The fading iPod Classic lives on -- for now - Sep. 2, 2010 - 25 views
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Jennifer Norman on 06 Sep 10Can't believe I bought a new Ipod this summer....should have gotten an Itouch instead!
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Zalia Cabreja on 08 Sep 10Yup.... but if you don't want it....hey I'm here!!! :) your lovely student!!! but you had to wait just a couple more months.
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Demetrio Rodriguez on 08 Sep 10i think the itouch is better too
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Nick Chu on 08 Sep 10iPod Touch > iPod Classic
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George Guerrero on 08 Sep 10aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa jaja
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But the iPod Classic has one killer advantage: It features an amazing 160 GB of space for music, which is enough for 40,000 songs.
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But the iPod Classic has one killer advantage: It features an amazing 160 GB of space for music, which is enough for 40,000 songs.
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But the iPod Classic has one killer advantage: It features an amazing 160 GB of space for music, which is enough for 40,000 songs.
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And that's 16,000 songs if you don't fill it up with anything else. The iPod Touch's memory is typically crammed with apps and high definition video, which aren't exactly small files.
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It wasn't until the January 2004 debut of the more affordable iPod Mini that iPod sales really took off. In 2002, the iPod's first full year of availability, Apple sold 381,000 units.
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Apple's decision to completely ignore the iPod Classic means that 2010 will be the first year in the iPod's nine-year history in which the Classic doesn't get even a slight upgrade.
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That's plenty for most music lovers, but it will set you back $399 -- $150 more than the $249 iPod Classic.
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The company likes to push its customers to stay on technology's cutting edge -- and sometimes, its innovations take it a step too far.
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Apple did away with the buttons, replacing them with a confusing control pad on the headphones and sparking a backlash. But to Apple's credit, it listened to its customers' complaints about the switch: Jobs noted this week that people "clearly liked the buttons," and Apple put the controls back on the actual device in the fourth-generation version that will go on sale later this month
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Would Apple kill off a device that still has a cult following? Maybe. The company likes to push its customers to stay on technology's cutting edge -- and sometimes, its innovations take it a step too far.
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As I have seen, Apple eliminates some devices in order to keep people on the edge. For example now in days people who used to have the original Nano ipod know that they dont work as before and they dont sell them anymore in the stores. Apple as they say like to push their cutomers on the edge of technology and up to date.
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