Posts Tagged Apple

iPod Nano : Déja vu

This post is about the 8GB iPod Nano 4G that I won at the Puffin Quiz. The simplest thing for me to do would be just copy-paste my last review of the iPod, with a few changes here and there, but no, this iPod attracts a totally fresh review. So here goes…

iPod Nano 4G

iPod Nano 4G

First off, let me tell you that there’s a very different feeling about receiving an iPod, that’s very hard to describe. Apple’s worked very hard to get that sort of mentality into all iPod customers. An iPod leaves is supposed to leave you in awe. You marvel at its simplicity, and at the same time realise that it is one of the best portable media players out there in the market.

Non-iPod owners tend to hold the opinion that it’s an overpriced piece of shit.

Of course, the non-believers are right…Apple does try its best to cash into the iPod-is-next-to-God mentality, by ripping you off big time. But since I’ve won this iPod, I really don’t care very much about the price tag. Incidentally, it was around 10k, according to the price label. I’ve got a blue 8GB model. Apple tends to build a shell around you, once you’re part of the family. Once an Apple fan, always an Apple fan. iTunes is forced upon you, as the only way to manage your iPod, which of course is complete nonsense, there are a number of alternatives like Winamp and Floola, just to name a few. Anyway, back to the iPod.

I’ve always liked the way Apple packages the iPod. They try to be very minimalistic, providing just one piece of paper as a ‘manual’. The idea is, of course, is that the iPod is so user-friendly, that it doesn’t need a manual, which is sort of true. One of the most intuitive interfaces in this technological era. The iPod Nano 4G has gone back to the shape of the Nano 1G and 2G, being longer lengthwise, rather than breadthwise. This, in my opinion is a good move. I considered the first video Nano i.e. the 3G, to be rather fat and ungainly. I always liked the Nano because of the way it would fit into your palm perfectly. I was always a bit iffy about the 3G. Well, the 4G certainly corrects that. The finish is typical anodized-aluminium.

Now, all the iPods I’ve (semi-)owned – a 512 MB Shuffle, a 2GB Nano, a 4GB Nano, have been white/silver. But I have to say, seeing a Nano in deep blue is something altogether different. It just looks so beautiful, especially with the new curved design, with light striking it at different angles. One more thing, the curved and oh-so-thin-I’d-barter-my-kidney design is actually just visual trickery. The shape is like a concave lens, thin at the ends, but bulging towards the middle. The middle thickness is about the same as my old 2G Nano. The screen of course is a 2″ (diagonal) 320×240 LCD. Compared to my 2G Nano, the screen takes up much more space on the iPod, about 3/5th of the front. The clickwheel is almost the same size as my old iPod. The screen has a glass cover, but unlike my old Nano, it isn’t recessed into the body, so if I drag it across a table, which I won’t, it will get badly scratched. Also, it is a mega smudge magnet.

Now, one of the niggles – the ‘Hold’ button. Now, I’ve always identified this as a trouble spot on almost all iPods. This button, on all iPods, feels as if it’s just going to fall apart after some time, and indeed, I have seen this happening on iPods belonging to my friends. On the 4G Nano, it is a very sturdy thing. Apple’s design department has replaced the traditional plastic job with a round metal switch. It does take some amount of struggling to use this button, and this is exactly what worries me. Assuming that I accidentally use too much force, or if my finger is at the wrong angle or something like that, I could render one of the most important controls on the iPod useless. I consider it important because it is very important to save battery life. And saving battery is important because replacing batteries in an iPod is not as simple as it may seem. Theses batteries are not user-serviceable, and Apple Service Centres charge and arm and a leg for that.

