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Invasion of the iPod people
Knight Ridder ^ | 5.4.05

Posted on 05/07/2005 11:28:05 AM PDT by ambrose







Posted on Wed, May. 04, 2005


Invasion of the iPod people


Knight Ridder Newspapers

(KRT) - When Kate Wolfe-Jenson turns in at night, she often can't keep her mind from racing. "I'm thinking my late-night thoughts," she says.

She tried using audiobooks to help her calm down and doze off. But this system worked imperfectly because she used audiotapes, which she had to flip over at regular intervals that kept her awake.

Then, she switched to an iPod digital-music player and found bedtime bliss.

Wolfe-Jenson, one of millions who use Apple Computer's iconic handheld devices, places her iPod at her bedside and tucks the player's signature white earbuds under her pillow. With the volume cranked up, she can hear one of Terry Pratchett's "Discworld" fantasy novels well enough to become immersed in the story and, before long, drop off.

Silicon Valley, Calif., resident Wolfe-Jenson and her husband, Ralph Jenson, are citizens of the so-called iPod Nation. That's the name often applied to the mushrooming number of Americans who have embraced the devices and come to depend on them in sometimes-unusual, not-always-music-related ways.

Apple has sold more than 10 million iPods since introducing an initial version of the device in October 2001. Of those, more than 8 million were sold in 2004, and nearly 5 million were sold during the last quarter of the year alone. The devices, which have gone through four generations, now dominate the digital-player market.

They range from the low-cost ($150), Juicy Fruit-sized iPod shuffle gizmos to high-end iPod Photos ($450) with capacious hard drives and color screens for showing digital photos. A black-and-red iPod is aimed at fans of the Irish rock band U2. Curvy, compact iPod minis in bright hues are intended for the style-savvy.

And now, it seems, those easy-to-spot earbuds are everywhere.

---

Wolfe-Jenson and Jenson have more than done their part to iPod-ize the nation. The couple and their daughter, Alexis, are a four-iPod household, which isn't all that unusual anymore.

In addition to the iPod at Wolfe-Jenson's bedside, there are the first-generation model Jenson uses to keep computer files and the newer iPod he takes on bicycle commutes -- he buds up one ear but keeps the other free for safety -- and the iPod mini the family uses on road trips, with tunes and audiobooks piped wirelessly through the car's radio.

"Absolutely not a day goes by when we're not using at least one of the players each, or maybe two," Jenson says.

The iPods' popularity has spawned a booming secondary market in iPod accessories -- more than 400 of them, by one recent estimate -- in what some have nicknamed the iPod Economy. Such add-on gear ranges from mounting devices and protective cases in all colors and textures to devices that help the minimalist iPods take on new chores.

When Lynn Huiskamp of rural River Falls, Wis., coaches her girl swimmers at a local high school, she blares music via a boom box to keep the teens motivated and entertained during grueling practices. She used music CDs for a time but had trouble keeping track of them. She later switched to CDs containing MP3 files, more of which can be put on a disc, but the platters were prone to skipping or stuttering just as the girls were getting into their grooves.

She found salvation in her gold-colored iPod mini, which she received as a Christmas gift from her husband, Jay Esch, along with a Griffin add-on dubbed the iTrip mini. The FM transmitter serves as a wireless bridge between iPod and boom box, which Huiskamp tunes to a blank spot on the FM band so the iPod's contents are heard over the speakers.

"At first, the girls didn't know where the music was coming from," the coach said. "Then they got excited. We said, `Yeah, Apple needs to come and do a commercial.'"

---

With sound-recording attachments, iPod users can use their players as the digital equivalents of tape recorders in classrooms or in their work.

Kevin Hendricks, a St. Paul, Minn.-based freelance writer, hated his old tape-based recorder with cassettes that needed to be flipped over at intervals during interviews. "It was just kind of pain listening to it because you had to fast-forward across the whole tape" to find specific portions of conversations, he said.

His iPod with a Griffin iTalk add-on works like a digital voice recorder -- except, with a 40-gigabyte hard drive, he is able to store hours upon hours of interviews. "I can go on a trip somewhere and do 10 interviews in a day," he said.

His only problem: Before interviews, he must spend a few minutes satisfying his subjects' inevitable iPod curiosity.

Terry Snell, a professor in the Georgia Institute of Technology's biology department, has taken iPod-based sound recording to a delicious extreme. His 20-gigabyte iPod is hooked to a high-quality mic with a parabolic reflector to concentrate and collect sounds – bird calls, to be exact.

