A Brief History of the iPod
antdude writes "MacSlash mentioned MLAgazine's article on a brief history of the iPod. It all started on October 23, 2001 with the release of one of the most important products from Apple in its history."
← Back to Stories (view on slashdot.org)
Raising non-news to a new level today?
I think I can hear their servers exploding. I gots the text but I don't gots the pictures.
Also, I find it interesting how many ipod-clones are coming out. I guess it's true what Steve J. once said about "imitation being the greatest form of flattery"
I enjoy large posteriors and I cannot prevaricate.
I also talked with a Mac-enthusiatic buddy of mine, and he hated it. I don't know why, but he thought it would bring down Apple another notch on the finance scale. Guess he was wrong. Along with some that said "no wireless. Lame."
I find it the most indispensable tool in my life. Backup, file transport, music and calendar. With a huge harddrive.
... sometimes I fly with the white swan to my Liffey home.
Lame
Fleur de Sel
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Since its inception, Apple has always been willing to gamble more with new products than most other companies
Granted, they flopped with the Newton... but they came out with the mac, the powerbook, peer2peer file sharing out of the box, the trackpad, the powerbook duo, speech recognition integrated on the OS on the 90's, quicktime, and the list goes on... (I would like to give them the mouse and the interface, but as with everything they also have a dark side)
It is good to see they are ripping the benefits of believing in something completely new... ( As they believed in a portable media player by some bogus guy who was rejected by other companies)
Kudos to Apple
Guaranteed: At least a dozen times prior to Apple releasing the iPod, large technology company middle managers refused to approve designs for competing devices, claiming with absolute certainty that no market existed for portable digital music players.
As those ass-molded-to-chair managers know, it's always easier to be a skeptic. The numbers of jobs and revenue lost to those WRONG decisions must be staggering.
Here's a brief history of the iPod:
First, Apple designed the iPod. One day an engineer came in succinctly blitzed and designed the horrible "I-ain't-seen-this-shit-since-Intellivision" circle navigation wheel thingy. The hippie fruits at Apple all applauded.
Then they bought usage rights to some second-rate cheap ass songs that never got played on the radio anyway, and used them to promote the thing. Said no-name bands became more famous because of the constant never-ending barrage of commercials. "Honey, if I do say so myself, this Black Eyed Peas song is rather good! I absolutely hated it the first 48,000 times I heard it but now it's starting to grow on me!"
Then Apple deployed their proven strategy of making the device look better than it actually performs, thereby luring thoughtless dimwits and college freshmen with enormous piles of high interest credit cards that they somehow "needed" one for Christmas.
Then when people realized that the music they were downloading for free was somehow supporting terrorism, and they were probably going to be castrated in town square, they needed another method to fill up the bottomless hole that is the iPod (seriously, who the hell needs to have that many gigs of mp3s with them at all times?). But wait, Apple was here with a solution! You can download the songs for a low low price, and it's legal! Oh...and the artists still get fucked! Yay! The RIAA can rest easy. iTunes is here.
And a legend was born.
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori
There are other portables you know!
Most we hear about iPod all the time? What about those their is Open Source like http://www.neurosaudio.com/
Wouldn't that be more interesting, instead of one that is completly closed and restricted in all possible ways?
I know this is off topic, but I see they call the iPod one of the most important products in Apple history. How does one value their individual products, and how would a list of importantness lokk like? Like this?
1. Apple I for starting the whole thing?
2. Apple II for making Apple a business?
3. Macintosh for paving the way to the future?
4. iMac for saving the company?
5. iPod for attracting buyers outside of the crowd of believers?
Can Steve Jobs be called a "product" these days, and thus earn a place on the top 5?
I didn't know a lot about the history of the iPod, so this was quite interesting to me. I really only started paying attention to the iPod when it was compatible with the PC.
But it would be more interesting to me to see an entire history of the Mp3 player...starting with the first little 32MB ones or whatever came out first, and going right up to the 80GB+ ones we have today. I remember being so excited when I got my first Rio Mp3 flash player. It had 64mb built in, and this was just amazing to me. I loved that thing to death. Now I look back and wonder how it was ever ok to only be able to carry a single album encoded at 128kbps around with me.
