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Apple iPod Update Increases Battery Life

hhoor writes "Apple has released iPod Software 1.2.6. According to Apple, 'After updating the iPod, customers can expect at least 10 days of standby battery life on a full charge.' So maybe now it's really time to buy one."

26 of 110 comments (clear)

  1. FP! by gqgreg · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sounds good to me! I wish there was some feedback here before I update my iPod, to see if Apple messes something up on my system.

    --
    Powerbook G4/1.5GHz 12", Toshiba Satellite 1135-S1554
  2. Holy Crap by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 4, Insightful

    5.2 MB! As if that's not crazy, there's a Gzip file that expands to 51 MB inside that. Most of it seems to be absorbed in different languages. That's 8-12 songs worth of space, though.

    Also, couldn't this have been available via Software Update? I don't spend much time at the iPod homepage. I suppose not everyone needs it, but couldn't there be some way of telling if you ever had an iPod connected? Wishful thinking, maybe.

    --
    That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    1. Re:Holy Crap by bats · · Score: 3, Informative

      All the previous iPod updates have come through Software Update. I'm guessing it won't appear for a couple hours/days, like most every other update. They appear on the website for the die-hards and trickle into Software Update for the rest of the world too busy to check the iPod homepage everyday.

    2. Re:Holy Crap by clarkcox3 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Most of that 51 MB is the iPod Software Updater application itself (i.e. it goes on your Mac's HD, and not on the iPod). Also, remember that the iPod's firmware is itself 32 MB.

      --
      There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
  3. Odd statement hhoor by biglig2 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Was an occasional bug in the battery monitor a deal breaker keeping you from an ipod? You must be very demanding in other aspects of your life. ;-)

    Downloaded, about to take the plunge. The Changelog is minimialist;
    Changes since 1.2:

    Version 1.2.6 has improved battery management, providing the following updates:

    * Increased playback time on scroll-wheel iPods
    * Longer stand-by time for all iPods

    Looks like it is a definite must for owners of the lower capacity pods.

    I see in other places that it does not implement the cursed EEC mandated volume lowering, so don;t let that hold you back.

    --
    ~~~~~ BigLig2? You mean there's another one of me?
    1. Re:Odd statement hhoor by galaxy300 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Newer iPods use touchpads instead of mechanical wheels.

  4. Works great for me by Fulkkari · · Score: 5, Informative
    I wish there was some feedback here before I update my iPod, to see if Apple messes something up on my system.

    I updated my 10 GB Mac iPod, and the updating process went smoothly. I have had no problems with the update. So go ahead and update. You should however always make backups if you want to be sure.

    --
    I demand the Cone of Silence!
  5. Re:Out of stock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I work for compusa and the 5gb ipod is DO1 status in our database, meaning it was discontinued... You wont be seeing it any time soon... 10gb ipod is the new 5gb..

  6. Re:hmmm...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    It was made for seti@home, and is working constantly on that, and breaking the X-Box key when the seti@home code needs to "phone home" to get a longer set of jobs.

    That's why iTunes has that "Connect to Internet when needed" option. It's so that when you sync your iPod the iPod can send its latest batch of results to seti@home and download new work to do.

  7. Clock and firmware by elliotj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    After updating my firmware the last time (from 1.1 to 1.2) I noticed a significant reduction in standby time. I did some research and found that the inclusion of a clock was the culprit: the iPod was never designed to keep time using a small power trickle in the same way that say, a digital watch, or your PC, is able to keep time without requiring a massive battery. The solution was to revert to v. 1.1 of the firmware and I got my standby life back.

    Does anyone know if the new firmware removes the clock feature? Personally I have no real desire to upgrade: I don't need any more functions from the device - I only need it to play tunes and that's it.

    1. Re:Clock and firmware by JArneaud · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I just updated my 5GB to 1.2.6 and the only strange thing that I noticed was that the clock was frozen at 12:00:00 1Jan 2002. If you manually adjust the date and time it starts running normally. I haven't found a way to turn it off again, short of running an iPod restore.

      Could this be a power-saving feature? Disabling the clock until the user actually decides to start using it? (I know I never do, so it wouldn't be a big loss and the extra run time would be great)

    2. Re:Clock and firmware by dhovis · · Score: 4, Informative
      I did some research and found that the inclusion of a clock was the culprit

      No, you and everyone else blamed the clock, as it was the only apparant change to the iPod firmware that seemed like it might have introduced a drain on the battery.

      However, if this update works, it blows that theory out of the water. The knowledgebase article for this says that the problem was that the iPod was incorrectly interpreting the battery charge. It seems that the 1.2 firmware was not allowing the iPod to use all of the battery capacity, and was shutting down when there was still plenty of life left. There is no way anyone outside of Apple could have figured this out, so the clock got blamed.

      --

      --
      The internet is the greatest source of biased information in the history of mankind.

    3. Re:Clock and firmware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You don't need any more functions? Really? Want any bugs fixed?

      How about creating and editing playlists or at least minimally being able to queue up the next N song(s)? Ever try to be a dj for some friends or pass your pod around the car and let others pick tracks? I find myself watching the remaining time constantly and having to get the timing just right when switching tracks so as not to cut the current track short or allow the logical next track in the list to start playing before you click to play your chosen track.

