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I want to thank all the modders of the WWW who sell refurbished iPod Classic, SSD 1 (even 2) Terabyte storage, 3000 mAh battery (eternal), great DAC audio quality and the chance to store and listen to enormous quantities of Lossless audio files with proper headphones.
At a reasonable price and fair assistance services in case of need.
Am I a dinosaur? Probably
Do I care? No
 
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When I was younger, I made an "everything about iPods" guide for my English class (I don't remember why). Anyway, it was 30 pages long, and the first section ("identifying your iPod") was basically the same thing as this article. I went into way to much detail describing each each generation of iPod and labeling key features. I think this assignment was only supposed to be 2 pages or so, I spent way to much time on this, but it was so much fun!
 
Around that same time, the Apple watch was new and novel, so I purchased a used 6th gen iPod nano+watch band. When people saw me plugging in headphones to listen to music on my "Apple Watch", they thought I was so cool and some even gasped?. The iPod nano 2 was my first Apple device and I have been using various iPods ever since (and will continue to do so). Even though I now have Apple Music and Airpods Pro, I still go back to one of the many iPods in my collection at least 3 or 4 times a week.
 
How do I say goodbye to what we had?

-Easy, iPhone 14 here I come.

The good times that made us laugh
Outweigh the bad


-Not quite. I have to wear bi-focals after going blind watching that 1 inch iPod Nano Gen 3 screen for 3 years.

I thought we'd get to see forever

-Come on man! You knew Apple was going to come up with something new.

On the serious. If you remember hearing that originally on the radio, you...are old. I kid.

I bought several over the years and have loved them all. The "dumb" music player without 80000 buttons was terrific. RIP. Real. Zune. And now iPod. Thanks for the memories.
 
Ah one of the Nanos... "TV on a one-inch screen" :D

My iPod touch was my first iPhone. Couldn’t afford the real thing. :rolleyes:
Ditto. 3rd gen to be precise. When it came time for me to get a smartphone, I ended up trying out Android (Samsung Galaxy s2), and really enjoyed that enough that I continued to get Android phones since then, even to this day. Never had an iPhone! However, I liked the iPod Touch enough to also get the 4th and 5th gens when they got released. Never bothered with the 6th and 7th gens because there were no improvements. Same dinky 4" screen (which I will acknowledge was a positive for other users, but for me, I got the IpT4 and IpT5 for the display upgrades. Specifically, Retina and 3.5" to 4" respectively)
 
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Man those 128/256kbps connections were fire, I downloaded gladiator DivX 650Mb in like one day. Blew my mind.

A popular 128kbps MP3? Maybe 5-15 min if you were lucky.

Since Windows 95 and 128-256 internet connections, every step has been simply incremental when it comes to desktop computers and laptops.

The iPod though, magic. My art teacher in high school would allow us to use it in class. Such good memories.
Haha. Dialup was brutal. Once I had my ringtone set as the dial up aol connection sound and people had no clue. I remember finally convincing my parents to get my own second phone line. I remember trying to actually watch a music video in realplayer or quicktime thinking maybe this time it will look better or not buffer. Got broadband and was like holy shirt! I can actually really watch crap from the internet. Also to a teenager getting broadband was huge for (yes I admit it) porn lol. No longer did I have to leave the download om overnight and make sure I woke up early to hide it before someone got on the computer lol =)
 
Haha. Dialup was brutal. Once I had my ringtone set as the dial up aol connection sound and people had no clue. I remember finally convincing my parents to get my own second phone line. I remember trying to actually watch a music video in realplayer or quicktime thinking maybe this time it will look better or not buffer. Got broadband and was like holy shirt! I can actually really watch crap from the internet. Also to a teenager getting broadband was huge for (yes I admit it) porn lol. No longer did I have to leave the download om overnight and make sure I woke up early to hide it before someone got on the computer lol =)
I stayed at an Crosslands Economy Suite back around a decade ago. It came with free wifi for internet, but it was very bare bones. It was so slow that I couldn't even play YouTube videos! When it did, it was at 144p resolution (I didn't even know videos can go that low, even at that time!). I was pretty much limited to basic browsing, email, etc. (save for ponying up $10 a month for much higher bandwidth). Felt like I was back on dial up! Getting proper broadband later on at an apartment put me back in "modern times"
 
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I stayed at an Crosslands Economy Suite back around a decade ago. It came with free wifi for internet, but it was very bare bones. It was so slow that I couldn't even play YouTube videos! When it did, it was at 144p resolution (I didn't even know videos can go that low, even at that time!). I was pretty much limited to basic browsing, email, etc. (save for ponying up $10 a month for much higher bandwidth). Felt like I was back on dial up! Getting proper broadband later on at an apartment put me back in "modern times"
What's even crazier is to think back at the times when there wasn't EVEN wifi. That's as big of a leap as dial up to broadband as well. Holy crap! Your saying I can actually take my laptop outside.... mind blown. I even remember the keynote jobs did introducing air port where he lifted the iBooks and there was no connection
 
Ha! Very similar stories, indeed!

