Advertising obviously boosts sales, but I have strong doubts advertising alone can bring a 70-80% market share to a company in the consumer electronics market in this day and age. Most places which review iPods tend to give them a pretty decent review. However I acknowledge that many places also give other products a slightly better rating (e.g some iRivers, Creative Zen), but the conclusions drawn from that is that those products can be considered slightly better (atleast from those reviewers), and that the fact remains Apple's iPods are still quality products.Calculon said:Apple's market share has come from advertising, not superior products (or lack thereof, I'm not arguing either case here).
LOL.. erm that's a PDA Smartphone, genius..malkin86 said:
Now Microsoft's getting in on it too... Due out in 2006.
Specs:
- Windows Mobile 5.0 (for Pocket PC)
- Triband 3.5G (GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA TBD)
- 240 by 240 (65k color)
- Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Infra-Red
- 64MB RAM, 64MB RAM
- 4GB NAND Flash Memory + Micro SD Slot
- FM Radio, Dual Stereophonic Speaker
- 416Mhz Processor
- 2.1 Megapixels Camera with Flash, VGA Camera (front)
- TV-Out, USB 2.0
Don't make me get out Ars Technica again:aaaman said:umm did u guys actually researched what other things out there than iPods, you would b surprised that there are sooo many things better than them. Like the Ipod nanno has a defect where the screen cracks and the iPods firmware is renoowned to be faulty and i kno 1 bloke where he got his replaced 3 tyms :O my creative zen micro may not have the flashy features but wats the point having an mp3 player that isn't reliable and that's the basic fundamentals in a mp3 player RELIABILITY
2. irivers have ~30 presets and i *think* custom equaliser.JKDDragon said:Advertising obviously boosts sales, but I have strong doubts advertising alone can bring a 70-80% market share to a company in the consumer electronics market in this day and age. Most places which review iPods tend to give them a pretty decent review. However I acknowledge that many places also give other products a slightly better rating (e.g some iRivers, Creative Zen), but the conclusions drawn from that is that those products can be considered slightly better (atleast from those reviewers), and that the fact remains Apple's iPods are still quality products.
And just analysing many of those reviews.. the main downfalls of iPods reported are (not including Shuffle):
1. Some are easy to scratch.
2. No custom EQ.
3. No-replaceable lithium-ion battery.
4. Radio and recorder must be bought as an option (excluding Nano, for which there is no option for that anyhow).
All I have to say is:
1. No argument against this, iPods are easy to scratch.. pretty simple.
2. Most music players in the consumer market doesn't have custom EQs either. Infact many don't even have presets still.. or perhaps just around 5. Atleast the iPod comes with many, and the ability to unique each song with a different preset via iTunes.
3. Many mp3 players don't have replaceable batteries either. Alot of people who bag out this issue (usually biased Apple haters) tend to totally ignore this fact.
4. It's a mp3 player. Those features are perhaps best left as options. Hence lots of people view this as an advantage.
So scanning through those issues, the fact remains that the Apple offers a mp3 product which can play sound and music at good audial quality, offers essential features, integrates arguably the best user interface (in both efficiency and user-friendliness) in a music player, appealing design aswell as marketing it at reasonable prices. Hence why it's generally regarded as a quality product.
Don't forget user-interface (both hardware & software on player & music transfer software). I'm sure most even hardcore Apple-critical mp3 fans would be hard pressed to disagree that the iPod's scrollwheel interface is the best in the industry. iRiver's touch strip is generally lauded as a good solution, but still inferior to iPod's wheel. Another method is the way by which songs are loaded and synchronised (referring to music transfer and PC player software). In my opinion, iTunes is one of the greatest.. and certainly most users tend to agree. Graceful & efficient, I haven't seen much better for a player. One example; although a good mp3 player, the iRiver H10 5GB (competitor to the iPod mini, now discontinued) uses Windows Media Player 10 (not sure about the 6GB & 20GB versions).. an experience I can say was certainly less simple and effective than iTunes. As for the software on the player, navigation is extremely user-friendly, and when combined with the scrollwheel.. the entire software interface becomes extremely efficient.Capitalist Pig said:2. irivers have ~30 presets and i *think* custom equaliser.
3. irivers do.
4. irivers have radios, and they retail for about the same as ipods.
+ a colour screen on all models
They are inferior products aside perhaps from the appearance, but that is quickly diminished by point 1), and while they may be "decent", there's no real reason to buy them when there are better products on the market for similar prices.
Point taken, though I believe you can use drag and drop with irivers to a certain extent.JKDDragon said:Don't forget user-interface (both hardware & software on player & music transfer software). I'm sure most even hardcore Apple-critical mp3 fans would be hard pressed to disagree that the iPod's scrollwheel interface is the best in the industry. iRiver's touch strip is generally lauded as a good solution, but still inferior to iPod's wheel. Another method is the way by which songs are loaded and synchronised (referring to music transfer and PC player software). In my opinion, iTunes is one of the greatest.. and certainly most users tend to agree. Graceful & efficient, I haven't seen much better for a player. One example; although a good mp3 player, the iRiver H10 5GB (competitor to the iPod mini, now discontinued) uses Windows Media Player 10 (not sure about the 6GB & 20GB versions).. an experience I can say was certainly less simple and effective than iTunes. As for the software on the player, navigation is extremely user-friendly, and when combined with the scrollwheel.. the entire software interface becomes extremely efficient.
On the issue of reviews, I certainly also haven't found any reviewer boasting any mp3 player's hardware or software interface superior to that of iPods.
For the issue of the iPod's physical design, I have to say that I think it looks pretty good. However I must clarify that if anything.. it was detrimental to my purchase of it. Simply put, I try to avoid exposing it in public since I know iPods tend to be associated alot to teeny-boppers by the mass public.
Btw, don't forget the 5th generation iPods are coming out soon. Even smaller & lighter, it also boasts video playing capabilities (something which I admittedly don't give a crap about, but nonetheless a flagship feature I should mention).
For the issue of battery replacement, I should clarify that you can replace the batteries for iPods. The only iPod for which the user can't actually replace is the Nano. The whole issue of replacing batteries within iPods is that it's simply more difficult than other products which claim their lithium-ion's to be user-replaceable. If you don't want to do it yourself, send it off to Apple.. they replace it for you for a fee. I just need to point that out because many people just assume once the battery dies, the product itself is screwed forever. Of course, this is utter bullshit.
On the issue of colour screens, reviewers have labelled some of the iRiver's with inferior quality to that of the iPods. The latest review I've read on this issue was from MaximumPC.
Some iRivers do have custom 5 band EQs indeed, which is good. However I should mention that iTunes offers preset EQ transfer capabilities for individual songs. This wipes away some of the benefits of having a custom EQ. Another benefit of it was that many people wanted the classic skate ramp EQ (basically high on bass, low mids and high treble). Apple recently enhanced their 'Rock', 'Latin' and 'HipHop' presets to pretty much that anyway, which can be viewed as a nifty solution to that problem.
As for radios, simply put.. iPods of course don't offer that; only as an optional addon. To people who desperate want a radio (although I'm sure most people would buy an mp3 player for mainly playing erm.. mp3s (and other common formats)), then you may perhaps find the iPod lacking in features. If you're like me and don't care (nor want) a radio, then I see this as no 'quality' disadvantage.