iPod nano

Essentials

Family: iPod

Codename: ?

Minimum OS: iPod nano OS 1.0

Maximum OS: iPod nano OS 1.3.1

Introduced: September 2005

Terminated: September 2006


Processor

CPU: ARM7TDMI

CPU Speed: dual 80 MHz embedded (?)

FPU: none

Register Width: 32-bit

Data Bus Width: 32-bit

Address Bus Width: 32-bit

ROM: 32 MB (?)

Onboard RAM: 32 MB (?)

Maximum RAM: 32 MB (?)


Video

Screen: 1.5" backlit LCD

Max Resolution: 16-bit 176 x 132


Storage

Flash Drive: 1/2/4 GB


Input/Output

USB: via Dock Connector

Audio Out: stereo 16 bit mini

Speaker: clicker


Miscellaneous

Dimensions: 3.5" H x 1.6" W x 0.27" D

Weight: .094 lbs.


Announced in September 2005, The iPod nano represented a bold decision for Apple: to replace the best-selling iPod mini, at the height of its market dominance, with a brand-new, significantly different iPod model. Whereas the mini had been based around a 1" hard drive, the iPod nano was built around a 2 or 4 GB flash memory drive. The iPod nano's look and feel was more aesthetically aligned with that of the iPod color than the mini's had been. It also included a higher-resolution color screen, which, along with the remarkable decrease in physical size (half the thickness, 25% less wide), helped to justify the reduction in capacity. Although the nano held fewer songs per dollar than its predecessor, Apple sold the 2 and 4 GB nano models at the same price point as the previous 4 and 6 GB mini models: $199 and $249, respectively. Both models were available both in black and the traditional iPod white. In February 2006 a 1 GB model was added, priced at $149. All models were discontinued in September 2006, with the release of the iPod nano (Second Generation).

Picture Credits:
Apple, Inc.