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When Apple launched the iPod in 2001, it changed music consumption forever. Over the 21 years it was in production, here we ...
Now that Apple sells over hundreds of millions of iPhones a year, it’s easy to forget that it all began with two college dropouts in a garage with some trademark old Apple computers. Since 1976, Apple ...
Refurbished Apple products can save you money, but not all are worth it. Here's what to buy used and what to avoid if you ...
Richard joined Engadget in October 2009 and has somehow become the longest-serving writer on the site. Over the years, he delivered breaking tech news and in-depth reviews, many of which saw the rise ...
Apple’s final iconic iPod Nano and iPod Shuffle MP3 players are now considered as obsolete, bringing an end to their lifetime. The move means that there are now no longer any models carrying those ...
Apple went on to discontinue the iPod nano and iPod shuffle entirely in 2017. Apple considers a device to be "obsolete" once seven years have passed since the company stopped distributing it for sale.
If you’ve been holding on to your final generation iPod Nano or iPod Shuffle you should know that both models have officially been declared as obsolete by Apple. While that doesn’t mean either of ...
That being said, here’s what your $1,000 investment in Apple stock would have turned into at the time of the iPod Nano’s launch: The price of Apple stock from Sept. 7, 2005, to Sept. 6, 2024.
Headphones It’s Time for Apple to Revive the iPod Nano If any company can revive the standalone gadget, it's the one that sold us all on it in the first place.
Apple has made a small play for the environment by introducing newer, smaller packaging for the iPod nano. The nano packaging uses 52% fewer materials than the previous “black box” packaging.
Between 2005 and 2015, Apple released seven versions of the Nano that came in six colors and could hold up to 2,000 songs. The iPod Nano (2nd generation) was launched in 2006.
Then came the “fat” iPod nano in 2007, which Apple designed to look more like a miniature version of the full-sized iPod, which had also moved the same aluminum front that year.