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iPod Shuffle Lookalike Hits CeBIT

An anonymous reader writes "It shouldn't be long before Apple's legal team goes after this one. LuxPro out of Taiwan introduced the Super Shuffle at CeBit, a look-a-like portable that is identical to the iPod Shuffle right down to the sihouette ads, but with the addition of an FM tuner and voice recording."

554 comments

  1. Confusing by nnnneedles · · Score: 0, Redundant

    What on earth were they thinking?

    --
    Will code a sig generator for food
    1. Re:Confusing by c0l0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Let's create a better product at a lower price, but without hordes of millions of fanboys blindly buying it at once..." comes to my mind immediately. ;)

      --
      :%s/Open Source/Free Software/g

      YTARY!
    2. Re:Confusing by Seehund · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Exactly. (Unfortunately this was posted in the "Apple" section for some reason, so you got modded down.)

      But after adding an FM-tuner and recording capabilities, all that was missing to make the iPod Shuffle useful (and at least on par with any cheap no-name Korean player) was a display, and they forgot to add it! The fanboys won't buy this anyway, so LuxPro might as well have made a good product for people who want an MP3 player more than they want a a cute piece of plastic with a particular trademark.

      What on earth were they thinking?

      --
      Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
    3. Re:Confusing by Elranzer · · Score: 3, Informative

      Apperently, if anyone was wondering what the Apple lawyers were gonna do, it's here

    4. Re:Confusing by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Let's copy a famous product that is expensively marketed worldwide and make some easy money from chumps"

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    5. Re:Confusing by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      It really is a striking look-alike, but the original is just a rectangular thumb drive in the first place. Since there is no Apple logo on it I wonder how far they will get with trademark issues.

      To me it seems ethically iffy but possibly letter-of-the-law ok (if they have good, expensive, lawyers).

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

      And what lower price would that be, dumbass?

    7. Re:Confusing by Deathlizard · · Score: 1

      Probably something like "How long will it take Apple to sue us?"

      There's only three things that come out of Apple; Ipods, Macs and Lawsuits. For any company to blatently rip off one of Apple's designs takes a lot of guts, especially since Apple's got some of the scariest lawyers in the industry.

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

      I believe this was a move by LuxPro to get noticed. Think about it. Create a few prototypes, get sued by Apple, stop making them. Now, because yo unever sold any, there are no profits to hand over to Apple, so you haven't lost much. You've just created a lot of advertising for your company for little cost. Then a month later you come out with the real product, that's different enough not to get sued over but still good enough that people will want it.

      3... profit!

    9. Re:Confusing by InfallibleLies · · Score: 0, Redundant

      How exactly can the first post be "redundant"?

  2. Trade secrets by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 4, Funny

    If we discuss Luxpro's trade secrets, will they sue us just like Apple does?

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
    1. Re:Trade secrets by Heisenbug · · Score: 1, Insightful

      ...

      If you signed an NDA with them, and then discuss stuff covered by the NDA, I'm gonna go with 'yes.'

      Just a thought.

  3. What law has been violated? by sultanoslack · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't think there are any trademarks that have been hit and other than that they just kind of look the same and have similar functionality.

    As far as I can see this really isn't all that different from walking into the grocery store and finding the generic products that do about the same thing next to the name brand ones.

    1. Re:What law has been violated? by xlyz · · Score: 1

      except that in this case it's the original that seems to be features-stripped

    2. Re:What law has been violated? by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Informative

      Using a "similar" name is still trademark infringement. They're using Apple's brand to sell their product.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    3. Re:What law has been violated? by Misroi · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Exactly what I think, when cd players first arrived, they all looked the same, round shape, same controls, etc... but it didn't matter, since it was serving a purpose.

      If you think you need to worry because someone else's product looks like yours, you have a problem. This means your whole sales concept is based on a look. I would be far more worried about a product that has more functionnalities, or cheaper.

      I don't know about you, but my mp3 player is always in my pocket, so how it looks doesn't really matter. On the other hand, maybe most people buy the shuffle for it's look. Odd world.

    4. Re:What law has been violated? by Patik · · Score: 3, Insightful
      other than that they just kind of look the same
      Kind of ?? There are more similarities between these two players than between successive generations of non-mini iPods. If they put it in a similar box a lot of people won't notice the difference. It's practically a twin.
      walking into the grocery store and finding the generic products that do about the same thing next to the name brand ones.
      For many of those products, namely medicines, the original creator has a patent that lasts many years before generics can be produced by other companies.
    5. Re:What law has been violated? by jez9999 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The 'big US corporations have a right to big profits' law.

    6. Re:What law has been violated? by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      I believe it's the "You can't just copy someone elses work and sell it as your own" law - also known as copyright. I bet you were one of the first to complain at CherryOS ripping off PearPC.

    7. Re:What law has been violated? by Tim+C · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, I don't know about the US, but here in the UK designs can be legally protected, so this could well be infringing under that law. Also, by calling it the "Super Shuffle" they're almost certainly going to fall foul of trademark law under a "confusingly similar" clause (Apple *has* tmed the name "Shuffle", right?)

    8. Re:What law has been violated? by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      I believe it's the "You can't just copy someone elses work and sell it as your own" law, also known as Copyright. I bet you were one of the first to complain that CherryOS was ripping off PearPC.

    9. Re:What law has been violated? by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      Argh, my apologies for the double post - something very very weird happened.

    10. Re:What law has been violated? by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 1

      Here's a brief definition of trademark:

      A trademark is anything that identifies the source (origin) of a product or service or that signifies sponsorship or approval of the goods. Trademarks include names, words, logos and product packaging, as well as distinctive non-functional visual aspects of the software, such as icons or user interface designs.

      Do you still argue that no trademark is being infringed here?

    11. Re:What law has been violated? by advocate_one · · Score: 1

      how do you know that this isn't the original product that Apple just rebadged???

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    12. Re:What law has been violated? by sultanoslack · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And you sir do not understand copyright law at all.

      This is nothing like the Pear PC.

      If the CherryOS guys decided to make a product from scratch that looked a lot like the Pear PC they would have been in the clear. If they'd decided to call it, let's say, another fruit as a reference to the other trademarked things it's related to, they'd be in the clear (oh, wait -- they did that one).

      It's when they actually copied the source code that they had a problem. Unless there's been some foul play in rooting out the design plans from Apple, which noone has suggested.

      It's called reverse engineering. And it's perfectly legal. (Well, aside from some possible quirks with DMCA interpretation.) It has nothing to do with copyright infringement.

      The only way that this could have issues is with a patent or trademark issue. And I'm not aware of any relevant patents and it seems that Apple does not have a registered mark for the term shuffle.

    13. Re:What law has been violated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only people who might suffer from this SuperShuffle are Americans. This thing is made in Taiwan, and they will sell it for cheap there, with more functionality and oh, wait, it IS a shuffle, so why the hell would anyone want an icrapTunes to put their mp3s onto their SuperShuffles? If you can just insert it into any usb, and copy from some directory directly to it, without wasting time - then i'm sold.

      Id travel to Taiwan just to get this bad boy. In your face, Apple - you officially been duped.

    14. Re:What law has been violated? by sultanoslack · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Only in the case that it is in fact a trademark. As Apple does not display a (R) logo for a registered mark or even a (T) logo for a trademark then I assumed that they did not assert one.

      It appears that they've applied for a registered mark on their logo (but not the word itself, from what I grok), but haven't yet been granted a registered trademark on the SHUFFLE logo as of now.

    15. Re:What law has been violated? by dedeman · · Score: 1

      I would imagine it would be similar to Hyundai presenting a car called the "Civil", and having it look remarkably like the Honda Civic. So at the '06 auto shows we would see that all new "Hyundai Civil", sitting on a platform next to the "Honda Civic".
      IANAL, but I believe there is something, both ethically and legally wrong, about creating a product which looks similar to the competition, when the competition's bread and butter is the appearance of the product. This ethic does not pertain to the Chrysler/Dodge/Mitsubishi cars of the 80's and 90's (different situation).
      I don't know, however, how characteristic a product must look to be granted some level of protection. My KDS monitor could have a Gateway logo on it, I wouldn't know the difference.

    16. Re:What law has been violated? by NoMercy · · Score: 1

      I think they probably went a bit far putting shuffle in the name, they could have probably gotten away with it if they'd called it 'basterd child' or something :)

    17. Re:What law has been violated? by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you think you need to worry because someone else's product looks like yours, you have a problem. This means your whole sales concept is based on a look. I would be far more worried about a product that has more functionnalities, or cheaper.

      It's called trade dressage, as I recall. Companies own the design, and can stop others from producing exact copies. IANAL, so there's no doubt a lot of factors that determine infringement (or what ever it's called).

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    18. Re:What law has been violated? by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're correct. Under English law, Apple have at least three causes of action:

      - trademark re. the name
      - design rights re. the design
      - "passing off", i.e. selling a product which people may think is made or endorsed by Apple.

      Most of the major jurisdictions have similar laws.

    19. Re:What law has been violated? by danila · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Shuffle is the name of a standard function on music players. Saying that Apple's trademark is violated is the same as me calling my CD burning software "Multi-session" and then objecting to someone else using the same word in their product. If Apple wanted strong protection, they should have went with a less generic name.

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    20. Re:What law has been violated? by standards · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't think there are any trademarks that have been hit and other than that they just kind of look the same and have similar functionality.

      It appears that they copied the package design of the iPod Shuffle, along with the term"Shuffle" in relation to a brand of music players.

      Apple has trademark on the term "Shuffle" when used in relation with portable music players. Dell can't sell the "Dell Shuffle" music player unless they ask Apple first. (On the flip side, maybe they could sell the Dell Shuffle Picture Frame Series, or the Dell Shuffle card shuffler)

      The design of the iPod shuffle's case is also protected. Apple's design is owned by Apple. It'd be wise to mix it up (pun!) instead of releasing a device that is clearly identical in appearance.

      All this is exactly why Ford never produced a car called "The Camaro", and never produced a car looked strikingly similar to a Chevy Camaro. Among other reasons related to the fact that the Camaro sucked.

      In the same way, Dell doesn't have a "Super Armada" series of laptops.

      ---

      In any case, I think there's an IP lesson in the making here - you may be finding legal trouble if you copy the name of a similar product, or the physical look of a product. Instead, think of your own name and create your own packaging.

      Here's what I'd advise: I'd call it the "Mini Mixer", paint it with chrome-like reflective paint, make the device 1/3rd the size, have it accept voice commands (and lose the buttons), and advertise it with a 500 hour battery life.

    21. Re:What law has been violated? by jackelfish · · Score: 1

      Oakley has previously been quite successful in maintianing their trademarking of the letter O. http://www.coleman-firm.com/veit.html http://www.bereskinparr.com/publications/rcd/pub_r cd_jun_2001.html

      --
      "When Nature Calls We All Shall Drown" Johan Edlund
    22. Re:What law has been violated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'm sure Coca-cola would agree with this sentiment. I mean cola drinks have been around forever, who cares about the package it comes in.

    23. Re:What law has been violated? by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

      The picture on the site (LuxPro's own) even uses iPod headphones to match the white... come on. Someone needs to invent more.

      --
      How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
    24. Re:What law has been violated? by tepples · · Score: 1

      That's because "O" isn't a generic term for sunglasses. "Shuffle", on the other hand, is a generic term for random play of single tracks on a music player.

    25. Re:What law has been violated? by Fortun+L'Escrot · · Score: 1

      unless imo Luxpro can show that "Shuffle" is just a label for a feature much like if they called their player an FM radio with mp3 playing and voice recording capabilities.

    26. Re:What law has been violated? by rhombic · · Score: 1

      It's a trade dress issue. See: this at the INTA website.

      --
      1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual.
    27. Re:What law has been violated? by Have+Blue · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, it means that someone has taken the design that Apple put effort into developing and duplicated it at no cost to them. This is how they were able to shove in an FM radio and record feature without increasing the price. And this is why Apple's design is protected by law, because that's not a fair business practice and it should not be done.

      Just think of it as a GPL violation. We all get up in arms about that, right?

    28. Re:What law has been violated? by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 3, Informative

      The use of symbols is not required by law. If you register your trademark, you get to skip over the part of the lawsuit where you demonstrate that it's a trademark.

      In this case, demonstrating that "shuffle" is an integral part of the "iPod shuffle" mark would take about two paragraphs and ten minutes of a legal assistant's time to type up.

    29. Re:What law has been violated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It looks like a violation of trade dress. Apple used the same law to stop the iMac imitators (the ones that looked confusingly similar) from staying on the market. Even worse for the copy, it has part of the same name. Dumb, dumb, dumb. Though I suppose it will sell well in China ;-).

    30. Re:What law has been violated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But not for the music player itself.

    31. Re:What law has been violated? by Donny+Smith · · Score: 1

      So what?
      These guys can change the name to muffle or something else in less than 10 minutes (i.e. before they type up a lawsuit).
      Like anyone wanted to buy this product because it's called Shuffle. Getting them to change it wouldn't matter a bit.

    32. Re:What law has been violated? by Donny+Smith · · Score: 1

      >Just think of it as a GPL violation. We all get up in arms about that, right?

      Uhm, no.
      Think of it as if an album you've always wanted and now you've found it on P2P.
      And no, noone gives a damn about that.

    33. Re:What law has been violated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you take a GPL program, copy all the features exactly, copy the interface exactly, etc... and turn it into a closed source product you're telling me people won't be up in arms? That would be copyright violation and the GPL is there to prevent that. It extends beyond simple code copying.

    34. Re:What law has been violated? by v1 · · Score: 3, Informative

      The basic purpose of trademark is preventing consumer confusion. When one company markets a product, they advertise unique features of their product that allows the consumer to choose their widge machine over the next guy's. They attach claims to their advertisements too, describing things like guarantees and warranty, plus associating the company's good name (reputation) with the product.

      Another company selling widget machines might decide that instead of spending money on marketing, they can just make their widget machine look identical to (or very close to) the well-known widget machine. This creates "brand confusion", and pisses off customers when they buy what they thought was brand X but in fact was a visual knock-off of brand X by brand Y. They thought they were getting the promises from brand X, but brand Y is usually a lower quality unit with none of the promises, and the customer also finds they were not in fact buying from the well known and trusted brand, but rather some unheard of company. This is a case of fraud, where you are trying to trick the consumer into buying your product under the pretense that it's a different product.

      To illustrate... If you went to the grocery store and bought a bag of Cheetos and got home and started munching on them and they tasted like crap, (or, really, tasted like anything besides Cheetos) then you look closely at the bag (which at a glance looks IDENTICAL to a bag of Cheetos) and see the name is "Cheatos", you too would be pissed. Trademark laws are not only to help companies - they also protect the consumer against fraud.

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    35. Re:What law has been violated? by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Argh, my apologies for the double post - something very very weird happened.

      It's much too early in the morning for me to be hearing about your conception and birth and why that would excuse a double posting. =)

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    36. Re:What law has been violated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be asinine. Nobody have much of a problem with that!

      Herb Cornfeld
      CFO, CherryOS

    37. Re:What law has been violated? by sultanoslack · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Just think of it as a GPL violation. We all get up in arms about that, right?


      No, no, no. I'm doing terrible things to my karma here, but people just don't seem to get this.

      This is much more like software patents, where we get frustrated with the fact that we're not allowed to copy what somebody already invented. Generally speaking copying is allowed.

      Have you ever been to the grocery store? Or maybe the electronics store? Or heck, Radio Shack. Basically every product at Radio Shack ("Realistic" was their store brand) rolls off the same commodity production line as some other name brand item.

      There's a big difference between copying a copyrighted work and copying an idea or a design. Every time we complain about patents it's because we're offended by the fact that it's possible to claim exclusive rights on an idea -- not a specific implementation.

      Trademark is yet another issue and the one where it looks like there are some issues here. Of course, a registered mark hasn't yet been granted (I checked earlier today). If that mark goes through this company will have a problem; but of course it's perfectly valid for them to contest that it's a generic term used for players and whatnot.
    38. Re:What law has been violated? by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      These guys can change the name to muffle or something else in less than 10 minutes

      No, they can't. Have you seen all the marketing materials they assembled for the show? There are posters and banners all over the booth, not to mention product packaging. Changing the name would be a major expense.

      And changing it to "Muffle" would not satisfy the requirements of trade dress laws.

    39. Re:What law has been violated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and "Windows" is a generic term for a framed area in a GUI for viewing filesystems. So, obviously, anyone can use "Windows" to describe their GUI-based personal computing operating system.

      ...or, maybe not.

    40. Re:What law has been violated? by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      Apple's design is a god damned white USB flash drive with controls on it...

    41. Re:What law has been violated? by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The term shuffle has been use for far too long in relation to music players for Apple to take the use of the word shuffle for itself. They can have "iPod Shuffle" if they want. Otherwise would they go after everyone whose hardware has a shuffle feature and calls it "shuffle"?

    42. Re:What law has been violated? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      It'a a legal concept called "Trade Dress". Many products have designs that are part of their identity. You can tell an iPod at a distance, without seeing the word "iPod" written on it. The qualities of appearance that let you do that are it's trade dress. This is protectable.

    43. Re:What law has been violated? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Because that's not Apple's business model. Apple designs products. They often incorporate others technology, but the look and feel is always Apple's. They then get far eastern companies to manufacture the products for them under license. It's concievable that Luxpro was a contract manufacturer for the shuffle, but there is no evidence for that, and I doubt it's the case as the penalties for the breach of contract would be severe indeed.

    44. Re:What law has been violated? by betaguy9000 · · Score: 1

      Whoa! They're trying to cover "MP3 players and software related thereto" over that trademark; does that mean Apple would be able to sue (almost) every MP3 player in existance?

    45. Re:What law has been violated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IANAL, but I have read USPTO documents explaining trademark law. "Shuffle" would likely be generic for the feature and descriptive for the player itself.

    46. Re:What law has been violated? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      How long do you think it would take Microsoft to go after someone who named their software something suspiciously similar to "Windows?" Like, I don't know, "Lindows," maybe? "Windows" is a generic GUI word, right?

      ...oh wait.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    47. Re:What law has been violated? by Randy+Wang · · Score: 2, Funny

      And changing it to "Muffle" would not satisfy the requirements of trade dress laws.


      It'd certainly make you want to buy it, though:

      "Hot damn, a SuperMuffle!"

      --
      --- Egads, I glow in the dark!
    48. Re:What law has been violated? by mabinogi · · Score: 4, Informative

      > This is much more like software patents, where we get frustrated with the fact that we're not allowed to copy what somebody already invented. Generally speaking copying is allowed.

      No, the issue with software patents is that most of the patents are for things so trivial that anyone could (and probably has) independantly develop them.

      A software patent on an application that is suffiently innovative, non trivial and non obvious is no better or worse than a patent on a physical invention, it's just that in the world of software patents, the patent examiners seem to have no clue and assume that anything someone has done with a computer must be worthy of patenting.

      If you have any other problem with software patents then it's not software patents you have a problem with, it's patents in general.

      But back to the Super Suffle.
      It looks almost identical to the iPod Shuffle, and it has an extremely similar name - "xxx Shuffle"
      I've never heard of another MP3 player called "Shuffle" so it's certainly not a generic term.

      I think it well and truly satisfies the "Confusingly similar" requirement.
      Similar to copyright, trademarks don't _need_ to be registered to be protected under trademark law.
      I guess the real issue here is whether or not they will try to sell it in a market that has trademark laws that will allow Apple to sue them.

      --
      Advanced users are users too!
    49. Re:What law has been violated? by bbc · · Score: 1

      "And this is why Apple's design is protected by law, because that's not a fair business practice and it should not be done."

      Er, no, you've got that the wrong way around. It's not a fair business practice because the law says so. There is nothing inherently unfair about copying.

      For the consumers it's even better, because they get more value for money.

      The problematic thing in this case is that consumers are being tricked into believing they buy an Apple product when they don't. Unfortunately, there is no law to protect consumers against such practices. (No, trademark law does not count.)

    50. Re:What law has been violated? by mikis · · Score: 1

      Well, their model *is* called "MX-575D/1075D".

    51. Re:What law has been violated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More like a DMCA violation, ala DeCSS.

      Reverse engineered hardware.

    52. Re:What law has been violated? by daesotho · · Score: 0

      If you do that without copying the code, it is perfectly legal.

      Or is SCO right and Linux is an illegal unix-alike?

    53. Re:What law has been violated? by pAnkRat · · Score: 0

      "Yeah, that's beause of the metric system."

      --
      we need an "-1 Plain wrong" moderation option!
    54. Re:What law has been violated? by Ham_belony · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have myself done trademark registrations for a company I used to work for. Although not that big of a company, The registration of the trademarks meant more control on the use of all the logo's, names and figures. It helped us to increase venue through licensing and merchandising. The trademark would allow us to prevent the use with the same domain for which it was registred. In case of Apple, iPod and Shuffle are likely to have been registred separately but both for electronic devices which would in general play music if they registred it as such. As long as they kept the definition of the trademark as general as possible they will be able to prevent the sales of this device almost world wide. If they just trademarked it as a device to play music files, they will not be that likely to prevent the use of the name.

    55. Re:What law has been violated? by MonkeyBoy · · Score: 1

      Uh. Your logic is a little flawed.

      They wouldn't go after companies who have products with a shuffle feature in them. As you said, it's a long-standing feature that's commonplace in both hardware and software audio products. I don't think anyone, besides you evidently, is even remotely considering this as a legal basis for a lawsuit.

      What they're considering are two points:

      1) It looks virtually identical to the iPod Shuffle aside from an extra switch on the back. When I first saw the pictures I assumed the face-up (round button) shots were of an iPod shuffle, and the rear (two switches) were of the Super Shuffle. If the design is close enough to cause that kind of confusion, where someone could conceivably buy your product instead of your competitors because they look all but identical - that's grounds for a lawsuit under US trademark/trade dress laws. Of course, Luxpro would have to actually sell their product in the US for them to apply.

      2) The name is not "Shuffle", it's "Super Shuffle." It was released, coincidentally enough, roughly 6 months after Apple launched the "iPod Shuffle." Golly, I wonder how they could have come up with that name, given that aside from an extra button it looks identical to an iPod Shuffle, which was on the market for some time prior to SS's launch.

      All that being said, they're so close that I think (with no basis for my opinion other than that) they're actually being manufactured by the same company and sold under license to Apple and Luxpro. My assumption is that the two of them will not sell their products in the same market and therefore can sell virtually identical products in different places and not confuse anyone except naive internet users.

      --

      Moof!

    56. Re:What law has been violated? by nuggetman · · Score: 1

      no, it means that they could sue anyone making an mp3 player which is confusingly similar to the names apple, ipod, shuffle, etc

      just like i can start selling car batteries called McIntosh car batteries, but i wouldn't be able to make a computer called a McIntosh

      --
      ...and that's all there is to it.
    57. Re:What law has been violated? by rgovostes · · Score: 1

      Not only is the name, marketing, and design of the device similar, the headphones are exactly the same. They can't even design their own? These people deserve to be sued...

    58. Re:What law has been violated? by chasingporsches · · Score: 1

      just as McCoy would say, "i would be confident that one of my legal aides could handle this and win". easy, clear cut case. there is no ambiguity. it's apple's design.

    59. Re:What law has been violated? by jizmonkey · · Score: 1
      A software patent on an application that is suffiently innovative, non trivial and non obvious is no better or worse than a patent on a physical invention, it's just that in the world of software patents, the patent examiners seem to have no clue and assume that anything someone has done with a computer must be worthy of patenting.

      Hey there, there are lots more problems unique to software patents. There's no reason to knock people down based on your own ignorance. Here's a few others:

      • The length of the patent is too long for the pace of technology
      • The benefits of software are largely based on network externalities, which are of course impeded by patent monopolies. That's not the case with say a new razor by Gillette
      • Software has no inherent cost/price, so by imposing licensing fees you might conceivably wipe out Linux, etc. A new kind of toothbrush will always be sold for money which can be used to pay royalties
      • There is no way to tell what's been patented (as opposed to chemical and DNA patents where there are searchable databases). Even patent owners themselves (e.g. Forgent) don't know what's in their patents! The marking requirement, which ordinarily goes a tiny way towards solving this problem, is almost universally ignored in the software industry
      • Having many, many players in the software industry drives up transaction costs. Although semiconductor patents are economically similar, there are many fewer semiconductor firms which makes licensing more tractable (although I don't believe its desirable there, either)
      • Software patents do not disclose underlying implementations, making the claims broad and vague without contributing benefits to society. That there is a legal distinction, not just an economic one
      • And the biggest one: There is simply no empirical evidence that patents cause innovation in the software industry. (There is actually quite a bit to the contrary.) If there's no economic benefit, then what's the point? The patent act was never titled "A Full Employment Act for Shysters"!
      There's a lot more. This kind of thing has been discussed in the economic and legal literature for decades.
      --
      With great power comes great fan noise.
  4. The best part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Will be the fanboi's reaction to this.

    It will affirm:

    1) The shuffle is only in the lineup to cover the low-end

    2) the FM radio is a good idea

    And once you guys wake up from your trance, you'll say "it really should have had a display"

    But for now, start foaming away that someone dares to look like an ipod shuffle. Good grief.

    1. Re:The best part by johnpaul191 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      look like? it is a 99.9% clone. it would be like Chevy cloning a Ford Mustang but using a different layout on the dashboard.

      Apple always has legal protection on the physical design of their products as well as the rest of it. they went after those people that came close to ripping off the old CRT iMac look and stopped them. this is a blatant rip-off of Apple's design. even if you hate Apple, you have to see that.

    2. Re:The best part by flumps · · Score: 1

      [i]2) the FM radio is a good idea[/i]

      I'd prefer it to be DAB digital radio... I'd be a bit more excited if it were.

      --
      "So there he is, risen from the dead. Like that fella, E. T." - Father Ted Crilly
    3. Re:The best part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This thing most likely uses the same GUTS even as the iPod shuffle, the chip in the shuffle already supports FM radio, Apple (like any sensible company) didn't provide it out of clean UI design.

    4. Re:The best part by ThePlague · · Score: 0

      Apple (like any sensible company) didn't provide it out of clean UI design.

      So it's not crippled functionality, it's a feature!

    5. Re:The best part by lavar78 · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of us who never use the radio. I appreciate not having an extra, unwanted feature on a simple player like this. Those of you who want a radio should buy something other than an iPod.

      --
      "Dave, I stand still--the conclusions jump to me!" - Bill McNeal, NewsRadio
    6. Re:The best part by thePjunisher · · Score: 1

      From looking at the pictures, I'd say it's more like Chevy cloning a Ford Mustang, including the dashboard, but adding an AC...

    7. Re:The best part by northcat · · Score: 1

      Good to see that there is at least *some* sense on slashdot.

    8. Re:The best part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No no no... The "Less space then a Nomad. Lame." stuff can only apply to Apple's competition, not our beloved Apple!!!

      As a rabid Apple fanboy I will ignore your logic and concentrate on posting great lengths about how their products "Isn't an Apple branded music player. Lame."

