Toshiba's iPod Competitor 395
a lonely moose writes: "It looks like Toshiba basically copied Apple's iPod. They got cheap on screen size and unit weight, and without iTunes, it'll be darn hard to handle as elegantly as the iPod. Anyway, check out
MacCentral's article and the smoking forum at the bottom."
Removeable 5GB HDD (Score:5, Insightful)
That has potential... I see many options... Most of them along the lines of a decent replacement for the floppy disk finally.
The player itself seems no different from a host of others.
Re:Removeable 5GB HDD (Score:2)
5GB HDD as floppy replacement? (Score:5, Funny)
The Apple iPod can be split between music and data. So you could, in theory, put your absolute favourite music on it, and leave the rest of the space for a system folder (and some utilities).
Apples can boot from Firewire drives.
The new Apple XServe [apple.com] has, on the front, a FireWire port.
So any responsible sysadmin that has to look after an XServe _needs_ an iPod as an *ahem* emergency recovery disk.
Given that the Unix way is to have a "boot floppy" and a "fixit floppy", I'll go with Apple on this one
Re:Removeable 5GB HDD (Score:2)
check the link here [toshiba.com]. While it is lots of storage for a little space, it is restricted to the maximum transfer rates of the PC card interface.
Removable... why? (Score:2, Insightful)
So, aside from swapping your entire music collection with a buddy -- why in the world would you care if you can take the drive out and replace it?
Because.... (Score:2)
Re:Because.... (Score:2)
Not if I own a desktop, it's not. That's what the USB2 connector is for, right? So I can download songs from my computer to the portable? So who cares if I can move the drive from my computer to the player, if I can connect using a cord (and recharge the battery at the same time) already?
Re:Because.... (Score:2)
Re:Removable... why? (Score:2)
Re:Removable... why? (Score:2)
Re:Removable... why? (Score:2)
Re:Removable... why? (Score:2)
Re:Removable... why? (Score:2)
Re:Removable... why? (Score:2)
Re:Removable... why? (Score:2)
Well, if you have a laptop:
Not everyone has USB 2 yet. In fact, I can't think of one laptop that has USB 2 built in. Sure, they might exist. But no one has them anyways.
However, with this sort of removable hard drive, you can copy your music collection over a PCMCIA (PCI) interface rather than agonizing as your files copy over USB 1.x.
That alone is worth something. Granted, most users will be people who only own a desktop machine, and thus have no PCMCIA slot. But if you have a laptop this is fantastic.
However, I won't buy one because I simply don't need it.
Floppy, floopy, forever (Score:2)
Competition is good (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Competition is good (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Competition is good (Score:3, Funny)
How much faster do you want it to play the music, anyway?
:)
--T
Re:Competition is good (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple's iPod hardware is entirely compatible. It's just a hard drive, with MP3 data stored in a particular sort of file tree. It's the software that Windows and Linux need to access it, and Apple hasn't bothered making that for the simple reason that they're not in the business of making PC products.
XPlay [mediafour.com] and EphPod [slashdot.org] both work, separately or together, to bridge the iPod/PC gap just as iTunes already does for Macs. And they do so with Apple's blessing, because Apple already knows that being able to sell iPods to PC users would be a good business decision -- but using iPods to help sell iBooks and iMacs is, from their end, an even better one.
Apple Doesn't Understand The Price of Closed Tech (Score:2, Flamebait)
This is the standard excuse Apple constantly uses for shooting themselves in the foot. "We are not in the PC business" [which is why we implimented a completely proprietary way of doing what everyone else has been doing using standard protocols/hardware specs for years now].
Apple keeps hoping to lure in new customers and then snare them with their proprietary hardware/software combination ("You can only do that with our stuff, switch to Apple"). What they do not understand is that anything sufficiently compelling will be implimented elsewhere, on people's preferred platform (whatever it may be), and that relatively few people are going to be compelled to switch platforms on the basis of such things.
Wintel, for all of its faults, is at least open on the hardware side (even if you're unlucky enough to be running windows), and if you're using *BSD or GNU/Linux, it is a completely open system. Contrast this with Apples growing list of "works only with Apple" peripherals, from their iPods to their proprietary LCD monitors. To be fair Apple's OS X is based on an open and free system (*BSD), but if all of their filesharing and other functions are implimented with proprietary protocols on top of that, it means very little in terms of the overall openness of the system, which in turn translates to virtual imprisonment of the customer. That may be Apple's goal (just as it has been Microsoft and Sun's goal), but customers do not like to be imprisoned, even in a gilded cage, and Apple is playing a game that, rather than taking advantage of the growing backlash against Microsoft, is likely to put them squarely in the same camp from their users' point of view.
