Disco music of the 1970s-1980s for DJs & record collectors
Discussion on laugh if you want, but I'm buying my first iPod soon within the Vinyl Record Care, Audio Restoration, MP3 & Computers forums, part of the General Music Discussions at DiscoMusic.com category; (I'm still fairly new to the digital world) and could really use some tips. I'm tired of listening to my ...
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Quicker. iTunes typically rips discs in 10x time, and transfers them to the iPod even faster. Yes, if you're ripping from commercially made CDs or MP3s that are already on your computer. If you're ripping from homemade CD-Rs, no. Quote:
Older iPods can use a different program called Rockbox, but this is not for beginners. Unfortunately, a non-removable, non-user-replaceable one. It automatically charges every time you connect it to your computer. Quote:
The "touch" models are the most expensive. These are really small computers that can connect to the internet via wifi and run many different applications. They're basically an iPhone without the phone part. They have a lovely touch screen, but they're more about the applications than the music/video. Next down is the "classic" model, which is what I use. These are the only kind that have a hard disk in them, so they're a bit more fragile, but they offer a huge amount of space. 120GB of storage and I can use it to play music, videos, games, store photos, and have a vast music collection with me wherever I go. Below that are the "nano" models. Very small and colourful, they have no moving parts so they are ideal for use while exercising. Then there's the "shuffle". The latest version is ridiculously small, has no screen, very little storage, and the controls are on the headphones. I've never understood the point of these, but they sell quite well, so... To give you an idea of 120GB... I have over 12 *days* worth of music on my iPod, most of it at 256kbps... and that's only 33GB. I could store several feature-length movies on this thing if I wanted. In my experience, they are pretty much the same everywhere. Big-box retailers (Best Buy, Wal-Mart, Future Shop... I guess Car Phone Warehouse is a UK equivalent) may sell them for a few bucks less, but you won't see huge price variants... if you do, it's probably a scam (like the spammers that keep trying to flood this board with cheap phones, video games, and iPods... they aren't actually selling anything, they're just trying to rip people off). So get it from a reputable retailer. Only for the "classic" model, which has a mini hard disk in it. The Touch, Nano, and Shuffle models are completely solid-state and have no moving parts at all. |
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