Apple Replaces B/W White iPods with Color Screens 113
FlameboyC11 writes "A quick check at the Apple online store shows no sign of the black-and-white screened 'white' iPods. The iPod Photo has replaced them in the 20GB and 60GB categories, but is keeping the same price scale ($300 for low end and $400 for high end). This seems like such a quick switch to color, perhaps a video player is coming faster than we think?"
Nope (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nope (Score:1, Troll)
What is it with OGG Vorbis anyway? I've been sitting here at my freelance gig with my click-wheel iPod for about 20 minutes now while it attempts to play a 17 Meg OGG Vorbis file (have to hear my "alternative" music with an "alternative" format, you know). 20 minutes. At home, on my Rio Karma running WMA, which by all standards should be a lot slower than this iPod, the same operation would take about 2 minutes. If that.
Re:Nope (Score:4, Insightful)
Ogg Vorbis is completely irrelevant to me and the majority of music player owners.
It is an obscure container format (OGG) and codec (vorbis). It is somewhat popular with a small clique of linux geeks because it is open source and royalty free. Unfortunately, it requires either an FPU (which the iPod lacks) or a lot more integer capacity than the iPod could provide. There are also some echo artifacts which can occur with vorbis.
Re:Nope (Score:1, Funny)
And because they're a bunch of closet homosexuals who like the manly man bearded guy on the logo.
"OGG?" Isn't that the sound of someone choking on a penis?
you are WRONG (Score:1)
don't spread misinformation with such conviction, please.
Re:you are WRONG (Score:3)
It barely registers on the radar screen on of the mainstream. OGG support does not make financial sense given its limited appeal. I'm sure OGG Vorbis is impressive from a technical point of view compared with Mp3 but it offers nothing over ACC.
The mainstream has no interest in OGG Vorbis or installing linux on their iPods. Deal with it. Linux belongs on
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Sure, I have Winamp on my desktop computer, and I think it's set up to play Oggs. But Winamp is dying (if you'll pardon the cliché), and Windows Media, Real, and QuickTime don't (easily) support Ogg. When I first heard about Ogg, I thought it was an interesting idea, but now it just seems like a hassle in practice. I mean, I have several MP3 players and
Re:Nope (Score:1, Troll)
Of course, it wasn't meant that way. It was a way of opening up discussion as to why a few people seem to insist upon Ogg Vorbis support when the entire industry seems to be deeming it irrelevant, or at best an afterthought.
A *real* troll comment would have been to question whether Ogg Vorbis is any good, or to use some sort of hackneyed crap about standards.
I can only assume that the people who moderated me are hair-trigger personalities with no interest
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Re:Nope (Score:1)
You know, it's not a far cry to add a new CPU, or a second CPU, now that they've upped the battery life to a steady 15 hours. Sure, video will drop it back to the 8 hour range, but that's the trade off.
Oh, and DAMN IT ALL. I just had my iPod serviced and they replaced it with the equivalent 4th gen. Guess you can't always win
Re:Nope (Score:1)
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Add an onboard MPEG-4 video decoder and you could also do some serious video work. Of course, both of these additions would drastically raise the price of the iPod, so this might be something they would introduce in the higher end first (like they did with the iPod Photo).
It'll be interesting to see what happens for sure.
Re:Nope (Score:1)
All I know about it, is that when the ipod-linux port was started, it was somewhat difficult due to some unknown customizations/hacks that the cpu uses... It's some type of a dual-core setup, one dedicated to decoding audio, the other for UI things. Linux ARM code ran on it just fine, but the hardware needed both pieces to do its job right.
That said, that was then, and not now, and things may have changed..
