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Lifestyle Reviews Everyone Can Use

iPods
ipod touch - iPod touch features a 3.5-inch (diagonal) widescreen multi-touch display and 8 GB or 16 GB flash drive. You can browse the web with Safari and watch YouTube videos on the first-ever Wi-Fi iPod. You can also search, preview, and buy songs from the iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store on iPod touch.
ipod touch
ipod classic - The iPod classic is a hard drive-based iPod (80 GB or 160 GB) featuring a large, widescreen color display, a Click Wheel, and the capability of displaying photos and videos. Like other models, it uses USB for syncing. The iPod classic is available in silver and black, and has an anodized aluminum and polished stainless steel enclosure.
ipod classic
ipod classic: The iPod classic is a hard drive-based iPod (80 GB or 160 GB) featuring a large, widescreen color display, a Click Wheel, and the capability of displaying photos and videos. Like other models, it uses USB for syncing. The iPod classic is available in silver and black, and has an anodized aluminum and polished stainless steel enclosure.  You can distinguish the iPod classic from the iPod (5th generation) by the last three digits of the serial number. The iPod classic serial number's last three digits will be one of the following: Y5N, YMU, YMV, and YMX.
ipod classic
ipod classic back & side view
ipod classic back & side view
ipod nano 2nd generationipod nano 2nd generation -iPod nano (Second Generation) is distinguished from other models by: Its smaller size. Its colors. The dock connector and headphones port are both located on the bottom of the unit.
ipod nano 2nd generation
ipod shuffle. iPod shuffle (2nd generation) is smaller than the original iPod shuffle and has no USB connector.
ipod shuffle 2nd generation
ipod nano collection - iPod nano (Second Generation) is distinguished from other models by: Its smaller size, its color, and the dock connector and headphones port are both located on the bottom of the unit.  .  The iPod nano (PRODUCT) RED Special Edition is an iPod nano (Second Generation) available in red and with a 4 GB or 8 GB drive capacity. With each iPod nano (PRODUCT) RED purchased, $10 from the sale goes directly to the Global Fund to fight AIDS in Africa.
ipod nano collection
iPod Touch
iPod Touch
The New Apple iPod Touch

Our tests of Apple’s new iPod Touch confirm that it is indeed essentially an iPhone without the phone. You get the same generous, 3-inch-wide multi-touch screen, the same superb interface that seamlessly links a multifaceted media player with a powerful Web browser, and the same Internet access via Wi-Fi.

Shedding the phone allows the Touch to be few millimeters shorter and thinner than the iPhone and about a half-ounce lighter--just 4.2 ounces. Of course, it also deprives you of being able to make calls, easily send-e-mails, or surf the Web on the cell network. But phone performance on the iPhone is only so-so anyway, and the phone is married to AT&T, whose performance is not the best by consumer standards.

The Touch costs $300 for our 8-gigabyte (GB) test model, which holds about 2,000 songs, or $400 for the 16 GB version--the largest capacity of any flash player on the market. We're still testing the iPod Touch--including assessing its battery life, which Apple claims is up to 22 hours for audio playback and 5 hours for video playback--along with the revamped iPod Nano. 

The first iPod that downloads. The Touch is the first iPod capable of downloading music, videos, and other content wirelessly. (iPhones will also have this capability later this month, when a software update becomes available). Other players and cell phones already offer wireless downloads, but the Touch generally implements downloading better than many of them. Unlike the Sandisk Sansa Connect, introduced earlier this year, the Touch allows users to buy songs; the Connect only allows you to stream or rent music from the Yahoo! music service for $15 a month. Unlike some other devices, the Touch allows you to share downloaded songs with your computer and other iPods you own. What’s more, should you lose your Wi-Fi connection during a download, you’ll be able to continue downloading via your computer when you get home.

Whenever the Touch is on and within range of a Starbucks T-Mobile Wi-Fi hotspot, a Starbucks button will appear on the Touch’s main menu. Pushing it will tap into the iTunes store and allow you to purchase the song that’s playing in the café or any other music from Starbucks’ collection. Access is free for those downloads. The service will be rolled out at select Starbucks across the country beginning in October.

The Touch’s headphone jack is not recessed, as is the one on the iPhone. That allows you to use any aftermarket headphone you wish without a special adapter. Also the iPhone’s jack is at the top of the device but the Touch’s is on the bottom, making it less likely that the cord will get in the way of the screen.


It Could Do Better
Some iPhone features are dropped. Besides losing the 2-megapixel camera, the Touch dropped icons for e-mail and text-messaging applications, Google maps, weather, stocks and notes. You can still access many of those features via the Safari Web browser, though now it takes a few extra steps.

Other iPhone niceties we miss include the side-mounted volume control, which allows you to adjust the iPod’s volume without taking it out of your pocket. The Touch does have a less convenient consolation feature: You can reach its iPod controls with a double press of the home button, where the iPhone demands that you press the home button and then the iPod icon on the screen. The Touch is also missing the iPhone’s speaker, which came in handy for watching videos without earphones, and the button on the iPhone’s headset cord that allows you to pause songs or advance to the next selection.

A dimmer display. The multi-touch display is also noticeably less bright than the iPhone’s under the same lighting conditions, although readability in bright light is still excellent. Other reviewers have also reported dimness and other screen problems in their tests, and some owners have weighed in on online forums. Apple has not yet publicly acknowledged the problem.

Relative bulkiness. The Touch’s maximum 16-GB storage capacity, though huge as flash players go, is puny compared with others players of about the same size, most of which are hard-drive models. For example, the iPod Classic, with 80 or 160 GB of storage, is thicker than the Touch but actually has a slightly smaller footprint.

Based on our tests, consider the Touch if you plan to do a lot of Web surfing or video watching, or if you want the most capacity you can get in a flash player. But weigh other players, including other iPods, if you don’t favor those activities and if your requirements lean to less or more capacity than that of the 16-GB Touch.

I suggest the 4 or 8 GB Nano, which is much smaller than the Touch. If you want large capacity, consider a video-capable hard-disk player like the iPod Classic, which offer 80 or 160 GBs of storage for $250 and $350, respectively. The Classic lacks Wi-Fi downloads and Web surfing and it’s heavier and thicker than the Touch. But its 2.5-inch screen, while smaller than the Touch’s, is big and bright enough to comfortably watch video, and its capacious hard drive will spare you from constantly thinking about what content to take with you and what to leave behind.

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