This page will contain discussion groups about Kingdom Hearts 2, as they become available.Kingdom Hearts IIKingdom Hearts II is an RPG video game sequel to the 2002 Disney/Square RPG Kingdom Hearts, though it is actually the third installment in the series. Directed by Tetsuya Nomura, the game continues Sora's adventures in finding King Mickey and Riku with the help of a large cast of Disney characters including Donald, Goofy, Jack Sparrow, Tron, Aladdin, the Beast and more. Developed by Square Enix, Kingdom Hearts II was released in Japan on December 22, 2005. The English version will be released on March 28, 2006 in North America [1], followed by European and Australian releases later in the year. The in-game music is composed by Yoko Shimomura, who composed the music for the first game, and the theme song Passion (Sanctuary for the international release) is written and performed by Japanese pop music star Utada Hikaru. Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.OverviewKingdom Hearts II begins where Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories left off. Sora and his companions have been asleep for about a year, regaining their memories. When Sora awakens, he eventually arrives in Twilight Town, the place where a mysterious boy, Roxas, who can use dual Keyblades, lived before he left suddenly. Gaining new clothes and powers, Sora began his journey anew, unaware of the events that have taken place in Chain of Memories. Sora continues his quest, sealing the keyholes of each world to protect them from the Heartless, as well as facing Axel and the remaining members of the mysterious Organization XIII. As the game progresses, Sora learns how much he and Roxas have in common. WorldsSora, Donald Duck, Goofy and Jack Sparrow in the Port Royal world of Kingdom Hearts II.As in the first Kingdom Hearts game, the player can access different worlds with themes based mostly on Disney films. Disney-based worlds
Original worlds
New gameplay featuresGameplay is revamped from the last game; there are various new features offering the potential of more interesting play. Drive FormsOne of Sora's first drives, "Brave".Sora can "fuse" with either Donald or Goofy to become more powerful and acquire different attributes as well. Three out of the five forms allow Sora to use two Keyblades instead of one, and the second keyblade may be equipped in the items menu for this purpose. There are five drive forms in all. The first two forms have Sora merge with one of his permanent party members, Donald or Goofy. One is Brave Form, where Sora merges with Goofy, and dons red and black clothes. Although he cannot use magic in this form, Sora gains a massive boost to his physical ability. Sora wields two Keyblades which doubles his combo potential dramatically and also gives him additional attacks. Sora also runs twice as fast in this form. The other, Wisdom Form, is where Sora merges with Donald for this form, and he dons blue and black clothes. Sora gains a massive magic attack boost, and hovers across the floor never touching the ground, instead of running giving him superior movement control. Wisdom Form replaces the attack command with shoot, which lets him shoot a blue magic bullet from the tip of the Keyblade in rapid fire if pressed continuously making Wisdom Form a long distance specialized form. The other two forms have Sora combine with two of Donald, Goofy or another party member to attain greater power than in the other two forms. Master Form, where Sora merges with both Donald and Goofy, combines the powers of the Brave and Wisdom forms. Sora's combo potential is increased, and his magic power is increased as well. Two Keyblades can be wielded,one psychokinetically and the other is held normally. His clothes turn yellow and black, and he is able to glide very swiftly as well as perform a double jump. The drawback to this form is that the drive meter will decrease quicker than the previous two drives. When in Final Form, Sora will merge with both other party members and don silver and black clothing. Wielding two Keyblades psychokinetically as well as the ability to fly incredibly fast, Sora wields incredible power in this form, dispatching enemies with ease and dealing increased physical and magical damage. Anti Form is a bizarre form that is caused by taking too much damage while in Drive form, and then attempting to use the Drive command afterward. Sora turns completely black like a shadow, walks on all fours, and has yellow eyes, similar to a basic Heartless. While in this form, both partners disappear and Sora uses his "claws" for wide-range attacks that may be weak with individual attacks, but he also has a very high maximum combo count. Unlike the other forms, when this form occurs it will cancel out Drive when entering a new area as opposed to staying in effect. Sora is also unable to use either items or magic, and both of the computer controlled partners will dissappear regardless of who Sora drives with. Reaction commandThe reaction command, similar to the Resident Evil 4 real time reaction commands, is used during fights and can allow you to perform certain actions when timed correctly. For example, against "Dusk" nobodies, your character will slide behind the normally evasive opponents and set you up for a combo. Reaction commands can also trigger counter moves as well. For example, a nobody might shoot a red bullet at you, but with a well timed reaction command, Sora will kick the bullet back at it. Reaction commands are often pivotal in defeating bosses as well. Combination AttackSimba and Sora's team attack knock rocks up from the ground and have Sora and Simba roar intensely to do damage.A gameplay addition gives Sora a special linked attack with any of the guest characters, and the effect varies depending on the character teaming up with Sora. In the Olympus Coliseum world, for example, Sora has the option to perform a linked attack with Auron when battling enemies. Later in the game Sora will also be able to perform team attacks with Donald and Goofy individually in similar fashion. Magic abilitiesSora's magic spells from Kingdom Hearts has been modified. Some spells have been replaced, other have differing effects. Casting spells in different drive forms also offers another variety to the spell effects, mostly increasing their strength. Two new abilities introduced to the game are Magnet and Reflect. Magnet creates a sphere that slowly sucks in enemies. Reflect causes a large shield to form around Sora for a very short amount of time, then crack and send out sharp shards a limited distance. SummonsThe Stitch summon involves music.Like the previous game, Sora can summon a particular character to aid him in battle when attaining each of their respective items. Summoning however, uses the drive meter, so Sora can't drive and summon at the same time. The character will replace the two computer-controlled characters and fight alongside Sora for as long as the drive meter holds out. Instead of the summoned character being limited to only one action, the summoned character now has a menu of his own to perform multiple actions, some solo actions and some cooperative actions with Sora. There are four summons.
Mickey's helpIn certain boss battles, if Sora is knocked out, a second option may be available, called "I won't give up!" It allows you to play as Mickey Mouse. Mickey is fast and his attacks are brutal, and he can shoot beams of magic from his Keyblade. However, you must revive Sora to finish off the boss; this is done by pressing the triangle button repeatedly to fill up his Drive bar. This can also be done by constantly attacking the opponent. After the bar is full, pressing the triangle button will bring Sora back to life. If you lose as Mickey, Sora will be automatically revived. Different command menusA new feature is that each world has their own command menu, which are sometimes animated. For instance, Olympus Coliseum's design shows the image of the top of the Coliseum, and Port Royal's design is to show a ship's steering wheel and the Pirates of the Caribbean logo. If the player desires, the command menu's design can be changed to the original Kingdom Hearts design in the options menu. There are two different Command Menus; a normal one, used to access magic, items and attack, and another used for attack, drive and party. MapsIt is optional to have a map in the top-right corner of the screen. In addition, mini-maps can be found in each world. On these maps, a small Kingdom Keyblade indicates Sora's location. Disney cameosIn addition to the Disney characters that will be returning from Kingdom Hearts, there will also be additional characters from their movies including Megara, Pegasus, Pain, Panic and the Hydra from Hercules, Lumiere, Cogsworth, Mrs. Potts, Chip, and Wardrobe from Beauty and the Beast, the merchant from Aladdin, Eric from The Little Mermaid, and Santa Claus as depicted in The Nightmare Before Christmas. Stitch from Lilo & Stitch and the titular characters of Chicken Little and Peter Pan act as new summons. Characters from the previously unexplored worlds of Mulan, Pirates of the Caribbean, Tron and The Lion King also play parts in the game. Yen Sid the sorcerer, Mickey's master in the movie Fantasia, makes an appearance, inhabiting a mysterious tower. Merlin returns and will be in Disney Castle and Hollow Bastion, revealing the existence of Timeless River to the heroes. Flora, Fauna, and Merryweather from Sleeping Beauty give Sora his new outfit. Scrooge McDuck also makes an appearance. Pete is also in the game as an ever-persistent enemy to Sora, Donald and Goofy, appearing in many