January 6, 2008 @ 7:00 pm
Why my new iPod has disappointed me (or, Cry me an iRiver)
For Christmas my lovely girlfriend, at my wishes, got me a black 80gb Apple iPod Classic, such as the one seen below:

(Please note: this is a stock photo, and not my iPod. I do not listen to Jack Johnson or Nelly Furtado.)
My original wanting for the device was due to the fact that it was pretty much the only financially viable player out there which would give me 80gb of music space to fill. For the past few years I’ve been living with the rather fantastic iRiver h320, a 20gb mp3 player with custom Rockbox firmware, which did pretty much everything I wanted: album art, folder structuring, line in recording, radio, video, last.fm integration, worked as a USB hard drive, drag-n-drop, etc. Again, the main reason I wanted the upgrade was for the 80gb of storage space, having found the 20gb space somewhat limiting (heh, I know, but honestly, its true); that and the fact that the iPod has a shedload of universal accessories out there such as in-car audio integration and speaker docks (Apple’s monopoly prevails).
At first I was pretty impressed with the player: shiny and slim player, sleek interface, good sound quality. However, the problems were pretty quick to highlight themselves. Firstly, the obvious one, the iPod likes to rely on you to use iTunes (or an alternative program) to add music, rather than just being able to drag and drop the mp3 files like a USB hard drive, but I knew this was the case and expected it so. I decided to just use iTunes and add my files to it from there manually. Copying over albums was fine, but when it came to B-sides and single tracks it was a royal pain in the ass, since I didn’t want the iPod’s cover flow feature showing a million different albums which I didn’t actually have on the player. Since I didn’t actually want to change the tags on my mp3 collection (I like them as they are) I created a second folder with copies of the mp3s, which I could then add into iTunes and rename/re-sort as I pleased. Despite the 6 hours of sorting this required, it did the job (apart from me getting confused between the two folders and accidentally deleting some of my proper mp3s). So once the mp3s were copied on to the iPod, I deleted the copied folder, thinking I would never need them again since they’re loaded on to the iPod.
After several days of content listening, and getting Last.fm integration to work thanks to iSproggler, I was pretty pleased with the player. I did still have a few issues, such as the very plain “Now Playing” screen (would’ve been nice if I could change the colours/backgrounds/details displayed), and the lack of volume when plugged into a non-amplified set of speakers (in comparison to my iRiver), but I was willing to overlook these minor issues and keep a smile of content on my face. The first major issue came when the iPod hung up on me when I tried to plug it into my laptop one day. This involved having to find out the reset technique (lock the iPod, unlock it, then hold down Menu and the centre button together until the apple appears to say “congratulations, you’ve been screwed by apple”) – not happy, considering it was still week 1 of ownership! That problem, however, pales in comparison to what followed a day or two later. I plugged my iPod into my desktop computer with the intent of doing some more editing on the library to help sort things a bit better. Upon plugging it in, the computer didn’t seem to acknowledge its existence, nor did the iPod show any form of connection on its screen. “Ok”, says I, “I’ll just unplug it and re-plug it”. Bad move. It decided to see the iPod this time, and then proceeded to tell me my iPod was corrupted, and required restoring to factory settings.
$%*&!!!!!!

That meant another full day of sorting music out, thanks to the player crapping itself. Great! Just what I always wanted, an unreliable piece of crap as an mp3 player. Bearing in mind that I’d be plugging my player in to a computer everyday to update my Last.fm plays, this doesn’t fill me with confidence for the future. Now I’m having to look into good ways of backing up the iPod to an external hard drive to make for easy restoration.
So yeah, 2 years of happy iRiver ownership has now been replaced by a 1 week unsatisfactory performance by the iPod.
Nice one, Apple.
(I’m still looking forward to receiving my Intempo IDS05 B speaker dock in the post in the next couple of days though.)
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Posted by Gayatri
January 18, 2008 @ 7:25 am
Hey!
I’m so, so grateful for this post. I’m the (not so) proud owner of a DAY old iPod 80GB (Black), like yourself and am facing the exact same problems with this stupid #@#$#. If it’s of any consolation, you’ve atleast enjoyed it for a week. iTunes freezes when I attach the two for syncing, the iPod hung on me TWICE when I attached it to my laptop on the SECOND day. Thank you so much for the tip on holdin down the menu and center key.
Was actually going to buy the iPod Touch, but felt that 16GB was barely enough space, so I settled for this. Anyhow, hoping it won’t give me too much trouble.
Best of luck with yours.
:)
Posted by Burkey
January 20, 2008 @ 7:18 pm
Thanks for your comment, good to know the tip helped out! I haven’t had much trouble with it since the post, other than another curious fault whereby it said my iPod may need restored again, but I found out it was mixing up the drive letter with a network drive and so manually changing the drive letter under Windows fixed it. The only other problem I’ve had is sometimes it doesn’t log what I play, meaning my Last.FM scrobbling update misses out on some music =( Other than that its been tolerable :)
Posted by not so amused cat | ~ we are chiwasu ?!
July 27, 2008 @ 5:25 pm
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