Video iPod Screen Test
Carl Bialik writes "The Wall Street Journal's Walter S. Mossberg has an interesting review of Apple's video iPod. From the article: 'It's a surprisingly decent video player, with crisp, smooth vivid playback of TV shows, music videos, short films, video podcasts and home videos. We wouldn't want to watch a full-length movie on this iPod -- the screen is just too small. But, for short things like music videos, video podcasts or even hourlong TV shows shortened by stripping out the commercials, as Apple is doing, the new iPod provides a pretty good experience.
However, there are some significant downsides to the video function on this iPod. Some of them are due to Apple's design decisions, while others are due to restrictions imposed by media companies, or to the simple human factors that go into watching video.'"
We wouldn't want to watch a full-length movie on this iPod
How many years ago was TV created, and how long after that was their Color. People improve ideas, the video ipod doesn't seem to be marketed as a "Buy me and you'll never need a tv again". I really don't think it will become people's primary mode of entertainment.
Of course then again.... how big is the PSP screen? I'm sure it's much bigger but by how much? And they are still able to mass sell DVD's made only for the PVP.
Just your everyday corporate code monkey.
To steal a line from cell phone users:
"All these iPods with video, picture, portable storage...All I want is an iPod that plays music well!"
Which, of course, it already seems to do.
Yes, but does it run LINUX?
oh, wait, let's make it harder..
Yes, but does it run KDE?
I don't know why the guy is that surprised. Apple lately has a reputation of making good products, minus some untested issues with first generation products like scratches on iPod Nano. But apple products for the last 4 years have been releasing good products. I would be more surprised if Apple released a very poor product. I think the guy probably has IBM Good and Apple Bad idea stuck in his head from the 80s
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
I agree about watching videos on the computer. I have no intention to my a video iPod, but I'm using iTunes to catch up on episodes of some TV programs. The quality on my computer was great.
I'll probably delete the episodes soon to reclaim the space. I'll just write it off as rental price.
The joke is I can already do this on my palm Zaire only better. If it wasn't for battery life I could hold two movies on a 1 gig memory card. I already have trailers to the movies I shot and my CG reel on it. Not to mention my portfolio and several hundred stills and I haven't begun to fill the one gig memory card. The screen is larger than a video Ipod and has a good quality image. I wish they'd come up with an add on battery pack for them. The sound isn't bad through head phones. I'd love to be able to load a couple of films on a memory card for plane flights. Ipods are convienent but I like Palms for flexsibility. I even find myself using the built in camera quiter often. Handy devices.
Anyone have any idea? Can it play divx's/xvid's? I have a large collection I'd want to put on it..
I submitted a story yesterday (rejected :( ) about this article by Gary Krakow which tempers some of the iPod hysteria. I've met a number of folks (some of whom were musicians) that have bought iPods for their "cool" factor without examining all the features, limitations (no 16-bit 44KHz audio recording unless you install Linux), or the competition's offerings.
Archos has had a portable media device that records video/audio from analog inputs for a number of years now.
Nothing interesting to say...MUST...NOT...REPLY...ohtheheckwithit.
I can forgive Apple for discontinuing Firewire on the new iPods, but I can't forgive them for not including the charger in the box. I understand that the USB cable doubles as a charger, but I want to charge it in a hotel room, friends's house, etc. How much could that little charger possible cost Apple? 2-3 bucks? I'll stick with my 3rd gen until it dies, then I hope my existing accessories will still work on the newer iPods.
No gapless playback. No ogg support. Lame.
Can it play divx's/xvid's?
.m4v, .mp4 and .mov file formats MPEG-4 video: up to 2.5 mbps, 480 x 480, 30 frames per sec., Simple Profile with AAC-LC up to 160 Kbps, 48 Khz, stereo audio in .m4v, .mp4 and .mov file formats
Nope.
From http://www.apple.com/ipod/specs.html
H.264 video: up to 768 Kbps, 320 x 240, 30 frames per sec., Baseline Profile up to Level 1.3 with AAC-LC up to 160 Kbps, 48 Khz, stereo audio in
Even the Wall Street Journal editors think nothing of downloading and sharing TV shows. I think this pretty much reflects the average person's stance: it's just not a big deal.
IP owners sure have a tough battle ahead of them.
there's more than one way to do me.
For $399 plays videos such as Xvid, Divx. Can do pictures as well.
Official Site
Digital Life TV Review
Might be a worthy rival to the iPod.
"A diplomat is a man who always remembers a woman's birthday but never remembers her age." -Robert Frost
"ipod video is great. my friend just got one. of course everyone is saying what the hell, who would want to watch video on a 2.5" screen, but the question i have, is how the fuck do you plan on taking a normal sized, 30" tv on a plane, train, or in a car?"