Anyone have any links to articles that might have a more broad history of the MP3 player in general?
Did I mess something up somewhere, or do anonymous posts suddenly have a starting score of 1?
didn't see any Rios or Dell laptops, though--go figure;>
Falange Manifesto Nation, Unity, Empire 1. We believe in the supreme reality of Spain. The urgent collective task of all Spaniards is to strengthen, elevate, and aggrandize the nation. All individual, group, or class interests must be subordinated without question to the accomplishment of this task. 2. Spain is an indivisible destiny in universal terms. Any conspiracy against this indivisible whole is repulsive. All separatism is a crime we shall not forgive. The prevailing Constitution, insofar as it encourages disintegration, offends against the indivisible nature of Spain's destiny. We therefore demand its immediate repeal. 3. We are committed to Empire. We declare that Spain's historical fulfillment is the Empire. We demand for Spain a prominent position in Europe. We shall not tolerate international isolation or foreign interference. Regarding the countries of Spanish America, our aim is the unification of culture, economic interests, and power. Spain claims that its role as the spiritual axis of the Spanish-speaking world entitles it to a position of preeminence in world affairs. 4. Our armed forces - on land, at sea, and in the air - must be sufficiently strong and efficient to ensure at all times for Spain total independence and a world status that befits the nation. We shall give back to the land, sea, and air forces all the public dignity they merit, and we shall see to it that a similar martial outlook pervades the whole of Spanish life. 5. Spain will look again to the sea routes for her glory and her wealth. Spain will aim to become a great seafaring power, for times of danger and for the sake of trade. We demand for the Fatherland equal status among navies and on the air routes. State, Individual, Freedom 6. Ours will be a totalitarian State in the service of the Fatherland's integrity. All Spaniards will play a part therein through their membership in families, municipalities and trade unions. No one shall play a part therein through a political party. The system of political parties will be resolutely abolished, together with all its corollaries: inorganic suffrage, representation by conflicting factions, and the Cortes as we know it. 7. Human dignity, the integrity of the individual, and individual freedom are eternal and intangible values. But the only way to be really free is to be part of a strong and free nation. No one will be permitted to use his freedom against the unity, the strength, and the freedom of the Fatherland. A rigorous discipline will prevent any attempt to poison or split the Spanish people, or to incite them to go against the destiny of the Fatherland. 8. The National-Syndicalist State will permit any private initiative that is compatible with the collective interest and, indeed, will protect and stimulate those that are beneficial. Economy, Work, Class Struggle 9. In the economic sphere, we think of Spain as one huge syndicate of all those engaged in production. In order to serve national economic integrity we shall organize Spanish society along corporative lines by creating a system of vertical unions that will represent the various branches of production. 10. We reject the capitalist system, which disregards the needs of the people, dehumanizes private property, and transforms the workers into shapeless masses that are prone to misery and despair. Our spiritual and national awareness likewise repudiates Marxism. We shall channel the drive of the working classes, that are nowadays led astray by Marxism, by demanding their direct participation in the formidable task of the national State. 11. The National-Syndicalist State will not stand cruelly aloof from economic conflicts between men, nor will it look on impassively as the strongest class subjugates the weakest. Our regime will make class struggle totally impossible, since all those cooperating in production will constitute an organic whole therein. We deplore and shall prevent at all costs the abuses of partial vested interests, as well as anarchy in the workforce. 12. The primary purpose of wealth is to improve the standard o
Hello world
It was WAY overhyped and overpriced - and it still is.
aslkdfjkee
We all remember CmdrTaco's first thoughts about it
LAME
I find it interesting that every "iPod killer" attempts to add more features and make it cheaper. Unfortunately this has the side effect of it having a horrible design or uses cheap materials which makes it feel horrible to handle.
Personally I believe that if something looks and feels good, then people will buy it. As soon as a company accepts that there are people who are perfectly happy to pay more for something that looks and feels good, then they might spend a little more on the hardware and less on trying to get it's sales price as low as possible.
I fear that at the moment the only real competitor to Apple was Sony, but then they dropped the ball with a limited hard drive (no 40 gig option?) and the stupid requirement to convert to ATRAC. Creative have never produced a product that remotely looks like it's worth the money that was paid for it and iRiver (whilst being technically very good) needs to seriously review some of their design choices (ruggidised black and a stubbly joypad doesn't appeal to many and definately not to women).
