Excerpt: Last year's iPod Nano marked a change that would see it as one of the more popular iPod devices. A small softened slightly rectangular shape and a thin depth coupled with...
Conclusion: The fourth-gen Nano is the friendliest one yet, with more customisation options, a smudge-free back and a wafer-thin yet sturdy construction.
Pros: Headphones and sound quality are the same as before, Thumb can feel a bit squished, Some features require the purchase of additional accessories
Cons: Attractive all-in-one matte metallic design, Better menu with option to turn off graphics, Easier to operate one-handed than the third-gen model
Excerpt: Here’s a hard truth: Even if Apple decided to carve its new Nano out of petrified poo and bless it with a Braille display, the interface alone would still make
Pros: Enough colors to make you second guess dropping that third hit of acid before hitting the Apple store. Up to 16 gigs of storage. On the fly Genius (should be called La...
Cons: Why no love for the squarePod? Shake-to-shuffle is a nightmare during parkour outings; switching off the much-needed French Hip Hop in favor of our knitting podcasts w...