Did you really think that's the only option? Either a 2.5" screen, or a 30" TV? Next time you're on a plane or train, note all the other folks with notebooks sporting 15" screens. This is what I use to watch movies on flights, since I have to take it with me anyway. Thus, I have no need for a video iPod.
"stop complaining about the screen size and realize the potential. if you travel a lot, if youre a high school student (like myself), its great."
And understand that there are many people who are not high school students (like yourself) or otherwise have different needs or expectations, and thus aren't interested in this product. You should not let this upset you. Others are entitled to their opinions, and theirs may just be just as valid as yours.
Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
So now that MP3 players can play videos as well, what's next? Maybe they can add support for video games. Wait, they already have those...
So who cares how it looks on the iPod screen, how does it look on a non HD TV, how easy is it to navigate through video selections with the remote, etc, etc.
IMO, that's what will make or break the video part of the iPod. Of course, you buy an new iPod, you get the video feature for free. So why are folks complaining so much???
Maybe I really am crazy, but the article mentioned Quicktime Pro 7, and "various other encoders" as a means to create iPod playable video. The iPod plays H.264 Mpeg 4 video, would pspVideo9 not work just as well as QT Pro? If you encode a video into a 320x240 resolution clip, with a bitrate not higher than the 768KB per second, then wouldn't it work? I cannot test this idea yet, as my 60GB 5th gen iPod hasn't arrived yet, but it seems likely to work. Correct me if I am wrong. And also do you think VBR H.264 would be a problem for the new iPods?
This video format and conversion problem is a mess that will hold back the video iPod unless Apple fixes it by incorporating free, reliable, and easy video conversion in iTunes.
He's got a point. Quicktime Pro is a $30 upgrade no user should have to pay for just to do this job. iTunes can easily convert between MP3, AAC, WAV or AIFF -- it ought to do the same for MPG and MOV videos.
Apple should also include a stand with the video iPod, to get around the problem of holding the thing in viewing position for long periods.
This comment I don't get. It's supposed to be a portable video viewer, not a comfortable one.
Seeing as it looks very similar to the ipod nano, does the video ipod suffer from the same screen scratching problem?
notebook computer = $999 and up ipod video = $299. i do have a notebook. its a nice 12" powerbook. most people can afford an ipod over a notebook.
Your grammar and capitalization reveals that you are.. a high school student. Surprisingly enough, though, mine isn't as easy to see through, eh?
;)
No one is expecting to watch a 30" T.V. on-the-go, they are talking about similar video devices with 4-6" screens - the PSP is an example.
Anyway the new iPod is neat, and I'd like to see how well the video function works.
"Section 107 contains a list of the various purposes for which the reproduction of a particular work may be considered fair, such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research." - http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html (emphasis added)
"National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
or even hourlong TV shows shortened by stripping out the commercials
Don't you mean 'or even 40 minute long TV shows that would usually be drawn out to an hour with commercials'
I know that the new iPods don't come with a firewire cable, but do they still support firewire cables?
Didn't Scifi.com put the last eisode of a season one of Battlestar Galactica online for free itself?
Not yet, but I'm sure it will soon...
http://ipodlinux.org
But aren't divx and xvid just MPEG-4 video in an AVI wrapper, such that a VirtualDub style program could just Direct-Stream-Copy the video to an MPEG-4 wrapper?
If you can't afford a cheap notebook, you shouldn't be spending $300 on an MP3 player. The one is more important and has more utility and more bang-for-the-buck than the other.
An iPod Video is pure luxury. A notebook is, for many people, at least part necessity. It also has a potentially longer life, performs many more functions, etc.
If it comes down to (a) spending $300 on an iPod or (b)spending $999 on a notebook, and you can't afford (b), the best option is (c) IF YOU DON'T HAVE $999, YOU CANT SPARE $300.
You know, I've seen this high school student comment more than once. WTF? The only time I had in high school to do anything was at lunch. Don't you go to class? Study? Interface with people? Or is it this much vaunted "video iPod rulez" syndrome that makes it so great, even though it isn't?
--ngoy
Your grammar and capitalization reveals that you are.. a high school student.
was that really neccesary? also, thanks for figuring out that i'm a high school student. the line "if youre a high school student (like myself)," would never have given it away. I know how to use proper grammar, i communicate with clients via email all the time. why do i not use my grammar/sp/punctuation here? well put simply, i dont feel the need to impress anyone.
His reply was to travel on a plane. People who make more than one trip a year tend to be business users. They also tend to have laptops provided for by their company. If somone cannot afford a $999 laptop, they also cannot afford to travel ofter enough to buy a $299 iPod video for travelling.
