an intuitive enough a key command for "close window"?

      I love it when linux geeks discuss usability. Not that the otiginal poster mentioned linux users... I just think /.'ers talking about usability is always funny.

      --
      Pooty tweet
  363. Saved again by CAPTAIN OBVIOUS! by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

    Oh thank you thank you! I never would have figured out that consumers spend less on electronic toys in a recession than they do in a boom economy if it weren't for your astounding insights!

    Oh wait... "No." And, secondary to that, "shut your noise tube, taco human." Hold off on the stunning macroeconomic analyses until you graduate high school, sparky, and save your pathetic attempts at flaming for the fuckedcompany bulletin boards.

    Are we in a recession? Yes. Will sales of consumer electronics be lower this year than last? Yes. Has the consumer electronics market suddenly vanished? No. Is "$200-400" the magic price range that every new consumer appliance shoots for? (Let's see: basically every new gaming console, digital camera, VCR, DVD, ETC ever...) Yes. Are Sony, Apple, Compaq, Kodak, Panasonic, Nikon and the dozen other competitors in this space going to be around and making money even in that far-off day when you grow a set of balls and register a nickname here? Yes, even in that distant future when you achieve sentience. By the hand of Adam Smith and the power of Greyskull, it will be so.

    And christ, minus whatever miniscule style points you might have cached and straight into negative territory for your pathetic attempt to somehow drag "Linux-based companies" into it.

    Idiot.

    --

    News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

    1. Re:Saved again by CAPTAIN OBVIOUS! by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      Man, just had to reply. Good flame!

  364. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bought an imac and one of those new fangled quicksilver machines to play with OS X. I'll buy one of these too.. At some point you have to make a choice and support what you believe will be the next big thing. OS X might just be it.

  365. Mac Buyers spend money by linuxbert · · Score: 1

    i am the resident mac expert where i work, and most pc buyers buy the computer monitor printer, andmaybe a scanner for 2k.

    most mac people buy the mac, monitor, printer, but also throw in the goodies, like airport, isub/soundsticks, dv divices etc. bring the average mac sale in the 5k plus range so i expect the iPod to sell well.

  366. iPod ships with iTunes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    iPod ships with iTunes, on a CD Rom... silly person

  367. yeah!! n/t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  368. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by starshinecruzer · · Score: 1

    USB is much faster than most home broadband connections, so the time to fill 5 gig will be much less than the time it took to download the files. :-)

    Oh, you mean 5 hours?

  369. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's assuming that you downloaded all your MP3s. I'd say that about 90% of the MP3s that I have are from CDs that I own and have ripped myself. But even if you downloaded all your files, it wasn't done at one sitting. A few one day, more over the weekend, etc. It took a lot of time that most users probably didn't notice. When they want to load up something like the iPod, people aren't going to want to wait a long time. They will want to xfer the files as fast as possible and go.

  370. Re:LAME? WTF?!? and hard drive by n6mod · · Score: 1

    If it were a personal player (which it is), I wouldn't need to worry about whether I put the new songs on it, as I run out of my house.

    How fast do you run? I'd say you've got about 20 seconds before you're of of range...

    While every one of your other points is quite good about the benefits of wireless, I just don't think that a personal player is the place for wireless. Heck, you've got to charge the thing anyway, this does charging and sync with one wire. Hang on... that's it:

    Hey Taco! It is wireless...but to conserve battery, it doesn't work unless you plug in the charger! Yeah, that's the ticket. ;)

    -Z

    --
    You have violated Robot's Rules of Order and will be asked to leave the future immediately.
  371. Re:Nomad Jukebox vs. iPod by aarku · · Score: 1

    Nomad Jukebox is Mac and PC, and as far as iPod goes... it is a firewire disk too... so I'd expect that it is not "officially" supported but any pc with firewire could access it.

  372. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by arson1 · · Score: 1
    Ok, but was it worth all the super-secret big-announcment hoop-la?

    What kind of hoop-la did Apple make? They sent out invitations to select press people.

    They didn't email the fucking cutomers, they didn't have ANYTHING on their site until after the media event today.

    All they did was send out an invitation that said something to the effect of: Come check out our new groundbreaking product. Hint: It's not a Mac"

    What do you expect them to say: "Hey, we got this thing... it's sorta cool, well actually it sucks ass, but come check it out anyways.

    The hoop-la was created by the ridiculous mac "news" sites and people like you.

    --


    --
    Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things.
  373. Money for nothin by TheMCP · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately $400 is about twice as much as I'd want to pay for something the size of a pack of cards.

    Hmm. Sorry you feel that way... I guess you wouldn't pay $500 for the Canon Digital Elph camera, which Macworld just recommended strongly. I have one, I paid $430 for it, I'm delighted with it, and given the same decision to make over again I'd choose exactly the same thing. I believe it's selling well.

    I won't be buying the ipod until Apple makes it play Ogg Vorbis files (which I want because I feel they offer substantially superior sound quality to MP3), but I'll be keeping an eye on the product in hope that they'll upgrade it.