    9. Re:The best part by northcat · · Score: 1

      Urgh... Parent presents valid points against something related to Apple in a polite manner and it gets modded down as troll!!

    10. Re:The best part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those of you who want a radio should buy something other than an iPod.

      The supershuffle maybe?

    11. Re:The best part by northcat · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't the logical thing to say be "Those of you who do not want a radio should buy something other than an iPod"?

    12. Re:The best part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do any of you possess an original thought? are you even capable of thinking? leave your parent's basement and go for a walk.

    13. Re:The best part by lavar78 · · Score: 1
      Wouldn't the logical thing to say be "Those of you who do not want a radio should buy something other than an iPod"?
      Er, no. The iPod doesn't have a radio. If you want one, you should buy another music player -- one that includes a radio.
      --
      "Dave, I stand still--the conclusions jump to me!" - Bill McNeal, NewsRadio
    14. Re:The best part by jisatsusha · · Score: 1

      Same here, but you'd never be able to fit the components into a package that small. The smallest portable DAB radio I've seen is about the size of a normal iPod, not to mention it'd probably double the cost of the thing.

    15. Re:The best part by djward · · Score: 1

      the FM radio is a good idea

      I like to use my music player on airplanes.

      Airlines don't allow devices with radio tuners on airplanes.

      There, a real reason to leave out the bloody radio. Besides, I haven't heard anything good on the radio in years (exaggeration - but not by much).

    16. Re:The best part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true at all, of course. Just about every cassette playing walkman has an FM radio, as well as many CD players. You aren't supposed to use the radio feature (and you probably wouldn't want to, since the best you could hope for is a few minutes of a station here and there when flying a cross-country flight) but you are and always have been allowed to used the other features.

  5. Fun stuff by mr_Spook · · Score: 3, Funny

    Why I can already hear Jobs smashing extra Newtons already,..

    1. Re:Fun stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your grammar is really full of redundancy really.

      Tonight we're gonna rock you tonight!

  6. Apple's in trouble... by zegebbers · · Score: 3, Funny

    their's isn't super! :(

    1. Re:Apple's in trouble... by Fred_A · · Score: 5, Funny

      What's more you can eat this one !

      At least I can't see any mention anywhere on the page that you can't.

      Way to go LuxPro !

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    2. Re:Apple's in trouble... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may think that's funny, but my 5GB iPod has the distinct impressions of 4 tiny little teeth marks that can either have been caused by a baby rabbit, or my 17 month old daughter. I'm not sure if I have a rabbit anywhere in the house, but I'd prefer not to think my daughter has been chewing on my iPod

  7. Hmmm... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I saw this a week or so ago, and the first thing what wandered through my mind was not 'They are going to get sued' but 'So this is the OEM version of the Shuffle eh?'.

    There has been a lot of speculation that Apple never designed the Shuffle but bought it in from outside, guess we will find out if and when Apple sue over it.

    1. Re:Hmmm... by argent · · Score: 1

      There has been a lot of speculation that Apple never designed the Shuffle but bought it in from outside, guess we will find out if and when Apple sue over it.

      Even if they implemented this one from scratch, it's still basically a redesign of the Magic Star device.

    2. Re:Hmmm... by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you look at any ipod actually there all made in Taiwan - I highly doubt its an Apple manufacturing concern in Formosa however. It wouldn't be too hard for some company to take the blueprints from their assembly line and start making their own ipods.

    3. Re:Hmmm... by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Speculation between you and a friend over a beer perhaps? Apple does it's own look and feel design. It doesn't do rebadged versions of others designs.

    4. Re:Hmmm... by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      The design, though, is patentable, and it is quite different from the Magic Star player (even if the functionality and generic form factor are very similar).

    5. Re:Hmmm... by argent · · Score: 1

      Sure, the Super Shuffle is more than a clone, it's an outright copy... down to the advertising materials. But then, if the design isn't patented (and apparently the Shuffle isn't) you can get pretty damn close with a clone. Back in the heyday of the IBM clone business, one of the clone shops operating in Houston was called "UBM". :)

    6. Re:Hmmm... by zonker · · Score: 2, Informative

      yeah the shuffle is apparently actually built by asus according to an article on digitimes from a while back...

    7. Re:Hmmm... by TWX · · Score: 1

      "Back in the heyday of the IBM clone business, one of the clone shops operating in Houston was called 'UBM'. :)"

      UBM? Sounds more like an instruction than a computer brand.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    8. Re:Hmmm... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      UBM? Sounds more like an instruction than a computer brand.

      Sort of like:

      10 goto toilet

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    9. Re:Hmmm... by mikecar52 · · Score: 1

      Yep, it probably is a redesign, I am surprised the tiawanese, malaysian, and all other asian manufacturers haven't gone after apple. Perhaps they have and have some deal going. I have a 256meg flash mp3player built long before apple got on the bandwagon. If I recall correctly I could have bought a 2.5" hard drive mp3player long time before ipods appeared too.

    10. Re:Hmmm... by argent · · Score: 1

      IBM
      UBM
      We All BM
      For IBM -- H.A.R.L.I.E. (Wehn HARLIE was one, David Gerrold)

  8. Innovation by thewiz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Are businesses REALLY interested in innovation or just being copycats? I foresee a lawsuit coming out of this blatant duplication of the shuffle.

    --
    If "disco" means "I learn" in Latin, does "discothèque" mean "I learn technology"?
    1. Re:Innovation by H8X55 · · Score: 1

      C'mon now, you know that innovation is only important if it's profitable. Copying a current, successful design sounds profitable, so who cares if it's innovative?

    2. Re:Innovation by argent · · Score: 1

      Are businesses REALLY interested in innovation or just being copycats?

      You mean, like Apple? I wuv my Shuffle, but the Magic Star (before my daughter bent the USB connector one time too many) was just as good.

    3. Re:Innovation by Not_Wiggins · · Score: 1

      Are businesses REALLY interested in innovation or just being copycats?

      There are two formulas for being successful in business: innovate or replicate. Rio was innovative in creating a portable MP3 player. Everything after that was basically replication (albeit with improvements, and that is what differentiates Apple's iPod from the other MP3 players currently... and now there's a scramble to replicate the iPod's features).

      Now, given all that, there is still a fine line between following in a leader's footsteps and trying to create brand confusion to sell a (supposedly) inferior product.

      Has anyone reviewed this "super shuffle?" If it "works better" (ie, has more memory, longer battery life, better UI, or something else), would it really be a bad thing that it mimics Apple's brand? I think we're assuming that it is inferior because it is made in Taiwan and it is trying to leech off of another brand's recognition to sell. If anything, if it is superior, then it helps Apple because it strengthens the perception of brand quality.

      Of course, if it sucks... then Apple has a real interest in shooting the product down.

      --
      Diplomacy is the art of saying, "Nice doggie!" until you can find a rock.
    4. Re:Innovation by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 0

      I've got a USB thumb drive that looks pretty much identical to that, but you have to admit the iPod Shuffle looks a fair bit different.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    5. Re:Innovation by flupps · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think we're assuming that it is inferior because it is made in Taiwan

      Yes, because no good technology is produced in Taiwan. Next time you go to a computer store, look at the motherboards section...

      Nowadays most motherboard companies have alternative homepages, but I remember 5-6 years ago if you needed bios updates or driver patches, the pages were always at www.motherboardbrand.com.tw

      It still seems to be the case:
      http://www.abit.com.tw
      http://www.asus.com.tw
      http://www.gigabyte.com.tw
      http://www.msi.com.tw
      http://www.epox.com.tw
      http://www.tyan.com.tw

    6. Re:Innovation by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I don't think inferior/superior has anything to do with it, as far as directly copying a product is concerned. More features does not necessarily mean superior, but that is neither here nor there.

      This is no different than if Chevy started selling Mustangs that looked exactly like a Ford Mustang, and claimed it was a different product because their Mustang had a higher top speed, or better fuel efficiency, or that it had an 8 track in addition to the CD player. It doesn't matter if you consider any of these an improvement. Chevy cannot sell a complete copy of the Ford Mustang.

      If the super shuffle merely "worked better" and didn't exactly resemble the Apple product, then it would compete in the marketplace on it's own merits. However, this company is not trying to compete with Apple. They're trying to leech of off Apple's efforts and Apple's success by direct and complete imitation. I don't know how to get that to sink in, other than with repetition: This isn't an evolutionary step, this is exact imitation.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    7. Re:Innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's really quite simple:

      It's not ok to clone something if it's hardware but it's ok to clone something if it's software.

      Especially if it's Apple hardware.

    8. Re:Innovation by Not_Wiggins · · Score: 1

      I think we're assuming that it is inferior because it is made in Taiwan

      I think you misunderstood my statement to mean I felt Taiwan produces inferior products. Instead, I meant to imply that that might be the more popular view on /. when it comes to comparing "Apple products" to others. That was all... I think Taiwan rocks (uh oh... now I won't be able to travel to China!). ;)

      --
      Diplomacy is the art of saying, "Nice doggie!" until you can find a rock.
    9. Re:Innovation by argent · · Score: 1

      All cats are gray in your pocket.

    10. Re:Innovation by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 0

      Factually incorrect.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
  9. Let's see how long that product will be available by giaguara · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Looks a bit too similar to iPod shuffle to let Apple lawyers just ignore it. I would guess before next Friday that company is gone, or heavily sued...

  10. One word: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lame.

  11. Great marketing for Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm glad that other manufacturers see the wealth of design options contained within the iPod. It is truly sheer brilliance by Steve Jobs to have unleashed this product into the consumer market. I think it's admirable that the marketing department has been reading the suggestions that Bill Joy made about alternative platforms. Hopefully Bill will join them on a full-time basis.

    I think the iPod is great and convenient. When I go out dancing, it doesn't get uncomfortable even when I wear my tightest pair of jeans while sitting in the subway.

    Which is nice.

    1. Re:Great marketing for Apple by Seehund · · Score: 1

      Good job! I think it'd be great if all Slashdotters were as honest as you were when you chose a subject for your ad^H^H post. ;)

      --
      Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
  12. good stuff gets copied. by danimrich · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Only good products get copied over and over.

    --
    where's all that Karma?
    1. Re:good stuff gets copied. by Everleet · · Score: 3, Funny
      Only good products get copied over and over.

      Yeah...that and bad products.

      --
      It's tragic. Laugh.
    2. Re:good stuff gets copied. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not in the case of Lindows.

    3. Re:good stuff gets copied. by back_pages · · Score: 2, Funny
      Only good products get copied over and over.

      Which is why there are no pirated copies of Microsoft Windows. Oh wait..

    4. Re:good stuff gets copied. by danimrich · · Score: 1

      Maybe this needs some clarification:
      "good" in this particular case should mean "sells well", "widely used", ...

      --
      where's all that Karma?
    5. Re:good stuff gets copied. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only good products? Then why are there so many "reality" tv shows? I think there might be a little hole in that theory there...

    6. Re:good stuff gets copied. by mcwop · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the commment should be rephrased to say: "Only successful products get copied".

      --

      "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

  13. I don't like Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, it's not really that I dislike them in general, I just don't like their recent legal actions.

    However, if they are suing these people they really have my blessing. (Not that they care, I know :-D)

  14. iPod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... what's it all about? Is it good or is it whack?

  15. I don't think Apple has much of a case... by trifster · · Score: 1, Redundant

    IANAL but I don't think there is much apple can do. Unless they stole some patented technology, they should be fine with that desing. You cannot copyright style or asthetics. If there were a trademarked shape (apple, nike swoosh) also copied then there would be a problem.

    You cannot protect a scent, that's why fragrances can be duplicated, generic drugs and grocery store products are another example.

    1. Re:I don't think Apple has much of a case... by SkipNewarkDE · · Score: 1

      Actually that's not true, regarding copyrighting style or asthetics. There are laws outlining "trade dress" which cover the look associated with a product. This is why Pepsi's soda bottle doesn't look like the Coke bottle, for example.

    2. Re:I don't think Apple has much of a case... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you're mistaken.

      Apple took eMachines to court for making a computer that looked similar to the original fruit flavoured iMacs. Apple won, eMachines had to withdraw their product.

      This doesn't look similar, this looks identical.

      Apple will win.

    3. Re:I don't think Apple has much of a case... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One would think the LuxPro people knows this (or at least their lawyers), and they've tried to keep just out of harm's way.

      Stick-shaped? 95% of these things are.
      White?
      Features?
      etc. ...

      The only thing I can think of is that round controller, which might be very difficult to claim ownership of (the circle layout has existed for a long time; the particular layout of the buttons - play above, rwd/ffwd left and right, etc.). If LuxPro has played their cards semi-intelligently, Apple mightn't even have a case..

    4. Re:I don't think Apple has much of a case... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you know what's funny. On this board you are hated for a few reasons.

      1) Make money
      2) Don't give you everything for free
      3) Have power and don't listen to the whiners
      4) Sucessful.

      So basically this boards hates anything they are not..... a bunch of losers

    5. Re:I don't think Apple has much of a case... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You cannot copyright style or asthetics.
      Are you sure? In Sweden, the patent office grants "pattern protections" (rough translation), which is a weaker form of patent, for exactly what you are describing - style and aesthetics.

      The design of a certain item can be protected if it (the design) is deemed novel or unique enough, precisely to prevent this sort of thing. I would be very surprised if similar protection did not exist in other countries.
    6. Re:I don't think Apple has much of a case... by mollymoo · · Score: 1
      It's not one thing. It's not just the design, that's fairly generic. It's the design being so similar, the name being so similar and the marketing being so similar all combined. It ammounts to "passing off" (that's what we call it in the UK anyway, it's "trade dress" in the US I think).

      I could make a car which looked quite like a BMW 3-series and get away with it. If I also called it the 3-series, had a round logo with the middle divided into 4 segments, played on it being a driver's car in my advertising and called my company EMW it would ammount to passing off, even though those actions individually may not be a problem.

      --
      Chernobyl 'not a wildlife haven' - BBC News
    7. Re:I don't think Apple has much of a case... by trifster · · Score: 1

      boy do i need to be modded down. who the hell said I was interesting?? :-)

  16. Why no AM radio? by AtariAmarok · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This lawsuit-bait would almost be worth considering if it had an AM radio. I wonder why these things include FM radio only. Perhaps the AM radio hardware is much more expensive. Regardless, it is much less useful without it. An FM radio is sort of redundant. I use FM radio for music, and there are already music files on the player. I use AM radio for news, and there aren't news MP3's.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:Why no AM radio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AM radio needs a coil inside while FM radio uses the wire connecting arphone as antenna

    2. Re:Why no AM radio? by Poromenos1 · · Score: 1

      There should BE news mp3s!

      --
      Send email from the afterlife! Write your e-will at Dead Man's Switch.
    3. Re:Why no AM radio? by Detritus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A decent AM radio antenna (ferrite rod) would be way too large to fit in the case.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    4. Re:Why no AM radio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only in your fucked up country. Here in the UK we get our major national talk station (4) in lovely stereo FM.

    5. Re:Why no AM radio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Here in the UK we get our major national talk station (4) in lovely stereo FM"

      That is good if you want the official government news from the BBC, but not if you want independent media.

    6. Re:Why no AM radio? by anagama · · Score: 1



      There's news on AM? That's news to me!

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    7. Re:Why no AM radio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The BBC is more independent than almost all American media, which is either in bed with the liberals, in bed with the conservatives, or just looking out for its own interests.

    8. Re:Why no AM radio? by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I use AM radio for news, and there aren't news MP3's.


      You should look into this thing called "podcasting".

      Granted, you're not going to get an up to the minute traffic report, breaking news, or a stock market report just as the market closes.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    9. Re:Why no AM radio? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1
      I use AM radio for news, and there aren't news MP3's.

      As others have mentioned, the ferrite antenna wouldn't fit inside the Shuffle.
      However, for news MP3s, get a copy of some podcast software (I use iPodderX), and point it to here:
      http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/wbur/news.news main?action=podcast&section=1

      WBUR Podcasts the stories from NPR's Morning Edition.

      -T

    10. Re:Why no AM radio? by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 1
      There are many Shuffle[tm]-sized(*) pocket AM/FM receivers. I've had Philips and Sony AM/FM radios for years since over here all decent channels are broadcast over AM. Since the AM antenna is built into that small case, in some locations the orientation of the radio affects the quality of the signal (fixed with some manual, umm, shuffling), but it's always better than having no radio available on the go at all.

      One of these days a manufacturer looking for a new niche will release an "ayXuphle" player with an AM receiver (and standard AAA rechargables and switchable memory cards) and I finally have just one stick for all my AM and .ogg listening needs, not to mention booting Linux... :^)

      (*) Rough size comparison:
      (W) 25 x (H) 85 x (D) 9.7 (mm) (Copycat Shuffle[tm])
      (W) 30 x (H) 80 x (D) 17 (mm) (Sony SRF-M95 AM/FM pocket radio)

      --

      Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

    11. Re:Why no AM radio? by flosofl · · Score: 1

      Granted, you're not going to get an up to the minute traffic report, breaking news, or a stock market report just as the market closes.

      I think that would be called "olds" then, not news.

      --
      "This calls for a very special blend of psychology and extreme violence" - Vyvyan "The Young Ones"
    12. Re:Why no AM radio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or perhaps the recents?

    13. Re:Why no AM radio? by MonkeyCookie · · Score: 1

      I get my news in the U.S. from National Public Radio, which broadcasts over FM. I've never been interested in listening to AM stations.

    14. Re:Why no AM radio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, there's decent, and there's what people will accept with AM radio. When I think AM, I think of a signal where static frequently drowns out the audio. I think widening the case a bit and stuffing a ferrite rod along that entire length would allow for reasonable (read: strong AM signals only) reception.

      Downsides I can see:
      1) Insure nothing grounds through ferrite, even after abuse (drops, etc).
      2) Increase in weight due to ferrite rod.
      3) Increase in packaging size due to rod plus whatever extra electronics are required for AM.
      4) Increase in price to cover development + extra guts

      Personally I understand why Apple didn't stick AM or FM in there. You just can't get good quality audio out of packaging this small. I tried AM/FM portable music players fairly recently and didn't notice any appreciable increase in AM/FM audio quality - 20 years seems to all been focused on shrinking the package and lowering prices.

      So in other words, Apple made a decision for iPod/iPod Shuffle/iPod Photo owners: Would you like to listen to whatever crystal-clear MP3s/AACs you already own and like - or listen to lousy quality AM/FM audio where you have no control over the content?

  17. Will there be a clash? by otter42 · · Score: 1

    This is going to be very interesting to see played out. They're going after the iPod Shuffle market, with nary a thought to even partially concealing their inspiration.

    However, there's absolutely nothing wrong with copying a good idea. Apple has no patent for the concept of an mp3 player, and I don't know if they can claim that a white tongue depressor is a "copyrighted piece of art". Otherwise the whole USB key market would be in a state of utter chaos, as my USB key looks pretty much like everyone elses.

    The iPod Suffle is certainly a trademark, but the SuperShuffle isn't the same thing, and no one is going to be fooled. Apple doesn't make the "Shuffle"-- they make an iPod with "Shuffle" attached. I would argue that the SuperShuffle is as legal a name as the SuperPhoto or the SuperMini.

    So, would Apple have a leg to stand on? Or is this a situation where the consumer (finally) is going to win on all sides?

    --
    www.eissq.com/BandP.html Ball and Plate System. Amuse your friends. Crush your enemies.
    1. Re:Will there be a clash? by argent · · Score: 1

      They're going after the iPod Shuffle market, with nary a thought to even partially concealing their inspiration.

      Right, at least Apple changed the appearance of the Magic Star "Gray Whale".

    2. Re:Will there be a clash? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iPod Shuffle went to market,
      iPod Photo stayed at at home,
      SuperShuffle went, "weeweeweweweeeee! Hahah Jobs!", all the way home.

    3. Re:Will there be a clash? by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

      I am sorry. The shuffle is definitely not just a clone of this monstrosity. It's ugly, it's biggerm it's control's are not as elegant and unlike the Shuffle, it like will not work with iTunes. Other companies CAN make competitors. The Super Shuffle is not that....it's a complete knockoff. I would not be a bit surprised on this one if someone took it apart that it did not have alot of the exact same parts inside. You won't see Gray Whale parts in a Shuffle.

      --

      Gorkman

    4. Re:Will there be a clash? by argent · · Score: 1

      The shuffle is definitely not just a clone of this monstrosity. It's ugly, it's biggerm it's control's are not as elegant and unlike the Shuffle, it like will not work with iTunes.

      It's ugly, yes.

      But I've bought both of these devices. The controls on the "Gray Whale" are not that much different, and it works fine with iTunes... or I'm imagining my daughter using it that way almost three years before the Shuffle showed up, and once it's in your pocket (you're not dumb enough to wear your Shuffle on that "Steal Me Now" lanyard, are you?) the only difference in appearance is the color of the earphones.

    5. Re:Will there be a clash? by argent · · Score: 1

      You won't see Gray Whale parts in a Shuffle.

      You might be surprised. The core of the Shuffle is a standard MP3 player chip that's used in a lot of East Asian designs:

      The Shuffle Sylvester dismantled was based around an MP3 decoder chip from SigmaTel and a flash memory chip from Samsung--which means the device uses many fewer chips than hard-drive-based iPods, she wrote.

      The MP3 decoder, mounted to one board, takes charge of a multitude of functions. Its handles music, including the playing of MP3, AAC and Audible format files. It harbors a USB 2.0 converter, SDRAM for buffering data and a headphone driver.

      The chip is capable of handling Windows Media music file decoding and voice recording, and could send images to an LCD screen and work with an FM tuner, she wrote. Those features go unused in the Shuffle, though.

    6. Re:Will there be a clash? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      STFU troll. And it was done much better earlier, too. Come up with an original if you want to play in this market.

    7. Re:Will there be a clash? by ablair · · Score: 1


      "However, there's absolutely nothing wrong with copying a good idea."

      There is if CopyCat Co. copies an idea wholesale and tries to pass it off as an original from Ingenuity Inc. This is what's going on here.

      "The iPod Suffle is certainly a trademark, but the SuperShuffle isn't the same thing, and no one is going to be fooled

      With two 512MB/1GB flash mp3 players both called "shuffle" and visually almost indistinguishable, both promoted with similar advertising, people are guaranteed to get confused.

      "So, would Apple have a leg to stand on? Or is this a situation where the consumer (finally) is going to win on all sides?"

      You are severely misinformed. Clearer cases of copyright and patent infringement don't come along that often. Apple will sue, (they should sue), and they will win. If you think consumers would win by quashing the impetus for innovation - the ability for a company to profit from it's ideas - then you should send your mail-order economics degree back for a refund. I know I would be pissed if my company spent millions in R&D, as well as months coming up with a great advertising campiagn, just to see it ripped off lock, stock & barrel by someone who doesn't have to spend a penny on said costs. No-one would ever bother making new products if there was no protection from this.

  18. Apple gets sued more than it sues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was curious to see if Apple had already sued anyone for infringing patents, trademark or copyright related to the iPod. I used the words: iPod, suit and court. There were many hits with stories about people suing Apple. The first couple of pages had no hits related to Apple suing anyone else.

    Given that there are many many mp3 players out there that might infringe Apple's ip, the fact that Apple doesn't seem to have sued yet probably means they won't sue in this case either.

  19. *Yawn* by PeeAitchPee · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I doubt it has tight integration with iTunes, which is a major selling point of the various iPods.

    1. Re:*Yawn* by Zilch · · Score: 1

      Yes, I hear itunes.com.tw does a roaring trade.

      Zilch.

    2. Re:*Yawn* by displaced80 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oddly enough, on the Mac, it probably will do (at least, with iTunes itself, not the Store).

      iTunes Mac has just worked with every single MP3 player I've ever plugged into my Mac. Creative Zen thingies all the way down to little no-name USB players. iTunes grants Mac-using owners of these devices almost every bit of functionality that they'd get with an iPod.

      However, iTunes on the Windows side works only with the iPod.

      --
      What's the frequency, Kenneth?
    3. Re:*Yawn* by legirons · · Score: 1

      "I doubt it has tight integration with iTunes, which is a major selling point of the various iPods."

      Presumably it's just USB mass-storage as far as the computer is concerned? Opinions may vary, but I find "cp -ru Music /mnt/usb" much quicker and more convenient than buying a Mac, running iTunes, importing my music and synchronising that with an iPod.

    4. Re:*Yawn* by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      I don't actually think that's correct. You can plug in a third-party music player and drag songs to it, but you can't sync.

      I've had a music player since 2001, and I absolutely would not be willing to part with it ... but if you took away my ability to sync, I'd just drop it in a drawer and forget about it. Sync is what makes an iPod practical.

      It's entirely possible that Apple has added syncing to third-party players at some point. If so, I'm just wrong here.

    5. Re:*Yawn* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should look things up before commenting.

    6. Re:*Yawn* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, but I doubt it will play ITMS songs.

    7. Re:*Yawn* by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I don't.

      Why? Because I can tell iTunes "select my four and 5 star rated music that's not spoken word or seasonal, and synchronize 1GB of it (randomly selected) to the iPod Shuffle, making sure to use different music each time."

      I'm sure it's possible to do that on the command line, but it would take a whole shell script and ideally a database, and you still wouldn't have a convenient way to rate the songs to begin with...

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  20. Slashpod--All iPod, all the time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here we go again. Another article about the iPod, feigning outrage that someone else dared to come up with an mp3 player. According to Slashdot, the only player worthy of existance is the iPod; everyone else is ripping Apple off, and nothing else is worth considering.

    There will come a day, thanks to all the hype generated by Slashdot, that NO alternatives to the iPod will exist (except for Microsoft, who will use their WinCE gambit against the iPod like they did against Palm).

    1. Re:Slashpod--All iPod, all the time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By the way, yes, I do work for an organization that makes products that compete with the iPod, and I'd like my stock option to be more valuable!

    2. Re:Slashpod--All iPod, all the time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Musician Barrett Kalellis has written a provocative article titled Music for Boneheads. While not specifically about the iPod, he wonders why do we need to be constantly surrounded by music? It diminishes the power of music. Myself, I am more and more looking upon music as just another form of noise.

      Silence can be golden, but escape to a silent place is not easy. Annoying music is probably the number one reason that I push the channel changer when watching TV.

  21. Some changes to take care of it. by AtariAmarok · · Score: 3, Informative

    1. Make it black

    2. Make the circular control area square.

    3. Make it narrower (even if it means making it longer to cram the electronics in). This is one area where it would actually improve on the real Shuffle, which is just too wide, especially where it plugs in, requiring a USB extension cable or unplugging the other plugs that are crammed in near the USB plug.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:Some changes to take care of it. by bwy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      # 1. Make it black
      # 2. Make the circular control area square.
      # 3. Make it narrower


      I guess what you aren't realizing is that it isn't a mere coincidence that this thing looks just like the iPod Shuffle. If they make the changes you suggested, they've failed in their goal of getting sales by confusing consumers into buying their product.

