New iPod Design Pictures Leak
Brian Hoyt writes "Apple's new iPod design will be announced Monday. A cover picture depicting the new design from Newsweek has been discovered early. MacRumors broke the story - MacRumors and more specifically the cover itself - NewsWeek"
It's not a big stretch from the iPod Mini to the design shown in the picture. I'm pleased with the new design... kind of back to it's roots.
My biggest problem with the previous design is the unapparent secondary button function. When the buttons are arranged around the wheel, the special combinations (Menu & Play/Pause to reset) make a fair sight more sense. Holding Menu for the backlight is especially obscure. I discovered this intuitively on my Original iPod - all of the buttons on the Original had an important Continuous Press function before the first several updates that gave us a new time search for the songs. My friend didn't know about the Menu Backlight - he used the automatic backlight - until I told him with his 30g. He's not stupid by any means, there just wasn't any reason that the second button over would also be a special Backlight control.
That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
Makes me wish I didnt just buy a 40gig iPod in Ginza. Damn damn damn
the site is down, but the article has all the new features http://dogmatic.typepad.com/ http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5457434/site/newsweek/
if it ever comes back up...
it looks nice, cheaper longer battery etc. no 60 gig promised by toshiba though
i'm sure this is going to flood someone badly, but here is a close up http://www.spymac.com/upload/gallery/f_0/user_117/ medium/upload_200466.jpg
The only signifcant drawback to the current material used in the regular iPod is its tendency to pick up scratches/fingerprints on its back.
I was also hoping that the new iPod would have an easy-access compartment for replacing batteries.
Still, looks interesting. May have to break down and get the 20GB model...
The PC Weenies: 11 Years of Online Tech 'Too
Asside from the new exterior, what's changed on the interior? 60GB? Any new features, let the Rumor mill take hold.
I had a gen 3 iPod. I was very pleased with it, but the 10GB I had was somewhat limiting, considering that my music is at a mere 12-14GB in the last 3 years. So I sold mine, which was very scratched, and I'm now waiting for the new 20GB model. What I really like, is the mini's jog dial/key combo. It works REALLY well, I've tried it first-hand and I could really say that it's the only thing I would really want the gen 3 iPod to have.
I always thought that the radial design of the 1G and 2G iPods was superior to the "row of buttons" of the 3G iPod. I thought that the iPod mini was even better with the combining of the wheel and the buttons.
Another notable difference here is the darker buttons. I've yet to decide if that's a good or bad thing, as far as design goes. What do you people think?
samrolken
Hopefully the sale of a new iPod will make the price of the older versions drop considerably. I really want one, but I think they currently are ridiculously overpriced. Especially here in the Old World. Is a 15Gb iPod for 100 euros too much to ask?
For starts you could sync small amounts of information with the iPod, contacts, address and such and plus it could drive bluetooth into more homes because it rides on the back of a more successful product. I already understand it doesn't have the bandwidth to transfer the mp3's fast enough, and its only the small information I would want it to transfer
A better battery might be nice.
Its also nice they havn't added colour or appeared to make it into some video ipod. The market is still young and the waters need testing more, glad to see Apple have kept things simple and as they alreayd are
I'll be buying one as well if what i hope for holds true.
Jonathanjk.com
When the last big rev of the iMac got released (flat screen), Time mag. leaked all the details something like 12 hours before Steve officially intro'd it. Obviously, Jobs had a cow over it -- they stole his thunder!
I wonder if Newsweek just pulled the same stunt by mistake?
Man, I just would not want to be anywhere near Steve Jobs right now...
It looks the same to me. ..tell me what are the differences?
.. only difference seems to be the backlight?
Of course I dont own an ipod. The differences must be subtle. So, any ipod owner
I checked on the apple website
Thanx
They cost $300 in the US.
Work is punishment for failing to procrastinate effectively.
this has been known for years in Japan.
Yeah, gee, I wonder what SCO is paying Slashdot to post so many SCO lawsuit stories?...Oh wait! They're not! Slashdot is about technology and geekery and all things associated with it, including things like Intellectual Property and MP3 players and so on.
If you have some sort of evidence of Slashdot stories being paid placements, please share said information with the rest of us...otherwise, stop speculating in such a way as to call into question the ethics of the editors.
blog |
here.
/
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5457434/site/newsweek
disappointing....
Newsweek cover.
__ Someday, but not this morning, I'll finally learn to use the preview button.
iAm therfore i need an iPod
If you have nothing useful to say post as AC.
The only problem with Apple is that I lust after them.
Now, my 40GB iPod is obsolete! I must have the yellow one.
The reason for that is, slashdot is about technology, the iPod happens to be an example of technology that has become a growing cultural icon.
When the three headlines for a huge publication are "9/11", "Iraq", and "iPod", with the "iPod" leading. It's almost surprising that slashdot doesn't have _more_ articles about it.
Despite the lack of significance (it is, after all, simply a music player), there are many surrounding wider effects that have come from it, and this is where the publicity is deserved.
It is obviously too much effort to for the submitter or the editors to link to the full article text so here it is:
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5457434/site/newsweek/
Actually, Looks like Macteens beat them.
Is it just me, or does that iPod look photoshopped in? At first glance, there is something screwy with it. On closer inspection of the headphone cables, look at the one on the right just before it reaches the ear. A little chunk is taken out, probably from a bad masking job. The earpiece looks like its in at the wrong angle, and the wire is supposed to be shadowed. The thumb holding the iPod is also several pixels past the edge, meaning that either the thumb is cupping the iPod, the iPod is inside of the thumb, or that the iPod was put in.
Egads! What an UGLY male model. My dog would look better, and I don't mean your girlfriend, eithert !!
;
Best of all, you don't even realize your strings are being pulled. You think you're outsmarting Apple and reading something they don't want you to read.
Tell your friends about xenu.net
And they look ghey!
The sensible (and arguably the best) method of putting tracks on it is iTunes, even when music match for the PC was responsible for this, it too did a fine job. iTunes is available for Windows & Mac, linux programmers have also created similar music syncing software.
To address your format concerns, the iPod plays AIFF, WAV, MP3, Audiobooks and AAC. The first three of those are DRM free. Additionally the rights management on AAC is hardly limiting, the rights are static and unable to be changed by a 3rd party over time.
The price argument is negotiable, with 3Million sales, it couldn't be too limiting a price.
I agree with Taco. I just bought my first iPod last week, and I don't really see anything amazing with this one. Battery life? I'm not having any problems with mine. Button design? I LIKE the button design on the current 15 GB iPod (makes pressing buttons through pants pockets easier). The only thing I could've used was an extra 5 GB of space, but I'm having trouble filling 15 GB with music as it is (I'm using the extra space to store DVDs).
:)
I'm not really sure why NewsWeek (or Slashdot) feels that this story needed to be front page. Vindication of the success of the iPod? We already knew about that. Call me when they make a video one.
Apple has made a great product and stuck to it. I really hope that mp3 players are not a fad, because Apple has centered too much of its resources to the Ipod.
My personal opinion, but i think its kind of ugly. But then again its really the technology (large disk capacity) that sells these things anyways, right? So when do they become affordable (about 50% of their current base price)?
I was crazy back when being crazy really meant something. (Charles Manson)
Sure, I can't get everything on to a single card... yet... but the cards are 4Gb+ these days and batteries last much longer than players with moving parts.
Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
It's because of the small i at the beginning.
Iran & Iraq should change their country names in iRan & iRaq to get more leading headlines.
1% APY, No fees, Online Bank https://captl1.co/2uIErYq Don't let your $$$ sit in a no-interest acct.