Perhaps eventually Apple will manage to ensnare massive quantities of new people into their proprietary lock-in products
I have friends who are not GNU/Linux users, who have come to hate Microsoft with a passion, but are unwilling to switch to Apple because they know that then not only will their software be monopolized (by Apple), but so too will their hardware, putting them in an even worse (and even more expensive) predicament. What is interesting is that they, even without understanding all of their options vis-a-vis FreeBSD and GNU/Linux, still have managed to develope a sense of the entrapment proprietary hardware and software platforms imply, and they are sick to death of it (having experienced it first hand from Microsoft on the software side).
Apple's leadership will have to learn, sooner or later, to work with open standards and make their products able to interact and function with computers in general, not just their particular brand. Until they do so they will never be anything more than a niche player, and likely a small niche at that. It is interesting how many people, desperate to leave Microsoft, are unwilling to switch to Apple because they see Apple's proprietary nonsense as even worse.
And you know what? Even though they are relatively uninformed users, they are still absolutely right.
It is frustrating to see a company that produces so many neat things behave in such a destructive manner. Destructive to their customers, destructive to the computing community and marketplace, and most of all destructive to themselves. One would have thought they would have learned from the last time they engaged in this particular folly and nearly went bankrupt as a result, but alas it appears not.
And I don't LIKE Apple... (Score:2)
What I can't stand is the disparity in software and support or price for parts. I know from experience manufactures gouge you when buying from them, but Apple positively rapes you. Need an Apple fixed? Good luck. The place I work at is one of the few in the area. Software? Games? You must be joking. Yes, they got a decent amount of the popular stuff and it's slowly getting better, but the parent is also right-- Their "we could give a shit" attitude is gonna kill em eventially and it'll continue as long as Jobs is at the helm (or is "Chief Politcal Officer")
Re:And I don't LIKE Apple... (Score:2)
Shrill, alarmist and wrong. There certainly are differences when buying/owning the number two platform, but your complaints are overstated for dramatic effect I think. I for one had enough of this hyperbole back in the mid-90's.
Alarmist? (Score:2)
Honestly though, I really have mixed feelings about the Mac. On one hand they represent a tremendous creative force. On the other hand it's a proprietary dictatorship, which in my shrilly, alarmist opinion is The Bad Thing (TM). There IS a reason why the PC market has a huge share of the pie, regardless of how loyal or fanatical Apple users may be. Why ya suppose that is? Whatever the reason, maybe Apple could use a healthy dose of it. You tell me. Actually, don't. I'll probably just get more of the irrational fanboy crap.
They give a shit if you go out and buy... (Score:2)
Of course, you're right about Mac licensing vs. Microsoft licensing, but then, Mac OS is your only choice.
Well of course... (Score:2)
Yay competition! (Score:2)
I say a little because it's USB 2, meaning it won't work with Macs right off the bat (connecting at USB1 speeds is a horrible idea).
$402 vs $399 means that they are *exact* price competitors for each other, where one has FireWire support and the other has ejectable disc support.
I suppose this means I can plug into my PC card slot and use iTunes (or the Finder) to update it at PCI speeds. Of course the laptop or PC card drive is still the speed bottleneck.
I wanna see if Apple ignores it (possible, since it isn't cheaper or exactly platform compatible) or 'improves' the iPod. It's plausible that the pricing of the Gigabeat is because the market will 'bear' the price of a $400 iPod
Re:Yay competition! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Yay competition! (Score:4, Informative)
While USB2 does have a theoretical maximum data rate of 480 Mbps compared to 400 Mpbs with FireWire, FireWire does a much better job of time-critical streaming with its isochronous mode. Thus you can actually use a much higher percentage of the theoretical bandwidth with FireWire.
Of course, we're talking 400 freaking Mbps here. A real-time stream of DV is only 25. Maxed out MP3 files are 0.32 Mbps. Heck, Panasonic is going to have 1280x720 HD decks that use FireWire later this year, and THAT is only 100 Mbps.
USB2 also has less bus power than FireWire, so it can't charge bus-charged devices like the iPod as quickly.
Also, while 1394b is coming, the name Gigawire is purely theoretical.
1394b includes faster speeds over copper and optical connections (800 Mbps initially, with 1600 and 3200 coming), with run lengths up to 100 meters. It'll also do 100 Mbps over CAT-5, so you can route real-time video over existing wiring.