--ngoy
The iPod could compete with the PSP by replacing the screen/touch wheel version with a full sized touch screen.
t ml )
The touch screen could approximate the 16:9 format of HDTV.
The iPod 'Wheel' could be displayed when you touch the screen in a certain location. You could see a display of the original formatted screen/wheel.
After selecting a video to view, the wheel vanishes and gives you the whole side of the iPod in Widescreen mode.
They would need to boost the size of the battery by a couple of millimeters of thickness to get some more playtime with the bigger screen.
In addition to the widescreen format touch screen, the actual display elements could be Organic LED (OLED) if that would help produce a brighter picture and clearer display.
(See Epsons OLED: http://www.epson.co.in/aboutus/newscentre/OLED.sh
Some touch screen technologies could be even more sensitive than the current wheel technology.
Also, a icon list of videos (like in the new iTunes 6) could scroll down the screen in landscape mode, and then the user could touch the little icon to begin playing Christina Aguilera or the next episode of LOST, or watch Toy Story in it's original format.
That's the next logical step for the iPod, then it could simulate an HDTV type experience on a 4" screen.
Now, if they would only up the resolution to 1080p and add a Universal Dock to HDMI adapter, you could take your favorite movie over to your friend's house and watch your iPod play connected to their 42" Plasma HDTV!
Alright, but the readability of your message would highly increase if you typed correctly, it also enhances your point. Regardless, this is mindless babbling and way beside the point, if you need to settle this more clearly contact me through my website (linked above).
So you are stuck with a file on your harddrive - sounds like a good deal to me... not.
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
...is on the way to Gitmo as we speak ;)
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
Who modded the parent down on this?!?! This is actually big news (if true). The last bit was funny (if a bit cruel).
Nothing interesting to say...MUST...NOT...REPLY...ohtheheckwithit.
Well, if your're crazy, then HackADay.com is your asylum: that's precisely today's hack.
I don't have neither gadget, but looks like that Videora iPod Converter is using PSPVideo9 codecs to prepare video for the iPod. Donate if you enjoy it!
Well, if your video clips are in divx/xvid/etc, you will have to convert them to h.264 (One of the playable codecs) in order for it to work.
Download this program, there is a 30 day free trial included. It allows you to batch encode your videos so you can run it all night. The resulting files, depending on your encoding level (I did the lowest, as its just for the little screen), will probably take less space than the originals. That's all you need.
What's that you say?
Did I stutter??? It's an iPod with Free Video Capabilities.
If you don't like the video aspect of it and just want an iPod that plays music, guess what? It still plays music! Just don't download any videos to it and you'll be fine.
People are missing the point that the new generation iPod is an improvement altogether: Thinner case and improved battery life.
I just checked, it's true!! 44.1 KHz stereo recording. See this page and search for "Voice recording settings".
Nothing interesting to say...MUST...NOT...REPLY...ohtheheckwithit.
Then you'll find yourself with a 15" screen in economy class. I did a little business travel with my old fujitsu lifebook and seat spacing wasn't enough to allow a comfortable viewing angle. I thought about buying a $200 dvd player for that situation, now the ipod is breaking into that market and i might do that instead.
also the ipod is more discrete and should have better battery life than a laptop decoding a video.
how when plugged into his car speakers, it was able to belt out the new Fountains of Wayne rocker, "Maureen," loudly enough to be heard perfectly, even though he was going 70 mph in a convertible with the top down?
No, it does not support the firewire protocol at all.
This has caused some problems for people with some accessories, for example, belkin makes an alternative to the camera connector for the ipod, and it uses the firewire protocol through the dock connector. It will no longer work on the new ipods. Apple's will, as it uses usb to transfer over the dock.
I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by. - Douglas Adams
Argh, at my high school so many damn kids listen to iPods during class! It is so freaking annoying. I don't get kids these days, why don't you stop listening to your music and listen to the teacher for an hour. Your music can wait. I can only hope that kids don't watch TV during class or something because if I were the teacher, I would be taking the device away for a long time.
Uncomfortable, small screen, and gives you a headache...
Its like a commercial airline without the actual airline!
Actually with the Dell you can have both a SD and a CF card at the same time... In about 512 MB you can store an entire 120 minute video... thats gets you to 4 video "on line". Stick a spare in the carrying case and an entire day's worth of music.
Don't forget the Pocket PC device also has WiFi and bluetooth, so you're all set for a BT GPS receiver.
Although a bit more pricy than an iPod...it does much more. The only downside is that you don't get those trendy earbuds and the battery life is short. (Not taking a page from Apple, the Axim has a user replacable battery--in fact you can pack a spare for long trips.
sure, i would love to listen to music in class. of course i'll listen to a lecture, but when we're doing classwork (which is susually useless busiwork that requires little thought anyway), it's really nice to have music
Hopefully this will push QuckTime to be the standard format for internet video, like on websites and such. After all, if you are going to post content wouldn't you rather it be available on the most popular portable media player? If I never have to view another .WMV on my Mac I'll be happy.