      Many non-tech users (a big slice of the Shuffle's market) may not notice the difference in the store, especially since these guys ripped of the advertising.

    2. Re:Some changes to take care of it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they're getting superior goods at a lower price, then only Apple is losing. Which is ok in my book, since the Shuffle is such a retarded piece of crap.

    3. Re:Some changes to take care of it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the real Shuffle, which is just too wide, especially where it plugs in

      Unplugging my mouse every time I charge my Shuffle is getting REAL old. I really wonder if those designers thought I wouldn't curse them 4X/wk. Damn them to heck!

    4. Re:Some changes to take care of it. by Theaetetus · · Score: 1
      Make it narrower (even if it means making it longer to cram the electronics in). This is one area where it would actually improve on the real Shuffle, which is just too wide, especially where it plugs in, requiring a USB extension cable or unplugging the other plugs that are crammed in near the USB plug.

      You probably don't have a Mac, I'm guessing. In any case, you still might want to pick up an Apple USB Keyboard - it works on any USB-using PC also: the iPod Shuffle fits pefectly into either of the two USB ports built into the keyboard.

    5. Re:Some changes to take care of it. by Kinetix303 · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure that they're not fooling anyone. If they really wanted to fool people, they'd just use the Apple logo. It's already an open and shut copyright suit.... if it was about fooling people, they'd just go all the way.

      They're manufacturing these so that people can buy these for way cheaper than an Ipod Shuffle and be just as stylish.

    6. Re:Some changes to take care of it. by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      In any case, you still might want to pick up an Apple USB Keyboard - it works on any USB-using PC also: the iPod Shuffle fits pefectly into either of the two USB ports built into the keyboard.

      that would work great if apple keyboards didn't suck so bad, they are small as hell and have the same meager stroke on the keys as a laptop. Overall I love apple hardware and wish i could afford some but the keyboards are absolutely terrible. Unfortuantely the trend with computers is to cheap out on anything that doesn't boost benchmark specs. Decent keyboards are almost gone except for maybe a handful of manufactueres and never come with new computers. I am using an ancient Dell "clicky" keyboard (model AT101w) ever since I ditched my USB keyboard.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  22. Without iTunes it's half the product! by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The only justification for lack of LCD is that you use iTunes to operate your iPod Shuffle. If you don't use iTunes smart playlists and iTunes autofill option, iPod Shuffle is actually quite worthless. It has no LCD because some elements of its UI are incorporated into iTunes. "Fake Shuffle" has no LCD either, but you have no software to make it out for you.

    1. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by ForestGrump · · Score: 1

      Another poster mentioned that this may actually be the OEM version of the iPod shuffle.

      Since it has nearly identical hardware, it might work with iTunes?

      --
      Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
    2. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by Quazi · · Score: 1

      Has anyone checked to see if it uses a little file called "ItunesDB"?

      Inquiring minds want to know!

    3. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple has already sued them to get them off the floor of CeBit, but apparently they are back there again after the laws that be said they need to go through proper channels.

      There are no OEM versions of any apple product.

    4. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by Bluey · · Score: 1

      "Without iTunes it's half the product! ... 'Fake Shuffle' has no LCD either, but you have no software to make it out for you.

      How do you know that, do you own one? What you really mean is "Without functionality similar to iTunes it's half the product". What makes you so sure they won't include some sort of similar software? If they're so willing to clone the Shuffle's design, why stop there?

    5. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 1

      How do you know that, do you own one? What you really mean is "Without functionality similar to iTunes it's half the product". What makes you so sure they won't include some sort of similar software?

      There's no mention of it on their website

      If they're so willing to clone the Shuffle's design, why stop there?

      It's one thing to repackage your old mp3 players into new shells, it's another to pay good coders to code a good product. The former is a cheap rip-off, the latter is an expensive rip-off. Personally I think they are after the former.

    6. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by argent · · Score: 1

      The only justification for lack of LCD is that you use iTunes to operate your iPod Shuffle.

      I'm sure this will work just as well with iTunes as the Magc Star "Gray Whale" player that both this product and the iPod Shuffle are cloned from does. The only difference is that Finder or Windows Explorer was the UI for the "Gray Whale".

    7. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by Cryect · · Score: 1
      I have to really disagree with you. I have an iPod Shuffle and I love it but in my eyes the worst thing about is iTunes. I don't have any great need for an LCD to tell me what song is playing and I can tell what song is playing fine from the first couple of seconds.

      If you want to play a particular song I can imagine it would be nice but thats not something I'm particularly interested in...

    8. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      In other words, no, it does not work with iTunes.

      Hint for you: iTunes is not just a file management program.

    9. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the love of Bob, look at the Gray Whale! The shuffle design wasn't remotely cloned from that!

    10. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by argent · · Score: 1

      Hi, Leo!

      What does the iTunes interface to the iPod shuffle give you that the file interface doesn't?

      Well, it makes syncing the iPod shuffle take longer, because iTunes unmounts and remounts it twice during the process. It also means you have to remember to eject the shuffle before fiddling with its playlist, because it'll go through the whole resync dance every time you move a file around. And it lets you sort the iPod Shuffle's playlist in case you don't want to use the shuffle feature. To do that on the Magic Star device you had to delete all the files then copy them in again... the way the Shuffle works if you use Autofill to completely reload the shuffle's playlist every time...

      The Shuffle is a nice device. The iTunes interface really needs tweaking.

    11. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      Well, it makes syncing the iPod shuffle take longer, because iTunes unmounts and remounts it twice during the process.

      The iPod never mounts at all unless you explicitly turn on disk mode. When you turn on disk mode, it mounts when you plug it in and unmounts when you hit the little eject button.

      It also means you have to remember to eject the shuffle before fiddling with its playlist, because it'll go through the whole resync dance every time you move a file around.

      No, that's not how it works. The sync process kicks in when you first plug in the iPod and also when you use the "Update iPod" command from the iTunes menu bar. If you plug in your iPod then make a change to your library, your iPod won't be synced again until you unplug and re-plug, or until you specifically tell it to. This is to avoid the very problem you described.

      And it lets you sort the iPod Shuffle's playlist in case you don't want to use the shuffle feature.

      Well, "sort" isn't really the right way to describe it. Playlists are completely free-form. You can arrange the songs in any order you like, not just sorted.

      The iTunes interface really needs tweaking.

      Sounds more like you really need to use iTunes once or twice, because practically everything you wrote here is wrong.

    12. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by argent · · Score: 1

      The iPod never mounts at all unless you explicitly turn on disk mode. When you turn on disk mode, it mounts when you plug it in and unmounts when you hit the little eject button.

      I don't have "disk mode" on.

      When I plug in my shuffle, it mounts, the icon appears on my desktop. Then iTunes updates it and unmounts it and the icon goes away... but an "ls" of /Volumes shows it's still there. I can see the little "iPod Shuffle" icon pop in on my desktop and pop off again. I don't know what it does on Windows, but this is what it does on my Mac, every time I plug it in, and every time I modify the Shuffle's playlist through iTunes.

      Don't tell me I'm imagining it, or that I don't use iTunes. Try it yourself, and watch what it actually does.

      If you don't have a Mac, then I'm sorry for you in so many ways... even if this is a little annoying it's a lot better than what happened the first time I plugged my Shuffle into a Windows box. Norton Antivirus and iTunes got into a pissing match over who would "own" the iPod and ran CPU up to 100% until I told Norton not to scan USB drives for boot sector viruses. Much hilarity ensued. :)

    13. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      Try it yourself, and watch what it actually does.

      Um. I have one right here. It does nothing like that. Either you have a problem, or you're just making stuff up.

    14. Re:Without iTunes it's half the product! by argent · · Score: 1

      It does nothing like that.

      What's your Mac, a dual G5? It sure does on my Mini and my "Beige G4" (Beige G3 with a G4 ZIF) and the 1.25 GHz Xserve G4 at work.

  23. The real question.. by lennywood1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So how much are they? can they undercut apple but a significant amount?

    even if they're a blatant ripoff, I'd buy one if they were cheap.

    1. Re:The real question.. by Slaveway · · Score: 1

      They are actualy a little more expensive than the shuffle.
      But it offers........
      FM tuner.
      Longer battery life.
      Voice recorder.

      --

      http://www.Slaveway.com
    2. Re:The real question.. by BackInIraq · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The funny thing is this Super Shuffle actually looks like a decent little MP3 player. If they had just had a smidge of creativity in the design department they would probably be applauded.

      But, as anybody who has read the article can tell, these things look like they were meant to be marketed right next to the fake Rolexes and Oakleys at the swap meet.

    3. Re:The real question.. by argent · · Score: 1

      can they undercut apple but a significant amount?

      Probably not enough to make a difference.

      The Shuffle is actually cheaper than the device it was based on.

  24. RTFA by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1

    Did you even read the article? This is not just an MP3 player: it looks and has controls just like the iPod. Outrage over any non-Apple MP3 player is one thing. Outrage over a non-Apple player that is a deceptive look-alike is another.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, but remember, this is /. and Apple is the "evil company" of the month for protecting their interests. This will all pass when a new SCO story emerges.

    2. Re:RTFA by macshome · · Score: 1

      In the photos where you can see their posters, they have even copied Apple's advertising by using the dancing silhouette wearing the bright white Shuffle.

      I imagine they will get in trouble for that too.

  25. No design patents? by sarahemm · · Score: 1

    I figured Apple would have a design patent in for the Shuffle, but it seems there's nothing there yet. There's design patents for the regular 1/2/3G iPod, but not the 4G or the Shuffle yet, and I can't locate any in the published applications either. Is there other protection afforded to designs for products other than design patents in the USA?

    1. Re:No design patents? by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Law concerning "Trade Dressage" would probably be the most applicable here. Trade Dressage is an offshoot of trademark law.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  26. Holy Knockoff Batman by yardbird · · Score: 4, Funny

    Looks like LuxPro is about to discover the iSue.

    --
    Free, legal music for iTunes users.
  27. emachines redux by Cappy+Red · · Score: 1

    It's been a while since the business with the original iMac ripoff, so my memory might be a bit fuzzy, but I think the shuffles might be even more identical than the teardrop computers.

    Then again, maybe not.

    --
    This is my sig. It's prescription, I swear. I need it for reading things... on the other side of things
  28. Not only the Shuffle by Conspire · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am here at CeBit and have been a bit amazed at a couple of look a like iPod mini's and iPod's as well. Apple will easily stop this in the US under "trade dress" litigation.

    I also wondered, what are they (the manufacturers that knock off almost exact copies) thinking!?

    --
    Real men don't need signitures!!!
    1. Re:Not only the Shuffle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I also wondered, what are they (the manufacturers that knock off almost exact copies) thinking!?

      money!

    2. Re:Not only the Shuffle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Real men don't need signitures!!!

      I'm not sure what a signiture is, but I think I need one! (!!). I am not a real man.

    3. Re:Not only the Shuffle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Sure, they may not be able to sell it in the US for long but I'm sure they'll be able to sell it in many other countries, like China for example.

    4. Re:Not only the Shuffle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I also wondered, what are they (the manufacturers that knock off almost exact copies) thinking!?

      They are thinking dollar signs.

    5. Re:Not only the Shuffle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    6. Re:Not only the Shuffle by Refrag · · Score: 1

      Maybe they're thinking they'll eventually be bought by Gateway, just like eMachines was.

      --
      I have a website. It's about Macs.
  29. But their's is Super by ellem · · Score: 4, Funny

    They are totally different.

    Apple's is a Shuffle, or iShuffle, or iPodensmallened, or something.

    Lux Pro's is Super. I mean by adding the word Super it is clear that they are disrespectful to dirt. Can you not see they are serious? Get out of their way, all of you! This is no place for loafers. Join them or die. Can you do any less? For lucky best mp3, use Super Shuffle.

    --
    This .sig is fake but accurate.
    1. Re:But their's is Super by evalencia1 · · Score: 0
      they are disrespectful to dirt. Can you not see they are serious? Get out of their way, all of you! This is no place for loafers. Join them or die.

      For the bewildered: this is a reference to the Simpson's episode where Homer thinks a Japanese company copied his likeness for their "Mr Sparkle" detergent. The lines above are from the promo video that the Mr Sparkle company sends to them.

      See: http://www.thesimpsons.com/episode_guide/0822.htm

    2. Re:But their's is Super by fLameDogg · · Score: 1, Funny
      Oh my GOD!!! There's a message in my Alpha-bits. It says "OOOO."

      Er, those are Cheerios.

      (I'm sure no one's ever mentioned that before.)

      --
      fD
  30. Get over it by Zilch · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes, it's a bit on the cheeky side, but get over it.

    - Apple wasn't the first company to make an MP3 player
    - Apple wasn't the first company to make an MP3 player that did suffle
    - Apple wasn't the first company to make an MP3 player without a display
    - Apple wasn't the first company to make an MP3 player that plugged into a USB port
    - Apple wasn't the first company to make something shaped like a USB key/stick/dongle

    Apple is primarily a marketing machine.

    Zilch.

    1. Re:Get over it by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1
      "Apple wasn't the first company to make an MP3 player that did suffle"

      Yeah, but they were the first to make an MP3 player that could cook up a souffle and not have it collapse if you took the thing jogging.

      --
      Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    2. Re:Get over it by Zilch · · Score: 1
      Yeah, but they were the first to make an MP3 player that could cook up a souffle and not have it collapse if you took the thing jogging.

      True. And then they only sold the iPod Strudel in Europe. What's up with that?

      Zilch.

    3. Re:Get over it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Apple is primarily a marketing machine.

      Shii-it... you'd better go tell that to all those organizations that keep awarding Apple design accolades.

      Go! Yell it from the rooftops! Make up sandwich-boards! You're all being fooled! Apple couldn't design their way out of a paper bag! It's all JUST MARKETING!

      Hehe. I dunno who's more amusing. The Apple zealots or the irrational haters.

    4. Re:Get over it by otter42 · · Score: 1

      Okay, seriously, what did you do? CTRL-F and then "suffle" in order to find every post that made this mistake?

      Either that, or I'm gonna start calling you "Eagle-eye".

      --
      www.eissq.com/BandP.html Ball and Plate System. Amuse your friends. Crush your enemies.
    5. Re:Get over it by zpok · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Apple is primarily a marketing machine."

      Yes indeed, just like Sony, Philips, Renault, Toyota and most other high quality makers of commodity goods.

      Marketing means finding out what people want, finding out what people need and then making it and getting it sold. Sounds simple, no? It isn't. One of the reasons is that people mostly forget about the what people need part or the getting it sold part.

      And anyway, the making it part isn't simple either, since you have to combine design and engineering with marketing. Look at all the high quality unusable products out there or the good looking crap and you see what I mean.

      Another thing: people confuse advertising with marketing... Good marketing deserves good advertising, but good advertising doesn't sell crappie products, at least not too many times at the same people.

      For companies like Apple and Philips (one of the inventors of good marketing) saying they're primarily marketing companies is high praise indeed

      --
      I think, therefore I am...I think.
    6. Re:Get over it by mmeister · · Score: 1

      That may be -- but these guys are trying to fool the ordinary consumer into thinking their product is Apple's. They are basically using Apple's brand to sell their product.

      Similar name
      virtually identical look, not even a color change
      virtually identical ads

      The intent here is to profit from Apple's product name and while IANAL, it seems a pretty open and shut case that this is trademark infringement both with the name (SuperShuffle is way too close to iPod shuffle) and dress (if you're looking at the front picture of it can you tell the difference? I can't).

    7. Re:Get over it by dmarcoot · · Score: 1

      in your flame you ignore the reason apple was succesful...

      they werent the first ay any of those things, all of which in themselves are less the sum of parts.

      they were first and to integrate it as a SYSTEM, between the mp3 player, they jukebox software and the music store, none of which sucked. Apple did what apple is good at, making things work SIMPLY.

      making things work elegantly and simply were easy, then no other companies would be knocking off apples products and UI as they always do. yet somehow, apple runs circles around most of the PC world, and now the electronic gadget world. a world which was knocked up the head because isn't known for integrating gadgets with software and online services.

      Apple is, thus iPod's success

      also the iPod is ONLY mp3 player with the scroll wheel. this is a huge advantage as all the other players seem like crap after using it.

    8. Re:Get over it by ballpoint · · Score: 0

      No, Apple hasn't fount out what its users want. Though I have an iPod, it fails horribly in a number of ways that could have been solved through better design and/or firmware:

      - when you dock it (to a PC, dunno about a Mac), it loses track of what song was playing, and de facto the position in that song.
      - while it's docked it can't play without firing up iTunes.
      - when you want to take it from the dock you have to stop it from your PC first, or it hangs.
      - cannot put it into your pocket/purse/whatever without protection in the form of a sleeve/iSkin/whatever.
      - when in the pocket/purse/whatever you need to put it on hold to guard against accidental operation.
      - when it's on hold, you cannot control it. The remote control is only marginally useable, since functions to navigate artist/albums/playlists are simply not available.
      - when a playlist is done, pressing play again starts playing the whole contents, not just the playlist.

      In short, daily using your iPod makes you walk through all sorts of compulsary behaviour just to make it tolerable.

      1. Get iPod out of sleeve.
      2. Unslide hold switch. Press play.
      3. Slide hold switch. Put in earphones and listen.
      4. Battery runs down. Before it's fully down, look at the display to remember what track was playing and the position in the track.
      5. Put in dock to recharge.
      6. Stop device in Windows
      7. Get out of dock. Restore the current track and position as remembered in 4.
      8. Press play.
      9. Goto 3.

      Don't even get me started about the widely documented flaws (no gapless playback, EQ) that Apple has chosen to DO ABSOF*CKINGLY nothing about, despite years of user demand and several iterations.

      In all, Apple hasn't convinced me of switching to a Mac. I like style, but not without substance.

      --
      Flourescent (adj): smelling like ground wheat.
    9. Re:Get over it by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Apple was the first company to make an MP3 player and call it the "Shuffle", though. If they've trademarked it (and I'd be amazed if they haven't) then the "Super Shuffle" may well be hit under trademark law as being confusingly similar and trading on Apple's brand name.

      Also, the Super Shuffle isn't just shaped like the iPod Shuffle, it's damn-near identical. That may fall foul of design protection laws; I don't know if you have them in the US, but we certainly do here in the UK. You can't just make something look almost identical to something else and get away with it. There was a very high-profile court case a few years ago when a supermarket chain was sued because the cans and bottles for its own-brand Cola looked too similar to Coke's.

    10. Re:Get over it by saboola · · Score: 1

      Mmmmm... suffle I'm sold.

    11. Re:Get over it by FeTrut · · Score: 2, Insightful

      - when you dock it (to a PC, dunno about a Mac), it loses track of what song was playing, and de facto the position in that song.

      I don't tend to dock it more than once a day, usually at night when i get home if it needs charging or if i need to put new music on it. In either case by morning when i want to use it again i would have a) forgotten when i was listening to the day before, b) be in a different mood and have something different in mind to play or c) have put something new on the night before and want to listen to that instead

      - while it's docked it can't play without firing up iTunes.

      Not sure i understand why you'd want to do this, as iTunes is a more functional interface to play music anyways(besides which all the music that's on my ipod is also on my harddrive, plus more that doesn't fit on the iPod

      - when you want to take it from the dock you have to stop it from your PC first, or it hangs.

      Isn't this standard operating procedure for any peripheral device? I know in windows when you hook up a USB device you get that little thingie in the system tray that allows you to "safely remove hardware". I've always used that just by habit, i believe it is good practice, i may be wrong(i primarily use OS X, where it *is* good practice to "eject" devices before disconnecting them physically)

      - cannot put it into your pocket/purse/whatever without protection in the form of a sleeve/iSkin/whatever.

      It does come with the sleeve, which i lost awhile back. I don't use anything anymore, don't see any problem with that other than it might get a bit scratched up...personally i don't give a crap, but i will agree that it is more prone to scratches than your average device.

      - when in the pocket/purse/whatever you need to put it on hold to guard against accidental operation.

      Very true. I've had this problem with almost every portable music player i've owned since tape players went out of style. Not sure if the alternatives to the ipod have solved this or not?

      - when it's on hold, you cannot control it. The remote control is only marginally useable, since functions to navigate artist/albums/playlists are simply not available.

      The remote is satisfactorily useable for my purposes. If i wanted to browse with it it would have to have a screen, which is bound to be too small to actually see all the relevant information without waiting for it to scroll by. I'd rather just reach into my bag/pocket and browse with the kick ass scroll wheel. Quicker and much more functional than any reasonably sized remote could hope to be. Thus, it does exactly what i'd want, pause/play, next/previous track, volume.

      - when a playlist is done, pressing play again starts playing the whole contents, not just the playlist.

      Your most valid complaint yet. I totally agree and get annoyed with this oversight on a daily basis.

      In short, daily using your iPod makes you walk through all sorts of compulsary behaviour just to make it tolerable. 1. Get iPod out of sleeve. 2. Unslide hold switch. Press play. 3. Slide hold switch. Put in earphones and listen. 4. Battery runs down. Before it's fully down, look at the display to remember what track was playing and the position in the track.

      Steps 1-2 are about 5-10 seconds max of barely tolerable hoops to jump through. Step 2.5(conveniently omitted) is 5-10 hours of music playback before step 4(battery runs down), is this part barely tolerable as well? How about browsing for artist/album/playlist? Barely tolerable compared to other players out there? Personally i'd say the bulk of time spent using is above and beyond anything else that's available in terms of user experience, but that's just me. I think the 80/20 rule applies here. You're pissed(and overl

    12. Re:Get over it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i bet they patented the design of the button arrangement to give the illusion of the iPod wheel too...

    13. Re:Get over it by xenoandroid · · Score: 1

      Irrational haters, because they usually have no real arguments.

      "I HATE APPLE BECAUSE THEY MAKE THEIR PRODUCTS LOOK GOOD! TECHNOLOGY SHOULD LOOK UGLY BECAUSE...LOOKS DON'T MATTER!" is not an argument, just sounds like the people saying that are just angry because they're ugly themselves and as a result can't get a date.

    14. Re:Get over it by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I am betting you find spelling Nazis to be insufflable.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    15. Re:Get over it by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      Apple never calls it the "Shuffle". They call it the "iPod shuffle" (no cap on shuffle). If they owned the word, don't you think they'd use it on their website?

    16. Re:Get over it by Kinetix303 · · Score: 1

      While we're thrilled that it works for you, it still doesn't fix his problems. If we always spend time pandering to the majority, we'd never have any innovation. You're more interested in cutting the above poster up that you don't realize that you're just posting to convince yourself that you really are happy with $350 mediocrity.

    17. Re:Get over it by FeTrut · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but this makes absolutely no sense. Not a single one of his complaints, when fixed, would be considered "innovative" in a music player. They are *at best* nice-to-have's.
      The iPod interface and iTunes integration, however, *is* innovative.
      And pandering to the majority is *exactly* how profit-based organizations innovate, where the hell else would they get the money? What would be the point in producing an mp3 player that most people *would not* be happy with?

    18. Re:Get over it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      One thing people forget is that "Product" is part of the marketing mix. Marketing 101:

      Product

      Price

      Place (Distrubution)

      Promotion

    19. Re:Get over it by Arkaein · · Score: 1
      Marketing means finding out what people want, finding out what people need and then making it and getting it sold.

      Actually, what you're describing here is market research. Marketing is find ways to get people to buy a product that has already been created. Market research tends to benefit both producer and consumer by allowing creation of better products. Marketing has more one-sided benefits in favor of producers, as good marketing might be getting lots of people to buy an inferior or overpriced product.
    20. Re:Get over it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but I agree with Kinetix - I was a mac zealot once and then I realised that there was nothing that Apple could offer me that a commodity system couldn't do better and cheaper and with real freedom. You'll realise this one day (if you haven't already and are just in denial) and you'll install Gnome and buy $50 ogg players.

    21. Re:Get over it by FredFnord · · Score: 1

      Personally, I'd have to say it's the Apple zealots. There seem to be a lot more of them who have actual senses of humor, anyway.

      Not that you can't be funny without a sense of humor, as the grandparent post so amply demonstrates. But that sort of amusement can be... wearing, after a while.

      -fred

      --
      Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
    22. Re:Get over it by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      - Henry Ford wasn't the first person to build a car.
      - Henry Ford wasn't the first person to commercialize it.
      - Henry Ford wasn't the first person to have the exterior be black.
      - Henry Ford didn't invent the assembly line.
      - Henry Ford wasn't the first person to apply the assembly line to cars.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  31. Re:good stuff gets copied, like Windows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only good products get copied over and over.

    Wrong. It's only getting copied because it stands to make someone a shitload of money. Just because a product stands to make a boatload of money for whatever reason, doesn't imply it's a good product. It's a mediocre, uninnovative, overpriced mp3 player at best.

    Let's face it- the only claim to fame the Shuffle has is it's heriatage, Apple's considerable marketing clout and current 'cool' status sanctioned by the powers that be.

  32. The Free Market at Work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We are always glad to see competition stirring up the broth of a healthy free market. Consumers win when there is choice. No laws have been broken, and this has all the earmarks of a winner. Thumbs up!

  33. that was the emachines eone. by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1
    "It's been a while since the business with the original iMac ripoff, so my memory might be a bit fuzzy"

    That was the emachines eone. Compared to the iMac, it contained standard ports alongside the parallel ports, and built-in floppy (all of which were missing in the iMac), it was a lot faster and had twice as much memory.....and it cost hundreds less. No wonder Apple had to sue it out of existence.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:that was the emachines eone. by Hitchcock_Blonde · · Score: 0

      You forgot to mention that it was a flimsy piece of trash.

      --
      Karma Schmarma
    2. Re:that was the emachines eone. by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1
      "You forgot to mention that it was a flimsy piece of trash"

      For the price of one iMac, you could have bought two of these, and have a backup parts source. Not only that, you could actually run programs with it. Not so with the iMac which had hardly any software for it: no wonder the ad campaign never showed one turned on. They did their best when looked at as an object, but not used as computer.

      It would have been easier, too. I actually saw an eOne in a store. I never saw the iMac in a store.

      --
      Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  34. Slur against a whole continent? by Frankie70 · · Score: 0, Troll

    From the MP3Newswire article

    "So if you are interested in an faux iPod Shuffle I expect they will soon fill those Asian consumer electronics stores along Broadway in NY. You know, the ones that have had the 'Going Out of Business' sign posted in their window for 20 years straight."

    What about mattress stores? Are they also all owned
    by Asians?

    1. Re:Slur against a whole continent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So if you are interested in an faux iPod Shuffle I expect they will soon fill those Asian consumer electronics stores along Broadway in NY. You know, the ones that have had the 'Going Out of Business' sign posted in their window for 20 years straight."

      Those stores aren't even Asian-owned. I've never even seen an Asian working in one of those stores.

      Not to mention that those stores sell overpriced name brand electronics to tourists and never obvious knockoffs.

      It all adds up to some guy who thinks he'll sound cool that he isn't fooled by the going out of business signs but ends up sounding like some hick subtly bragging about his big trip to the City.

