iPod Shuffle (3rd-gen) review, surprises
CNET's official, rated review of the third-generation Apple iPod Shuffle is up and ready for your perusal. I never thought it would be tough to review an MP3 player without any buttons on it, but the experience wasn't as cut and dry as you'd expect. In some ways, Apple's new Shuffle may just be the most intriguing MP3 player I review all year, even if its design paradoxically bores me to tears. You have to admire the sleight of hand Apple pulled off by adding song ID and playlist navigation to the Shuffle, while at the same time removing its tried and true navigation pad. I'm not crazy about the result, but the concept is fascinating.
The CNET review covers the nitty-gritty, but I'm here to offer a few of my own personal observations after spending a day with Apple's new Shuffle. Here's a list of ways the Shuffle surprised me.
Vanishing act. Over the course of just one day, I must have lost the Shuffle at least four times--just sitting at my desk. Nicole Lee can vouch for this. She heard all my screams from the other side of the cubicle. Now, I expected this thing would be easy to lose, but the surprising part is that the Shuffle's tiny size was only part of the problem.
The Shuffle's resemblance to a USB stick probably threw me the most. Since I typically have at least two or three thumb drives scattered on my desk at any given time, the addition of a nondescript black or silver $80 Shuffle is easy to dismiss.
Jasmine would actually wear it. If you've ever seen a First Look video from my MP3 cohort Jasmine France, you can get a sense of how much this girl likes fashion. I wouldn't have thought in a million years that she'd go for the new Shuffle's muted, stoic design, but it turned out to be her favorite feature. I guess there's something to be said for wearable tech that just blends in, and doesn't draw attention to itself. What's not surprising: I still don't understand women.
Podcasts and audiobooks. Not everyone works out to throbbing techno at the gym. Some people take their mind off the treadmill by listening to a good book or their favorite podcast. The Shuffle now supports automatic podcast and audiobook management, and is smart enough to keep the material from popping into the default music shuffle. It's also smart enough to play these files sequentially, regardless of whether the shuffle switch is on or off. The Shuffle treats podcasts and audiobooks as playlists, so if you want to hear them you have to press and hold the button until VoiceOver starts reeling off your playlists. As a side note, the remote's volume buttons let you quickly scroll through playlists, so you're not waiting forever for VoiceOver to talk its way down to your playlist of Xylophone Songs.
You can use the Shuffle with other headphones, sorta. There's a lot of groaning going on about Apple's decision to shift the controls to the headphone cable, and the effect that has on using third-party headphones or stereos. I'm totally with you. For what it's worth, though, the Shuffle will technically play music to anything that uses a standard 3.5mm connection (headphones, aux cable). I connected my Ultrasone HFI-2200 headphones to the Shuffle, switched it on, and music started playing immediately. Now, without Apple's remote clicker on the bundled earbuds, you can't control volume, pause, skip, or manage playlists--but you do get to hear music. The Shuffle always remembers the last volume setting used, and you can also throttle down the player's maximum volume using the device overview pane in iTunes.
Donald Bell is CNET Reviews' senior editor for MP3 players and portable audio, and one half of the MP3 Insider blog and weekly podcast. He also likes getting his hands dirty with digital audio tools for musicians and DJs.

Donald Bell is an electronic musician, a veteran record store employee, and a fearless hardware hacker. He's also CNET's Senior Editor for MP3 and digital audio.
Jasmine France is CNET's resident digital audio doyenne, writing and editing product reviews, crave blogs, and feature stories on all things MP3. And if you need advice on headphones, she's your girl.


You're calling it an overpriced POS and yet I'm guessing you've never seen, used, or even touched this shuffle. So really, you're making a completely baseless statement and then criticizing the people who actually HAVE looked at this.
As for you and all the other people who think that CNet gives Apple favorable reviews, go read some of those reviews please. The Zune beat the iPod Classic FYI.
While Fanboys do exist, they harm no one. On the other hand, you bear witness to the other side of the spectrum. Your caustic and snide remarks do nothing but bring the spotlight on you (and it is not a favorable light).
You're calling it an overpriced POS and yet I'm guessing you've never seen, used, or even touched this shuffle. So really, you're making a completely baseless statement and then criticizing the people who actually HAVE looked at this.
As for you and all the other people who think that CNet gives Apple favorable reviews, go read some of those reviews please. The Zune beat the iPod Classic FYI.
Just to add to that, here is an excerpt from the CNet review, which you undoubtedly didn't read:
"Compared with other sub-$100 MP3 players on the market (Sansa Clip, Creative Zen Stone Plus, Samsung Pebble), the Shuffle's microscopic design isn't enough to make up for the limited features, relatively high price, diminished battery life, quirky navigation, and a headphone remote system that reeks of planned obsolescence. MP3 players like the Shuffle that are aimed at the gym and jogger crowd are particularly susceptible to issues of headphone fit, comfort, and wear and tear, and Apple's unique headphone remote needlessly complicates the process of replacing or upgrading the Shuffle's earbuds. This is not to say that headphone control is a bad feature, but redundant controls on the actual device would help avoid confusion over navigation, and improve the product's usefulness in the long term."
One very pleasant surprise is that the Clip has -excellent- sound quality. I use a Sony MDR-EX90LP--a headphone with excellent sound quality--and the Clip sounds very well with music "ripped" my my CD collection encoded at 256 kbps VBR data rate MP3 encoding; the sound quality of the Clip is akin to much more expensive portable music players from Sony and Samsung.
