Sunday, February 28, 2010

iPod click wheel



The iPod line's signature click wheel

The iPod click-wheel is the navigation component of the device that uses both touch technology and traditional buttons to let a user find their music, videos, photos and play games, on their iPod. The wheel lies flat on the face of the iPod, directly underneath the screen. The design was first released with the iPod Mini, and is now used on the iPod Nano and iPod Classic.

The science behind the touch-sensitive technology is known as capacitive sensing, which stores the energy created between users' fingers and the wheel itself. This technology dates back to 1919.

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[edit]How it works

The click-wheel detects a user's input via its touch sensitive ring, and because of the four mechanical buttons that lie beneath it, the ring is able to perform multiple commands.[1] For example, if you are browsing through your music, and you happen to select a particular song, the click-wheel's function will now be to adjust the volume. Press the select button once again, and now you can skip to a specific part in the song.

The primary technology that the click-wheel demonstrates is that of Capacitive Sensing. This technology actually dates back to 1919, where it was first utilized in a musical instrument called a Theremin. It allowed the pitch and volume of the instrument to be controlled by the distance from the musician's hands to two antennae. When two metal plates are placed very close to one another, without coming into contact, a current passes through the plates, energy is stored, but once the current is taken away, the stored energy creates a current on its own. This is how a capacitor gathers and stores energy.[2]

This same principle is applied to the iPod Classic and iPod Nano.

The "brain" behind the click-wheel is the conductive membrane behind the plastic covering. This membrane has "channels" that when connected, create a set of coordinates. These channels are conductors, which when connected to another conductor (in this case your finger), try to send a current through your finger, but are blocked by the plastic covering the click-wheel. So instead of passing through the plastic, the current creates a charge at the closest location to your finger, which is also known as capacitance. The component that detects this change in capacitance is the controller. Whenever the controller senses a change, it sends a signal to the microprocessor, which performs the desired action. The faster a finger moves around the wheel, the more concentrated the stream of signals it sends out. The moment the finger leaves the wheel, however, is when the controller stops detecting change in capacitance, therefore stopping the current process.[1]

[edit]Controversy behind the technology

It is a little known fact that Apple was not behind the development of the click wheel, but it was actually Synaptics that came up with the design for the device.[3] There have nevertheless been a few lawsuits concerning its capacitance-sensing technology.

In January of 2007, a U.K Based company named Quantum Research made public a lawsuit against Apple claiming that its own patents on this technology suffered from copyright infringement by Apple. Legal action regarding this lawsuit had been going on since 2005, but was not made public until two years after.[4]

[edit]References

  1. ^ a b Layton, Julia. "How iPods work." How Stuff Works March 14, 2006 (accessed October 12, 2008).
  2. ^ Kranz, Matthias. "A Capacitive Sensing Toolkit for Pervasive Activity Detection" Ibr.cs (accessed October 12, 2008).
  3. ^ Hurst, Wolfgang. "A Study of Algorithms in Mobile Devices" March 2007 Click Wheel Study (accessed Ocotber 12, 2008).
  4. ^ Gamet, Jeff. "Quantum Research Sues Apple Over Click Wheel Technology" January 2, 2007 (accessed Ocotber 12, 2007).

[edit]External links

iPod Photo



IPod Photo
iPod Photo
ManufacturerApple Computer
TypePortable media player
Retail availabilitySeptember 26, 2004 — June 28, 2005
MediaHard drive
Operating system1.2.1
PowerLithium-ion battery (15 hours)
Display220 x 176 2" color LCD
InputClick wheel
ConnectivityUSB 2.0
FireWire
Dock connector
Remote connector
Predecessor4G iPod Classic
Successor5G iPod Classic (video)

The iPod Photo was a portable media player designed and marketed by Apple Inc. It was the top-of-the-line model in Apple's iPod family. It was positioned as a premium higher-end spin-off of thefourth-generation iPod Classic on October 26, 2004.[1] Originally named iPod Photo, with a capital "P", a few months later it was renamed iPod photo, presumably to fit in with the naming of the iPod mini .[2][when?] It was merged back into the standard iPod Classic line within eight months of its introduction on June 28, 2005 as the iPod (with color display).