worlds. He works with the resurrected Maleficent, who refuses to relent in her desire for power. Final Fantasy cameosSquall and Cloud in the Hollow Bastion world of Kingdom Hearts II.Seventeen characters from the Final Fantasy series appear. Auron of Final Fantasy X will be Sora's partner in battle in Hercules' world. Yuna, Rikku and Paine from Final Fantasy X-2 appear as fairies at the Hollow Bastion. Younger versions of Seifer Almasy, Fujin (called "Fuu"), and Raijin (called "Rai") from Final Fantasy VIII appear in Twilight Town, as a "disciplinary committee". Squall Leonhart (Leon) and Selphie Tilmitt of Final Fantasy VIII, and Cloud Strife and Yuffie Kisaragi as depicted in Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children return as cameos in Hollow Bastion. Aerith Gainsborough also appears, albeit wearing a modified version of her Before Crisis clothing. Tifa Lockhart of Final Fantasy VII also makes her first cameo in the series, wearing her Advent Children attire. Cid Highwind also returns, but he is still wearing the same attire as in the previous game; he has a speaking role this time around as opposed to caption bubbles in Kingdom Hearts. Sephiroth, Cloud's ever-present enemy, comes along as well, battling Cloud. The Moogles, featured in many different Final Fantasy titles, serve as shopkeepers in the world of Hollow Bastion. It had been stated by Nomura that, although the first game strictly stuck to characters Nomura designed, this time around they were going to "take some risks", which implied that characters from the Final Fantasy games without involvement from Nomura could make an appearance. One of these was Vivi Ornitier of Final Fantasy IX, who appears in Twilight Town as a member in Seifer's group. Another non-Nomura character included is Setzer Gabbiani of Final Fantasy VI, as a challenger in Twilight Town. Cloud Strife has his own side story, involving conflict with Sephiroth and his relationships with Tifa and Aerith. Voice CastEnglish language version (tentative)
Japanese language version
Music
The tracklist for the single is as follows:
Trivia
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The tracklist for the single is as follows:. Apple has promoted the iPod and iTunes brands in several successful advertising campaigns, a large number of which are part of their series of silhouette commercials. One of these was Vivi Ornitier of Final Fantasy IX, who appears in Twilight Town as a member in Seifer's group. Sales by Hewlett-Packard made up 5% of all iPod sales. It had been stated by Nomura that, although the first game strictly stuck to characters Nomura designed, this time around they were going to "take some risks", which implied that characters from the Final Fantasy games without involvement from Nomura could make an appearance. In July of 2005, HP reversed its decision and announced they would stop reselling the iPod by September 2005, when existing stock were projected to be depleted. The Moogles, featured in many different Final Fantasy titles, serve as shopkeepers in the world of Hollow Bastion. Retailers of this model included (among others) the retail giant Wal-Mart, which included a disclaimer explaining that it would not work with its own online music service. Sephiroth, Cloud's ever-present enemy, comes along as well, battling Cloud. The HP models were the same as the Apple iPod except for the inclusion of an "HP" logo on the back under the Apple logo and "iPod" label They were sold as the "Apple iPod + hp". Cid Highwind also returns, but he is still wearing the same attire as in the previous game; he has a speaking role this time around as opposed to caption bubbles in Kingdom Hearts. On January 8, 2004, Hewlett-Packard announced that they would license the iPod from Apple to create an HP-branded digital audio player based on the iPod. Tifa Lockhart of Final Fantasy VII also makes her first cameo in the series, wearing her Advent Children attire. [38]. Aerith Gainsborough also appears, albeit wearing a modified version of her Before Crisis clothing. Most recently, Apple shipped 14.04 million iPods during the quarter that ended on December 31, 2005, a 207% increase over the same quarter one year prior. Squall Leonhart (Leon) and Selphie Tilmitt of Final Fantasy VIII, and Cloud Strife and Yuffie Kisaragi as depicted in Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children return as cameos in Hollow Bastion. [37] Apple shipped 6.16 million iPods during the quarter that ended on June 25, 2005, a 616% increase over the same quarter in 2004. Younger versions of Seifer Almasy, Fujin (called "Fuu"), and Raijin (called "Rai") from Final Fantasy VIII appear in Twilight Town, as a "disciplinary committee". In its first quarter results of 2006, Apple reported earnings of $565 million — its highest revenue in the company's history. Yuna, Rikku and Paine from Final Fantasy X-2 appear as fairies at the Hollow Bastion. In other countries, the iPod market share is significantly lower, mostly due to high import taxes and less ubiquitous marketing, so flash memory players, or hard disk based players from competitors like Creative are dominant. Auron of Final Fantasy X will be Sora's partner in battle in Hercules' world. That is why Flash players at the beginning of 2005 account for less than half the US market share they did in 2004 (their market share decreasing from 62% in January 2004 to 29% in January 2005 [36]). Seventeen characters from the Final Fantasy series appear. Therefore, Apple succeeded in chipping away at the mainstream Flash player market in the US. He works with the resurrected Maleficent, who refuses to relent in her desire for power. This success was especially based on the introduction of the iPod mini. Pete is also in the game as an ever-persistent enemy to Sora, Donald and Goofy, appearing in many worlds. Within one year from January 2004 to January 2005, its US market share tremendously increased by 34% from 31% to 65%. Scrooge McDuck also makes an appearance. [35] According to the latest financial statements, iPod's market share accounts for 74% in the US in July 2005. Flora, Fauna, and Merryweather from Sleeping Beauty give Sora his new outfit. [34] The iPod currently dominates the digital audio player market in the US, frequently topping best-seller lists. Merlin returns and will be in Disney Castle and Hollow Bastion, revealing the existence of Timeless River to the heroes. Fortune magazine reported on June 27, 2005 that Apple had sold over 15 million iPods, including 5.3 million in the first quarter of that year. Yen Sid the sorcerer, Mickey's master in the movie Fantasia, makes an appearance, inhabiting a mysterious tower. This equates to 100 iPods sold every minute throughout the quarter. Characters from the previously unexplored worlds of Mulan, Pirates of the Caribbean, Tron and The Lion King also play parts in the game. At the Macworld Expo keynote speech[33] on January 10, 2006, Apple CEO Steve Jobs reported sales of over 42 million iPods total, and 14 million in the first quarter of fiscal year 2006. Stitch from Lilo & Stitch and the titular characters of Chicken Little and Peter Pan act as new summons. Sites like iLounge and The Apple Collection have parts of their sites devoted to iPod concepts, things varying from completely touch screen iPods to iPods that include an integrated mobile phone. Potts, Chip, and Wardrobe from Beauty and the Beast, the merchant from Aladdin, Eric from The Little Mermaid, and Santa Claus as depicted in The Nightmare Before Christmas. The iPod's design is also a part of this ecosystem. In addition to the Disney characters that will be returning from Kingdom Hearts, there will also be additional characters from their movies including Megara, Pegasus, Pain, Panic and the Hydra from Hercules, Lumiere, Cogsworth, Mrs. Along with the introduction of the nano they also introduced nano tubes (most likely a joke on nanotubes), a silicone case with no screen, dock connector, or headphone port protection, but a cover over the click wheel, and the hold switch. On these maps, a small Kingdom Keyblade indicates Sora's location. Apple themselves even make some. In addition, mini-maps can be found in each world. There are a host of different types and brands, all different for each iPod owners different needs. It is optional to have a map in the top-right corner of the screen. Some are silicone, others are hard plastic, some you can't even reach the controls through. There are two different Command Menus; a normal one, used to access magic, items and attack, and another used for attack, drive and party. Kate Spade, iSkin, Speck, Incase, and Chums all produce these cases. If the player desires, the command menu's design can be changed to the original Kingdom Hearts design in the options menu. People buy these accessories not only to protect their iPods but also to make fashion statements. For instance, Olympus Coliseum's design shows the image of the top of the Coliseum, and Port Royal's design is to show a ship's steering wheel and the Pirates of the Caribbean logo. Besides technological peripherals there are also cases. A new feature is that each world has their own command menu, which are sometimes animated. Other companies (such as Griffin Technology) make add-ons that allow your iPod to record your voice, charge your iPod on the go, play your tunes over the radio, or use your iPod wirelessly with a remote. If you lose as Mickey, Sora will be automatically revived. Companies such as JBL, Bose, Altec Lansing, and Kensington all make speakers that are designed specifically to work with the iPod, using the iPod's thirty pin dock connector. After