What's wrong with the current wheel? Honestly, I don't see any issue with it. What would you change?
How about a 500 GB classic? 😀
Agree 100% with your comments. 256 GB SSD is now available in 1.8" size, that would be perfect. That and a better DAC than the cheapo one they're using now. Lastly, I'd like the headphone jack to be like the one on the MBP, where it's an electrical audio jack, but it's also a mini-Toslink SPDIF jack... for when I want to use my serious home DAC and stereo system.I want more storage, the more the better. A better DAC, like the 5g and 5.5g had. Like the title says, I want a MUSIC player. A Classic doesn't need to multi-function. I really like the no look function of the scroll wheel. The thickness or thinness of it is no big deal to me because mine spends 90% of it's time in my glovebox anyway. When I do take it out, the scroll wheel suits my simple needs and my simple mind. I might be in the minority on these views, but my iPod needs to do one thing and do it well. Nothing does it better than the Classic.
Why WAV? Apple lossless is identical 1:1 quality as WAV. So is FLAC and any other lossless compressed formats.I imported all my CD's onto iTunes in a WAV format so the file sizes are not compressed at all but it does take up a lot of space. I would love for the next iPod classic to have 250GB or a possible 320GB of memory space & improved battery life. If the sound quality isn't very good, I honestly haven't noticed a problem but I am still pretty new, then I would like improved sound quality. That is about it.
I have to ask the people of this forum:
Do you want a thinner Classic, more storage, ect? Select multiple options and lets see where we are.
I want a 250GB iPod Classic. I love music and my library is about 50% Apple Lossless now, and I can tell the difference in the quality. I don't want to down convert to 128kbs EVER, and I'm not sure 256kbs is good enough either (what I used before Apple Lossless and 2TB hard drives). I don't care if it is as thick and heavy as the iPod Photo, I was cool with that then.
What do you all want and why?
Why WAV? Apple lossless is identical 1:1 quality as WAV. So is FLAC and any other lossless compressed formats.
Like most of you all I want is a larger hard drive. I use mine in the usual fashion as a music player, but I also do large file transfers with it, so an extra 10-12 gigs of available storage space is valuable to me.
Keep the storage big.
Keep the features simple.
Keep it reliable (still using a 30g Photo version)
Keep the price low.
Keep making it!
Because WAV is completely uncompressed & it is the full file. If you buy the totally uncompressed file, you can still import it in a lossless format but it doesn't go the other way around. You can upconvert lossless to WAV but it wont be 100% the same quality as the original WAV file would have been. Let me buy the uncompressed file & do with is what I want.
Is old fashioned spin drive fast enough for multi-touch interface? If yes, lose the physical click wheel, keep the same form factor of iPod Classic, boost storage to 220GB (Toshiba or some other has managed to produce such micro sized HDD), slap the current iPod Touch on top of it. Yes, the iPad 1G's aluminum back would look fantastic on iPod Classic.
Or just keep the form factor (I love the width & length), use iPad 1G aluminum back, put in iPod Touch 4G internals & modified LCD, 128 GB max, voila, you have a larger iPod Touch or an iPad Mini for extreme mobile gamers.
"iPod Classic Re-Defined."
"The Classic as You've Never Seen It Before."
"The Classic. Still Here."
Perhaps you've been misinformed. Apple Lossless as well as FLAC indeed store a perfect bit-for-bit representation of the audio data that a .WAV or .AIFF file contains; the Apple Lossless and FLAC codecs are simply more efficient with its method of storing those bits. Reconverting the Apple Lossless or FLAC file into .WAV or .AIFF indeed restores every single original audio bit, in a very similar way that .ZIP files do to documents/binary data.
No sound data, and thus no sound quality, is lost at all; that's why it's called lossless.
EDIT: Another thing you may notice: Apple Lossless and FLAC have standardized metadata sections that allow information like artist and song title to be recognized across applications and even OS platforms. WAV files don't; metadata stored in a WAV file by one application are not guaranteed to be readable by other applications.
...this "Ability to down-convert on transfer to 256kbs" can be implemented in software (iTunes side)