Of course, everyones opinion is different. I know people who think the Creative one is beautiful and the Apple one horrible. But the market has clearly shown that they are in the minority.
More style, more class, less about the price point and someone could actually make it vaiguley close to having an "iPod killer" on their hands.
Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
"It all started on October 23, 2001 with the release of one of the most important products from Apple in its history."
Uh, no. It started when Tony Fadell had the idea of creating a digital music player and tying it to an online music store a few years before the iPod came out. Inside Look at Birth of the iPod on Wired News covers the stuff that happened before the iPod came out.
Why can't I moderate something "Wrong" or at least "Grossly Misinformed"?
Why doesn't Apple just drop the Mac entirely?
Hear me out...
The TOTL G5s cost about $2500, IIRC. I can get a much better x86-based computer for the same price. The same goes for every other price range of Macintosh computer. This, coupled with the fact that there weren't (until the new unix-like OS) very many programs that run on Mac, lead to it's doom. Mac died a loooong time ago, and the diehards aren't going to save it from being Apple's biggest sinkhole. Apple should focus on doing the things that provide revenue for them, such as iTunes and the iPod. Not making overpriced and overrated PCs that cannot compete with the x86 market.
I wish I kept all my modpoints just so I could -1: REDUNDANT all the 'less space than a nomad. Lame.' quotes :P
Prosperity is only an instrument to be used, not a deity to be worshipped. Calvin Coolidge
Slashdot has never been revolutionary. It's never really on the cutting edge of anything. Most of the editor's comments end up being incendiary or show that they are profoundly out of touch with reality.
I think, therefore I am an Atheist.
As the Chaplain and founding member of the 68k Macintosh Liberation Army, I greet the /. crowd.
Stop on by: http://www.68kmla.net/
~Donald / Just RTFM
Calling a karma hoes,Any mirrors?
(yes, I would like one, but the price is barking mad)
When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
iPod is not based on a new concept. Companies before Apple released hard drive based music players, but none had the charm and elegance in the Apple implementation. Unlike the competitors, the iPod used a high speed FireWire interface to transfer files on and off of it, and it used a tiny hard drive, that made the device a quarter of the size of comparable products. Besides the specifications, the iPod offered an intuitive interface and a beautiful enclosure. Even the ear buds were different and unique. Almost all audio equipment was black, but Apple created a set of ear buds that were glistening white. Everything in the design was there to make the user experience a better one.
The iPod was almost not released by Apple. The products creator, Tony Fadell, had shopped the idea to Phillips and RealNetworks before proposing the idea to Apple. Fadell found a welcoming enviroment at Apple, who agreed almost immediately to produce and market the device.
The iPod was so small that it can slip into a shirt pocket with ease, and with a Sony battery that lasts for ten hours on a charge. On the inside, the device had a tiny 1.8 in. Toshiba hard drive, weighing around fifty grams, far smaller than even notebook hard drives. Apple did not develop the operating system or MP3 player software. The operating system is from Pixio, a company staffed by many former Apple employees, and an MP3 player from PortalPlayer. Pixio's operating system has been implemented in many portable telephones allows for fast develpment on limitted deviced, taking up 155 kb. Since the original iPod, Pixio was acquired by Sun, who is happy to be selling its software on every iPod produced.
There was only one serious flaw with the iPod, and that was the price, The machine cost $400, making far from accessible to many consumers. Some lamented the lack of PC support, though Jobs promised a PC version very soon after the lauch. In fact, weeks after the lauch, third party utilities cropped up that enable iPod users to sync with their PC.
Several limitations were present in the first version. There was no remote control,despite a connector designed for such a puropse, there are no games, except for the breakout game included as an easter egg, the dial was subject to problems, and the software implemented limitting anti-piracy policies.
One month after the domestic launch of the iPod, it was launched in Europe, accompanied by new peripherals. Several companies were selling charging adapters, FM broadcasters and a plethora of cases. By the end of 2001, Apple had already sold 125,000 new iPods.