    2. Re:Slur against a whole continent? by briankoenig · · Score: 1

      "Asian" in this usage was referring to the type of consumer electronics, not the owners of the store.

      Settle down, and take it easy. Nobody's "slurring" anybody here.

    3. Re:Slur against a whole continent? by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Maybe he was thinking of "Crazy Reo"?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  35. Designs by caitsith01 · · Score: 5, Informative

    IAAL and...

    You can actually protect style and aesthetics to a certain extent. It depends on the jurisdiction, but in many countries there is intellectual properties in designs, as opposed to patented methods or copyrighted works. In Australia, for instance, the rip-off iPod would clearly breach rights in Apple's shuffle design, assuming they were validly registered etc., not because of the similar functionality but because of the identical aesthetics.

    Furthermore, Apple may have an action for 'passing off' in that this company is clearly trying to ride on Apple's market reputation to sell their own product through the name, advertising and styling of the device. This is an illicit subversion of Apple's goodwill and they will be able to take action on this basis in most countries.

    Finally, if the allegations about asian tech manufacturers and Apple's partners prove true, there will very likely be an action in contract or equity against any company that has participated in sharing the technology used in the Shuffle for this device.

    That is the legal position. My OPINION, however, is that Apple deserve to get screwed over because this new device looks as good and has better functionality than the Shuffle. Plus it is refreshing to see that you don't have to have the Godly powers of Steve Jobs in your fingertips to produce the same hardware at the same (or lower, presumably) price.

    --
    Read Pynchon.
    1. Re:Designs by cupiditas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My OPINION, however, is that Apple deserve to get screwed over because this new device looks as good and has better functionality than the Shuffle. Plus it is refreshing to see that you don't have to have the Godly powers of Steve Jobs in your fingertips to produce the same hardware at the same (or lower, presumably) price.

      I guess I would want to withhold judgment about its functionality. The fact that it looks exactly like the iPod Shuffle doesn't mean that it will work in precisely the same way. For instance, three rapid clicks of the play/pause button on the Shuffle returns you to the beginning of your playlist: will the rip-off work the same way? Also, what sort of battery life will it have? Sound quality? Will the FM receiver really work? We don't know any of these things. In terms of real functionality, this may bear as much resemblance to the iPod Shuffle as those ten-buck "Rolexes" you can buy in Times Square have to the real thing.

      As for lawsuits: when I first saw the LuxPro design and ads, I figured that they were going to sell the thing only in countries where they are safe from lawsuits. Surely they won't try to sell them in the U.S., U.K., Australia, or N.Z.?

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

      My OPINION, however, is that Apple deserve to get screwed over because this new device looks as good and has better functionality than the Shuffle.

      OK, lawyer. Let me get this straight.
      So, it is OK to screw a company by copying the idea and the design, pretty much cloning it, as long as it has better functionality? A product that won't exist otherwise without the original? OK, I get it. Who cares about R&D. Good business plan:
      1. Take any idea and design of any product in the market.
      2. Tack on some extra functionality
      3. Profit!!

      Aren't trademarks, copyrights and patents supposed to give protection to a company to make money off their hard work in creating a product? If you say a company is deserved to be screwed, what is the incentive to spend money for R&D?

      Plus it is refreshing to see that you don't have to have the Godly powers of Steve Jobs in your fingertips to produce the same hardware at the same (or lower, presumably) price.

      The company does not need to have the Godly powers of Steve Jobs in your fingertips because Steve Jobs already "provide" them with a base design to work on. Duh! Not having to spend $$ for R&D helps them lower the price, too.

    3. Re:Designs by BasilBrush · · Score: 3, Interesting
      It's easier to produce the same device, with perhaps an extra feature or two for less money when you reuse the R&D and marketing of the company that you are ripping off.

      Apple certainly do not deserve to be ripped off. There is nothing stopping this company from producing shuffle like device in a different color and slightly differnet shape than the iPod shuffle. That they haven't done that, and made it visually identical with identical advertising is both illegal AND immoral.

    4. Re:Designs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's an important point. Companies like Dell only have to pass along the R&D costs of manufacturers making faster motherboards, hard drives, etc., while Apple does all those things PLUS has to cover the R&D costs of product design. Not to mention they also are the fastest computer company to shed legacy technology, and there's an associated cost with that.

      It's the same reason that Paxil is hundreds of dollars, while a generic alternative might be $30. The drug company paid a team of employees for years of research before they sold one pill. Apple has to cover the same costs.

    5. Re:Designs by Secret+Agent+99 · · Score: 1

      My OPINION, however, is that Apple deserve to get screwed over...

      So are you trying to perpetuate lawyers' asshole stereotype, or does it just come naturally?

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

      There's something you are overlooking in terms of the internal design of the iPod shuffle. It is based on a reference design made by another company (in Taiwan) and sold to virtually all of the flash MP3 manufacturers on the market. iPod shuffle could have a radio quite easily. It would just cost extra for the part (and a slight redesign for more space). The original circuity (except for the addition radio) would be virtually unchanged. Here is why Apple doesn't have a radio (written by some guy who appears to work for Apple but denies it). The tech, other than some patents on data retention when a USB device is suddenly pulled from a computer, is likely owned by whatever company supplied Apple and the knock-off owners their internals. I would expect any violation on that end does not exist. However, I don't believe Apple should be screwed over for someone just copying their general design and adding something a little extra. It was bad enough when Microsoft copied them and subtracted stuff.

  36. mmmm. iPod souffle ..... by AtariAmarok · · Score: 5, Funny
    "The iPod Suffle is certainly a trademark"

    Is it any tastier than iPod Quiche? Will it collapse if you slam your Powerbook closed?

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:mmmm. iPod souffle ..... by otter42 · · Score: 1

      BWAHAHA!

      And to make matters worse, it took me a full 30 seconds to find that typo even after you'd pointed it out!

      --
      www.eissq.com/BandP.html Ball and Plate System. Amuse your friends. Crush your enemies.
    2. Re:mmmm. iPod souffle ..... by thebudgie · · Score: 1

      Danger: Do not eat iPod souffle.

  37. Hey... by AliasMoze · · Score: 2, Funny

    You can't, like, trademark a product's look, feel, and functionality, man.

    What? You can? Oh. Yeah, those guys are screwed.

  38. And I should also add by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

    in response to the grandparent that:

    1. that you can protect a scent in some circumstances; and

    2. that generic drugs are not automatically free from intellectual property constraints, and may infringe patents for the manufacture process or the specific action of the drug.

    --
    Read Pynchon.
  39. Even ripping off the advertising by pringlis · · Score: 0, Redundant

    http://www.macnews.de/gallery/displayimage.php?alb um=21&pos=7 [macnews.de] Even the silhouette advertising isn't safe.

    1. Re:Even ripping off the advertising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linky: here

  40. The chip probably comes with FM built in by ites · · Score: 1

    Most cheap MP3 players are built using standard chips that come with FM tuning and voice recording as standard. All you need is the firmware to activate the functionality.

    AM would mean extra hardware (antenna and the rest) so is out of the question.

    --
    Sig for sale or rent. One previous user. Inquire within.
    1. Re:The chip probably comes with FM built in by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Besides are there any countries other than the US that actually use AM ?

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    2. Re:The chip probably comes with FM built in by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      It's also widely used in Europe. Don't know about the rest of the world.

    3. Re:The chip probably comes with FM built in by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      It is ? I've never been able to get anything with the only AM enabled radio I have...

      OTOH I've never been able to get much in the US on the AM radio when driving around there either. Except for some weird religious ramblings every now and then (usually some kind of story that seemed to be out of the 1930s of someone who lived in misery and found salvation because he suddenly believed in Santa Claus, or was it the Tooth Fairy ?)

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    4. Re:The chip probably comes with FM built in by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm out of date. All the UK national and many of the local radio stations used to have both an FM and an AM frequency. Now I look again, most of them are just publishing an FM frequency, so perhaps AM is being phased out.

    5. Re:The chip probably comes with FM built in by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Ah, never tried listening in the UK. Maybe I'll try again this summer when I go in Scotland.

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
  41. Re:Gadgets: the workhorse of modern capitalism! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those 86000 MAC's wasn't the best multitasking machines... and that was the OS's fault... try and install a Linux or BSD on it...

  42. Re:Let's see how long that product will be availab by chinobis · · Score: 1

    It doesnt matter to them. This is a typical "asian" hit & run operation: Design a knockoff of something wildly popular, make half the web advertize it for free, and sell some hundreds of thousands (or millions) during a couple of months. By the time Apple wakes up, you have already made millions in profits. Apple won't be able to get a penny from you, for obvious reasons: a) you're in Asia. and b) you have a big & loyal family.

    --
    My gallery: www.estiasis.com/modules.php?name=gallery2&g2_item Id=22
  43. you forgot by caitsith01 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    4. Don't call it 'Shuffle'

    5. Don't target your advertising at pretentious wannabes using silhouettes of idiots dancing to world music so that people who don't want to look like fashion victims will still consider using one

    6. Don't package it with shitty proprietary software that automatically sends you to buy music from the same company that makes the hardware and installs multiple useless services that run all the time in Windows XP

    I think we're starting to get to quite a decent little MP3/MP4 player between us...

    --
    Read Pynchon.
  44. You botched that: by djdavetrouble · · Score: 1

    No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame.

    --
    music lover since 1969
  45. Swedish version by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1
    "True. And then they only sold the iPod Strudel in Europe. What's up with that? "

    In northern Europe, they also sold the iVorkVorkVork.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  46. Battery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.luxpro-corp.com/images/p_accessories.jp g

    Looks like this thing is powered by a AAA battery. I think that's very good, one of my biggest gripes with the Ipod is that when your battery dies out, you have to take it in to aple to change it, and that would be quite impractical and expensive without Apple support in my country.

    1. Re:Battery by sarahemm · · Score: 2, Informative

      This player doesn't, it uses an internal li-ion battery like the shuffle does. If it's the same dimensions as the shuffle, there's no room for an AAA battery in the player.
      From the LuxPro page:
      Power Supply: Li-Ion rechargeable built-in battery (Charging via USB port from computer or power adapter)

  47. "Share connector" by Zouden · · Score: 1

    This addon is quite cool. It lets you copy files between two Super Shuffles. I've not seen this for iPod shuffle, has anyone else?

    --
    "A week in the lab saves an hour in the library"
    1. Re:"Share connector" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't think you're going to see something like that in western markets; the RIAA and equivalents would try and kill it straight away so it's doubtful anyone would want the hastle of trying to sell them.

      Just think of all the DRM and everything that's being pushed on us at the moment

    2. Re:"Share connector" by argent · · Score: 1

      It doesn't look like it's transferring between two super-shuffles to me.

  48. How about it? by AtariAmarok · · Score: 2, Funny

    How about a new name for this, Lux? "EyePawed: Shah-phel"

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:How about it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how about calling it an iPwnd , on a lighter note, imagine a beowulf cluster of these! time to get my tinfoil memory stick out, i for one bow to our new iPwn overlords.

  49. But the advertising is no equivalent by GlobalEcho · · Score: 1

    Worse, it looks like the silhouette in the knockoff photo is an asian chick who clearly can't dance!

    [Not that there aren't plenty of asian chicks who can...but the ones who can are mostly in North America]

  50. It doesn't by pslam · · Score: 2, Informative
    Most cheap MP3 players are built using standard chips that come with FM tuning and voice recording as standard. All you need is the firmware to activate the functionality.

    The iPod Shuffle uses a Sigmatel Stmp3550, which doesn't have a built in FM tuner. There's an external tuner chip which only supports FM.

  51. No Apple FM.. by seven+of+five · · Score: 1

    Tell me again why Apple doesn't put FM in the iPod?

    1. Re:No Apple FM.. by argent · · Score: 2, Informative

      Tell me again why Apple doesn't put FM in the iPod?

      I assume they don't think it would help sell more iPods. When they see demand, if they see demand, they'll spend a year making it cool and release it at the 11th hour.

      The company you ought to be talking to is Griffin. They were going to do an FM tuner for the 'pod, but dropped it because Apple changed the way the iPod remote worked.

      Why Griffin couldn't have given their tuner its own controls, I don't know.

    2. Re:No Apple FM.. by wazzzup · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because Clear Channel owns all of the radio stations and Clear Channel playlists suck ergo all radio sucks.

      I'm only half joking though. Where I live, there is no radio worth listening to (musically) unless your into corporate music (ClearChannel). Personally, a radio on my iPod would go unused.

    3. Re:No Apple FM.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus Christ... I hope it's the same reason that book publishers doesn't put magazines in my literature!

      Or why my Zippo doesn't have some chintzy flashlight in it.

      Or why my car doesn't come equipped with a bicycle.

      Seriously, if you want an FM radio, then buy one. You may be pleasantly surprised... they are a good deal cheaper than iPods.

    4. Re:No Apple FM.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell me again why Apple doesn't put FM in the iPod?

      Because FM radio is utter shit. The same ten or twenty songs played over and over, interspersed with too many fucking commercials.

      When you have a device loaded with your personal favorite songs, why would you want to go back to FM radio? Nostalgia for hearing songs that you don't like, annoying commercials and inane DJ banter?

      IMHO, if Apple were to put any radio functionality into the iPods, AM would be a better choice-- then at least people would have access to an all-news station, which is practical.

    5. Re:No Apple FM.. by argent · · Score: 1

      Seriously, if you want an FM radio, then buy one. You may be pleasantly surprised... they are a good deal cheaper than iPods.

      $0.99 at any "Dollar General".

      The thing is, now you're carrying two devices around. Of course the FM radio's got a superbright LED flashlight and a decorative carabiner clip built in, so you're probably ahead of the game.

      Did you see the Swis Army Knife flash memory card? No, I'm not kidding.

    6. Re:No Apple FM.. by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Tell me again why Apple doesn't put FM in the iPod?

      I cannot speak for Apple. I can only tell you why I would not buy an iPod with FM.

      The audio quality of FM sucks. It has a 19khz subcarrier that, if you still have decent hearing, is in the audio spectrum. It has to be filtered out, lowering the upper frequency limit to about 15khz. In order to have "punch", most stations employ compression and limiting, further reducing the audio quality.

      I'd rather that any available space, engineering time, and money go into improving the sound quality and battery life of the existing iPod. I don't want them to put in a cheaper op-amp, smaller capacitors, etc. in order to squeeze in an FM tuner.

      The main reason that I buy devices like the iPod is that they give me choice. I don't have to listen to commercials, mindless DJ chatter, and music that I don't like. If I'm in the mood for an up-tempo song, I play it. If I want something more laid-back, I play that. FM does not give me those choices. I can, at best, choose a station by genre.

    7. Re:No Apple FM.. by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Tell me again why Apple doesn't put FM in the iPod?

      Because an FM tuner is a feature, and the iPod is not about features.

    8. Re:No Apple FM.. by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It has to do with perceived value.

      To keep the numbers simple and because I'm too lazy to look them up right now, let's say there are 10 million iPod owners. (I think that's pretty close.) Let's say that Apple has telephone numbers for half of them, because they bought their iPods from an Apple retail store on the online Apple store.

      Apple picks a thousand of them and calls them up and asks them how they're enjoying their iPods. They follow up with a series of questions, one of which is, "Do you wish your iPod had a radio in it?" They note the answers. People who take the time to respond get a $10 gift certificate or something.

      They go back and collate the answers, and discover that out of their statistically valid sample of 1,000 users, only 20 said that they wanted a radio in an iPod. That's only 2%, compared to the 85% who said they'd like their iPod to have a longer battery life or hold more songs or be cheaper. So when Apple makes their list of priorities, battery life, size and cost are up top and adding a radio is way, WAY down on the list.

      But let's ignore that for a second. Let's assume, just for the sake of argument, that Apple has the opportunity to add a radio for zero cost and zero time. Let's say somebody waves a magic "radio" wand and there it is.

      What do we know? We know that only 2% of iPod customers, on average, are interested in getting a radio, but that 85% of their customers wish the product were cheaper. What does that mean?

      That means that a whole bunch of people are going to look at the new radio-equipped, same-priced iPod and think, "I don't want a stupid radio, but Apple's making me buy one! How much cheaper could this thing be if it didn't have the stupid radio in it?"

      Even though, in our contrived example, the answer is "zero dollars cheaper," the damage has been done. The customers perceive that they're paying for something they don't want.

      A device like an iPod, especially a cheap iPod, needs to be as stripped down as possible to give the customer the impression that he's getting pure value for his money. All it does is play prerecorded music, so every dollar you spend on it is going toward prerecorded music playback. You're not paying for a radio you'll never use.

      And of course, because the market for a radio-equipped iPod is so small, the idea of manufacturing one version with a radio and one without is just absurd. They'd never sell enough of the radio-equipped iPods to cover the cost of designing, building, shipping, marketing and selling another model of iPod.

      That's why Apple doesn't include a radio.

    9. Re:No Apple FM.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you call people who already own an iPod, of course they'll say a radio isn't important to them. If it were, they'd have bought some other product. The real question is how many people who aren't in Apple's database would have bought an iPod if it came with FM and a voice recorder. I'm one of them -- I plan to buy a Samsung for about $20 more than the iPod because it has a radio, voice recording, and plays Ogg files.

      That being said, I magine a market-savvy company like Apple has done marketing research outside its usual customer base. They may have very good reasons for keeping it simple, even at the cost of losing customers like me.

    10. Re:No Apple FM.. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Did you see the Swis Army Knife flash memory card? No, I'm not kidding.

      Yes, I did, and considered buying one as an xmas gift for my brother-in-law, who is even a bigger geek than I am.

      However, I discovered he already has one. Instead, I bought him a jacket from SCOTTEVEST, so he could more easily carry around all the gadgets. I'm absolutely sure that even if there was a single universal gadget which really did everything, that Carl would still own a number of gadgets in addition, and that he'd carry as many as possible with him at all times.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    11. Re:No Apple FM.. by argent · · Score: 1

      [cute handle] ... considered buying one as an xmas gift for my brother-in-law... However, I discovered he already has one

      *snort*

      I looked at the eVest, but decided to go with Docker Mobile Pants instead. Unfortunately they seem to be off the market.

    12. Re:No Apple FM.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The funny thing is, I'm actually discovering the usefulness of an "all-in-one" electronic device. I bought an "iAudio G3" flash player primarily because the series seemed to have the best-rated sound quality among flash players. It didn't disappoint there(in addition to good basic sound and format compatibility, it has EQ, various effects and DSP), but it also had these things:

      -FM radio with auto-tuning
      -Microphone and line-in...
      -Recording for all three of the above at various bit-rates in two formats(with the latest firmware anywhere from 8khz WAV to 128kbps MP3)
      -Playlist features
      -Alarm features - can start playback, radio, or recording on cue
      -Standard flash drive functionality, I only got the 512mb version but now I run all my usual apps off of it and can take them anywhere(though it takes longer to boot because of that)

      And of those things, since I got it in January, the only one I haven't used is the line-in. My only real complaints are that it's a bit boxy and you have to use a mini-USB cable to hook it to a computer.

    13. Re:No Apple FM.. by FortranDragon · · Score: 1

      Anecdotal evidenced-base comment (You Have Been Warned (tm) ;-)):

      Among the people I know that have an iPod, the reason they use the iPod is to get away from the perceived crap on the radio. They want to hear the stuff they think is good, not the few dribs and drabs of songs some overly-verbose DJ has been told to play.

      I can see why a few folks want an all-in-one device, but adding an FM tuner adds complexity, various legal hoops, and a small dilution of focus to a device that has always about having your music.

      (Ok, ok, the iPod photo is a small dilution as well. I think Apple tried to be innovative and add a feature they though people could use. It hasn't been a big boost to iPod sales, though that may mostly be because of the high prices of the iPod photo.)

      --
      "All the darkness in the world can not quench the light of one small candle."
    14. Re:No Apple FM.. by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      FM tuners are dirt cheap and tiny these days. I've got a pen with a built in radio that cost me a few bucks. Hell, there are FM tuners available for $0.99 which are decent enough for most purposes. Adding an FM radio would add negligable costs to a portable music player, and give people more choice as to what they want to listen too. Course, then again, not everyone is in a radio market where Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols is a DJ, so ymmv.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    15. Re:No Apple FM.. by Synbiosis · · Score: 1

      An FM tuner is more important for a flash player. If you work out at a gym, they'll broadcast television audio on an FM band.

      There's a reason the Rio Forge is the most popular flash player in gyms. Well, it has a smartmedia slot and a screen, which are both nice.

    16. Re:No Apple FM.. by podperson · · Score: 1

      Well chances are if they *did* make one with FM, the one *without* FM would have FM but it would be disabled.

      Then someone would figure out how to enable FM in the cheaper model and people would complain that Apple was screwing them...

  52. Of course Apple's lawyers are after it, see here by leif.singer · · Score: 5, Informative
  53. coca~cola by zogger · · Score: 1

    Ever see any red and white cans of soda at the store that just say "cola"? Pretty obvious those are a knock off of cocacola, yet they are out there. Similar but not exact product, similar colored can, not the exact swirl but similar, similar size, shape, weight,etc. I wonder if this will come into "play"?

    1. Re:coca~cola by seven+of+five · · Score: 1

      doubtful if any more new brands would fit into the soda aisle without extensive remodeling.

      The only point behind all these new weird coke flavors is to grab more shelf space. Expect spillover into either 'Ethnic Foods' aisle by 2006 and whole stores dedicated to coke products by 2010.

    2. Re:coca~cola by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      None of these other cola products are named Super Coke*, I haven't seen any with swirls, nor the name printed with a similar script. Nor do they taste exactly the same. And as you say, when you are looking at the products on the shelf, it's pretty obvious that these products are NOT coca-cola, that they're "off-brand" products. You know you're purchasing an off brand product. If you saw the super shuffle on the shelf, it would not be obvious that it was a different product or brand.

      AFAIK, Coca-cola did not invent or design the can itself. However, you can bet that whoever invented and patented the pop top on the cans we use today profited handsomely.

      *Coke is a registered trademark of the Coca Cola Company

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    3. Re:coca~cola by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Hmmmmm. Coca cola hut. Coca Cola Republic. Coke 'n' Stuff. None of those really works for me. I don't "feel" any consumer excitement. However, if it was an online store, and you called it eCoke.com, I'm already getting out my credit card. =)

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  54. Apple Legal Team Jurisdiction? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Does the US trademark laws even have any relevance in Taiwan? It may not matter that this is a knock-off ( with more features )

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Apple Legal Team Jurisdiction? by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Maybe Taiwan would just prefer to be swallowed up by the PRC, if they don't want to stop one of their own from ripping off an American company.

      No, I'm not a zealot, I'm a pervert. I get sexually excited when the USA bullies other countries. You would not believe the amount of kleenex I've gone through since Iraq was invaded.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  55. The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They probably make them in the factory next door to the clone factory they make the iPod Shuffle in.

    When Steve Jobs got on stage in 2004 and poo-poohed flash music players, concentrating on the high end, I was livid. He was talking about flash music players as if the big bulky high-end were the only possible competition. I immediately went to Apple's site and sent in a suggestion that if they thought flash music players were $200 behemoths they ought to have a look at the music player I'd bought for my daughter back in late 2002 or early 2003. It cost me $70 and it had the minimum features imaginable... no screen, no way to select specific songs, you just plugged it in like a flash drive and copied MP3 files over... and it played them in whatever random order they landed in memory.

    I had even figured out the way to use iTunes with this player to get the equivalent of what they later called their "Autofill" function using their Party Shuffle. Sure, it only held a couple CDs worth of songs, but you could reload them when you recharged the battery overnight... so who cared?

    Apart from the "reshuffle" ability, and the memory size (after all, this was 3 years ago), it was functionally identical to what Apple released a year later as the iPod Shuffle. It was a little bigger than the shuffle, but not much, and even hung from a lanyard like the Shuffle does. Oh, Apple's definitely done their usual wonderful job of [re]design... but all in all the Shuffle is just a few tweaks applied to the Magic Star "Gray Whale" MP3 player:

    http://pc-memory-upgrade.co.uk/memory/magic-star -m p3-player.asp
    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t g/detail/-/B000 08AJSO/002-0805304-2818432?v=glance

    The killer feature of the Shuffle, for me, is that the 512M Shuffle is cheaper than the 512M "Gray Whale"! This may be the first time in memory that an Apple product was less expensive than the third-party equivalent... but it's got a lot less of Apple in it than most people seem to think.

    1. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 2, Informative

      I just followed your links...the iPod Shuffle and Gray Whale do not look even remotely similar to one another.

    2. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      What part of "functionally identical" is difficult to understand?

    3. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      For example your title is difficult to understand. If you say "The Shuffle is a clone to begin with" people expect to see some "prior art".

      Apple created a USB2.0 player for MP3/AAC/M4A/M4B/M4P/AA/AppleLossless/WAV(?)/AIFF and does not allow song uploads via USB MassStorage. Your stick is a USB1.1 player for MP3/WMA files and scans its MassStorage memory for songs.

      Well, both players support mp3-files ... so they're "functionally identical".

      q.e.d.

    4. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by ratsnapple+tea · · Score: 1

      Form is function. Especially when it comes to tiny flash players.

    5. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      When it's sitting in your pocket, the difference in form between two slightly differently shaped packs of chewing gum with the same controls in slightly different places is negligable. I've owned and used both, and there's very little to choose between them... stylistic differences at most.

      If the iPod's the Hummer of the MP3 player world, the Gray Whale is the Chevy Tahoe inside the Shuffle's Hummer 2 lines.

    6. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      Please moderate this comment up. It's the best anonymously posted comment I've ever seen on this site, hands down.

    7. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      If you say "The Shuffle is a clone to begin with" people expect to see some "prior art".

      I've got your "Prior Art" right here:

      Ipod Shuffle: 512MB-1GB flash disk, USB interface, recharge from USB, size of a pack of gum, hangs on a laynard, plays songs in sequence, randomize function, controls are volume up/down, next song, previous song, play, pause, power, shuffle, released 2005.

      Gray Whale: 128MB-512MB flash disk, USB interface, recharge from USB, size of a pack of gum, hangs on a lanyard, plays songs in random sequence, controls are volume up/down, next song, previous song, play, pause, power, released 2002/2003.

      Differences: shuffle mode (Gray Whale plays songs in whatever order it finds them... random but not re-randomizable), tight integration with iTunes (both work with iTunes, by the way), and the Shuffle's got iPod styling.

      There really are no other devices out there that work this way, or there weren't until Apple made it "cool" to be simple. I looked really hard for something like the Gray Whale back in 2003, and I didn't find anything that wasn't either far more complex (and expensive) or that used AAA batteries instead of rechargables.

      One more note: the Shuffle's controls are not based on the iPod's controls, they're the same controls as the Gray Whale moved around to look like the ones on the iPod. The unique iPod "click wheel" is only present as a stylistic reference.

      Thankfully.

