Apple Computer has shuffled in new iPod Mini and iPod Photo players and dropped prices on some models. But one aspect of the release has some iPod fans furious.
The company introduced a higher-capacity, 6GB Mini, along with new 30GB and 60GB iPod Photo models, which can use an adapter to connect directly to digital cameras and display photos.
The new models expand the range of Apple's popular hard drive-based music players and increase the product line's capabilities in digital photography. A $29 camera adapter for the iPod Photo answers the call for connecting the player directly to cameras without the need for a computer as a go-between.
The 30GB iPod Photo costs $349, while the 60GB device costs $449. Previously, Apple offered a 40GB model for $499 and a 60GB version for $599.
However, with the latest crop of iPods, Apple is no longer including a FireWire cable in the box. The music players will still work with FireWire, if a cord is purchased separately, but only a USB 2.0 cable comes with the device. The move is part of a gradual shift on Apple's part to standardize the iPod on USB, which is far more common in the Windows world.
The other issue is cost. With the latest round of products, Apple cut its prices. By omitting the FireWire cord, the company can gain back some of the lost profit margins.
Nonetheless, some Mac owners were rankled by the move, saying that as recently as a year or two ago many Macs didn't include a USB 2.0 port. More than 1,300 people have signed an online petition calling on Apple to again include a FireWire cable with iPods.
The big question is how quickly the masses will want such features--and whether they'll pay more for a music player that has a photo side to it. The fact that people can connect an iPod to a digital camera and then connect the iPod to a printer doesn't necessarily mean that they'll want to.
A look under the hood of the flash-based iPod Shuffle shows that Apple is making music with two chips.
IDC analyst IdaRose Sylvester recently dissected a 512MB iPod Shuffle, purchased at retail, in order to determine what the tiny music player is made of. Her report, published earlier this month, reveals that Apple used two main chips spread over two separate circuit boards to foster the compact design of the music player, which was introduced in January. But despite the Shuffle's tiny size, Apple still left room for a relatively high profit margin.
... but I don't need it to be the size of a deck of cards. So I came up with my own version of the iPod. It's got 60 GB of hard drive space (and can upgrade to more). It can rip and burn CD's and can play DVD's at a full 1680x1050 resolution. It has wireless intenet access, has USB2/Firewire/RJ45 connectivity, and has its own AC power supply.
So, considering just the $449 for the 60 GB iPod, and maybe $649 for a big screen portable DVD player, that toal is $100 more than I paid for my option...... an HP ZV5240 laptop. It was one h--- of a buy, and it also works very well as a Windows XP computer (well... as good as any XP computer can run ;-))
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This week, we pass around Sony's new PlayStation Vita for some hands-on testing, check out HP's newest Beats Audio laptop, and debate the best and worst Valentine's Day gadget gifts.
EnerG2 opens a plant to make an engineered carbon that will improve performance of energy storage devices and make storage for start-stop hybrid cars less expensive.
up with my own version of the iPod. It's got 60 GB of hard drive
space (and can upgrade to more). It can rip and burn CD's and
can play DVD's at a full 1680x1050 resolution. It has wireless
intenet access, has USB2/Firewire/RJ45 connectivity, and has its
own AC power supply.
So, considering just the $449 for the 60 GB iPod, and maybe
$649 for a big screen portable DVD player, that toal is $100
more than I paid for my option...... an HP ZV5240 laptop. It was
one h--- of a buy, and it also works very well as a Windows XP
computer (well... as good as any XP computer can run ;-))