The sounds are then saved to a laptop so Snell and his students can analyze them using ornithological software, such as Canary or Raven, "which allow us to estimate frequency, call rate, etc."

What's more, they can use the iPod to play back the calls and record the birds' responses. "The iPod allows us to get into the field with a whole library of professionally recorded songs," he said.

In iPods' longstanding role as high-capacity portable hard drives, they have often proved to be lifesavers because of their ability to safely stockpile vast amounts of digital data.

Maplewood, Minn., attorney Thomas Tuft decided to back up all his firm's computer files onto his iPod one day. He was wandering by the office's computer-network server when he spotted a high-speed FireWire port in front. On a whim, he used his iPod's computer-syncing cable to plug in and move the files -- about 2 gigabytes of data -- to the player.

Good thing: A day or so later, the office's network server crashed and took every document with it. He did have another backup, but it wasn't as up-to-date as the one on the iPod. So when he moved the duplicate files on the player to a spare computer, he got the firm up and running in no time.

---

Linda Cullen's new iPod already may be among the most-traveled. The St. Paul, Minn.-based photojournalist, who has worked in such locales as Afghanistan, Iraq, Istanbul, Sri Lanka and Thailand, bought an iPod Photo as a Christmas present to herself.

Now, she uses it to back up the photos on her Apple iBook laptop. She also loads up her Arabic and Farsi language lessons along with music, audiobooks and recorded National Public Radio programs for those long hours on planes (she is unable to read in the air because of chronic motion sickness).

As a photographer, showing off photos on the iPod Photo's color screen comes in handy on planes when she tells fellow travelers about her work and in photo-shooting situations when she needs to break the ice with potential subjects.

Cullen was disappointed with her iPod's less-than-stellar internal-battery life, a common user complaint. She licked the problem with an add-on Belkin battery pack that uses four standard AAs.

Minneapolis, Minn., graphic designer Tod Foley uses his iPod as a personal organizer containing his calendar and contact information, a simple if sometimes-overlooked trick for those synchronizing their players with Macintosh computers. (Windows users must install extra software to pull this off.)

"That's a nice feature to have at the post office," Foley said. "If I need my brother's address, I can scroll through the address book, and there it is."

---

For many iPod users, of course, the devices are mainly if not solely about tunes. They'll load up their players with hundreds or thousands of songs ripped from CDs or purchased on Apple's iTunes online music store. Then, they'll fire up the iPods for their workouts or their morning commutes and often sing to the music at the top of their lungs.

In Sheri Hansen's case, that often involves classical pieces, such as Mozart's Vespers or Bach's Magnificat, during her morning-drive jam sessions. The Eagan, Minn., woman has a special reason for such glorified choices: She's an amateur alto rehearsing for Oratorio Society of Minnesota performances.

Apple's iTunes store has been a blessing, she says, because of its extensive classical-music selection. Once she has downloaded a practice piece to her iPod and fired up her iTrip mini, "it's like being in your own little concert hall. You can make it as soft or as loud as you want." She has been laughed at, she admits, as she lets loose on her commutes to her public-relations day job in Minneapolis.

Hansen isn't focused solely on classical music. She and her husband, Bill, are so fond of the rock group U2 that their three-iPod set includes the U2 special edition with a black front and red scrolling wheel. They don't dare let that one out of the house because they don't want to scuff the mirror-metal back engraved with band autographs. Hansen's husband gave her "The Complete U2," an iTunes set with 446 songs, a digital booklet and band commentary.

---

Katie Condon and John Jodzio are wild about music, too, but they needed a good excuse to pop for something as pricey as an iPod. So, the Minneapolis couple decided they'd use a yet-to-be-purchased player as the digital disc jockey at their upcoming wedding dance -- cheaper than hiring a live band or a human DJ, they figured, and boasting many more musical choices. They'll likely tap one of their groomsmen as an iPod minder during the August celebration.

Now, they face the daunting task of loading up the iPod with all their music and creating suitable play lists. They're jotting down song ideas in a notebook and asking the advice of friends "whose musical tastes we trust," Condon said. They're also planning live-music segments courtesy of musician friends and relatives so the dance won't become too tech-impersonal.

No one is more iPod-fanatical than Josie Lonetti, a 12-year-old St. Paul resident. She recently bought a blue iPod mini after getting a refund on a sewing machine a well-meaning relative gave her for Christmas, then throwing in some of her savings and a bit of extra money she sweet-talked out of her father, Jim, by offering to do chores.

"I was a total suck-up," she admits.

