Apple retains the iPod's famous ease of use and applies it well to
digital photos, but with some odd limitations. If you want primarily a
music player with the added ability to see and show photos, too, you'll
be thrilled. But digital photographers will wish for more
on-the-road-friendly features.


Color screen, photo album display, and TV output give the iPod a vibrant
visual side. Navigation through albums and photos is quick and easy. TV
output is excellent. Can synchronize and load new pictures automatically.
Music features remain the same?which is to say excellent.


Cannot view JPEGs uploaded directly from a camera, only those loaded from
a PC. Only one computer can update the photo database. Cannot zoom in or
pan on photos. Album thumbnails are very small.

By Bill Machrone
One of the theater's most enduring slogans is "Leave 'em wanting more."
And that's exactly how we feel about the new Apple iPod Photo. On the one
hand, it's still the music player to beat, now with a color screen and
easy-to-use photo-viewing features. But while we enjoyed the performance,
we were left wanting more.
One of the theater's most enduring slogans is "Leave 'em wanting more."
And that's exactly how we feel about the new Apple iPod Photo. On the one
hand, it's still the music player to beat, now with a color screen and
easy-to-use photo-viewing features. But while we enjoyed the performance,
we were left wanting more. 
In addition to its familiar music duties, the iPod Photo stores and
displays photos?thousands and thousands of them?on its 40GB ($499 direct)
or 60GB ($599) hard drive and 2-inch color screen. Options in the new
iTunes 4.7 let you synchronize the images in a specific folder, so that
your photos are always up to date. It can also turn collections in Adobe
Photoshop Album 2.0 or Photoshop Elements 3.0 into iPod Photo
slideshows?a nice touch for hobbyists who have committed their photo
libraries to those apps. 
With the new color screen, Apple omitted a brightness or contrast
control, but you can still adjust the auto-off time for the backlight. We
found the display to be just a bit dimmer than we would have preferred,
and the color balance is slightly shifted towards the red, but not
objectionably so. (Oh, and thanks to the addition of color, the solitaire
game is finally playable.) 
You can arrange your photos in albums, though the album view is fixed in
a 5-by-5 image grid that yields thumbnails approximately 3/16 of an inch
high by 1/4 of an inch wide. It can be difficult to distinguish one image
from another, especially when they have similar subjects or backgrounds.
But navigating through the images is a joy. Click on a thumbnail to make
it full screen, and you can quickly?and we mean quickly?scroll forwards
of backwards through the library by running your thumb around the scroll
wheel. 
The iPod Photo stores images in an internal database in a resolution
suitable to its 220- by 176-pixel screen or to a TV screen (if you
connect the included audio-video breakout cable or use the S-Video
connector on the provided docking base). Slide show settings allow you to
control the amount of time that each slide is on the screen, turn on a
wipe transition, and select one of your playlists as a background music
source. The TV image is sharp and stable, and Apple claims 15 hours of
music playing or 5 hours of slide show viewing from the rechargeable
lithium ion battery. 
Musically, the iPod Photo is identical in performance to the
fourth-generation iPod, which is to say excellent. One addition: You can
now view album art on the Now Playing screen. 
Odd, minor limitations keep the iPod Photo from being a killer
implementation. You can't zoom in or pan around your images, and you
can't rotate photos; all adjustments have to be made before you download
the images. If you want to store full-resolution pictures that can be
transferred to another computer or printed, you have to select that
option in iTunes. If you forget, you'll wind up with low-res images on
the unit's hard drive that lack full-resolution counterparts. 
Also, the iPod Photo insists that only one computer can be its source of
photos. If you connect it to another computer it will ask you if you want
to replace all of the images currently on the iPod with the images
currently on the computer. There is no way to add to the photo database
other than adding photos to the "home" machine and updating the iPod.
Likewise, digital photographers can still use the Belkin Digital Camera
Link or a card reader on the road to offload images to the iPod Photo,
but you will not be able to display those images on the iPod Photo (since
they do not pass through iTunes). 
As a music player, the iPod Photo is still virtually unassailable. But in
the growing arena of portable multimedia players, it is not king of the
hill. For example, the svelte Archos Gmini 400 matches the iPod Photo's
music abilities, trumps it as a photo viewer/storage companion, and
handles video to boot. 
That said, for users looking for a great music player that also delivers
the ability to store, view, and display photos, the iPod Photo is the
latest in this line of must-have devices.

Jeff Slyn, Owner
SLYN Systems & Peripherals
(502) 426-5469
serving Kentuckiana clients 7 days a week since 1985!
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