(Minneapolis) After a three month hiatus, Menopause the Musical returns to the Twin Cities stage this week, John Reger reports (3:47).
(Denver) As the title implies, `The Great American Trailer Park Musical` is just what you think it might be. Critic at Large Greg Moody has a review.
Music and fashion came together Thursday night at Radio City Music Hall for the annual Fashion Rocks concert. Headliners included Aerosmith, 50 Cent, Fergie and Alicia Keys with Carlos Santana. (Sept. 7)
iPod
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(Redirected from Ipods)
iPod
The current iPod line consists of (from left to right) the iPod shuffle, iPod nano, iPod classic and iPod touch.
Manufacturer
Apple Inc.
Type
Portable media player
Retail availability
2001
Units sold
Over 119 million units worldwide, as of October 2007
Online service
iTunes Store
iPod is a brand of portable media players designed and marketed by Apple and launched on October 23, 2001. The line-up currently consists of the hard drive-based flagship iPod classic, the high-end touchscreen iPod touch, the mid-level video-capable iPod nano, and the entry-level screenless iPod shuffle. Former products include the compact iPod mini (replaced by the iPod nano) and the high-end spin-off iPod photo (re-integrated into the main iPod classic line). iPod classic models store media on an internal hard drive, while all other models, aside from the Microdrive-based mini, use flash memory to enable their smaller size. As with many other digital music players, iPods, excluding the iPod Touch, can also serve as external data storage devices.
Apple's iTunes software is used to transfer music to the devices. As a jukebox application, iTunes stores a music library on the user's computer and can play, burn, and rip music from a CD. It also transfers photos, videos, games, and calendars to those iPod models that support them. Apple focused its development on the iPod's unique user interface and its ease of use, rather than on technical capability. As of October 2007, the iPod had sold over 119 million units worldwide (stated in "The Beat Goes On" conference) making it the best-selling digital audio player series in history.