  374. PJB-100 still best?!?! by 90XDoubleSide · · Score: 1
    PJB:


    $398
    size: 150 x 80 x 26mm
    weight: 9.9 oz.
    capacity: 6.4 GB
    12 hour battery
    USB interface: takes almost 4 hours to load
    128 x 64 pixel display
    buffer holds 10 minutes of music
    plastic case / sub-optimal industrial design, to say the least
    USB cable and separate brick AC adapter

    iPod:


    $399
    size: 102 x 61.8 x 19.9mm
    weight: 6.5 oz.
    capacity: 5GB
    10 hour battery with one-hour quick-cahrge to 80% capacity
    IEEE 1394 interface: takes 10 MINUTES to load
    160 x 128 pixel display
    buffer holds 20 minutes of music
    stainless steel case / Apple industrial design
    IEEE 1394 cable and tiny AC adapter that uses the IEEE1394 cable
    Simultaneous English, French, German and Japanese support
    Automatic synchronization
    WORKS AS PORTABLE FIREWIRE DISK

    The advantages of the PJB are that it comes with a car adapter kit, a $15 value for those of you who don't already have one from a CD player, and a stereo adapter, $5 at RadioShack. Both come with some decent headphones and the standard sound-quality tech specs. It also has and extra 1.4 GB and 2 hours of battery, both of which are easier to acheive in a bulkier machine. It also has 20 GB and 30 GB options, which might actually be interesting for those needing the space and looking for something between the "CD-player" sized jukeboxes and the "deck of cards" sized iPod and flash-memory players, but the $515 and $665 price tags might make you really start thinking if you'd rather have a second computer insead.

    The PJB has a very low resolution display and a UI that is more useable, if much uglier, than most other HDD players, but doesn't even compete with the iPods much higher resolution screen and Apple-designed UI, which you can see here. The iPod automatically synchronizes with your computer, something which you couldn't do with a USB player because it would take hours instead of minutes. The iPod also works as a portable firewire disk, greatly increasing its utility considering the price of an ultraslim external firewire drive. If the PJB does this too, please inform me; I know that many HDD players work as disks, but I would think they would note this on their website if it did. In any event, one of the huge advantages the iPod has over other players that work as disks is that as a FireWire drive it will probably be faer than your internal HD, as opposed to the nearly unuseable speed of USB devices for mass storage.

    The PJB is definitely a step ahead of most of the HDD MP3 player competition, but I don't think anyone who has a machine that works with the iPod would choose the PJB. If anything, this device shows that the iPod is priced very comparably to other devices of its kind, of which there are very few. Since the initial price targets were rumored to be $249-299 perhaps there is some chance that the iPod will drop in price quickly as Apple clears up manufacturing issues or whatever the snag with this might have been. An iPod at $249 or even $299 really would be able to dominate the MP3 player market.

    --
    "Reality is just a convenient measure of complexity" -Alvy Ray Smith
  375. For a supposed graphics guy.... by hatless · · Score: 2

    Rob, for a someone who considers himself a graphics guy, you have remarkably poor feel for the benefit of good design. This thing is half the weight and a quarter the size of the "better" Creative Nomad, can transparently sync with your MP3 collection out of the box using MP3-management software that's better designed, hands-down, than anything else out there. And it transfers the data a hundred or so times faster than the USB and IrDA interfaces on other such gadgets.

    And it's got a readable screen, simple control layout, a well-designed UI and long battery life.

    If you want a one-pound MP3 jukebox and you want to write your own software to transfer files and you don't mind spending a half hour transferring a couple dozen songs, I guess the Nomad "wins".

    Apple's out to make easy to use consumer devices. That's what an iMac is. That's what an iBook is. And that's what the iPod is. Nomad and Archos jukeboxes are interesting gadgets in their own right, but they're not friendly, they're not easy to use, and they're not really designed. iPod may be too expensive right now to be a big seller, and the Mac-only factor will hurt sales too, but if you've got a Mac and you want a hard-drive MP3 player to listen to music on (as opposed to hack on, or do field recording on), it's the hands-down slickest thing around.

    A word of advice: if you still plan on being a world-famous computer animator, let someone with some art skills design the characters and do the storyboarding. You should stick to the math and the wireframes.

    1. Re:For a supposed graphics guy.... by pressman · · Score: 1

      hallelujah!

      --
      Pooty tweet
  376. You are all a bunch of .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no good dumbass zealots for:
    #1 thinking Ipod sucks
    #2 condemning all things Apple
    and lastly are just JEALOUS, because finally
    a well known company has gotten off of it's ass
    and embraced the only known o.s. to be rock solid
    stable ('nix in general) and made it their own
    with the best gui, commercial programs and games that kick ass; not even to mention the fact that
    it is all easy as F*@%.
    Oh - and the most important thing of all:
    all of this and more makes using all things apple an ENJOYABLE EXPERIENCE.
    Something you turd burglars just don't understand; I suppose to do your nature - "oh goodie another version! I get to waste 30 hours downloading and 5 days compiling and 1 to 3 config'ng!! weeee!!!"
    Been there. Done that. Got certified.
    Bought an apple!
    I moo at thee :P

  377. It looks really cool... by onetrueking · · Score: 1

    I have to say, hate the price, but it looks damn cool. Love the firewire aspect. And it's so damn small. Honestly, Archos was probably the closest thing to portable player before this. And even that was too big. The Nomad Jukebox was hardly something I'd call portable.

    Is it overpriced? I really don't think so. I can't afford it, but it isn't overpriced. If you watch the quicktime movies on the apple.com site, you'll notice people handling the ipod in their hands. It looks as small as my Nomad II. So it's as small as my Nomad II, has 10 hours of battery life, has extremely fast transfer, and looks so damn cool. $399. You're paying a premium for size. Hopefully Creative will look at this and innovate. It's really, really sad that no one has done this already. When the hell is the PC world going to have Firewire standard?

  378. It's actually a Toshiba PC-Card HD, not a 2.5" HD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The dimensions are 2.4" wide, which is too narrow to fit a standard laptop drive. The PC-Card drives are much smaller and draw less juice, but are pricier than their larger counterparts.