Anybody have one of this iPods yet? Care to test out a reference video for me?
:-)
What I mean is, using QT Pro... grab a short selection, copy and paste it into a new movie. Now when saving using the radio button down at the bottom and save it in the smaller format. In QT 7 this is called Reference video, but in early it was called something else.
Now try and play the reference movie on the iPod. Does it work right?
Thanks.
Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
Then again if a person has a desktop and no real need to a laptop the iPod makes a lot more sense. Most people don't need laptops. I have both and use my laptop more, fine, but I also don't pull it out to watch movies or listen to music on the train to school every morning -- it just isn't practical for that. And iPod (which I don't have yet) makes a lot more sense -- even though it is a luxury..
Yeah, and look how many PDAs are being sold compared to iPods.
Well, now they can:
http://www.apple.com/ipod/specs.html
Two recording formats:
Low Quality Recording: 22.05 KHz, mono - Speech Recording
High Quality Recording: 44.1 KHz, stereo - Music Recording
Ask and you shall receive.
I've Been using Pogo Products to do direct to MP3 recordings for over two years now, and I have been very happy with the results (Radio YourWay LX - built in microphone / mic in/ line-in):
http://www.pogoproducts.com/
What I REALLY like about the Pogo Products is that they record directly into an MP3 file (encoding levels / quality is user selectable)
Recording directly into MP3 saves time, and makes good use of a 1GB SD card. (1GB holds quite a long speech recorded at 56/44!)
So your musical friends can now record to their iPod or make quick demos using a Pogo Radio YourWay LX 512 MB + 1GB SD/MMC Cards...
http://www.pogoproducts.com/radioyourway.html
( I've been hoping that if Pogo Owns that technology (hardware MP3 encoding), that Apple would buy the whole company just to add MP3 recording into the iPod. But I don't know if Pogo owns the technology,
or if they are repackaging someone elses chips into their products...)
Thats a straw man argument. I can't make a car on my own for less than 5 million dollars ... that doesn't mean any car has a value of 5 million dollars.
Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley
Right. But you have both a desktop and a laptop -- an iPod would be icing on the cake. For a person who can't afford a proper computer, a video iPod is like icing with no cake to begin with. I own a desktop (homebuilt) and a laptop (an old Tablet PC), as well as a greyscale 4g iPod 20gb. I bought them in that order -- necessity first, necessity second (the laptop is a must now that I'm at a university), luxury last. If I couldn't afford a laptop, then I could by extension barely afford an iPod, and it seems like I'd be better off not buying either. In fact, that's what used to be teh case -- before I had my computer or iPod, I used a cheap Rio player for years, upgrading it every now and then courtesy of Costco's extremely liberal return policy.
Hear Hear.
My wife is one of, what seems, the very few people to have bought one of the original Nokia NGAGE game system/phones. She LOVES it. Sure, the screen is smaller than the new iPod's, but she loves watching movies on it. She's an anime fan-- I can take 3-4 smaller anime series and convert them down to H.263, sized for her screen, and they'll easily fit on a 1GB MMC with room to spare. I think, in fact, that an appropriately sized full-length movie might only take up around 80-90MB of space, since you cut a few frames and shrink the video's resolution.
I think that people just like to whine/naysay about anything, personally. Why do you need incredible quality for a portable device, anyways? I think people are really expecting more than they should from these; they're not home entertainment systems, after all, and you're stupid if you honestly expected them to be.
I don't moderate anymore. Karma penalty for 90% fair mods? Can I mod that unfair?
Can it play ogg theora...?
But you don't have to spend $999 on a laptop. You can spend $499 on this dell laptop and not have to worry about what media formats it plays. Also, it has tons more features that the ipod doesn't have. Mind you I think this whole argument of comparing ipods to laptops is kind of useless. They are completely different devices, meant for completely different things. I really don't get those people who carry around laptops. There are very few times when a laptop would provide better results than a good desktop + a good PDA.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
News flash. Proper grammar isn't something you use to impress people. It's something you use to communicate your message effectively. I hate when I receive an email, or even an IM, from someone with terrible grammar. Why people can't take the extra 7 seconds to use proper grammar is beyond me. If they had taken the extra 7 seconds, I wouldn't have to take 30 seconds trying to figure out what they meant.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
Who says anything about writing your own applications? The Video iPod claims that it supports MPEG4, in which case I'm pretty sure I could convince AutoGK to create compatible xvid files at a cost of $0. Of course, AutoGK is a Windows program, but I'm sure there are other options out there if you look.