Like all Apple products, a major update was released several months later. In March of 2002, a 10 GB version of the iPod was released. Along with the new iPod, came a software update that included several bug fixes, and a new equalizer....
Hardly four months later, in July, a new 20 GB version was released, with a major price cut for the 5 and 10 GB versions. The new iPods are also PC compatible, using MusicMatch to sync with the player. A new calendar and artists search was included into the software that shipped on the new players. Unlike the earlier versions, the new iPods came with a remote control attached to the ear buds, which Apple soon released to existing iPod users as an add on. The most obvious physical change in the iPod comes in the scroll wheel. No longer is it a physical wheel, instead it is a touch sensitive wheel similar in function to a touchpad.
To many's surprise, Apple abruptly discontinued the
The site has no pictures because they are still recovering from being MacSlashdotted
FUCK YOU SLASHDOT, quit sucking Steve Jobs' COCK! Slashdot has SOLD OUT and is PANDERING to the likes of APPLE to alievate Slashdot's TECHNOLOGICAL INADEQUACY!
It is just an mp3 player and it's still lame. Hell, I like Apple products, but there's no way in hell I'm plopping down that kind of cash for a glorified mp3 player! There are much cheaper alternatives out there. An iRiver H140 completely spanks an iPod of comparable size. The only reason people buy iPods is Apple's tremendous marketing campaign to sheeple.
What about Apple's famous 1984 commercial? That was pretty important...
Video here for those who don't remember...
There is another kind of evil which we must fear most, and that is the indifference of good men. -- Boondock Saints
SLASHDOT "EDITOR" MICHAEL is proving once again that SLASHDOT has SOLD OUT to the LAMENESS of Apple. SLASHDOT is the Internet's EPICENTER of FAGGOTRY! Only MICHAEL would be so GAY to post this just after being ANALLY FUCKED by CMDRTACO! How about you do some more mindless editorializing like in your Half-Life 2 posting YOU FUCKING RETARD! Get back to your CENSORSHIP NAZI ways by hiding this TRUTH POST from the world! MICHAEL SUPPORTS CENSORSHIP!
The battery on the iPod blows. Mine didn't even last a year. This whole Apple craze is blown out of control and Wall Street is partly to blame. This is only going to end in disaster.
Now look at it? For all the hype, I've never seen an ipod in use. Yes, I've seen plenty of MP3 players on the streets, but never an ipod. You hipsters don't know when to quit.
CMDRTACO and the "EDITORS" (HAHA) STAFF here at SLASHDOT have been hypnotized by the FAGGOTRY of APPLE! The whiff of the cum of STEVE JOBS has sent this site's admins into a HOMOSEXUAL FRENZY by WHORING every single thing that APPLE has involvement with! You can't swing a DEAD HOMOSEXUAL BABY without hitting some free advertising posted by CMDRTACO or his CENSORSHIP HAPPY staff! Slashdot cannot be trusted with even the slightest bit of level minded reporting as they have SOLD OUT TO VA SOFTWARE, a company that OUTSOURCES jobs! SLASHDOT CANNOT BE TRUSTED with the news NEITHER WITH your YOUNG MALE BOYS!
I don't know where you live but I see people with ipods every day in the subway, every single day.
This is totally insecure, but very convenient.
Agreed. For a tech-oriented site, slashdot is very quick to decry most techonological advances.
It's official. Most of you are morons.
Oh, wait...
You must think in Russian.
For me, it is when I am informed of the device's capabilities and price and this data provokes an involuntary choking laughter (which sounds a bit like a dog barking).
They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I really hate to having to guess (from the url) the year of an old post. Please, show the year in the post date. It's just 4 chars, man! Am I missing something ?
It's been a long, long time since I've been enticed by any piece of consumer electronics.
I'm not a gadget freak anymore, really.
But dammit! Apple have created an object of sheer desirability in the iPod - and especially in the iPod mini.
Despite my (iBod) nickname, It's been many years since I've owned an Apple product (the last was the ill-fated Newton).
I think Apple really understand which buttons to press to get hip, design-aware customers longing for their products (not that I include myself in that demograph). When they've got the trendsetters, the rest will follow.
Credit and kudos where it's due. Apple have a killer product that is even making iPod buyers switch from PCs to Macs, allegedly.