      I think Apple made an excellent choice. I don't like the click wheel, and I'm glad they've copied this nice stripped-down design. After my daughter broke her Gray Whale (for good, finally) I gave her my iPod Mini and bought a Shuffle. It's a much nicer device than the full-on iPods.

      and does not allow song uploads via USB MassStorage

      Have you looked at the contents of your iPod Shuffle's flash drive? All the songs are there under a hidden directory, in numbered subdirectories. The software on the shuffle itself only seems to know about those files... it doesn't support Apple's HFS file system (you can format your shuffle with HFS but the MP3 software doesn't see anything on it), and iTunes loads it up through the USB mass storage interface.

      I don't know how much Apple has done to keep you from being able to populate those numbered subdirectories by hand, but I would be really surprised if there wasn't an easy way to load it up from Linux or Winamp playlists the same way iTunes does.

    8. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple uses a list of the songs rather than scanning for them, so you can't populate the folders by hand.

    9. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Please point out the product that the iPod shuffle is a clone of.

      No one is getting mad that someone made a product that's like the shuffle, this thing is physically identical. Take a shuffle, erase the Apple logo, the capacity on the USB sheath, and, well that's about the difference. They even have the same silhouette dancing people.

      This isn't a 'clone' in that it 'works pretty much the same, with pretty much the same features', it's a clone like that Louis Vuitton bag you can get at the swap-meet for $25.

      When Steve Jobs got on stage in 2004 and poo-poohed flash music players, concentrating on the high end, I was livid.

      Because the low-end mp3 players suck. I've seen 'em up close, and witnessed the hassles friends have had with them.

      Apart from the "reshuffle" ability, and the memory size

      Two of the four things which make the shuffle not-suck. The other two are iTunes and the industrial design.

      (after all, this was 3 years ago)

      And three years your idea was shit. You idea wasn't the iPod shuffle, it was the iPod 32mb, with the 1 hour battery life (I guess if you only have four songs...), at thrice the physical size, all for the low-low price of $199.

      I'll bet you had the idea for Sony's tiny cell phones and bluetooth headsets back in '95, too!

    10. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      Apple uses a list of the songs rather than scanning for them, so you can't populate the folders by hand.

      Have you tried?

      I wouldn't be surprised either way. But if you can't, then that's a restriction Apple's laid down on the generic MP3 player the Shuffle's based on, because the original devices can do it.

    11. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      Your logic is like saying, "The Ford Mustang is a clone of the Chevy Corvette" because both use gasoline fueled engines and have two doors and rear wheel drive.

      Or even more similar to your analogy, that the iPod is a clone of the Creative Nomad because both use hard drives, play mp3s, have equalizer settings, and playlists.

      The expectation when you use 'clone', ie cloning, is that not only are there similar functions, but they are physically as similar as twins. The SuperShuffle is a clone of the iPod Shuffle, the same way a Ford Escape is a clone of a Mazda Tribute; same components, same design, same usage.

      A Ford Escape is not a clone of a Honda RAV or Toyota CRV, nor is a Honda RAV a clone of a Toyota CRV, even though all are FUNCTIONALLY identical.

    12. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      the low-end mp3 players suck. I've seen 'em up close, and witnessed the hassles friends have had with them.

      That's why I spent so much time in 2003 looking for one that didn't suck. What I got was pretty damn good. If it sucks, then so does the shuffle... because other than three years worth of price drops in flash memory prices, this is virtually the same device. All that's missing is the ability to reshuffle the songs you randomly selected once you get to the end of your Autofilled playlist...

      You idea wasn't the iPod shuffle, it was the iPod 32mb, with the 1 hour battery life (I guess if you only have four songs...), at thrice the physical size, all for the low-low price of $199.

      The one I bought had 128MB, back when that was a lot of flash for the price. It was about 50% thicker than the shuffle, and a little longer and wider. And it cost me $69.00, not $99 or $199.

      And where are you getting this "your idea" business from? I bought it for my daughter's birthday in 2003, and it had already been on the market long enough that it was showing up on discount sites back then. It's not "my idea", it's a real product, you can buy it right now if you follow the links (but I'd suggest buying a Shuffle instead... it's actually cheaper!).

      But all this info was in the message you're responding to. Did you actually read the whole thing? Or was that too much work.

    13. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      Your logic is like saying, "The Ford Mustang is a clone of the Chevy Corvette" because both use gasoline fueled engines and have two doors and rear wheel drive.

      If those were the only two vehicles on the market that had those features? I looked long and hard for a better version of the Gray Whale the first time my daughter broke the USB connector... and ended up soldering it back together. There really wasn't anything else like it on the market until the Shuffle came out.

      This is more like a Chevy Tahoe and a Hummer 2. Same frame and powertrain, slightly different sheetmetal.

    14. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      Alright, so here's my question/allegation.

      How do you know that the Gray Whale and the iPod shuffle have the same frame and powertrain?

      That's like claiming the Nomad and iPod (as an example I used earlier) have the same frame and powertrain.

    15. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by Kinetix303 · · Score: 1

      The real question is.... Why do you care? They do the *same* thing.

    16. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      How do you know that the Gray Whale and the iPod shuffle have the same frame and powertrain?

      I doubt it's using the exact same parts all the way through, and I don't have my Gray Whale any more: after my daughter ripped the USB port off it the third time I couldn't fix it again. But... according to the guy who disassembled the Shuffle, it's using a standard MP3 player chip and flash memory device, and it's using the same controls as the Gray Whale, and its features and functionality are a closer match to the Gray Whale than either are to any other MP3 player on the market when I bought it.

    17. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by Secret+Agent+99 · · Score: 1

      In this context, maybe it's important to note that the iPod shuffle and the Super Shuffle are not functionally identical.

      One plays WMA, one does not. One plays AAC (DRM or no), one does not. One has an FM tuner and voice recorder, one does not.

      However, the one that came second to market looks identical to the one that came first. Therein lies the problem; functionality has little or nothing to do with it. (Until naive consumers start to find that some of their music won't play and they can't figure out why.)

    18. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      Yah, that's a good point. The Super Shuffle isn't just a clone (like, say, the Compaq Deskpro was a clone of the IBM PC), it's a deliberate fake.

    19. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      All that's missing is the ability to reshuffle the songs you randomly selected once you get to the end of your Autofilled playlist...

      And iTunes, and style, and 4x the RAM, and the size, and...

      The one I bought had 128MB, back when that was a lot of flash for the price. It was about 50% thicker than the shuffle, and a little longer and wider. And it cost me $69.00, not $99 or $199.

      Well, shit. If you get to pick whichever year you want... You're livid last year, you bought your mp3 player two years ago, and you had your idea--the part I was directly replying to, in the part above, 3 years ago.

      I quote, "(after all, this was 3 years ago)," which puts it at early '02, just a few months after the release of the original iPod.

      And where are you getting this "your idea" business from?

      "I was livid"

      "I immediately went to Apple's site and sent in a suggestion"

      "I had even figured out the way to use iTunes"

      But all this info was in the message you're responding to. Did you actually read the whole thing? Or was that too much work.

      I read your entire message before replying. I'm starting to have my doubts that you did, though.

      Your contention that the iPod shuffle is basically just a generic flash player, only 3 years late shows you don't even know what an iPod is.

    20. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      Well, shit. If you get to pick whichever year you want... You're livid last year, you bought your mp3 player two years ago, and you had your idea--the part I was directly replying to, in the part above, 3 years ago.

      No, stupid. The product came out in 2002, I bought one in 2003, Steve Jobs did his "we hate flash players" dance in 2004, and then the shuttle came out in 2005.

      Now try and keep up.

    21. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      No, stupid. The product came out in 2002, I bought one in 2003, Steve Jobs did his "we hate flash players" dance in 2004, and then the shuttle came out in 2005.

      God you are dense...

      You are picking your years, treating them all the same--whichever works best for you.

      You're bragging about a product that's been out since 2002. Well, in 2002, there was just the original 5GB iPod. There's no way Apple could have made a successful iPod shuffle then.

      In 2003 you bought your 128mb, 2-CD holdin' mp3 player. From Apple's point of view, that player's utter crap. I agree with them. I've owned 3 flash mp3 players, all prior to the iPod, and the memory limitation sucked, but I lived with it. Once the iPod came out, there was no way I'd limit myself to 1 CD per $100 flash card again. The 512MB shuffle is only usable because of iTunes and the shuffle mix feature. You really need a really cheap 512mb flash (minimum) and an iTunes jukebox to make the shuffle a success. It wasn't until 2004 that this became feasible, and wonder-of-wonders, Apple created the product in.... 2004!

      In January of 2004 Jobs ripped on the crappy flash players, only focusing on the high-end--your player was high-end for that era. He's right that that's crap. The iPod mini, which only became feasible then, tore them up.

      Now Apple comes out with the iPod shuffle, which you claim they could have and should have released in 2002 (when your player originally came out) or you will call them cloners. And you became livid when Jobs called your crap player 'crap'.

      I'm trying to get you to understand that the iPod shuffle couldn't have been made in 2002, or 2003, and even early 2004 would have seen it at too high a price. You need to check in with reality every once in a while to calibrate your expectations, or you'll be spending a lot of time being livid.

    22. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by damiam · · Score: 1

      FYI, it's the Toyota RAV4 and the Honda CRV, not the other way around.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    23. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      I work in the tech industry. I want to see that 'trade dress' protections are accurately enforced.

      That means if we make software or products to enter a market dominated by another that we can't be sued for similarity when there are obvious differences, and that when a company decides to imitate us that we can sue them if they copy us too closely.

    24. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Hey Argent, my hands are a bit full at the moment. Would you mind sticking your hand in my pocket, and skipping a song for me?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    25. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that Apple should have made an iPod shuffle in 2002. I said that this device was made in 2002, and that Apple should have been able to do it one better by January 2004.

      your player was high-end for [January 2004]

      My player cost $69 in 2003. That's not "high end". That's cheaper than the shuffle is *now*,

      The 512MB shuffle is only usable because of iTunes and the shuffle mix feature.

      512M holds 8 hours of music. That's a bigger playlist than any Clear Channel radio station has, and you can refill it every night.

      OK, maybe if you're listening to your pocket MP3 player all day, then 512M is cramped. If you work in an office or other environment where you can't listen to earphones, or you have a computer to hold your playlist, then you're only going to be listening to your MP3 player an hour or two at a time. Something that holds two hours of music is adequate if you can refill it easily.

      If your flash player operates in disk mode, it takes two drags and two clicks to refill it with a new random set of songs.

      you claim they could have and should have released in 2002

      I didn't say that. Stop making things up.

      What I said was that Magic Star made it with 128M in 2002, and sold it for under $100. If they could make it with 128M and sell it for under $100 three years ago, then just the difference in flash memory prices would have let you make a 512M model for under $100 by 2004.

      The other differences between the units are software. The marginal cost of software is $0.00.

      Apple's margin on the shuffle is 40%. So they could have made it for under $100, sold it for around $150, and you're telling me that the market wasn't ready for a $150 flash player from Apple in 2004? Hell, in early January 2005 people were playing what-if games about the idea of a $150 flash player from Apple.

    26. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that Apple should have made an iPod shuffle in 2002. I said that this device was made in 2002, and that Apple should have been able to do it one better by January 2004.

      There's a huge distinction you are missing--which is that Apple couldn't have done it. There's a reason 'cheap' flash players are made by companies called 'Magic Star'.

      My player cost $69 in 2003. That's not "high end".

      128MB was 'high end'.

      512M holds 8 hours of music. That's a bigger playlist than any Clear Channel radio station has, and you can refill it every night.

      Which is only good if your library is relatively small (say, 30 cd's or less, tops). My point about needing iTunes' shuffle mode is that in order for 512MB to not be unacceptable, you need a way to effortlessly pick 512MB of music.

      If your flash player operates in disk mode, it takes two drags and two clicks to refill it with a new random set of songs.

      If your flash player is an iPod shuffle, it takes no clicks and no drags. Your method requires too much user interaction. The 'shuffle' part of the iPod shuffle is really the breakthrough.

      What I said was that Magic Star made it with 128M in 2002, and sold it for under $100. If they could make it with 128M and sell it for under $100 three years ago, then just the difference in flash memory prices would have let you make a 512M model for under $100 by 2004.

      Impossible. Did Creative have a 512MB Muvo in Jan, '04, for $100? Did Rio have one? More apt, did they even have them in Jan. '05?

      No.

      The ones they had were more expensive, and less usable, even with their screens.

      The other differences between the units are software. The marginal cost of software is $0.00.

      So are you saying iTunes cost Apple nothing to create? (no, of course not), then don't leave out that cost.

      Apple's margin on the shuffle is 40%. So they could have made it for under $100, sold it for around $150, and you're telling me that the market wasn't ready for a $150 flash player from Apple in 2004?

      Yes, that's exactly what I'm saying.

      Why do you think the 'Magic Star' player didn't take off, if it was so good? If you hand a company a warehouse full of flash chips, an mp3 playing IC, and a small budget for engineering, design, and fabrication, they'll make those little shit players you are espousing.

      Now, if Apple had released your player in '04, the market would have laughed at them, and they would have been universally panned, and the product would have been a failure. Apple had to do something which 'Magic Star' could not--make the player attractive and usable. To do so, you needed a minimum of 512mb flash, it needed to look good, you needed an iTunes jukebox with the shuffle feature (this isn't as obvious as you think), and you needed to be able to do it all for a price people will pay. Miss any one of those, and the iPod shuffle is a failure.

      Do you really think Apple had all those pieces in 2003 (and hence a finished product ready for MWSF '04)? If not, your argument falls apart.

    27. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by Paradox · · Score: 1

      I can't believe you're having this big BS fest where you claim to be privy to the origins of a device, but you haven't even bothered to read up on Apple's version.

      Bad argent. No cookie for you.

      --
      Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
    28. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      128MB was 'high end'.

      Huh? Did you watch Jobs' address in 2004? The high end was 256M and above, he must have used the figure a dozen times.

      My point about needing iTunes' shuffle mode is that in order for 512MB to not be unacceptable, you need a way to effortlessly pick 512MB of music.

      I've already pointed out that I was already using iTunes Party Shuffle to do that with my Magic Star device.

      If your flash player is an iPod shuffle, it takes no clicks and no drags.

      Actually, it takes more work. It's only one click (Autofill), but since iTunes mounts and unmounts the shuffle in the foreground instead of the background like the Finder, loading the shuffle is less convenient than loading a "Flash Disk" player.

      you needed an iTunes jukebox with the shuffle feature (this isn't as obvious as you think)

      I'm no genius, and I was using iTunes with the Party Shuffle to load up my flash player long before the Shuffle was announced. It's not rocket science, honest.

      Did Creative have a 512MB Muvo in Jan, '04, for $100?

      Um, the price I suggested for the 2004 timeframe was $150, not $100. They could have hit that easily, even with 512M, and with the 256M that Steve kept going on about it would have been a snap.

      Why do you think the 'Magic Star' player didn't take off, if it was so good?

      Two reasons. First, it's dorky looking. Second, and more important, it didn't have the Apple name on it. This kind of thing happens all the time. Nobody wanted multitasking in personal computers until Microsoft "invented" it. Nobody wanted canned or bottled coffee until Starbucks "invented" it. Getting a product launched is expensive, and it sometimes takes a big name as well as a lot of money to get a product off the ground: Maxwell House had a bottled coffee product before Starbucks that I personally think was better, and they certainly have the money to push it... but it didn't have the Starbucks name.

      Do you really think Apple had all those pieces in 2003 (and hence a finished product ready for MWSF '04)?

      Obviously not, they weren't looking at the low end flash players that early. If they had been, they could have done it. Once they became aware of the product, they did it...

    29. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      your player ... your player ... your idea ...

      And please, it's not my player, it's not my idea, I'm not trying to take credit for anything here. I'm trying to give credit to the unsung genius at Magic Star who came up with it.

    30. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      this big BS fest where you claim to be privy to the origins of a device [...]

      Dude, nothing I've posted is or implies any private or personal knowledge of Apple's development projects. Plus, the "Gray Whale" has been on the market for years, I have no idea how many people have one... but it's a widely available mass-producted device so thousands is utterly conservative.

      If this is what counts as "privy knowledge" I better not spill the beans on "fire" or "the wheel" before I patent them.

    31. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by Paradox · · Score: 1

      You're claiming a link from a device to another device, but you seem to know almost nothing about either. This would be like me writing a long dissertation about how the British Monarchy evolved, and then go, "It's a damn shame women can't participate in that."

      So maybe you just forgot. The order is research, then talk.

      --
      Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
    32. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      You want me to reverse-engineer Apple's playlist file format? Implement a Linux installer for the iPod shuffle? What research are you talking about?

      iTunes installs music on the shuffle by mounting it as a flash drive and copying the files to the Fnn folders. You can watch it happen by opening a terminal and watching what it does. It mounts the shuffle, then copies the files in, then unmounts it.

      Have you done that, or are you just taking Apple's word that it requires iTunes? Do some research yourself.

      If you can't do the same thing, then that's because Apple has deliberately locked you out, not because the Shuffle's generic MP3 player and flash chipset doesn't have that ability.

    33. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Huh? Did you watch Jobs' address in 2004? The high end was 256M and above, he must have used the figure a dozen times.

      Yes, I did. And in 2004, 128/256 was high end, 32/64 low end. There were higher capacity players, but those were 'special edition, too expensive to consider a rational product' versions.

      I'm no genius, and I was using iTunes with the Party Shuffle to load up my flash player long before the Shuffle was announced. It's not rocket science, honest.

      What's not obvious is how to make this process non-shit. How many people were all, "WTF? No screen? Random mix?" They didn't get the point.

      Again, if Apple had all the pieces in 2003, why didn't they release it then and take the whole mp3 market? It's because they didn't have the pieces.

      Getting a product launched is expensive, and it sometimes takes a big name as well as a lot of money to get a product off the ground

      Hrm. So much for the Apple $150 player in Q1 '04.

      You're all over the place. One minute you are in '03, next you are in '04, once minute it's 128MB, next it's 256MB.

      So why don't you stick to something specific? A flash iPod, 256MB, Jan '04, for how much, $150? Is that what you are 'livid' at Apple for not creating?

      Two problems--price and capacity.

      512MB would have been too expensive (flash prices at the time would have put that at about $250, might as well buy a mini!), and 512 is the minimum usable capacity, 1GB would have been around $350+! You have to remember to add the above "it's expensive to launch" issue into account.

      You can bet Apple wanted to have a cheap flash iPod at the time, Jobs said so on more than on occasion. You can also be certain that the flash iPod project was underway at the time, so it's not like Apple just woke up on Jan of this year and there was an iPod shuffle out of thin air.

      It wasn't until sometime during 2004 that the iPod shuffle became feasible, and it wasn't until sometime during 2004 that Apple finalized the product. That is not a coincidence.

      Had they released the iPod shuffle you imagine, at the time and price that the technology at the time would have mandated, people would no longer see the iPod as something of quality, but instead as just 'nother cheap-o mp3 player.

      This is why Apple could not do it, and why 'Magic Star' can (Magic Star has no worry about maintaining a brand).

    34. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      How many people were all, "WTF? No screen? Random mix?" They didn't get the point.

      Uh, yeh, that's the same reaction a lot of people had to the MP3 player I bought in 2003.

      Again, if Apple had all the pieces in 2003, why didn't they release it then and take the whole mp3 market?

      Who the hell knows why Apple does anything? Anyone who's followed Apple for more than a couple of years has whiplash trying to follow the twists and turns. look at the Mac mini, for years they say "No ugly monitors on nice Macs" (that's a Steve Jobs line, by the way), then they turn around and throw out "BYODKM". They're by turns brilliant, infuriating, obtuse, and illuminated. Sometimes they hit the market dead on, sometimes they come in late, sometimes they produce stupendous flops and sometimes they engineer miracles. Apple follows their own rules.

      Possibly they held off on the Shuffle purely for market timing. maybe they were right to do so. That doesn't change the fact that Steve Jobs' talk in 2004 was a blatant misrepresentation of the flash player market. You didn't have to pay $200 for a 256M iPod-sized monster, you could spend $70 on something the size of a thumb drive and get a better designed device.

      Less than $70, by then. $70 was the January 2003 price.

      Hrm. So much for the Apple $150 player in Q1 '04.

      What are you getting at here? Are you saying Apple doesn't have advertising dollars to spend? That they're not a big name?

      A flash iPod, 256MB, Jan '04, for how much, $150? Is that what you are 'livid' at Apple for not creating?

      Um, no, I was livid at Steve Jobs for claiming that the flash market was represented by the huge behemoths that he was comparing the iPod Mini to, rather than the streamlined minimal design that the majority of flash players used. It was an obvious straw man.

      But, yeh, $150 for a 256M iPod Shuffle in January 2004. that would have worked. $50 less than the 256M flash players Steve was mocking, smaller, lighter, he could have blown them away.

      512 is the minimum usable capacity

      You keep saying that. Do you think repetition makes it true?

      You know, I'll bet if he'd come out with (say) a $120 1G model and a $180 2G model, you'd be writing "1G is the minimum usable capacity". Fact is, the minimum usable capacity of a flash-drive MP3 player like the shuffle is based on one thing and one thing only: how long you spend listening to it before you reload it. If you listen 8 hours a day, then you need 8 hours worth of music... maybe a little less, because of the shuffle function, but that's a reasonable first cut.

      I listen for less than 2 hours a day... that's how long I spend driving to work, home again, and at lunch. My daughter's ride to school was shorter than that, and she wasn't allowed to listen in class, so that worked out well for her. So, my 512M shuffle is much bigger than I really need. Now maybe you really need more than that, but don't assume that your needs are some kind of physical constant that Apple has to hew to lest people laugh at them.

      I mean, hell, I think the 256M RAM in the Mac Mini is silly, and Apple should be ashamed of themselves for shipping less than 512M in a Mac. But it doesn't seem to be hurting their sales... because, you see, that's my opinion. Not a law of physics.

      You have to remember to add the above "it's expensive to launch" issue into account.

      Um, no, that's a fixed cost, no matter whether he launched in 2004 or 2005 the marketing costs would have been comparable. Maybe a little cheaper in 2004, what with inflation, but not enough to matter.

    35. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Damn you are dense.

      Apple has to pay for R&D, support, advertising, etc, and so on. Magic Star has miniscule overhead. Apple also has to make a quality player. Magic Star doesn't.

      Apple can't bring a $70 iPod to the market today, but you think they could have in Jan '04. That doesn't make any sense.

      512MB is an absolute minimum for an iPod. Why? Because the iPod is about bringing your music with you. With 256MB (presumably Apple could make a 256MB shuffle for $75 if they wanted), you have room for four CD's. That's not enough choice for an iPod.

      What you propose isn't an iPod, it's just a crap mp3 player, and Apple isn't in that market.

    36. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      Apple can't bring a $70 iPod to the market today, but you think they could have in Jan '04.

      You're making things up again. I have not at any point in this discussion suggested Apple could have produced a $70 iPod in January '04. I've suggested that since Magic Star could produce a $70 flash device iin 2002, Apple could have produced a $150 flash device in 2004.

      Apple has to pay for R&D, support, advertising, etc, and so on. Magic Star has miniscule overhead. Apple also has to make a quality player. Magic Star doesn't.

      That's why I didn't suggest that Apple should produce a $70 device. You keep coming up with this stuff, arguing against something you imagined I said. Why?

      Because the iPod is about bringing your music with you.

      The iPod Mini already fails that test, for me. Once your iPod is smaller than your iTunes music library (by a factor of 4, in my case) you have to pick and choose or come up with some scheme to automate that. And once you've automated it, the only limit is how much music you're going to listen to before you reload.

      That's not enough choice for an iPod.

      The Shuffle isn't about choice, it's about chance. Once you've abandoned "bringing your music with you", you're in a whole new world... and in that world, the only limit you need to worry about is how often you get back to base to refuel...

      I've got 512M of music in my Shuffle. That's 147 songs. I doubt if I've listened to more than half of them yet, between repeats and resets... and the last time I hit Autofill was last week.

      What you propose isn't an iPod, it's just a crap mp3 player

      Yeh, that's EXACTLY what people were saying about the shuffle right after MWSF '05. I knew it was more... that it was a great little MP3 player... because of my experience with a merely good one. It wouldn't matter if the base unit was 256M, 512M, or 1G, people would say the same thing... until they had a chance to try it. Since you haven't had a chance to try the Magic Star player (in any of its versions, 128M, 256M, or 512M), you're in no better a position to call it names than the people who came out of MWSF pooh-poohing the Shuffle.

    37. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      The iPod Mini already fails that test, for me.

      That's why I said you had to have iTunes shuffle play for the shuffle to be usable.

      The Shuffle isn't about choice, it's about chance.

      Chance fails for small samples. That's why you need more capacity than just enough to hold that amount of time. The more songs you have, the more choice you have to hit 'next'.

      Since you haven't had a chance to try the Magic Star player

      Retard, I stated I already owned 3 flash players prior to the iPod. You've failed to point out why the Magic Star player is any better.

      The standards and expectations for mp3 players took a quantum leap ahead with the original iPod. The problems with your Magic Star player weren't apparent until the advent of the iPod. Apple would have been stupid to release an iPod shuffle with less than 512MB and without their implementation of 'shuffle' syncing. Without both of those, you just have a crap Magic Star player.

    38. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      That's why I said you had to have iTunes shuffle play for the shuffle to be usable.

      Yes, you need the iTunes shuffle capability, or something equivalent. But you don't need the iPod shuffle to get that, you can use the iTunes shuffle feature with any MP3 player that provides a "flash drive" interface. I'm sorry that you never thought of doing that with the "3 flash players" you owned prior to the iPod, because it makes a tremendous difference.

      By the way, you keep saying Apple would have been stupid to release an iPod shuffle without "their implementation of 'shuffle' syncing". I don't understand what your point is, there. You don't need Autofill to get shuffle syncing... the Autofill button is just a gimmick. It's the random selection that they put in for Party Shuffle and Smart Playlists that's the important part. Soon as the shuffle started shipping, you had people posting schemes to use them to build better automated playlists for their shuffles than the Autofill gave them.

      Like I said before, none of this is hard to figure out. Assuming you're willing to think about it.

      The problems with your Magic Star player weren't apparent until the advent of the iPod.

      Um, the iPod was already out when I bought it. For five times the price.

    39. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Yes, you need the iTunes shuffle capability, or something equivalent ... I'm sorry that you never thought of doing that with the "3 flash players"

      1. I did, and I didn't care much for it--I ended up with a 64MB card full of songs, only a few of which did I want to listen to.

      2. It was a manual process. This is important because having to do it each time is annoying. Better to just have it be automatic.

      Not understanding these two points shows you lack a fundamental understanding of Apple--it's little things like these that put their products ahead of the competition.

      By the way, you keep saying Apple would have been stupid to release an iPod shuffle without "their implementation of 'shuffle' syncing".

      And at the right price and with sufficient storage. You need all the features. Without any one of them the product isn't worthy of being an iPod.

      Um, the iPod was already out when I bought it. For five times the price.

      Um, that does not contradict, "The problems with your Magic Star player weren't apparent until the advent of the iPod." When you bought your Magic Stars, the iPod had shown the problems with it, duh.

