Apple's iPod is the other device that saved Apple, and set the table for the iPhone

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in iPod + iTunes + AppleTV edited May 2022
It was the iMac that saved Apple Computer, but it was the iPod that made the company into a consumer technology hit -- and it lasted for an amazing 21 years.




From launch to discontinuation, the iPod lasted 7,504 days, and across that time it went from limited appeal, to incredible mass market hit, and on to being practically forgotten. Originally, if only briefly, just for Mac users, the iPod somehow managed to be become both a status symbol and ubiquitous, all at the same time.

"We lured you here today," Steve Jobs told assembled journalists on October 23, 2001, "with the promise of a breakthrough digital device that's not a Mac. And that's exactly what we're going to do."

"We love music, and it's always good to do something you love," continued Jobs. "More importantly, music is a part of everyone's life. But interestingly enough, in this whole new digital music revolution, there is no market leader."

At this point, there were CD players, limited Flash players, both of which held around 15 songs. There was an MP3 CD format that held 150 songs, and there were hard drives that held 1,000 tracks.

"We looked at this and studied all of these, and that's where we want to be," said Jobs. "iMac, iBook... iPod."






"iPod is an MP3 player that has CD-quality music," continued Jobs. "The coolest thing about iPod is that your entire music library fits in your pocket."

The iPod revolutionized music

Apple's iPod was far from the first MP3 player. Even its software was based on the existing SoundJam which Apple bought in early 2001. But the renamed and redesigned iTunes made the iPod the first music player anyone could use, and everyone would want.

Reportedly, the name iPod was coined by freelance copywriter Vinnie Chieco, who was reminded of "2001: A Space Odyssey" and the line "open the pod bay doors, Hal."

At the launch, Jobs made it sound as if the iPod was driven by the love of music, but it also came a from a very practical chance. Apple's Jon Rubinstein was shown a 5GB miniature hard drive by Toshiba engineers who had made it practically as a proof of concept.

The iPod nano was one of Apple's longest running music players.
The iPod nano was one of Apple's longest running music players.


The developers certainly had no customer in mind, no project. When it was shown to Rubinstein, though, he recognized its worth.

With fast approval from Jobs, Rubinstein bought Toshiba's entire inventory to make the iPod. It cost ten million dollars, or $15.63 million in today's money.

That set up the insides of the iPod, and the famous wheel design came from Phil Schiller. But ultimately the rest of the hardware design was developed by Tony Fadell, who would later become known as the father of the iPod.

He's certainly the father of it coming to Windows as soon as it did. Fadell says that he had to get journalist Walt Mossberg to see Steve Jobs and persuade him not to limit the iPod to the Mac.

Launched to no fanfare

In its news story covering the launch of the iPod, the New York Times quoted an analyst saying that it was nice for Mac users. "But to the rest of the Windows world, it doesn't make any difference," the article correctly declared.

Even so, Jobs told the newspaper that Apple might have trouble meeting the initial holiday demand. And, naturally, he predicted that the iPod would inspire customers to buy Macintoshes.

Curiously, the iPod got more of a rave from PC Magazine. "Leave it to Apple to come out with the world's coolest -- and dare we say best -- MP3 player," said a review headline "Not just candy."

Apple revamped the original iPod form factor under the
Apple revamped the original iPod form factor under the "iPod Classic" branding.


"Its usefulness and simplicity make it a standout product, even for the price," it continued. "Our only gripe: while the Mac-friendly iPod is available now, a rumored PC version won't appear until spring, if ever."

The first Windows version was launched in July 2002.

The iPod takes off

That Windows version was officially the second generation iPod, and it was followed by a third in 2003. A fourth, called the iPod photo, came out in 2004, which was when Hewlett Packard briefly released a badged version.

But if the specifications kept improving, and the storage capacity kept getting higher, the iPod was always more than the sum of its technology.

Just as you today see AirPods everywhere, back in the early 2000s, you saw everyone wearing the famous white earbuds. Whether they were using an iPod, or the later iPod mini, and the iPod nano, the earbuds were the same.

It was impossible to imagine how successful the iPod was going to become -- and then at the height of its success, it was inconceivable that it would ever go away, that there would ever be a rival.

Ultimately, the iPod's biggest enemy turned out to be Apple itself. First it took the iPod mini, the world's biggest selling music player, and completely discontinued it -- in favor of the iPod nano.

That was Apple being willing to sacrifice a hit when it believed it had another one.

And then in 2007, it really did believe it had another hit. Apple brought out the iPhone, or what Steve Jobs introduced in part as being "a widescreen iPod with touch controls."

At the height of iPod success, it really looked as if the iPhone just might unseat it as the best music player to buy. When your iPhone does everything your iPod can and so very much more, it was surely the end for the single-purpose music player.

However, that wasn't the end of the iPod.

The iPod touch

Apple debuted the first iPod touch in September 2007, a few months after Apple debuted the iPhone. Taking a broad view of the iPod's history, the device lasted another 15 years after the iPhone dropped.

The first iPod touch looked much like Apple's original iPhone. It had a 3.5-inch display, multi-touch, and Wi-Fi. It was essentially an iPhone for those who didn't want call functionality.