IMHO there will be no 'iPod killer' because nobody understands the intended market for these devices better than Apple.
No self-respecting kid will thank you for getting him/her a 'no-name' MP3 player this Christmas instead of an iPod.
...sounds like a scottish pyschopath!
:-]
Jaj
Some people like it, buy it and play music on it.
Others don't have a need for an iPod.
End of story - next news article please.
Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
... has anyone else noticed that Slashdot is just overflowing with worshipful fluff articles about Apple products recently (like the last year or two?) I can't help but think that Apple has paid Taco's Corporate Masters for the "inline advertising" that Slashdot used to decry as unethical. Microsoft has banner ads at the top, Apple gets a positive spin story or two a day.
*** Posting anonymously because whenever I say something negative about Apple when I'm logged in, the mods go straight to my account and mod down every other post I've made in the last few days as revenge.
It's not like they were even thinking about making an mp3 player until someone pitched the idea to them.
Apple have no vision beyond making already established ideas better. They're no better than Microsoft in terms of innovation. Microsoft tends to let other people release products, analyse why they suceed/fail and then improve them in some way.
Apple do the same, but tend to focus on simplicity and the visual design. They like the "cool" factor that makes their products appeal to designers and the in-crowd.
In fact, OSX follows this concept. They've taken already written software (kernel, X windows etc), improved it and grafted a slick interface on the front.
Err.... I own an iPod, I think it's great, and I realise that it's made Apple a lot of money, but is sticking a nice GUI and interface on a mini HDD and packaging it nicely really anywhere close to as "important" as, say, the first personal computer? No? What about the first GUI for a consumer OS? No again? Or, if we're going to talk in terms of cash cows, how about the iMac, which actually saved Apple? If the company was on its last financial legs before the iPod's debut, I could see calling it one of their most important releases, but making a profitable company more profitable by taking exiting ideas and technology and simply doing them better than anyone else, while significant, can't be compared to innovations that changed the world forever à la MacOS or Apple I.
In conclusion, profitable =/= important
and the TFA is a POS.
In 20 years time, I'll bet people will be saying 'iPod' when they mean generic personal, life-style-enhancing, thingummy.
It all started on October 23, 2001 with the release of one of the most important products from Apple in its history.
lets correct this sentence.
It all started on October 23, 2001 with the release of the most important product from Apple in its history.
4 years of history....that's getting deep
stop the hype, stop the insanity!
Yeah. Forget that, didja?
When linux has those without a virtualization layer, we'll talk.
...album after five years in the business*, then why not have a story on the history of the iPod, which is bound to be more interesting?
* The all-time record for "most pointless 'greatest hits' album" goes to early-90s dance music purveyors TKA, whose third (yes, THIRD) album was "Greatest Hits."
Ah, good point. There's also quite a large troll population.
I'm sorry, were you talking about Slashdot, or Fox News?
I like big butts and I cannot lie.
Is it really that hard for you to understand that the iPod does not contain any technological advancements? There were no technologies that weren't already available when the iPod was released.
Caution: Linky NSFW.
Dr. Freud
Technology meets Transportation.
Raise your hand if you have iTunes ...
...
...
...
:-D
Raise your hand if you have a FireWire port
Raise your hand if you have both
Raise your hand if you have $400 to spend on a cute Apple device
There is Apple's market. Pretty slim, eh? I don't see many sales in the future of iPod.
~LoudMusic
October 23rd, 2001. Priceless.
I am defenseless. Use your button. Mod me down with all of your hatred.
First there was the guitar or maybe the ukelele, so many vowels - so few strings. Actually in some places there was also the banjo. OK, so first there were instruments and you'd strum a little song and be all up-ons with the ladies.
This was superseded by the record player. Not so good - how to get the ladies to visit, doesn't work by the campfire without a long extension lead. Then the jukebox - brilliant, put the record player where the ladies is.
Then the Walkman, no ladies, the smaller Walkman, still no ladies, CD Walkman, ladies? Creative portable hard-drive thingo, ditto, iPod, iPods with progressively larger drives, mini iPod because, as the ladies say, size isn't important, and finally the iPod Photo with the tunes and the pictures, of the ladies, from the Internet.