There will be two new connector types. Bilingual cables will hook up to both legacy 1394 devices and 1394b. This means you can mix and match 1394 and 1394a devices and computers. There will also be the beta connector for 1394b only applications (not beta for "non-quite-done" but for the b in 1394b). There won't be any more of the 4-pin v 6-pin confusion in 1394b, thankfully. As long as you don't have any beta-only stuff, you can just use normal 6-pin FireWire cables for all your stuff.
Re:Yay competition! (Score:2)
Looks like a nice product... (Score:4, Interesting)
Using standards is always better (Score:2)
PPA, the girl next door.
Re:Using standards is always better (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, and perhaps compatibility with over, what, 10 years of legacy might have helped too.
HFS+ is interoperable, it's just that Microsoft doesn't implement HFS+, so yeah it's a pain to pay someone $40 to implement HFS+ support for you, but then what do you think Apple users have to deal with when buying PC oriented products?
Re:Using standards is always better (Score:2)
Nothing. The ability to read DOS formated disks and such has been in MacOS for at least 7 years, in the form of the PC Exchange control panel back in System 7.x.
Unless you are referring to other devices (such as firmware incompatabilities for graphics cards, lack of drivers and such)....then of course, I completely agree w/ you.
Cheers.
:)
They were thinking it would work on Macs (Score:2)
software integration!!!!!!!! (Score:2)
with the iPod had the in line remote though:( oh well maybe soon, if you inspect the headphone jack there appears to be three unused contacts arround it. rumors have been on the iPod sites that apple will release an external control for it but nothing official yet. maybe this will bring it to market sooner.
Not as bad as all that, Apple nuts (Score:2)
Second, the iPod has a lot more going for it than 5/10 GB and a FireWire connection. That thumbwheel on the front makes it insanely easy to navigate through the music stored on it (you just spiiiiiiin and click, versus click-and-click-and-click-and-click-and...). Instant sync with iTunes means that you can organize playlists on your desktop with a full-size keyboard and download them perfectly into your portable. If you've never held one, you'd be amazed how small and light it is.
Bottom line: Apple's not the only high-capacity MP3 player on the market, and they know it, but they can sell theirs for higher prices because (a) they're selling to Mac loyalists and (b) they've got ease-of-use down to a science, to a degree almost no other company can match. Believe me, they're far from running scared.
Re:Not as bad as all that, Apple nuts (Score:4, Insightful)
The amusing thing is, even though the press might compare the Nomad 3.0 with the iPod, the Nomad 3.0 was leaked on the Creative Nomad newsgroups about a year before the iPod was announced.
And all the specs were the same as when it was released.
The details of their Audigy stuff were released at the same time.
Simon
Re:Not as bad as all that, Apple nuts (Score:2)
True, but they might be soon. As we all know, Creative is putting Firewire (called SB1394) on their cards. Is it me, or might this be a hint that Creative might put out a Firewire Nomad sometime soon? According to their site, the Nomad Jukebox 3 has Mac support AND Firewire(SB1394). The old Nomadas worked quite happily with iTunes too but there is no indication of the Nomad 3 working with iTunes
Hmmmm (Score:2)
But the bad news is towards the end of the article, when it comes to availability. Isn't it always the case with new products thatr look darn cool, and pre-announcements to make them even more desirable?
Dammit, why are none of my friends in Japan for the World Cup. If only ....
That's Apple for you... (Score:2)
Re:That's Apple for you... (Score:2)
You've been waiting 8 months for, um, a $3 cost saving?
Or do you mean you don't want to buy the software that enables you to use the iPod on Windows machines? I guess to be fair, I guess official Windows support still is in the beta stage. The Gigabeat will probably reach US shores about the same time Apple updates to a 20gb iPod and official Windows support
Sticking with the pod (Score:2, Interesting)
The things the Toshiba seems to be lacking are:
a scroll wheel (which really seems like the ideal interface for navigation LONG lists)
recharging from USB cable(?)
The main reason I bought an iPod is it seemed like the first device I could actually use that would really take advantage of the Firewire ports on my computer, which I never ever used. The same seems true for this Toshiba and windows users. w/USB 2.0
I've never understood the market for these players (Score:3, Insightful)
So here's what I don't get...is the smaller profile of the device worth the extra $220?
Re:I've never understood the market for these play (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I've never understood the market for these play (Score:2, Funny)
I think I might too. Maybe you'll catch a cold from buttock-snot licking (?!?!), but eat Kraft Macaroni and Cheese straight from the box and you're likely to break some teeth.