Re:Nope (Score:5, Informative)
It seems the first three iPod generations had two 90 Mhz ARM7TDMI CPUs. The fourth, the mini and the photo have two 80 Mhz ARM7TDMI. This information is brought to you by this page [scoutingaround.com].
wikipedia [wikipedia.org] agrees:
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Thought you might find this funny. From today's issue of The Onion [theonion.com]
Dead iPod Remembered As Expensive
VENTURA, CA--A third-generation, 30-GB iPod, serial number AP356372, died early Monday morning at age 2. "I'll never forget all the great music it used to play during my workouts," said the late iPod's owner Sarah Zartman at a brief memorial held over the junk drawer. "It was convenie
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Re:Nope (Score:1)
Re:Nope (Score:1)
Re:Nope (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Nope (Score:2, Informative)
I think they got something like 10 or 15 FPS... And I doubt you could keep up a consistent rate of motion for any longer than a minute.
Re:Nope (Score:1)
The greyscale iPods were capable of playing video. But with a higher bit depth I don't know if the color iPods will be similarly capable.
About Time Too! (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, you don't actually *need* colour if you just want to listen to music, but it's more vibrant, more dynamic and fits better with the look of OS X.
And the brick game looks a little nicer too. I was hoping for Arkanoid, but there you go.
A video iPod would have to be very large to be worthwhile (I'm more than doubtful of the video success of the new Sony PSP, but it'll take a while for the results to come in on that). A large unit contradicts what the iPod is all about - a small, convenient device for a single purpose.
Lastly - I don't see why people want video while they're out and about. Audio I can understand - you can easily walk around and listen to music. Video? I look forward to the first hysterical warnings brought on by teens walking accidentally into traffic while watching their PSPs. You just can't watch video and do other things. It's too intrusive.
Re:About Time Too! (Score:4, Insightful)
The iPod Photo plugs into the video-in jack on your TV and displays the images on there.
The iPod also has stereo audio out. Duh.
iTunes has started selling video content. But why?
Put the pieces together.
It may not be for a while, but I would bet money that we'll see iPods that are capable of playing QT7 HD/MPEG4 video through a standard RCA AV cable when plugged into a Televison.
Re:About Time Too! (Score:2)
It's not hard to think of specific uses, but I can't think of good, general uses that show reasonable value.
Re:About Time Too! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:About Time Too! (Score:5, Insightful)
iMovie now supports HD video, as does iDVD, and QuickTime 7.
I know that I would rather edit, export a HD movie, dump it on my iPod and bring it over to a friend's place to preview than waste time burning DVDs of rough cuts.
This shit is cool. And it fits in well with the way Apple seem to be going with iLife.
Re:About Time Too! (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:About Time Too! (Score:2)
You mean "think different(ly)"? (Score:2)
The use of the expression "outside the box," ironically, is so businessspeak cliche that it's become a sign of conventional thinking.
(That said, I do agree that some signs are out there. Personally I'd suspect Apple wanted to sell a sort of iPod cradle/set-top box instead, not fold video into the main iPod line. Be a good product line to hold them over for the intel chip CPUs.)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:About Time Too! (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll go one further and speculate that they reached the point where adding it to the low-end model was probably cheaper than keeping the B&W screens around.
This way, they have one stock display part going into all full-sized iPods. Less inventory management is usually a good thing.
Re:About Time Too! (Score:2, Redundant)
And yes, I don't think the current tiny screen would work well, which I'd suggest using the 320x480 screens used on some Palms, T5, and the Tapwave, because those screens are beauti
Re:About Time Too! (Score:2)
I agree that video on an iPod-sized screen would be a bit painful, but I think the PSP screen is just big enough. What I think might end up being the biggest hurdle for PSP as a video device is the idea of buying separate me
Malibu Stacy - NOW WITH HAT!!! (Score:1, Troll)
Just moving to color screens for all the 'big' iPods is not new.
I have an iPod. I love it. But Apple has been really complacent with it's development for the last while. Then again, it's poor PPC faithful are in even worse shape (I have no problem with the x86 switchover, but in the mean time almost their entire PPC line is desperate for updates).
Complacentcy will kill ya. Look out Apple. For the 'kings of innovation' there isn't much to see for the last while.
