Apple iPod nano

Review: Apple iPod Nano music player

Old player 'completely remastered', according to Apple

Written by Anthony Dhanendran

Larger Image

By far the best known of all portable music players, the Nano is the newest and smallest of the iPod family. Apple has now came out with a completely new, thinner version of the iPod Nano.

This one comes with 4GB of storage space and the top half of the player is taken up with the screen, which is a little on the small side compared with some of the players we're looking at. That said, the screen is clear and fairly bright, and has been slightly improved in the new edition.

Unlike most modern music players, this one doesn't come in black – that's reserved for the high-end 8GB edition, which costs an extra £40. The case is made from aluminium rather than plastic, which makes it more durable but gives it a slightly retrograde feel compared with its predecessor.

In pictures it looks like the iPod Mini, but once out of the box, the differences become clear.

Apart from its size, the best thing about the iPod Nano is its navigation system, which remains the same as before. All the players here use playlists, artists, albums and song titles to find music, but Apple is the only company to use a truly intuitive method to navigate it – the famous scroll wheel.

No other player comes close (apart from the Sandisk Sansa e260 - our review will be online from Monday), as far as ease of use goes. There's also the ability, lacking in some players, to add tunes to a playlist while listening.

The Nano comes with a slightly redesigned pair of Apple's standard earbud headphones, which are not particularly good. It's worth replacing these at the first opportunity, particularly as they indicate to others that the user has an iPod.

The iTunes software is the only way to put music on the player, and the iPod can't play downloaded music that's protected with the Microsoft DRM, only music bought from Apple's iTunes store.

Annoyingly, the iPod Nano still can't play video. That makes sense, in a way, given the small screen - it's still smaller than that of most similar music players. There are still those who'd like to see video playback as a feature on the Nano, we think.

There's no sound recorder or radio, but it can show images, and has an organiser, a few games and a stopwatch. No case is supplied, but plenty of third-party accessories are available.

Apple supplied our test device with three of its own gadgets, all of which cost £19 - firstly a dock, the adapter for which comes with the Nano itself. This simply provides a place to put the iPod while it's charging.

There's a USB power adapter which connects the iPod (all models) to the mains, so it doesn't have to be charged using the computer. Finally, there's an armband, for those who like to look slightly silly while jogging around with a Nano strapped to their arm.

We don't think any of these represents particularly good value for money - particularly the power adapter, since it would have been nice to see this in the box itself.

Accessories aside, the iPod Nano remains an excellent buy. No other music player of its size has such an excellent way to scroll through menus and track lists. The screen remains small, but it's bright, and the overall size of the player means it will fit into any pocket.

Also consider:
Creative Zen V music player
A very good pocket-sized player
4/5
£120

All mp3 player reviews

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print this
  • Share

Tags:

Product overview

  • Price: £129
  • Web site: Apple

Ratings

  • Our rating: 5
  • Average user rating:

Verdict

Good points
The same excellent menu navigation as previous iPods; thinner and with a brighter screen than before

Bad points
Users need to have iTunes installed to transfer music; can't play downloaded music that's protected with Windows DRM

Verdict
The flawless menu system combined with an expansion in storage means that Apple, on the verge of losing its crown at the top of the digital music tree, regains it just in time

Best prices

reader comments

related articles

 

iPod Nano gets video camera

iPod Touch, Classic and Shuffle ranges also revamped, and new iTunes 9 software released 09 Sep 2009

Top 10 best Apple products of all time

Welcome to the world of Apple 06 Feb 2010

SanDisk unveils tiny Cruzer Blade USB drive

Diminutive storage device reaches capacity of 16GB 28 Jul 2010

today's top stories

Financial IT job market recovery continues

Recruitment growth suggests IT budgets are increasing 30 Jul 2010

Satellite broadband touted as digital divide clincher

KA-SAT launch promises 10Mbit/s service for hard-to-reach locations 29 Jul 2010

Ofcom slams ISPs for exaggerated broadband speed claims

New code of practice for ISPs planned by the regulator 27 Jul 2010

Aerohive offers traffic light Wi-Fi monitoring

Firm promises simple 'red, yellow or green' system with Client Health Score tool 27 Jul 2010

Flaw in top wireless security protocol WPA2 uncovered

Disgruntled insiders could hack corporate wireless LAN 26 Jul 2010

Advertisement

How to achieve business and financial-system implementation success
A look at how organisations - regardless of size - can work towards successful business software installations and factors that determine the outcome.

Case study: Specsavers put customer care into focus
How Specsavers captured customer feedback at point of sale and incorporated the results into its CRM system.

Advertisement

Citrix

Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies; IThound.com brings you thousands of white papers, case studies and analyst reports.

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

More available - click 'submit' to view

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

Latest poll

ICO to lean more heavily on public sector bodies

ICO to lean more heavily on public sector bodies

The ICO has said it will lean more heavily on public sector bodies to secure timely FOI responses, do you think this is:

View poll results

Latest audio and video articles

picture of Jason HartVideo

Ethical hacker reveals the security secrets behind cloud computing

Jason Hart, Senior VP at Cryptocard, shows Computing just how easy it is to illegally gain access to corporate cloud services to wreak havoc and steal money. 29 Jun 2010

gartner logoVideo

Part 1: 2010 trends in SOA and Application Development and Integration

Gartner analyst Paolo Malinverno explores trends in SOA 29 Jun 2010

Latest in-depth articles

Map of 3G coverageComment

The risks of selling off the 800MHz radio spectrum at the wrong price

It's a choice between revenue now or universal broadband later 30 Jul 2010

Luton Borough Council officesAnalysis

Local authority leads the way in digital backup technology

Luton Borough Council tells of the benefits of early adopter of VTL, data deduplication and virtualisation 27 Jul 2010

Primary Navigation