  379. Yet another innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now Apple can pretend they invented portable MP3 players as well as CD-burners (iToons), Unix, and GUIs.

    Apple knows its target audience. Good thing the target audience knows nothing but apple.

    1. Re:Yet another innovation by feldsteins · · Score: 1

      If it's your contention that Apple isn't one of the most innovative companies in the computer business then I would venture to say that you wouldn't know innovation if it bit you on the ass.

      --
      You like your Macintosh better than me, don't you Dave? Dave? Can you hear me Dave?
    2. Re:Yet another innovation by pressman · · Score: 1

      Um, Apple has never claimed to have invented the GUI, the CD burner, portable MP3 players or UNIX. In the case of the GUI, they matured and popularized it.

      --
      Pooty tweet
  380. ogg? by hemul · · Score: 1

    looks nice, but when are iTunes and iPod going to support a real encoding format?

  381. Oh yeah, real lame. Ferarri lame, even. by x136 · · Score: 1

    Smaller hard drive than a Nomad. Yeah, doesn't it suck only having 2.3 DAYS (at 192kbps) worth of music? If it can't keep me entertained for a month straight, I don't want it.

    No wireless? You mean I have to reach all the way behind the computer to plug in a cable? Oh forget it.

    It's the size of a pack of cards? Bah! I want my gigantic mass-of-a-brick doorstop MP3 player!

    (By the way, the preceding has been sarcasm, not a troll or a flame. The following, however, has no sarcasm.)

    It doesn't play WMA files? Thank god.

    --
    SIGFEH
    1. Re:Oh yeah, real lame. Ferarri lame, even. by PMan88 · · Score: 1

      wireless transfers (using airport) would add another $100 to the product. that alone makes it not worth it unless you are insanely rich. but also the transfers would be so much slower, only slightly better than usb transfers

  382. All info on the Apple's site by Eminence · · Score: 1

    Everything about this product is here on the Apple's site.

    A nice toy, but way, way too expensive. All mp3 players available right now are just too expensive - such a think should cost no more than $200 to be a good buy...

    And if you think that Apple is expensive in the US think about other countries - for the price of an iBook I can buy a top-of-the-line Intel notebook here in Poland...

    Emin

    1. Re:All info on the Apple's site by Logopop · · Score: 1

      The specs on Apple's web lists the device as handling bitrates between 32kb/s and 320 kb/s. Fine for music, but my main use of the old Nomad-or-whatever was to listen to otr drama or recorded talkshows at lower resolution than 32kb/s. Will it not handle, let's say, 8 kb/s? Anyone got any practical experience yet, or is it too early?

      -Kris
      plan9@pair.com

  383. Re:LAME? WTF?!? I'll buy one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for providing some data on the Nomad between the flames. Hopefully some people will read it and see past your username :)

  384. Apple vs. RIAA? iTunes vs. Cactus? by C+A+S+S+I+E+L · · Score: 1

    I find it odd that someone like Apple is moving into the MP3 hardware market the same month that Universal Music is implementing the Cactus Datashield copy-protection on all their new CD's, making it impossible (or at least difficult and illegal) to rip CD's. Is the iPod going to be a white elephant within a year? How is Apple going to protect this product: go up face-to-face against the music industry?

  385. Whats wrong with this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whats wrong with making the best product in a market and charging a premium for it? Mercedes and BMW do it. I don't see anyone complaining when the new M3 comes out and its "only" faster and cooler looking than your Camry.

    sheesh, some people...

  386. "Rock Different" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    That's my slogan above, and I completely agree with DB's message. I think there's something bigger going on below that polished metal surface.

    Here's a post I put up on MacSlash a minute ago...

    If someone else has posted a similar opinion already, I apologize. I didn't see it.

    My thinking is that iPod is not bad on two counts:

    One, I was thinking of buying an in-dash CD player with MP3 capabilities for my car, which would have run nearly as much and would have required me to carry around 10 CDs full of MP3s to hold this many songs. Now, I'm thinking I can just get one of these with a car adapter, and on long drives to Los Angeles or Tahoe (from Berkeley), I don't have to mess with a thing. And with a 10 hour battery, I don't even need to use a car battery adapter.

    Second, I think Apple is using this as a "sneaky" device to sneak large capacity hard drives into our pockets. Basically, once we're used to carrying around something like this, they can build on it. Add the PalmOS or OSX/CE (OK, bad joke, but you get the idea) and you have a PDA with more massive storage than any other. Add a firewire connection to some optics and you have a video camera with 10 hours of battery life, smaller and easier to conceal than Sony's smallest.

    The thing I like about the video camera idea is that with tapeless storage, editing is much, much faster, and with the disk unit in your pocket, the camera can be really tiny and lightweight and still have a lot of features. Basically, once they up the drive capacity to 20GB (maybe 3-6 months?), that's enough for 90 minutes of broadcast quality digital video, enough for almost any common event!

    Think about it. This is just an iSeed iPod. Many other things can and probably will grow out of it.

    By the way, I've made a banner ad campaign for this product, which you can see in rotation at my haiku movie review site. There are several banners up, but if you cycle through a few of the movie reviews, you'll see the banner.

    --Benno

    All opinions are my own, and you can't have them!

  387. Strange. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If this thing were running Linux you'd be drooling about how cool this thing was.
    Grow up. It's cool. It's expensive. It's shiny.
    It's Apple. I want one.