Re:Malibu Stacy - NOW WITH HAT!!! (Score:2)
I'd say they're cooking a lot more inside of Apple; this is still major revision 4 of the iPod. Gen 5 could bring us a whole host of things we weren't expecting (bluetooth remote? sync to cell? wifi? bigger color screen? video?). The options are really limitless. This is just more
Re:Malibu Stacy - NOW WITH HAT!!! (Score:2)
Can you replace the battery? Especially now that there's a color screen to drain even more of it?
Re:Malibu Stacy - NOW WITH HAT!!! (Score:2)
If you care so much about user replaceable batteries, use some other player.
Re:Malibu Stacy - NOW WITH HAT!!! (Score:2)
"for the last while"? sounds like someone wants to make a point but has no facts or evidence so just uses meaningless vague language. congratulations, pick up your MBA on the way out.
Re:Malibu Stacy - NOW WITH HAT!!! (Score:2)
Last year was the iPod mini, this year is the iPod shuffle, so it's not as if there's a drought. If they don't release a new 'high end' model next year, then Apple will be forced by market economics to play the volume game, because prices can onl
Re:Malibu Stacy - NOW WITH HAT!!! (Score:2)
The only thing of note they've released is the iPod Shuffle in the last year
What the hell are you and the GP talking about?? Apple has done a crapload this year. They released iLife 05, iWork, Tiger (a signifigant upgrade to the Mac OS), and probably more software I'm forgetting; They released the Mac Mini, they have updated (if I recall) every one of their computer lines (for instance
Re:Malibu Stacy - NOW WITH HAT!!! (Score:2)
Of course I was pretty specific in only mentioning the iPod, iPod mini, and iPod shuffle, and the article talks about iPods...
So if we narrow the conversation to only mp3 players, yes, Apple is taking their sweet time (complacent). I expect another revision of the iPod with the new ARM core powering the mini, giving them a good battery life improvement without changing anything else.
Then if we don't see some real 'improvement' there is t
Re:Malibu Stacy - NOW WITH HAT!!! (Score:2)
Increased processor speed is not "innovative." Nor does it mean much to most users, these days. Apple has been making some great software and an innovative OS. That's way more important than mere clock speed. What's the point in having a fast clock if you haven't got good software to run on it
By the way... (Score:2)
I like the U2 edition's colors, but it just wouldn't match my snowflake iBook.
Re:By the way... (Score:2)
Re:By the way... (Score:1, Informative)
Of course, it does come at a higher price (though sans U2 branding).
Cheapest alternative: one iPod, a Sharpie, and lots of patience :)
Visualizer (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Visualizer - slide shows! (Score:2)
http://www.apple.com/support/ipod/tutorial/ip_get
Dude, comb your hair (Score:1)
You've obviously got a weird cowlick thing going on on the left side of your head...
Crow T. Trollbot
Re:Dude, comb your hair (Score:1)
Re:Dude, comb your hair (Score:2)
Re:Dude, comb your hair (Score:2)
The "dumb" comment was also supposed to be in jest.
As this demonstrates quite well, sometimes it is hard to convey humor purely over text. No timing. No inflection. That's why the emoticon -- which I guess I need to use more.
Technology (Score:1)
Now. I'm a big Apple fan... But I think that the iPod is getting quite too popular. I can't go walking without seeing 10 people with it... Ahh!
And no, I don't have an iPod. It's price is quite too high for my budget.
Re:Technology (Score:2)
Good product -> Popularity.
Popularity -> Volume
Volume -> Affordability
Affordability -> Popularity
So the longer you wait, the more affordable it will get; however, it will get to the point, as it is more affordable, that you can't go walking without seeing 20 people with it.
iPod minis are only $149 from the Apple sale store (these are the older last year models, with 8 hour battery, instead of the new 16 hour battery).
Video player?! I think not (Score:1)
I don't know how fast you think its coming - but I think it will be a cold day in Cupertino before we see one of those.
A coulour screen is one thing but even the photo functionality on the iPod itself hasn't caught on. It seems that the most common use (and even this isn't common) is actually to hook the iPod up to a TV to show off the photos, not on the dinky little screen of the iPod. Video would be an order of magnitude worse.