...use Privoxy with referrer-spoofing. Any link I click to www.domain.com/foo/bar.html, has a referrer of "www.domain.com", no matter where I came from. Works with every site I know of. I consider it the same way as pop-ups. It was a privilidge, you abused it, I revoked it. No referrers for anyone.
Kjella
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
i'd like to see bush on the cover holding up a little white map of iraq with earplugs in his ears...
I am so confused as to what you are talking about. Are you saying the story isn't true? Are you implying that someone hacked into Newsweek's site and posted 6 fake pages with pictures about the new iPod? Jackass.
The sensible (and arguably the best) method of putting tracks on it is iTunes
In this age of ubiquitous USB storage, I would disagree. The sensible, simplest method is "Copy, paste to Ipod". Have it automount just like USB storage.
I agree with your first two arguments.
I got myself an iRiver H140 this week.
It addresses your two arguments:
- Normal USB harddisk that has actual MP3 files on it so you can easily hack up your own tools under any OS. You can also copy the tracks off it.
- mp3, ogg, wma, asf support
My main gripe is that it's interface just isn't very good. I can't stand the idea of someone putting up a millions-of-dollars production line to create excellent hardware and then put ill thought out software on it.
If they'd hire me I'd make it two times better at the very least.
Biggest problem: The shuffle option always shuffles in the same way. What idiot thought of that gem?
IMHO 5000+ songs are just begging for a good shuffle!
That and their marketing which sucks compared to Apple. If they get their act together on that as well as on the software front they could really start competing.
And competition is good...
I'm certainly curious about what this means to the market for iPod accessories. When the 3G came out third-party manufacturers immediately dropped support for 1G and 2G iPods in most cases. Apple as well decided to more or less drop support of the older models up to and including the lack of firmware updates to provide many of the same features as present in the new models (I am told that it would be possible to add such things as on the go playlists and such, but Apple merely chooses not to). As the owner of a 2G I was, of course, upset by the idea that my iPod no longer seemed to exist.
While this design seems to be much more in line with the non-3G what with the return to the wheel as opposed to the independent buttons I'm curious as to where the compatibility will lie. Will earlier models suddenly be supported once again (probably unlikely, the wheel looks to be sized differently and the cutouts for the various ports are different, it might work as a kludge at best)? Will 3G-style products suddenly drop out of sight just like what happened when the design was last changed significantly?
There are some valid questions here that I don't think Apple or many others are bothering to consider. Yes there are advantages to making improved designs, but Apple doesn't seem to be paying any attention to the benefits of a consistent design with only functional improvements.
They don't like to be repeatedly fully discharged. Fully discharging them and recharging them is the quickest way to wear them out. To get the longest use out of them recharge after every use, discharged or not.
Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
Burn!
Firstly, I'm not happy with something that doesn't give you a sensible method of putting tracks on it, cross platform.
:-)
Well, you can put it on from iTunes on Windows. But not from Linux (AFAIK), if that's what you mean.
Secondly, I want somthing that plays a format that other people don't control the rights to.
Perhaps I'm missing something, but it sounds like you're referring to protected AAC. I can put regular AAC (MPEG-4 Audio) and MP3 on it, at least. Perhaps you're referring to FLAC or Ogg Vorbis or something. It's not like protected WMA is open or anything.
Thirdly, they're just too damn expensive.
Ummmm....I got nothin'.
AAC is also DRM-free when you rip your own CDs (or convert from another file, etc). Only iTMS-files have DRM.
If you read one of the other threads, the photos were actually found by someone checking msnbc urls until they came across the photos. There was a rumor that there would be a newsweek article, so some folks started scouring the site.
Standard Apple fan behavior. We tend to go nuts over any minor change (and most changes to Apple products *are* very minor over the life of a particular model). And why not? Why mess with perfection? By definition, any change (minor or not), is an improvement on perfection... logically impossible, but always big news.
How appropriate. You fight like a cow.
Only if you enjoy editing your playlists with a text editor or anally arranging your directory structure prior to copying. Most people seem to prefer to organize their music in iTunes and have that carry over to the iPod. True, it's less 1337, but most people don't care about their Geek Purity Test score.
You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
-- Colonel Adolphus Busch
I know its off topic, but damn... Steve's got some sweet glasses. I wonder where a guy gets a pair like that. Those are. by far. the coolest glasses I've seen. /four-eyes since six years old
Yes, and I think Apple have lost sales to all the other unemployed, Linux using, Ogg Vorbis fans. That's 14 sales lost right there! ;-)
A lot of people will like the fact that it 100 dollars less. Some will like the 50% improvement in battery life. Others will dig the fact that you can have multiple on the go playlists. A couple will like the menu redesign. And a handful will like that you can speed up or slow down audio books, with no pitch distortion.
Be nice if I didn't have to transcode, I'm lazy like that :)
With all the new colors and styles that the iPod is coming out in, I think that the developers have missed one important design: a black (or dark) theme. Is it just me who thinks that a black iPod would just look sweet?
Well, you can put it on from iTunes on Windows. But not from Linux (AFAIK), if that's what you mean.
I thought the iPod was usable as a standard mass
storage device?
Is that untrue?
And yes, I'm aware that songs purchased through Apple's music store do need to be transferred through iTunes, but you should be able to transfer unprotected MP3's by just copying them over.
Stop the world; I need to get off.
Copy and paste using a file broswer is what you do on the cleap and nasty MP3 players.
One of the TV programs about gadgets did a test of 4 MP3 players this week. They had a newly ripped album on a PC, and they timed how long it took to plug the player in, get the tracks onto the MP3 player, disconnect, and play track 11. iPod was 50 secs. The nearest competitor was 1:50, the longest was 2:35. QED.
In the scope of all things, is it of any real importance that Apple has yet again changed the buttons on the iPod? I own several Macs and an iPod 3G and I couldn't care less.
What does that say about our society when a fairly simple re-design of a product garners such attention? Is it really important? Does it make your life better somehow?
Just get over yourselves.
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - BF
This is basically a modernized walkman without removeable media, right? Why all the hoopla about them removing some buttons from it?
Were did all this snow come from?
"It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." - Albert Einstein
I just bought an Archos AV140 40G, MP3 player/recorder, video capture, voice recorder, USB (2.0) storage device. It is bulkier than an IPOD, being build around a standard laptop drive. BUT: It cost a little under $300 US, and requires no special software to run under any OS that supports USB storage. It also has more features than an IPOD.
It is not perfect. A bigger screen would be nice, a scroll wheel would help looking through big directories (folders to Winheads), video capture only does 304x224 @30 f/s max. Of course for a few more $$ Archos has the ultimate cool gadet the AV480! See it at archos.com.
Steve needs to get a new iBlade for his iRazor.
hmm, actually it just sounds like a 'top 40' radio station play list... nevermind, probably done intentionally.
Does anyone know if the problem that plauged the initial release of the Mini have been fixed - that is, the bad connector which led to noise after a few weeks of use. I tiny four gig player is just the right size for me, but I refuse to buy one until all the kinks have been worked out.
Download my free songs!
12 hour playtime (so it says above)! Thats a huge improvement in itself.
It's not 100 dollars less. They're dropping the 15 gig model, making the entry level cost still $300.
don't get me wrong- I think the iPod is great. That having been said, this is just a minor revision to the existing product. Does that really warrent steve jobs being on the cover of newsweek?
--- Don't ever trust a woman until she's dead- B.B. King
The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
If you were talking about the iTunes music store, you might have a point. As it is your post doesn't make any sense.
The iPod does NOT require DRM, I don't know where you got that idea. You can play your music in multiple formats, the most widely used being MP3. It also plays DRMed music from the music store, if you choose to use that.
If you want to get the music off it again, there are several apple scripts floating around to do it. The files are only hidden after all.
The Xserve was going to be called the iRack until George started talking smack about Iraq.
