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How To Update Ipod Earlier Version

Non and then long agone, nosotros listened to music on the go with a Walkman or portable CD player. Inevitably, you'd take to untangle the magnetically coated tape or restart your CD after going over a major bump in the road while riding in the backseat of your parent's car. It'due south hard to believe what nosotros put upwards with earlier the MP3 music player arrived. Apple's in particular.

The iPod wasn't exactly the first of its kind. In that location were six MP3 players on the market place when Apple's player debuted. But in the first iPod promotional video(Opens in a new window), DJ and musician Moby said he owned three and couldn't figure out how to use any of them. With the iPod, he said, "I held it, and 45 seconds afterward, I knew how to apply information technology."

The iPod may have seemed revolutionary, but it got its beginning back in 1979. British inventor Kane Kramer(Opens in a new window) created the showtime digital audio player, called the IXI, which was able to play about one song. The prototype was shelved when Kramer couldn't market place it successfully, and his patent expired in 1988. Kane did get credit, though, when Apple ran upwardly confronting patent issues in 2007 and brought him in to evidence.

"To exist honest, I was but so pleased that finally something that I had done which has been a huge success and inverse the music industry was being best-selling," Kramer told(Opens in a new window) The Daily Mail. "I was really quite emotional about it all." Just even with his identify secured in digital music history, Kramer couldn't bring himself to buy an iPod.

Millions have forked over their hard-earned money for an iPod. But the rising of the iPhone and the coming of all the music streaming subscription services (including Apple Music) cannibalized iPod. But it lives on. For now.

As Apple tree finally discontinues the iPod, as the company announced today, information technology's a good time to reflect on the make and how information technology changed through the years. And be sure to stick around for the video at the stop, where we reminisce about all things iPod.


2001: 5GB iPod

Before the iPod, MP3 players were either big and unwieldy or pocket-size and useless. Steve Jobs tasked Apple Senior Vice President of Industrial Pattern Jonathan Ive and a group of hardware engineers to produce an alternative that could get iconic. Developed in less than one twelvemonth, the 5GB iPod, holding i,000 songs, was unveiled on October 23, 2001, for $399. The proper noun came from a freelance copyrighter who, later seeing the image, thought of the picture show 2001: A Space Odyssey and the phrase "Open the pod bay door, Hal!"

When PCMag tested the iPod, we were able to transfer 523 songs in 5 minutes flat (2.3GB of music). Using a 1.8-inch hard drive compared to the competitors' two.5-inch drives, the iPod weighed in at 6.five ounces and was nearly the size of a deck of cards. Information technology featured a mechanical scroll cycle, a center select button, and four auxiliary buttons around the exterior of the wheel. The showtime-gen iPod was only for Mac users.


2002: iPod 2G

iPod 2G

About 9 months subsequently releasing the first iPod, Apple tree made a few minor updates and released the second-gen iPod on July 17, 2002. The biggest addition was the power for Windows PC users to use the device with Musicmatch Jukebox software. If 5GB wasn't enough space to hold all your Radiohead homemade MP3s, the new iPod bumped upward the storage space to 10GB for $399. Later that twelvemonth, a 20GB model was also released. For $499, it could hold 4,000 songs.

Another addition was the touch on-sensitive bicycle. Though the second-gen iPod looked almost identical to its predecessor, the wheel didn't actually plow. The iPod also got a cover for the FireWire port and included software for users to shop contact lists with upward to 1,000 names and addresses. Apple as well got a footling more than personal by adding the option of a custom light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation engraving on the stainless-steel back.


2003: iPod 3G

iPod 3G

Apple tree realized that 5GB may just non be enough room for growing music collections. Announced April 28, 2003, the 3rd-generation iPod was offered in 10GB, 15GB, and 30GB capacities, and, 5 months later, 20GB and 40GB. In under two years, the iPod went from a 1,000-song chapters to a ten,000-song chapters.

Apple stopped building Musicmatch software in 2003 after iTunes 4.1 was introduced for Windows. Information technology likewise introduced the iTunes Store on Apr 29. Over 10 million songs were sold in the store's first four months.

The third-gen iPod was the get-go to offering an all-touch coil bicycle interface, as well every bit a dock connector and a slimmer instance. The buttons also vanished from around the wheel and ended upwardly in a row above it.


