Friday 28 July 2017

Apple axes iPod nano and shuffle


Apple CEO Steve Jobs delivers a keynote address in front of an image of the new iPod Nano during an Apple media event September 12, 2006 in San Francisco, California. Jobs announced new iPods and video downloads from iTunes as well as a sneak peek at a device tenatively called iTV which allows you to channel iTunes to your television and is expected out in early 2007. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)


Touch became the last iPod standing on Thursday as Apple removed nano and shuffle stand-alone digital music players from its lineup.


Late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs introduced the devices some 12 years ago with his legendary showmanship flare, and the small, easy to operate players helped the company revolutionize how music was sold.


Apple confirmed to AFP that it is no longer selling nano and shuffle, and the MP3 players vanished from the Apple website.


“Today, we are simplifying our iPod lineup with two models of iPod touch now with double the capacity starting at just $199 and we are discontinuing the iPod shuffle and iPod nano,” the company said in an email.


Industry trackers and California-based Apple itself have long acknowledged that the do-it-all iPhone would eat away at sales of one-trick devices such as iPod MP3 players, so the farewell was met more with nostalgia than surprise.


The trend toward streaming music services, including the launch of one by Apple, has made devices designed just for carrying digital tunes around less enticing for consumers.


Shuffle devices about the size of matchbooks and featuring click-wheels for control but no screens debuted in early 2005, with Jobs touting that they let people carry broad libraries of music right in their pockets.


The small gadgets became popular with runners and others involved in physically active endeavors due to the ease with which they could be toted.


The iPod nano also hit the market in 2005, featuring click wheels and screens that improved the ability to select songs. Nano devices evolved with subsequent models, leading to one with a multi-touch screen and the look of an iPhone.


Neither the shuffle nor the nano linked to the internet, instead relying on downloading music from Apple online shop iTunes through computers.


Three years ago Apple discontinued the last version of the original iPod Classic, introduced in October of 2001.


The remaining products in the line are iPod touch models boasting much larger storage capacity and the ability to link wirelessly to internet hotspots for online content such as music streamed from services such as Apple Music.

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