I have a website. It's about Macs.
Does it still use the dock?
Does is still use the same remote connector?
Will there be a "line in" dock?
Is the screen size the same?
Will the 3g iPod be upgradeable to some of the new features?
If the powersavings is mostly done in software, will 3g iPods get more life with a firmware upgrade?
The IPod uses a special directory structure and naming convention that prohibits direct copying. You certainly can use the ipod as a portable hard drive, but don't expect the MP3 songs you copied to the root of the unit to show up in the list of songs available for playing. -Michael
If one is so inclined, (s)he can take the 1337 path as well.
/Volumes/*******'s iPod/iPod_control/Music/
Mount the iPod as a firewire drive and ls, cp, mv., using one's favorite shell. All the music files are in
on a 3g 20GB iPod. I think it was arranged differently on a first gen. iPod.
Mostly because the iPod didn't have a whole lotta butotns in the FIRST place. How many devices do you have with buttons EVERYWHERE? (Digital Cameras come to mind...with cellphones a close second.)
The fact the ipod's hitting it's 4th (5th if you count the mini) generation without a major overhaul of the ui shows how well designed it was in the first place.
"Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus."
Macobserver has a <a href="http://www.macobserver.com/article/2004/07/<nobr>1<wbr></wbr></nobr> 8.1.shtml"> few technical specs</a> of the new model. Apple claim that batterly life is improved by 50%, but I will believe that when I see it. The 20Gb model has been moved to the $299 price point, and the 40Gb model has been moved to the $399 price point, with the 15Gb model being phased out. My guess is that we will see a 60Gb model at the $499 price point when Apple is able to source a good number of the 60Gb 1.8" drives from Toshiba, but that's just a guess in my part.
Have you actually *tried* dropping them? iBooks look like they would break if you dropped them one inch, but mine never fussed a single time when I dropped it from my desk (about 5 feet) or my bed (about 3 feet).
I disagree, to update an iPod, you plug it in, do nothing and unplug it.
No need to find a music file, drag and drop it into a folder on a mounted drive. With iTunes you can go from doing nothing and have it automatically update all your new songs, then to making automatic playlists which will search through your music to fit categories and update those, to finally totally custom playlists, which you can then additionally have shuffle.
After all those much simplier methods, dragging and dropping is ancient and clumbsy.
Slight correction... AAC does *not* require DRM. You can encode AAC files without DRM and play these files on the iPod or any other device that plays AAC. (With iTunes, such files are .m4a where a file with DRM is .m4p)
If you purchase music from iTMS it will be AAC with the DRM wrapper. In this case the DRM restrictions apply but, as you say, the iTMS DRM is very reasonable as to what you can do with the files you buy.
Digital cameras have buttons everywhere because you have so many parameters to control. Eg: Aperture Exposure Time Metering type autofocus type autofocus zone flash exposure setting photo viewing and navigation white balance etc etc etc So thanks for posting without thinking. Apples and oranges...
Heh. Figures.
At least the one I bought yesterday was a great deal. I've had a 20Gig 3G pod since xmas, and the wife's been wanting one ever since she made the switch to iTunes on her two home Winboxes. So yesterday at Futureshop I saw a clearance on a demo openbox 15Gig iPod and had a look, it was covered in fingerprints and had a few small scratches, but it was $40 off list, so I had the guy show it to her. As they were going through the box, he noticed the headphones and the software were missing... so he slips the sleeve with the tag off that box straight onto a new one, and sells her a brand new one at the same price.
Cool.
And now you insensitive clods are making me feel bad for not waiting for the 4G model goddammit!
(Still a good deal, and she loves it)
Whoa! Hold on. I'm unemployed.
I bought an iPod so I could hack it, as did those other 13 taht I'm working with.
So no lost sales.
Might be a software bug. Many (many) years ago I was a corporate coder working on, of all things, the drug testing 'randomizer' program that one of the other coder wanna'bes wrote. Wrote it up in Foxpro because that was the language he knew. Anyways, I noticed a particularly alarming long term trend that in a company of +/- 300 the guys that got picked most of the time were the same set of guys (about 100).
... it returns a number between 0 and 1 which then gets multiplied by 300 (the number of employees). If the granularity of your random number is only .01, .02, .03, ... .99 then there are only 100 possible choices, so the other 200 employees never got picked (of course when a person left the company it shifted the stack by one, so the others did get tested but (well you can see where I'm going with that.)
Checked the code and the guy that wrote it set his precision to two digits on his variables, meaning his random number generator only returned two significant digits. This is all well and good until you realize that the random number generator doesn't return a number between 1 and 300 (the number of employees)
Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
And this is why I don't own one. A friend of mine has one and after I saw all the hoops we had to jump through to get music (mp3s) off the hard drive into the playlist I decided against getting one.
Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
Yeah, I know, don't Feed the troll:
I had a great Sony Walkman in highschool.
Several in fact...
It was a marvel of minaturized tech: when not loaded with a cassette it slid shut to a size smaller than a cassette! It was tiny and light, sounded great.
It was also the most fragile piece of consumer tech I have ever owned.
Which is why I had more than one... as it was constantly being replaced under warrany... mostly for drops less than 2 feet.
And it cost a fair bit more than the second iPod i bought yesterday for my household. The first of which has taken a few spills and continues to function *JUST FINE* thank you.
I suppose if you're referring to the low end of the Sony Walkman line intended to compete with the knockoffs, then yes... all that bulk and plastic and their very disposeable nature would lead one to consider hurling them at the pavement to test durability.
Better... my ass.
I've been thinking about picking an ipod up for a while now but have been kept from doing so by all the negative press about the dead battery issue and the high replacement costs. Has Apple done anything about that yet and how much is it to replace the battery nowadays?
Looking closely at the picture and the size of the lenses, I'll bet that Steve has a fake pair of those just for photos. There appears to be little or no refraction at the edges and, even with 1.7 super high index of refraction material, you would see something.
sig,
(-6.5, -8.25)
the LCD iMac leak was the day before MacWorld and Steve was going to pull the "one more thing" line and show everyone with the radical new design.
there is no press conference or anything scheduled for this iPod. the Newsweek thing was THE official first notification. and i guess Apple will follow with emails and press releases. ThinkSecret.com was the first site to pick up on the new iPod with some solid information, and one thing they kept saying was that Apple would not be using a press event to show it off, just some unusual (for them) way to publically get the word out to the masses.
ALSO there are rumors from the same sources that a revision to the iPod mini is coming in August. i guess it is known the manufacturer of the mini's drive has made a 6 gig drive (or has one one the way very very soon now?).
I was a huge Sony fanboy since the cassette walkman, and I got one of the Mini Disc players, and while the hardware is really ergonomic/sturdy, the software they make you use to write to mini disc is so bad that I've abandoned it and any hope of using another Sony product that involves using any of their software or formats.
"from the bricks to the booth...I predict the future like Cleo the psychic..."
It's because you don't own one. Really.
:) 5G version has me as one of the first 100,000 purchasers. Within a week I simply told my brother he HAS to have one (he does now :).
:) makes it very functional and intuitive to use without looking at it (while driving).
My serial number on my original (and only
I have specifically NOT purchased a newer version due to the button layout. Having the buttons on the outer edge of the scroll wheel (original version
Now that the buttons are back where they belong I'm interested in buying a larger version...
http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8 &threadm=6019bc74.0406262005.21439b64%40posting.go ogle.com&rnum=2&prev=/groups%3Fq%3Dfreeipods.com%2 6hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26ie%3DUTF-8%26selm%3D6019bc74.04 06262005.21439b64%2540posting.google.com%26rnum%3D 2
*cough* pyramid scheme *cough*
Limp Bizkit? I see they haven't implemented the "taste" or "talent" features yet?
