new toy

Sep. 25th, 2006 06:00 pm
cellio: (avatar)
[personal profile] cellio
I've entered the 21st century: I now have an iPod (nano), a birthday present from Dani. This was totally unexpected; I haven't had portable music since way back when I had a Walkman (TM). But I'd been lamenting the hassle of moving CDs between the home and the car (the one you want is always in the wrong place), and this solves that. Dani also got me an interface between the iPod and the car stereo; it broadcasts via FM, raising questions (not answered in the documentation) about signal distance. Can I end up in conflict with the guy behind me at the traffic light? Time may tell, nor not. (Neither Dani nor I is really an earbud kind of person.)

The itty bitty iPod comes with an itty bitty manual. Fortunately (I suppose), also a short one. (I read it with a magnifying glass.)

The UI seems a little jumpy, and I do hope there's a global switch so that turning it on requires intentional action. As it is, just brushing the face sometimes turns it on, which can't be good for battery life.

I haven't used iTunes before, and parts of the interface are (deliberately?) counter-intuitive for Windows, but I think I've got the gist of it. So far I'm just working at the album level; I haven't created playlists. I assume that eventually I'll have too much music in iTunes for the iPod and I'll need to select what to put on the iPod, but I've only scanned about half a dozen CDs so far so that's not an issue yet.

Cool toy!

(no subject)

Date: 2006-09-26 01:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chaiya.livejournal.com
Huh. I say you experiment, then! Try putting the iPod as far as possible from the antenna, and see if it's different from putting it as close as possible. Be sure to control for factors such as moving away from or toward a conflicting radio station (stay put), etc. I hypothesize that having the iPod closer to your antenna will give you better signal. ;)

(no subject)

Date: 2006-09-26 09:50 pm (UTC)
jducoeur: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jducoeur
Sounds like the same device I have. Yes, what matters there is the proximity of the gadget itself, not the iPod. I eventually decided that the interference was Way Too Annoying (see previous comments about the crowded Boston radio dial), and switched over to a cassette adaptor, which worked smashingly well -- until that stereo broke, and I discovered that getting a new one with a cassette player is a pain nowadays.

So I wound up choosing my new car stereo mostly *for* the iPod. I got one with an AUX input, had the installers hang a jack wire out the front, and I simply plug the iPod into that for automotive use. (They even make an iPod adaptor for the thing, which lets the stereo front-panel control the iPod, but it was an extra hundred bucks that I didn't care to spend...)

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