  388. Wasn't iPOD is an Intel trademark? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As in Intel Phone Over Data?

  389. The USA is going metric inch by inch by NKJensen · · Score: 1

    2.4" by 4" by 0.78" is

    6 x 10 x 2 cm

    --
    -- From Denmark
  390. This could later go for the PC by Quila · · Score: 2

    1) All someone has to do is write the synching software for PC

    2) All of Creative Labs' new sound cards - the Audigy series - come with a IEEE-1394 port. That alone will put "Firewire" on millions of PCs in the near future, catching up to the Mac.

    Just wait, a PC version will be coming. If not from Apple, then from someone else.

  391. Support for non-Apple platforms? by robertito · · Score: 1

    This question is possibly already redundant but what are the chances of Linux support? I can't get to the apple site but the linked News article said there was no windows support at the moment- Apple 'might' get round to doing it later.

    Man, this looks like a damn fine playa! I have a (damn fine) transmeta-based viao, with fire wire link, and I'd love to link it to an iPod - but if windows support is a way off, then I'd be more than happy with a Linux port from the OS X version.

    Does anyone have any have idea if this iPod device will use some kind of standardised format for it's fire wire link - like the mass-storage profile many things follow with USB?

    Roberto (slightly over-excited)

    1. Re:Support for non-Apple platforms? by PMan88 · · Score: 1

      stay tuned
      they might add support to quicktime for windows

      not sure about linux

  392. CPU? by ConsumedByTV · · Score: 2

    Whats the cpu? Speed? Is it Risc based? Is it (iPod) flashable for the entire os (not just the codecs)? Can you run linux on it?
    :)

    Anyone else think its funny how they werer toting OS X as great because of how its gui looks and how bland others were (even compairing them to a 6 line LCD) and here they are releasing something that doesnt even have color. Irony.

    Pretty neat, but it wont be as cool untill someone hacks it and finds a way to put in a 40 gig drive of the same form factor.

    --


    "Not my manner of thinking but the manner of thinking of others has been the source of my unhappiness." - M
    1. Re:CPU? by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      Anyone else think its funny how they werer toting OS X as great because of how its gui looks and how bland others were (even compairing them to a 6 line LCD) and here they are releasing something that doesnt even have color. Irony.

      Dude, don't give them ideas. I can't even afford $400 for this thing, let alone $600.

      Besides, it's an MP3 player. Why on earth do you need colour? Just like that new Samsung (?) phone, with the full-colour LCD built-in, what on earth do you need it for?

      --Dan

    2. Re:CPU? by ConsumedByTV · · Score: 2

      I can't afford it either, however I would like to see those features for THAT price. The comments for this article have links to all sorts of devices with MORE storage.

      And I was talking about apples double speak, but color would be neat for certian aspects like keeping with apples aesthetic (not needed but neat mind you) :)

      --


      "Not my manner of thinking but the manner of thinking of others has been the source of my unhappiness." - M
    3. Re:CPU? by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      I can't afford it either, however I would like to see those features for THAT price.

      Well if you keep in mind that the hard drive in this thing costs $400, then notice that for the same price, you can get the hard drive plus LCD plus MP3 playing capabilities plus playlist management plus 32 megs of anti-skip memory...

      I mean, I'd like to see more for this price too, but that doesn't mean it's not a sweet purchase. =;>

      --Dam

    4. Re:CPU? by Refrag · · Score: 2

      Why does it need more space? It can already hold 8 hours worth of 44.1KHz WAV files (uncompressed), which is almost the same as the battery. Assuming you actually use it for MP3s, it can hold far more songs than you could play on one battery charge (even with its very long battery life), so you don't need more space.

      --
      I have a website. It's about Macs.
  393. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by FyRE666 · · Score: 0


    Raise your hand if you have iTunes

    Bundled for free on every Mac sold in the last 18 months, and installed retroactively on god only knows how many other ones. Easily in the high hundreds of thousands, possibly in the millions.

    Raise your hand if you have a FireWire port...

    Every iMac, PowerMac, iBook and Powerbook sold in the last two years, plus almost every Sony VAIO and a good chunk of Compaq and HP's product lines. Easily in the millions.


    I didn't realize iTunes was available for my Firewire equipped Vaio, or any PC for that matter...

  394. each iPod has unique ID - possible hook for SDMI? by robertito · · Score: 1

    At the bottom of page 3 of the iPod faq on the Apple site:

    http://a1504.g.akamai.net/7/1504/51/0f06b808e347 23 /www.apple.com/ipod/pdf/iPod_FAQ-a.pdf

    there's a question about using more than one iPod with a Mac. The reassuring answer is that each iPod has a unique ID, so no clashes occur- but presumably the ID can also be used in a DRM context- don't play any MP3 that hasn't been signed for this particular device, etc.

    Roberto

  395. Ask Slashdot: iPod or Jukebox Studio 20? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was about to buy a Jukebox Studio 20 when i heard about this new iPod. Could Slashdot readers give their opinion about the 2 players, Pros and Cons about both systems?
    I'm still wondering which one to buy..

    Here is the link to the Jukebox Studio 20:
    http://www.archos.com/uk/products/product_500205.h tml

    Thanks in advance.
    -J

  396. cool... by Cinematique · · Score: 1

    i like this little thing... a *lot*

    but... if i could use this as a bootable firewire hard drive, it would be orgasmic.

    plug it in, have your x desktop...

    :)

    1. Re:cool... by stux · · Score: 1

      You can use it as a bootable firewire harddrive :)

      You may now orgasm ;)

      Of course, this is not officially supported, but is mentioned in the iPod FAQ... sorry no linkage.

      --

      ---
      Live Long & Prosper \\//_
      CYA STUX =`B^) 'da Captain,
      Jedi & Last *-fytr
  397. Re:each iPod has unique ID - possible hook for SDM by Cinematique · · Score: 1

    each iPod has unique ID - possible hook for SDMI?

    i seriously doubt it. itunes lets you copy anything *and* listen to whatever you download from the net. no converting over to another format...

    i can't picture apple going the sdmi route.