If it takes off at all I think what this is going to do is usher in a new form of video that is suited to small hand-held devices. No one is going to want to sit and watch a 40 minute TV show on one of these, your arm would fall off and your eyes would permanently cross. It's too small, its just wrong. However, for short music videos, that go with a song, and short independent video podcasts, this is going to be a somewhat new medium. Creative people adapt to the canvas that is available; TV shows are not what this is going to be about. Even with normal DSL it takes too long to download, it destroys the impulse buying part of the equation. Who in their right mind wants to spend 20 minutes downloading an episode of DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES?! However, songs with good or clever videos to go along with would probably sell better. However, I want one so I can listen to Glenn Gould play Bach on the piano. Who cares about the video?
Get a free video ipod
I spent ages upgrading my DirectTivo so I can pull the movies off and edit out the commercials. I would love to be able to convert them to Ipod format (MPG4) and watch them. Is there a compatible converter I could use to do this? Is it legal?
Yes, there is.
There are also automation programs like ffmpegX (for Mac) that can write appropriate movie files.
For more information, click here.
I really am favorable towards the video Ipod, but Apple has really got to give away video conversion software for free with the video ipod, unless they do they are really shooting themselves in the foot. Why would I spend 300-400 dollars on a device then another 30 so I can convert my home movies? That is really lame, and I really agree with Walt Mossberg that it should be within Itunes, instead of having to pay for a separate program. Mossberg is a great tech writer and usually right about these things in the long run, and Apple should listen to him.
Quicktime Pro will allow you to change the format, you have to get the MPEG2 add-on though. Sure QTP is legal, whether or not the DTivo is or not is the real question...
Quicktime 7 lets you export> then save as ipod movie.
Watch your language kid. This is a sophisticated blog.
The purpose of writing is to inflate weak ideas, obscure poor reasoning, and inhibit clarity....Calvin
I'm not sure if you're allowed to criticize punctuation if you don't even know how many dots go in an ellipsis.
Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
So now that MP3 players can play videos as well, what's next? Maybe they can add support for video games. Wait, they already have those...
No. The Nintendo DS and Sony PSP are closed systems, meaning that the legitimate method to get code running relies on some sort of cryptographic handshake that only the console maker knows, allowing the console maker to approve or deny all programs. The iPod 6 might be the first chance at an "open" handheld video game system that doesn't have to be imported from the Republic of Korea.
Remember this is an experiment involving Video player in a Music player.
It's a music player first, and a popular one involving a thing called a scroll wheel. If the experiment proves successful and a market develops for more content and more demand for player that's more video less music, then you will see your full screen Video iPod, maybe a bigger screen still, say postcard sized so they can squeeze a battery better then 2 hours into it.
Say 6 months at the earliest, any longer than 12 months an the chance of happening start to look slim.
After all looked what happened with that experiment they called iPod.
"Call us when the New age is old enough to drink" Beck
The key is he had a 70MPH tailwind.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
okay i'm a few months away from getting one, so this will be the start of my research. do any portable video players have a USB port that i could plug a USB memory stick into it for transfer? i'm also looking for video output, and audio output. and have digital audio out?
if there's not a sweet player out there, i'll just wait for apple's Video Airport thingy. anyone have any suggestions?
You call it excessive, I call it ambitious.
A video ipod is still an ipod, still capable of playing music and audiobooks. The new 60GB ipod lasts for twenty hours doing just those things. How long does your notebook battery last again?
I suppose you can always carry five extra notebook batteries with you...
Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
Now i've seen it all -- just in case you couldnt get your hands on one fast enough, there's a company that will deliver an iPod in 2 hours. Absurd. Why would you ever need anything that fast? Apparently they've been running stealth in San Mateo for 6 months or so and have sand hill bouncing like schoolgirls -- LicketyShip.com
I guess its not a bad deal if you need stuff right away. It apparently costs the same as overnight delivery. Do a lot of people ship stuff overnight?
1. A touchscreen is not perfectly transparent, and it noticeably lowers the image quality.
2. Using a touchscreen with the fingers will smear it, and you'll never stop polishing the display.
3. All the touchscreens I know are not nearly as sensitive as the touch pads used in mp3 players and they don't give any tactile feedback at all. I don't know whether pressing the buttons behind the scroll wheel of the iPod gives tactile feedback (hopefully), but you can at least feel the position of the wheel itself.
That's a fucking bad idea! Right now I can use the iPod without even looking at it. I can feel where the wheel is. If it were in a touchscreen instead, I would have to hold the device in my hand and look at it, whenever I want to skip a song or adjust the volume! with touchscreen there would be zero tactile feedback! And the screen would get dirty really fast.
Remember: iPod is a music-playback device. the video is merely an added bonus, it's primary purpose if to play back music.