It's a pyramid scheme. They know that 99% of people will get a few friends to sign up, but not enough to earn an iPod. There are also lots of "mysterious reasons" why people get their order cancelled.
Engadget did a little investigative reporting about freeipod.com.
For more information, click here.
The funny thing is "it's always a troll when it doesn't agree with your view" the truth is I really believe Apple products are crap because I have used them, but people like you just can't get past the "troll" thing.
Censorship is alive and well.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
Post, not the Times! It was the New York Post that got the VP selection wrong.
Hmmm, write your own software? I am sure someone has felt the same way and written something since there appears to be something written for just about everything.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
I'm not saying I dislike the new one, but I think I'll hold on to the old one for a while. :)
Five feet from your desk? Vertically? I'm 6' 4" tall and rest assured I've never stepped up to a desk that struck me in the shoulders or required a ladder to scale up to the 4' chair required to sit at such a desk.
For reference, standard tables are on average 30" high and chairs will meet your ass at about 18" to 22" depending on your hydraulic settings.
Bitch.
One other thing I notice you use "Anonymous Coward" where I will use my name, that says a lot for your argument.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
From what I've seen, they're really tough on "referal fraud," that is, when you try to sign up under yourself to get your referals done quicker. Everyone on this board who's done it seems to have been caught, and even a few people who just had similar names as their referals (i.e. Sr/Jr).
Anyway, the best way to do this is sign up for ancestry.com or AOL, then cancel the service during the free trial. For ancestry.com, you have to call an 800#, and they may make you call twice if you aren't insistant, but it's not hard. It does seem like a pyramid scheme, though, so beware (even though it seems like the site has been up a couple of month).
Once you get your five referals to complete their offers, they check your info, which takes a week or so, then they let you order your ipod. You can either get a 15 gb, which ships in a week or so, or a mini, which takes an extra month. Be careful, though, because I have heard a personal report from someone claming that right after they signed up, someone used their credit card number to buy some expensive plane tickets, but I think the two are unrelated.
The link to the forum I posted above has a "conga line" going for people who to refer each other and try to organize the process a bit. I've been siting at two completed for about a week, though, so I'll be a link whore, too.
And with that you just explained why most people buy iPods. Not to flame you, but most people don't care about support for anything beyond MP3 and "whatever iTMS uses". Most people also don't care about how the files are stored on the disk. Just the fact that an iPod can be used as a FW/USB external disk is good enough, although most people probably don't care about this either.
So, yes, once again it comes down to the interface. You can easily use it with one hand while driving, walking, whatever, and it's just fairly intuitive.
It's not $100 less. It's 33% larger.
I'm also told it's got twice the stain-busting power of the other leading brand, but I have yet to verify this myself.
I write in my journal
Unless like me you're married longer than 15 years and are middle aged, do you have nothing better to do in bed?
I'm a macrumors regular, but macteens broke the story.
I guess I'll be the one to say it: does it support OGG Vorbis yet??
When you look at the state of the world, how can you not become a radical, liberal anarchist?
Jobs says in the article that they have increased the 4G's battery life by quite a bit with careful power conservation. It remains to be seen whether they accomplished that purely in software or not-- if so, 3G users will get the same benefit with just a firmware upgrade.
They're probably still using the same battery as before, and as the previous responder pointed out you can replace it yourself for pretty cheap when the time comes, assuming you're not a complete gimp.
Golly, what was I _thinking_? My last film camera did all of this with, hmm, three buttons and three knobs. (shoot, DOF preview, timer, focus, zoom, f.stop.) On a digital unit, there's more stuff to control, but the controls can also do more than one thing.
"Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus."
And this has to happen just one month after i bought my brand new 40 gig. Steve Jobs, you fucker!
As a long time photography enthusiast, having 3 buttons to control that many functions makes using the ccamera very frustrating. When I'm shooting a sailing race, I quickly need to adjust many of the cameras parameters (in less tan 2 seconds). Having 3 buttons may look cool, but is useless from a photography standpoint.
Sure, if you are a point and shoot user, than maybe you want to look at three buttons and say "duh, looky pretty".
Nah, surfing the web and talking to my girlfriend over instant messaging is more fun in bed.
Just to let everyone know, the Rio Karma's still alive and kickin', and so is the iRiver H series. Both play Ogg Vorbis files quite well (and as an owner of the former, I'm incredibly pleased with my purchase). IMHO, the Rio Karma's the closest so far towards a true ipod competitor (USB2/Ethernet, 20GB, easy menu system, easy syncing, MP3/OGG/WMA/FLAC), with the notable exception of USB2 not working on mac or linux yet (use the dock's ethernet connection to sync up).
As an aside, an engineer from Rio (name changed in the article) posted his unofficial postulations on why the iPod has yet to materialize with Ogg support to Gizmodo. Essentially, his answer is that the processor originally used in the iPods just aren't powerful enough for it. There's also a rebuttal from a xiph.org guy, so I suspect the answer lies somewhere in the middle. In any case, if the 4g ipods use the same processor as the mini (looking likely) then Ogg support just might be coming yet, though Apple still may not do it for the same political reasons as before (mp3 good enough, aac just the same or better, blah blah blah)
See, that's what happens when you live in a country with metric units; you get American units all messed up. Never mind my post.
loops and hoops? Are you joking?
;-) )
;-) - some mp3) and iPod
./ readers.
:
:
Test one:
have a cd, have an iPod:
1) put cd in tray, close tray.
2) let iTunes find CDDB data, then click import, let import happen.
3) plug-in iPod.
( 3)a) let iTunes work its magic, no user assistance required
4) uplug ipod.
Which one of these steps qualify as a hoop or a loop? Pray tell me.
Test two:
have mp3 in a folder on HD (or on a separate disk, if you friend just plugged in his USB disk-on-key to give you -illegally?
1) locate mp3 files
2) drag and drop these to iTunes window
(which lets iTunes add them to its reference library, and if you set preferences so, copy them to its library folder too: better actually, if they are on removable media)
3) plug in iPod
( 3)a) let iTunes work its magic )
4) un-plug iPod
Now, if you have an issue with that, I might have to lower my opinion on some of
Some comments before flame arises:
* If your ipod capacity is inferior to the volume of your music files, you will have to tweak iTunes magic, obviously.
i.e.
1) either have it let you manually put music on said iPod, up to its capacity
=> annoying after a while... but no worse than managing files and mp3 player as a removable media (because you still have gained bonus as music is also available for iTunes to play and organise)
2) or: create manual playlists, and only these will be set to update on ipod.
- you then have to be sure you drag and drop the mp3 files to the playlist, not just iTunes library (step 2 is still one step, just asks you to be a bit more attentive)
=> slightly less annoying, but you have to remember to drag music to the playlist (and not to general library). Still, next time ipod is plugged in, magic works. Only downfall? don't overload the playlist and exceed iPod capacity. Or buy a bigger one
3) or: create SMART playlists (on top of your manual fixed ones):
for example, a playlist that tells iTunes that it will be made of the 100 latest new songs.
=> any new songs added to iTunes (step 2) will be copied to iPod (step 3a)
* if you don't like iTunes for your mp3 (matter of taste, I let you off on this one), you might not like iPod either; so end of story.
* Now for my personal opinion (above were just plain verifiable FACTS )
The combination of iTunes+iPod gives you a solution where YOU have
- ease of use (amazing music playing experience, brainless management of songs, easy and fast synch, etc)
-, control (smart playlists, various settings to be found in prefs, like "import in XXX format, at XXX rate", or "let me / let iTunes organise my music library folders" and more)
- elegance in the whole approach, and respect for the user (you easily learn to use it, and can do tons with it -burn audio / mp3 cds, organise party playlists, edit all MP3 tags of songs, one or many at once, add cover art, etc etc. AND it has been designed for intelligent people by intelligent people)
Where were the loops and hoops again?