  398. Copy Protection? by ksr · · Score: 1

    The New York Times saith, "Mr. Jobs said the company had taken some steps to protect against piracy in its device. For instance, he said, songs loaded onto the iPod from a Macintosh computer, cannot then be loaded from the device to a different Macintosh computer, a step he said would make it difficult for people to distribute music they own to other users."

    I guess this shatters any ideas of using the iPod to keep the music collection on two Macs synchronized...

  399. Not so slim, really. by atomicgirl · · Score: 1

    *waves hand in the air frantically*

    Well, how many of the new iBooks did Apple just sell? I'd say everyone of those buyers passes your test. Add to that people who've bought a G4 in the last year, and you've got a pretty large customer pool right there (iTunes, Firewire, disposable income). I think they'll sell well.

    Personally, 1000 songs in a box the size of a deck of cards is mighty attractive to me. I'm seriously considering buying one.

  400. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by yugami · · Score: 1

    yeah, 4 mile run, hard drive with moving parts, pound pound pound.

    sounds great to me

  401. MB/s != Mb/s by oneiros27 · · Score: 2

    MB = Mega Byte.
    Mb = Mega Bit.

    Therefore, 400Mb/s = 50MB/s

    For some reasons, some standards always seem to be listed in MBps and some in Mbps. [Normally, it's an order of magnitude thing...I had an engineering teacher who prefered numbers that stayed between 1 and 10, if possible, as he could conceptualize those numbers more easily than 100-1000.]

    SCSI, UDMA and Firewire you normally see in MB/s. USB and network connections are normally listed in Mb/s.

    --
    Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
  402. JUST BUY A SUBNOTEBOOK by robvasquez · · Score: 0

    You can get a Toshiba palmtop/subnote for about $400 with a 10gb drive, and it'll be much more useful.

    This isn't unique, just a nice MP3 player with the 'Apple Touch'.

    They should have included USB however. Maybe since apple didn't, it means USB is dead.

  403. New RIAA/Apple anti-piracy strategy... by rweir · · Score: 1
    They tried shutting napster down.


    They tried locking people up.


    They even tried using Disney cartoons.


    Now, they've taken it to a new level:


    For legal or rightholder-authorised copying only. Don't steal music.


    Politely asking.(#6, down the bottom).

  404. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

    ridiculous...people like you.


    No, sorry sir, I made no fuss - I went about my regular news/info gathering as I always do. Apple has taken to releasing their products in a pagent, with all the pomp and circumstance of %your-favourite-hysterical-fascist-state-here% but with little reward or substance.

    You see, Apple has begun to take *MARKETING* to seriously. I abhor marketing. I absolutely detest advertising. I see them as polluting the mental health of the world with lies and trash, the worst kind of self-serving propaganda is dumped on the planet day after day after day to the point where people cant get away from it.

    When apple, with their 'media' cronies in tow, abuse this ability to 'make news' and subvert it for what was a purely marketing ploy, i am a little angry.

    Had this device been innovative in any way, had it been an advance in what we were capable of as a species, had Apple *really* delivered something worth the hoop-la, i would have been less put off - I wouldnt feel so cheated.

  405. First FireWire MP3 player - not LAME by Jobe_br · · Score: 1

    A quick search on thinkgeek revealed that currently all MP3 players are USB driven (including the nomad). Me thinks that having a firewire driven MP3 player is anything but lame. Too bad for all those geeks out there still using PCs - guess you'll need to invest in a Firewire extension card :). And as far as the disk-space goes, expect that to increase in the next release of the iPod. I'm sure Apple wants to sell a few of these babies before it pours a bunch more money into it. Expect this one to come down in price and be superseded by one with more disk-space.

    Also, note that this player is just slightly bigger than the Rio500/600 players w/ far more space ... something that the nomad can't stake a claim on - the nomad is far to horsey to fit in any of MY pockets!

    Finally - design matters. If you like 'em or not, Apple is definitely putting out products that look ultra-cool and dovetail nicely with their other product lines. Most of the players on thinkgeek look ultra-geeky, even the nomad (though its design and the design of the Rios aren't bad). I'm no designer, but I've come to appreciate good design and I'm willing to pay a bit extra for it.

  406. LOL by SPYvSPY · · Score: 1

    In the interest of halting your campaign of misinformation, let me enlighten you:

    1. Although S2000 is not a straightline dragster, it does pull 0-60 times in the high 5's. The lack of low end torque makes dragging a clutch-burining and differential crunching experience over time. I don't find redlight racing much fun in any car, though. So, you got me there. Whoopee for you. (BTW, supercharged S2000's put down about 300rwhp, which results in much faster 1/4 times and trap speeds, but not a huge change in 0-60).

    2. S2000's real strength is in high-speed handling. It will beat all Boxsters around most any road track, except that the Boxster S is an even match for S2000. This is a fact. I've raced and driven enough Boxsters to know this. There aren't many roadsters sold in America that can beat an S2000 in the twisties. There aren't any that cost $34,000 and come with a Honda's reliability.

    3. S2000 is a Honda, which means that it employs radical new technology. The S2000 engine (F20C) makes the highest NA ouput per litre of displacement of any production car. It revs to 9000 rpm, and engages a variable cam system at 6500 rpms (about the point where most sports cars are redlining). There are many other wonderful innovations in the handling and steering systems, as well as in the design of the interior. The chassis is rock-solid due to its radical x-frame design (something no other open top roadster can claim except perhaps some Lotus').