Re:Video player?! I think not (Score:1)
Color pods !=vPod. Airport Express Video is future (Score:2)
it can hold a tiny h.264 decoder chip from Texas Instruments, and can have a DVI/HDMI/S-VHS output to connect to your plasma/LCD/Standard TV. It also, of course, already has the audio output.
Charge $150 for it - that's a duable price - and stream HD and SD h.264 content you've bought from the iTunes Video store - bamo.
You're watching movies and TV shows you've paid $2 a piece for - instead of waiting for the DVD to come
Re:Color pods !=vPod. Airport Express Video is fut (Score:2)
As Seen on TV has been strangely quiet since the x86 announcement...
Re:Color pods !=vPod. Airport Express Video is fut (Score:1)
Re:Color pods !=vPod. Airport Express Video is fut (Score:2)
He may have been an Apple guy or he may have been someone posing as an Apple guy, but he seemed to know his stuff and put his points well.
Re:Color pods !=vPod. Airport Express Video is fut (Score:1)
i hope (and my faith in a portion of humanity rests on this hope) that such things are rare if not unheard of and you are only conjecturing on a hypothetical possibility of something that John Doe might think of pondering while trying to come up with a good "what if" line for a short artistic work he might get around to writing.
awesome. (Score:1)
Some other tidbits (Score:5, Informative)
The 30GB iPod is no more.
The 1GB iPod shuffle is only $129 from now on.
Re:Some other tidbits (Score:3, Funny)
Well, of course it is, silly. I just bought one for $149 a few weeks ago.
iTunes update designed to kill off podcasting! (Score:1)
Seriously though, this has rendered my favourite podcasts, with the exception of the BBC's Today programme and From Our Own Correspondant, co
Re:iTunes update designed to kill off podcasting! (Score:2)
Bittorrent should work fine. And don't forget nyud.net works with any slashdotted resource.
Re:iTunes update designed to kill off podcasting! (Score:1)
RikF
Re:iTunes update designed to kill off podcasting! (Score:2)
If you want it automatic, write an Applescript that nyud-net-ifies the URL of the podcast.
Otherwise, you'll want to make the torrent client a proxy (listening, say, on port 6161) that recognises URLs of podcasts that have torrents available and fetches them, otherwise just do the regular lookup... and then set your network prox
Re:iTunes update designed to kill off podcasting! (Score:2)
I've also seen more than one plug-in for Bittorent clients to check a RSS feed and start queue up any torrents in the feed.
The solution is there, it's just getting people to use it.
Color vs. battery (Score:1)
Good thing I already have an iPod ;-). Also, this announcement didn't mention the iPod mini. I assume they are still B&W?
Re:Color vs. battery (Score:1)
Re:Color vs. battery (Score:2)
Driving a color screen uses up much more batteries then a simple B&W one does. Personally I would prefer increased battery life - I don't feel the need for color in my music player.
Actually, the new color iPods tout 15-hour battery lives. I don't know what the previous iPod photos had, but my B&W 20 GB iPod from the last line claims 12 hours. Sounds like an improvement to me.
Re:Color vs. battery (Score:2)
Re:Color vs. battery (Score:1)
My G5 isn't fast enough for a video iPod (Score:5, Insightful)
Being Apple its going to come in H.264. Thats great. I love playing back H.264. What I don't love is encoding it. It took me over 24 hours to encode a 2 hour DVD. As my G5 can only just handle playing 1080i there seems little chance of an iPod handling it in the near future (hell, my powerbook can't do it). So do I download the 1080i then re-encode for my iPod, or do I download the 1080i version and get the 480p version for free? I don't think so. It seems more likely that Apple will charge us twice, or not offer the 1080i version. As for re-encoding, that seems unlikely too - unless the iPod has re-encoder built into it.
