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#23768
kyus2007
kyus2007

Feb 09, 2007
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[PG] Parental Guidance Suggested

i pod nano 6

Design and Features



Probably the sweetest part of the new Apple iPod nano is the surprise announcement that caught every site and publication off guard. Even the "insider" Apple fan sites missed this one coming. The second surprise is that Apple decided to replace their infamous iPod mini with a flash player with roughly the same storage space (the Apple iPod mini was originally introduced with 4GB of storage). It only make sense that Apple phases the mini out. Most 5GB players out now feature color displays, FM tuners and a myriad of features. Apple is clever to introduce a player with the same storage space as their mini, while using flash memory; it again puts the company back on top of the ingenuity chain.



In what can be considered a combination of the iPod Shuffle and the full-sized iPod Photo, the nano is a little wider and taller than the Shuffle at 3.5" inches tall and 1.6" inches wide. But since the player uses NAND Flash memory (developed by Samsung) instead of an internal mini hard drive, the nano is only .25" inches deep. That's thinner than your typical #2 pencil! Available in black and iPod white, the new Nano comes with a 1.5-inch color LCD display and a navigation wheel reminiscent of the iPod mini. The back of the nano is bathed in a shiny chrome mold. If you are worried about getting visible marks or fingerprints on the front of your nano, we recommend you go with the white version over the black. Plus, most accessories out there for Apple's products are white anyways. Expect to get fingerprints on the back of both units.



Powering the iPod nano is a built-in lithium ion battery which is non-removable. Apple says you should be able to get 14 hours of battery life on normal use, but shoot a little lower like 12-13 and that will be a little more realistic. 14 hours for a flash based player is not very long, but if you take in mind that the nano has a 1.5-inch color display, we suppose that sounds about right. The biggest downside here of course is that the battery is not removable, and with Apple's history of battery issues, this could pose a problem, but our fingers are crossed.



The nano uses a USB cable to connect to your PC or Mac and interfaces directly with Apple iTunes only. You should be able to store around 500 songs encoded at 128kbps AAC on the 2GB version and 1000 songs for the 4GB version. If you plan to use the nano for storing photos, you should be able to store around 25,000 photos on the 4GB player according to Apple. The iPod nano supports the following formats: AAC (16 to 320 Kbps), Protected AAC (from iTunes Music Store), MP3 (16 to 320 Kbps), MP3 VBR, Audible (formats 2, 3 and 4), Apple Lossless, AIFF and WAV. If you are a current Napster To-Go, Real Rhapsody or any other 3rd party music subscriber, get ready to cancel your subscription and switch to Apple iTunes, because that is the only music subscription service the iPod family supports. The iPod nano comes with white ear bud headphones, a USB data cable, and a dock adapter that lets you use the nano with future Apple iPod peripherals that are part of the "Made for iPod" program (the dock adapter will not with with docks designed for earlier iPod models, but the nano might still work with these docs without the dock adapter being needed.)



Other cool features that the iPod nano supports include a 20-setting equalizer, sleep timer, various alarm modes, contact manager, world clock, calendar, audio book playback and more. For complete specifications, please click on the specs tab and link found above and below this review.



The iPod nano is compatible with Mac OS X v10.3.4 or higher and Windows 2000 SP4+ and Windows XP Home or Professional with SP2 or higher installed. The iPod nano comes with a 1 year limited warranty which includes 90-days of telephone support.


Setup and Use



If you are familiar with any of Apple's Click Wheel used in other versions of the iPod you will feel right at home with the nano since its exactly the same. The Click Wheel is used for controlling playback (pause, play, fast-forward, rewind and accessing the menus.) The nano uses the same easy to use touch-sensitive part of the wheel to scroll menus, browse music and control the volume. The Click Wheel can make it a little tricky at first to skip songs (we frequently end up changing the volume instead due to the thumb sliding ever so slightly in one direction or other), but after some use it becomes easier to do. This is an important
[PG] Parental Guidance Suggested

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