Like any tool, it just requires to know its logic and how it works. But unlike most tools, this one is bloody simple.
I reckon that iTunes is one of the simplest and most useful out there, and is taking a huge place in my life, by being so unobstrusice and useful...
=====
I lie all the time, including now
- Click wheel (like the iPod Mini)
- A millimeter thinner
- More efficient Menus
- Multiple on-the-go playlists
- Listen to audiobooks slower or 25 percent faster without affecting pitch
- Longer play - 12 hours of battery life due to more power conservation
- Lower price: 40GB - $399, 20GB $299 (no 15 gig model now)
- Still white
Sig Nature
A trained studio photographer can use tricks like polarized lenses & carefully placed lighting to make it seem as if glass is perfectly transparent & non-reflective.
DO NOT LEAVE IT IS NOT REAL
> I think I'll wait for the Sony *walkman* version they tend to build better stuff
You must be one of the few people who still believes that Sony build quality products.
Their stuff used to be better than their direct competition but now it's just crap, (and overpriced for what it is).
Thats good to know...I'm thinking about buying an iBook and would like to find out from someone other than Apple exactly how rugged they are. Also, how about putting the iBook in a bookbag with other books or something of that sort? One of my other big concerns would be hard drive life. I know that the hard drive is supposedly in a ruberized chamber, but do you ever carry yours around w/ the drive spinning? Also, when the computer is hibernating, does the drive stop spinning? thanks
SIGFAULT
Wow, not only are you spouting falsities (nobody controls AAC, dude, and iTunes for Mac/Windows is a perfect way to manage the music on the thing), I really think you'd buy one if you could afford it, so you're just whining and rationalizing. Just continue to whine and don't ever get your hands on one, since you WILL want it.
You sound like the married guy with the hot flirty secretary who keeps telling himself 5 exaggerated things wrong about her every day in order to stay minimally tempted.
I never cease to be amazed at the self-righteousness of those hiding behind a /. pseudonym not linkable to a real-world identity when berating those who post AC. Please, keep on ranting.
One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
I'm no physicist (it took me two goes to even spell the word!) but there is a difference between what you're talking about (reflection) and what the parent was talking about (refraction), no?
:-)
I think he meant exactly that - it looks like it is simply transparent glass, with no magnification/lens effect - there's no distortion, so they are probably not lenses, i.e. probably fake glasses.
Then again, on my examination, there appears to be very noticeable refraction on Steve's right cheek, but I've no idea if that would occur without a lens. IANAP, as I mentioned.
As for being a trained studio photographer, I think even they would have a hard time negating the effect of a lens in a scene by using filters.
How about an OLED Color screen? Slightly larger? How about being able to store album cover art or lyrics accessed when the song places and scrolled or displayed on the screen if the user wants?
Steve wasn't happy about Macworld moving to boston from NYC. Apple didn't show for it... and now, they'll see that if they'd done it in NYC like apple wanted, they'd have had yet another big announcement to energize the masses and increase admissions... and profit.
I guess you're a slow learner =)
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
Got my iBook July 2002. It's a 12 inch 700 MHz Combo drive model (G3). The hard drive, a Toshiba MK2018GAS, died April this year. But it's not like I ever treated my laptop well - I wanted a machine I could use *anywhere* and that's exactly what I did. So yes, I *did* carry it around with the drive spinning. And I suppose that eventually caused the drive's quality to deteriorate (it first had lots of problems writing and reading data; then it would start getting so far that it couldn't find all of the kernel on the drive any more, and that's when I realized booting from an emergency Linux CD might be a good idea to do backups.)
Replaced it upon others' advice with a Hitachi HTS548060M9AT00 (i.e. a Travel Star with 60 GB). Note that you lose any kind of warranty by replacing a hard drive, and that it's everything but easy.
Also upped RAM, first to 384 Megs, then to 640 Megs. It makes a huge difference. You don't want to use OS X with anything less than 384 Megs, but it won't be a *joy* with anything less than 512 Megs. Everyone will tell you that.
The hardware itself is incredible. Durable, lightweight, and really powerful enough for everyday work (I'm a programming and networking guy), watching DVDs, burning, etc. Of course, it goes without saying that Mac OS X is one of the best modern operating systems out there. As long as you're willing to deal with *slightly* less hardware and software compatibility (and even that seems to keep getting better) than you'd have on x86 machines, you're good to go. As an example, I just bought a Canon PowerShot A80 yesterday (great product I might add). It said on the backside that it would come with Mac OS X drivers. But up to now, I never used those. I plugged the thing in via USB and instantly, through Apple's ImageCapture software, had access to 1) downloading pictures, 2) sharing camera access over the web - thusly also to Windows and Linux PCs (ImageCapture comes with a built-in web server), 3) taking photos from the Mac, either manually or even in periodic intervals (again, this feature can be accessed from other machines through the network) and simple operations like rotating the images. Note again that this worked without *any* configuration - neither on the camera nor on the iBook - and without any glitches. Now, if I wanted advanced functionality such as Canon's photo stitching tool, I would of course have to install that. But the point is, if someone were to bring his camera over and it supports standards like PTP, I'm ready to go to use it. (My experience with using the Canon on Windows XP has been *muchly* different.)
(I should maybe note that the iBook does not come with PCMCIA, decreasing upgradeability. You can, of course, get lots of FireWire devices for external hard drives or TV tuners and whatnot, but Gigabit Ethernet or FireWire 800 will never be options for you.)
If there's anything else you want to know, you may want to register at applenova.com; they have quite a few experienced people there (it's obviously a "fan" board though, but that doesn't mean the people aren't critical of Apple).
Hope that helps.
Heh :).
One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
Is there any talk about improving the sound quality? I've read several things about ipods having lower sound quality (Not much though) in comparison to other portable players.
http://www.commaecho.com
is it Apple's fault that you have much higher taxes? I can understand that you'd want the exact same price as us (maybe what, 70 euro's cheaper?), but to have a cheaper ipod solely because you have higher taxes and lower income is impossible. Maybe in a 3rd world country where the economy isn't so globalized, but if your idea came about next thing you would know european countries would be by far outselling the US in iPod's -- and mysteriously there'd be thousands up on ebay that were sold in europe.... Hell many wouldn't even take that step, I have family in Europe, I'd have them go to a shop and by one for me and send it over.
fyi 40G is 549 euro
Have no idea if you're a troll or not - maybe you come from a EU country with 50% tax or something but since belgian is pretty much a representative country in the EU I think my prices above are a bit more representative too and so the yanks can make a better comparison QED
ciao
Memorie devices do have longer battery lives as the moving HD sucks a lot of juice but for the fast majority of people that is not a problem. Use it a couple of hours a day, plug it into the recharger when home and you never run out. People have already been trained to empty their pockets and recharge with phones and pda's.
Although I got to admit that I am currently looking for a cheap memory device since my current Nomad Zen battery life of about 8 hours means it often cuts out during work. Not good if you work in a factory and you have to spend the last hour of the night shift without music to keep you going.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
I have a 3G iPod, which puts a small gap in between each song to load up the song from the hard drive. When listening to live albums you hear the crowd screaming in between tracks followed by a small gap of silence. I'm disappointed that the new ones still haven't solved this problem by loading a buffer in between tracks.
I like the clickwheel though, definately easier to use than the tapping that you have to do on the 3Gs.
I'll vouch for the durability of the iBooks as well -- at least, the older models.