2004: iPod mini, iPod photograph, iPod 4G

iPod mini, iPod photo, iPod 4G

By Jan 2004, Apple had sold over 2 million iPods(Opens in a new window), staking its position as the No. 1 digital music player in the world. Apple introduced iii dissimilar iPods that year: the iPod photo, in 30GB, 40GB, and 60GB capacities; the fourth-gen iPod in 20GB and 60GB models; and the 4GB iPod mini.

In homage to the iMac, the iPod mini was available in five different colors (blue, pinkish, silver, greenish, and golden), and outset introduced the click wheel to the iPod family unit, allowing for one-handed navigation. The office buttons were moved onto the actual scroll bicycle. The mini was at the time the smallest portable music player ever to hold up to 1,000 CD-quality songs, and information technology sold for $249.

The iPod photo, too known as iPod with color display, was released in October. It looked just like an ordinary iPod, but it had a larger hard drive chapters, the aforementioned color display, and a larger bombardment. Information technology wasn't until the adjacent year that an iPod would be able to play movies, but users could look at photos on this colour screen. Album covers were also integrated, appearing while songs played.

As for the quaternary-gen iPod, the player lost its auxiliary buttons and took on the mini's click wheel. This version also introduced the Shuffle feature, which would play a larger role in Apple's line of iPods in later on years.


2005: iPod nano, iPod shuffle, iPod mini, iPod 5G/Video iPod

Releasing five new iPods in 2005, Apple introduced two completely new models to the iPod family: the iPod nano and the iPod shuffle. The nano came out toward the end of 2005. Using flash memory for storage, the iPod nano was gratis from the worry of skipping and dead difficult drives. Available in black or white, and 2GB and 4GB flavors, the nano featured a color screen and splendid audio quality. It was especially thin at 0.27 inches making it 62% smaller than the iPod mini.

"iPod nano is a total-featured iPod in an impossibly small size," Steve Jobs said on its release. "And it'due south going to change the rules for the entire portable music market."

Also wink-based, the iPod shuffle was extremely simple with a white shell and a four-way rocker ring and play/intermission button on the front. The power switch and battery-check button resided on the back. This was the kickoff iPod to non accept a display. Instead, the shuffle came with a new version of iTunes that would randomly load songs. You could choose to play them in order or accept them shuffled. The about-weightless flash player, which Jobs called "smaller and lighter than a pack of gum," had a list price of $149 for the 1GB model (240 songs) and $99 for the 512MB (120 songs) model.

This was the last time we'd ever see an update to the iPod mini. The nano replaced it about vii months after. In improver to the miniature-sized iPods, Apple too released a 5th-gen iPod, otherwise known as the iPod with video. Information technology featured a larger screen and a smaller click cycle. This model was the outset to allow users to, naturally, play video. It was too available in black and would be the last iPod to characteristic a plastic face.


2006: 80GB iPod, iPod nano 2G, iPod shuffle 2G

80GB iPod, iPod nano 2G, iPod shuffle 2G

2006 was a bit mellower. Apple released its largest-chapters iPod to date: the 80GB iPod, which offered a few enhancements, such every bit longer battery life, a brighter screen, a search feature, and support for better games. Apple also updated the nano, releasing the second-gen nano version, which traded in its plastic body for an eye-communicable, scratch-resistant anodized aluminum casing, like that of the iPod mini. It was offered in half dozen different colors and boasted a 40 percent brighter screen, a new search option, and gapless playback of audio files.

The iPod shuffle also got a revamp, changing its look drastically from the previous year's design. Less than half the size of its predecessor, Apple chosen the shuffle the "world's smallest MP3 histrion." And that was including a built-in chugalug clip. The power and shuffle/no shuffle switches were too separated into separate controls.


2007: iPod impact, iPod nano 3G, 160GB iPod classic

iPod touch

By the time 2007 rolled around, Apple had already sold 88 one thousand thousand iPods. The yr also marked the launch of a new product that would, to put it lightly, affect iPod sales: the iPhone. Announced in January, the iPhone offered many of the same features as the iPod, but with the added functionality of being a total-fledged smartphone. People who would normally carry around an iPod and their mobile telephone ditched their iPods for a mobile device that could combine both.

In September of the same twelvemonth, Apple tree likewise released another item for those who didn't desire the phone call functionality of the iPhone only did want apps. The iPod touch featured the aforementioned 3.5-inch multi-touch on screen and Wi-Fi. iPod touch users were able to surf the Web, watch YouTube, and buy music wirelessly. At 8 millimeters, it was thinner than any other full-sized iPod, and it started at $299 for the 8GB model. Here at PCMag, we chosen it "probably the best portable media thespian ever fabricated."