    4. You call it a rice-burner, which is not only lame and ignorant, but offensive to asian people and anyone that respects human rights. That slur also belies your allegience with the chew-spitting, big block american drag racing scene.
    News flash: the fifties are over. American thunder is only cool in the following cars: Viper GTS, Vette C5, Panoz Esperante GTR and the LMP.

    That's the facts, Jack!

  407. LOL by SPYvSPY · · Score: 1

    Do some research. S2000 is amazing. Your 0-60 times are off by at least a full second; I usually pull 5.6 or less. It's not a straightline dragster anyway. It's for beating Boxsters in the twisties. Only the Boxster S is comparable, and it costs twice as much with options and has much higher maintenance and failure rates. Do some homework.

    BTW, dude. Rice burner is NOT the preferred term.

  408. we deserve better than what Taco gives by feldsteins · · Score: 1

    You can always count on slashdot to immediately pronounce an apple product to be "lame." One begins to suspect that slashdot has abandoned all pretense of objectivity when it comes to certain products/companies.

    By the way, for a *sane* article on the introduction of the iPod check out arstechnica.com. Neither ars nor I are in love with the thing but at least they seem to be able to provide some cursory analysis of the products introduction...I mean beyond the slashdot "lame" perspective.

    Taco you should be ashamed of yourself. We readers deserve better.

    --
    You like your Macintosh better than me, don't you Dave? Dave? Can you hear me Dave?
  409. Bootable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder if I could boot off an iPod. The drive is big enough to hold a system folder and the apps I use most at temp jobs. That would be especially cool. Everything I need plus music in the size of a deck of cards.

    It's like a portable firewire dirve combined with an MP3 player. A little pricey but woth it.

    1. Re:Bootable? by marusin · · Score: 1

      You can! Check out http://www.apple.com/ipod and read the FAQ at the bottom.. (Apple admits you can boot off it, but they don't "recommend" it).. :)

  410. I'm not a Mac person... by alexhmit01 · · Score: 2

    Look, I earned my spending money through college as an NT Admin. I run a small shop developing web applications on UNIX, but my desktop in W2K. My fiancee and I have 4 computers in our apartments, 3 are Windows PCs, 1 is a Mac. I'm not a Mac person, yet I can still respect what they have done right.

    You are correct, WMP has successfully copied iTunes to the point of being similar, but it isn't as clean. Personally, I still use WinAMP on my Windows machines for MP3 playing, as does everybody I know. Then again, we all ran Netscape for a while too.

    I have always used Audio Grabber/WinAMP for rip play. I used to use l3dec/Nero for burning. I haven't really messed with MP3s in a while, but I've never seen anything like iTunes.

    The "playlist" is amazingly useful compared to WinAMP. The computer ships with a bunch of MP3s (which was nice since the computer arrived the day of a trip, and I barely had time to toss Mac:Office on there.

    No question, MS has improved TREMENDOUSLY with each release. Win95 was the key release, but 98 and ME were similar evolutions in UI. 98's browser functionality was a marketing move, but it has resulted in some simplification of our lives. ME's media integration was useful. XP seems to be an attempt to match OS X. We shall see, MS seems to be able to be consistently 90%-95% of MacOS, which keeps them in the dominant position because they can undersell.

    Alex

  411. iPod VS. other mp3 players by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The iPod eats the other players I've owned in features. I've owned 2 Sony "mp3 players" and a Rio player.

    Sony's hardware has been very nice their designs have been really compact while maintaining some usability. However, super small buttons/switches and small hinge doors break. The biggest weakness is Sony's software interface -it is soooooooo crap. It looks like a bad windows 3.1 application. It actually made me cry the first time I tried to use it. Add to that, Sony players aren't even mp3 players (as you spend a long time changing music into some bullshit format) and Sony's razor blades err I mean memory sticks sell for USD$100 for 64 megs it's really an overall weak product. Oh I didn't mention battery costs.......

    Rio's are nice but they aren't using the latest technology. Memory is too pricey and battery life is low. USB is some 30x slower than firewire.

    Storage sold seperately? What if the iPod was only $100 without the harddrive would everyone say wow the iPod isn't lame it kicks ass?

    -brady

  412. About the price.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well... yes it is a bit expensive...

    I'd say about 100$ more than a nomad and has 1 gig less space...

    OK... BUT

    It's really really smaller (at least now you can but it in your pocket) which in consumer electronics makes a difference in price. Also it uyses IEEE1394 which makes sense since at 5 gigs and more, transfering all the data can take a very very long time over USB.

    Overall I'd say the 100$ or so you spend on it makes the product way more usable. And if you look at it from a consumer electronics point of view... it really makes sense!

    Smaller and is easier to use (takes less time).
    That is sufficient to pay the price.

    If you guys don't buy them, I am sure they can sell some in Japan.

  413. Check Those Figures ... by SteveM · · Score: 2

    Apple appeals to a market segment that happily pays $5000 for a niche computer ...

    I have yet to see a $5000 iBook or iMac, which is what Apple sells most, mainly to students. And a quick tour through the Apple online store didn't turn up any $5000 Macs (athough I expect that built to order machines might approach that figure).

    And what does it mean to be a 'niche' computer anyway? Macs seem pretty general purpose to me.

    No Apple gets this one right. As Jobs said, the solution to music stealing is a behavioral not a technical one.

    Steve M

  414. Mini-CD (CD3) players by Erik+Corry · · Score: 1
    Take a look at the new CD-walkmen coming out that play Mini-CDs. You can burn your own, in MP3 format, each mini CD (same size as the old CD singles) holds 3 hours, the cost per Mbyte is much much less than Flash, you can lend the CDs to your friends, and they have big buffers, so they don't skip.