As this is obviously a post designed to generate speculation...
iTMS is not a good place to get movies. A good movie requires 2 hours on continuos attention, and on average I'll watch a purchased DVD twice. Music can be enjoyed in the background and I'll listen to a good song twice a day for a month. DVD is not even like books. In general, you can (even though its hard) put a good book down at any point and still enjoy it as much. Also, DVD take up too much space. iTunes is good, because I don't have to look for a CD anymore. Everything is in one place and instantly accessable. To be equivalent, 1080 would require home users to have close to 1TB of storage. Not unlikely, but not now.
iTMS is a great place for TV. I wouldn't mind picking up a 480p TV show. I watch TV exactly once. I know this, so I don't mind deleting it once I'm done - it hurt at first, but I haven't regretted it once (I'm a natural hoarder). I consume TV differently to DVD. I wouldn't mind there being advertisements. I wouldn't mind them tracking my viewing habits and giving me adverts that I want. I would like to be able to tell my iPod that I'm interested in a product and to add the products site to my 'adverts' bookmark folder. In this respect I'd expect Apple to step into the same role as a conventional network - just with a much larger audience. But in return I'd expect the content to be free. They could sell me an add free 1080i, as long as it had no adverts and I was free to burn it to Blu-ray and the cost was similar to a song. File size aside - $5 for a 60 minute show, that I watch once seems expensive - $20 a month all you can eat, now your talking.
Re:My G5 isn't fast enough for a video iPod (Score:2, Insightful)
The reality of this is that h264 is a scalable codec and whats going to be in primary focus is short films, video clips and television shows formatted for mobile viewing, ie. possibly less than 480.
Personally I think the video store will be as relevant as t
Re:My G5 isn't fast enough for a video iPod (Score:5, Informative)
H.264 is designed to be scalable. It is designed to be playable on mobile phones at the low end, and scale up past HDTV at the high end. If an iPod were to support video, then it would include a dedicated H.264 decoder chip. These are relatively cheap and low power.
As to the resolution question, H.264 is wavelet based. This means that you start off with a low quality image (e.g. 2x2) and then progressively apply additional wavelets to it until you have something that closely resembles the original image. You can adjust the quality and bit-rate by deciding how many iterations through this process are done. If you were copying video to the iPod for watching on the iPod (which, as I said, I think is quite a silly idea anyway) then you could simply[1] remove the highest detail wavelets from the stream, which could be done orders of magnitude faster than decompressing and recompressing the entire stream. This process (i/o permitting) would actually be faster than playback, since all you need to do is an inverse-quantisation, a cut and a write, rather than actually decoding the video.
[1] Well, non-trivially.
Re:My G5 isn't fast enough for a video iPod (Score:2)
Which has nothing to do with the original point that a particular H.264 file has a particular bitrate and resolution, and you need a device powerful enough to decode the file.
H.264 is wavelet based.
No, it isn't.
[long description of scalable video]
Too bad you can't actually do that with any H.264 files that really exist.
Re:My G5 isn't fast enough for a video iPod (Score:2)
Re:My G5 isn't fast enough for a video iPod (Score:1)
Neither does Steve. . .
Re:My new iPod (Score:1)
Cheaper (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Cheaper (Score:1)
iPod photo not that great (Score:1)
I thought it was a great idea, instead of having a giant iPhoto library taking up space on the hard drive, keep all your images on the iPod.... but it doesn't store the images in the original, highest resolution... so it becomes not even a good back up device
that being said, I wish I had one
Re:iPod photo not that great (Score:1)
Re:iPod photo not that great (Score:1)
Thickness changes? (Score:2)
Re:Thickness changes? (Score:1, Informative)
Think Marketing (Score:1)
No, you are not.
But what if your ads display on this nice color screen?
Re:Think Marketing (Score:2)
Re:Think Marketing (Score:2)
Anything they might give away as a podcast will serve to keep ESPN on people's minds for where to get their sports fix.
iPod Mini Colour? (Score:1)
3.9 confirms video (Score:1)
Remember the version numbers. (Score:2)
Form and Function (Score:1)