Instead of a screen, the face still featured the classic, circular iPod hardware controls. It even had a physical off switch!
The iPod once reigned supreme in the realm of portable music. Hackers are now working on preserving one of its less lauded functions — gaming. [via Ars Technica] The run of 54 titles from 2006 ...
This build comes to us from [Hugo] who made the painstaking effort of removing the old NAND flash storage chip from an iPod Nano by hand, soldering 0.15mm enameled magnet wire to an 0.5mm pitch ...
On some Apple products, including the M4 iMac, MacBook Pro, and iPad Pro, as well as the Studio Display, a feature called nano-texture glass is available. This is something that was first ...
Clip: This is an excellent rectangle. Kim: But sales have been in decline for over a decade. How did the iPod go from being one of the most popular gadgets to being basically nonexistent?
But the Mini’s time in the spotlight was short-lived. At Macworld 2005, it was succeeded by the iPod Nano. The Nano would sell for the same $249 price and still held 1,000 songs in your pocket ...
The iPod changed drastically over the product's lifetime, with the move to color screens, the Shuffle, the Nano and eventually ... the small size and gave it a clip. The idea of the iPod Shuffle ...
Apple has officially added the last iPod nano and iPod shuffle models, as well as the iPhone 6, to its global obsolete products list. The 2017 12-inch MacBook and the sixth-generation iPad have ...
In July 2015, Apple updated the iPod Nano and iPod shuffle for the last time. The 7th generation iPod Nano and the 4th generation iPod shuffle proved to be the last products of their kind.
After only 18 months, the iPod mini was dead, and Apple’s obsession with miniaturisation began in earnest. The iPod Nano was the result ... with the dinky second-generation ‘clip’ model, which was ...
The click wheel iPod was once a gaming machine. Now, people are trying to keep its games available before they’re lost forever.