A new shorter, wider, heavier iPod nano was too introduced in 2007. Featuring a two-inch screen, the nano included video playback and support for new iPod games. If you lot thought the 80GB iPod introduced in 2006 offered a lot of space, Apple did 1 better by introducing the iPod classic in a 160GB model. Not a lot had changed from the previous yr, but customers were able to snag double the retention for $349.

By the end of the year, Apple tree had sold 141 million iPods, thank you to the introduction of the iPod touch. But every bit you'll run across below, the intro of the iPhone proved the iPod'southward undoing.


2008: iPod bear upon 2G, iPod nano 4G

In 2008, America's No. 1 music retailer was no longer Walmart. The iTunes store surpassed the major chain, topping five billion songs sold. July saw the launch of Apple's App Store, which allowed iPhone and iPod touch on users to download 10 million apps in the store's first weekend. Past September, over 100 meg apps had been downloaded.

Apple also updated the iPod bear upon and iPod nano. The second-gen iPod touch on featured a thinner pattern, a volume push button, and built-in speakers. New iOS updates also offered the App Store and Genius functions. The fourth-gen iPod nano integrated Apple's Genius playlist creation and was the first nano to include an accelerometer, which allowed you to turn the screen from vertical to horizontal. Another nifty feature was that shaking the nano would play a random song.


2009: iPod shuffle 3G, iPod nano 5G, iPod bear upon 3G

In March 2009, Apple tree released the third-gen iPod shuffle which introduced VoiceOver, a feature that announces song titles, and informs you when your bombardment needs to be recharged. The new shuffle was even smaller than its precursor. It was still missing a screen, a radio, and even controls, but the latter were embedded into Apple's signature earbuds.

In September 2009, Apple released the first (non-touch) iPod to include a photographic camera for photos and video. The 5th-gen iPod nano boasted a larger screen than its predecessors, and a feature many iPod users had been waiting for for years: an FM radio. The nano also featured a built-in mic, a speaker, a pedometer, and the VoiceOver features of the shuffle.

The third-gen iPod touch on came with a faster processor. Information technology was marketed every bit a gaming platform to compete with the PSP and Nintendo DS. (Two years later, the iPod touch on would become the No. 1 non-phone portable game player.)


2010: iPod touch 4G, iPod shuffle 4G, iPod nano 6G

With over 10 billion songs in the iTunes Store and over v billion downloads in the App Store, 2010 was a great year for Apple. In September, it introduced its new fourth-gen iPod bear on with Retina brandish, making the text and images look incredibly precipitous. It also was able to shoot Hd videos and accept high-quality photos. The touch on finally featured a front end-facing camera, allowing FaceTime video calling.

The shuffle and the nano as well got makeovers that twelvemonth. At $49, the fourth-gen iPod shuffle was the lowest-priced iPod ever. The "play/track/book" buttons from the second-gen shuffle returned over again. Users no longer had to utilize the earphone controls to navigate. Equally for the sixth-gen iPod nano, it wasn't as well-received equally nanos by. Apple tree traded in the nano'south click cycle for a bear upon screen on the super-compact display. The nano as well lost its video capture and playback adequacy. The multi-touch screen was rotatable, and the nano besides featured FM radio and Nike+ fitness features.

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Past September, Apple had sold 275 million iPods. But sales were in a reject (see below).


2011: iPod nano 7G, iPod touch 4G update

iPod touch 4G

In October 2011, Apple tree announced it would keep the bear upon screen of the last-generation iPod nano. The concrete appearance remained the same, but it made a few tweaks to the nano's user interface. The refresh included larger icons, 16 watch-face widgets, and a toll driblet. The new nano was also easier to navigate thanks to a feature that allowed you to swipe between icons.

The iPod touch on also got a small 2011 update. Available in black or white, it ran iOS v, which included 200 new features, including iMessage, Notifications, and Wi-Fi Syncing to iTunes. It also worked with iCloud, Apple'due south set of free cloud services.


2012: Larger Screen iPod Bear on 5G, iPod nano 8G, EarPods

This twelvemonth brought some nice changes to the line. Start and perhaps was the redesign of the stock headphones that come with every iPod. The Apple EarPods were the first major refresh of Cupertino's signature white earbuds in 11 years, and while they couldn't produce audiophile high-end sound, they were a major stride upwardly.