the bar is full, pressing the triangle button will bring Sora back to life. A host of different companies produce accessories that are designed to work with the iPod. This can also be done by constantly attacking the opponent. The large accessories market that has built up around the iPod is sometimes described as the iPod ecosystem. However, you must revive Sora to finish off the boss; this is done by pressing the triangle button repeatedly to fill up his Drive bar. Arguing that the cheap songs from iTMS have contributed significantly to the iPods' great success, record labels are also seeking a share of profits from the iPod division itself and they hope to accomplish this by putting pressure on Apple to differentiate between "hot singles" and "golden oldies." Jobs responded by accusing the record industry of being greedy [26]. Mickey is fast and his attacks are brutal, and he can shoot beams of magic from his Keyblade. Aside from the controversial iPod-exclusive AAC format of audio files, SonyBMG and Warner Music who had initially signed on with Apple have lately complained that they have been undercharged for the value of their songs due to iTMS's flat fee. In certain boss battles, if Sora is knocked out, a second option may be available, called "I won't give up!" It allows you to play as Mickey Mouse. Steve Jobs has stated "We would like to break even (or) make a little bit of money (on the iTunes Music Store) but it's not a money maker." The role of the iTMS is not to sell songs, but rather to promote the sale of iPods by offering owners a convenient service for music. There are four summons. Yet Realnetworks has continued to update the technology allowing iPod owners to download purchased music from RealNetworks music store. Instead of the summoned character being limited to only one action, the summoned character now has a menu of his own to perform multiple actions, some solo actions and some cooperative actions with Sora. For a short time in 2004, RealNetworks had advertised that tracks purchased from their RealPlayer Music Store could be played on an iPod through the use of their Harmony technology; however, an iPod update released at the time of the iPod photo launch disabled files created by Harmony. The character will replace the two computer-controlled characters and fight alongside Sora for as long as the drive meter holds out. Microsoft and RealNetworks have accused Apple of using iPod, the iTunes Music Store, and FairPlay to lock iPod users into using iTunes exclusively (and vice versa), creating a vertical monopoly. Summoning however, uses the drive meter, so Sora can't drive and summon at the same time. No portable music player other than the iPod can play the DRM-enabled files sold on the iTMS, and the iPod cannot play files protected with other DRM technologies, such as Microsoft's DRM format or RealNetwork's Helix-DRM system. Like the previous game, Sora can summon a particular character to aid him in battle when attaining each of their respective items. However, the files can also be burned to CD, at which time those DRM restrictions are removed. Reflect causes a large shield to form around Sora for a very short amount of time, then crack and send out sharp shards a limited distance. Apple encrypts the AAC audio files using the controversial FairPlay digital rights management (DRM) system, so that only authorized computers (up to five) and unlimited iPods can play them. Magnet creates a sphere that slowly sucks in enemies. Advertised that any song was 99¢, the music bought from it can be uploaded onto the iPod and the store has become the dominant online music service, helping the sale of iPods. Two new abilities introduced to the game are Magnet and Reflect. Introduced on April 28, 2003 the iTunes Music Store (iTMS) is an online music store run by Apple and built into iTunes. Casting spells in different drive forms also offers another variety to the spell effects, mostly increasing their strength. Another popular tool is vPod, a stand alone freeware tool for copying music from your PC to iPod. Some spells have been replaced, other have differing effects. Some of the more notable examples are the ml iPod plugin for Winamp, that allows users to manage their iPod content through Winamp, and Anapod Explorer, produced by Redchair Software, which presents a Windows Explorer-like interface for managing the content on an iPod. Sora's magic spells from Kingdom Hearts has been modified. Many of these third-party tools allows functionality not available through iTunes, such as the ability to copy music off the iPod back to the host PC. Later in the game Sora will also be able to perform team attacks with Donald and Goofy individually in similar fashion. However, several third-party tools exists that addressed synchronization of the iPod. In the Olympus Coliseum world, for example, Sora has the option to perform a linked attack with Auron when battling enemies. Apple Computer endorses only one official method for synchronizing with the iPod: iTunes. A gameplay addition gives Sora a special linked attack with any of the guest characters, and the effect varies depending on the character teaming up with Sora. Additionally, many aftermarket stereo manufacturers Kenwood, Alpine, etc, have iPod integration solutions to allow one of their head units to control and play music from an iPod. Reaction commands are often pivotal in defeating bosses as well. Virtually any vehicle that has a factory CD changer controller port on the stereo, or a sideways tape player can be integrated with an iPod using this kit. For example, a nobody might shoot a red bullet at you, but with a well timed reaction command, Sora will kick the bullet back at it. Using Peripheral Electronics' iPod2Car adaptor kit, an iPod can be thus integrated into many vehicles which wouldn't otherwise allow it. Reaction commands can also trigger counter moves as well. For example, against "Dusk" nobodies, your character will slide behind the normally evasive opponents and set you up for a combo. While in this form, both partners disappear and Sora uses his "claws" for wide-range attacks that may be weak with individual attacks, but he also has a very high maximum combo count. Some reviews in arstechnica.com showed that the battery in iPod nano is soldered in the mainboard and in the fifth-generation iPod it is more difficult to be removed and "It's actually affixed to the metal backplate and sits above its own power management circuitry and right next the headphone port and its driver circuitry". Sora turns completely black like a shadow, walks on all fours, and has yellow eyes, similar to a basic Heartless. The big question now is if the fifth-generation iPod battery can be replaced by users in the same manner as the other generations of iPod. Anti Form is a bizarre form that is caused by taking too much damage while in Drive form, and then attempting to use the Drive command afterward. These batteries often contain more capacity than the standard Apple batteries. Wielding two Keyblades psychokinetically as well as the ability to fly incredibly fast, Sora wields incredible power in this form, dispatching enemies with ease and dealing increased physical and magical damage. As a response to the battery problem, multiple 3rd parties [23] [24] [25] have appeared that are selling iPod battery replacement kits for one third of the price that Apple charges customers for a battery replacement. When in Final Form, Sora will merge with both other party members and don silver and black clothing. [22]. The drawback to this form is that the drive meter will decrease quicker than the previous two drives. Some iPod users also defended Apple by pointing out that their iPods had lasted longer than 18 months, while other viewers suggested that the brothers had attacked Apple solely for the sake of publicity. His clothes turn yellow and black, and he is able to glide very swiftly as well as perform a double jump. The movie depicted the Brothers vandalizing Apple ads in the New York City area with graffiti proclaiming that "iPod's unreplaceable battery lasts only 18 months." [21] The movie was widely linked and viewed, with much of the commentary failing to mention Apple's recent change in policy. Two Keyblades can be wielded,one psychokinetically and the other is held normally. The movie, called iPod's Dirty Secret, apparently made before the change in policy, expressed anger because the battery on their early model iPod had failed after eighteen months and Apple refused to replace it. Sora's combo potential is increased, and his magic power is increased as well. On November 21, 2003, a short film produced by iPod owners The Neistat Brothers was released on the Internet. Master Form, where Sora merges with both Donald and Goofy, combines the powers of the Brave and Wisdom forms. [20]. The other two forms have Sora combine with two of Donald, Goofy or another party member to attain greater power than in the other two forms. On November 14, 2003, Apple quietly announced a battery replacement program that initially cost $99 [19] (now $59), and one week later offered users the option to extend the warranty of their iPods for $59. Wisdom Form replaces the attack command with shoot, which lets him shoot a blue magic bullet from the tip of the Keyblade in rapid fire if pressed continuously making Wisdom Form a long distance specialized form. This situation led to a small market for third-party battery replacement kits. Sora gains a massive magic attack boost, and hovers across the floor never touching the ground, instead of running giving him superior movement control. The official