Now, she has more than 400 songs on her player, ranging from the Go-Gos to Sum 41, along with her baby-sitting schedule and contact information for her friends and relatives. She tucks the iPod in her backpack when she goes to school, and she uses it while walking to pick up her 5-year-old brother at day care.

She shares her iPod passion with her father, who keeps a larger version around for family use and who has been known to sneak music onto his daughter's player in horizon-broadening attempts.

"On the first day I got my iPod, I kissed it good night, and my little sister called me an insane freak," Josie says. "Now, my best friend wants one, but she wants it in pink, and she is using me as an example to her parents on why she should get one"

.---

© 2005, St. Paul Pioneer Press (St. Paul, Minn.).

Visit the World Wide Web site of the Pioneer Press at http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/

Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.





© 2005 KRT Wire and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved.

http://www.fortwayne.com



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: ipod
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To: Yardstick

I have no idea how it works, but Mp3 compression technology apparently gets rid of the parts of the recording that are not detectable to all but the most sensitive of ears.

Let's face it... most music these days is not "pure"... they've all been tinkered with during the recording to CD transfer process... especially older albums, which have been remastered.

I have an old Jazz album that still retains the scratchy recording sound. The only thing "authentic" about the experience is that it replicates the inferior recording technology of the 20s/30s. The person hearing it live back then didn't hear those scratchy noises, and I doubt the artist intended those noises to be present either.


41 posted on 05/07/2005 12:42:28 PM PDT by ambrose (....)
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To: ambrose

Some questions, I see the iPod folks w/little ear buds.
I use a walkman, have a long bus commute, and am subject to a lot of bus noise. I bought high end earphones (big suckers) to drown out some of the outside noise so I wouldn't go deaf turning up the volume on the walkman.

1. Can I use other earphones w/it? I've never seen anyone w/anything other than the little white earplugs.
2. I listen to a lot of talk radio (hence the FReepername). I don't suppose they make an iPod w/a radio? I haven't seen one, but the young people I know who have iPods don't listen to talkradio, so they wouldn't be looking for this function.

I wear my walkman all the time, but until I can get something small, like a walkman, that has radio, I don't see me switching over to an iPod. I don't even use a portable cd player cause they don't fit in a pocket.


42 posted on 05/07/2005 12:42:28 PM PDT by radiohead (revote in washington state)
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To: durasell

Yeah. My Dad (Sonny's GrandPa), likes to tease me in front of him that I went into my room when I turned 13, and didn't come out until I left for the Army at 17. Partially true. I DID come out for meals and phone calls. Had there been a slot in my door, meals wouldn't have been a problem, but of course, he never DID allow me to have my own phone; the Cruel Ogre! :)


43 posted on 05/07/2005 12:43:27 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: ambrose

Hmmmm, I wonder if they have pods in their cellars....


44 posted on 05/07/2005 12:43:54 PM PDT by mewzilla
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To: Yardstick
I'm guessing that even though the original file may have been recorded at a higher bit rate, the compressed version that gets stored on the iPod isn't at that high of a bit rate.

When you 'rip' your CDs into computer files (for an iPod owner, typically using iTunes) you have a choice on what format and what bitrate the resulting file will be. The iPod can play all the formats that iTunes can encode.

Looking at iTunes right now, I see that it can encode into:

It's all there in iTunes - just look in the preferences, at the "importing" tab.

I'm a pretty demanding listener, and I use AAC 256 to encode my music - I can't tell the difference between that and a CD. But if you are really a fanatic, go with Apple Lossless - it's exactly like the CD, but saves (by my memory) half the space.

Why don't you give it a try? Just go to the iTunes download page, install it, and try it out on some of your favorite music.

45 posted on 05/07/2005 1:08:22 PM PDT by Yossarian (Remember: NOT ALL HEART ATTACKS HAVE TRADITIONAL SYMPTOMS)
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To: ambrose
I used to have a Walkman but gave it up for three reasons:

People with headphones on in public look like goofs.

No pair of headphones on earth can beat a good set of speakers so, what's the point?  I mean, why engage in something half-a$$ed?

I'm comfortable enough with my own thoughts that I can walk places without distracting myself.

Those reason apply to iPods so I don't own one.

46 posted on 05/07/2005 1:17:05 PM PDT by Psycho_Bunny (“I know a great deal about the Middle East because I’ve been raising Arabian horses" Patrick Swazey)
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To: cyborg

I live for my iPod. During a trip I took last month, I used it to cover the sound of snoring so I could drop off and fall asleep. :-)


47 posted on 05/07/2005 1:19:28 PM PDT by RikaStrom
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To: rdb3

Question on the Audible.com - On the two per month downloads - Are they like rentals or they purchases. In other words do you get to keep them?