As for the iPods themselves, the theme of 2012 was: more than screen. The iPod affect got the same expanded 4-inch Retina brandish that the iPhone v received, plus a faster A5 processor (making it the start dual-core iPod affect), a 5-megapixel camera, and the new Lightning dock connector. This affect only came in 32GB and 64GB models; the less expensive viii and 16GB versions went away. New: a popular-out loop then you could attach a strap.

The nano as well got bigger. It nonetheless had a touchscreen just had been completely overhauled to a rectangular two.5-inch screen—all the amend for watching HD videos (once again). It was too the first nano to include Bluetooth, a pedometer, and an FM radio tuner. 16GB became standard storage across the many color options.


Special Releases: U2, Harry Potter, (Product) RED

U2 iPod

Apple releases and then many new products that information technology'south easy to miss some of them, especially the express-edition versions. Apple released a Harry Potter Special Edition iPod in 2005, which featured the Hogwarts Crest laser-engraved on the back, while a 20GB Special Edition U2 iPod was released in 2004. It featured an all-black stainless-steel enclosure, a carmine click cycle, and custom engraving of U2 band member signatures. In 2006, Apple released a Special Edition U2 iPod based on the 5th-gen 30GB iPod. This version came with 30 minutes of sectional U2 video downloadable from the iTunes Music Shop. Then, in November 2006, Apple tree appear a new (Product) RED Special Edition iPod nano. For each (Product) RED iPod nano sale, Apple donates $10 to the Global Fund to help fight HIV/AIDS in Africa. Apple tree however offers (Production) Cerise(Opens in a new window) products (generally iPhone cases and bands for Apple Watch) to this day.

We do not speak of the iPod+HP(Opens in a new window) distributed past HP for a year in 2004-2005.

If you're curious what happened with iPods in the years 2013 and 2014, non much, except Apple officially killed the iPod Classics of any capacity in September 2014, just short of a full 13 years after the thespian's debut. The reason, ostensibly: Apple couldn't get the ancient components anymore to brand more. Later, the classics started to sell at crazy prices on eBay.


2015: iPod touch 6G

iPod touch 6G

It just took the launch of Apple tree Music to spur Apple tree into making the latest update to the iPod touch (after incremental updates in 2013, where it got lighter, and 2014, where information technology got a photographic camera upgrade and a price driblet). Like the previous iii years, this 6th-generation iPod touch had a 4-inch Retina display with 1,136 by 640 resolution, but inside the guts were souped-up with the same A8 bit used in the iPhone half-dozen, an viii-megapixel iSight camera, and M8 motion coprocessor to handle fettle tracking. Information technology came in sixteen, 32, 64 and 128GB models, with prices that range from $199 up to $399. For colors, the backs now came in space grayness, silver, gilt, pink, and blue, plus a version for (Production) Cerise. Plus, the iPod nano and shuffle both remained for sale.

Still, it would exist another four years before the iPod touch got another update.


2019: iPod touch 7G

It came every bit a bit of a surprise in May of 2019 that Apple tree included the seemingly forgotten iPod brand in the announcement of its new products. After all, the company had unceremoniously killed the nano and shuffle in 2017. (Apple declared the nano "obsolete" in 2020.)

Still, in that location was a new model. Apple tree didn't change the await or size, only the internal updates on the seventh-gen iPod touch on included a quad-core A10 chip (the kind used in the iPhone seven back in 2016). It had six colour options and came in three capacities (32, 128, and 256 GB) priced from $199 to $299 to $399. Wi-Fi got an upgrade to 802.11ac, and Apple claimed it had a 40-60 minutes bombardment life for listening to music, or eight hours of video viewing. The reason to put out a new iPod touch for 2019 was easy to see: The Apple tree Arcade games subscription service would launch that fall and the quondam iPods couldn't keep up. Our review called it "the only mainstream not-cellular handheld on the market" and that it was (and is) "terrific for kids and anyone who doesn't want a full-fledged smartphone."

And information technology yet has a 3.5mm headphone jack!


Dusk of the iPod

iPod Sales of the Past

And that is the terminate of the story for the iPod. The chart above from Statista(Opens in a new window) from 2019 tells y'all why. At that place was a point during the iPod's heyday where information technology was responsible for a significant percent of Apple's overall revenue, every bit high every bit forty%—back in 2006. Once the iPhone came out in 2007, that percentage began to dip, and iPod sales started to slip off a cliff by 2010. In 2014, Apple stopped reporting iPod sales separately at all.

Now watch: The iPod'south 20th Anniversary: A Look Dorsum

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Source: https://www.pcmag.com/news/a-visual-history-of-apple-ipods

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