Hi,
My sister has a 3G Nano and I think it pauses when you unplug the
headsets. She answered the question. When you unplug the headset it
pauses the track you are currently on and if you hit the play button
again it starts playing. You can still navigate the menus as if it was
in normal operational mode and even control the volume. Luckily, on
the bottom left there is a switch by the headphone and data cable
connection jack. The possitions are as follow:
Left: unlocked
Right: locked
This is useful if you don't want the volume changing while listening
to a track. You can still hear everything, you can not control the
Nano however.
Courtisy Kimberly,
Thanks for listening,
Alex,
On 13-Sep-08, at 8:57 AM, David Poehlman wrote:
my concern is that if I don't have the headset in, what the state of
the
unit is. In other words, if I have it connected to nothing and
don't have
audio plugged in, does it automatically keep anything from happening
or does
it still do stuff when I use the wheel etc.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dean Wilcox" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS
X by
theblind" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, September 13, 2008 11:46 AM
Subject: Re: 4g ipod nano absolutely brilliant
I think apple phasing out the classic is something for a few years
time, I doubt its an immediate thing. The Nano is the same price as
the clasic not because they're making the clasic cheap, its more that
the Nano is as expensive as the clasic. That much flash memory is
still quite expensive when your talking of over 100GB and you pay for
the very small size.
I'm thinking of a Nano but although I really do want one I'm not
looking at how I would have done even just a year ago. Now that my
phone Talks and has a decent music player on it the value of an iPod
is to take my whole music collection plus a few extras with me. On
the other side though, the Nano does have 24 hours music playback and
I don't always want to use my phone.
At 15:23 13/09/2008, you wrote:
that explains why the nano and classic are the same price (or at
least
they were both $249 but I suppose the nanos might have come down?) I
have more than 16 gigs of music, etc on my computer so went with the
classic. Hopefully it will be around for a while. :)
On Sep 13, 2008, at 5:25 AM, Scott Howell wrote:
To be honest, at this point although flash drives are coming down in
price, your still looking at $1,000 or so for 64Gb and probably not
that much less for a smaller drive. The thing is they won't do it
unless it's reasonably affordable. Why turn out a 20Gb or even 40Gb
iPod that is flash drive-based if it'll cost the consumer $500 or
more dollars. This is just my speculation of course.
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Alex,
ICE Customer Care,
AWEBSIGHT Administrator,
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