Now, let me come to the actual interface of the iPod. The large screen, with the better resolution has made stuff much, much better. You can see more options on the menus. Plus, on the main menu, there’s this new feature called the Preview Panel, which allows you to see album art, among other things. One of the things I noticed was that the clickwheel seemed a bit more clunky, as compared to my old 2G. By clunky, what I mean is that scrolling, changing volume et al, are a bit more digital, less analogue, if you get what I mean. It isn’t a smooth process… Another small niggle…maybe it’s just be taking some time to get used to the new positioning of the clickwheel.

When you play a song, instead of being greeted by a white screen with a small portion of it being taken up by album art, and the rest being info about the song, now the album art is predominant, taking up around 8/10th of the screen space. The only reason Apple could do this is because of the resolution as well as the screen orientation. Anyway, it looks good this way. The song name is displayed in small letters at the bottom. Also, now you can choose the shuffle mode by pressing the center button 3-4, and using an iPhone-style slider, which I think is a very good idea. Lyrics also look much better as compared to my old Nano 2G, with album art and song name accompanying the lyrics.

Genius is also a pretty good feature…just select any song, and let your iPod make a playlist of similar songs. It isn’t always right, but then, nobody’s perfect, right? Just press the center button 2 times and use the slider. Remember that this feature will only work if you have updated Genius for your iTunes library, which you can only do if you have an account on the iTunes store (doesn’t matter if it’s Indian or US).

I think it’s time I mention that this time around, Apple has put an accelerometer in the iPod Nano. Cover flow takes full advantage of this, and if you tilt your iPod 90 degrees, you’ll enter Cover Flow mode, which shows all your albums. I personally don’t use this too much, because it takes up a bit of battery, which I’ll explain later. Another accelerometer funtion is the Shake to Shuffle function – possibly one of the most addictive features. When your Nano is not on Hold, just shake your iPod to shuffle all songs. In fact, I’m so addicted to it, I put my iPod in the pocket of my shorts and just do a little jig! Honestly, it works. Please, just make sure you have strong seams in your pockets, otherwise you’ll have a nasty time trying to explain to an Apple salesman exactly how your iPod smashed itself into itsy bitsy pieces (which it won’t, because it does have some structural strength).

One other niggle I noticed, was to do with the screen. It’s a very nice screen, with the backlight. But I’m a battery freak…I don’t want my iPod to die prematurely. So I like to disable the backlight, and just do with ambient lighting, tilting the iPod in the right direction to see what’s on the screen. Thing is, on the 4G Nano, this simply won’t work. I don’t know if it’s to do with the curved glass on the screen, or if it’s Apple’s new strategy for planned obsolence of iPods, but I simply have to keep the backlight on, albeit for only 2 seconds. But the thing that really winds me up is that in my old Nano, I could enable an option on my Main Menu, from where I could simply turn off or turn on my backlight temporarily (as long as I needed it). Apple seems to have disabled this option, which means that to do anything with the backlight, I have to go into the settings. This has confirmed my suspicions that Apple wants iPods to die young, so that you have to buy another one. This is only real problem I have with the Nano 4G.

Since this is a Nano which plays Videos as well, the Main Menu also contains a Video option (d’oh). In case you didn’t know, you can customise what options are included in the Main Menu in the Settings. Anyway, as always with iPods, converting videos into H.264/MP4 is the only hassle (apart from keeping duplicate versions of files on your PC). The iPod Nano is pretty good with videos, and if you categorise them the right way as Movies, TV Shows or Music Videos, it’ll be even easier. The iPod also allows you to adjust the brightness while playing a video, which I think is a good thing. But one major problem is that the backlight stays at that brightness even after the video stops playing. What’s more, the backlight timer is reset to 10 seconds, which is really annoying.

Before I forget, the iPod has a couple of games as well, of which I found Maze the best, because it uses the accelerometer. Sorta like the little mazes you can find on top of a pencil box!

Audio quality is top notch, as usual. In fact, there’s something extra special about the iPod earphones/audio output. The earphones look visually identical to the ones I got with my last iPod, but they sound much much better…dunno if it’s got to do with the earphones or the iPod, or the fact that I haven’t listened to music on iPod earphones for almost 9 months now, but the music sounds amazing.

