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I just bought an iPod Shuffle (512 MB), and, whaddyaknow, a few weeks later they come out with the 1 GB version! I got it for working out, and I love small and easy to use it is. You just plug it into your USB drive and add songs.
 
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I usually don't buy things like this but I am really considering getting the 2 GB nano. Having some music while working out, walking to class, whatever, that'd be great. $200 though... thats about 20 cases of Natty.. damn.
 
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Just got me one of these: 4 GB, 1000 songs. I know I could have gotten the regular ipod that held a lot more songs for $50 more but 1000 songs is enough for me and not to mention these nanos are freakin sweet gawsh.
B0007Y79B2.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
 
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I got the 4gb nano the day it came out and I love it.

It's ideal for working out as I spend a lot of time at the gym and it's small enough that you can just carry it around in your pocket and it's not a pain in the butt. Also, if you buy the armband, it's so light that you can't feel anything on your arm. It is VERY convenient.
 
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Apple cuts iPod Shuffle price, adds 1-GB Nano

Tue Feb 7, 12:50 PM ET

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Apple Computer Inc. on Tuesday cut the price of its cheapest digital music player, the iPod Shuffle, and launched a smaller-capacity version of its mid-priced iPod Nano.

The move by Apple, which has 70 percent of the U.S. digital music player market, is aimed at further consolidating a market that it leads, Apple executives said. The company also said it has now sold 12 million videos on its iTunes online store.

"By making it even more affordable, we want to continue to grow and enlarge the market," said Greg Joswiak, head of iPod product marketing, in a telephone interview.

Cupertino, California,-based Apple said the 512-megabyte Shuffle will now sell for $69, down from $99 previously. The 1-gigabyte model will sell for $99, down from $129.

The 512-megabyte version holds about 120 songs.

The new 1-gigabyte Nano, the sleek iPod model that won rave reviews from critics and consumers when it was introduced last September, was priced at $149.

The 2-gigabyte Nano sells for $199 and holds about 500 songs; a 4-gigabyte model sells for $249.

Apple has already sold more than 40 million iPods since their introduction in October 2001, and, in 2005 alone, sold more than 30 million of the popular items.

The price cuts could raise questions about whether Apple's profit margins will suffer, but American Technology Research analyst Shaw Wu said he was not concerned.

"The price of components have come down more than 70 percent, especially flash memory for the Shuffle," he said. "And the price of the Shuffle hadn't changed, so they were making a ton of profit off the Shuffle. So they're passing some of those savings on."

Asked whether Apple needed to cut prices for products that were already so popular, Wu said, "While iPods have a 70 percent share in the U.S., internationally its share is much lower at around 40 percent."

While Joswiak declined to comment on the lower prices' impact on iPod gross margins, he said the announcement was part of Apple's longer-term strategy. Apple Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer has said that average gross margin on all iPod models is 20 percent or more.

"It's fair to say this has been a planned move," Joswiak said when asked about gross margin impact.

Wu also said that recent studies suggest only a third of all U.S. households have a digital music player, suggesting that the market opportunity for the iPod is greater than its global market share suggests.

Apple shares were up 16 cents at $67.46 in Nasdaq trade after rising as high as $69.48 earlier in the session, a gain of 3 percent. The shares fell nearly 13 percent over the previous four intraday trading sessions.

The stock trades at about 25 times its projected earnings per share before items for its fiscal year 2007 ending in September.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060207/wr_nm/apple_dc
 
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My iPod Nano just fucked up...can't turn it off correctly, screen fades slowely when I can turn it off, reset doesn't work, etc.

Anyway, I called the Apple store where I bought it and they said that I had to either buy a new warrenty for $59.99 or pay $49.99 for the two minutes of help that they would be giving me. I said no and they refused to help me.

I will never buy another thing from Apple
 
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My iPod Nano just fucked up...can't turn it off correctly, screen fades slowely when I can turn it off, reset doesn't work, etc.

Anyway, I called the Apple store where I bought it and they said that I had to either buy a new warrenty for $59.99 or pay $49.99 for the two minutes of help that they would be giving me. I said no and they refused to help me.

I will never buy another thing from Apple

How old is your Nano? Luckily I paid for the 2-year warranty through BestBuy, because my Shuffle was only a month old when it died. I have another one -- we'll see how long this one lasts!
 
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How old is your Nano? Luckily I paid for the 2-year warranty through BestBuy, because my Shuffle was only a month old when it died. I have another one -- we'll see how long this one lasts!

It's about 4 monthes old. I don't see the reason Apple won't help after the warrenty expires. As long as you don't want to return it then they should help. I don't know of any other companies that won't help me with tech support if the warrenty expires. My Compaq computer has conked out several times since the warrenty expired and they still helped, even sent someone out. If I had an Apple computer then I would have been screwed long ago.
 
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It's about 4 months old. I don't see the reason Apple won't help after the warrenty expires. As long as you don't want to return it then they should help. I don't know of any other companies that won't help me with tech support if the warrenty expires. My Compaq computer has conked out several times since the warrenty expired and they still helped, even sent someone out. If I had an Apple computer then I would have been screwed long ago.

I'm surprised your warranty isn't longer than a few months. If you buy something for more than a few hundred dollars, it might be worth it to get some sort of multiple-year warranty. Have you tried the iPod tech support discussion page? Someone might be able to help you there. http://discussions.apple.com/category.jspa?categoryID=146
 
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