The iPod touch was the most recently available iPod.
The iPod touch was the most recently available iPod.


From there, Apple kept iterating on the iPod touch. A version with built-in speaker and an even thinner designed debuted in 2008. That model was also the first to sport the App Store.

The iPod touch lacked a camera and microphone until 2010 with the release of the fourth-generation version. At the same time, the 2011 model finally brought iMessage, notifications, and iCloud. It took until the fifth-generation in 2012 to receive an LED flash.

Each change to the iPod touch brought only incremental updates, given that the company was busy focusing on the iPhone, Apple Watch, and other devices. However, the iPod touch remained a popular device for both consumer and enterprise clients.

And, until the middle of 2017, the iPod touch wasn't even the only model available.

iPod's decline

Although the iPod touch was the most recently available Apple music player, the very last iPod nano and iPod shuffle models were actually available up until the middle of 2017.

It's easy to forget that, in the era of the Apple Watch and iPhone, customers could still buy an iPod nano.

A chart of iPod family lifespans


The seventh-generation iPod nano, which was first launched in 2013, actually sported a 2.5-inch touchscreen display with video playback and Bluetooth capabilities. It also packed a Lightning connector instead of a 30-pin port.

Seeds of other future devices

That iPod nano had an unexpected extra life as some users strapped one to their wrists and so had an Apple Watch years before anyone else did.

AppleInsider writer Wesley Hilliard says he loved his iPod nano watch. "A computer on my wrist," he says. "Just unheard of at the time. I used wired headphones up my jacket sleeve to listen to music."

Conceivably, it was users like him that prompted Jony Ive and co to develop the Apple Watch, which would come out in 2015. It's more likely that the Watch was already being planned, but the popularity of this unplanned watch must have helped.

Perhaps no one actually continued using the iPod nano as a wristwatch after the Apple Watch came out, but it still kept being sold. The humble screen-less iPod shuffle -- released in 2010 -- was available for a full seven years. The fourth-generation variant of that lineup had a simple design with little else but click controls and a headphone jack.

The iPod's legacy lives on in devices and services like HomePod and Apple Music, and Podcasts.
The iPod's legacy lives on in devices and services like HomePod and Apple Music, and Podcasts.


While the iPod's popularity declined once streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music gained ground, they lasted longer than one would expect. That's mostly because of the iPod touch's longevity -- and for reasons beyond the consumer market.

The end of an era

When that last iPod touch debuted, it was already underpowered. It was an A8 machine, in an A10 world, behind the curve from birth.
Apple called it a good starter device, or a good machine for kids. It was less that, than it was a machine for enterprise, which is why it lived for so long.

It is used by the thousands in enterprise, at restaurants, and at amusement parks. Instead of a thousand-dollar iPhone, that iPod touch got jammed in bespoke cases, embedded with extended batteries and card swipers, or special RF readers, or any one of a number of peripherals.

So, while consumers won't be able to buy them them after supplies are exhausted, they will still exist for a while. We've already found out that the enterprise supplies are a different stock bin than the consumer-oriented ones are.

So, while the iPod branding may be gone, it's more than just nebulous influence that Apple talked about in their press release this morning that will be felt. They'll still be a part of day-to-day life for at least a few more years.

And who knows. Enterprise clients may yell loudly enough for a refresh in a half a decade. Stranger things have happened, and Apple has inexplicably maintained other products like the iPad 2 and Apple Watch Series 3 for longer.

Grab an iPod while you can

Apple resellers still have inventory left in stock, so if you want to pick up an iPod touch head over to Amazon or B&H Photo. And to compare our prices on the remaining supply, visit our iPod touch Price Guide.

Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 11
    mike1mike1 Posts: 3,286member
    I would argue that the iPod and the introduction of iTunes for Windows propelled Apple into the company it is today.
    That single decision gave millions upon millions of PC users access to a very cool device, likely their first Apple device and their first sip of the Apple 'Kool Aid'.
    Those initial iPod customers went on to buy their first post-Blackberry iPhone. And many are still buying their first Mac.
    dewmeAlex1NbaconstangBeatswatto_cobrajony0
  • Reply 2 of 11
    I remember the first iPod.  Man it was great, but had some challenges with the small spinning drives.  Sometimes they'd skip, but software updates fixed that. Other times, I'd be at my son's hockey games and it would get too cold and not spin fast enough.  Putting it into my jacket pocket always fixed that.  Quirks and all, I've loved iPods ever since.  Sorry to see them go, but in reality, most folks have phones now - including kids!
    radarthekatAlex1NBeatswatto_cobrajony0
  • Reply 3 of 11
    thttht Posts: 5,447member
    2001 was the most historic year of all of the years: iPod, Mac OS X, and Apple Retail Stores came out that year. All 3 became force multipliers, or worked in concert, to get Apple to iPhone, the most successful single gadget on the planet, and they simply repeated it with iPad, Watch, and headphones.