You can get a 4 GB capacity Sansa Clip from most online retailers for about US$50, much less expensive than the 3G shuffle with the same storage capacity. And unlike the shuffle, the Clip supports any decent headphone with the 3.5 mm stereo phone jack and with its on-screen display and controls, you can actually navigate around to find the song(s) on the player fairly easily.
In my humble opinion, Apple "oversimplified" the 3G iPod shuffle, which has actually made it just a tad harder to use than even the 2G shuffle. Mind you, if you're willing to buy a refurbished iPod from the Apple Store, there are good deals going for the 3G iPod nanos with its unmatched Click Wheel navigation system costing not much more than what a new shuffle costs.
Hahahaha, I can see that happening :P
Regards.
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Netspeak for "Ok, thank you. Goodbye!"
Best used in a snarky manner; as in "Zen444...go f**k yourself. Kthxbye."
Can also be written as "Kthxgtg", or "Kthxbai" if you're a weeaboo.
Other variations include "Kthxdie", "Stfukthxbye" and the combination of the two, "Stfukthxdie".
Usually used by scene girls repetitiously in their very unique way of trying to shut you up when you tell them Tokio Hotel s**ks balls.
Is used by women over 9000% of the time, as women are mentally incapable of comebacks.
Despite what many fa**ots who use it will tell you, "kthxbye" is one of the gayest things anyone ever said in the history of forever, challenged only by the phrase "he/she/I/you won at the internet".
I've read several such mistakes just today on cnet. On another article a writer wrote about a teenage boy who "idealized" Sean Fanning. Shouldn't it be idolize?
It seems everyone on cnet is a senior editor but no one ever edits or proofreads their material before posting it. Come on cnet. If you expect to be a writer you need to be better than that. Don't be so lazy. My eight year old son writes better than you people.
The design I feel is great for people who use it for the gym as it small and clips right to your clothing. The controls on the earbuds are laided out well and very easy to use. When I was ruuning on the treadmill is was nice not to have to take my attetion away from running to advance to another song.
My hope is that in the future a bluetooth headphone can be developed to get rid of the cord. As I think the challege will be is........to create a transmitter smaller then the device itself. This 3rd generation shuffle is a soild replacement to the last generation. As with all products Apple designs it depends on how your going to use it. I guess to me $79 dollars is an ok price to pay for this as I get a music player and a jumpdrive all in one.
But in the end it's "To each his/her own" You don't have to buy anything Apple puts out.....the market has a ton of players to pick from...........buy one that you will enjoy using.
"The Shuffle's resemblance to a USB stick probably threw me the most. Since I typically have at least two or three thumb drives scattered on my desk at any given time,"
Just out of curiosity, do you lose those similarly-sized thumbdrives just as easily throughout the day? I hope you don't keep anything to important/sensitive on them, because you must lose thumbdrives like crazy!!
How about a 64gb iPod touch?!?!?!!?!?
Personally, I'm a Cowon fan (I've been using Cowon devices now for about 4 years) and still think that they're the best sound on the market. However, they have weaknesses in comparison to other mp3 players (navigation is a common issue mentioned among Cowon owners, however sound quality is almost always rated as stellar).
I think overall, this can help people make more informed decisions when making mp3 player purchases. I do realize that this is a blog regarding the shuffle, but I do not know what devices would be comparable to the shuffle and therefore I do not know how to rate them in comparison.
If this player came from an anonymous Chinese manufacturer, would it have merited that?
Looking at what the new Shuffle is and isn't, does it merit that itself? Tiny, ok. Controls on the headphones, maybe. But removal of controls from the unit? Use of a voice announcement to try to make up for the silly removal of a screen (and Apple's refusal to admit that it was just that)? The failure to add standard features routinely found elsewhere (an equalizer, sleep timer, FM radio, settings options)?
In the end, it seems to me that the real story is Apple's stubborn pursuit of a fundamentally defective design, advancing it in its failure.
<a href="http://musparade.com">producers music</a>
I listen to music while both my hands are occupied quite often, and sometimes when I'm riding my bike! This player is obviously aimed for the jogger crowds and in my case the headphone remote system is extremely convenient and I do not understand why some people find it complicated. I don't even have to look at what I'm doing when navigating through my player because it is just right there! I do not want to bend my head forward just to pull my brickish ipod touch out of my pocket whenever I'm jogging or driving and stuff like that.
Apple's reputation for design just took a huge dive here - why should the consumer be using a piece of tape to fix something like this?
I can't believe I was stupid enough (this time) to break my own rule: NEVER buy a newly-released Apple product - there is always a dumb glitch that gets worked out after several months (just like the weak wireless receiver in the MacBook I bought almost 3 years ago - my son's Macbook, purchased one year later, finds a lot of Wi-Fi networks that my computer never sees).
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by GSmurf1234
July 3, 2009 12:17 PM PDT
- I'm about to be on my 3rd 'new' shuffle in under a month of ownership. I suspect there is a design flaw in the control switch on the earphone line - any sort of continuous use during heavy cardio causes the sound to cut out to barely audible. The unit then proceeds to ignore all further input for several hours.
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(32 Comments)My guess is that the control switch is not well sealed against moisture intrusion and that sweat is likely causing the control switch to the iPod to short until it subsequently dries out.
If this 3rd one doesn't resolve the issue, I'm going back to the previous version (which served me rather well for quite a while) and would advise anyone who wants to use this device for the gym or running to steer well clear of this latest addition to the iPod line.