Katana VentraIP

iPod Nano

The iPod Nano (stylized and marketed as iPod nano) is a discontinued portable media player designed and formerly marketed by Apple Inc. The first-generation model was introduced on September 7, 2005, as a replacement for the iPod Mini,[2] using flash memory for storage. The iPod Nano went through several models, or generations, after its introduction. Apple discontinued the iPod Nano on July 27, 2017.[1][3]

Developer

September 7, 2005 – July 27, 2017 (11 years, 10 months)

July 27, 2017[1]

1.3.1 (1st Gen)
1.1.3 (2nd, 3rd Gen)
1.0.4 (4th Gen)
1.0.2 (5th Gen)
1.2 (6th Gen)
1.0.4/1.1.2 (7th Gen)

1st–2nd Gen: 132 × 176 px, 1.5 in (38 mm), color LCD
3rd Gen: 240 × 320 px, 2 in (51 mm), color LCD
4th Gen: 240 × 320 px, 2 in (51 mm), color LCD
5th Gen: 240 × 376 px, 2.22 in (56 mm), color LCD
6th Gen: 240 × 240 px, 1.55 in (39 mm), color LCD
7th Gen: 240 × 432 px, 2.5 in (64 mm), color LCD

1st–5th Gen: Click wheel
6th–7th Gen: Multi-touch touchscreen

1st–6th Gen: 3.5mm headphone jack (TRS connector), 30-pin connector
7th Gen: 3.5mm headphone jack (TRS connector), Bluetooth 4.0, Lightning connector

Development[edit]

Development work on the design of the iPod Nano started only nine months before its launch date.[4] The Nano was launched in two colors (black and white) and two storage sizes: 2 GB (roughly 500 songs) and 4 GB (1000 songs).[2] On February 7, 2006, Apple updated the lineup with the 1 GB model (240 songs).[5] Apple also released accessories, including armbands and silicone "tubes" designed to bring color to the Nano and protect it from scratches, as well as a combination lanyard-earphone accessory that hangs around the neck and avoids the problem of tangled earphone cords.

AAC

Protected AAC

(8 to 320 Kib/s, including variable bitrate files)

MP3

(formats 2, 3 and 4)

Audible

Lossy:


Lossless/original PCM:


Other container:

at the Wayback Machine (archived July 26, 2017)

iPod Nano – official site at apple.com