    And they cost about 1/3 of the iPod price.

    There's the Philips eXpanium 401 here, the Compaq PM-1, just announced or the Q-Sonic which is being sold for about $125 by Pearl in Germany.

  415. Realism in portable music by geekboy_x · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it is easy to shit on the iPod because it only has 5 meg, but I was at the press release in Cupertino, and I was ready to dismiss the thing as well. BUT (big letters but) ... I have to admit I am grudgingly changing my "tune" (ha ha ha)

    Reasons? 1: Firewire. Firewire is all that and a bag of chips. We carry portable firewire drives at work and after you go fire, you ain't NEVER going back.

    2: The interface. I have a Nomad. I hate the interface, which ranges from "a chore" to "arrrrrhg" when you have a big load o' songs.

    3: The rechargable battery, standard. 'Nuff said.

    4: APPLE BEING THE ONLY COMPANY TO REALISTICALLY TALK ABOUT MP3. Companies always tell you that their players can hold this much music, or that their player downloads a song in XX seconds, but then in the small print they say all numbers are for songs encoded at 64kHz .... like ANYONE is desperate enough for storage to listen to crap like that. Apple really impressed me by saying that all the numbers (and the baseline encoding rate) is 160kHz. Likewise, I was impressed when they were so forthright about the fact that iTunes can't more files BACK to the base computer, and they did that specifically to keep the RIAA at bay, but you can use the portable hard drive function to trade files all you want. Honesty in hawking a product ... I don't know if the world is ready for that! :)

    Postscript: (no, not THAT kind of postscript) 5 meg really is all the average consumer needs. 1000 songs at 160kHz? Most mopes will be MORE than happy with that. Sure, us freaks want more ... but a COMPANY who wants to MAKE MONEY needs to aim a consumer product at the biggest segment of the market. And, depressingly, we aren't it.

    --
    -- There are two kinds of motorcycles. 1: German. 2: Crap.
  416. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by arson1 · · Score: 1

    Ok, it wasn't "people like you". But there is a substantial portion of the Mac crowd that thinks every anouncement is going to be the greatest thing ever (tm), and they provide the hoop-la, and absurdly high expectations, not Apple.

    All Apple did was hold a press conference for a new product. While you may abhor marketing and advertising, if you think it isn't necessary you're a fool.

    I think the device is innovative in a couple of ways.

    1) it syncs with your desktop
    2) it charges itself while syncing, through the firewire cable, not a power cord (unless you want to use the powercord)
    3) it's incredibly small and light
    4) the price isn't bad, considering you can buy the drive inside it for $399, the same price as the ipod.
    --


    --
    Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things.
  417. You forgot the biggest compromise of all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Having to use MacOS.... :-(

    And there is no line outut. And it can not record.

  418. Re:It's actually a Toshiba PC-Card HD, not a 2.5" by jchristopher · · Score: 2

    If that's true, this was a VERY poor design decision. This could have been a $150 device if they'd used a regular laptop drive.

  419. No "digital rights management" but.... by call+-151 · · Score: 2
    This bit from a news.com article makes it sound like there are some built-in barriers to prevent using the iPod (with iTunes) to copy music to other machines, here it is:
    The device does not use a digital-rights management scheme.

    When it auto-syncs to iTunes, the iPod can only connect to one copy of the software on one Mac. But a manual mode allows the device to share songs between any number of Macs.

    However, Jobs said Apple does not condone stealing music. In fact, he said, the company spent $50,000 on CDs to go along with review copies of the unit so that Apple would not be promoting piracy.

    The iPod does come wrapped in plastic with a warning in English, French, German and Japanese that states, "Don't steal music."

    "Piracy is not a technological issue. It's a behavior issue," Jobs said, adding that all the encryption schemes that have been developed can also be broken.

    He added that Apple tried to go out of its way to show its concern for artists' copyrights, despite the relatively open nature of its hardware.

    "We own a lot of intellectual property ourselves. We're one of the few companies in the industry that does," he said.

    The "piracy is a behavior problem" comment is spot-on, to my mind, but unfortunately is pretty much a minority opinion from the corporate side.
    --
    It's psychosomatic. You need a lobotomy. I'll get a saw.
  420. Firmware upgradeable? by onetrueking · · Score: 1

    Is this device firmware upgradeable?

    1. Re:Firmware upgradeable? by sjonke · · Score: 1

      Yes, it has upgradable firmware. Just look at the specs. "Upgradable firmware enables support for future audio formats"

      --
      --- What?
  421. Re:Good lord, you're fucking stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No. I'm only saying that if you want to criticize, you'd have a better chance of being taken seriously if you didn't resort to name calling. Who cares if lots of Slashdotters are rude? It doesn't mean you have to be.

  422. You forgot the biggest advantage of all by TheInternet · · Score: 2

    Having to use MacOS.... :-(

    Errr, how about getting to use Mac OS X with it?

    - Scott

    --
    Scott Stevenson
    Tree House Ideas
  423. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well said.

    iPod is a 'one more thing' device that you add to the system on your shopping cart as you go to the checkout in PCWorld/CompUSA, during that warm, fuzzy "I'm spending money, so what's another $400" moment.

  424. Er, iTunes supports the Rio... by hearingaid · · Score: 2
    Having it all go through iTunes is also a good UI choice (a no brainer for Apple of corse), you don't need to deal with another little lame MP3 manager (my most despised part of my Rio).

    I sync my Rio 500 using iTunes...

