200gb Hack for iPod Nano
romka1 writes "For people who think their Nano doesn't have enought space for their music there is a hack walkthrough to get 200 gigs on your Nano. Warning some assembly required" For some reason this tickled my funny bone this morning. Enjoy.
funny how I felt the same way when I read it on a lazy Thursday afternoon.
I've always wanted an iPod Kilo.
Note that the 200gb capacity enables you to store about 50 000 pieces of music. If this capacity is filled with illegal "warez" mp3s, you can be fined up to 75 000 000 USD. (204 800 megabytes, 4 megabytes per song, 10 songs per CD, average CD price 15 USD).
Who else besides the author has 75 million handy?
"There's nothing like adding an extra 196 gigs to my iPod Nano so I can listen to all my favorite British Invasion bands." -- Oscar Wilde.
It's good to see that more and more people are realizing that the Uncyclopedia is the true source for knowledge.
Much like the black widow, after the battery life of the Nano completely drains, the Maxtor Diamond will attempt to eat the iPod Nano for sustenance
You bastards!
An iPod Macro, just what I've also been holding out for!
One of my aims in life has been to construct a properly redundant RAID array of inexpensive disks - namely, floppy disks!
Floppy drives are really cheap at the moment, so it shouldn't be too difficult to build up a decent amount of storage. Also, it should be possible to build a custom interface so that the whole assembly can be connected to one of these modern iPod things - I'm guessing you could add several hundred megabytes of storage in this manner and still have something fairly portable.
Any thoughts? I'd really like to get this project off the ground, so to speak!
Tedious Bloggy Stuff - hooray?
12 minute battery hack for iPod Nano!
Does anyone know of a hack to get thet battery life on the 200Gb Nano up from 6-minutes? I'm thinking maybe a car battery could be used for power. Any thoughts?
I think I'm going to wait for a Raid hack...
What other people think of me is none of my business
My gmail account has some 827MB worth of crap on it. I'm filling it at pretty close to the growing rate.
Remember that 1GB HD that you'd never fill up?
The 32MB of RAM that was workstation levels?
The fast 14.4k modem?
If you think education is expensive, you should try ignorance -- Derek Bok, president of Harvard
Sorry someone beat you to it.
It seems Uncyclopedia forgot to upgrade their server with a 200 Trilobyte WAN connection. You'd think they'd put their own good advice to use and avoid the Slashdot effect?
Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
Coral Cache
Wah Sig!
Oooh, a whole WEEK ago! You MUST be cool reading ALL these sites EVERY minute, just WAITING for that FRESH scrap of news!
There is an Outside. BELIEVE in the Outside.
You mean "a properly redundant redundant array of inexpensive disks array of inexpensive disks"? Judging by your post here, you're well on your way to insanely redundant levels of insane redundancy....
ABSURDITY, n.: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.
There are many other hacks for the Apple iPod family available already. From the first generation iPods as well as for the iPod Shuffle and iPod mini. You may also find links to hacks for accessories like cables and headphones and batteries.
Back in the spring, I saw a "Coming Soon" announcement for Uncyclopedia which said It's like Wikipedia, only you can make shit up!
Feel free to visit this link while you wait for me (I'm a slow reader).
>Would this be a bad time to mention that all digital audio is by definition lossey?
Wait. What makes "digital" lossy but non-digital non-lossy?
Pick any analog method of recording and duplication. Its lossy. Now toss in playback equipment, speakers, ears, etc.
I don't see how your neo-luddite comment applies nor why it should be modded up.
Arguably, digital methods are non-lossy over time considering current analog recordings (tapes, LPs) over time simply disintegrate causing all sorts of loss, while digital data can be reproduced without loss over generations and onto different digital media thus avoiding the aging problem. Copy that Office 2000 CD all you like, after the 8th generation you arent suddenly going to lose spell checker. Same with digital audio. Now copy that audio tape 8 times and tell me its not lossy.
The Shannon Sampling Theorem states:
To put it into term that you can understand, if your ear cannot detect frequencies higher than 22.05 kilohertz then a sampling rate of 44.1 samples per second can perfectly reproduce any sound you can hear.We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
-- Anais Nin