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[edit]Models

GenerationImageCapacityColorsConnectionRelease dateMinimum OS to syncRated battery life (hours)
Originalfourth generation iPod40 GBWhiteFireWire orUSBOctober 26, 2004Mac: 10.2.8
Win: 2000
audio: 15
slideshow: 5
60 GB
Premium spin-off of 4G iPod with color screen and picture viewing.
1st revision20 GBWhiteFireWire orUSBFebruary 23, 2005Mac: 10.2.8
Win: 2000
audio: 15
slideshow: 5
60 GB
Pack-ins and price reduced. Images directly viewable via optional iPod Camera Connector.

[edit]Overview

In addition to being a digital audio player, like other iPods, the iPod Photo allowed users to store and display color photographs. On June 28, 2005, the iPod Photo line was merged with the existing iPod line, giving all full-size iPods the same features and color screen as iPod Photo; the iPod Photo line then ceased to exist under that name.

iPod Photo's design was nearly identical to the fourth-generation iPod, storing media on a hard drive and synchronizing with the user's computerover FireWire or USB 2.0.[1] However, unlike earlier models which had monochrome displays, its 220x176-pixel LCD was capable of displaying up to 65,536 colors.[3]

iTunes was used to synchronize music and photos from the computer. Photos were displayable either on the built-in display, or on a TV with an additional TV cable.[1] Before iTunes gained the photo-syncing capability in version 4.8, users would use Apple's iPhoto on the Macintosh, orAdobe Photoshop Album 2.0 or Photoshop Elements 3.0 on Windows.[1]

[edit]Specifications

The iPod Photo supported JPEG, BMP, GIF, TIFF, and PNG graphic file formats, and could be attached to a television or other external display for slideshows. Apple's advertised battery life for continuous music playback was fifteen hours, or five hours for a continuous slideshow with music.

The iPod Photo was originally available in 40 GB and 60 GB models, which cost US$499 and US$599 respectively. On February 23, 2005, Apple discontinued the 1.9 cm-thick 40 GB model[4] and introduced a lower-priced (US$349) and slimmer (1.6 cm) 30 GB iPod Photo. Additionally, it dropped the price of the 60 GB model (which had always been 1.9 cm thick) to US$449. However, the iPod dock and theFireWire and television video cables were sold separately.

On February 23, 2005, Apple announced the iPod Camera Connector which promised users of iPod Photo instant transfer of images from a USB-compatible digital camera to the iPod Photo.[4] The main difference between this and Belkin's Digital Camera Link is that Apple's unit supports instant image viewing on the iPod Photo after transfer without having to connect the iPod Photo to a computer first.

[edit]iPod (with color display)

On June 28, 2005, the iPod Photo and standard iPod were merged to create only one form of the white iPod. The 30 GB model was dropped, and the 20 GB model received a color screen. The price for the 60 GB model was also dropped to US$399.

Timeline of full-size iPod models

Sources: Apple press release library,[5] Mactracker Apple Inc. model database[6]

[edit]References

  1. ^ a b c d "Apple Introduces iPod Photo". Apple Inc.. 2004-10-26. Retrieved 2007-09-23.
  2. ^ "Bring it into line". TrustedReviews. 2005-03-08. Retrieved 2008-08-27.
  3. ^ Ina Fried; John Borland (October 26, 2004). "Apple unveils color iPod, U2 edition". CNET News.com. Retrieved 2006-09-27.
  4. ^ a b "Apple Updates iPod Photo Lineup". Apple Inc.. 2005-02-23. Retrieved 2006-09-27.
  5. ^ Apple Inc., Apple press release library, Retrieved September 19, 2007.
  6. ^ Mactracker (mactracker.ca), Apple Inc. model database, version as of 26 July 2007.

[edit]External links