Hello the ladies of the Internet. Wanna see my iPod?
Now wash your hands.
The article says that Fadell shopped his idea around before settling on Apple. As this is the history of the *iPod*, who came up with the ideas of hard drive players or music stores is not relevant. Save your complaining for a history of mp3 players in general.
+5 Needless Nitpicking
http://www.rockbox.org/playerhistory/
It may surprise some people to see that the iPod was announced a full two years after the first harddisk-based mp3 player.
he was talking about slashdot
iPod has been a savior of Apple. The hardware has actually been driving sales of downloaded music and this fact has not been unnoticed by the business world. Hence the term, *iPod killer*.
Users typically spend a bity of time creating, transferring their music titles to the pod. But what happens at the end of the hard drive life? I wonder what steps a typical user has taken to backup their 40/80 Gb of music?
Will they be tempted to save their 40Gb to hard drive before any hardware problems occur? What is the MTBF of the iPod? [www.ipodhacks.com, iPod Boot Disk Burnout, 20,000 hrs]
Will the cost offset the user disatisfaction? Or will enough users purchased the next version with suitable upgrade of their music lists?
peterrenshaw ~ Another Scrappy Startup
That's because the Slashdot crowd seems to be fairly pragmatic.
/. crowd mostly thinks in terms of "what can you do for me NOW," and as a result, you get a lot of people saying "Gee, [innovation] won't lead to anything useful with the next year or two, so it's not important to me." The sad part is, they're right most of the time. Don't believe me? Go grab an issue of Popular Science or Popular Mechanics from the mid-1980s.
Most technological advances that make the news here are in-development technologies that may or may not bear fruit in five to ten years. And if anything, the experience of the last 50 years should have taught us that no matter how many times flying cars and nuclear fusion are predicted to be 10 years off, they seem to be perpetually 10 years off.
I think the
p
In Korea, long hair is for old people!
You just have to know what to look for. The significant article would be the one covering the Compaq Personal DJ (Something like the PDJ-100; can't find any references anymore). It showed the future.
Although people here will continually obsess about things like Ogg support, sometimes their whining has value. If you have something that works technically, and has enough marketing muscle behind it, you have a winner.
Oddly, some of the best "tips" I've gotten have come from Slashdot. Both short term positions and long-term strategies. The complaints Taco made about the iPod give a useful insight into all the iPod killer reviews today, and the future direction... just know what to look for!
I wonder what steps a typical user has taken to backup their 40/80 Gb of music?
Hey, genius, you are aware that there's a complete copy of the music on the iPod sitting in the computer's iTunes library, right?
If the iPod drive dies, you don't lose anything. If the computer's drive dies, it's possible to retrieve the songs from the iPod, but you lose anything that wasn't on the iPod's drive.
I think Apple is already trying to leverage the iPod popularity ... The new iMac G5 looking rather like a huge, docked iPod is no accident. (Look at the advertising they've done where you see the two side-by-side, if you don't think it's intentional!)
The stock analysts are expecting an increase in Mac sales too, based on strong iPod sales. They know the iPod is acting as a "bridge" of sorts, getting folks to consider Apple as a solid brand making quality products.
IMHO, Apple's biggest dilemma is software availability. When you buy your iPod, you can find just about any music you like and it can play it. When you buy your first iMac or iBook though - you CAN'T yet find quite a few programs (especially games, but apps too like AutoCAD, or a current version of Street Atlas USA... and the "promise" I once heard of Microsoft making Mac versions of all their apps is far from reality too). Don't get me wrong; there's a LOT of good stuff to run on a Mac. I own 3 Macs over here right now! But it's gonna dampen some people's experiences when they go to buy, say, Half Life 2, and find out "Oh, no Mac version is even so much as *planned* to ever come out?"
I see more of these come in for service at Best Buy than computers. We may take in 10 computers a week but I promise we take in at leat 25 ipods for each 10 computers.
I could easily say it started when Stan Ng came up with the idea and he and Jeff Robbin mocked up the iPod UI.
I credit Tony Fadell with a lot in relation to the iPod. A lot more than Apple lets on in general. But he was more instrumental in producing the product than actually being the genesis for the idea.
