Article 5Z7ZJ Farewell to the iPod, the device that ushered in too much choice | Rebecca Nicholson

Farewell to the iPod, the device that ushered in too much choice | Rebecca Nicholson

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Rebecca Nicholson
from US news | The Guardian on (#5Z7ZJ)
As Apple's pioneering digital player shuffles into the sunset, has its legacy delivered on its promise?

There are a couple of old iPods in my desk drawer still, tangled up with cables that will definitely come in useful one day. One is a Shuffle that I clipped to my T-shirt during a brief attempt to have a jogging phase. The other is a scuffed, black, fifth-generation iPod. If I charge it for hours, it plays for a few songs before the screen dissolves and if you press the wheel in a way it doesn't like, the screen freezes completely. It is a frozen object in other ways, too, capturing life at a certain time, in playlists called things such as Dip It Low!! and Happy Birthday Matt 7.

Last week, after just over 20 years, it was announced that the iPod was going to be discontinued; when the last remaining iPod Touches have sold out, there will be no more. [It] redefined how music is discovered, listened to and shared," said Greg Joswiak, Apple's senior vice-president of worldwide marketing, wheeled out for the quote to accompany the announcement. Given the sorry state of the music industry for anyone not at the very top of it, I'm not sure that is something to be proud of entirely, but of course it redefined music. As the iPod's capacity grew, from 5GB to 160GB, it put vast choice in our pockets and made it portable.

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