Ice Pod - true story
I just took my pod to a place called Kiruna, 200km north of the arctic circle in Sweden ... the specs say it dies below -20 and you're not supposed to use it below -4.
To which I say "pshaw." It was -28 outside and -5 in the hotel (made of ice), and Mr. Pod lent a little warmth to the proceedings. I took along some external speakers that froze the hell out my gyal's ears but worked ... it spent the night sitting on a block of ice.
To which I say "pshaw." It was -28 outside and -5 in the hotel (made of ice), and Mr. Pod lent a little warmth to the proceedings. I took along some external speakers that froze the hell out my gyal's ears but worked ... it spent the night sitting on a block of ice.
Comments
So one of the reasons I was hesitant to purchase an iPod was: What would be the point of spending $680 on a device that won't work in the one place I need it--outside. But this makes me re-think that.
Who knows, I might get one now.
-Y
<strong>I just took my pod to a place called Kiruna, 200km north of the arctic circle in Sweden ... the specs say it dies below -20 and you're not supposed to use it below -4.</strong><hr></blockquote>
Is that Centigrade?