      You have low standards. You keep saying, "Magic Star made this player in '02, surely Apple could have made one too!" The problem is that Apple wouldn't let such a crappy player see the light of day.

    40. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      1. Autofill is a manual process as well... plugging in the iPod, hitting Autofill, and waiting. It's a couple fewer steps, but because of the way iTunes and the iPod are tightly integrated it's at least as intrusive... if you let Finder do the actual copying it goes on in the background and doesn't make iTunes hang while mounting and unmounting the iPod.

      2. You keep saying that 128M isn't sufficient storage, based on your experience with a 64M device. That's like the people who were pooh-poohing the shuffle based on their experience with 256M devices.

      3. You're still putting words in my mouth.

      You keep saying, "Magic Star made this player in '02, surely Apple could have made one too!"

      I said that Apple could have made a slightly smaller shuffle in 2004, and it would have been a killer device in 2004.

    41. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1
      1. Autofill is a manual process as well

      Not as manual as:
      1. delete all songs
      2. randomize library
      3. select about XMB of songs
      4. click, drag, drop

      Apple had to polish the 'autofill' function (your method is too cumbersome! but you have no standards, so you don't care). They also had to give it enough capacity, and it had to be cheap enough. Apple didn't have the necessary ingredients in Jan '04--in fact, no one did.

      The issue isn't whether you think manual shuffle-syncing is sufficient, or whether you think 128MB is sufficient, or whether you think >$150 for a 256MB player is sufficient, it's whether Apple thinks it's sufficient--and they clearly don't.

      That's why Apple didn't release one until MWSF'05. They didn't have all the pieces. You think they did, and you are wrong. It wouldn't have been an iPod-quality player, it would have been a Magic Star quality player.

      What you wanted is for Apple to release a Magic Star iPod (256MB for, at best, $50 less than a 4GB mini, and that's if they could cut a sweet deal on flash mem). That's ludicrous.

      And stop this bullshit about me putting words in your mouth. You still haven't stated exactly what you think Apple should have released at MWSF '04. Spell it out or shut up about it when I have to surmise from what you've written.

      Give me: capacity and price, we'll assume the same form factor, and normal iPod fill mode (with Mac fan websites showing tips on how to use a 'Smart Playlist' to generate random mixes). When you consider price, remember MWSF is in January, so the prices are from Q4 '03.
    42. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      Sorry, it goes like this:

      1. Delete all songs.
      2. Select playlist (either a Smart Playlist, or Party Shuffle).
      3. Drag, drop.

      What you wanted is for Apple to release a Magic Star iPod (256MB for, at best, $50 less than a 4GB mini

      Um, the 4GB mini was $250 in January 2004, not $200, so that'd be $100 less than the Mini.

      You still haven't stated exactly what you think Apple should have released at MWSF '04

      You're not paying attention. I've suggested the 256M iPod Shuffle could have been sold for $150 in January 2004. Leaving out the LCD and extra controls really does save about 25% on the price, which is why Apple left them out of the Shuffle.

      You're also making up the "I didn't want them to have Autofill" bit. That's just software, the marginal cost of that is $0.00.

      You know, I think the real problem here is that you have a crappy collection of songs in your iTunes playlist. If you have to hit "Next" more than a couple of times an hour you're having WAY too much trouble filling your playlist with good stuff.

    43. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, it goes like this:

      Three steps is two steps too many. Apple is all about, 'it just works'.

      You're not paying attention. I've suggested the 256M iPod Shuffle could have been sold for $150 in January 2004.

      No, you never stated this. And you're retarded to think that it would have been $150. It would have been at least $200. And 256MB is just too little.

      That's just software, the marginal cost of that is $0.00.

      Again, you show your lack of intelligence. You still have to pay to create, support, and improve the software.

      You know, I think the real problem here is that you have a crappy collection of songs in your iTunes playlist. If you have to hit "Next" more than a couple of times an hour you're having WAY too much trouble filling your playlist with good stuff.

      No, I just don't want to listen to everything I have at the same time. Think about it--off of the heals of NIN's Closer, do you want to hear Elvis sing Heartbreak Hotel? Or on the heels of the Blue Danube Waltz, do you really want to hear Eminem, or George Carlin? Maybe, but maybe not.

      That's why 256MB is too small. You just have low standards--you don't really mind the effort and don't really care about the limited space. You were served well by Magic Star (and Creative and Rio, etc). It wasn't until the iPod that mp3 players were mainstream--that's because the average consumer won't put up with the shit you will.

    44. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by argent · · Score: 1

      I've suggested the 256M iPod Shuffle could have been sold for $150 in January 2004.

      No, you never stated this.

      *plonk*

    45. Re:The Shuffle is a clone to begin with. by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Dipshit, you never explicitly stated exactly what you wanted from Apple. All you ever said were things like, "Apple could make a $150 flash player in 2004" and "If Magic Star could do it in 2002, Apple could do it in 2004", but whenever I tried to tie you down to specifics, you keep saying, "quit putting words in my mouth." It keeps changing with you.

      You even stated Apple could have made a 512MB player in Jan '04 for less than $100. How am I supposed to refute a moving target?

      Idiot.

  56. generalized explanation... by jxyama · · Score: 1
    i think AM radio broadcast requires a loop of antenna where the area of the loop determines the reception quality. even if you put the antenna wire on the outer edge of mp3 players, it offers minimal area coverage.

    FM, on the other hand, length of the antenna determines the reception quality - the headphone wire is a perfect place for that, i think.

    1. Re:generalized explanation... by amembleton · · Score: 1

      Yes, in fact some headphones have four wires: Ground, Left, Right and antenna. Just take a look at the plug to see how many seperate metalic blocks there are on the connector.

    2. Re:generalized explanation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      basicaly they could design a super suffle shirt/coat
      in the shirt is a long antena perhaps even an extra batery pack... just put the super shuffle in a super shuffel power pocket that has the right connectors.

      voila, longer play life, Am radio and free advertising.

      and for no hidden extra fee we present the super shuffel scarf that aides in the reception of police broadcasts and works as a wifi sniffer.

      super shuffel shirt and scarf order now
      for the amazing price of only 999.-

      what you want more for that ludicrus low LOW price
      may we present the super shuffle booster earmufs...

  57. Careful, that foam will wet your chin by tkrotchko · · Score: 0

    "Apple will easily stop this in the US under "trade dress" litigation." ..and this is good for the consumer because...?

    I'll bet you're genuinely angry, aren't you?

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:Careful, that foam will wet your chin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is good for the consumer, because if exact copies like this could just get made and sold throughout the US, then companies like Apple, who make cool products like this, would go under. Additionally, if cheap knockoffs like this were allowed throughout the US market, it would become increasingly harder to separate the knockoff crap from the genuine quality article.

    2. Re:Careful, that foam will wet your chin by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      If I or you were to create something cool and someone created a knockoff, don't you think we deserve protection via 'trade dress' protections?

    3. Re:Careful, that foam will wet your chin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, not really.

      Today, companies create one thing and sit around.

      Take software. Software was far more innovative before software patents.

      Now we're patenting one-click, and browser plug-ins.
      Pathetic.

  58. Reality distortion field strikes again by pslam · · Score: 1
    This thing most likely uses the same GUTS even as the iPod shuffle, the chip in the shuffle already supports FM radio, Apple (like any sensible company) didn't provide it out of clean UI design.

    I really think that you should say that the other way around: the iPod shuffle uses the same GUTS as all the cheap and not so cheap no-name MP3 players out there. It's just another Sigmatel Stmp3500 based MP3 player without a display, but with the reality distortion field applied. It probably even has all the same filesystem, frequency response and USB bugs as all the others. I wouldn't be at all surprised if the only part Apple played in making the Shuffle was the ID. I also wouldn't be surprised, as some have pointed out, if the company in the article are the people they outsourced it to.

    The Stmp3500 does NOT have a built in tuner and I have no idea where everyone is getting that idea from. Apple probably didn't add an FM tuner because: a) it would be more expensive (most likely reason), b) it would be unusable without a display. I imagine they'd just have "random station selection" and think up a funky marketing slogan to hide the stupidity.

    1. Re:Reality distortion field strikes again by byolinux · · Score: 1

      The tuner wouldn't really need a display. There are plenty of radios out there which just have a next or previous autotune functionality.

  59. Manic lawyers to power... Turbines to speed... ! by Dystopian+Rebel · · Score: 1

    And when Apple's iLawyers are done with LuxPro in iCourt, LuxPro will have to find to find an i-noffensive pursuit instead... such as running a Mac rumour blog.

    --
    Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
  60. About LUXPRO by Detritus · · Score: 2, Insightful
    LUXPRO CORPORATION is recognized by a technological group. They work in researching, designing, and innovation products for over 30 years. LUXPRO always insists to provide you comfortable customer services and high quality products to match your requirements.

    We will keep going to be a designing leader. Our products are always so useful to meet what you need. Our mission is to improve your living quality and to create your life value. If you can imagine it, LUXPRO CORPORATION can make it.

    No matter how old you are, what you do, or where you live, chances are a LUXPRO CORPORATION product touches your life.

    All your base are belong to us.
    -- Apple Lawyer

    --
    Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    1. Re:About LUXPRO by Arru · · Score: 1
      If you can imagine it, LUXPRO CORPORATION can make it.
      At least they're honest. Apple did the imagining, and LUXPRO made it, once more!
      --
      There's no 'on' position on the Slacker switch!
    2. Re:About LUXPRO by The+Mad+Crasher · · Score: 1

      Amen, there! Let's go down the list one more time, shall we?

      1) "All Your Base" translation style page give. Cats not happy.
      2) Graphics lifted straight from Apple's website and marketing campaign.
      3) It *says* it can shuffle, but I don't see anywhere on the UI for it to! In fact, this whole player seems to be an attempt to put the features people want in the iPod Shuffle without drastic changes to the UI. This doesn't seem physically possible!

      --
      --The Mad Crasher has struck again! Or something along those lines...
  61. Here you go, fishbulb. by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1

    Here is a view of Mr Sparkle: click here.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  62. Apple already tried to stop it by Lars+T. · · Score: 4, Informative

    Heise News article (in German) and the Google-Translation (replace "conditions" with "booth", and it makes more sense). LuxPro had removed the notPod from their booth on Friday, but put it up again on Saturday.

    --

    Lars T.

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

    1. Re:Apple already tried to stop it by FroBugg · · Score: 2, Informative

      Or you can read Heise's own translation into English, which actually makes sense from the start

    2. Re:Apple already tried to stop it by dabraun · · Score: 1

      Article says it supports WMA. That's a significant selling point over Apple's offering to me. The problem is that the 'shuffle' design doesn't really offer anything special over the well established pen drive/music player market. Now if they'd make a clone of the regular iPod that supported WMA I'd be sold. I can't see ever buying an iPod when it doesn't support my music but the design looks nice and with WMA support I might even pay the Apple premium.

    3. Re:Apple already tried to stop it by FredFnord · · Score: 1

      Argh, I hate people who abuse that Winston Churchill quote. Taking that one out of context is like quoting the ten commandments as 'Thou shalt ... kill'.

      The original quote, from WC himself, is an argument that, for example, it might be better to use tear gas on a native group rather than shooting them all. Or, to take some context:

      "I do not understand this squeamishness about the use of gas. We have definitely adopted the position at the Peace Conference of arguing in favour of the retention of gas as a permanent method of warfare. It is sheer affectation to lacerate a man with the poisonous fragment of a bursting shell and to boggle at making his eyes water by means of lachrymatory gas."

      Your sentence slots in right after that.

      Yeah, yeah, off topic, on topic, who cares, it's an obnoxious sig.

      -fred

      --
      Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
    4. Re:Apple already tried to stop it by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Yeah, yeah, and he is talking about Mustard Gas. And Saddam used it against the same people Churchill wanted to use it against.

      --

      Lars T.

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

    5. Re:Apple already tried to stop it by FredFnord · · Score: 1

      Last I checked, mustard gas could not really be called 'lachrymatory gas', unless one were to stretch the definition enough to say that anything that hurts you an enormous amount is 'lachrymatory'.

      -fred

      --
      Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
    6. Re:Apple already tried to stop it by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Tell that Winston, not me.

      --

      Lars T.

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

  63. quite common by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This kind of ripoff is actually quite common. I see Rbok and Nke shoes all of the time and they are cheaply made direct copies of the originals. In fact, many Chinese factories that make the original will also do the ripoffs using the same equipment, just different grades of electronics, plastices and other items. It even goes as far as cars. I read a article in Time where knock offs cost not just the computer industry, but almost every industry on the planet. Callaway golf clubs, Yamaha Motorcycles, Nikon cameras, etc etc....

    I bet this Super Shuffle does not even work with Apple's DRM'd files.

    --

    Gorkman

    1. Re:quite common by MemoryAid · · Score: 1
      Business Week had a cover story about counterfeit goods a month ago. One of the more interesting points was that the situation was so bad that even China was going to crack down on it (due to external pressure).

      Now, to be fair, this is not a case of the counterfeiter slapping an Apple brand on the product and selling it as an iShuffle, but it's close. Who knows, maybe the same factory is also selling Apples, we just can't tell because they all look like iPods.

      --
      Language students: Don't try to learn English here. This ain't it.
    2. Re:quite common by MemoryAid · · Score: 1
      Oh, I just found another Business Week story about Apple not outsourcing their design. So those who thought that Apple may have bought the design from a Taiwanese company are wrong, according to Apple.

      Handling its own design work is one reason for best-sellers like the iPod and Shuffle. Steve Jobs is the other.

      "Designed by Apple in Cupertino."

      The words are printed in such small type on the back of Apple's (AAPL ) tiny new iPod Shuffle MP3 player that you have to squint to read them.

      But maybe Business Week is just a bunch of Apple fanboys....with presbyopia.

      --
      Language students: Don't try to learn English here. This ain't it.
    3. Re:quite common by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 1

      Not really. Sometimes they do try to counterfeit the device....other times they just bank on it looking so much like the original that they convince people to buy it. Like the Chery QQ and the Chevy Spark mini cars in Asia. The QQ looks so much like the Spark that you can even interchange parts between the two. The QQ is also loads cheaper then the Spark.

      --

      Gorkman

  64. Song selection? by statixz · · Score: 0

    So how are you gonna select which songs to transfer with the device connecting 2 Super Shuffles?

  65. why stop there? by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1
    "So how are you gonna select which songs to transfer with the device connecting 2 Super Shuffles?"

    Why stop there? Why not a Beowulf cluster of these super suffles?

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  66. Better functionality than the Shuffle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "That is the legal position. My OPINION, however, is that Apple deserve to get screwed over because this new device looks as good and has better functionality than the Shuffle."

    Really? What tells you it has better functionality than the iPod Shuffle? The unsubstantiated claims of a plagiarist firm? I have not seen any kind of review or test of the device.

    1. Re:Better functionality than the Shuffle? by chaoaretasty · · Score: 1

      Umm, built in FM radio says better function. The Shuffle has no real functions to improve upon, just generic mp3 decoding chips and a simple shuffle function.

    2. Re:Better functionality than the Shuffle? by cthellis · · Score: 1

      Um... There's "functionality" and there's "functioning." On the surface it has more going for it (excepting that you won't have a seamless tie-in with iTunes, which is much of the appeal of Apple products), but will the extra features actually be WORTH it?

      Not to mention that there's one other trait we don't know yet that one always needs to take into account... will the LuxPro device actually be the same PRICE? If it's more expensive, then the features are moot--you're paying more for them--and the device comparisons back to where they always are: measuring price, performance, functionality, etc. and determining what's best for you.

  67. Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There are no OEM versions of any apple product."

    Ever hear of the Apple Airport aka the Lucent RG1000? Also last time I checked Apple wasn't the manufacturer of any of their display products. So yes their are OEM versions of Apples products that wind up in the open market.

    1. Re:Wrong by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ever hear of the Apple Airport aka the Lucent RG1000?

      It's been a couple of years now since Apple used that card's guts as the basis of their AirPort card.

      Also last time I checked Apple wasn't the manufacturer of any of their display products.

      Apple doesn't make the LCDs themselves. They do manufacture the displays themselves.

      So yes their are OEM versions of Apples products that wind up in the open market.

      You have that completely backwards. Apple has, in the past, bought OEM versions of other products and used them as the basis for their products. But Apple does not offer OEM versions of its own products.

    2. Re:Wrong by argent · · Score: 1

      Apple does not offer OEM versions of its own products.

      Bell and Howell "Black Apple II"?
      HP iPod?

      Apple's a big company. They do lots of stuff. They even do stuff they said they'd never do, like release a headless consumer Mac. Or a flash-based MP3 player. :)

    3. Re:Wrong by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      Bell and Howell "Black Apple II"?

      Are you fucking kidding me? You want to reach back nearly 30 years? I suspect that you might be a dipshit.

      HP iPod?

      Good point, but technically that's not an OEM arrangement. Apple sells the iPods to HP at wholesale prices and HP retails them. It's the same arrangement that Apple has with other retailers, like Target and Best Buy.

    4. Re:Wrong by argent · · Score: 1

      You want to reach back nearly 30 years? I suspect that you might be a dipshit.

      No, just an old fogey who really enjoyed programming on a Bell and Howell Black Apple back in the day.

      What are you upset about? Is there something evil and rude about OEMing stuff? I think it's a smart move, myself, and I wish Apple did it more. I'd really like a Power-PC equipped Thinkpad running OS X, for example... I hate the OS on my Thinkpad, but I can't stand the PowerBook and iBook hardware.

    5. Re:Wrong by Leo+McGarry · · Score: 1

      Is there something evil and rude about OEMing stuff?

      There's something evil and rude about being a troll.

    6. Re:Wrong by argent · · Score: 1

      There's something evil and rude about being a troll.

      What exactly is it that's pissing you off, man? I report what really happens, and you accuse me of lying, call me names, and generally make a big stink about the idea that tight iTunes integration might not be a killer feature... that someone might actually prefer an MP3 player that operates at "arms length" from iTunes.

    7. Re:Wrong by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      I'd really like a Power-PC equipped Thinkpad running OS X, for example... I hate the OS on my Thinkpad, but I can't stand the PowerBook and iBook hardware.
      I'd really like that too, actually. Not because I don't like the Apple hardware, but because I'd rather have a 2lb X series Thinkpad than a 5lb 12" iBook or Powerbook.

      Heck, if they wanted they could even change the GUI back to NeXTStep style to differentiate the products further. I wouldn't mind!
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    8. Re:Wrong by argent · · Score: 1

      Oh, now that would be interesting. Custom OSX themes for OEMs. Something shiny and "bling bling" for Sony, OS/2-style corporate for IBM, Platinum for Toshiba, Luna theme for Dell...

      No, maybe that's going too far,

    9. Re:Wrong by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that would be going too far -- I was thinking of stopping at "white/Aqua" for Apple consumer stuff, and "brushed metal/NeXT" for IBM corporate stuff. IBM would be making "SuperPower[Book|Mac]" kind of devices.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    10. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Apple sells the iPods to HP at wholesale prices and HP retails them. It's the same arrangement that Apple has with other retailers, like Target and Best Buy.

      I don't believe it is the same arrangement. An iPod putchased from Target or Best Buy is not branded on teh packaging and the iPod casing as an "Apple iPod from Target" or an "Apple iPod from Best Buy." It's simply an Apple iPod which is (and here's the kicker) supported by Apple.

      Call Apple for support on an Apple iPod from HP and they'll point you towards HP.

    11. Re:Wrong by argent · · Score: 1

      Don't forget, now it's Lenovo who owns the Thinkpad factories.

      Lenovo Thinkbook? lBook?

    12. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i thought he was quite clear. you are obviously a troll. you're comments are so crazy that nobody could posisbly mean them. you're just trying to pick a fight.

      back under your bridge, troll

  68. Interesting WHOIS by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Administrative Contact:
    hotels.com.tw
    tom lin (host@hotels.com.tw)
    7F.-2, No.10, Shaosing N. St., Jhongjheng District, Taipei City -
    Taipei, tw, tw
    P: +886.223912558 F: +886.223912650

    Technical Contact:
    hotels.com.tw
    tom lin (host@hotels.com.tw)
    7F.-2, No.10, Shaosing N. St., Jhongjheng District, Taipei City -
    Taipei, tw, tw
    P: +886.223912558 F: +886.223912650

    Billing Contact:
    hotels.com.tw
    tom lin (host@hotels.com.tw)
    7F.-2, No.10, Shaosing N. St., Jhongjheng District, Taipei City -
    Taipei, tw, tw
    P: +886.223912558 F: +886.223912650

    Is the Shuffle made in Taiwan as well?

    --

    Gorkman

    1. Re:Interesting WHOIS by Flyingcats · · Score: 1

      inteesting... hehe..

      --
      www.iSoftNews.com - Latest software news,fre
    2. Re:Interesting WHOIS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the Shuffle made in Taiwan as well?

      Probably, but the fanboys probably don't want to hear that.

      They might not even like to hear the though that there is the possibility that this company is the same one that manufactures the original shuffle!

    3. Re:Interesting WHOIS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the Shuffle made in Taiwan as well?

      It seems like they're both made on Earth as well.

    4. Re:Interesting WHOIS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems like they're both made on Earth as well.

      Therefore THEY MUST BE MADE BY THE SAME COMPANY!! My God, why didn't I realise this earlier!?

    5. Re:Interesting WHOIS by daninbusiness · · Score: 1

      With sketchy contact info like that (all based out of a Hotel address), it seems that "Luxpro" is little more than a Taiwanese trading company.

      Tom Lin is probably just a middleman - he knows (and perhaps directly works with) some producers of MP3 products on the mainland and markets and sells the product himself so he can get a larger markup.

    6. Re:Interesting WHOIS by Nrlll9 · · Score: 1

      It is obvious that Tom Lin has very little to do with luxpro. hotels.com.tw is a web hosting company that luxpro uses, hence, the whois info is under hotels.com.tw

  69. Cola by justdweezil · · Score: 1

    The 'Cola' and 'Grocery Store' comparisons I've heard are a little off. In those examples, you're comparing two products that have a similar purpose. That'd be like comparing the iShuffle to all other MP3 players, or comparing a Rolex to other watches.

    The debate here would be analagous to someone making imitation Rolexes that are exact, blatant aesthetic ripoffs. What's wrong with that, you say? The only reason anyone wants a fake Rolex is because it looks like a Rolex, but is much cheaper. Here, people might want to buy the Super Shuffle because they think it's just a cheaper (not sure), better (could be soundwise) iShuffle with more features.


    Also: Someone posted a remark saying it couldn't use iTunes. Are you sure? I'm sure that could be easily cracked if the hardware inside is similar at all. What software do they plan on providing the users with otherwise?

    1. Re:Cola by argent · · Score: 1

      Someone posted a remark saying it couldn't use iTunes.

      Any MP3 player that acts like a flash drive can use iTunes.

  70. got news for you. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple is doing what they have to.

    You have to stand up to everyone or stand up to nobody. Its one or the other, not only who you don't like. If apple has NDA, then they should sue those who breach the NDA contracts and as such most people know when they are sharing information they shouldn't as such they are putting themselves at risk.

    Again you stand up against everyone or nobody.

  71. Bah, nothing to see here by Jackson_Ash · · Score: 0

    Apple might sue to prevent sales of this unit, but realistically, it would never pose a problem from a competition standpoint. ./ readers seem to forget that the success of the iPod and devices of its ilk is because of the average consumer, not gadget freaks like theselves. Do you really think Mom/Dad/Bro/Sis is going to spend even a second (if they are even aware of the Luxpro offering) debating on whether they should buy from Apple or some Taiwanese company they've never heard of?

    I highly doubt circles of 15 year old girls will be saying 'Like Oh my God! You have a Luxpro! I'm so Jealous'

    Meh.

    JA

  72. Good artists borrow, great artists steal! by AKosygin · · Score: 1

    Copying wholesale and just sell a copy is one thing. But I have to respect even those people that copy and IMPROVE upon an existing invention and sell it.

    If you improved upon it, I believe it should be fair game as it benefits everyone in the long run and leads to competitive innovation. A lot of times, innovation comes in steps, this is a patent violation I am willing to turn a blind eye towards.

    1. Re:Good artists borrow, great artists steal! by iowannaski · · Score: 1
      Fine. All they have to do is make the thing blue, or any color other than white.

      Nothing is preventing them from selling an improved iPod shuffle like devide, they just can't make it look exactly like an iPod shuffle.

      --
      i forget
    2. Re:Good artists borrow, great artists steal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *cough* OpenOffice.org *cough*

  73. Intellectual property is evil by danila · · Score: 0

    If Apple didn't have the uber-powerful patent, copyright and trademark laws on its side, we could expect each and every product relentlessly improved by competitors. No longer would we complain about Apple not including FM, because we would have an option of a better competing product and Apple would be forced to include the option or lose part of the market.

    --
    Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    1. Re:Intellectual property is evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Apple didn't have the uber-powerful patent, copyright and trademark laws on its side, we could expect each and every product relentlessly improved by competitors.

      Yeah, and then innovation would come to a screeching halt, because what company is going to blow big bucks on R&D and industrial design to create something cool and distinctive, only to have some rinky-dink operation in East Bumblefuck, Asia legally copy the design, graft on a digital clock and/or FM tuner, undercut the price, and steal half the sales?

      There is nothing wrong with intellectual property laws to the extent that they allow innovators a period of exclusivity to reap the rewards of their innovation (Though one possible exception would be the drug companies trying to soak poor countries with raging HIV epidemics, etc. In cases like that, the needs of mankind should trump the profit potential for one company).

      The problems start when intellectual property laws are used as anticompetitive weapons against viable competitors, or when copyrights are extended beyond a reasonable time, preventing things from entering the public domain (Sonny Bono, may you burn in Hell. If only you had hit that tree a few years earlier).

    2. Re:Intellectual property is evil by danila · · Score: 1

      There is nothing wrong with intellectual property laws to the extent that they allow innovators a period of exclusivity to reap the rewards of their innovation

      Wrong. There is everything wrong with such laws, but the wrongs are sometimes balanced with rights. It is bad that companies can't copy others' inventions, but there is a potential benefit of increased R&D spendings.

      You seem to have the belief that laws are fundamentally good, no matter what they say. There are many good ways to solve the problem of "innovation coming to a screeching halt", while also opening the world of ideas to human creativity. For example, compulsory licensing of patents and designs would allow that company to make their Super Shuffle as long as they pay Apple, say 10$ per item. We would still get our FM-enabled shuffle and Apple would still be stimulated to develop great designs in the future.

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    3. Re:Intellectual property is evil by node+3 · · Score: 4, Informative

      This isn't 'IP' like software patents, or DMCA copyright schemes, it's 'IP' as in 'identity'.

      No one would cry 'foul' at this product, if it were functionally exactly like it is now, but didn't look just like an iPod shuffle, and wasn't packaged with Apple type adverts (dancing black silhouettes with white 'pods over a green background).

      I agree that fighting competition with 'IP" instead of innovation is evil, but this thing isn't 'competition', it's impersonation.