48 posted on 05/07/2005 1:26:08 PM PDT by sd-joe
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To: cyborg

Can you recommend any good meditation music? Here or private message. Thank you.


49 posted on 05/07/2005 1:35:02 PM PDT by my_pointy_head_is_sharp
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To: my_pointy_head_is_sharp

Steven Halpern
Deuter's Buddha Nature
Liquid Mind
Visionary Music's DNA series
Carlos Nakai


Those are some of the best ones out there. I never did like Yanni. He's artsy fartsy new age. I like real spacey, granola crunching stuff :-) I also have a yoga series by Beth Shaw that I downloaded off of itunes.


50 posted on 05/07/2005 1:40:19 PM PDT by cyborg (Serving fresh, hot Anti-opus since 18 April 2005)
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To: ambrose

My boss is an "iPod person." It's kinda scary.


51 posted on 05/07/2005 1:42:51 PM PDT by k2blader (Immorality bites.)
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To: sd-joe

They're purchases. You own the digital book.


52 posted on 05/07/2005 1:44:41 PM PDT by ambrose (....)
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To: k2blader
This is way better...you can record and watch DVD's, TV, play games...and it has a 20GB HD...TEN HOURS of battery time...


53 posted on 05/07/2005 1:50:13 PM PDT by GRRRRR (Hillary is the most dangerous person in America and the RINO's haven't a clue...)
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To: ambrose
I have no idea how it works, but Mp3 compression technology apparently gets rid of the parts of the recording that are not detectable to all but the most sensitive of ears.

Yes, this is the crux of the problem. I have ridiculously sensitive ears, and the times I've heard MP3 audio I've been disappointed with the quality.

Let's face it... most music these days is not "pure"... they've all been tinkered with during the recording to CD transfer process... especially older albums, which have been remastered.

Naturally there's nothing pure about most music these days given all the processing that happens during recording and mastering. But I'm not interested in absolute universal purity. What I'm interested in is hearing a pure reproduction of the master recording with all its impurities.

That may sound strange, but really not, because not all impurities are created equal. The impurities added during recording and mastering were put there by audio guys to make the music sound better. MP3 and other compression schemes, on the other hand, were designed by computer guys to decrease bandwidth. The one has to do with creating music, the other with saving hardrive space. My ears tend to appreciate the first but not the second.

I have an old Jazz album that still retains the scratchy recording sound. The only thing "authentic" about the experience is that it replicates the inferior recording technology of the 20s/30s. The person hearing it live back then didn't hear those scratchy noises, and I doubt the artist intended those noises to be present either.

Well, I think a scratchy old jazz recording is an exceptional case. What bothers me is hearing high-quality modern recordings that are missing dynamic range and high-frequencies due to MP3 compression.

Like I said, I'm picky :)

54 posted on 05/07/2005 1:53:53 PM PDT by Yardstick
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To: ambrose

I put my Ipod in the tour-pack of my Harley. I attach an RF generator that broadcasts on the FM frequency of my choice. Since the Harley antenna is mounted on the tour pack, the signal is excellent. I can ride across the US with music I like coming out of the radio (when Rush isn't on of course).


55 posted on 05/07/2005 1:54:24 PM PDT by Poser (Joining Belly Girl in the Pajamahadeen)
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To: Yossarian

Good info. I didn't realize that an iPod did anything but lossy compression, but now I see that they do.


56 posted on 05/07/2005 1:57:59 PM PDT by Yardstick
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To: cyborg
I love it even more now that Art Bell is pod casting.

For free?

give, sister!

57 posted on 05/07/2005 1:59:30 PM PDT by papertyger
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To: GRRRRR

Whoah, what does it cost??


58 posted on 05/07/2005 1:59:46 PM PDT by k2blader (Immorality bites.)
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To: sd-joe
On the two per month downloads - Are they like rentals or they purchases. In other words do you get to keep them?

The two downloads are yours to keep. You download them directly from Audible.com. The two download plan is $21, I believe, while one is at $14.

I think you can get audio magazines and periodicals as well. I'm just focussing on classic lit right now. Then I'll move towards Bestiat, Adams, and Locke.


59 posted on 05/07/2005 2:00:19 PM PDT by rdb3 (To the world, you're one person. To one person, you may be the world.)
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To: cyborg

You mean people still listen to that nut? ;-)


60 posted on 05/07/2005 2:00:29 PM PDT by k2blader (Immorality bites.)
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