    Actually, that brings up my sole complaint regarding this device. It requires iTunes 2, which AFAIK only runs on OS X. Those of us with OS 9 systems would like to play with Firewire toys as well...

    --

    my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

    1. Re:Er, iTunes supports the Rio... by stripes · · Score: 2
      I sync my Rio 500 using iTunes...

      I have the older Rio. I think it was the first revision of thir first model. It sync's only with their software, and it needs a par port which I don't have on my Mac anyway.

      Actually, that brings up my sole complaint regarding this device. It requires iTunes 2, which AFAIK only runs on OS X.

      The iTunes2 FAQ says:

      iTunes 2 works with all Apple systems that have built-in USB ports. iTunes 2 for Mac OS 9 requires Mac OS 9.0.4 or later; CD burning in Mac OS 9 requires Mac OS 9.1. Mac OS 9.2.1 is highly recommended. iTunes 2 for Mac OS X is available for systems running Mac OS X version 10.1.

      So it looks like it will work under OS9. See page 5 of the iTunes2 FAQ.

      P.S. the VA Apple store claims they will have an iPod this weekend for demoing (none for sale for ~4 weeks though).

      P.P.S. you can get OS9.2 for free, ask for the OSX upgrade CD at your retailer (free), it comes with a full OS9.2 as well as the upgrade to OSX.

    2. Re:Er, iTunes supports the Rio... by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      I'm already running 9.2.1. OS X however is not free, and needs more than 64MB. OK, I'm planning on buying new memory. Grad student budgets: food is first. :)

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

    3. Re:Er, iTunes supports the Rio... by stripes · · Score: 2
      OS X however is not free,

      No, I was saying the upgrade from X to X.1 is free. It is free even if you don't have OSX. Once you get it you can toss the X.1 disk, and just use the OS9.2 disk. That is, if you don't have 9.2, and want it.

      and needs more than 64MB. OK, I'm planning on buying new memory.

      It's hard not too. Memory is dirt cheap these days. No, it is cheaper then good topsoil :-)

      Grad student budgets: food is first. :)

      I thought beer was first, then books, then ramen :-)

      Oh, grad student. Sorry, that was the undergrad budget....

  425. Re:Nomad Jukebox vs. iPod by marusin · · Score: 1

    You also forgot...
    3 hours battery life vs. 10 hours battery life..

  426. Re:each iPod has unique ID - possible hook for SDM by Cinematique · · Score: 1

    http://www.apple.com/ipod/pdf/iPod_FAQ-a.pdf

    and they don't.

  427. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Refrag · · Score: 1

    Isn't USB 12kbps? My cable modem is much faster than that!

    --
    I have a website. It's about Macs.
  428. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Refrag · · Score: 2

    It's called FireWire.

    --
    I have a website. It's about Macs.
  429. iPod runs Pixo/PortalPlayer on Oxford911 ARM-chip by phr0gger · · Score: 1

    That the CPU is an ARM 7 (part of the Oxford Firewire-IDE bridge) is strongly hinted at by this article http://www.macobserver.com/article/2001/08/31.2.sh tml which I read about on Macintouch http://www.macintouch.com/ipod.html where I also found this most interesting remark: "Oh yeah, two things I made note of on the iPod. Under the "About iPod" section, I noted copyright messages from Portal Player, and Pixo." Looks like the iPod uses the Pixo toolbox which supplies Memory Management, Low-level graphics (lines, boxes, bitmaps, text), Unicode(!needed for Japanese!), Collection classes, Resource database, and Standard libraries. Or even more of the Pixo OS platform. The ARM kernel Apple might have recycled from the Newton OS. Check out Pixo's web site http://www.pixo.com/products/products001.htm . A visit ot http://www.portalplayer.com is also very enlightening, just look what they have to offer: o ARM-based system-on-chip solution supporting real-time encoding and decoding of digital media, and direct support for all major storage media formats. o Firmware stack including Real Time Operating System (RTOS), decoders and encoders, encryption and decryption algorithms, file management, navigation and control, and post processing effects. o A network of technology partnerships and business alliances supporting both secure and open digital audio formats, content services and related capabilities. o PC jukebox application offers a simple, customizable user interface for content management on the PC and attached devices. (Unfortunately they also offer Windows Media Rights Management. I hope Apple didn't license that!) Now there is potential. But it makes me wonder even more why a microphone is missing when encoding is already supported. Maybe it will in the "new and improved version" that Apple like to ship a few months later when the initial sales slow down (latest example: iBook bus and CPU speed bump) Oxford's web site http://www.oxsemi.com/press/dec00/index.html is not so informative: "With spare MIPS and over 50% of the flash memory free for user encoding, the product differentiation the device offers will be invaluable in creating competitive advantage" Does anybody know somebody at Pixo or PortalPlayer to give us some more meat? And BTW, copying MP3 onto the iPod in firewire mode (which a PC can do) does not make them playable. That would need a real hack. P.S. It has just been reported that the iPod contains a game (http://www.macobserver.com/article/2001/10/26.12. shtml)

  430. ...and these aren't lame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and this isn't "lame"? And this isn't "lame"? And THESE aren't "lame"?

    What's truly lame is slagging off an evolutionary (not "revolutionary") product and instead drooling over clunky set-top landfill fodder.

    iPod is Apple testing the waters. There's more to come. I can't afford it, but hey, I can't don't know where my next meal is coming from, either.

  431. Re:LAME? WTF?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You just got a bullseye. CmdrTaco is clearly as gay as michael and timothy. They're all just buttfucking each other while serving ads to stupid Slashdotters.

    You're all so fucking pathetic.