Ipod Nano 4G

FEATURES ARE:-

(1) A musical Genius.

                                                                                                                   

Say you’re listening to a song you really like and want to hear other tracks that go great with it. The Genius feature finds the songs in your music library that go great together and makes a Genius Playlist for you. It’s like having your own highly intelligent, personal DJ.

 

(2) Rock and roll over.

                                                        

Tilt or turn iPod nano on its side, and you’ll listen, watch, and play in new ways. You can flip through your album art with Cover Flow. Or, vertically speaking, see more albums and artists on the screen at one time.

 

(3) Let the games begin.

Now you can get in on games made especially for iPod nano and the accelerometer. They respond to the way you move, so they’re immersive, addictive, and a blast. iPod nano comes with Maze, which lets you work your way through vast mazes by tilting and moving. You can find even more games on the iTunes Store.

 

(4) Even your photos rock.

        

Pull hundreds of photos from your pocket and share them wherever you go. Hold iPod nano upright and see your photos in portrait view. Turn it on its side to see them in landscape. Your photos look beautiful in their proper aspect ratio on the vibrant, 320-by-240-resolution display.

 

 

 

(5) Shake your groove thing.

Sometimes, we could all use a little unpredictability. And now you can shake to shuffle your music. Just give iPod nano a shake and it shuffles to a different song in your music library. You’ll always be surprised by what you’ll hear.

 

(6) Find your music faster.

It’s even easier to find the song you want to hear. Now you can view your album art in Cover Flow. Or just press and hold the Center button to browse by album or artist. When you find the right song, press the Center button to add it to your on-the-go playlist.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(7) World’s biggest small screen.

Watching movies, TV shows, and videos is big fun on iPod nano. And the high-resolution picture looks crisp and vivid on the 2-inch widescreen display. So you can always have a little video with you.

APPLE IPHONE

 

iPhone 

CPU

CPU: Samsung ARM

Onboard RAM: 512 MB

Maximum RAM: 512 MB

 

Video

Screen: 3.5″ multi-touch

Max Resolution: 480×320

Camera: 2MP

 

Storage

Flash Drive: 4/8 GB

 

Input/Output

USB: via dock connector

Audio Out: stereo 16 bit mini

Speaker: mono

Microphone: mono

 

Networking

Airport Extreme: included

Bluetooth: 2.0+EDR

 

Miscellaneous

Codename: iphone

Battery Life: Talk 8 hrs, Standby 250 hrs, Internet 6 hrs, Video 7 hrs, Audio 24 hrs

Dimensions: 4.5″ H x 2.4″ W x 0.46″ D

Weight: 0.3 lbs.

Maximum OS: iPhone OS 1.0.2 (OS X-based)

Minimum OS: iPhone OS 1.0 (OS X-based)

Introduced: June 2007

Announced in January 2007 and released the following June, the iPhone marked Apple’s entry into the cellular phone marketplace. Described by Steve Jobs as “a wide-screen iPod with hand controls… a revolutionary mobile phone… [and] a breakthrough Internet communications device,” the iPhone was the first Apple-branded consumer device to run on OS X. Based around a touch-based user interface with a single button, the iPhone was controlled using a variety of one- and two-finger gestured. It included a custom version of Safari that allowed full browsing of any web page, a revamped iPod interface with CoverFlow, integrated access to YouTube and Google Maps, an iChat-like SMS text-messaging interface (iChat itself was missing from the initial release), and a standard set of cellphone apps, such as a calendar, an address book and a calculator.

The iPhone was available exclusively with AT&T voice/data plans, and was limited to EDGE-based network access, rather than the faster 3G wireless networking standard. This was mitigated somewhat by an integrated 802.11g WiFi chipset, which allowed for faster browsing on any available WiFi network.

Though the iPhone officially only supported web-based applications from third-party developers, an underground development effort was quickly organized, and within a few months native 3rd party applications were widely available. Warantee-breaking hardware modifications to “unlock” the iPhone from the AT&T network were also uncovered. The iPhone was sold in two configurations: a 4GB model sold for $499, and an 8GB model for $599.