Were you active on the now long-gone Nike+ website, with its rankings and challenges and bulletin boards? I still find myself from time to time wondering about the mysterious Chuck Jonard, and whether he continues to run a couple of marathons 365 days a year ?

I wish I still had my first-gen nano, just for nostalgia reasons. Long after the battery died (by which time I was using an iPhone with the Nike+ app to log my miles), I heard about Apple's recall through which my nano would be replaced with a new model, so I sent my old companion in and received a sixth-generation nano. I used it a couple of times before deciding to just stick with my iPhone when using Nike+.
I regularly posted my runs to Nike+ for a few years, yes! I was always surprised at how much more active I apparently was compared to the average of my age group. I wondered if my Nike pod was misleading me to keep me going. :p

I actually found and charged my 7th gen iPod nano a few days ago. It still works fine, though judging from the battery indicator, it might not have enough juice to last a 5K now. Understandable for a 10-year-old device. :)
 
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Apple earlier this week announced the discontinuation of the iPod touch, and because it was the last iPod still available for purchase, its sunsetting effectively marks the end of the entire iPod lineup.

RIP-iPod-Feature.jpg

To send the iPod on its way, we thought it would be fun to take a look back at some of the most notable iPod releases over the last 21 years.

Original iPod (2001)

Introduced in October 2001, the original iPod was introduced as a device that put 1,000 songs in your pocket. It became one of Apple's most iconic and well-known products, and is one of the devices responsible for skyrocketing Apple back to success.

2001-ipod.jpg

The original iPod offered a hard drive with 5GB of storage space and a Scroll Wheel that physically turns, and it remains the only iPod with this design. It also featured a FireWire port to connect to a Mac, and it sold for $399. Apple followed the original iPod with an almost identical second-generation model in 2002 that featured a capacitive-sensing Touch Wheel with click buttons around the sides, and a third-generation model added an even more refined Touch Wheel with buttons above. The third-generation iPod also added a Dock Connector.

third-generation-ipod.jpg

With the fourth-generation model that came out in 2004, Apple introduced the Click Wheel, an iteration of the Touch Wheel that also incorporated the buttons. The fourth-generation model is notable because Apple continued to use the Click Wheel for years to come.

ipod-click-wheel-4th-gen.jpg

The iPod photo with its color display followed the fourth-generation model later in 2004, and Apple expanded the color display to all models in 2005 with the iPod with color display. Both of these were considered part of the fourth-generation lineup.

ipod-color.jpg

Apple added video capabilities in 2005 with the fifth-generation iPod, and this was also the first iPod that came in black aside from the special black and red U2 edition of the iPod.

u2-ipod.jpg

After the iPod video, Apple introduced the iPod classic, and several versions came out in 2007, 2008, and 2009, all of which were similar in design. The 2009 iPod classic was Apple's final iPod at the size, and it featured a 160GB hard drive, a Click Wheel, and a widescreen color display. It stuck around until it was discontinued in 2014.

ipod_classic_views.jpg

iPod mini (2004)

Apple's first iPod mini came out in 2004, and it was much smaller in size than the standard iPod. It came in several fun colors that include yellow, blue, pink, and gold, and it had a standard Click Wheel.

ipod-mini-2005.jpg

The iPod mini didn't stick around for long, and while there was a second-generation version in 2005, it was discontinued after that in favor of the iPod nano.

iPod nano (2005)

Replacing the iPod mini, the iPod nano is one of Apple's most interesting iPods because of the many major design iterations that it saw over the years.

ipodnano1.jpg

Apple started out with a slim black or white iPod nano with a Click Wheel, a color screen, and flash memory that allowed Apple to cut down on the size. The original nano was actually recalled due to a battery overheating issue, and it was replaced in 2006 with the second-generation version that had more rounded edges, a smaller form factor, and bright aluminum colors.

ipodnano2.jpg

For the third-generation iPod nano that came out in 2007, Apple went in an entirely different direction, and this nano was colloquially known as the iPod nano "fatty." It had a wider, squatter body with a wider display, and it came in several color options.