    Nobody could have predicted it. Most everyone was saying brick & mortar retail was a gigantic mistake. iPod was a "meh". OS X was slow.
    radarthekatAlex1NelijahgBeatswatto_cobrajony0
  • Reply 4 of 11
    radarthekatradarthekat Posts: 3,842moderator
    mike1 said:
    I would argue that the iPod and the introduction of iTunes for Windows propelled Apple into the company it is today.
    That single decision gave millions upon millions of PC users access to a very cool device, likely their first Apple device and their first sip of the Apple 'Kool Aid'.
    Those initial iPod customers went on to buy their first post-Blackberry iPhone. And many are still buying their first Mac.
    This exactly describes my experience.  I owned two iPods, using them with a Windows PC, before buying a MacBook Air, which spurred me to invest in the stock (that was $3 million in profits ago), and in 2011  my first iPhone (the 4S) and the rest is history.  
    Alex1NBeatswatto_cobrajony0
  • Reply 5 of 11
    anantksundaramanantksundaram Posts: 20,404member
    An absolutely unparalleled, genius, life-changing, Apple-changing product. 

    Even more than the iMac, it made Apple super-Uber-cool all over again, this time globally, and the company never looked back since. 

    (One of my all-time favorite Apple ads that contributed to the coolness factor: https://youtu.be/AzqHYTtNnk0)
    edited May 2022 Alex1NradarthekatBeatswatto_cobrajony0
  • Reply 6 of 11
    I thought the iPod was interesting but I was hesitant until the iPod mini came out. I loved those minis and bought the 4GB model at first and then I bought the 6GB model. Then I bought a nano which I loved. I finally bought the iPod Touch when it got parity with the iPhone. The fifth generation iPod Touch and the iPhone 5 were almost identical other than one device had a phone. And that was also the year the screen size went from 3.5” to 4”. I actually never bought an iPhone until 2015 and that was the very first cell phone I ever bought in my life.
    Alex1Nradarthekattobianwatto_cobra
  • Reply 7 of 11
    bestkeptsecretbestkeptsecret Posts: 4,265member
    The 3rd generation iPod was the first Apple product I got. Everything about it was so cool. It was such a luxury device, with the huge box packaging and packed with a dock and a wired remote!

    It led to me buying the iPhone and then the iMac. 

    My last iPod was the iPod Classic with the 160GB capacity. It really seemed like I would always have my music library with me. Now I have the 1TB iPhone!
    tobianwatto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 11
    tobiantobian Posts: 151member
    When 20GB 2nd gen. came out, it was my must must must have thing I spent all my student savings for:) 20GB in my pocket, my entire music library, plus some extra space for moving other stuff around, using full size FireWire 400.. gosh that was something!
    Later I’ve added linux in dual-boot setup, with drawing app, some games, player supporting ogg vorbis, picture viewer.. that’s when I realised the screen wasn’t B&W, but 4 grays.. PNGs looked great on it :)
    elijahgwatto_cobra
  • Reply 9 of 11
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,371member
    iPod taught me about the value of Apple’s tight integration between products. My first Apple product was an iMac, but trying to use a non-Apple music player with the iMac was a total kluge compared to using an iPod with the iMac. I continued to support iPod (Touch) up until two generations ago and found it great for testing iOS apps on real hardware. In retrospect my favorite iPod Touch was the second generation because I used it a ton and it preserved my sanity at a time when I was traveling a lot. 

    Subsequent generations have been far less rewarding because they are too thin and have too little battery capacity for the processor they come with. Plus, if you have an iPhone with lots of storage the iPod is redundant. In my opinion the iPod Touch is what killed the iPod line. The number of people needing an iPhone without the phone is near zero. If Apple offered a decent iPod Nano with a terabyte of storage at a reasonable price I’d buy it in a heartbeat. Bundling a couple of fitness features in a music player makes sense, but throwing in the iPhone kitchen sink is a solution in search of a problem that doesn’t exist.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 10 of 11
    y2any2an Posts: 189member
    Shortly before the iPod launched, in a moment of retail therapy I hunted around Best Buy for something interesting to buy. Everything portable was so boring. PDA’s! Little more than an address book in your pocket. Who cared about Windows CE? Just one more thing to keep up to date. To quote Steve, Yuck!

    I instantly recognised how different the iPod was. A totally different direction in personal electronics. Something actually useful and desirable. And so well integrated with the data I already had, seamless. 

    For all the claims of the miniature hard drive or clickwheel making the product, what really brought everything together was FireWire which enabled the implementation of the miraculous and almost instantaneous syncing with the owner’s computer. And this was built in to Macs. USB 2 was released as a spec in April 2000 so the capability to offer a similar syncing experience at the hardware level was all but non-existent. Even Microsoft was not onboard with USB 2 for Windows XP, instead (strangely) preferring FireWire. But this was not a widespread feature of Windows PC’s, so the real reason there couldn’t be earlier support for Windows was the Windows platform technology gap. 
    watto_cobrajony0
  • Reply 11 of 11
    andycandyc Posts: 7member
    And you could use the iPad as a hard drive. So it could hold OSX and boot up a Mac. And carry files between work and home when the laptops were much heavier than today.
    watto_cobra
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