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
On my iPod Mini, the songs are automatically synced the moment I plug it in the computer. No need to drag files around.
Well, I can unmount the Mini by dragging it to the Thrash. Or I can hit the nifty "Eject" button in Finder or iTunes. Or I can right-click the icon on the desktop and choose "Eject" from there. How else would you like to do it? There's already 4 different methods to remove the removable device.
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
The only downside is that you don't get those trendy earbuds and...
Oh god, those earbuds. I cannot explain how much I loathe them. What is it that people find so aesthetic about them? Personally, I've taken to wearing the earbuds that came with my Samsung YP-MTetc-etc instead of my normal headphones just so that the blackness and more, shall we say, professional looking design of them can contrast with all the oddly cheap-looking white ones everyone else has attatched to their iPods.
At least the newer stuff since the minis have been partially-coloured (they still look like someone just put a plastic plate of colored plastic overtop of a fundamentally white iPod, though the nanos finally overcome that). Before, with the all-pure-white ones, it really showed off the mass-production monopoly thing. It felt like early Ford Motors inverted; I can just imagine Steve Jobs saying "They can have any color, as long as it's white."
I remember sigs. Oh, a simpler time!
Have you tried to remove a removable device on a PC (say, an USB memory stick)? You need to go to a tiny icon on the task bar, use a contextual menu, and two crazy screens show up with non-intuitive options, etc. Ridiculous.
At least the MacOSX option is consistent.
On my iPod Mini, the songs are automatically synced the moment I plug it in the computer. No need to drag files around.
Yes, that works when you plug your own MP3 player into your own properly configured Macintosh running iTunes. That's one simple usage scenario.
But lots of people are using their MP3 players differently: they are moving them between many machines, they use different music management software, they copy clips from friends, etc. Those other players still synchronize with iTunes, but they do things like on-device playlist generation and bookmarking, and they are no harder to use than iPod either.
There is no technical or user interface reason why iPod functionality is so limited. Either Apple doesn't have the software development resources to add these functions, or it's a deliberate marketing decision by them to keep you tied to iTunes.
In the end, the iPods are nice looking, reasonably priced players that integrate very well with iTunes, but the fact remains: their on-board software is limited compared to what's out there.
How else would you like to do it?
I want to just unplug it when I'm done. That works on other platforms, why not on Macintosh? It's the obvious and simple thing to do. And don't tell me that it might "interrupt a write"; other platforms deal with that without problems.
Are the videos on iTunes only for play on the iPod or can I play them on my PC through iTunes?
It's a marketing-desicion to keep the user tied to iTunes. Is this news to you?
I remember when I copied some files to my USB-thumbdrive on XP. I copied the files, and simply removed the drive from the computer. When I got back home, I noticed that no files were in fact copied. There is a reason why we "safely remove" removable media. We do it on Macs, Windows and Linux. What "other platforms" are you talking about, since I run in to this issue on all three platforms? All three systems tell me to "safely remove" the media, instead of simply unplugging it.
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
of course you can play them in iTunes. just in case: you can also play songs and podcasts and movie trailers and audiobooks downloaded through iTMS in iTunes.
The original poster never mentioned anything about QuickTime Player. QuickTime is a format and can be played full screen by hundreds of free apps including iTunes.
The 2 types of video supported by the iPod are MPEG4 and H264 neither of which are proprietary. If this means less proprietary Real video and WMV on the web, it is definitely a Good Thing(TM).
Hell, it's better quality than half the clips I troll of Usenet. pr0ncasts here I come! (Uhhh...that came out wrong, just pretend I never said that...)
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
I wonder if Apple is giving up on QuickTime? The iPod video standards are all non-Apple!
J.E.B.
Joshua Corps
Not if you don't want XP to spend the next five minutes whining at you for not wading through three different popup menus for the "Safely Remove Harware" wizard. Clicking Eject in iTunes is lovely in comparison.
"I Know You Are But What Am I?"
Well, let's hope that there weren't any pending operations in the filesystem when you pull your device. Especially if your device is formatted with a non-journaling filesystem! Say good-bye to data integrity.
Filesystems always need to be unmounted before physically removing them. I hope there haven't been too many times when you've lost data and blamed it on the hardware (or you haven't discovered it yet).
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XviD supports Simple Profile but videos you've "found" "somewhere" are most likely Advanced Simple Profile or more at resolutions beyond the 480x480 supported by the iPod.
Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
I don't know why I see people always go through those crazy screens for unmounting devices in Windows. All you have to do is a single, left click on that "tiny icon", and a menu pops up with all of the removable devices you have inserted. Click on the one you want to remove, and bam, it's gone. Granted, there's no indication that that's what your supposed to do, but there's no real reason to do it the other way, either.
