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Today marks the 18th anniversary of Steve Jobs unveiling the original iPod at a small event on Apple's Infinite Loop campus. While the iMac started Apple's renaissance in 1998, it was the launch of the iPod in 2001 that truly set Apple on a path towards becoming the world's most valuable company.

ipod-say-hello.jpg

Jobs famously pitched the original iPod as offering "1,000 songs in your pocket." The combination of its 5GB hard drive and 0.75-inch thickness was impressive at the time, with the device also featuring a two-inch screen, up to 10 hours of battery life, a FireWire port, and the first iteration of the iconic click wheel.

"With iPod, Apple has invented a whole new category of digital music player that lets you put your entire music collection in your pocket and listen to it wherever you go," said Jobs in Apple's press release from October 23, 2001. "With iPod, listening to music will never be the same again."


While many people were thrilled about the iPod, others were not so impressed. Here is a sample of some comments from the MacRumors forum thread about the iPod from the day it was announced, with some light editing for clarity:
I still can't believe this! All this hype for something so ridiculous! Who cares about an MP3 player?
Hey - here's an idea Apple - rather than enter the world of gimmicks and toys, why don't you spend a little more time sorting out your pathetically expensive and crap server line up? Or are you really aiming to become a glorified consumer gimmicks firm?
We live in the YEAR 2001... not 6,000 years from now when ridiculously awesome technology will exist. No other MP3 player has a hard drive like this... 5 gigs... Rio of the same size offers 64 megs... get over your moping... this is revolutionary... plus it's just the beginning.
This is not like any other MP3 player on the market, imagine being able to store several days worth of music at once! The iPod will be great for travelers, students, heck anyone who is really into music.
There are already two products similar to this on the market. The Nomad Jukebox and the Archos Jukebox which can come with a 20 gig hard drive. The iPod is obviously a lot cooler and has FireWire, but it is far from revolutionary. I for one am disappointed and think that Apple is making a mistake by trying to get into this market.
This is a nice product. A firewire MP3 player/HD with 5 GB capacity in such a small package. It is a little overpriced for such a device, though.
Opinions are similarly split in this Slashdot thread from the day the iPod was announced.

In an October 2001 column for The New York Times, well-known tech writer David Pogue described the iPod as "the most beautiful and cleverly engineered MP3 player ever," suggesting that it would become a smash hit if Apple lowered its price and made it compatible with Windows:
Apple clearly believes that the iPod's advances in size, speed, function and elegance are worth the $150 price premium, but not everyone feels that way. In an informal poll at the Macworld.com Web site, 40 percent of Mac fans indicated that they would not be buying an iPod, and every single one cited the price.

It should also be noted, however, that the remaining 60 percent had either already ordered iPods or were virtually drooling into their keyboards. They are among the first to succumb to the lure of the most beautiful and cleverly engineered MP3 player ever. But if Apple ever lowers the iPod's price and develops Windows software for it, watch out: the invasion of the iPod people will surely begin in earnest.
In July 2002, Apple did just that, lowering the price of the 5GB iPod to $299 and extending compatibility to Windows. iPod went on to become the best-selling digital music player in history -- at least until smartphones.

More links related to the original iPod:Apple Presents iPod press release
Apple's homepage on October 23, 2001
The New York Times announcement coverage
WIRED announcement coverage
UPenn Computing announcement coverageApple discontinued the iPod classic in September 2014, followed by the iPod nano and iPod shuffle in July 2017. The only model still available for purchase is the iPod touch, which received a minor refresh last May.

Article Link: iPod Turns 18: Here's What People Thought in 2001
 
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mozumder

macrumors 65816
Mar 9, 2009
1,283
4,416
lol timeless.

But mostly, people don't understand design and user experience.

They think nerdy features matter.

They don't.

The LESS you can do, the better. Flexibility is complications. Every additional option requires a piece of knowledge to operate. Doing what you need to do with the least knowledge is the ultimate goal.
 

840quadra

Moderator
Staff member
Feb 1, 2005
9,256
5,968
Twin Cities Minnesota
I still have my 15gb 3rd generation. The OG iPod Touch, since it was the first touch sensitive iPod with no click or physical buttons. still gets used and works great. I always thought the clickwheel was a step backwards from this design in some ways.

8095D3E9-A54D-4E0E-8F6A-703028521FB5.jpeg

Looking at the archives of this site, I sure do miss some of the old days, and chatting with users no longer active here!
 

keysofanxiety

macrumors G3
Nov 23, 2011
9,539
25,302
MacRumors' comments section could learn a lot from history. With very few exceptions, pretty much every negative comment made 5 or more years ago has been completely disproven with time. I'm sure it'll be the same 5 years later.

All of the below have been failures. Apparently.

Apple Watch, iCloud, Beats acquisition, iPad, MacBook Air, the latest MacBook Pro (and the model before that... oh, and also the one before that...)
 

Azeroth1

macrumors 6502
Apr 20, 2010
296
673
This one was my favorite, well said whoever you were!

We live in the YEAR 2001… not 6,000 years from now when ridiculously awesome technology will exist. No other MP3 player has a hard drive like this… 5 gigs… Rio of the same size offers 64 megs… get over your moping… this is revolutionary… plus it's just the beginning.
 

now i see it

macrumors G4
Jan 2, 2002
10,618
22,170
The iPod was convenient but hands down sounded like crap. It was the official beginning of the death of HiFi.
Never bought one. Didn't like what I heard.
 
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bb9

macrumors 6502
Apr 1, 2017
276
158



Today marks the 18th anniversary of Steve Jobs unveiling the original iPod at a small event on Apple's Infinite Loop campus. While the iMac started Apple's renaissance in 1998, it was the launch of the iPod in 2001 that truly set Apple on a path towards becoming the world's most valuable company.

ipod-say-hello.jpg

Jobs famously pitched the original iPod as offering "1,000 songs in your pocket." The combination of its 5GB hard drive and 0.75-inch thickness was impressive at the time, with the device also featuring a two-inch screen, up to 10 hours of battery life, a FireWire port, and the first iteration of the iconic click wheel.

"With iPod, Apple has invented a whole new category of digital music player that lets you put your entire music collection in your pocket and listen to it wherever you go," said Jobs in Apple's press release from October 23, 2001. "With iPod, listening to music will never be the same again."


While many people were thrilled about the iPod, others were not so impressed. Here is a sample of some comments from the MacRumors forum thread about the iPod from the day it was announced, with some light editing for clarity:Opinions are similarly split in this Slashdot thread from the day the iPod was announced.

In an October 2001 column for The New York Times, well-known tech writer David Pogue described the iPod as "the most beautiful and cleverly engineered MP3 player ever," suggesting that it would become a smash hit if Apple lowered its price and made it compatible with Windows:In July 2002, Apple did just that, lowering the price of the 5GB iPod to $299 and extending compatibility to Windows. iPod went on to become the best-selling digital music player in history -- at least until smartphones.

More links related to the original iPod:Apple Presents iPod press release
Apple's homepage on October 23, 2001
The New York Times announcement coverage
WIRED announcement coverage
UPenn Computing announcement coverageApple discontinued the iPod classic in September 2014, followed by the iPod nano and iPod shuffle in July 2017. The only model still available for purchase is the iPod touch, which received a minor refresh last May.

Article Link: iPod Turns 18: Here's What People Thought in 2001
It would have been fun if macrunners included the author’s names. THEN include what those same people say about the ipod six months or a year later.

Now do the same for the maxipad (ipad). LOL
 
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