| |

iPod Shuffle: So Small, So Complex

Note: This article was published while I was in my early 20s. I was much younger and dumber. Please don't hold it against me. One of the perils of having a 20+ year old website!
Image courtesy of Apple
Image courtesy of Apple

With all the news in politics happening lately, I’ve almost forgotten why I started this blog: to talk tech. It’s what I know best. Well, here you go: My thoughts on Apple’s newest iteration of the iPod Shuffle.

I’ve posted thoughts on Apple and their precious iPod before, but this is pretty baffling. This shuffle is the smallest it’s ever been at 1.8″ tall and 0.3″ in thickness. That’s smaller than a key, which is pretty cool. However, when you need a guide to controlling the thing, there is a problem. 1 click to play/pause, 2 clicks to go forward, 3 clicks to go back. Other controls to traverse through playlists. I mean it’s cool that it talks to you and all since there is no screen on the device, but there is actually nothing on the device.

Right- the controller is actually on the headphones, and that is where my main problem lies. This new shuffle is limiting you to using Apple’s proprietary headphones or paying extra to buy an adapter to use your own. You need an adapter to use different headphones for your own mp3 player.

Apple touts all of this as innovative- small because it should be small; convenient, easy-to-use controls. But nixing a back and forward button is not innovative- it’s making something overly complicated and saying it’s innovative because no one has done it. And believe me, there is a reason.

Similar Posts

  • How Do I Learn Web Development?

    A couple of years ago, I was on the How to Hold a Pencil podcast (episode here) and we discussed a number of things, including the steps I took to learn web development (over 14 years ago…whoa). I’m often asked, as I was on the show, what I recommend for people starting today. Here’s my…

  • |

    Since the Giants last made it to the Super Bowl

    Note: This article was published while I was in my early 20s. I was much younger and dumber. Please don’t hold it against me. One of the perils of having a 20+ year old website! Since 2000, the last time the Giants made it to the Super Bowl I’ve… Learned how to develop websites Started…

  • 2026 Yearly Theme: Digital Detox

    There comes a time in everyone’s life when they’ve consumed too much of something, and they find the very notion of consuming more sickening. This could be the college student who drank too much vodka and can’t have it anymore. Or the person who ate far too much sushi, got sick, and is now repulsed…

  • Facebook vs. MySpace III

    Note: This article was published while I was in my early 20s. I was much younger and dumber. Please don’t hold it against me. One of the perils of having a 20+ year old website! This is part 3 of a 3 part series that started here and continued here. User Friendliness The most important…

  • |

    The Occam’s Razor of Projects

    Ever since I heard about it on Scrubs back in 2006, I’ve been obsessed with the idea of Occam’s Razor. According to Wikipedia, it’s the problem-solving principle that “entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity”, sometimes inaccurately paraphrased as “the simplest explanation is usually the best one.” Put another way, it’s the theory with the least amount…

  • Playing with the Apple Classical Music App

    I’ve been listening to a lot more classical music lately. My wife said recently, “The older I get, the less interested I am in lyrics.” I wouldn’t go that far, but it is nice to have beautiful, lyric-less music on while you work or read. The Apple Classical Music app dropped today and I’m not…