In conclusion, I think it’s an iPod, which it is. Period.

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DIY : Escape from iTunes

Some people don’t really like iTunes, but are entrapped, mainly because they’ve got an iPod or perhaps their libraries are too integrated with iTunes. But it really isn’t all that hard to move to Windows Media Player, WinAmp, Real Player or one of the other alternatives.

First, try to get all your music in one place. This might be unneccesary if you’re like me, and have your entire collection in one folder (actually, in my case, partition). This helps when you’re adding the files to another media player. Do this by going to the Edit menu -> Preferences. Click on the Advanced Tab, and set the iTunes library location to the place you want all your music to go. Now, clik on File -> Library -> Consolidate Library. Will take some time, but will make sure that all the music in your iTunes library is now organised in one folder.

I’m trusting that you didn’t try and play video with iTunes. It is possibly the worst player for video. Apparently it refuses to take video codecs from the OS’s codec library, and will only support .mov (QuickTime) and .mp4 files. I can’t say about podcasts, mainly because I don’t really use them too much.

All you need to do is add that folder to your new media player’s media library and/or watch list. A watch list will monitor that folder for any changes, and automatically add new media to the library as and when you add it to that folder.Now, the main problem arises when you’re thinking of moving metadata. This can be a pain with iTunes, mainly because it doesn’t believe in keeping stuff like playlists, play counts and ratings as metadata with your music files, but it keeps it hidden away in that crappy iTunes library XML file. That place looks like a complete junkyard. And I can see why searches take so long in iTunes. Anyway, there’s a solution I stumbled across – MusicBridge.

Actually, this only works for iTunes -> Windows Media Player. It’s a tool which copies all that info from your iTunes Library to your WMP library. All I had to do was just add the media files into the WMP library, and then run this program which did the rest for me. I had an option to copy just General Metadata, Ratings, Playlists, Artwork and more such stuff. It could also copy stuff from WMP -> iTunes, but such a person would be a moron, right?

In it’s defense, iTunes does seem to use less RAM in Windows 7 for some reason. Apparently, window management’s gotten better, and this means that it needs less of private memory. But that’s about it…;-)

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iTunes 8

Now, I could sum up the entire player in a few words (mainly expletives) and that would be the end of the review, but I’d prefer to a go a bit more in-depth than that.

The Package

It’s 64.6 MB for Windows. Which is a lot, when you compare it with stuff like Windows Media Player (WMP) and Winamp, which are less than half that size. The reason it’s so bloated, is that it’s got a lot of stuff riding piggyback.

QuickTime Player comes default. I don’t blame Apple for that, because .mov is their own codec. But I think that they should go the Microsoft way, and let iTunes run the entire show. Apple could save a few MB there. Then, they’ve got some useless stuff. Like the Bonjour service, which allows you to access other iTunes libraries, over the local network. Then, there’s the Apple Mobile Device service for iPhones and iPod Touches. Again, not a necessity. Despite all of this, the installation is pretty easy.

Mainly because they never bother to ask you before installing each of these.

Really, not everyone needs all of the features the iTunes package has to offer, so Apple could add a few check boxes here and there during the install, and then shift the blame off to dumb users who just click ‘Yes’ throughout the installation.

The Features

OK, so I’ve disabled the useless services, and taken care of everything. And then I start up iTunes. One thing you’re likely to notice when you start it up, is that, unlike WMP and RealPlayer, it doesn’t have a video-centric layout, with a large empty space in the middle. iTunes, as the name suggests, is mainly for songs.

In iTunes 8, by default, you’re greeted with the Grid layout. This is a nice touch they’ve added in this version – you can choose to sort by Artist, Album, Genre or Composer, and the items are arranged in a grid, with multiple rollover Album Arts in case of multiple results for one grid item. This is a good replacement for the Browser in the list view, where you can select songs by artist, album or genre in a dropdown box. The original list view is still there, and so is Cover Flow. Cover Flow, as you should know by now, displays the album art as if you’re browsing through a large collection, flowing from side to side.