You can also right-click on the device in "My Computer" and click "Eject."
Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
From what I hear of the specs, it is vcd resolutions which the videos are at that will play on the device with a maximum of 700 Kbps for the video bitrate. Sorry, but the only way they can make it portable is if you can hook it up to special sunglasses where it makes you seem like you're watching a 50 inch tv 10 feet in front of you. "That" will make it truly portable to want to watch now.
My Gawd WTF...
You can use the same software to convert for PSP as for Ipod video ironically enough, just set the aspect ratio to 320X200 mp4 files, (does not support 368x208 like psp does) is a supported format. Though I am not sure about supported bitrates chances are it will work, though I would wait til you ACTUALLY GET an ipod video before you convert your whole collection. So you can use psp video 9 if you wanted, which is what I will use when I get mine. However, I would like to see it integrated into itunes, just for simplicity sakes, working with one program is better than two.
Fingerprints would be a bitch though.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." - Martin Luther King, Jr.
In addition to the four methods mentioned by the parent, in the left side of all Finder windows there are two panes. The upper one contains all the directories/devices mounted on the system, including removable media. For removable media, there is a very convenient eject button beside each icon. You click it and the device is unmounted, no questions are asked (unlike on Windows). Don't get offended, but the fact that you didn't know about any of these five methods suggests that you haven't really used a Mac in the last four years (other than sitting on it for five minutes, claiming "this sucks", and leaving).
On the other hand, where did you get the idea that other systems allow you to unplug removable media without unmounting? Or let me rephrase that: just as on Windows or on Linux, on MacOS X you can unplug the device and in more than 99% of the times absolutely nothing bad is going to happen. But some systems (including MacOS X, and properly configured Windows 2000/XP or Linux) have the courtesy to remind you that it is not worth the risk, even though admittedly it is very, very low.
The original poster never mentioned anything about QuickTime Player. QuickTime is a format and can be played full screen by hundreds of free apps including iTunes.
;)
I suppose you're right, there are projects like QuickTime Alternative that let you watch QuickTime files without Apple's player. They're not very well-known, though, so I fear that any increased popularity of the QuickTime format will only lead to increased use of QuickTime Player.
And then a whole generation will grow up thinking that full-screen video is a luxury feature to be paid for separately. Won't someone please think of the children?
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Well, let's hope that there weren't any pending operations in the filesystem when you pull your device.
I don't have to "hope", I know that there aren't any pending operations when I pull the device; that's what those big dialog boxes that are telling me that there are pending operations are for, as well as the blinking light on the device. When it is clear that there are no more pending operations, then I pull the device.
Especially if your device is formatted with a non-journaling filesystem! Say good-bye to data integrity.
There is no reason why there should be any more serious consequence of pulling out the device too early than a single truncated file. Furthermore, the correct thing to do is for the system to put up an informative popup saying "I didn't complete writing file XYZ or subsequent files; if you would like to continue, please reinsert the device. If you don't care, just don't worry about it."
I hope there haven't been too many times when you've lost data and blamed it on the hardware (or you haven't discovered it yet).
The only place I have ever lost data from removable devices was on the Macintosh because the Macintosh can't prevent me from removing the device either, but it doesn't actually give me a clear indication of when it is safe to remove. Even worse, afterwards, it doesn't even give me correct information about whether anything actually went wrong or what happend. It just whines and complains about what an ill-behaved user I am. This is really something where Apple screwed up big time, and they should fix it.
On the other hand, where did you get the idea that other systems allow you to unplug removable media without unmounting?
Because they do and because it works.
Or let me rephrase that: just as on Windows or on Linux, on MacOS X you can unplug the device and in more than 99% of the times absolutely nothing bad is going to happen. But some systems (including MacOS X, and properly configured Windows 2000/XP or Linux) have the courtesy to remind you that it is not worth the risk, even though admittedly it is very, very low.
Your mental model of how this works is wrong. Users don't pull flash devices at random points in time, they pull flash devices when they think they are finished writing to them.
Well-designed systems indicate when it is not safe to pull the devices (both on-screen and through a light on the device), and when they are done writing, they make it clear that it is now safe to pull the device. So, you watch the indicator and pull the device when it's safe to do so. On the rare occasion you screw up, they give you an error message, but only if something bad actually happened.
Macintosh doesn't give you a clear indication of when it is unsafe to pull the device. In fact, it's so bad that you can't even unplug devices when the system is suspended; Macintosh doesn't seem to unmount removable devices on suspend. On the other hand, Macintosh always complains about pulling the device even if there were no bad consequences, apparently in some mistaken attempt to train the user. And Macintosh doesn't prevent bad device removals either, so the risk of data loss is at least as large on Macintosh.