ipodnano3.png

The nano fatty only lasted for one year before being replaced with the once-again slimmed down fourth-generation iPod nano, which came in a whole rainbow of colors. It got a taller screen, a curved front, and an accelerometer for the "Shake" feature that let you shake an iPod to shuffle songs.

ipod-nano-4.jpg

Apple's 2009 fifth-generation iPod nano was similar to the fourth-generation model, but had a taller screen and it gained a camera and a microphone. It also came in glossier colors, but Apple kept the wide array of color options.

ipodnano5.jpg

The nano got a major design overhaul in 2010 with the sixth-generation version that was just a screen in a square-shaped body. It used a multi-touch display instead of a Click Wheel, and this is the version that people attached watch straps to, making it something of a precursor to the Apple Watch.

ipod-nano-6th-gen-watch-strap.jpg

Apple changed the design in 2012 with the seventh-generation iPod nano, reverting to the rectangular shape but leaving the multi-touch display in place. The nano from this era looked similar to a tinier iPod touch, featuring a Home button and support for multiple apps. The seven-generation iPod nano got new colors in 2015 before being discontinued in 2017.

ipod_nano_colors.jpg

iPod shuffle (2005)

Apple's first iPod shuffle was introduced in 2005 ahead of the second-generation iPod mini, and it looked a lot like an Apple TV Remote. It was Apple's first iPod with no display, featuring nothing but a control pad in order to keep the size down, plus it doubled as a flash drive.

ipod-shuffle-anniversary-wikimedia-commons.jpg

The second-generation iPod shuffle got a significant redesign in 2006, and Apple shrunk it to about half the size of the original and added a belt clip. It was advertised as the world's smallest MP3 player at the time, and there was even a little iPod shuffle dock for charging it up through the headphone jack. It launched in silver, but Apple eventually came out with additional colors like pink, blue, green, and orange.

ipod-shuffle-2nd-gen.jpg

The iPod shuffle got yet another redesign in 2009, with Apple adding a voice feature that let it speak the names of songs and albums aloud using text-to-speech. This is the model where Apple did away with the on-device controls, instead using headphones with an attached remote for playback.

ipod-shuffle-3rd-gen.jpg

In 2010, Apple decided no on-device controls was a bad idea, introducing the fourth-generation iPod shuffle. The fourth-generation model was the last iPod shuffle, featuring bright colors, a smaller chassis, and the return of the Control Pad.

ipod_shuffle_2015_lineup.jpg

The iPod Shuffle didn't receive any other design updates, though Apple did introduce new colors in 2015. It was ultimately discontinued in 2017.

iPod touch (2007)

The first iPod touch came out in 2007 alongside the iPhone, and it was a more affordable iPhone alternative that did not have cellular capabilities. It looked a lot like an iPhone with a 3.5-inch multi-touch display, and it came with WiFi support, Safari integration, and apps like YouTube, Mail, Maps, and Weather.

ipod-touch-original.jpg

The second and third-generation iPod touch models had the same design, but when the iPhone 4 came out in 2010, Apple also redesigned the iPod touch to have a similar look. It included a front-facing FaceTime camera, a rear camera, and support for iMessage, plus it came in black or white.

ipod_touch_2011.jpg

Apple redesigned the iPod touch again in 2012, and the fifth-generation model had a larger display and a thinner body, plus it was the first iPod touch to come in bright colors. It was released alongside the iPhone 5 as a pocketable computer with an A5 chip.

ipod_touch_5_colors.jpg

After the fifth-generation iPod touch, the design didn't change, but Apple introduced a sixth-generation model in 2017 and a seventh-generation model in 2019, both with updated chips. After the 2019 release of the seventh-generation iPod touch, the device went without an update for three years until its discontinuation earlier this week.

iPod-Touch-Background-Feature-2.jpg

iPod Replacements

Apple said that it decided to sunset the iPod lineup because the iPod's capabilities are now built into every Apple device, from the iPhone and the iPad to the Mac, Apple TV, HomePod, and Apple Watch.

ipod-touch-discontinued.jpg

Almost every modern Apple device supports the Apple Music service that Apple introduced in 2015, and it is also available on the web, on Android devices, and more, making the iPod superfluous. Apple is selling the iPod touch while supplies last, but it is already sold out in the United States.

You may still be able to find an iPod touch from a third-party retailer, but make sure to act quick because they're selling out quickly as people aim to get one of the last available iPods.

Article Link: RIP iPod: A Look Back at Apple's Iconic Music Player Over the Years
6th gen ipod touch is not supposed to be released in 2017
 
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