Genius is a nice touch. It’s not groundbreaking, but at least it’s here in iTunes now. You can upload your music tastes, like ratings, to Apple’s servers, and you can download the cumulative results from Apple, which includes ratings from all over the world. If you select one song, and click on the Genius button, you can get a list of songs similar to your selection. Call it refined shuffle if you will…

Unfortunately, you need to create an iTunes Store Account for this, which is of no use in India, as there aren’t any songs for sale, only iPod Touch and iPhone applications. Still, I did give Mom’s credit card details over a secure(?) connection. The results are somewhat accurate. The iTunes Mini Store, has been integrated with the Genius sidebar, which recommends songs which go with the one you’re listening to, and recommends other top songs as well.

There’s a new visualiser. Apple’s apparently bought a visualiser called Magnetoshpere, and has made it one with iTunes. To be honest, I like it, even thought it hasn’t got too much variety, and the visualiser changes only when you change the song, or pause it. The good thing about it, is that it uses the graphics card, so it can deliver incredibly smooth animations, assuming your CPU is not bottlenecked either.

Apart from this, like older versions of iTunes, version 8 supports videos, podcasts and also radio. If you look around on the iTunes Store, you can find a selection of free podcasts, which aren’t all that bad. Also, Radio stations they’ve listed aren’t bad either.

There’s a problem, which has persisted ever since iTunes was released. iTunes can’t read most video files. It has to be in the few handful formats that it supports. Unlike WMP and RealPlayer, iTunes does not check up with the Operating System what all codecs are installed on the PC. It’s beacause WMP does this that it can play DivX files with ease. Feels more friendly too. But Apple won’t give in, and that makes iTunes suck.

Genius hasn’t ousted Party Shuffle, which lives on in the left sidebar. You can get it to randomly select songs from the entire library or a particular playlist, and also give preference to higher rated songs. iTunes supports smart playlists, like any other music player worth its salt. You can give multiple conditions to get results like all Coldplay songs with ratings of 4 or higher.

Even though there isn’t a way to directly convert songs to MP3 or change bitrate, there is a convoluted way to do that. Go to Edit -> Preferences, and click on the Import Settings button on the General tab. Then set your preferences, save them, right-click the song you want and select  ‘Create MP3 version’.

iTunes also connects to the Gracenote CDDB online database for CDs, which allows you to download info about the songs on a CD. Speaking of CDs, iTunes can burn audio CDs, MP3 discs and Data discs.

The Performance

Going back to when I fired up iTunes for the first time.

It doesn’t exactly fire up.

It crawls half-heartedly. Taking up 50~60 MB when I first start it. Can fluctuate wildly. Plus, this is way too much, to listen to a song, or just grab a bit of a video, iTunes is impracticle. Useless, rather.

Scrolling through lists of songs can be a pain, but not browsing Cover Flow, for some reason. It stores the library in an XML file, and boy is it slow! Search is really stagnant, and it takes ages for iTunes to respond to a keystroke in the Search bar.

Videos are not smooth. Period. Of the few videos that iTunes can play, when you move the mouse over the video, a semi-transparent control overlay appears, which causes the video to jar till it disappears. iTunes remains the very worst player, when it comes to video playback.

When you connect an iPod, iTunes simply freezes up as the PC and the pod chat about a bit. No control at all. Luckily, the music doesn’t stop, or I’d be tempted to put my foot through the monitor.

Unfortunately, if Apple decided to release a minor update to version 8.0.1, you’ll be forced to download the whole thing again. All 65 MB of it! A rather huge pain in the ass.

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finally

iPod Nano - 4G

iPod Nano - 4G

Finally, it’s out. The replacement. The repair. The way for Apple to sweep the third generation under the carpet, and let it rot. The next iPod Nano is out.

