The last iPod nano and iPod shuffle are now officially obsolete as Apple banishes them from even repairs, alongside a range of devices of other key devices. Apple has a straightforward system for when ...
Apple today added the final iPod nano and iPod shuffle models to its obsolete products list worldwide, marking the end of an era. Apple introduced new color options for the seventh-generation iPod ...
After killing the iPod classic in 2014, Apple has now decided to slash the iPod Nano and Shuffle for good too. They had been on the market since 2005. According to Business Insider, Apple will begin ...
It marks the end of an era: Apple has officially (and quietly) killed off the iPod Nano and the iPod Shuffle, leaving just the iPod Touch as the only remaining version of the company’s iconic portable ...
A second-generation iPod shuffle digital music player from Apple Computer will be noticeably smaller than the existing model and could see an introduction as early as January, says one Wall Street ...
Apple has been moving away from its iPod days for years. Once the company’s most important product, the range has taken a backseat role in recent years as Apple has slowly discontinued old products.
The iPod, the device that turned Apple into a key player in the music business, revolutionized the way we consume digital media and basically defined cool for a generation, is officially dead. But ...
There’s no getting around the fact: Apple’s iPod line—last updated a year ago—was in dire need of a refresh heading into this week’s press event in San Francisco. And Apple provided that refresh in ...
Too busy to read our liveblog coverage of Apple’s September iPod Event? Everything you need to know about Apple’s new products is below the fold, including details about the new iPod Shuffle, Nano, ...
Apple plans to stop selling the iPod. The music player was launched in 2001, with various versions following over the next two decades. Insider takes a look at the evolution of the iPod, which has has ...
The latest iteration of Apple's entry-level iPod, the diminutive shuffle, costs just 28 percent of its retail price, leading to a fat profit margin, according to BusinessWeek. To be fair, that's the ...
Apple replaces its compact flash-based music player with a second-generation shuffle that’s half the size of its predecessor. The silver shuffle comes in only one capacity — 1GB — and adds a built-in ...
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