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iPod's Two-Year Anniversary

the terminal of Geoff Goodfellow writes "Two years ago this month, Apple Computer released a small, sleek-looking device it called the iPod. This Sunday's New York Times Magazine has a long article on it: The Guts of a New Machine."

21 of 471 comments (clear)

  1. Free registration sucks ;) by Daikiki · · Score: 5, Informative
    --
    I want the fire back.
  2. Two-Year Anniversary by smiley2billion · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hey, it's also the Two-Year Anniversary of when I started paying for my iPod, which continues to this day.

  3. Re:And to celebrate ... by aceh0 · · Score: 5, Informative

    apple recently dropped the price to 100$ for battery replacement. there are 3rd party replacments that are as cheap as 50$ also.

  4. Initial reaction wasn't favorable by kajoob · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I know everybody is going to come on here and praise the ipod, but if I recall correctly, most slashdotters (even the mac zealots) bashed the ipod when it was launched. Slashdotters not infalliable? That's unpossible! ;-)

    --
    Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum viditur
    1. Re:Initial reaction wasn't favorable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      The original poster was "CmdrTaco," an editor here and also a well-known troll.

    2. Re:Initial reaction wasn't favorable by Skeezix · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Slashdotters are some of the most negative people on the planet. That's because nearly everyone on /. thinks he is a generalized critic with some profound insight that others need to hear.

    3. Re:Initial reaction wasn't favorable by nek · · Score: 5, Informative

      You are all very misinformed: As long as you don't set the iPod to "automatically update playlists" (just manually manage songs), you can use it with as many computers as you like. I have plugged my 2nd generation 20GB iPod into at least 25 different Macs and dumped music onto it.
      The story about the "disabled ipod" was a FIRST GENERATION iPod never meant to connect to a Windows machine. Read the story.
      There are many ways to get the music back off the iPod - search versiontracker.com for "PodWorks" for example.
      As far as it being fragile - I chuck mine into backpacks and luggage and not really worry about it. I bought a TAP from CompUSA: $60 full replacement warranty for 2 years... almost time to 'break' my iPod and get a new one for SIXTY bucks.

  5. Re:And to celebrate ... by computerme · · Score: 5, Informative

    Which i am sure you have been heard by now, is filled with bull...

    Seems like the makers of this "film" have some secrets of their own:
    Dumb kids.

    Young, stupid and camera owning...a dangerous combination...

  6. Re:Battery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There certainly is a customer service problem. They should tell their idiot customer service employee(s) that. I know, all the 1337 geeks on /. know how to search for a replacement at DigiKey, but when someone calls the company up and asks about a battery replacement and their customer service department tells them, "the iPod is worthless, it would be $250+ to fix it, throw it out and buy a new one," there is a major problem with that company's customer service.

  7. Yes, I remember it well... by Mwongozi · · Score: 5, Funny

    "No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame." - CmdrTaco

  8. Re:And to celebrate ... by ratell · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's a website with a nice counter to the dirty little secret. Not only has his ipod (and mine) lasted longer, but he has links to Apple's $99 replacement and 3rd party $49 replacement batteries.

  9. Re:iPod durability by Fulkkari · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When iPod harddrive spins up, it's usually in the end of the song. That means that the risk of it spinning up in the middle of a song with you jumping around like crazy is pretty small.

    My iPod has fell a couple of times to the floor while playing, and nothing happened. I heard from my cousin that some Apple salesmen even threw an iPod against a wall... or was it floor to demonstrate it. But if you're unlucky with the harddrive spinning at that time, it's propably not going to take that. Anyways, don't try this at home!

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    I demand the Cone of Silence!
  10. Re:iPod durability by O · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is a hefty RAM buffer into which data is loaded, and then the disk spins down. This is how the iPod conserves battery life.

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    1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21 -- Mathematics is the Language of Nature.
  11. Umm by mindstrm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Taking the music off it is cake.

    Second - it locks itslef ot one instance of itunes. That's because it's behavior is to synchronize with itunes, not just to copy mp3s to it.

    Third, it's flat and sleek..which means it fits in my pocket nicely. nothing jutting out.

    As for "a discman is better".... if you are happy with your discman, and some cdrs, power to you... it makes sense for the reasons you say.