And by God, isn’t it a beuty…

There are many who think I’m an Apple fanatic, and maybe I am. Anyway, I’m happy Apple has corrected the shape of the Nano. I simply retched whenever I saw that squat little creation they called the Nano 3G. All in the name of video. It simply wasn’t worth it. I always preferred it being much longer than it was broad.

But, have they dropped video, for a longer screen. No way! All they’ve done is put an accelerometer, like the one in the iPhone and iPod Touch. When you’re viewing a video, you can simply rotate the iPod and view it.

Another interesting feature is ‘Shake to Shuffle’. Apparently, if you don’t like a song, just shake your iPod, and it’ll shuffle off to another song. Now, in India, Sony Ericsson released a music phone with a similar feature, so I must say that it’s not completely original. Anyone remember Hritik Roshan dancing with that phone in his hand?

It’s also got a new feature called Genius. Apparently, you can select one song, and the iPod can automatically create a playlist out of songs that go well with it. This is also available in iTunes 8, which’s also been released. I’m yet to try it out.

Back to the iPod. I somehow like the curved design. I think it might be better to hold in the hand, but on the other hand, it might rock about on a table too much. The black clickwheel is an experiment. Stains are less likely to show up on it, but I don’t know how everyone will like it. The iPod also has a revised user interface. The Nano will be coming in 8GB and 16GB models.

In other news, a new iPod Touch is also out. Mainly in the same form factor, but thinner, with a new in-built speaker. According to PCWorld, Apple said that the speaker was meant for casual listening. What I infer from that, is if you try cranking up the volume too much, it’ll just go to pieces. Either that or it has a volume limiter. It’s also possible that Apple has made a good quality loudspeaker, in which case, hats off to them. Anyways, I think that introducing a sub-standard component in a quality product would be a blunder. It would spread like wildfire throught blogs, reviews, word-of-mouth, anything and everything.

The Touch will be available in 8GB, 16GB and 32GB models.

Another thing I’ve noticed from the gallery pictures on Apple’s site, the iPod interface is slowly losing it’s ‘all-white’ clean look. I noticed one pic, where the pod was playing a song, and the top, where ‘Now Playing’ appears, was black, as was the playing bar, with time. And the album art is full screen, instead of a small screen on the left.

One more thing…the iTunes store seems to be available in India now. Because I can reach the iTunes Store screen while making an account. Will investigate that later…

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fightback

A late one, but a fightback nevertheless.

I’m talking about Microsoft. They’re starting up a new ad campaign – ‘Windows, not Walls’. They’ve signed up Jerry, Jerry Sienfeld for the commercials. I guess they’re gonna blow past the ‘I’m a Mac, I’m a PC’ ads.

Or not…

Firstly, the name sucks. Big time. But actually, it depends on the ad. If it has anything to do with walls, I might forgive them.

Secondly, it’s the campaign itself. The whole thing is pointless. ’cause everyone knows about Windows, everyone has used Windows, but it will never…ever make you go gaga, like Macs do, unless you’ve been spending the last century in a cave or something. And,

Windows is not cool

I’ve sure that I’ll be likely to see more satisfied Mac users than Windows users. And I think I’ve come up with a theory to support this. It’s that more software is made for Windows than Mac. So, Windows maniacs will end up loading their PCs with junk, clog up the registry, boot-up procedures, and make their lives miserable. Mac has a more select number of good applications developed by Apple. This also means that they would be likely to work better with their native operating system.

Anyway, back to the topic.

Windows is not cool

And the worst thing is that they’re trying to get someone like Jerry Sienfeld to endorse it. I think it’s a waste of talent. But he must be being paid good, cause someone with brains would generally not endorse something this hopeless.

The ads are releasing next week, and I’m hoping to catch them on YouTube, unless they think of releasing them in India, which I think they won’t.

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