policy was that the customer should buy a refurbished replacement iPod, at a cost almost equivalent to a brand new iPod. The other, Wisdom Form, is where Sora merges with Donald for this form, and he dons blue and black clothes. Compounding this problem, Apple would not replace worn-out batteries either. Sora also runs twice as fast in this form. This is unusually difficult for a consumer device, but at least half a dozen well-known rivals to the iPod have a similarly enclosed battery. Sora wields two Keyblades which doubles his combo potential dramatically and also gives him additional attacks. The battery in all iPod models cannot be removed or replaced by the user without levering the unit open. Although he cannot use magic in this form, Sora gains a massive boost to his physical ability. Apple has published guidelines on its web site for maximizing the life of an iPod battery. One is Brave Form, where Sora merges with Goofy, and dons red and black clothes. In other words, the battery will continue to have a useful life through the equivalent of five hundred complete discharges and recharges; through time and use, the life of the battery will generally decrease until eventually it is not able to power the iPod for more than a few minutes. The first two forms have Sora merge with one of his permanent party members, Donald or Goofy. Like most lithium-based batteries, the iPod battery lasts roughly 500 full recharge cycles. There are five drive forms in all. Apple designed the iPod with an internal lithium ion battery that users cannot easily replace (the first and second generation iPods used lithium polymer batteries). Three out of the five forms allow Sora to use two Keyblades instead of one, and the second keyblade may be equipped in the items menu for this purpose. Unfortunately the case doesn't allow access to the screen or controls. Sora can "fuse" with either Donald or Goofy to become more powerful and acquire different attributes as well. The first shipment did not include the cases, but were included later on. Gameplay is revamped from the last game; there are various new features offering the potential of more interesting play. For this reason, Apple started to package both the Nano and the fifth-generation iPods with soft fabric cloth carrying case which should help prevent scratches to the screen and body. As in the first Kingdom Hearts game, the player can access different worlds with themes based mostly on Disney films. The surface is a soft plastic and normal use can easily damage the surface (and this seems to be more prominent on the black model than the white model). As the game progresses, Sora learns how much he and Roxas have in common. The iPod body itself was also very delicate and can scratch easily. Sora continues his quest, sealing the keyholes of each world to protect them from the Heartless, as well as facing Axel and the remaining members of the mysterious Organization XIII. There have been a number of complaints about the Nano's screen being too soft, resulting in it becoming easily scratched or even cracking if put under too much pressure. Gaining new clothes and powers, Sora began his journey anew, unaware of the events that have taken place in Chain of Memories. The iPod nano is available in white and black, in 1 GB (US$149), 2 GB (US$199) and 4 GB (US$249) models. When Sora awakens, he eventually arrives in Twilight Town, the place where a mysterious boy, Roxas, who can use dual Keyblades, lived before he left suddenly. The click wheel is used to input the digits to the passcode. Sora and his companions have been asleep for about a year, regaining their memories. The screenlock option lets users set a 4 digit passcode for their iPod, and once the screenlock is activated the only buttons that can be pressed are the skip forwards and backwards and the play/pause buttons. Kingdom Hearts II begins where Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories left off. The nano saves the user's stopwatch stats for multiple timing sessions, which is useful for comparing times. . While the timer is on, the Start button changes to a Lap button that allows the user to time individual laps. The in-game music is composed by Yoko Shimomura, who composed the music for the first game, and the theme song Passion (Sanctuary for the international release) is written and performed by Japanese pop music star Utada Hikaru. The stopwatch feature allows users to press Start to start the timer, and the Stop button to stop. The English version will be released on March 28, 2006 in North America [1], followed by European and Australian releases later in the year. The clocks can be set to adjust for Daylight Saving Time. Developed by Square Enix, Kingdom Hearts II was released in Japan on December 22, 2005. The world clock allows users to set the time in cities around the world, and set alarms for each time zone. Directed by Tetsuya Nomura, the game continues Sora's adventures in finding King Mickey and Riku with the help of a large cast of Disney characters including Donald, Goofy, Jack Sparrow, Tron, Aladdin, the Beast and more. These features were new to the iPod operating system, including the addition of world clocks, a stopwatch, and a screenlock option. Kingdom Hearts II is an RPG video game sequel to the 2002 Disney/Square RPG Kingdom Hearts, though it is actually the third installment in the series. The iPod nano has several features that would later be included into the fifth generation iPod. The release year of Mulan is erronously written as 1992 in Jiminy's Journal in the Japanese version. The nano is the first dock connector iPod that cannot sync to any PC (Windows or Mac) via FireWire cable, though it can still be charged via a Firewire connection. The plot of Agrabah is loosely based on a direct-to-video movie, The Return of Jafar. It retains the standard 30-pin dock connector for compatibility with third-party peripherals. The name of the world "Space Paranoids" is a reference to one of the games that Kevin Flynn created in Tron. The headphone jack is located on the bottom. [21]. It has a 65,536 color display that can show photographs, and connects to a computer via USB 2.0. During its first week of availability in Japan, Kingdom Hearts II sold 727,591 copies. Based on flash memory instead of a hard drive, the iPod nano is 0.27 inches (6.9 millimeters) thick, weighs 1.5 ounces (42 grams), and is 62% smaller by volume than its predecessor, available in 1GB (introduced on February 7, 2006), 2 GB, and 4 GB models. [20]. On September 7, 2005, Apple announced the successor to the iPod mini, the iPod nano. It is notable because only five games have been given perfect '40/40' scores. The 512 MB iPod Shuffle is $69, and the 1 GB model is $99. The notoriously harsh magazine Famitsu has given the game a score of 39/40; close to perfect. or 22 g) and approximates in size to a pack of chewing gum (originally, the iPod shuffle website contained a footnote advising people not to eat the iPod shuffle like gum; it was later removed, possibly because several users photographed themselves with their iPod shuffles in their mouths.) Like the rest of the iPod family, iPod shuffle can operate as a USB mass storage device. Characters from Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories, such as Axel, DiZ, and Naminé, as well as allusions to deceased Organization members, such as Marluxia, make appearances in the game. The iPod shuffle weighs less than one ounce (0.78 oz. A teaser for what appears to be a sequel or a spin-off can be seen if the player accomplishes certain tasks. Users can set iTunes to fill iPod shuffle with a random selection from their music library each time the device connects to the computer. Certain levels of gameplay are based on music and button coordination, such as the Atlantica world and the Stitch summon. The iPod shuffle has no screen and therefore has limited options for navigating between music tracks: users can play songs either in the order set in iTunes or in a random (shuffled) order. Click here to listen to a 46 second sample of Passion. One review regards it as having one of the best-sounding audio systems of all the iPod models. Passion ~after the battle~ (5:57). The shuffle has a SigmaTel processor. Passion ~single version~ (4:36). Unlike other iPod models, iPod shuffle cannot play Apple Lossless or AIFF encoded audio files—possibly due to the iPod shuffle's smaller processing power. The CD single for Passion was released on December 14, 2005, with a price of ¥1,050 (roughly 8.78 USD). The shuffle comes in two models: 512 MB (up to 120 4-minute songs encoded at 128 kbit/s) and 1 GB (up to 240). The theme songs to Kingdom Hearts II, Passion and Sanctuary (the English version of Passion) are performed by Utada Hikaru, and according to Tetsuya Nomura it ties in even more closely with the game's story than Hikari (Simple and Clean) did with Kingdom Hearts and Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories. iPod shuffle introduced flash memory (rather than a hard drive) to iPods for the first time. See Kingdom Hearts II Original Soundtrack. Apple announced iPod shuffle at Macworld Expo on January 11, 2005 with the taglines "Life is random" and "Give chance a chance". An original soundtrack CD for Kingdom Hearts II, composed by Yoko Shimomura was released on January 25, 2006 and its catalogue number is TOCT-25871~2. With the introduction of the iPod nano, the iPod mini was discontinued. as Chicken Little. Also, the second generation iPod minis did not include the AC adapter or the FireWire cable bundled with previous models. Keiko Yamamoto .. In addition, they featured richer