    4. Re:Intellectual property is evil by aixou · · Score: 1

      WTF are you talking about? Competitors DO have the right to make better products with more and better features. They don't however, have the right to shamelessly rip off the design and marketing of a product.

      There is nothing stopping anyone from making a cheaper, smaller, and more featureful mp3 player than the iPod shuffle.

      Quit your bitching.

    5. Re:Intellectual property is evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Insightful, my @$$.
      You are assuming that Apple would still be around providing competitors with good ideas and designs. No intellectual property protection -> no Apple -> no iPod -> no iPod knock-offs.

      The argument that if there were no Apple, there would be some other company to create iPod is academic and moot. There is just as high a probability that nothing like iPod will be produced. Love it or hate it, iPod made huge contribution and changed the way we listen to the music.

    6. Re:Intellectual property is evil by Feelvoid · · Score: 1

      Interesting.

      Trying to understand your perspective in today's global environment becomes something like writing science fiction; not that what you say won't ever come true. I don't fully agree with you as I haven't reflected on the ramifications, but I'd like to understand your position. Do you recommend any reading material for this?

      >You seem to have the belief that laws are fundamentally good, no matter what they say.

      No, there isn't enough information to extrapolate that from the parent's comment.

      -j.

    7. Re:Intellectual property is evil by danila · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the reply and for the compliment. While I don't know about books/articles about this particular topic that describe my point of view, I'd recommend you read something on dialectics, preferably something by Hegel and Marx themselves (not to confuse with dianetics, which is an evil cult).

      IMHO dialectics is the best approach to deal with contradictions. In this case there are two conflicting views 1) copyrights are property and artists have the right to profit from their work (thesis) and 2) ideas belong to everyone, limiting creativity is evil (antithesis). To achieve synthesis you need dialectics.

      The best part about dialectics is that it works just fine in any area, not just in regards to patents.

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    8. Re:Intellectual property is evil by danila · · Score: 1

      I may be wrong, but I suspect that most people buying Shuffle buy an "Apple iPod", not a "Shuffle".

      Furthermore, while the ads may be intentionally exploiting Apple's ad campaigns, I am not sure it should be considered illegal or even unethical. After all,
      1) Apple ads were manipulative in the first place, trying trick the customer into buying their product (as any ad that appeals to style does).
      2) If a company is providing a similar product, why shouldn't it use similar marketing? The trademark laws are intended to protect the customer, not corporate profits.

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    9. Re:Intellectual property is evil by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Wow! You're really an iconoclast! I bet you have some really great, unconventional ideas.

      I've got a really great, yet unconventional, idea. Hows about you give me all your money? What do you think? Is that a great (yet unconventional) idea, or what?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  74. Booth Pic by phoxix · · Score: 4, Interesting

    http://www.ubergizmo.com/15/archives/2005/03/super _shuffle_f.html

    The Shuffle wasn't the only thing they copied ....

    1. Re:Booth Pic by Maserati · · Score: 2, Insightful

      An "OEM" iPod Shuffle, that's one thing. But ripping off the design aesthetics from the iPod advertising campaign is just stupid. Put the two together and they're in serious legal trouble. Anyone who's red-green colorblind won't be able to tell the two campaigns apart. And I think that's the same font - hard to tell in the photo.

      If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery then these guys are begging to have Steve Jobs' love child.

      --
      Veteran, Bermuda Triangle Expeditionary Force, 1992-1951
    2. Re:Booth Pic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somehow I don't think that can happen with the orifrice Apple's lawyers are going to ream out for them.

  75. No design patent on iPod Shuffle? by Momomoto · · Score: 1

    Originally I was going to claim that this is a perfect example of design patent infringement, but I've just done a quick search of the USPTO web page and I can't find any design patents relating to the iPod Shuffle, just the normal iPods.

    Unless I've missed it somehow, this means that they can at least get away with copying Apple's design for the time being, since the patent's most likely pending.

    --
    "Max, come over here. French-Canadian bean soup. I want to pay. Let them leave me alone." - Dutch Schultz
    1. Re:No design patent on iPod Shuffle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somebody with a real shuffle please tell us whether it says "Patent Pending" on it.

    2. Re:No design patent on iPod Shuffle? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1
      Unless I've missed it somehow, this means that they can at least get away with copying Apple's design for the time being, since the patent's most likely pending

      ... but when the patent is accepted, then they can get sued for damages, say %100 of the gross sales (not net profit, mind you), plus damages for "dilution of trademark", "damage to reputation", etc. Stupid of them to make something so identical and then market it in an absolutely identical way.

    3. Re:No design patent on iPod Shuffle? by argent · · Score: 1

      No patent notice on the Shuffle anywhere I can see. I could be misreading something.

      "iPod"

      "Designed by Apple in California"
      "Made in China Serial No.: FEEDFACEC0EDBABE"

      "512 MB"

      "FCC EMC No. 2037"
      "CE Model No. A1112"

      And in the lanyard cap: "Singapore".

  76. Consumer Confusion by SideshowBob · · Score: 1

    No, this product certainly isn't intended to cause any!

  77. Not the First Time by ttyler · · Score: 2, Informative

    About 5 years ago, right after Apple came out with the first iMac, eMachines came out with a blatant knockoff and Apple successfully sued http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=99/08/20/ 1345216&tid=3. This website http://ordinateurs.free.fr/APPLE/copies_pc_iMac.ht m is in French but has pictures.

  78. rediculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some of us out here use playlists instead of just shuffling our songs together.

  79. Trademark and trade dress by phillymjs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    By producing a nearly identical product to Apple's and giving it a nearly identical name, Luxpro is clearly trying to make consumers believe they are buying an Apple product. I mean, it's so blatant they're even ripping off the advertising.

    Apple can, and will, go after them for trademark issues because of the product's name, and trade dress issues because of the appearance of the device.

    If you're not familiar with it, trade dress is when two products "kind of look the same" enough (in the eyes of a court of law) that consumers could be fooled into thinking cheap knockoff B is actually name-brand product A. Trade dress infringement claims are how Apple killed off those cheesy all-in-one PCs with a blue and white/translucent color scheme that quickly appeared after the original iMac was released.

    ~Philly

  80. Maybe reason Apple can NOT fill it's orders by goombah99 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Could it be that the reason the supply of shuffles is so inelastic to demand is that Apple and its OEM are having a cat-fight, and this is a power play by Lux?

    Have not seen this dicsussed yet but I ordered a shuffle 7 days after it's debut from mac mall and have yet to recieve it. I checked around and all re-sellers are out or have cryptic notices like we dont gaurentee in stock at time of order. Mac mall says they have 4000 orders they cant fill.

    On the other hand if you go to apple's store they are delivering with 1-3 day ship delays. Obiously they in a position where demand outstrips supply and as a result are taking the sales premium for themselves (that is they pocket the profit thed lose at the MSRP by letting someone else sell it.).

    So my guess is that Lux is the OEM for these and is squeezing apple by only producing the contracted number. THey have excess capacity or are holding back expanding in return for some concession form apple like letting them re-sel their own version. Apple cant bit the hand till the find another maker.

    Or so I wildly speculate.

    So do you have an ipod on order from other than apple. Where sis you order it from and how long did you wait. I perhaps foolishly in hindsight, ordered from mac mall because the ipod shuffle came with a load of freebies ( senhieser headphones, a second set of ear buds, and some base station speakers from logictech.) A good deal if I could just get it delivered before ski season ends....

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
  81. Trade Dress is protected under the law by thefinite · · Score: 2, Insightful
    IAALS (Law Student). The trade dress of the iPod Shuffle is probably protected under the law. The shuffle doesn't have to look the way it does to work and Apple clearly has established the look as coming exclusively from Apple.

    The name Shuffle is clearly protected under Trademark law, since Apple has it trademarked.

    LuxPro is screwed.

    --
    Boom Shanka
  82. Guess you weren't around for the iMac by Delphix · · Score: 4, Informative

    Right after Apple released the iMac back in 1998, everyone started jumping on the "all-in-one" PC thing again. A new company at the time, eMachines, tried to market a near copy of it called the eOne PC. They were slapped with injunctions in the US and Tokyo shortly after that and later forced to stop production.

    The review for the eOne is still up on epinions, along with a stock photo: eOne Photo

    Daewoo tried something similar. They both got the smack down. See here.

    Do you remember when Cobalt Networks was about to sue Apple over the Cube? Because of Cobalt's Qube design? Only to find out a few months later Apple owned NeXT at that point, which created the original Cube. At that point Cobalt changed their tune and decided suing might not be so smart. Some Cobalt info.

    The reason for suing is brand dilution. When you make a look-a-like, you're copying a design that's identified with the product. It's the same reason stores brand soda tries to have similar color schemes to Coke, or Pepsi. You identify the product by the colors, shapes and patterns of the packaging or product itself.

    I get what the Taiwanese company is doing. They would have been better off sticking to knock off Nintendo games though. I'd guarantee Apple already knows about the knock off at this point, and we'll probably be seeing lawsuits within a week or two.

  83. "Shuffle" is descriptive by tepples · · Score: 1

    The name Shuffle is clearly protected under Trademark law, since Apple has it trademarked.

    Links from tess2.uspto.gov expire after a few minutes. Here's a fixed link (the Check Status button).

    Anyway, how valid is Apple's trademark on SHUFFLE given that "shuffle" is a descriptive name for the random sequence playback feature in several MP3 players? It's not nearly as strong as IPOD, an arbitrary/fanciful name.

    1. Re:"Shuffle" is descriptive by thefinite · · Score: 1
      Thanks for fixing the link.

      That's a good point. Still, I would put it closer to suggestive than descriptive, which I am guessing the PTO did as well since Apple trademarked it so early (in December). As you probably know, you can't trademark a descriptive name without some showing of distinctiveness. The name "Shuffle" wasn't distinctive in December.

      --
      Boom Shanka
    2. Re:"Shuffle" is descriptive by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      You've put forward this argument several times, tepples, but I'm not sure of the position you're taking.

      Are you saying that this might not be a slam dunk? Or are you saying that Apple has absolutely no grounds to make a claim of trademark infringement? Or perhaps you are arguing some other point.

      If you are saying that Apple has no guaranteed win based on the name alone, I think you may have a point.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    3. Re:"Shuffle" is descriptive by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      By your logic, Microsoft wouldn't be able to sucessfully trademark "Windows", but they have. Not that it matters. The strongest legitimate complaint that Apple has against Luxpro is one of Trade Dress, and the similar names of the two add to the (already comcrete) evidence of a deliberate Trade Dress infringement.

    4. Re:"Shuffle" is descriptive by tepples · · Score: 1

      By your logic, Microsoft wouldn't be able to sucessfully trademark "Windows", but they have.

      Only because the trademark had gone unchallenged for so long. Besides, Lindows won in U.S. courts; it changed its name to Linspire only because it lost in Benelux courts where "Windows" is not a descriptive word in the native language.

      The strongest legitimate complaint that Apple has against Luxpro is one of Trade Dress

      Court orders Luxpro to paint future units blue or something. Done.

    5. Re:"Shuffle" is descriptive by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Yes, paint it blue and change the shape and there's no problem. Except for damages from any of the white iPod shuffle shaped ones they do actually ship.

  84. Freeeee!!!!1!11 by tepples · · Score: 1

    It's one thing to repackage your old mp3 players into new shells, it's another to pay good coders to code a good product.

    And it's yet another to find a good Free Software product, use that, and make a token donation to the project.

    1. Re:Freeeee!!!!1!11 by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I think you are mistaken if you think there is any requirement to make a donation, token or not, when using Free Software for commercial use. This will depend on the license. If you are using software covered by the GPL, the only thing a company need contribute is any changes that they have made. If they have not made any changes, there is no requirement for them to give anything to the copyright holders.

      "But it would be the right thing to do and they'll earn a lot of good will", I hear you saying. Perhaps it would be, but what are the chances that a company willing to engage in a complete rip off of another company will "do the right thing", or gives a shit about good will?

      Some people are pleased about this because they don't like Apple. I'd like to point out that a rip-off artist doesn't care about who they're ripping off, so long as it means some sort of gain for them. If they're willing to take on Apple, do you think they'd feel more qualms or less about ripping off an individual?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  85. Re:Maybe reason Apple can NOT fill it's orders by MetaPhyzx · · Score: 2, Informative

    I dunno where you live, but every Target I've been in has em.
    just ask for it at the electronics counter. I picked up a 1GB there about two weeks ago. I asked why they weren't on display, and the reason was related to shrinkage. So, maybe you might wanna saunter/mosey/drive there...

    --
    Blacker than my baby girl's stare. Black like the veil that the muslimina wear. Black like the planet that they fear...
  86. Harmonization by tepples · · Score: 1

    Does the US trademark laws even have any relevance in Taiwan?

    If the trademark laws don't, then the other weapons do. Look how the bought Congress of the United States forced the DMCA and the Bono Act on Australia, by threatening a trade war if Australia didn't "harmonize" its copyright laws with the bought laws of the United States.

  87. identical... by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Except it has more features, doesn't require a proprietary program to use it, and costs less.

    --
    If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    1. Re:identical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except...it doesn't really cost less, and the apple shuffle doesn't need a proprietary program...

    2. Re:identical... by FeloniousPunk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How very insightful. Of course it costs less. Luxpro didn't have to sink loads of money into design and advertising, as Apple did, instead they just used Apple's designs and even advertisements free of charge.

      --
      I know this because Tyler knows this.
    3. Re:identical... by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      I looked into getting a Shuffle, and according to Apple's site you NEED iTunes to put music on it.

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    4. Re:identical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's a USB flash drive - 'nuff said.

      And do you really think Apple's website is gonna tell you anything different?

    5. Re:identical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iTunes is not proprietary. It's free, and it's available for both platforms.

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

      Except it has more features, doesn't require a proprietary program to use it, and costs less.

      None of which factors remotely into design patent violation, which is what this is a case of.

    7. Re:identical... by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      Neither of which make it non-proprietary. Try stealing the code and calling it SuperTunes and see what Apple's legal department does to you.

    8. Re:identical... by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      So let's say you're right. You don't need iTunes to use it. Apple lies. Then why in the fuck would I want to buy from a company that lies to me?!

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    9. Re:identical... by Anita+Coney · · Score: 0

      You don't get it. If you need iTunes to use an iPod, APPLE controls what goes on and comes off. Not me. Not you. ONLY Apple. The fact that you can use it how you want is ONLY due to the fact that Apple lets you.

      I'd never buy a music player where someone else controls the content.

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    10. Re:identical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure that if you steal anything from anybody, you're going to be in trouble. This is hardly unique to iTunes.

    11. Re:identical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's an incredibly stupid comment. No, Apple doesn't control what goes on your iPod. You have no idea what iTunes is and how it works.

      You need to shut the fuck up if you don't know what you're talking about.

    12. Re:identical... by siliconjunkie · · Score: 1

      You don't get it.

      No, YOU don't get it.

      If you need iTunes to use an iPod, APPLE controls what goes on and comes off. Not me. Not you. ONLY Apple.

      You DO NOT NEED ITUNES TO USE AN IPOD. On the Windows side of things you can use Anapod Explorer, YamiPod, ml_iPod for Winamp, iPod Agent, or ephPod to name a few. OSX users have choices as well. Furthermore, even if I use iTunes, how is Apple "controling" what I put on my iPod? I buy a CD. I rip it to MP3. I put it on my iPod. End of story. Where is the control? I assume you are referring to the fact that iTMS uses DRM'ed AAC, but the fact is I am in no way forced to use iTMS. iTMS != iTunes.

      The fact that you can use it how you want is ONLY due to the fact that Apple lets you.

      Um, yeah. I *can* use it how I want, thanks for pointing that out.

      I'd never buy a music player where someone else controls the content.

      Neither would I.

    13. Re:identical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to Open Source software!

    14. Re:identical... by Andrevan · · Score: 1

      Apple doesn't advertise ephPod, Anapod, etc because it wants you to use iTunes so its music store gets exposure. Apple never says "you can only use iTunes to send songs to this device," - in fact, before iTunes for Windows, Musicmatch Jukebox was Apple's application of choice for iPod transfers. Apple just PREFERS iTunes now.

      --
      "All it takes to fly is to hurl yourself at the ground... and miss." - Douglas Adams
    15. Re:identical... by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      So you admit that Apple lies. Go to Apple.com/ipod and look at the REQUIREMENTS for the iPod. In addition to a USB port, and Windows 2k/XP, Apple REQUIRES iTunes.

      So I'll say it again, WHY BUY FROM A COMPANY THAT LIES TO YOU?!

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    16. Re:identical... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      No, you don't get it. YHBT. HAND.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    17. Re:identical... by Andrevan · · Score: 1

      Uh, that column says "Features," not "Requirements."

      --
      "All it takes to fly is to hurl yourself at the ground... and miss." - Douglas Adams
    18. Re:identical... by blackdragon7777 · · Score: 1

      Except that it doesn't work with iTunes or allow me to use AAC files that I already have encoded. It would require too much work to use. Also why would I want an FM tuner on my music player that already has music on it. AM would be good for news/sports but FM is useless.

  88. observations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the super shuffle doesn't play the AAC format, so I'm not interested.

    does it integrate with itunes? what's the pricing?

    on the other hand, voice recording is kind of neat.

    btw, look at the picture at the link above.. it'll show you the "super shuffle" with ipod headphones.

    these are just some observations.. my bet is that this is the exact same hardware, but with different firmware and the addition of the FM tuner. so many of the specs match up (see iPod shuffle specs) that i'm inclined to think that Apple and LUXPRO cooperated to build the iPod Shuffle, with LUXPRO handling the internals and Apple handling the firmware and look/feel.

  89. I think they do by sg3000 · · Score: 5, Informative

    > IANAL but I don't think there is much apple can do. Unless
    > they stole some patented technology, they should be fine with
    > that desing. You cannot copyright style or asthetics.

    I don't that's true. Patents aren't the only thing protected. Designs, trademarks, logos, and appearances are protected, too.

    You can't market a product that can be mistakened for the product of another. The reason is that psychologically, people associated items that look similar as having the same quality as the original product, and consumers will assume that the two companies have something in common. In other words, the rip-off product is trying to bank on the consumer perception of the original product.

    In my Consumer Behavior class we studied the case of a regional soft drink called "Corr's Natural Soda". The can looked vaguely like "Coors", but the script was different (to someone paying attention) and the former can had a big cross-section of a lemon on it.

    Coor's Brewing Company sued the regional soda manufacturer claiming that "Corr's" was trying to facilitate their market position and gain benefits through the name and the look of the can. The latter defended by saying that it was named after the owner "Robert Corr".

    The courts sided with Coor's Brewing Company. They told the regional soda company to change the product to make it less similar to Coors. They were told to not put the name in script and if they wanted to name their soda after the person, they had to use the guy's full name and not just the last name with an apostrophe s so as to not deceive. The soda was changed to "Robert Corr Natural Soda," the name was put in a regular (albeit ugly) Serif font, and the can looked different enough from Coors that no one would expect there to be a connection.

    The Coors versus Corr's case gives some insight, so I think Apple has a case. Many people will look at this "Super Shuffle" and think either Apple made it (since it looks almost exactly like the iPod shuffle), or that this company builds it for Apple (and thus the customer is getting the same product for less money because they don't pay Apple's markup). Then they'll go home and find out it doesn't support purchases from the iTunes Music Store, and you'll have some unhappy customers.

    Clearly this ripoff product is gaining value by banking on Apple's look and feel. The fact that they put "Shuffle" in the name (a non-obvious name that only has value now that Apple has an iPod shuffle) and their ad rips Apple's ads off makes it worse.

    I'm sure Apple Legal will have a response Monday morning. Like with the case of Future Power who ripped off the iMacs years ago, Apple needs to quelch the iPod ripoffs early and often. If someone wants to make a competing product, great, but market the product on its own merits, not trying to deceive customers.

    --
    Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
  90. Seems slightly ironic to me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But do you think that mp3newswire.net asked LuxPro before they blatently stole images from the LuxPro website for use in their article? If you're going to accuse someone of stealing...

    1. Re:Seems slightly ironic to me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try knowing what you're talking about first. For the purposes of news presentation, the press has a reasonable leeway to reproduce copyrighted materials in disseminating info, especially if it's pertinent to the story at hand. Reproducing copyrighted material that shows how one company is ripping off another is a legitimate use of the material. There's no irony in it. It's legitimate journalism.

    2. Re:Seems slightly ironic to me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plus some sites have PR sections that allow news sites like that one to do this.

    3. Re:Seems slightly ironic to me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. The primary reason that companies and sites set up such a thing is to avoid having some publication use a crappy web image in their publication. They would rather provide high quality images for that purpose.

  91. Headphones by kd5ujz · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    They copied the F@#$#$ headphones. I wonder if it comes with a shuffle manuel, or did they have to make that themselves?

    --
    -William
    God is everything science has yet to explain.
    1. Re:Headphones by phillymjs · · Score: 1

      To ensure they maintain the high standards of English-language manuals produced by Asian manufacturing companies, they should translate Apple's manual into Chinese and then translate it back into English.

      As you can see, it works really well:

      [Reading from his book, "Jimmy James: Macho Business Donkey Wrestler," translated to Japanese and back again]
      Mr. James: I had a small house of brokerage on Wall Street. Many days no business comes to my hut. Jimmy has fear? A thousand times no! I never doubted myself for a minute, for I knew that my monkey-strong bowels were girded with strength like the loins of a dragon ribboned with fat and the opulence of buffalo...
      [pauses while turning page]
      Mr. James: dung.

      (Courtesy: IMDB)

      ~Philly

  92. Because consistency varies by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Tell me again why Apple doesn't put FM in the iPod?

    Because the quality of received FM varies, and Apple is all about trying to give you a consistent experience. It doesn't matter if it's not the Shuffles fault if you go under a bridge and loose signal, most people are still going to get mad at the device. Apple wants to make sure that when you are listening to music the quality is not going to degrade in any way they can help.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  93. well yes but ... by taniwha · · Score: 1

    the next one will be "hyper" and the one after "ultra", or is it the other way around, they always are ... don't know what comes after those companies that use those names always implode before they go any further

    1. Re:well yes but ... by fossa · · Score: 1

      In hair gel land, I belive the heirarchy is something like this:

      Super, Mega, Ultra, Mega Mega, Ultimate Extreme

  94. No legal recourse in China... by Dzimas · · Score: 1

    People have missed the point. This company is going to sell an iPod Shuffle knock-off in China. There's no way that it will be sold (for long) in Europe or North America -- just like knock-off Rolex watches. Apple will have an extremely difficult time pursuing the manufacturer through the Chinese legal system. If they do manage to exert suitable pressure to get the company shut down, it may well be a year from now -- after all the money's been made. Clever strategy in the Chinese "Wild West."

    1. Re:No legal recourse in China... by ky11x · · Score: 1

      Except for the fact that very few Chinese customers are able to afford an iPod Shuffle. So Apple is not losing any customers -- perfect market differentiation between Apple and the cheaper knockoff manufacturers. No harm no foul.

    2. Re:No legal recourse in China... by daninbusiness · · Score: 1

      I think that the shuffle is within the price range of a lot of Chinese consumers. (People in the target market in China tend to buy cell phones for 4 times the Shuffle's cost with little thought every 6 months or so).

      It's been on sale for a while (I'm in Shenzhen, China), people seemed to be interested.

      The 512 MB version is also now given away with purchases of laptop computers.

      It probably will never catch on with the majority of people (who are content with their 20 dollar AAA-powered 128 MB flash player), but it should do fine with the luxury-goods crowd.

      A little off-topic:
      One reason that the ipod hasn't really taken off here though is since iTunes isn't really supported - if you don't have a US credit card you can't buy anything that way...and without the store intact, iTunes is basically just a jukebox application (which is pretty good)...but maybe the average computer-owning Chinese won't see much value in having to add another music player application.

    3. Re:No legal recourse in China... by gt623 · · Score: 1

      I think its already been made clear that this company is based in Taiwan not China. Even though its true that in general they're have been problems with counterfeit/piracy/look-alike products in Asia, Taiwanese government have been quick to shutdown operations and quick to protect "intellectual property." Ever since they were almost censured by America, their government has tackled the problem head on to improve international relations, which in turn gets them more business, which gets them more money.

  95. Re:Maybe reason Apple can NOT fill it's orders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or maybe apple has them all produced, and is just using the "limited supply, can barely keep up" tactic to keep up the hype, price, and demand factors for their product.

    It also give them a much longer time frame that they can go about selling these, and when the hype factor dies down they can announce the new versions with features they had already planed in the first version. Then it is all back to square one with the updated iProduct, and selling the upgrade back to those who adapted early.

  96. That's what you get, Apple... by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1, Insightful

    When you don't listen to your customers, they'll find someone who will. Serves them right.

    1. Re:That's what you get, Apple... by Winterblink · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, I doubt a sizable percentage of the population who buys iPods are requesting an FM tuner to be in them. If there was anything on radio worth listening to, iPod sales wouldn't be quite so high.

      --
      "I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar."
      -Hoban Washburn
  97. Design patents by sjbe · · Score: 1

    There has been a lot of speculation that Apple never designed the Shuffle but bought it in from outside, guess we will find out if and when Apple sue over it.

    Unless Apple was brain dead, whether it was manufactured or even designed by Apple is irrelevant. Apple should have at minimum taken out design patents which cover the look of the device. We're more familiar with utility patents which are what most of us think of when we think of patents. But for something that is purely ornamental one can take out a design patent which protects the visual design. Doesn't provide the protection of a utility patent but still effective in a case like this. Plus it's entirely possible they have one or more utility patents and there probably are some copyright issues involved as well. Virtually all consumer electronics are manufactured outside the US but this has no bearing on whether a company can build a visually identical knockoff.

    Ob Disclaimer IANAL. Source: Legal Aspects of Engineering Law by Richard C. Vaughn.

    1. Re:Design patents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe Apple felt the design wasn't patentable because I doubt they make that oversight. The shuffle does look similar to any number of 'dongle' remotes.

  98. The best bit by Sv-Manowar · · Score: 1

    One of the best bits is that in some stores they are using ipod shuffle wall ad posters and just sticking the logo of the Luxpro over the top.
    if you want one, grab one while this company is still in business, which it won't be for much longer

  99. Price? What price? by serutan · · Score: 1

    I've just been looking through articles about the SuperShuffle and I don't see any mention of price. Where do you get that it's the same price as the IPod Shuffle?

    1. Re:Price? What price? by Skynyrd · · Score: 1

      I've just been looking through articles about the SuperShuffle and I don't see any mention of price. Where do you get that it's the same price as the IPod Shuffle?


      I'm assuming (but I'm not the original poster) that the clone will be cheaper (if it makes it to market). People aren't interested in buying a copied product from an unknown company for more then the "real thing". Knockoffs are generally cheaper.

      On the other hand, they might try asking more because of the FM tuner, but I doubt it.

