PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • IPod Shuffle
  • IPod shuffle
  • IPod shuffle
rdfs:comment
  • iPod shuffle无屏幕。主要的用途是为了随机音乐。苹果已经将iPod shuffle之口号定为“生活是随机的” (Life is random)。 iPod shuffle比一管口香糖还更轻更小,这也是为什么苹果曾经开过玩笑:“不要吃掉iPod shuffle!”。
  • The iPod Shuffle was a piece of crap that Steve Jobs tricked the average idiot into buying in a last ditch hope of earning money in the music player business. The iPod Shuffle is just like the iPod, except totally useless. The only song the iPod Shuffle can play is called "iPod Shuffle". This song is simply the word "Shuffle" said over and over again for two hours. The iPod Shuffle received negative reviews, but Steve Jobs does not care because he made OVER 9000 UnDollars on this device. The only person who liked it was Morshu, and people have no idea what's wrong with him.
  • Released on January 11, 2005, the first-generation iPod Shuffle weighed 0.78 ounces (22 g) and was designed to be easily loaded with a selection of songs and to play them in random order. According to Apple,[citation needed] owners of existing iPods had often left the music selection to "shuffle", and the new iPod Shuffle was a way of implementing that in a much more cost-effective fashion. It relies on the use of an "autofill" feature in iTunes, which can select songs at random from a user's music library (or from a specific playlist) and copy as many as will fit into the iPod Shuffle's memory. The Shuffle can hold up to 240 songs (1-GB model, based on Apple's estimate, of four minutes per song and 128 kbit/s AAC encoding). It used the SigmaTel STMP35xx system on a chip (SOC) and its soft
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abstract
  • iPod shuffle无屏幕。主要的用途是为了随机音乐。苹果已经将iPod shuffle之口号定为“生活是随机的” (Life is random)。 iPod shuffle比一管口香糖还更轻更小,这也是为什么苹果曾经开过玩笑:“不要吃掉iPod shuffle!”。
  • The iPod Shuffle was a piece of crap that Steve Jobs tricked the average idiot into buying in a last ditch hope of earning money in the music player business. The iPod Shuffle is just like the iPod, except totally useless. The only song the iPod Shuffle can play is called "iPod Shuffle". This song is simply the word "Shuffle" said over and over again for two hours. The iPod Shuffle received negative reviews, but Steve Jobs does not care because he made OVER 9000 UnDollars on this device. The only person who liked it was Morshu, and people have no idea what's wrong with him.
  • Released on January 11, 2005, the first-generation iPod Shuffle weighed 0.78 ounces (22 g) and was designed to be easily loaded with a selection of songs and to play them in random order. According to Apple,[citation needed] owners of existing iPods had often left the music selection to "shuffle", and the new iPod Shuffle was a way of implementing that in a much more cost-effective fashion. It relies on the use of an "autofill" feature in iTunes, which can select songs at random from a user's music library (or from a specific playlist) and copy as many as will fit into the iPod Shuffle's memory. The Shuffle can hold up to 240 songs (1-GB model, based on Apple's estimate, of four minutes per song and 128 kbit/s AAC encoding). It used the SigmaTel STMP35xx system on a chip (SOC) and its software development kit (SDK) v2.6, a flash memory IC, and USB rechargeable lithium cell. The STMP35xx SOC and its software was the most fully integrated portable MP3 playback system at release time and SigmaTel was Austin's largest IPO (2003) capturing over 60% of flash based MP3 player world market share in 2004. In 2005, peak iPod first-generation Shuffle production occurred at a hundred thousand units per day, at the Asus factory. It lacks a display and the trademark scroll wheel, playlist management features, and is missing the games, address book, calendar, alarm, and notes capability of larger iPods; it cannot be used with iSync. Due to the codec not being ported, it is incapable of playing Apple Lossless and AIFF audio files. Due to superior audio technology in the SigmaTel STMP35xx SOC and SDK, the iPod Shuffle has a better bass response than a 4th generation iPod, according to a review published days after its release.[2][3] First generation iPod Shuffle with the cap removed to show the USB connector. The cap snaps onto the unit. iPod Shuffle comes with a second cap on a lanyard, which a user can wear around his or her neck. iTunes offers some new features for iPod Shuffle. One is the ability to reduce the bit rate of songs to 128 kbit/s AAC. The conversion is done automatically, with the original file left untouched on the computer and the smaller (lower bit rate) file sent to the iPod Shuffle. Older versions of iTunes allowed an iPod Shuffle playlist to be viewed and changed while the unit is not connected; the next time the unit is connected, it can then be updated with the changed playlist. This functionality is no longer a part of iTunes as of iTunes 7. The front of the iPod Shuffle has buttons for Play/Pause, Next Song/Fast Forward, Previous Song/Fast Reverse, and up and down volume adjustment. On the reverse, it has a battery level indicator light (activated by a button) and a three-position switch to turn the unit off or set it to play music in order or shuffled. It plugs directly into a computer's USB port (either 1.1 or 2.0), through which it also recharges its battery, which has an expected life of around 12 hours between charges. The USB plug is hidden beneath a cap. The unit also comes with a lanyard that attaches to the iPod Shuffle via an attached cap and this allows the user to wear the iPod Shuffle around his or her neck. The iPod Shuffle can also be used as a USB flash drive. iTunes allows a user to set how much of the drive will be allowed for storing files, and how much will be used for storing.