Absolutely worth it. (Score:3, Insightful)
a) Carry around a big CD/MP3 player
b) Carry around those 8 CDs
c) Swap between those 8 CDs
d) Find the CD with the album I want listen to
e) Whenever I get a new album, burn a new CD that includes it.
With my iPod, I drop it in my pants pocket and I'm done. No fishing for CDs, no carrying cases, no saying "oh shit" when my CDs get scratched.
Absolutely worth it.
spreer
Re:I've never understood the market for these play (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm a BIOS developer and spend lots of long hours in a very noisy machine room hunched over prototype machines will all sorts of fan and other noise around... My iPod is small enough to drop in my shirt pocket which is a good thing because the amount of hanging cable to my ears is much shorter than a larger device on my belt (think about hazard getting caught in fans, etc).
Also the battery life (10 hours) is long enough that I can go all day on a major debug bender and not worry about my tunes dying right about the time I get to an interesting problem.
Also having multiple CD-RWs means I've got multiple CDs floating around the lab that I need to protect from scratches or from other people clipping, etc.
I may develop PC hardware, but I love my iPod (and yes... the iPod was enough for me to go out and buy a G4 PowerMac)
Re:I've never understood the market for these play (Score:2)
Kind of a simplification of the features, eh?
- Smaller profile
- No swapping of 8 CDR
- No burning of CDR... just copy over and go
- New hard drives will be made with larger capacities.
- These hard drives are PC Cards, so they can be used for other things as well as this device.
Yeah, I think that makes it worth an extra $220!
Re:I've never understood the market for these play (Score:2)
Re:I've never understood the market for these play (Score:4, Insightful)
Perhaps. Here are the reasons I can think of to justify the cost:
So in short, I think it's just a bit more than profile.
Re:I've never understood the market for these play (Score:2)
You need, um, a portable CD device, with, um, USB, SCSI, or FireWire, and those, well, are pretty big.
And you don't get the storage capacity unless you have a portable CD-RW device...
Battery life is the deal breaker for me (Score:2)
One of the beauty of Firewire is that the iPod or any device can charge off it. No need for an adapter.
Anyone know the battery life of the Gigabeat ?
Re: (Score:2)
Linux anyone? (Score:4, Funny)
Seriously though - what about Linux support? (Score:2)
I know kernel 2.5.2 has USB 2.0 support, but does USB 2.0 have some kind of generic storage support like USB does? What filesystem does the device use? If so, would it be easy to simply mount the device as a generic USB 2.0 filesystem without writing drivers?
Re:Seriously though - what about Linux support? (Score:2)
Device: Disks, CD-RW, etc.
Driver: usb-storage
Comments: Linux USB 2.0 support seems to work pretty well for the usb-storage devices that now exist, though it's slowed down since the usb-storage driver does not queue its USB requests. (Some devices will run twice as fast when that's fixed.) Most devices seem to use the In-System Design ISD-300 part internally.
Re:Seriously though - what about Linux support? (Score:2)
Could be better. (Score:2, Informative)
Myself, my iPod just arrived in the main today, so I've put my money where my mouth is. I'm off to work with it now!
5GB Drive for $321!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Only 5GB (Score:2)
I have 12GB of music (all legally ripped from my own CD's thanks...) so 20GB is the minimum I want from my mp3 player. you never know when you want to hear some Mozart or some Merzbow. I want it all on one player. Can't the device makers get that? Why not sell it it with no drive and offer a 5, 10 and 20GB option?
/b
Re:Only 5GB (Score:2, Informative)
The next step (Score:3, Insightful)
Then you have a portable media library.
hmmm... (Score:2)
Other features include...."
wait, you just told me why NOT TO buy it, and then go on like you were telling me why TO buy it??
this article is retarded.
Re:hmmm... (Score:2)
Re:hmmm... (Score:2)
read the comment slower. and the paragraph slower.
i'll give you an example: i'm selling poop, my competitor sells juicy hamburgers.
my poop is really stinking and not edible at all. it is full of bacteria and should stay away from your mouth. our competitors products can be eaten safely. other features of our poop...
DO YOU GET IT NOW?! they say its bad, its bad, then "other reasons why its good"...... the structure is completely wrong.
... Crackhead repliers.
