Revision as of 21:46, 4 November 2002 editMagnus Manske (talk | contribs)Administrators24,423 editsm Pixo← Previous edit | Revision as of 21:13, 24 January 2003 edit undoMbessey (talk | contribs)132 editsm clarified the role of Pixo in creating the iPod's softwareNext edit → | ||
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First announced in ] ], the iPod was originally available with a 5-] ]. A 10-GB version was announced in ] ]. In ] ], a 20-GB model was announced, and both the 10- and 20-GB models were updated with a touch-sensitive (rather than moving) scroll wheel, as well as other upgrades. Firmware upgrades have added some ] functions. | First announced in ] ], the iPod was originally available with a 5-] ]. A 10-GB version was announced in ] ]. In ] ], a 20-GB model was announced, and both the 10- and 20-GB models were updated with a touch-sensitive (rather than moving) scroll wheel, as well as other upgrades. Firmware upgrades have added some ] functions. | ||
Two ex-] developers founded ] , |
Two ex-] developers founded ] , a company that created some of the software that runs the iPod. | ||
The iPod was originally only compatible with ] computers, but as of the summer of ] has also been available in ] versions, formatted to ] instead of ]. Third-party products also exist to allow the use of Mac-formatted iPods with Windows computers. | The iPod was originally only compatible with ] computers, but as of the summer of ] has also been available in ] versions, formatted to ] instead of ]. Third-party products also exist to allow the use of Mac-formatted iPods with Windows computers. |
Revision as of 21:13, 24 January 2003
The iPod is a hard-drive-based MP3 player from Apple Computer that is distinguished by its small size, simple user interface based on a central scroll wheel, and fast FireWire connection capable of 400-Mbps data transfers.
First announced in October 2001, the iPod was originally available with a 5-GB hard drive. A 10-GB version was announced in March 2002. In July 2002, a 20-GB model was announced, and both the 10- and 20-GB models were updated with a touch-sensitive (rather than moving) scroll wheel, as well as other upgrades. Firmware upgrades have added some PDA functions.
Two ex-Apple Newton developers founded Pixo , a company that created some of the software that runs the iPod.
The iPod was originally only compatible with Macintosh computers, but as of the summer of 2002 has also been available in Windows versions, formatted to FAT32 instead of HFS+. Third-party products also exist to allow the use of Mac-formatted iPods with Windows computers.
External links
- iPod product info by Apple Computer: http://www.apple.com/ipod/