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Title: Apple iPod shuffle Power Users’ Review
Pros: Apple's smallest, lightest, and cheapest iPod yet, with an industry-leading price point and enough music playback features to satisfy some users
Cons: Major compromises on features (especially the absence of a screen) will suit new iPod users more than experienced ones, and force old users to adapt to the shuffle's limited ways of organizing and playing back music. By no means a must-have product for cu
Verdict: i have my shuffle now and can easily say that the weight savings and size savings and shock proof savings are IMHO (and obviously some disagree) just HUGE over even a iPod mini for gym or sporting use. now if i could only have ONE iPod, clearly i would ge
Summary: Since there are different types of iPod owners - first-timers and experienced ones - iLounge always reviews new iPods twice, once for new users and once for power users. No new iPod has demonstrated the value of this double review system as fully as Apple
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75/100 |
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Title: Apple iPod nano Review
Pros: Best looking iPod we've ever seen, Impossibly small, Bright color screen, Click Wheel, Available in black!
Cons: No protective case included
Summary: The iPod nano is newest iPod from Apple. Designed to replace the iPod Mini, the new nano neatly fills the gap between the big iPod and the smaller, but almost useless, iPod Shuffle. The iPod nano is thinner than a pencil and holds 1000 songs.
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90/100 |
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Title: Apple iPod nano (3rd gen, video)
Pros: Crisp, bright video playback; exceptionally thin all-metal body; above-average battery life; built-in games; advanced user interface
Cons: Wider body; smaller scroll wheel; lack of video output; average-sounding audio quality
Verdict: Apple's new iPod nano seems to be drawing equal amounts of ire and admiration. Although we miss the slender form of the second-generation iPod nano, we feel the latest edition has more going for it than against it. At less than £100, the 4GB iPod na
Summary: With its wider, square design and its video playback capability, the latest iPod nano is more like a 'light' version of the iPod classic. Despite its changes, the nano is still one of the smallest, thinnest and most exquisitely designed MP3 players on the
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80/100 |
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Title: Apple iPod classic
Pros: Capacity; design; good screen; Cover Flow; use of album art; high-quality video support; great games; handy search feature; sound quality; support for lossless audio; integrated podcast features
Cons: New main menu UI; have to use iTunes; navigation can be slow at times
Verdict: Apple has not only exceeded our expectations, it's exceeded ones we didn't even have. The iPod classic is a superb audio player with a huge wealth of well-integrated features and intuitive navigation. Our only real concern is that menus can be laggy. Apar
Summary: Coming in 80GB and 160GB capacities, the new Apple iPod classic can hold a massive archive of music and video. There's no need to pick and choose which music goes with you, even if you rip CDs at the very highest lossless quality. The interface has been g
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90/100 |
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Title: Apple iPod nano (3rd gen, video)
Pros: Crisp, bright video playback; exceptionally thin all-metal body; above-average battery life; built-in games; advanced user interface
Cons: Wider body; smaller scroll wheel; lack of video output; average-sounding audio quality
Verdict: Apple's new iPod nano seems to be drawing equal amounts of ire and admiration. Although we miss the slender form of the second-generation iPod nano, we feel the latest edition has more going for it than against it. At less than £100, the 4GB iPod na
Summary: With its wider, square design and its video playback capability, the latest iPod nano is more like a 'light' version of the iPod classic. Despite its changes, the nano is still one of the smallest, thinnest and most exquisitely designed MP3 players on the
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80/100 |
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Title: Apple iPod shuffle Power Users’ Review
Pros: Apple's smallest, lightest, and cheapest iPod yet, with an industry-leading price point and enough music playback features to satisfy some users
Cons: Major compromises on features (especially the absence of a screen) will suit new iPod users more than experienced ones, and force old users to adapt to the shuffle's limited ways of organizing and playing back music. By no means a must-have product for cu
Verdict: i have my shuffle now and can easily say that the weight savings and size savings and shock proof savings are IMHO (and obviously some disagree) just HUGE over even a iPod mini for gym or sporting use. now if i could only have ONE iPod, clearly i would ge
Summary: Since there are different types of iPod owners - first-timers and experienced ones - iLounge always reviews new iPods twice, once for new users and once for power users. No new iPod has demonstrated the value of this double review system as fully as Apple
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75/100 |
 |
Title: Apple iPod nano (3rd gen, video)
Pros: Crisp, bright video playback; exceptionally thin all-metal body; above-average battery life; built-in games; advanced user interface
Cons: Wider body; smaller scroll wheel; lack of video output; average-sounding audio quality
Verdict: Apple's new iPod nano seems to be drawing equal amounts of ire and admiration. Although we miss the slender form of the second-generation iPod nano, we feel the latest edition has more going for it than against it. At less than £100, the 4GB iPod na
Summary: With its wider, square design and its video playback capability, the latest iPod nano is more like a 'light' version of the iPod classic. Despite its changes, the nano is still one of the smallest, thinnest and most exquisitely designed MP3 players on the
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80/100 |
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