      How about that delay between tracks? Surely it's possible to make an album played on the pod sound just like the original album...

      Or what about showing the "All Songs" list for an Artist in alphabetical order (it could be an option, but I consider the current behavior a bug). I have 230 Zappa tracks on my pod right now and finding a particular one in the list is quite difficult. Note that I need to do this to listen to Zappa (or King Crimson, etc) on random, usually by album. Even worse is trying to find a song in the "All Songs" list for a Genre.

      Surely there are many improvements in the software that could/should be made.

      Anyone want ogg support?

  8. My pet iPod-peeves: by Erik+K.+Veland · · Score: 4, Interesting

    - Occasionally shuts down when shoving the remote-control into the jack. I have to smoothly press it it.
    - Said remote-controls connection is finnicky. I have to press it into place a bit too often if I have it in my pocket.
    - The clock is some archaic system with letters instead of the standard 24-hour clock used in most parts of the world.

    None of these are deal-breakers though. I just love my 20 GB iPod. Bring on AAC already Apple!

    --
    "I tend to think of OS X as Linux with QA and Taste", James Gosling, creator of Java
  9. What happened to the missing versions by MrMickS · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I keep my iPod up to date but it's running 1.2.1 what happened to the missing versions? I know that there was a 1.2.2 to stop deafening the French but what about the others?

    --
    You may think me a tired, old, cynic. I'd have to disagree about the tired bit.
    1. Re:What happened to the missing versions by tuxedobob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My guess would be that they were internal releases which were not made public. It happens sometimes.

  10. Aha! by tamen · · Score: 3, Funny

    So this is were they put the lost battery life from the iBooks!

  11. Re:hmmm...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    aaargh will you people stop spreading the urban myth of a dual processor iPod.

    The 'second processor' is not a second processor. in fact it's not a processor at all, it's simply a logic array that happens to be made by the same manufacturer as the real CPU.

    repeat after me

    "apple do not sell ipods to make clusters from"

  12. Now just give us other formats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    PLEASE- OGG, AAC (mpeg-2 & mpeg-4), mp3pro and MPC support.

    iTunes LAME plug-in (and those presets), Accerator (for mp4/aac experimenting) and Audion (mp3pro for spoken word/audio books) all help, but iPods restrictions keep me from fully taking the sound to the next level.

    Please Apple live up to the openness you're stating with OS X. Have your music device be as agnostic with sound as your OS is with fonts, etc.

  13. iPod on Linux by dakkar · · Score: 4, Informative

    I use an iBook with OS X, and a Linux machine.

    Recently I acquired a iee1394 PCI card, and used the conversion tool from iPod-on-Linux to transform it into a FAT32 iPod, and gtkpod to manage songs on it.

    The conversion tool installed firmware 1.2.1, but this last iPod upgrade wanted to reformat my iPod. So now I had a 1.2.6 iPod, but HFS+ instead of FAT32.

    Never to lose courage, I copied the 'Firmware' file from inside the upgrader's directory on the Mac to the PC, over the 1.2.1 firmware used in the conversion tool. Run the conversion tool again, and now I have a 1.2.6 FAT32 iPod, and I'm filling it up again using gtkpod.

    --
    dakkar - mobilis in mobile
  14. Re:Why does the iPod have no off switch? by idsofmarch · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hold down the Play button.

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  15. Re:Why does the iPod have no off switch? by Del+Vach · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I can't speak to standby time, but I believe it does a fairly good job of power management. When it's running, the drive only spins up as often as it needs to refresh the 32 Meg cache. And when you pause it, it powers itself off after... three minutes? So at that point it's only expending however much energy is necessary to:
    • Power the LCD
    • Save the RAM state
    • Maintain the clock
    I tend to skip lots of songs, so I get less playtime because I'm forcing the HD to keep spinning up. But I also have a first version 5Gig and my battery life is barely over an hour at this point. Figures I got a Dr. Bott auto charger last week! When I first got it, I was able to get a solid 10+ hours. I'll have to see how much this update improves things.
  16. yeah... by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is Slashdot - ending a sentence with a preposition is something up with which we will not put.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  17. Buyer Beware by DaracMarjal · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yeah I'll probably get modded down for this, and no-one will see it, but here is a lone voice of dissent warning you about the perils of buying an iPod and about just how stupid they can be at Apple Customer Support.

    1. Re:Buyer Beware by Mononoke · · Score: 3, Informative
      lone voice of dissent warning you about the perils of buying an iPod and about just how stupid they can be at Apple Customer Support.
      You're right. A lone voice. One anectodal episode of bad service and a bad day. It wasn't even the US version of Apple Support.

      Every piece of hardware (computer, automobile, etc.) ever created has stories like this attached to it.

      --
      NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
  18. Actually... by vought · · Score: 4, Informative

    I wrote some of the documentation for the PP5002C and PP5003 chips used in the iPod when I worked for Portal Player last year.

    In fact, the chip IS a dual ARM7 core with supporting I/O logic. So it is you, in fact, who is mistaken.