A teardown of the 7th-generation iPod Nano by iFixit finds the battery and other components soldered to the logic board, making them difficult to replace. Lance Whitney is a freelance technology ...
I use used a 4th generation iPod. It was glorious with it’s 20 gigabyte hard drive, paper weight styling and ability to be dropped onto concrete with fear not for the device but for the ground it ...
As indicated by a handful of MacFixIt readers and numerous posters to Apple's Discussion boards, the iPod nano (or at least some shipped currently units) are highly susceptible to scratches -- though ...
There’ve been many how-tos in fixing your broken iPod over the years, many of which recommend you to just reset and restore the iPod in hopes that it was a software corruption. If that doesn’t fix it, ...
March 6, 2007 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google Gadget weblog CrunchGear posts a "five-point plan" for fixing an iPod that won't boot. The first two steps are ...
Second, when I got my iPod back, it had been renamed to "The iPod Drop." Since I had erased my iPod in my attempts to fix it, I'm not sure this happens to everyone. Nonetheless, it was easy to fix.
The best way to prevent hearing damage from listening to your iPod too loud is to just turn it down - but that's common sense. Here are a couple of easy ways Apple could avoid lawsuits claiming that ...
Apple has created a winning combination with iTunes and the iPod—products that are both fun and easy to use. But even these well-designed feats of Apple software and hardware engineering can cause a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results