    I travel.. and I don't like to carry a binder full of cds around with me, nor do I like swapping them. All those little things like CD wallets and whatnot add up when you are travelling.

    My ipod fits in a shirt pocket, and has far more tunes on it than your discman.

    Your discman will be stolen just as easy as an ipod.

    That said.. it's a luxury item.. nto a must-have. If you use it the way it's intended, and especially if you already use itunes to sort all your music, it's a pleasant device to use.

  12. Re:Marketing geniuses by hitmark · · Score: 5, Interesting

    the one thing apple does diffrent then the rest of the it world is that they sellan experience, not a machine, not a os but an experience. in many ways they are closer to disney or macdonalds then ibm and dell...

    this is why they gloss over stuff like hardware specs when they try to sell something and give the gui and user experience har hard beating to make sure its perfect.

    in many ways apple products are perfect for the general user that wants a pc thats as easy to use as your average tv, stereo or video/dvd recorder...

    sure they stuffed a BSD kernel under the hood but that just means that they can scoop the cream of the open source world, hook the power users that was looking at linux or one of the BSD users and still get people to buy theyre propriatary hardware...

    no, give me linux and a joe blow mainboard.

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  13. Re:Missing Some Points by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 5, Funny

    As a side note, who's bright idea was it to use USB 1.1 for a 20 Gb HD? Oh, Firewire isn't standard on PCs? That's too bad.

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    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  14. kudos to the ipod by mantera · · Score: 5, Insightful



    i guess it's a sign of the immense success of a product when you forget that it was only introduced no more than 2 years ago... once a product feels like it's been there forever and it somewhat doesn't easily occur to you that a while ago it didn't even exist and no body heard of it, that is when it become a part of the popular culture.

    kudos to apple; and also for the fact that 2 years on no one seems to have been able to bring to market a better product.

  15. I agree with Moby by tbmaddux · · Score: 5, Interesting
    From the original article, Moby says:
    "...it's so elegant and logical, it becomes part of your life so quickly that you can't remember what it was like beforehand.''
    Like the subject says, I agree. I've had mine (30 GB) for a year now. My wife got one of the first 5 GB models and is now using a 20 GB model. We have used our iPods on two cross-country drives in the past 18 months... the freedom from the morass of country music that blankets about 75% of the distance between the two coasts is alone worth the iPod's price. When I discovered that play counts on my iPod would be updated to my computer when I synced, I started using only the iPod to listen to music. It connects to my stereo via the line-out on a spare dock. My CDs now just gather dust.

    The iPod competitors so far have lacked the interface and/or small size to be navigable with one hand. It will be interesting to see what Apple comes up with next. Can drive sizes keep going up and be useful? Do we need a 200 GB iPod?

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    Can't you see that everyone is buying station wagons?
  16. Re:2 iPod flaws that deliver me from temptation by Golias · · Score: 5, Insightful
    1) I would utterly hate it if they switched to AA or AAA batteries. The current battery is one of the best things about the iPod.

    2) It's not Apple's fault that you chose to rip your CD's using a compression format that most of the industry (and most users) has chosen to to adopt. Ogg advocates are starting to sound like Betamax owners from around 1990 or so.

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    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  17. Re:I think it's also kind of a gateway drug... by generica1 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That's completely true.... I just got a G5 last weekend after owning my iPod for about 4 months. I convinced my boss to buy it for me (we are an all-mac company and I am the I.T. Manager) and traded him my old PC for it (who he is giving to his father-in-law).

    All in all, the iPod i bought really made me salivate for a computer that matched its elegance, logical design and stable, worry-free performance. Bye bye, Windows-flavoured PC... (I love *NIX but I've never had the time or interest to spend days and days configuring my computer to do even simple tasks like recognize and use all of my hardware, thus I've just casually ran Windows at home for years).

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    JUMP JUMP JUMP JUMP JUMP JUMP JUMP JUMP IRRIGATE
  18. Re:We should celebrate by MrAngryForNoReason · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you read your own quote you would notice that the parent talked about not evolution or revolution, but innovation.

    The whole thing about the iPod isn't that it is a massive leap forward in technology, its that it is so perfectly refined. The design is so pure, they didn't set out to make the most money, or sell the most players, they set out to make the best player. Thats the innovation, making a product as close to perfect for the consumer, not just churning out a mass market money spinner for the company.