I had one in my backpack along with a heavily padded Dell laptop when it slipped off my shoulder and rolled down a fairly steep hill. I was pretty worried about condition of both laptops, but when I pulled them both out, the iBook (without any padding) had hardly a scratch. The Dell, also didn't have a scratch, but the battery had popped out. The iBook instantly awoke from sleep, and was pretty much exactly the way I had left it.
Not too bad for a laptop with no padding to fair slightly better than the heavily padded laptop.
dennis
Have had three different laptops (a powerbook from 2000, an ibook from 2001 and lately a Titanium) from Apple, and lots of friends have also some. ;-) ). It never suffered from it, neither did we, it is unobstrusive and although not so light, its small form factor makes it discreet.
I used to travel a lot.
I have always put the laptops in normal bags (either small backpacks, together with books and else, or travel bags, wrapped in a towel or a pair of jeans). I have never ever used one of these laptop bags that screams "I hold a computer inside, steal me quick". My laptops have never suffered from this.
The powerbook has fallen from tables many many times (i am clumsy, and I move it around all the time, and sometimes i forgot it was plugged in for charge, and would trip over the plug). Its plastic got cracked from the worst fall, but no more than estethic damage.
The ibook is my girlfriend's, and it is the laptop we take away with us on holidays. So it ended up going with us in Bali, and we hiked with it in our day bags (because of not wanting to leave it at the hotel
It has sustained a few falls, without any consequences.
It feels and is really rugged. Previous ibook had this clamshell form factor that felt really sturdy, and when Apple re-designed it, they actually had to uphold the previous one on the sturdiness side (aimed for students, so needs to be solid?) Well, they did. Although it is not roundly shaped and does not seem to close in the protective way the clamshell felt, it feels very rugged. And the screen is attached to the back with only one large and solid hinge, feels good and solid. And the case does not crack or bend when you hold it by the side, like a tray. I trust it to be really reliable.
Last to suffer is the titanium: i work for a company that provides us with laptops and my titanium is one. I take it to work and back home every day in a normal backpack, together with books for reading in the train and else. No protective casing or cushioning.
The other day, i was showing a colleague of mine something, and because I was out of airport (wifi) range, I needed to plug into network with a cable. I have forgotten so much about it (because I am wireless all the time and the battery is good enough for having it unplugged when i am not at my desk) that I never pay attention to cable. which is what happened when i stood up in a hurry to answer my phone at the other end of the open space. Guess what? I went away with the cable on my feet and the powerbook just flew across the room from the table to the floor.
Where it laid, waiting for me to pick it up. still running. side of the casing was cracked because it landed from a 5 feet long (and 2 feet down ) flight, on a corner, where the power cable goes in (so the casing is fragilised already, being holed for the plug).
Apart from that, HD check came out with perfect drive, and everything runs fine and dandy. It did not event turn off or else.
I am not saying other laptos would not survive this. I am saying Apple's laptops are solid.
Regarding your issue with HD. I never ever turn off my laptops, they always are on standby in my bags. I usually get about 15 days uptime, at which point something will require a restart -updating system software, or maybe some stupid modem driver that need a restart after updating- if i were not doing any update or else, i would have a much longer uptime since boot. My girlfriend's ibook has once been noted to be at 45 days uptime (I cheked out of curiosity, before rebooting it for an install!). But since she nevers reboot it, just leave it on standby on the coffee table in the living room (we call it "our coffee table iBook"), and opens it every now and then for email or internet or writing a paper or watching a movie, it could have been time where it had a much longer uptime, i just never checked!
(side note: mac OS X allows a laptop to be operational by the time you have fully raised the screen open. with wifi coming back as fast, you are typing the website address as soon as you let your hand of the screen lid! Linux apparently can do that on apple's hardware too)
So standby really is not an issue, more of a bonus!
=====
I lie all the time, including now
Futureshop.ca has had pictures and info up for a week already.
And it looks like it has a slightly nicer screen - the LCD looks almost flush with the front bezel.
There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
Whilst the iBook looks like its case is plastic-only, it's really plastic mixed with magnesium beneath, making it a lot stronger than it looks. My white-translucent plastic cover does have scratches which are visible under unusual lighting conditions. But the actual hardware doesn't seem to care.
A lot of people will like the fact that it 100 dollars less. Some will like the 50% improvement in battery life.
I think with that they'd eliminate the two prime reasons to decide against an iPod.
I think the real news is that a copy of Newsweek is $3.95 nowadays. That's just absurd.
Iran & Iraq should change their country names in iRan & iRaq to get more leading headlines.
Do iRan and iRaq give you portable audio? Can you plug them into your PC? Do they have sleek designs? Are they kind-of status symbols? Last time I checked they lacked all of that. No wonder people are more interested in the iPod.
USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
I disagree, to update an iPod, you plug it in, do nothing and unplug it.
Until you have more music than will fit onto your iPod (like I have), and you have to do it manually.
And that's when the frankly appalling sluggishness of the Windows version of iTunes comes to the fore. It is fricking painful to move songs to your iPod.
I really love it when I click on a listbox on my 800MHz Pentium III PC, and it takes >1 second to select an item. Only iTunes for Windows can do this.
Best Windows application ever written, my arse.
(And don't, whatever you do, try resizing the iTunes window when in the iTMS. It's like they dispensed with the PCI bus for video transfer, and used a postal one instead or something.)
I use Ephpod to update my iPod - I only use iTunes for ripping. Life's too short to use the iTunes UI, really.
Basically, take all those whines from Mac users about Microsoft Office 6 for Mac, and throw them right back at Apple for iTunes for Windows.
Don't tell me the iPod doesn't skip. It does intra-track buggering but not inter-track buffering. On a good sprint I can reliably get the unit to skip between songs. Very annoying.
Apple will likely ship off all remaining inventory of the (3rd gen) iPod to HP, were Carly should be able to sell 'em as the hPod - the model that came before the current iPod.
Dr. Freud
Technology meets Transportation.
repost due to apple fanbots
I know I'll be flamed to a crisp by the iPod-weilding overlords here, but am I the only one to ask: what's the big deal? So, iPod drops a couple of buttons and looks like a mini; so what? Dropping a couple of buttons and/or adding buttons is not a radical design change. Why's everyone in a frenzy over this little crumb from Apple?
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
...would be gapless MP3 playback, like on the Rio and coming up (or already there?) on the iRiver iHP series. It's just a pain in the butt listening to live or DJ mix CD's with the annoying pause between tracks.
I can't understand why this feature isn't already in iPods - it really should be on top of the developers' todo list. Maybe Apple is so convinced that "nobody listens to albums no more"?
OK, this is interesting. My Archos 15 gig is almost perfect, but I need more space. I've thought about the 40 gig iPod, but the price is a bit too high. However, at $400, that changes things. Wait until there is a $30-$50 off sale at Amazon, and a $100 off promotion for signing up for a year of Audible.com (which I've been interested in trying), and that gets it down to $250-$280 (Amazon is one of the dealers at which you can use the Audible discount). I'd snap one up in an instant then.
You know that's not really Steve's blog, right? It's satire. Some other guy runs it.
My bet is that Newsweek has some kind of relationship with some big music company that has a big stake in iTunes.
More uninformed consipracy mumbo-jumbo from the Tinfoil Hat Brigade.
Fifteen seconds of Googling ("who owns Newsweek") shows that Newsweek is owned by The Washington Post Company. Visiting their web site shows that The Washington Post Company owns no stake in any record/music company. Additional Googling shows no evidence that any record/music company owns any stake in The Washington Post Company.
The main reason Newsweek got this scoop is because in 2002 Time Magazine got the last one, and made its story about the new flat-panel iMac publically available online before the machine was officially unveiled at MacWorld-- thus drawing the ire of Steve Jobs.