  100. Re:Maybe reason Apple can NOT fill it's orders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I ordered a shuffle 7 days after it's debut from mac mall and have yet to recieve it

    do yourself a favor and cancel that order with mac mall immediately, then place your shuffle order a reputable apple reseller... you can thank me later.
  101. Liar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lessee... iTunes shut down: CHECK.

    ps auxwww|grep iTunes|awk '{print$2,$11}'

    Yields:

    399 /Applications/iTunes.app/Contents/Resources/iTunes Helper.app/Contents/MacOS/iTunesHelper
    926 grep

    That's ONE process running in the background; with iTunes proper shut down. One process, not multiple. And I suspect that's there so as to launch iTunes if I insert a music CD, as I have set in my preferences. That's not "multiple useless services" and that's not bloat.

    You, sir, are either incompetent and incapable of reading a process listing; or you're a liar and a troll.

    1. Re:Liar by dilg · · Score: 1
      He did say: "and installs multiple useless services that run all the time in Windows XP"

      On my XP machine iPodService.exe and iPodHelper.exe each use about 1.8MB of memory.

      That said, I wouldn't call it bloatware.

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

      Yes, chump, see other reply. On WINDOWS XP it installs two services that run by default, and even better, although iTunes can be installed by an ordinary user in a multi-user environment with remote authentication, it cannot be uninstalled the same way.

      Installing iTunes installs the 'iPodHelper' service whether you have an iPod or not.

      Spare me the condescending lectures about reading process listings when you can't even read a ./ post, fool.

    3. Re:Liar by blackest_k · · Score: 1

      Actually I don't have an Ipod I don't want an Ipod and an IpodService.exe is no use to me on a laptop with a 400mhz processor and a maximum of 192 meg of ram giving away nearly 2 meg of it to a service I will never use is a waste of limited resources.

      Portable media serial number (retreives the serial number of any portable music player connected to my system) also started and unneeded.
      remote registry editor whats that doing enabled.

      Thanks Grandparent and parent for alerting me to the option of turning off a lot of useless services.

  102. Generalize much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You seem to have the belief that laws are fundamentally good, no matter what they say.

    The FUCK I do! Don't put words in my mouth, assclown!

    The system of patents, trademarks, and copyrights were just fine as they were originally envisioned-- a LIMITED period for companies to be able to make money off their innovations. That's fair. The laws as they exist now are a completely lopsided mess.

    Your idea for compulsory patent licensing is also bullshit. Imagine if there was a law forcing me, the owner of a two-bedroom house who lives alone, to take on boarders to occupy the other bedroom, as long as they pay rent. Or forcing me, the owner of a car that seats five, to drive four other people I don't know into the city every day when I go to work, as long as they kick in for gas/maintenance. If I wanted to do either of those things, I'd open a motel or start a taxi service. I don't.

    Like I said in my previous post, there should be a finite period (as originally intended) where innovative companies are rewarded with exclusivity, with the possible exception of "for the good of mankind" type things like a very effective treatment/cure for a disease of epidemic proportions, or a fertilizer that turns barren desert into arable farmland with a bare minimum of irrigation.

    A company cranking out cheap knockoff iPod Shuffles with one or two added features is not doing it for the good of mankind, they're doing it to make money rather specifically at Apple's expense.

    1. Re:Generalize much? by danila · · Score: 0

      You clearly have no idea how the laws work. And your forced analogies are invalid. Do you imply by them that it's OK to force you, the owner of a two-bedroom house, to let any number of boarders for free into your house after 15 years?

      You wrongly see copyrights and patents as the same as real property. This is idiocy and it was explained millions of times why.

      Your other problem is that you see everything in black and white. E.g. the old laws were "just fine" and new laws are a "lopsided mess". This view, of course, is patent nonsense.

      All laws are compromises and it is possible to modify the laws in numerous ways, each with some advantages and some disadvantages. Unfortunately, you seem bent on thinking that anyone who doesn't share your outlook on the world is an assclown. I feel sorry for you, but I hope you may still grow up.

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
  103. "Kind" of look the same? by joetheappleguy · · Score: 1

    Did you look at the thing??? "Kind of the same" is a Dell DJ compared to an iPod. This is as blatant a rip off of an Apple product that I have ever seen, they even copied the advertising, and I would not be surprised if the packaging also looked the same. Generic store brands don't copy the entire thing like this, and actually are often made by the same company that made the original product, they are different enough to the point where a consumer can not accidently mistake which one is the real thing. Can you say the same about this Super Shuffle? I don't know what the hell they were thinking, especially by trying to pitch it in a trade show outside of Taiwan, maybe they hope to be able to sell enough of them to turn a profit before they have to stop.

  104. audio quality by line.at.infinity · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It might be pointed out that one of the chief negatives against the entire iPod line is that it possess lower audio quality than competing manufacturers.

    This is the first time reading someone being concerned over the iPods' audio quality. I've read reports on the contrary, where audiophiles could not find problems with it. I wonder what the Consumer Reports report had to say, which the web page author refers to.

    1. Re:audio quality by mcdesign · · Score: 2, Informative

      I keep reading much the same thing. Various websites always have staments like product x has better audio than the ipod with absolutely no idication of why or how. Is this just an opinion, is the comparison done with the same headphones, or better quality headphones. Was it done with a blind testing of a group of 'golden ears' or by two half-deaf-glue-sniffers during a Metallica concert?

      I have also read other webpages, by audio engineers, that found the iPods frequency response to be incredibly flat for such an inexpensive device.

      So is this "possess lower audio quality than competing manufacturers" an attempt to tar the iPod name or is it based on some sort of actual reality?

    2. Re:audio quality by vijayiyer · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's because your average reviewer doesn't want flat frequency response - they want excessive "bass" in the 70-90Hz range. People who actually care about music sounding real seem to be satisified with the iPod.

    3. Re:audio quality by Oinos · · Score: 1

      I have found that the iPod has great audio, but the ear buds that ship with it and the "in-ear headphones" that Apple sells for it suck mad goat ass when it comes to audio performance.

      When I plug my Sennheiser HD280 Pro cans into my iPod Shuffle or my 40GB iPod, I get a full range of sound. When I plug in my HD212 Pro cans (also by Sennheiser) I not only get a full range of sound, but also an enhanced bottom end for a little more bass punch.

      Most audiophiles that I know think that an iPod with the Sennheiser HD212 Pro cans is a perfect combination. I have yet to hear anyone complain about the audio performance of the iPod itself.

  105. Re:I just had to.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can't call them pirates, they are not sailing the high seas, yelling "ARRRR!", and robbing people of their loot.

    People need to stop calling them pirates, they are "copy-right infringers" and people need to use this term!

    </typical-slashbot-reply>

  106. Consumer Reports by cirby · · Score: 4, Informative

    "The iPod ear-bud headphones are among the best we've tested."

  107. Re:Maybe reason Apple can NOT fill it's orders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you are serious aboug your conspiracy theory, you need to explain how I got my Shuffle. Apple Store was quoting 1-2 week delivery. I drove over to Best Buy and was handed a Shuffle on the spot.

  108. Not yet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps because the patent application hasn't been published yet? The patent office takes time to process these things.

  109. Screw Apple- Just ordered 5000 units by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Screw Apple. I just ordered 5000 units.

  110. Re:Maybe reason Apple can NOT fill it's orders by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    I doubt it. The legal and financial implications for Luxpro of doing a clone rip off a client that they have a contract with would be even larger than they are already facing, and far easier for Apple to win. China and Taiwan as just really quick at cloning stuff, they don't have to be an OEM of the shuffle to be able to copy it's physical appearance.

  111. Same reason there's no ogg... by Thu25245 · · Score: 1

    ...or WMA, or FLAC, or any of the dozen other things people gripe about.

    Because most of the potential buyers don't mind not having it. The potentialb buyers who do are not a large enough market to justify changing things.

  112. As long as I get a better product for less $ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The corporations can go a kill each other for all I care.

  113. so it comes down to... by zogger · · Score: 1

    ...is this an *exact* copy down to everything, or is it similar looking and functioning? Where exactly is the dividing line with the laws? I was throwing out the cola example because it's analogous and most everyone has seen it. Does Mac have a trademark with the word shuffle? Does mac have an exclusive patent on having a music player using a flash drive in a small portable form factor? I honestly don't know exactly where they draw the line, like so far and no further before it becomes a "legal" counterfeit item. I mean, it's a real Sorny! A Panaphonik!

    I don't know any of those things, but I really don't care either, not that much anyway in this exact situation here, because it's a minuscule example of a much larger problem.. I fully expect that we will continue to see clones from asia, everything from small electronic gadgets all the way to cars and planes and ships and you name it, That's one of their prime businesses is just making knock offs, and because they have been doing it for decades, and the US hasn't banned imports from there yet, or banned outsourcing, or done much of anything with IP laws other than to harass little guys in the US*,and to make quad trillions for 1% of the population while dragging the nation into a debt that just cannot be paid off and trashing the dollar, well, the obvious conclusion is that they are ignoring it on purpose more or less, and I expect it to continue.

    *Yes I know there have been some token busts of clone copycatters once in awhile, I read the news too, and it also hasn't slowed them down one bit, close one clone factory, ten more go up in their place, and the tariffs and taxes keep being skewed in favor of cloned crap in, hard to export out. And shoot, where is the "real" iPod made anyway? I wouldn't even consider it a US product if you got down to it. They happen to have corporate HQ in California, /shrugs. I've grown very cynical of manufactured items and labelling and who owns what with "IP", I just don't care much anymore. I used to but it's been beat out of me with the reality stick and watching this government and our "business" leaders actions for a long long time. They aren't even close to loyal to us rank and file US workers, haven't been for an entire generation now(I'm a blue collar guy and personally felt the effects of both outsourced jobs (mine, twice) and insourced cheap illegal competition labor WAY before any of the white collar IT world had it on their radar screen),so, I feel zero loyalty to them. I'll take whatever I can get that's the cheapest and gets the job done, I can't keep up with who is stealing what "IP" from whom, not in this age of software patents and business process patents and being able to trademark common words like "windows" and whatnot. US big business asked for this situation, now they got it, sort of silly for them to cry foul over it. That's my opinion anyway. They "cloned" my labor over to asia for a nickel on the dollar, so I don't care if they get "cloned" themselves. I've bought quite a few Apple products in the past, still own most of them, but until they drop their prices down even more, I mean radically drop prices, I won't even consider buying any of their stuff, it's no longer worth it to me to pay a huge premium for about the same asian manufactured items. Ya, I'd like to have a decent new PPC based system, but I'm not going to pay their prices for it either, I'll "struggle by" with cheap commodity stuff, either computers or music players.

    1. Re:so it comes down to... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      I think the test would be, "Would a reasonable person confuse the copy with the original?" There might be other ways to determine where the line should be drawn between an original product and a copy, but this is pretty straight forward, and has been used by the courts.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  114. Anglophone vs. non-anglophone by tepples · · Score: 1

    Yes, and "Windows" is a generic term for a framed area in a GUI for viewing filesystems.

    In the United States and possibly in other English-speaking countries. However, outside the anglophone world, "Windows" is possibly a fanciful foreign word.

    <sarcasm> So, obviously, anyone can use "Windows" to describe their GUI-based personal computing operating system. </sarcasm>

    Lindows won in the United States but lost in Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg, all jurisdictions outside the anglophone world.

    1. Re:Anglophone vs. non-anglophone by Ham_belony · · Score: 0

      And do you know why they lost in Belgium?

  115. No slam dunk by tepples · · Score: 1

    Are you saying that this might not be a slam dunk? Or are you saying that Apple has absolutely no grounds to make a claim of trademark infringement?

    The former. If it goes to court, the judge will probably find trade dress infringement and order a few cosmetic changes to the product, but the name "Super Shuffle" and (more importantly) the existence of the product will likely not be affected.

  116. Super Shuffle? by Jozer99 · · Score: 1

    How do they integrate the extra features without extra buttons?

    Also, has anyone ever bought ANY product made by Luxpro? Their website only has digital mockups of their stuff.

    1. Re:Super Shuffle? by argent · · Score: 1

      How do they integrate the extra features without extra buttons?

      Two sliders on the back.

  117. Re:It doesn't... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I read the specs for the chip used in the iPod Shuffle, and it includes a controller for an FM-tuner, as well as display controller, and equallizer I believe. So these guys have scooped a future product that Apple may have been considering??

    http://www.sigmatel.com/documents/App-Brief1-Fla sh -MP3-7-1.pdf

  118. Since I'm filtered, you won't read this, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe it was easy to copy, because there's nothing particiularly difficult or innovative about the shuffle.

    I marvel that people buy them. I think once the ipod fad is over, people will just throw them out once they realize how spectacularly bad these things are.

  119. Supports WMA, not Apple AAC by geekee · · Score: 1

    "Decoding Format: MP3 (8~320Kbps), MP3-VBR, WMA, WMA-DRM (5~192Kbps), WAV (ADPCM)"

    They support WMA, but no mention of AAC and fairplay. This could be good for Napster, etc.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
    1. Re:Supports WMA, not Apple AAC by Anarchitect_in_oz · · Score: 1

      First Of All it's Not Apples' AAC.
      To be fair apple do own the 'Fairplay' DRM envelope they use to protect content recorded in AAC.

      AAC is owned by the Dolby Group.
      The device does support WMA which of cause in both non DRM and DRM versions is owned by by Microsoft.

      --
      "Call us when the New age is old enough to drink" Beck
  120. Only to 18 year old college students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Apple's got some of the scariest lawyers in the industry."

    Yeah. They really punished Microsoft. They stopped Windows COLD with their look and feel lawsuit.

    The only thing Apple ever does is threaten mom-and-pop web pages. Apple never goes after companies bigger than them. At least not since they got their asses handed to them by Microsoft.

  121. Basil won';t see this, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "It doesn't do rebadged versions of others designs."

    When you find out the truth about the iPod shuttle, it will blow your mind, and change your world then.

    Externally, you'll deny reality in this case, but the seeds of doubt are now planted about apple.

    1. Re:Basil won';t see this, but... by mmkkbb · · Score: 1

      When you find out the truth about the iPod shuttle

      Apple's a bit late for the X Prize, no?

      --
      -mkb
  122. Fair enough by PhunkySchtuff · · Score: 1

    Fair enough if they made it so it looked a bit different. A different colour even?
    Fair enough if they made it a different size, or shape, or changed the position of the buttons, or something
    Apple do not have a monopoly on flash-based MP3 players, they don't have a patent on the idea. What Apple do have, however, is ownership of the design of the iPod Shuffle.
    What Apple are (rightfully) pissed off at is the blatant rip-off of their intellectual property - the look and feel.

  123. Gawdamn, fanbois are blind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, companies don't care about innovatation or copycats. They just want to make *MONEY*. If they make it by copying great. If they make more by innovating. Great. Anything that makes money, is "great".

    Or do you think the boys at apple sit around and say "Gee, what can we innovate today"?

  124. FM Radio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There you go.

    Go wipe the spittle off your chin now.

  125. STOP THE PRESSES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "For instance, three rapid clicks of the play/pause button on the Shuffle returns you to the beginning of your playlist"

    Brilliant. Just brilliant. Boy when apple comes up an idea its brilliant.

    The engineer who came up with that...well, he should be likened to Edison.

  126. Re:Maybe reason Apple can NOT fill it's orders by waynelorentz · · Score: 1

    Could it be that the reason the supply of shuffles is so inelastic to demand is that Apple and its OEM are having a cat-fight, and this is a power play by Lux?

    Certain Apple stores seemed to get a lot more Shuffles than others. I remember in Chicago they all disappeared off the shelves within hours of being released, and it took weeks for a new supply to come in. At the same time, the Apple store in Tokyo had crates and crates and crates of them. And for good reason. One random weeknight I waited in line with 200 other people to buy one for my wife. Most people bought two or three at a time, plus a full suite of accessories. And this wasn't even immediately after the release -- this was a month later. From what I've seen there's a huge pent-up demand for Apple products in Japan. Yodobashi Camera (think eight floors of Best Buy on crack) is still sold out of 1G models. And I've seen people at the Ginza Apple store buy Mac Minis by the armload. Considering the fact that Apple products cost US$10 to US$30 more in Japan, I can understand why they'd get more product than U.S. stores.

  127. Let me ask you... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you trying to perpetuate apple fanboi idiocy, or did you get that from your mom?

  128. Re:identical... (MOD PARENT COMMENT DOWN) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Can't believe that clueless comment got modded "insightful."

    You do not need...

    Let's start over. It doesn't seem that you're listening. Now this time, follow along closely.

    You do not need a proprietary program or file format to use an iPod.

    Fucking period. End of fucking story.

    If you have the time to post a comment like that to Slashdot where doubtlessly thousands of people will read it and know that you're pulling it out of your ass, then you presumably have the time to look it up for yourself and see. The iPods are integrated into iTunes and the iTunes store, but you don't need either to use an iPod.

    Why waste your time and mine and everyone else's by posting something that you either know is wrong or about a topic you obviously know nothing about? What is the point? There's enough meaningless talk and disinformation in the world. Why add to the noise?

  129. Re:It doesn't... by pslam · · Score: 1
    In their words, it has an FM tuner interface and controller. I would more accurately describe it as having a (buggy) I2C bus interface and an analog input for the processed signal. It does not have a built in tuner - it can only control an external one and mix the output signal from it.

    I've been working with these exact chips for years and I would be very surprised if we've been spending extra dollars per unit on a needless external tuner chip :)

  130. antenna is in the earphones, not in the case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    eom

  131. A typical anonymous coward by FredFnord · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Try new Anonymous Coward Lite! Opinionated, and low in facts!

    Apple has actually spanked MS a number of times in the last ten years, lawsuit-wise. The problem is that as soon as it begins to look like Apple is winning, MS immediately settles. One of the settlement conditions is always that neither of the principals will discuss the settlement, so it takes a little digging to get the information, but there are always some leaks.

    For example, there was the company that MS paid a rather surprising amount of money to get a copy of Apple's QuickTime source code from. At the time, MS's video player was less than half the speed of Apple's, on Windows. So they just appropriated huge chunks of code wholesale from Apple's software. And, when Apple took them to court, they settled out of court. According to the best scuttlebutt available, the large MS investment in Apple in the late 90s, and the agreement to continue developing MS Office for the Mac, were part of the settlement.

    -fred

    --
    Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
    1. Re:A typical anonymous coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.

      Ok so this is really bad. I saw your sig and thought "Do they really have a republican moderation tag? I don't remember seeing it..."

    2. Re:A typical anonymous coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Links?

      2. Quicktime is about 3x slower than any other media player on Windows. Play a video and pop open the task manager. Compare and contrast to WMP, VLC, RealPlayer, or Quicktime Alternative.

      How did Apple's allegedly superior player not only squander their lead, but fall behind everyone else's performance by several times in a relatively short period of time? What's the scuttlebutt on that?

    3. Re:A typical anonymous coward by FredFnord · · Score: 1

      Links? It's really strange, all of the official web sites that I had that showed this stuff seem to have up and vanished.

      Here are some second-source things:
      Apple's letters to VfW devopers:
      http://www.pa.msu.edu/~hamlin/facts/1stltr.html
      http://www.pa.msu.edu/~hamlin/facts/2ndltr.html

      A tiny snippet that tells how the case actually came out, courtesy of the wayback machine:
      http://web.archive.org/web/19970206203623/http://w ww.macworld.com/pages/may.95/News.705.html (Scroll down some)

      The only reference I can find to the rumor about this issue forcing the investment in Apple and the patent swap and the agreement to keep developing Mac software is from here:
      http://www.mackido.com/History/History_VfW.html
      However, I saw quite a few references to that rumor in the circles I was traveling in at time, and I know for a fact that there was still a lawsuit that was settled and disappeared without a trace right around that time, so...

      Another one where Apple won one:
      http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,16141, 00.html

      As for why QuickTime works so badly now, I can only surmise that one of the following is true:
      - Apple has stopped really trying.
      - Microsoft succeeded in making it impossible to do within QT's budget.
      - Microsoft has gotten a lot better at what they do, and thus make the QT group look worse.

      Given how often MS has been convicted of sabotaging rivals, I'd have to say that the second sounds like the most likely. Real has mentioned in a lot of interviews that if they didn't rely on undocumented Windows calls that they reverse-engineered, they wouldn't be able to get their product working acceptably.

      Ah, Microsoft... to know you is to know just how much I'm being known by you.

      In the biblical sense, of course.

      -fred

      --
      Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
  132. Re:identical... (MOD PARENT COMMENT DOWN) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you are saying that I can drag and drop files off of it, and not use any proitory software to do so?

    And it acts like a normal USB drive, and shows up in linux without needing any hacks to get it working, right?

    And iPods will work on any computer, and allow you to move files regardless if you formated it for a Mac or a Windows PC?

  133. Re:Oh Basil, you're such a foamer by FredFnord · · Score: 2, Informative
    I think they are morally bankrupt, and I think Steve Jobs is destined to go to hell for how he treats people.
    Ye gods. Well, first of all only a real dick says something like that of someone, especially with all the implied glee that you seem to be exuding, and ESPECIALLY of someone who you've never even met. (Yes, I have, several times, but not really to talk to.) You're the sort who gives Christians a bad name, and I don't care to share the same religion as you do much myself. "'Judgement is MINE' sayeth the Lord," remember?

    And second, you need a little bit of education on the difference between morals and ethics. I won't even undertake to do that here, but here's a pretty decent web site: http://www.scribblers-ink.com/professional_ethics. html

    Apple does unethical things upon occasion, as does any other large corporation you can name. Do they do it more often? Are they a thousand times more heavily scrutinized than most other companies their size, and therefore their 'little lapses' are more often found? Is more expected of them, because of their early rhetoric, and therefore are all lapses greatly magnified, sometimes out of proportion?

    I'd have to answer those three questions: 'who knows?', 'yes', and 'ohhh yes.'

    -fred
    --
    Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
  134. immitation by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1
    Immitation is the highest form of flattery.

    That said, this is a total bust. Apple rocks. Cheap knockoffs suck.

  135. Re:identical... (MOD PARENT COMMENT DOWN) by metamatic · · Score: 1

    Yes. You need something that can write the index files, but there are Perl modules for that. Plenty of people use iPods with Linux. It's just a hard drive. MP3s go in a bunch of folders, with an index file.

    --
    GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  136. Kids nowadays! by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 2, Funny
    1. Get iPod out of sleeve.
    ...
    9. Goto 3.
    When I was a lad, we used to dream of a day when we could get stoned and not have to
    • get up
    • lift the needle from the turntable
    • lift the record
    • put it in the inner sleeve
    • put the inner sleeve in the outer sleeve
    • put the album back in the collection
    • choose another album (fuck! You don't even have to choose nowadays, it just shuffles for you, good thing because if you're that stoned everything is good),
    • pull it out of the collection,
    • take out the inner sleeve,
    • take out the record,
    • place it on the turntable,
    • start the turntable,
    • put the needle on it (motor control!)...
    • ...and finally get back to the...shit...they've already finished the spliff you just rolled.
    The iPod is the second greatest thing for potheads across the universe and yet you're still complaining about it! (The greatest thing was of course the Lego Mindstroms controlled rolling machine.)
    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  137. Please explain how to sync to non-ipod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I \'m eager to learn how you sync a non-apple mp3 player. When I hook mine up I can drag songs to it but iTunes (latest version) does not recognize it as an ipod. (prefs say "no ipod connected"). So how do i sync to it? is there some setting I am missing?

  138. photoshopped image by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    can nobody else tell that the image is a fake? i'm not saying there's no real product behind it, but in any case that isn't a photograph.

  139. It supports WMA, but not AAC... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...or even OGG.

    dammit, nobody's gonna buy it now.

  140. Run, before they get you! by Paradox · · Score: 1

    You fool, you've let your tinfoil hat slip off! Now, they know that you know!

    Run, hide, go before the black Apple's iHelicopters drop iJackbooted iThugs down on your mom's roof! Your imminent incarceration is only minutes away! Write your manifesto on the wall? No ink? Improvise!

    Or, maybe we could come back to reality for a moment. Take your meds and calm down for a second.

    Lots of tools let you sync with the iPod. Apple is not going to make an mp3 player that filters content. If they were, they'd be doing it allready. But they aren't, because the concept itself is absurd.

    And even if they could do it without an absurd about of development, it would ruin the iPod. The iPod wins by being a sexy, easy-to-use, high quality player. If Apple nerfs it, then it stops being what people want at all the work that Apple's done to control the online music market will vanish in a puff of smoke.

    We aren't using iTunes because it's an Apple product. We're using it because it's one of the best music players/managers out there.

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
  141. Whoah there, think I'd forget? by Paradox · · Score: 1

    Did you think I'd forget what you said in this post?

    You obviously didn't know this before hand, when you wrote that post. It's good that you're doing some basic googling now. It's bad that you're trying to pretend like you never messed up in the first place. No one here is going to fall for it.

    What, did you think I'd forget the post that I responded to? I think maybe you need more coffee. Or less. I'm not sure which.

    Move along.

    --
    Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
    1. Re:Whoah there, think I'd forget? by argent · · Score: 1

      Did you think I'd forget what you said in this post?

      I'm sorry, you're obviously trying to pick a fight, because I'm not trying to "pretend" anything, and I didn't "google" anything. I plugged my shuffle in and observed what iTunes did as it updated the playlist. That's what I based the comment you're pointing to on.

      That's research.

      Reading Apple's webpage and believing their system requirements isn't research.

      If I depended on what Apple said I probably wouldn't have a Mac right now, because until the Mini came out I sure couldn't afford their prices. I certainly wouldn't have tried installing OS X on a Powermac 7500, or put more than 192M RAM in a 1st generation iMac G3.

  142. My shipping notice came yesterday (finally!) by The+Bum · · Score: 1

    I've had an iPod shuffle (512 MB) on order from MacMall since January 12. I finally got a shipping notification yesterday (March 13). Maybe yours is not too far behind.

  143. Re:Let's see how long that product will be availab by giaguara · · Score: 1

    if "asia" was a reason, we would have had a wide selection of ipod clones in the web for the past 3 years. if there would have been this selection of those, a shuffle clone would not have hit the /. headlines now.

    never underestimate apple's lawyers. the chances that you would not lose are existant, only if you 1) have more money to burn to prove it, and 2) did not copy the product. the "family" is not going to protect anyone against apple.

  144. Thinking of a notebook by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1
    "You probably don't have a Mac, I'm guessing."

    That is a safe guess, regardless, considering the Mac's tiny share of the market!

    In any case, you still might want to pick up an Apple USB Keyboard "

    There is no such problem on my desktop, but the ports are really crammed in there on my PC notebook. Looking at some pics (I don't know anyone with a Powerbook to check for real), it appears that Mac notebooks might have the problem too: Look at this powerbook pic. They look rather crammed on this one as well.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  145. But does it run by biophysics · · Score: 1

    Linux

  146. Remember that line... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...from Pirates of Silicon Valley:

    "Good artists create. Great artists steal."

    Mhmm! Good irony, mom!

  147. BOO HOO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mommy didn't buy you one, huh? You know, the only people I find that put down the iPod are the ones who couldn't afford it.