And as you or others have said, iPod would have been nothing without the good UI (which owes to Pixo) and the integration to iTunes. Tony didn't bring either of these with him to Apple, both of those ideas were not his.
Benjamin Knauss did not quit. He was fired.
I have to say it disappoints me greatly when stories fail to reveal the true backgrounds of their sources. It makes a big difference to hear Knauss was fired, doesn't it? Makes you wonder about the story and the "facts" in it?
When this happens, I wonder, was Wired too lazy to get to the bottom of what really happened? Or did they find out and realize it made their story less valuable? Either one makes me realize I don't want to get news from them.
And the same thing with Paul Mercer. He's often used about stories about the Mac or Newton. But stories inevitably mention how he quit Apple in digust. Paul Mercer was also fired (in this case from Apple). Note also that Mercer went on to form Pixo (the libraries used for the iPod UI), but don't go making the mistake that Mercer was responsible for the iPod UI. He was critical in the development of the Pixo toolbox, but he was long gone before the iPod adopted Pixo and thus Paul had nothing to do with it.
It's amazing how stories take on a life of their own. No one means to corrupt the truth, but it does happen. Seeing inaccurate stories like this or "Pirates of Silicon Valley" (which was entertaining) makes me wonder how much I can trust history of other sorts.
As the AC pointed out, yes the GUI was invented before Apple came along (and XEROX as well), but Apple were the first to take this proof-of-concept and make it usable.
The reason is that Slashdot has morphed from a "tech news" site into just a geek sounding board where people can get up on a pulpit and preach their little opinions as though they're important. Everyone thinks they're a lawyer, a sociologist, an economist, and that everyone is concerned with what they have to say.
regard to the IPod being not an inovation. MP3 players have been around for ages.
Invention is not required for innovation. Yes there were small players before the iPod, and larger capacity players before the iPod, but there weren't any other players that had a large capacity in a compact form factor. There was nothing else like the iPod at the time of its introduction. Nothing. That, and the industry has followed Apple in making small size-high capacity players, most with hard drives. How is that *not* the definition of innovation?
Apple just have great marketing. That's all there is to it.
Snob. The iPod is a phenomenon because Apple made a product with the best combination of features and it took a very long time before anyone could touch them. And its *still* arguably a superior product because of its interface and software integration. Apple's compeditors seem to think they'll have an "iPod killer" on their hands if they take a billeted list its features and one up them. But just because your player has a couple more hours of batter life and costs $40 less doesn't automatically mean you have a better product on your hands. The iPod succeeded because it had a great mix of features, and to beat it your player will have to do the same.
Agree again. The only real problem for me right now is AutoCAD. Almost everything else can be solved, but I can't ditch the work Dell for a mac until Autodesk gets on board.
The real problem for Apple, though, is not software but hardware supply issues. Software is the difference between a 10% and a 25% market share; hardware is the difference between 6% and 10%. Have to get over the first hurdle before you worry about the second!
Whats some good software to use with a 4th generation iPod? I've heard theres 3rd party software out there that allows you to use it more like a portable HD? Any good free software?
Anyone have any links to articles that might have a more broad history of the MP3 player in general?
Try this:
http://www.rockbox.org/playerhistory/
Da Blog
This has always been a problem with mp3, there was the gapless plugin for winamp, itunes attempts it with 'crossfade' except with a zero value crossfade there is still a wierd little skip or gap between tracks. I have seen the rip groups using one big mp3 and a cue file, but as far as I know no mp3 portable supports them, and itunes certainly does not, not sure what windows app does but obviously there is one. Surely this is one thing the mp3 scene has not dealt with. I don't mind ripping mixes as one joined track, since the ipod's scrubbing is excellent, and it is easy to skip forward _and_ backward through a mix using scrub.
I have found that most people that I talk to and people that I sell custom mixes to prefer tracked cd's though.
music lover since 1969
Mine was free too. Though I must say I think they are well worth the money compared to similar devices.
? r=7214
Even my PC loving GF wants one:
http://www.mp3players4free.com/default.aspx
has anyone ever tried Anapod Explorer?
http://www.redchairsoftware.com/anapod/
i know where toget a brand new free 20g ipod for free go to
www.tech4free.com/default.aspx?ref=191723