case colors (though Apple discontinued the gold color) and other minor aesthetic changes (the color of the lettering on the click wheel now matched the color of the iPod mini). as Peter Pan. Most notably, both models featured an increased battery life of up to 18 hours. Yu Hayashi .. In February 2005, the second-generation [18] iPod mini came on the market with a new 6 GB model at $249 and an updated 4 GB model priced at $199. as Gopher. Silver models sold best, followed by blue ones, while the least popular was the gold. Mahito Tsujimura .. Apple initially made iPod mini devices available in five colors: silver, gold, blue, pink, and green. as Roo. The center button still acted as a select button. Masaya Sugimoto .. The iPod mini introduced the popular "click wheel" that was incorporated into later iPods: the touch-sensitive wheel means that users can move a finger around it to highlight selections on the screen, while the unit's Menu, Back, Forward, and Play/Pause buttons are part of the wheel itself, letting a user press down on part of the wheel to activate one of those functions. as Tigger. Critics panned it as too expensive, but it proved to be overwhelmingly popular, and Apple Stores had difficulty keeping the model in stock. Tessho Genda .. It had 4 GB of storage and a price of $249 (at the time, only $50 below the 15 GB third-generation iPod). as Owl. On January 6, 2004, Apple introduced the first iPod mini. Toshiya Ueda .. The iPod mini was discontinued on September 7, 2005, after Apple announced it was to be replaced by the iPod nano, which was 62% smaller in size and included a color screen. as Rabbit. The iPod minis used Microdrive hard drives for storage. Naoki Tatsuta .. In addition, it introduced the ability to charge over a USB connection. as Piglet. Its smaller display had one less line than previous models, limiting the on-screen track identification to title and artist only, and not the album. Mitsuru Ogata .. The iPod mini had largely the same feature set as the full-sized iPod, but lacked support for some third-party accessories. as Winnie the Pooh. Apple entered the market for "mini"-form-factor digital audio players in January 2004, with the introduction of the iPod mini, competing directly with players like Creative's Zen Micro and Digital Networks Rio Carbon. Sukekiyo Kameyama .. The price point remains the same as the fourth-generation model. as MCP. The capacity of the iPod was increased to 30 GB from the previous 20 GB. Ikuya Sawaki .. The new Harry Potter iPod retains the laser engraved Hogwarts crest on back of the device and is sold with the "complete Harry Potter" (the first 6 books in the Harry Potter series). as Sark. On October 12, 2005 Apple reintroduced the Harry Potter collectible iPod along with the update of the iPod line. Tetsuo Kanao .. A third-party addon will still be required in order to record audio on the iPod, as it was in previous generations. as Tron. Other notable improvements include the reduction of minor audio defects, such as hard drive noise being heard through the headphone jack, as well as an increase in recording quality to 44.1 kHz stereo, 22.05 kHz mono. Hiroshi Tsuchida .. The fifth-generation iPod no longer supports file transfers via FireWire, but still supports charging using FireWire. as Banzai. One must purchase one separately in order to charge it from the AC. Ben Hiura .. Apple has also discontinued the inclusion of an AC adapter and FireWire cable. as Shenzi, Kanga. The fifth-generation iPod also comes with a thin slip case, most likely in response to many complaints concerning the iPod nano's easily scratchable surface. Tomie Kataoka .. In addition, the earphones plug is smaller. as Rafiki. Like the iPod nano, it comes in two colors, white and black, and it features the World Clock, Stopwatch, and Screen Lock applications. Ryuji Saikachi .. Griffin has, however, released a new version of the iTrip for the new iPod, which mounts to the dock connector on the bottom of the unit. as Mufasa. Gone from the fifth-generation iPod is the remote control accessory port, previously found beside the headphone port, meaning that accessories such as the Griffin iTrip will no longer work. Shinya Owada .. The headphone jack has been moved from the center of the top to the right of the top, while the hold switch has been moved to the left side of the top. as Nala. Apple has stopped using the click wheels used in the fourth generation iPod and iPod mini from their previous supplier, Synaptics Inc of San Jose, CA, and now uses an in-house solution. Riko Hanamura .. The new click wheel is completely flat, unlike older models where the center button is slightly rounded. as Simba. The click wheel design is the same as the previous generation, but is marginally smaller than before. Mitsuru Miyamoto .. Watching movies reduces that amount to 2 and 3 hours respectively. as Santa Claus. The reported battery life for the 30 GB is 14 hours and for the 60 GB is around 20 hours. Tomoaki Nagae .. It is also 30% thinner than the previous full-size iPod. as Oogie Boogie, Pumbaa. The screen size is now 2.5" (6.35 cm) diagonally, 0.5" larger than the previous iPod. Hiroshi Hatanaka .. It can also display video on an external TV using the iPod AV or S-video cables with the iPod Universal Dock [17], however video watched on a TV is often of poor quality due to the fact that iPod video can only play videos up to 480x480. as Barrel. It has a 65,536 color (16-bit) screen, [15] with a 320 x 240 QVGA transflective TFT display, and is able to display video on an external TV via the AV cable accessory [16], which plugs into the headphone minijack and splits into composite video and audio output connectors with RCA jacks. Shigeo Matsuzawa .. However, the 30 and 60 GB versions differ in body thickness, the 30 GB version being slightly thinner. Finklestein, Timon. On October 12, 2005, Apple announced at the "One more thing..." [14] event, the fifth-generation iPod, which featured the ability to play MPEG-4 and H.264 video with resolutions of up to 480 x 480 (maximum pixel count of 230,400) and 320 x 240 (maximum pixel count of 76,800), respectively (videos purchased from the iTunes Music Store are limited to 320 x 240.) Some users have reported the ability to play widescreen resolutions up to 640x360 using MPEG-4 and 400x192 using H.264 (total pixel count is equal to the stated maximums) The new models are available in 30 and 60 GB capacities and are priced the same as the previous generation at $299 and $399 USD, respectively. as Dr. The only way to get a Harry Potter Collector's iPod is to buy it online [13] along with the complete set of Harry Potter audiobooks, at a combined price (as of February 9, 2006) of $548.00 USD. Yuji Mitsuya .. The iPod was launched along with Harry Potter audiobooks on the iTunes Music Store. as Sally, Shock. [12]. Yuko Doi .. This model was superseded on October 12, 2005 with a fifth-generation Harry Potter 30 GB Collector's iPod. as Jack Skellington. On September 7, 2005, Apple released a limited-edition Harry Potter fourth-generation 20 GB iPod that featured a laser engraved Hogwarts crest on the back. Masachika Ichimura .. The U2 iPod was the last iPod to ship with Firewire connection cables and firmware, prompting some analysts to speculate about the future inclusion of Firewire interfaces on Apple products. as Iago. On October 12, 2005, Apple discontinued the iPod U2 Special Edition with the introduction of the fifth-generation iPod. Toru Ohkawa .. On June 28, 2005, at the same time as the announcement of the merger of the iPod and the iPod photo lines, Apple added a color screen and photo capabilities to the iPod U2 Special Edition while dropping the price to $329. as Jafar. [11]. Akira Takarada .. It also included an iTunes Music Store coupon redeemable for $50 off of the price of The Complete U2, a "digital boxed set" featuring over 400 tracks of U2 music. as the Merchant. Originally retailing for $349, it had a black front with a red click wheel (the colors of U2's latest album, How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb), and featured the signatures of U2's band members engraved on the back. Takashi Matsuo .. On October 28, 2004, Apple released a black-and-red edition of the fourth-generation iPod called iPod U2 Special Edition. as Jasmine. To fix this problem, a small piece of cellophane wrap with a hole in it or a thin, non-conductive washer may be placed between the headphone jack and the plug. Kaori Aso .. The likely cause for this malfunction is that a small metal disk on the base of the earphone plugs makes electrical contact with the metallic back of iPod, tripping the detection mechanism. as Aladdin. This erroneous detection occurs with some third-party headphones (such as Sennheiser models), but users have also reported experiencing the problem with the supplied Apple earbuds. Shinichiro Miki .. A headphone contact switch, in coordination with iPod's auto-pause feature, is supposed to pause the music playback if the headphones are disconnected, but incorrectly detects that the headphones have been removed. as Barbossa, Scar. These iPods have a glitch that causes them to pause on their own, despite the hold switch being activated. Haruhiko Jo .. Popular optional accessories included the dock, a FireWire cable (which owners could use in lieu of USB), an iPod AV cable (to view photo albums on a TV set), and an iPod Camera Connector (to transfer and view images directly from a digital camera to an iPod). as Elizabeth Swann. The new fourth-generation line of iPods/Color iPods came bundled with a USB cable and an AC adapter. Saori Yumiba .. New Mac