If you’re willing to void your warranty (like I was, although mine was well out of warranty anyway) you can pop an iPod open. Unplugging the battery and waiting a few minutes normally does the trick, then plug the battery back in and reassemble. As my iPod has started to throw more errors over the last year, I’ve found that this is the best way to fix most problems.
Remember that MP3 is also a patented and proprietary technology. If vendor lock-in concerns you, then make sure the media player you buy also supports free, non-proprietary formats such as Ogg Vorbis. (Ogg Vorbis also compresses better than MP3 for the same quality level, allowing you to fit more tunes on your device.)
I’ve had good luck so far with the two Zen models I’ve bought from Creative. I’ve got the Vision:M and my husband has the nano. I can’t swear as to their long-term durability, but I’ve dropped the Vision more than once and it keeps working, and Himself is hell on electronics and other small things.
I was talking to my ex-wife last night and she told me that hers is making strange noises and she thinks it’s on its last legs. I asked her if she was going to see about getting it fixed and she said, “Nah. I’ll just get a new one. They have bigger hard drives now.” Fucking typical of her. Thankfully shit like that no longer comes out of the joint account.
I wish I’d seen threads like this before I bought one. Am I the only one who didn’t get an instruction manual? I held the box upside down, hoping one would fall out, but no joy. All I got was a sheet of paper with four Quick-Start steps. From memory (I didn’t bother to keep it) they were:
1: Turn your iPod ‘on.’
2: Connect it to your computer.
3. Import songs.
4. Listen and enjoy!
Duh. So that’s what an MP3 player does? My Rio Riot (may it rest in peace) came with a bona fide manual! It was thick! It kicked ass! I didn’t read half of it, but it was there if I needed it! My iPod came with… a sheet of paper.
A quick tutorial on iTunes would have been helpful, I didn’t find the application very intuitive. It’s either buggy as hell or I still don’t understand it. And when I connected my iPod and got the “Do Not Disconnect” message, I had to Google it to figure out what it meant.
Anyone know offhand the warranty on these things? Mine’s been acting kinda flakey.
I’ve got a Sandisk m250 and I love it. It’s got 2GB of flash memory, which is enough for my needs, and it means that I don’t have to worry about any hard drive crahses. Plus, it runs on an ordinary AAA battery. If the battery runs down, I just pop in another and I’m good to go. A few months ago, I bought a package of rechargable batteries and a charger, so I don’t have to keep buying batteries for it. I also have a silicone rubber case which does an excellent job of keeping my player scratch-free. Oh yeah, and it comes with an FM tuner and a voice recorder built in. (Not as an overpriced accessory.)
It is patented but hardly proprietary. It is supported by every thing even Sony finally came around and fully supported it. Ogg is not proprietary but it is supported by hardly anybody in the mp3 player market. You can buy mp3 files from a wide variety of sources. You can download them from a wide variety of sources. Your friends have ripped there CDs to it. The next palyer you get in 5 years will support it.
'Fraid not; the standard is indeed based on patented technology owned by Thomson Consumer Electronics, and it does enforce them for commercial applications, but not for free encoders and decoders.
gazpacho is of course right to say that the vast weight of MP3 files, players and encoders already out there means that the prospect of it being restricted in any meaningful fashion is basically zero. While it’s all very well to opt for the patent-free ogg format on principle, the reality is that at present and well in to the future, MP3 will continue to be the most portable and widely-supported format, despite being “encumbered” by patents. Far too many people have their entire collections ripped to it for it to be otherwise.
Possibly but you can at least check, right? Before the days of the Ipod she had one of those Compaq flash players. She was ready to chuck that one out until I took a look at it. A battery had leaked in it. I spent five minutes cleaning out the area where the batteries go, put in new batteries and it was good as new.
Nothing much to add to the Op, as I only bought my new Ipod Nano two weeks ago (I caved when they came out in red), but I have had a Creative Zen Xtra 30GB for a year and a half and it keeps running. Ive dropped it on concrete three times, asphalt, and from a second story window into muddy grass, and nothing’s happened besides the front face being loose and a hell of a lot of scratches. Even the battery life is still good, although reduced. Now instead of lasting nigh-on forever it ‘only’ lasts 12 hours of consecutive use. The thing’s a brick, but it was inexpensive and is super durable.
The old, “I hate ipods so much I bought three of them!” pit. Nicely done. Ever hear of the Creative Zen? Personally, I prefer the ipod, but you DO have a choice.
I have used the exact same player (CZX 30gb) for two and a half years. It’s great. I love it. I’ve bumped it the hell around on long walks in my pocket, thrown it in my messenger bag with heavy books that rested on it. It’s not even cracked. I think I’ve only had to reset it once after it stopped playing for no reason but it started right back up. The battery is only starting to give after this long, it only keeps a charge of like five hours now. I don’t know anyone whose iPod battery has lasted this long. It is bulky, and I kind of want something smaller (probably a Nano), but it’s the dull yet durable counterpart to Apple’s flashy planned obsolescence.
Apple apparently does not like to issue instruction manuals because their technology is so “organic” and easy to understand at first sight. I say that Apple is full of crap.
Who needs manuals when you have such a massive user community? If you go here you can download a 202 page book for free. Ignore all the sales crap in it, but it should answer the majority of iPod related questions.
Another Creative fan: Works like a charm. I once had an incident, but I went to the Creative home page and downloaded an updated OS for it. A hard-boot, a synch, and a reload of the music from my music library and it was done. I think I made made a sandwich for myself while I waited.
It has worked like a charm ever since.
(The mp3 player; not the sandwich, which was a little dry…)