This time, the iPod article *is* the major part of the unveiling, though I'm sure Apple press releases and a new Apple.com front page will follow tomorrow or Tuesday.
I can attest to what you said about the Archos player. I have the Archos Multimedia Jukebox (20GB) which does a fine job of playing mp3's, but it's just a little too big to carry around in your pocket and the battery life isn't that great. It's a nice little device in that it can do many things, the problem is it just doesn't do any of those things extremely well (I cannot speak for any newer models that have come out).
This is why I am buying an iPod. I want to listen to music and I want something that can last longer and will fit in my pocket better. It can't do nearly as much as the Archos player, but what it does do, it does much better.
It was the New York Post that got the VP selection wrong.
I hear last week they also declared that Dewey Wins!
It's not bloody difficult.
Then the URL won't get mangled by the SlashDot filters.
...your battery just isn't what it used to be. Batteries to start to have less life after a while.
"It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
My iBook goes with me everywhere in my backpack when I'm on the job, along with a toolkit and a large soft case full of software CDs. I got a Sleevecase from Waterfield Designs, and it provides pretty good protection. The only thing I'd do differently with my next laptop is place something (like a sheet of felt or something else soft and about the same thickness) between the two halves when it's closed-- the weight of the other items in my backpack presses them together, and the finish around the display bezel has worn off in some spots. It's purely cosmetic, but I'm anal-retentive when it comes to keeping my equipment looking as new as possible.
When you put the iBook to sleep, it does spin down the drive-- you wouldn't be able to tell that it was on at all, if not for the pulsing sleep light. Even though it does spin the drive down, though, the iBook wakes up very quickly-- by the time you've got the screen opened and tilted back to where you like it, the iBook is ready for you to resume typing/mousing/whatever.
~Philly
With Intel Chips at almost 3GHz more than your current offering, why not just upgrade? After all apple hardware is -oh- so expensive and you could still purchase something from them.
And it cost a fair bit more than the second iPod i bought yesterday for my household. The first of which has taken a few spills and continues to function *JUST FINE* thank you.
It has taken a few spills since YESTERDAY??? That would go a long way to explain why your walkmen broke after 2-foot drops. You just fail to mention that it was after the TENTH 2-foot drop. I must admit the Walkman was probably weaker than an iPod, but not _that_ much weaker.
They're way ahead of you...
That should be moderated as "insensitive" considering that bandwidth isn't free. Thank you for making us web developer's lives more difficult.
OK, I'll admit I haven't tried the iPod mini yet, but I do have a recent iPod, and before that had one of the earlier 20gig models.
Yes, the newer iPods are curvier and sexier because of it, but the ergonomics of the touch buttons is TERRIBLE. The original iPod - with 'hard' buttons arranged around the wheel is a LOT more user-friendly... specifically, you actually get some tactile feedback as to whether you have pressed a button, or not...
With the touch controls, it is FAR too easy to either fail to press a button, press a button when you don't intend to, or even double-press accidentally.
Why can't we have an iPod with sexy curves and tactile buttons?
Yeah and you're probably one half of one percent of all photographers.
When I was shooting Auto Racing, I would typically prefocus, preset shutterspeed and f.stop. It was hard enough stopping the motion of the cars, I wouldn't be farting around with _everything_ at once.
Further, learning the ins and outs of a Nikon doesn't prepare you for a Canon or Minolta. How long does it take to muddle through learning an iPod?
"Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus."
P3-800MHz, that's like complaining that your pocket calculator doesn't get enough FPS out of linux.
Yeah, funny how (apart from the latest insane games) everything else I want to run on this PC runs just fine. It runs XP, and isn't slow. I must have missed the meeting where profligacy with the user's computing resources was ok to the point of requiring them to buy a new PC just because the app has a small database and a big listbox in it.
Apple can't even code up a listbox that responds within a reasonable timescale to user events on a machine with a clock rate of 800,000,000 ticks per second, so I should spend £500 and upgrade?
Like I said, I use Ephpod instead. It's not dog slow like iTunes. It also requires zero pounds in hardware upgrades.
Assuming you're going to be running on a 2GHz+ machine just because your UI is so dog slow is bad engineering, plain and simple. No amount of waving new computer catalogues at me is going to change that fact.
It sticks out like a sore thumb because (battery longevity notwithstanding) the iPod is well engineered. Shipping nice hardware and backing it up with crappy software is the sort of thing Apple would sneer at PC companies for doing. Quite rightly, I would add - but the fact remains iTunes for Windows is in many ways poorly engineered.
After all apple hardware is -oh- so expensive and you could still purchase something from them.
So you're saying you know something about my bank account that I don't? How about I take that money you'd want me to spend on a new system and do something more useful with it? Like buy software, for instance. There is quite clearly no need for me to upgrade my PC at the moment - for my purposes it works just fine. When Half-Life 2 ships, then we'll talk.
As soon as there's a perfect product, Apple will stop improving it.
However, since there will never be a perfect product, I think their R&D wonks don't have to worry about trying to collect unemployment...
Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
How long does it take to muddle through learning an iPod?
About four seconds. It's not rocket science.
Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
It looks like a public service announcement: "Kids, don't get into the car with a stranger who offers you an iPod."
There's no radio because Apple wants to sell the same box internationally.
Personally, I don't listen to radio, so it's not a big loss to me.
i think thinksecret.com actually was first to break it... a few other rumor sites have been crediting them as being the first with the story
Precisely my point.
"Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus."
Apple as well decided to more or less drop support of the older models up to and including the lack of firmware updates to provide many of the same features as present in the new models (I am told that it would be possible to add such things as on the go playlists and such, but Apple merely chooses not to). As the owner of a 2G I was, of course, upset by the idea that my iPod no longer seemed to exist.
You've got a great product that does what you want it to, and you're feeling "screwed" because the newer models have better features? Kinda like someone who got a computer 3 years ago feels screwed 'cause today's computers are better?
Yeah, you're talking about firmware. So hpw many applications have you bought that came with ongoing, free software updates, despite the fact that I'm told such a thing is possible?
So, yes, once again it comes down to the interface. You can easily use it with one hand while driving, walking, whatever, and it's just fairly intuitive.
:) Still, I just have the sneaking suspicion that some of these comments are just summaries of the reviews which are out there. Who knows how much time those reviewers spent with the device, or what other factors might come into play (e.g. a bias towards whatever player they got used to first, because they're more familiar with it).
I hate comments like this. While the iPod's interface may well be good, a statement like the above implies that every other mp3 player is worse without actually presenting any evidence. Meanwhile, I still have this sneaking suspicion that most people have used at most one mp3 player for any length of time (e.g. they bought an iPod and stuck with it), so they don't really know other players except via reviews and such. In other words, few people are qualified to make such claims, yet the do get made an awful lot.
The reason I bring this up is that I do own another mp3 player (the Dell DJ) and I think the same thing can be said for it. The software looks like a clone of what's on the iPod. As for the buttons and scroll wheel, I can easily use them with one hand. In fact, I can hit every button with my thumb if I hold it in my left hand. Furthermore, a scroll wheel has to be more intuitive than a circular touchpad. I've actually used scroll wheels before (on a scroll wheel mouse) but circular touchpads are a new thing. Not to mention that rolling a scroll wheel up moves you up a menu and down moves you down. Compared to clockwise and counterclockwise, that _must_ be more intuitive! Plus none of the buttons serve double-duty -- they all do exactly one thing. So how is this interface worse than the iPod exactly?
Of course, I've never used an iPod, so I don't know for sure that there isn't some magic there.
So, parent complains that there were features of the iPod UI that he didn't know about, and apparently weren't obvious. So, if he had read the manual he would have known about those things. How is pointing that out off topic?