computers are bundled with iPhoto, while Windows users must either use the limited features within iTunes for Windows or purchase either of the Adobe products (a limited version of Adobe Album is available for download for free). as Will Turner. To manage the photo library on iPod, Mac users use Apple's iPhoto software, while Windows users can use Adobe Photoshop Album or Elements, or use a limited set of features within the free iTunes for Windows software. Daisuke Hirakawa .. Along with the new lineup, Apple also updated iTunes to version 4.9, which added podcasting capabilities to iTunes and to iPod. as Jack Sparrow. Apple Computer — as well as prominent fan sites (such as iLounge) — continued to refer to this lineup as fourth-generation iPods. Hiroaki Hirata .. The price of the 60GB iPod photo, now known as iPod 60GB, dropped from $449 to $399, and Apple discontinued the $349 30GB iPod photo model. as Ariel's Sister #2. On June 28, 2005, Apple Computer merged the iPod and iPod photo lines, [10] removing all monochrome models from the main iPod line, giving the 20GB iPod all of the capabilities of the former iPod photo line for $299, the same price as the previous monochrome version. Shion Hino .. However, unlike the first iPod photos, the lower-priced 60GB and the new 30 GB models lacked the dock, FireWire cable, carrying case, or AV cables (accessories valued at approximately $120). as Ariel's Sister #1. On February 23, 2005, Apple discontinued the 40 GB model; which included a FireWire & USB cable and a dock, introduced a lower-priced 30 GB model; which included only a USB cable and no dock, and dropped the price of the 60 GB model. Hiromi Maeda .. It originally came in 40 GB and 60 GB versions, which cost $499 and $599, respectively. as Flounder. One millimeter thicker than the standard monochrome fourth-generation iPod, iPod photo could also play music for up to 15 hours per battery charge. Takuya Kaihoko .. Released on October 28, 2004, iPod photo (originally named iPod Photo — with a capital P for "Photo" — but renamed less than a month after its launch) featured a 220 x 176-pixel (maximum pixel count of 38,720), 16-bit color screen capable of displaying 65,536 colors, and the ability to store and display JPEG, BMP, GIF, TIFF, and PNG images. as King Triton, Eeyore. The monochrome fourth generation iPod, slightly thinner (about 1 mm less) than the third generation iPod, introduced the ability to charge the battery over a USB connection. Taro Ishida .. It came in one of two sizes: 20 GB for $299 and 40 GB for $399 (Apple discontinued the 40 GB model in February 2005 and began solely selling a monochrome 20 GB version). as Prince Eric. Originally, the fourth-generation iPod had a monochrome screen and no photo capabilities, like its predecessors. Kazuhiko Inoue .. After many requests from users asking for these improvements to operate on earlier iPods as well, Apple on February 23, 2005, released a firmware update which brings the new menu items to first- through third-generation iPods. as Ursula. Other minor changes included the addition of a "Shuffle Songs" option on the top-level menu to make it more convenient for users. Kujira .. Apple also claimed that updated software in the new iPod allows it to use the battery more efficiently and increase battery life to 12 hours. as Dale. Some users criticized the click wheel because it does not have the backlight that the third generation iPod's buttons had, but others noted that having the buttons on the compass points largely removed any need for backlighting. Minoru Inaba .. In the most obvious difference from its predecessors, the fourth generation iPod carries over the click-wheel design introduced on the iPod mini. as Chip. In a new publicity route, Steve Jobs announced it by becoming the subject of a Newsweek magazine cover. Roko Takizawa .. In July 2004, Apple released the fourth generation iPod. as Daisy Duck. Although past models proved widely popular, after the release of the third generation model Apple's iPod sales skyrocketed, with a combination of effective advertising and celebrity endorsement making iPods a fashionable item. Mika Doi .. When purchased through the online Apple Store, the iPod featured custom engraving: a purchaser could have two lines of text laser engraved on the back for free. as Minnie Mouse. The third generation iPod could not charge through USB 2.0 however). Yuko Mizutani .. These iPods also introduced Hi-Speed USB connectivity (with a separately sold USB adapter cable. as Hades. Instead, all iPods now shipped with their hard drives formatted for Macintosh use; the included CD-ROM featured a Windows utility which could reformat them for use with a Windows PC. Kyusaku Shimada .. With the third generation iPod, Apple stopped shipping separate Mac and Windows versions of the unit. as Megara. The touch-sensitive buttons, which build upon the touch-sensitive scroll wheel introduced in the second generation iPod, make the third generation iPod unique in that it has no external moving parts (other than the hold slider on the top of the unit) and is the first iPod that doesn't have its buttons surrounding the wheel. Rika Matsumoto .. The new buttons featured red backlighting (controlled by the same preference as the screen backlight), allowing easier use in darkness. as Philoctetes. The third generation iPod featured touch-sensitive buttons located below the display. Ichiro Nagai .. The iPod Dock came bundled with all but the least expensive iPod, and also retails separately. as Hercules. This allows them to fit more easily into the new iPod Dock which Apple introduced at the same time. Yasunori Matsumoto .. These iPods use a 30-pin connector called the Dock Connector — longer and flatter than a FireWire plug. as the Wardrobe. Over the life of the third generation iPod series, Apple produced 10 GB, 15 GB, 20 GB, 30 GB, and 40 GB sizes. Takako Kondo .. Slightly smaller than their predecessors, they had more distinctively beveled edges. Potts. On April 28, 2003, Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduced an "ultrathin" iPod series. as Mrs. The second generation iPod came with carrying cases and wired remotes and it was the first generation that was compatible with Windows. Kimiko Fukuda .. Due to the new Toshiba hard drives, the 20 GB iPod slightly exceeded its first generation counterpart in thickness and weight, while the 10 GB model was slimmer. as Lumiere. Introduced on July 17, 2002, at Macworld in 10 GB and 20 GB capacities, the second generation iPod replaced the mechanical scroll wheel of the original with a touch-sensitive, nonmechanical one (manufactured by Synaptics), termed a "touch wheel". Masashi Ebara .. Perhaps somewhat an antique, the original iPod is very rare to find nowadays, as technology has, indeed, progressed to new possibilities. as Cogsworth. Although superseded by nonmechanical "touch" and "click" wheels, the circular controller design has become a prominent iPod motif. Kazuo Kumakura .. The first generation iPod featured four buttons (Menu, Play/Pause, Back, and Forward) arranged around the circumference of the scroll wheel. as Belle. Apple designed a mechanical scroll wheel and outsourced the implementation and development to Synaptics, a firm that also developed the trackpad used by many laptops, including Apple's PowerBooks. Eri Ito .. Apple announced a 10 GB version ($499) in March 2002. as Chien-Po. [9] Critics panned the unit's price, but iPod proved an instant hit in the marketplace, quickly overtaking earlier hard drive MP3 players such as the NOMAD Jukebox. Kozo Shioya .. First announced on October 23, 2001, the original iPod cost $399 with a 5 GB hard drive. as Ling. One can scale this proportion up; the current 30-gigabyte iPod can hold roughly 7,500 songs, though the Apple website states that 'actual formatted capacity may be lower.'. Ryusei Nakao .. Encoding songs at higher bitrates will take up more space on the hard drive. as Yao. For the first and second generation iPod, 1 gigabyte will hold 200 songs. Yutaka Oda .. Note that Apple claims that 1 gigabyte of storage will hold 250, 4-minute songs in 128 kbit/s AAC. as Shan Yu. Currently, Apple sells two sizes of iPod: a 30 GB hard drive for $299, and a 60 GB model for $399. Hiroshi Fujioka .. During the third generation, three sizes of iPods have coexisted in the marketplace at any given time, priced at US $299, $399, and $499. as the Emperor. Within any generation of iPods, various models with different sizes of hard drives have come onto the market at different price points. Osamu Kobayashi .. Five distinct generations of iPods exist, commonly known as: first, second, third, fourth and fifth generations. as Captain Shang, Lock. While all iPods have roughly the same size and the same capabilities, the design has undergone several revisions since its introduction to the market. Shintaro Sonooka .. Some of this is also taken up by the iPod's firmware. as Mulan, Ariel. For example, a 4 GB iPod mini actually had 3.77 GiB of usable storage. Mayumi Suzuki .. This comes about because the capacity advertised uses metric prefixes, not binary prefixes. as Merryweather. As with most hard drive-based devices, the actual drive space available for music, photo, video and data storage does not quite attain the advertised capacity. Masako Nozawa .. Several product revisions have taken place since the original model of iPod appeared, leading to the existence of five distinct generations. as Fauna. The Harry Potter 20 GB Collector's fourth-generation iPod was replaced by the Harry Potter 30 GB Collector's iPod, which is simply a fifth-generation iPod with a