Excellent Price (Score:2)
Buy it for value of the hard drive alone. The MP3 player is a bonus.
competition is good (Score:2)
Re:I will buy it (Score:3, Informative)
iPod copy "prevention"... (Score:2)
Re:I will buy it (Score:2, Insightful)
Could you define "better" with something more than Trillian. Everything I download has extra shit piled on. That's how they help recover their costs. In any case, there's no escaping bloat if you add or remove software from a windows machine every so often. You've never experienced "Windows Rot"?
As for the plethora of windows software...not that I want to get into the same old argument, but quality over quantity, dude. And there's this thing called the internet that lets you download all sorts of software without having to walk into a local computer store and pay tax/markup anyway.
I don't know the last time I bought shrink-wrapped software anyway...other than Quake3 for my Athlon.
Re:Advantage? (Score:3, Insightful)
plus, the work-arounds to using an ipod on a pc are well known. anyone who drops $400-500 on one of these is going to be at least a somewhat serious user.
and, in the end, the itunes interface with the ipod is simply superior to anything else out there.
i'm not so sure anyone is the winner-- except us as apple must have to lower the high prices on ipods now that they have direct competition on size and price.
just my two cents.
OT: SwordFishboy? (Score:2)
Re:Advantage? (Score:5, Informative)
1) The Ipod is smaller, lighter, and has a bigger screen.
2) The battery is a Lithium Polymer, which can support playback of up to 13 hours, by some user reports, while this hunk of junk may very well use AA's.
3) It costs, oddly enough, $10 more, even though Toshiba makes the hard disc, and it has *ahem* a smaller screen.
4) The backlight can't be nearly as good.
5) USB 2.0 can't power the unit, while firewire can, so I never have to bring an AC adaptor *anywhere*.
I think that you maybe didn't read the article?
Re:Advantage? (Score:2, Informative)
Hard to take you seriously when you can't even get simple facts straight. USB has always provided power to peripherals. Check their web site [usb.org] if you don't believe me.
Re:Advantage? (Score:3, Informative)
Advantage nullified (Score:3, Insightful)
Apple's plan to release Ipod with only apple software initially may have made sense but it's going to kill them in the long run if they don't get off their high horse.
Also, add to this that the Toshiba has some features that make it, in my mind, superior to the ipod. The fact that it's hard drive is removable is a definite bonus. Not only can I speed up transfers by hooking it up to my laptop's pcmcia slot, I can also upgrade the thing later if I need more space.
We'll see when these devices finally come out, but it seems to me that overall these are similar enough to cut into apple's sales in the long term. If apple decides to stick to selling to a base of apple customers, then they will never sell as many Ipods as Toshibas take on it.
Re:Advantage? (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, wait. We just read a product bragging page, and they didn't spend even a single line talking about their great battery life. What do you think that means, champ?
*yawn*
Re:Advantage? (Score:2)
Anyway, it weighs 25% more than the ipod. Cost more, smaller screen, and thanks to the laws of physics, whichever diety you identify with is pretty much the one who says that the tiny bit of power provided by USB 2.0 won't charge the unit until judgement day.
So, Toshiba pretty much managed to come eight months late to the party with an inferior product. I only wish I could be a fanboy like you and cheer them on.
Oh yeah, and I'm done responding to you. You couldn't argue your way out a speeding ticket if you were a hot chick.
Re:Advantage? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Advantage? (Score:2)
Re:Advantage? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd say many people are missing something that in retrospect may seem obvious.
The iPod contains a Toshiba drive (the same drive, or one twice the capacity.) Apple made a large purchase from Toshiba. There's probably more to that relationship than just one cash order. Apple may have given Toshiba cash to hold off selling the drives for other companies to put in other players, with a clause allowing Toshiba to sell their own version starting at some specified time, but holding off on the larger drive. I'm sure there's a relationship between the two companies we're not privy to.
Re:Toshiba is cheap. (Score:2)
I wouldn't buy an iPod then; they both use the same hard drive internally.
You did know that Toshiba make the hard drives for the iPod, didn't you?
Simon
Re:Still no Ogg... (Score:2)
Re:Still no Ogg... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Still no Ogg... (Score:4, Interesting)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but Ogg seems to take significantly more processing power to decode.
You're wrong :-)
I currently have my iPAQ sitting on the other side of the room playing an Ogg file. Ogg playing seems to take around 30% of the CPU time, while MP3 playing takes around 20%. That's with madplay - a high quality integer-only MP3 decoder - playing the MP3, and the integer-only version of the Ogg Vorbis reference decoder. Okay, the Ogg decoding takes more, but I'd guess that the Ogg decoder could be optimised a bit more as well...