Reading the manual may not be the ubergeek thing to do, but isn't it a good idea to know all the things that the expensive toy you just bought can do?
"The dew has clearly fallen with a particularly sickening thud this morning"
*ROFL* Yeah! They've been photoshopped. Look in the reflection... the photo was taken in Germany.
*ROFL*
"Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
I would buy an Iriver player, but they don't have tempo adjustment.
;-)
Maybe not yet, but iriver is probably still a good bet, since they have been very active with their firmware updates. They seem offer significant improvements with each update. Just take a look at the latest update. So who knows, maybe that's coming?
In any case I'm wildly happy with this player: tons of functionality over the ipod (radio, recording, built-in mike, standard usb-storage protocol so I don't need proprietary software to copy songs and it doubles as a general file transporter), and it already has 12+ hours playtime: here and now. I just flew over to Germany from California non-stop a few weeks ago and I couldn't help but gloat (quietly, of course) about a fellow passenger and his obvious disappointment as his shiny iPod gave out several hours before the end of the flight
-chris
San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
Actually, the 4G's buttons ARE clicky - like a snapple cap.
...they change the headphone cable. I was under the impression that all the modern portable music players had seen the light and supplied headphones that plug in at a 90 degree angle to the device. My iPod remote is already shorting out due to it constantly hitting my, um, abdominal muscles. Well, it could also have something to do with me saving the iPod from impacting concrete by catching the cord...
But the thing is, people are different. Their taste varies and some are obsessive. I recall when iTunes for Windows was introed. WinGeeks complained that iTunes messed up their file naming scheme. Forget the fact that iTunes can be set not to do so or iTunes organizes them in directories logically: Artist, Album, Songs. They prefer their naming scheme. The argument is usually, they knew how to find those songs. The fact that iTunes uses metadata to facilitate search and ordering is completely lost. You can locate files from iTunes just by selecting the song you want and press Cmd-R, much quicker than locating Artist-Album-##-Title.mp3 from different folders. And yet, they obsessively wanted to organize the files themselves. Somehow, the thought that they didn't have to be in control makes them ga-ga.
I hate comments like this. While the iPod's interface may well be good, a statement like the above implies that every other mp3 player is worse without actually presenting any evidence. ... Of course, I've never used an iPod
You want evidence, but can't get your mitts on an iPod to try out the interface?
At least you chose your handle wisely...
--R.J.
Electric-Escape.net
This is the same mag that has done issues with "The Year of the Matrix" last year and a big Spiderman 2 thing on the front.
The cover is a tool for selling magazines. If it is also an earth-shattering topic that's barely more than concidence.
Yeah, 'cause everybody knows those third world slobs don't have radio.
From The Article: Longer play. Coast-to-coasters rejoice: the new iPods are rated for 12 hours of rockin' between charges--a 50 percent boost in battery life. This is accomplished, Apple says, not by a heavier battery but diligent conservation of power.
Better battery conservation? Can anybody tell me if this would be a hardware or software thing? I have a 3G iPod, and if they found a way to give it better battery conservation simply by updating the firmware, I'll be sure to rejoice!
Imagine a world where not every country used the same frequencies for the radio, scary isn't it?
there is a pcmcia slot in the ibook its just not externally acessible
:)
its under the keyboard
Writing as someone who uses his iPod in his car or his pocket 80% of the time (and on a desk the other 20%), I can't tell you how frustrated I am that the 3G design isn't conducive to eyes-free use. The touch buttons are great if the iPod is sitting in front of you and you can hand-eye your finger to the target, sure -- but if you can't reasonably divert your attention and stare at the thing long enough to find the right button and touch it with the correct pressure, it's a mess. If you can't look at it, you have to divert even more attention to feeling around on the 3G iPod, because if you lay your finger in the wrong spot, you're going to unintentionally hit a button. Tactile buttons are necessary when you can't focus on the gadget.
I got my iPod the same day a friend got her iPod mini (on mini launch day, in fact), and the moment I held the mini, I knew the click wheel was going to be on the next iPod revision. This is what the iPod should have been from the beginning.
Well...actually, the mini is the perfect size. Until higher-capacity storage shrinks that far, the 4G iPod is as perfect as it gets.
The iRiver series (Hxxx) with similar functionality have radio (FM only though), and also an option to select your country of residence in order to adjust radio settings appropriatelly (Europe / Japan / USA)
I have used both of them in the past(ipod 2nd gen, and iriver H140), and this is a listing of my thoughts on both products. please note that my experience with the ipod was relatively short, i feel that i have a good knowledge of all the features of the device, but please dont flame me if i made a mistake, just corrent me
:)
- Ipod had a battery life of around 8 hours, while with iriver h140 i have experienced average battery lifes of 16 hours
- ipod is smaller slightly smaller than iriver hseries
- iriver remote has lcd screen, and provides access to ALL features of the device and to all the menus. you can use everything without ever touching the main module
- iriver leather case sucks (why brown leather???) while ipods rocks
- iriver has fm radio receiver, ipod doesn't
- iriver has built in microphone (which is of very good quality for a built in microphone). also there you have the option to connect an external microhone
- iriver has built in both optical input and outputs (which work as analogue as well)
- iriver has WOW and SRS audio filters, i don't remember something like that existing on the ipod
- iriver DOES NOT ANY SOFTWARE AT ALL in order to connect to a pc, apart from a basic USB storage driver. i find the simplicity of just chucking the songs you want to the device unparraled compared to the burden of having to install an extra piece of proprietory software
- you have the option to install a media indexer on your pc (which is slightly buggy at the moment) which builds a database of all the songs you have in the device. after that you can broswe by genre / artist / album (normally you get a filemanager). the database however increases the boot time of the device to about 30 seconds
- it plays MP3, WMA, ASF, WAV and OGG while ipod has AAC, MP3, AIFF, WAV
- the 40gb iriver costs as much as the 20gb ipod
- i believe that the ipod is much more of a fashion item, than a device that will meet the requirements of the average geek
The CF form-factor hard drive in the iPod mini doesn't work in (most?) cameras. Something's different about the firmware on the drive, I guess.
More details here
-Mark
Anyone remember the Sony DISCMAN? It was a "portable" record player, looked like a tall narrow tombstone, and you slipped the record into it and turned a center knob to clamp the unit onto the record. It was fragile, but rocked. You could hang it on a wall, lay it flat, or stand it on legs that could swivel out. Funky.
They see you walking about with your pretty little white clickety box maybe playing a little Ludwig van and they'll soon give you a nice beating. Better served to just have a little milk and keep the clicky box hidden at home.
[I don't know why I wrote this. It's late and the previous post reminded me of Kubrick.]
_damnit_
It's my job to freeze you. -- Logan's Run
why not steve? he's at least 80 points higher on any given IQ scale
Read the bottom of this web page. This is not Steve Jobs blog. This is a parody. Do you really think that Steve Jobs would host a blog on a hosting service outside of Apple or Pixar?
I for one have requested FLAC support, and hopefully other lossless audio geeks have as well. That and gapless playback would make the iPod beyond perfect. Right now its just near-perfect.
You can put the WAV files packed up inside your FLAC files onto the iPod pretty easily (albeit slowly) with Anapod Explorer, but you'd be able to fit twice as many if the iPod supported them natively.
Pretty please?
As the page was downloading on my tired old 56k connection I saw the headline, "New Iraqi Strongman", then the scary looking face of a man that is clearly evil. What the hell is he doing with an iPod plugged into his torture-scream receptors?
-- Howto: Get +5 (1) Whine about M$ (2) Namedrop Gentoo (3) Casually Abuse Mods (4) Namedrop Early Computer Model
Hmmmm. Is she surfing the web and chatting with you from her side of your bed?