Harry Potter engraving and the Harry Potter audiobooks pre-loaded. Hisako Kyouda .. The iPod U2 Special Edition was also discontinued. as Flora. The iPod mini (4 GB and 6 GB and in various colors) are now discontinued, having been replaced by the iPod nano. Miyoko Aso .. The model range as of February 7, 2006 includes:. as Merlin. Some models come with different capacities (a higher capacity allows the storage of more music) or with different designs. Minoru Uchida .. Apple currently markets three distinct players bearing the iPod name. as Tournament announcer. An iPod unable to start (due to either a firmware or a hardware problem) displays the "sad iPod" image, reminiscent of the sad Mac icon of earlier Macintosh computers. Junichi Suwabe .. The iPods with FireWire ports can be put into FireWire Disk Mode, in which it behaves like a FireWire hard drive without any of the additional iPod functionality. as Yen Sid. Fourth and fifth generation iPods, second generation iPod minis, iPod nanos and iPod shuffles automatically pause playback when headphones are unplugged from the headphone jack, and turn on when you put the headphones into the headphone jack. Takashi Inagaki .. Setting this switch to display orange will make the buttons and scroll wheel unresponsive, so that users do not activate them accidentally. as Olette. A 'Hold' switch also exists on the top of the unit. Yuka Hirasawa .. (Note that fourth and fifth-generation iPods, iPod minis, and iPod nanos incorporate these buttons into the "click wheel" scroll wheel.). as Pence. The iPods (other than the iPod shuffle) have five buttons:. Hayato Taya .. iPod contains a small internal speaker which generates the scroll-wheel clicks and alarm clock beep sound, but this internal speaker cannot play music. as Hayner. A servicer can pry the iPod open by carefully inserting a small non-metal screwdriver to pull the metal away from the clips. Kazunori Sasaki .. The plastic front of the case has clips which lock under a ridge inside the rim of the metal case back. as Paine. The unit's case snaps together, with no screws or glue involved (though the fourth generation has some glue holding the battery in place). Megumi Toyoguchi .. From left to right:. as Rikku. This photograph shows the internal view of a third-generation iPod:. Marika Matsumoto .. The iPod mini uses the "Espy Sans" font (previously seen in eWorld, the Newton, and Copland), while the color fourth-generation iPods (previously known as iPod photo) and fifth-generation iPods use Myriad, Apple's current corporate typeface. as Selphie, Yuna. Until the release of iPod mini, the user interface of all iPods used "Chicago", the font used on the original Macintosh computer from 1984. Mayuko Aoki .. More recent iPods, such as the iPod nano and fifth-generation iPod, also incorporate the "brushed-metal" effect, previously used in iTunes before version 5.0, in their stopwatch and screen lock features. as Setzer. (The founder of Pixo had worked on the Apple Newton, a personal digital assistant formerly produced by Apple.) The Pixo libraries provide the user interface, though the iPod photo has incorporated some visual elements from Mac OS X, such as the animated Aqua style progress bar. Ryotaro Okiayu .. His team integrated the core firmware from PortalPlayer with the user interface library developed by Pixo. as Vivi. Jeff Robbin headed the iPod firmware team at Apple. Ikue Otani .. Apple has not yet released a Linux version of the software used to flash the firmware of the iPod. as Rai. As of 2005 only gtkpod offers such functionality for Linux and other Unix variants; however in early 2006, AmaroK will have full support for most iPods. Kazuya Nakai .. However, a special database file serves to list the songs available to play, so a program such as iTunes is required to upload songs. as Fuu. The iPod will also charge from any powered USB or Firewire port, regardless of software support. Rio Natsuki .. The iPod uses standard USB and FireWire mass-storage connectivity, and therefore any system with mass-storage support can mount it and use it as an external hard drive. as Seifer. Running this interface on an iPod photo has been known to cause irreparable problems. Takehito Koyasu .. The linux interface is known as "Podzilla". as Sephiroth. [8]. Toshiyuki Morikawa .. A SourceForge project exists for the project [7], and copious documentation appears online. as Tifa. It currently supports first through third generation iPods, and features simple installers for Mac OS X and Windows. Ayumi Ito .. The iPodLinux project has successfully ported an ARM version of the Linux kernel to run on iPods. as Cid. The ability to use an iPod as a boot disk for a Macintosh computer was lost when Apple removed FireWire with the introduction of the fifth-generation iPod since none of the G5-based Macintosh models can boot from an external USB drive. Kazuhiro Yamaji .. HFS+ leaves slightly more space available to store data, and it allowed the iPod to serve as a boot disk for a Macintosh computer. as Yuffie. Currently, iPods ship with FAT32 by default and are reformatted for use with Macintosh computers, but they previously shipped formatted for Mac and would be reformatted for PC. Yumi Kakazu .. An iPod with its hard drive formatted as HFS+ operated only with a Macintosh, because Windows does not support HFS+, but since the Macintosh could handle FAT32, an iPod formatted as FAT32 could operate with a Macintosh as well as with a PC. as Aerith. [5] Apple released a Windows version of iTunes on October 16, 2003 [6]; previously, Windows users needed third-party software such as Musicmatch Jukebox (included with Windows iPods before the release of the Windows version of iTunes), ephPod, or XPlay to manage the music on their iPods. Maaya Sakamoto .. The original iPod interacted only with Macintosh computers running Mac OS 9 or Mac OS X until July 17, 2002, when Apple began selling a Windows-compatible iPod, with its internal hard drive formatted in FAT32 instead of the original HFS Plus. as Cloud. [4]. Takahiro Sakurai .. The signature earphones have such good recognition characteristics that they can become a liability – after a 24% rise in robbery and a 10% increase in grand larceny in the NYC subway system, a spokesperson for the New York City Police Department suggested that iPods might be behind the increases. as Leon, Auron. However, using Earjams can be uncomfortable to some users. Hideo Ishikawa .. Some users add extra bass to the standard white headphones by using Griffin Earjams - a clip on accessory that makes it possible to insert the headphones into the ear, using soft rubber adapters. as Jiminy Cricket. This is often easily solved by applying a small amount of suction to the problem earphone. Kaneta Kimotsuki .. They are also known to develop a clicking noise at volume peaks, due to the membrane being displaced. as Pete, the Mayor. Users rate the substandard bass response as the most apparent negative characteristic found in the standard headphones. Toru Ohira .. Despite the fact that new generations of the iPod now appear in black as well as white, the cords still remain white. as Maleficent. The white cords have become symbolic of the iPod brand, and advertisements for the devices feature them prominently. Toshiko Sawada .. All iPods come with earbud headphones with distinctive white cords and earbuds, a color chosen to match the design of the original iPod. as Xigbar. (The 60GB fifth-generation iPod holds 64 MiB of RAM, to further extend battery life.). Hochu Otsuka .. For example, an iPod could spin the hard disk up once and copy about 30 MiB of upcoming songs on a playlist into RAM, thus saving power by not having the drive spin up for each song. as Luxord. All iPods, except for the 60GB fifth-generation iPod, have 32 MiB of RAM, a portion of which holds the iPod OS loaded from the firmware and the vast majority of which serves to cache songs loaded from the hard drive. Jouji Nakata .. The iPod has a 32-MiB flash ROM chip which contains a bootloader, a program that tells the device to load the operating system from another medium (in this case, the hard drive). as Demyx. The iPod mini uses one-inch hard drives made by Hitachi. Kenichi Suzumura .. The iPods use 1.8-in (46-mm) ATA hard drives (with a proprietary connector) made by Toshiba. as Xaldin. The first three generations of iPod used two ARM 7TDMI-derived CPUs running at 90 MHz, while later models have variable speed chips which run at a peak of 80 MHz to save battery life. Yousuke Akimoto .. iPods can recharge their internal batteries using either FireWire (all generations) or USB power (only fourth generation and later) while connected to a computer or to an iPod AC power adapter. as Saix. Apple stopped shipping FireWire cables with iPods in favor of only using Hi-Speed USB (USB 2.0), more than likely a cost-cutting and size-saving measure since many Windows-based PCs do not have FireWire ports. Ginpei Sato .. Except for iPod shuffle, iPod nano, and fifth-generation iPod, all previous models of iPod offered FireWire connectivity. as Naminé. The game, "Rock and Pop Trivia Quiz" from Coolgorilla takes the listener through 40 narrated questions on well known Rock & Pop artists. Iku Nakahara .. December 2005 saw the release of one the first iPod Game to make use of the iPod's ability to act as a "Sonic Gaming Platform". as Axel. All iPods (except the shuffle) feature "Brick", a clone of the Breakout arcade game from Atari (originally created by Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak) along with three other games:. Keiji Fujiwara .. Most iPods (the exception is the iPod