Re:Still no Ogg... (Score:2)
Better than Gigabeat (Score:2)
--it's available now. It's been available for over 8 months now. It's compatible with Windows, but requires a FireWire card and a program to read HFS+ volumes
--it uses Windows Media Player on a PC, strangely enough, and iTunes on a Mac. It takes about 5 seconds to load 4gb of music on my G4-400, but then again why close iTunes? 0% CPU usage when idle.
Apple will probably drop the price as it unveils larger versions (20gb models) since the design has already paid itself off, and maybe even unveil a cheaper 2gb version to accomodate Toshiba's 2gb discs.
Oh, and the iPod *is* smaller and lighter, as well as easier to use, if that means anything.
Re:Better than ipod (Score:2, Informative)
FOR THE LAST TIME -
The drive in the iPod USED to cost $399. TODAY, it costs $99, RETAIL. I imagine Apple gets them for way less. A FireWire hard drive incorporating the same Toshiba mechanism used in the 5 GB iPod can be purchased for $99. (The FireFly drive).
Makes you wonder why they never lowered the price of the iPod when the price of the drive went down, doesn't it? Perhaps some pressure from other vendors will persude them.
Here you go. (Score:4, Interesting)
They already have [rhythmbox.org].
Rhythmbox, which "takes its inspiration from Apple's iTunes application" [rhythmbox.org], is a direct rip-off of iTunes. It's also what I point at each and every time someone mentions open-source innovation.
Innovation... (Score:2)
Of course *Apple* and *Microsoft* tend to *pay* the innovators by purchasing the software, instead of copying it (iTunes was purchased, as was DirectX)
I couldn't tell if you were sarcastic or not when you mention 'open-source innovation'
Re:Innovation... (Score:2)
Yep, that's the kind.
Perhaps, however iTunes is a very different animal on the outside compared to SoundJam.
The little I've used SoundJam, I really haven't liked it. iTuens, however, I have used since my iBook finally arrived back in January. Apple are known for their UI experence, and it shows. They tend to build innovation on a foundation of technology.
Yes, yes I was.
Re:mmm.... iTunes (Score:2)
Apologies (Score:2)
Anyway, yeah, it's an expensive proposition, and it's tough for some to swallow.
But really, iPhoto+Mac+Canon Powershot or iTunes+Mac+iPod or iMovie+Mac+Sony Handycam or iDVD+Mac+iMovie is really, really, really cool.
It's not worth it for just one of them, but all of them combined is really, really, nice.
Re:Apologies (Score:2)
That's because Apple is not a software company. They sell hardware, OS's AND apps. In order to sell the first they work on having great software. Apple doesn't want to make a few extra bucks by selling iPods or iTunes to PC Users, they want PC users to "wake up" and see that the Mac is the superior platform and buy one. Right or wrong, that is their motivation, and in that context, their actions make sense.
Re:It can't be any worse than the i-plod (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How the hell is this a copy? (Score:2)
Why bother with removable media when I don't ever want to remove the media. A 10GB drive need not be removed. And my interface is much more clever/robust than USB 2.
Re:Whatever. (Score:2)
Now that Apple gave up and is using Unix now, I seriously considered getting one for a few months. But, the price/performance still isn't there, and there's Apple's damnably stubborn insistence on making its products look as cartoony as possible. I'm sure to those elites to whom price is no object find Apples appealing and "cute", but for serious work, where you have to justify spending cash? I'll check again in a few years.
Re:and it uses electricity! what an obvious clone. (Score:2)
Ummm.... he meant upgrade as in "increase disk size", not as in "update firmware".
Unless you'd like to suggest how you're going to replace your iPod drive with a 20Gb drive in a year or so?
Oh yeah. Without opening it up and voiding your warranty, you can't.
Simon
Re:and it uses electricity! what an obvious clone. (Score:2)
I'm hoping that in a year or so, 3 solid days of music will still be enough to tide me over, and I won't feel a need to upgrade.
I can see where that would be a problem for your solution - I guess it might help if you had better software to manage what's on your player at any given time.
Well, given that I used to use a Nomad Jukebox with 6Gb of space on it, and I already filled that with half of my CD collection... and not to mention that I *don't want to shuffle crap onto and off of the player* -- I want to put it on there and forget about it -- I would already fill an iPod several times over.
Heck, these days a 20Gb might not fill it.
BTW: What sound quality do you store you MP3s in? I doubt you'd get 3 solid days of music if you recorded them at anything approaching high quality.
Simon