When was ipod nano released




















It could play video, though was limited to 8 GB of space. It featured a taller screen and an sleek oval shape when viewed from the side and was offered in 8 or 16 GB models.

The 6th generation Nano saw the line shrunk down to the size of a watch-face and indeed many accessories were developed for folks to wear this ipod as a watch.

It squeezed up to 16 GB into it's magically small touch-screen color discplay. In the Nano line morphed into a vaguely iphone-like shape, with a home button and a larger multi-touch display. It was offered in 8 shades with up to 16GB. The original iPod Touch model debuted in September of and yes, it looked, felt and worked very much like the iPhone.

For the first time you could browse the internet, watch YouTube and directly buy songs through the iTunes store right there over WiFi on your iPod. This model came in 8, 6, or 32 GB. The 2nd generation Touch came out the following year and looked slightly different, but no special spec changes were announced.

In the iPod Touch got it's first camera in the 4th generation-- two actually, a Facetime HD camera and an iSight camera. The model was available in classic glossy white or black. It was available with 16, 32, or 64 GB of storage. The most recent iPod available is the 7th generation Touch that came out in May of Sarah Tew Oct.

A look at the evolution of the iPod Apple introduced it's original iPod on October of and at that time it would have been impossible to predict just how much this product's development would massively impact the way we interact with music, media and the internet at large. The original iPod The very first iPod featured a scroll wheel that you physically turned with your finger. Special U2 Edition iPod In what was surely a marketing coup for U2, Apple released it's first and last band-specific special edition in October of A music-lovers dream come true: The iPod Classic In September of the iPod Classic was introduced, sporting an anodized aluminum enclosure and offering a whopping gigabytes of storage.

Wildly unpredictable: the iPod Shuffle In a new concept in listening was born with the iPod Shuffle. Both got larger screens. Meanwhile, the fourth-generation iPod Shuffle came back with new color options and the fifth-generation iPod touch was released in 32GB and 64GB models.

The company also brought out new versions of the fourth-generation iPod Shuffle in six colors instead of the previous eight colors. Meanwhile, the latest seventh-generation iPod Nano dropped from seven to six colors. Both, however, are still available in Product Red in this release cycle.

The surprise refresh was the first in four years and came with an A10 processor, a 3. The original iPod with the Click Wheel. The third-generation iPod. The iPod mini.

The iPod Shuffle. The U2 Special Edition iPod. But it was as though the nano had leapt so far ahead as to make the traditional iPod feel like a thing of the past, like the nano was a modern riff on technology we used to use and love. For my money, it also had the all-time-best Steve Jobs unveiling , pulled from the coin pocket of his jeans.

The second generation, released a year later, changed the iPod nano into a more familiar shape, with curved sides and bright color options. It was far more reminiscent of the iPod mini and largely represented what the nano would look like into the future. As much as I love the original style, the color options have always gone a long way toward making the iPod line feel more fun and personal. Then came the third model, which was kind of a bizarre misstep.

It made the nano stout and wide, so that it could have a screen portioned properly to play music videos. At a time when YouTube was just getting started, it almost seemed like downloading music videos from the iTunes Store made sense.

But it never really made much sense. Though there was one highlight of this generation: the colors. Apple should really bring back that soft blue and green. A year after that, Apple returned the nano to its traditional shape. This time, with a longer screen. It was where Apple had gotten so good at making iPods, there was just nothing to complain about.

It was sleek, it was stylish, and it came in nine colors. At this point, the iPod touch had already been unveiled, and it was kind of clear that there was only so far that the iPod line could go.

Here was where Apple showed that it had done all there was to do with a tiny screen and a wheel. Evidently, Apple agreed because it got rid of it the next year. This was the model where you started to get the sense that things were over for the nano.

Apple had taken the iPod as far as it could. And with nowhere left to go, it decided to shove a camera into the device just because it could.



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