What should Apple do?
-- They should make sure at the system level that writes to flash devices are more synchronous with application-level operations.
-- They should indicate on the desktop icon that a flash device is in use and has pending writes to it.
-- They should make sure that they write to flash devices in such a way that their indicator lights blink as long as there are pending writes.
-- They should get the OS into a state that it is safe to remove a device when all operations have completed on it.
-- They should put up an error message only if device removal has actually caused an incomplete write, and it should be an informative message (i.e., not require acknowledgement).
-- And they should change the file system code for flash devices so as to minimize the damage caused by early removal of flash devices (this may mean having two VFAT drivers--one for non-removable devices and one for removable devices).
(Some of these things are not yet implemented in Windows or Linux either, but those other systems are closer.)
It's a marketing-desicion to keep the user tied to iTunes. Is this news to you?
Yes, this is news to me. It's not a nice thing for Apple to remove useful functionality from their iPod in order to tie people to their music store.
I remember when I copied some files to my USB-thumbdrive on XP. I copied the files, and simply removed the drive from the computer. When I got back home, I noticed that no files were in fact copied.
The same thing can happen to you on Macintosh, since nothing prevents you from unplugging the device too soon and you may not even see the dialog box after the fact. Furthermore, most of the time, the dialog box appears even though, in fact, the data is fine, and the dialog box gives you no way of fixing the problem anyway.
There is a reason why we "safely remove" removable media. We do it on Macs, Windows and Linux. What "other platforms" are you talking about, since I run in to this issue on all three platforms? All three systems tell me to "safely remove" the media, instead of simply unplugging it.
The correct thing to do is to tell the user when the device is in use and to finish with it as soon as possible. When there are no more operations pending, the user should be able to unplug it. For practical purposes, that's the way it works on Windows. That's also the way it works on many Linux systems (e.g., with automount and a short timeout). If your OS has reasonable write semantics, you can watch the blinking light on the flash drive to guess a good time to remove the device.
It is never correct to throw up big dialog boxes with error messages in a foolish attempt to punish the user when, in fact, no error occurred, and that's what Macintosh does.
This sort of thing isn't rocket science, and the Mac just gets it wrong. Apple has always thought they could control device removal perfectly, but they can't. What they need to do instead is improve the UI to reduce the risk of bad device removals and improve the OS to reduce the consequences of bad device removals.
Do you make up that sort of thing? Admittedly, XP isn't my main machine, but I have the misfortune of having to transfer data with some regularity, and I can assure you that I can just plug and unplug flash devices and it just works. There is no data loss if you wait for the blinkenlights to stop flashing, and there are no complaints or dialog boxes. And it's the same on my Linux machine (where you can configure automount to mount and unmount the flash drive as it is being used).
Of course it can happen in Macs as well, I never said that it couldn't. And what should the Mac do? Give the user an electric-shock if he tries to unplug the device without unmounting it?
Well, iTunes DOES have a text saying "updating iPod" (or something like that) with a progress-bar. And the iPod has a text saying "Do not disconnect". I think those are pretty self-explanatory.
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
Of course it can happen in Macs as well, I never said that it couldn't. And what should the Mac do? Give the user an electric-shock if he tries to unplug the device without unmounting it?
I told you what it should do. In a nutshell, it should automatically unmount the device when it is not in use so that I can just unplug it safely when it is not in use.
And if I unplug the device while in use, it should do the obvious thing. So, if I unplug an iPod that is syncing music, some songs don't get transferred, nothing more. And if I unplug a USB stick that I'm writing data to, the data doesn't get fully written, but the file system should remain consistent. Making those things work is something a student could do as a senior project.
Well, iTunes DOES have a text saying "updating iPod" (or something like that) with a progress-bar. And the iPod has a text saying "Do not disconnect". I think those are pretty self-explanatory.
Yes, and that's a problem because there is no reason to tell me that.
Mark my words: Apple is going to fix this in a release or two and do exactly what I described. It's obvious, it's simple, and it's user friendly. And then people like you are going to defend it and are going to tell everybody how amazingly innovative Apple is.
No, I didn't make it up. I trudge through the "right-click on the System Tray icon, select 'safely remove hardware', get the pop-up, choose which device I wish to detach, click close, confirm that I really wanted to do so, close the pop-up, usually with a several second wait at each stage" rite on a regular basis on both my home and work XP machines.
I've only just unplugged twice, however - the second time I lost data, and both times I got "helpful" admonishments from XP. But then, this is still the company that decided it was a good idea for Windows to tell you off for not shutting down properly every time the box bluescreened. So I do things the Microsoft way, even though it's annoying.
"I Know You Are But What Am I?"
I have never seen a movie were it does anything.
Lars T.
To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck