iPods comes in a variety of shapes and sizes. Find one that's right for you.
iPod: Full-size iPods have a large hard drive (30GB or 80GB), a photo slide show feature, and the ability to play video, games, and music. It’s a good choice for serious audiophiles, fans of mobile video, and people who aren't worried about size or who want a lot of bang for their buck.
iPod nano: iPod nano offers a color screen, 4GB or 8GB of storage, and a portable, pocket-sized profile. It uses flash memory (no hard-drive components that might jiggle and break during high-intensity activity), making it a good choice for athletes and exercise enthusiasts. iPod nano is also favored by music lovers, commuters, and students.
iPod shuffle: Fitness-lovers, athletes, commuters, the budget conscious, and minimalists love the miniscule iPod shuffle. It clips onto clothing, has a long battery life, holds about 240 songs, and sports 1GB of flash memory storage.
iPhone: The widescreen iPhone cell phone includes a touchscreen iPod and 3.5-inch widescreen to enjoy music, videos, movies, and more.
Before you can listen to music, podcasts, and audiobooks or watch movies and TV shows, you need to transfer content from your desktop computer or laptop to your iPod. iPods come with Apple iTunes software to help you organize tracks and transfer music. The latest version of iTunes is always available as a free download at Apple's Web site, too.
iTunes is integrated with Apple's online iTunes Store, where you can download most songs for 99 cents and albums for $9.99 and up. To help prevent music piracy, songs purchased from the iTunes Store are provided in AAC format, which restricts how many computers and digital devices can share the same digital music file. It also limits how many times you can burn the song. There shouldn’t be an issue as long as you only share songs on iPods you own and use.
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