Today marks the anniversary of Apple's unveiling of the very first iPod, in 2001.
It
sold for $399, and its 5 GB hard drive could fit about 1,000 songs.
- the iPod classic, with 160 GB (40,000 songs)
-
iPod touch, with a touchscreen and many capabilities in addition to playing music (such as being a Wi-Fi internet device, game console, personal digital assistant, and more), 64 K (14,000+ songs)
- iPod nano, a compact model with 16 GB (4,000 songs)
- and iPod shuffle, an ultra-compact model with 2 GB (500+ songs).
In
bigger news....!!!
Apple
chose today, iPod Day, to hold a press conference by invitation only.
It is expected to be an unveiling of yet another product, and rumors
have it that it will be an iPad Mini—a smaller, cheaper version of
the popular iPad tablet. By the time you read this, these rumors may well be either confirmed or denied.
Phones
are cameras are computers are game consoles are music players are
e-readers...
These
days, many phones are getting larger screens and more capabilities,
with sophisticated cameras, hundreds of games and practical apps, and
full-on computer functions. Tablets are getting thinner and (in some
cases) smaller. E-readers with color capabilities and interactivity
are being introduced (and are arguably really tablets). The iPod
Touch has always been like a really small tablet.
I
wonder which of all these sorts of different products will still
exist in 20 years. Will everybody just carry around one slim device
capable of just about everything and backed up with “the cloud”?
And what would that device be called?
Also
on this date:
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