shuffle) also feature games. as Ansem (Xehanort). However, iPod has limitations as a PDA, since users cannot edit this information on the iPod but only on a computer. Akio Otsuka .. It can also display notes, and hence host simple games and store restaurant information. as DiZ (Ansem). [3]. Genzo Wakayama .. Repeated calls to Apple from consumers have yielded no commitment to correct this problem as of January, 2006. as Xemnas. No workaround (including mentally converting times when reading them) is functionally acceptable due to the combined behaviours of iSync, iCal and the iPod with regards to converting events between timezones. Norio Wakamoto .. Their timezones are excluded from the iPod's firmware, leaving them unable to properly sync calendar events and alarms to their devices. as Mickey Mouse. The limited PDA calendar functions of the iPod are somewhat tainted for users from Newfoundland and parts of Australia. Takashi Aoyagi .. However the files can be manually dragged and dropped into the correct directory on the iPod. as Roxas. Although Mozilla Calendar and Mozilla SunbirdiCalendar have the same file format used by iCal and the iPod, there is no way to automatically sync schedules across from these programs. Koki Uchiyama .. With the 2005 release of iTunes 5.0, Apple integrated contact/schedule syncing into iTunes and added the ability for Windows users to synchronize their contacts and schedules from Microsoft Outlook and Outlook Express. as Kairi. Since January 2003, Mac users have been able to synchronize their contacts and schedules Address Book and iCal to their iPods through iSync. Risa Uchida .. In addition to playing music and storing files, the iPod has limited PDA functionality. as Riku. iTunes lacks the ability to transfer songs from iPod to computer because of legality issues. Mamoru Miyano .. Apart from iTunes there are also several third-party applications available that can be used to transfer songs to the iPod. as Goofy. Users may also set a rating (out of 5 stars) on any song, and can synchronize that information to an iTunes music library. Yutaka Shimaka .. iTunes can automatically synchronize a user's iPod with specific playlists or with the entire contents of a music library each time an iPod connects to a host computer. as Donald Duck, Mushu, Beast, Sebastian, Genie, Stitch. Apple designed the iPod to work with the iTunes media library software, which lets users manage the music libraries on their computers and on their iPods. Koichi Yamadera .. Midis can also be played on iPods, but they first must be converted to the MP3 format by choosing the "advanced" menu on iTunes. as Sora. Reviewers have criticized the iPod's inability to play some other formats, in particular the Ogg Vorbis and FLAC formats. Miyu Irino .. WMA files with copy protection cannot be played in iTunes or be copied to an iPod. as Chicken Little [19]. The Windows version of iTunes can transcode non copy-protected WMA files to an iPod supported format. Zach Braff .. The fifth-generation iPod can also play .m4v (H.264) and .mp4 (MPEG-4) video file formats. as Tron. The iPod can play MP3, WAV, AAC/M4A, Protected AAC, AIFF, Audible audiobook and Apple Lossless audio file formats. Bruce Boxleitner .. 6,928,433: "Automatic hierarchical categorization of music by metadata", which Creative dubbed the "Zen Patent", granted on 9 August 2001).[2]. as Genie. Patent No. Dan Castellaneta .. Also in August 2005, Creative Technology, one of Apple's main rivals in the MP3 player market, announced that it too held a patent on part of the music selection interface used by the iPod (U.S. as Aladdin [18]. Apple's application to the United States Patent and Trademark Office for a patent on "rotational user inputs", as used in the iPod's interface, received a third "non-final rejection" (NFR) in August 2005. Scott Weinger .. In 2005, Apple Computer faced two lawsuits claiming patent infringement by the iPod and its associated technologies: Advanced Audio Devices claimed the iPod breached their patent on a "music jukebox" (See Hong Kong-based IP portfolio company Pat-rights filed suit on behalf of inventor Keung Tse Ho,) claiming that Apple's FairPlay technology breached their patent on "protection of software against unauthorized use".[1]. as Hades [17]. Apple and several industry analysts have posited that the iPod has a "halo effect", encouraging users of non-Apple products to switch to other Apple products, such as to Macintosh computers. James Woods .. The iPod has sold at a tremendous rate, now past 42 million units since its release. as Hercules. As of October 2004, iPod dominated digital music player sales in the United States, with over 90% of the market for hard-drive-based players and over 70% of the market for all types of players. Sean Astin .. In 2003, Apple released third-generation iPods that included a single CD that included a Windows version of the iTunes software along with the Mac version. as Beast. The actual iPods could work with either system (though to work with Windows, they had to use the FAT32 filesystem, Mac iPods could use either the FAT32 or HFS Plus filesystem). Robby Benson .. The only difference though was the bundled software, since there was no iTunes for Windows at the time, the Windows iPods came packaged with Musicmatch software. as Shan Yu. In 2002, Apple released the second-generation iPod in two versions, one for Mac users and one for Windows users. Miguel Ferrer ... It was unveiled by CEO Steve Jobs on October 23, 2001 as a Mac-compatible product with a 5GB hard drive that put “1,000 songs in your pocket.”. as Mushu [16]. Apple’s Hardware engineering chief Jon Rubinstein assembled a team of engineers to design and build the first iPod in less than a year, with Tony Fadell and Michael Dhuey as the principal hardware engineers. Mark Moseley .. While digital cameras, camcorders and organizers had well-established markets, the company found digital music players lacking in quality and Apple decided to develop its own. as Mulan [15]. Development of the iPod grew out of Apple’s digital hub strategy, as the company was creating software applications for the growing number of digital devices being snapped up by consumers. Ming-Na ... Recently, some media have started referring to the generation primarily born in the late 1980s, and which in particular has made the iPod popular, as the iGeneration, suggesting that the "i" family of products may have a far-reaching cultural impact. as Yen Sid. When Apple first introduced the iMac, the "i" stood for Internet (as well as a possible tongue-in-cheek reference to Steve Jobs's title with the company at the time, interim CEO, abbreviated iCEO), meaning that the iMac shipped with everything needed for a connection, but the prefix stuck, as the brand recognition associated with it has positive effects on the sales of Apple products. Corey Burton .. The company has many other products with a lowercase "i" in front of the name, including iSight, iChat, iTunes, iDVD, iBook, and many more. as Pence[14]. Apple's web site reflects this usage (for example, "iPod incorporates the same touch-sensitive Apple Click Wheel that debuted on iPod mini"), which resembles Apple's use of the words Macintosh or iMac. Sean Marquette ... Apple Computer often refers to the player as iPod, without use of the definite article the. as Paine [13]. . Gwendoline Yeo .. The most recent incarnations of iPod and iTunes have video playing and organization features. as Rikku [12]. A music jukebox application, iTunes stores a comprehensive library of the user's music on his or her computer, and can play and rip music from a CD. Tara Strong .. The bundled software used for uploading music, photos, and videos to the iPod is called iTunes. as Yuna [11]. The iPod is currently the world's best-selling digital audio player. Hedy Burress .. As of January 2006, the lineup consists of the fifth-generation iPod, which has video playback capabilities, the iPod nano which has a color screen, and the iPod shuffle; all three versions were released in 2005. as Auron. Discontinued versions of the iPod include two generations of the popular iPod mini and four generations of the full-sized iPod, all of which had monochrome screens except for the fourth-generation iPod with color screen (previously sold as iPod photo before it replaced the monochrome iPod in the top line). Matt McKenzie .. Like most digital audio players, an iPod can serve as an external data storage device when connected to a computer. as Tifa Lockhart [10]. The standard iPod model stores media on a built-in hard drive, while the smaller iPod shuffle and iPod nano use flash memory. Rachael Leigh Cook .. Devices in the iPod family provide a simple user interface designed around a central scroll wheel (with the exception of the iPod shuffle). as Aerith Gainsborough [9]. Hugely popular, the iPod provides excellent sound quality and the ability to hold immense amounts of music. Mena Suvari .. The iPod is a brand of portable digital media player designed and marketed by Apple Computer. as Cloud Strife [8]. Accessed on October 13, 2005. Steve Burton .. Notes." MP3 Newswire. as Squall Leonhart (Leon). "Apple Portable Does Video. David Boreanaz .. ^ Richard Menta. as Jiminy Cricket. Accessed on August 22, 2005. Eddie Carroll .. "Eminem settles with Apple over iPod commercial." c|net News.com. as Pete, Winnie the Pooh, Tigger. ^ Ina Fried. Jim Cummings .. Accessed on August 22, 2005. as Maleficent. "New iPod ads feature U2." Macworld. Susan Blakeslee .. ^ Jim Dalrymple. as Naminé [7]. Accessed on August 22, 2005. Brittany Snow .. "Pepsi ads wink at music downloading." USA Today. as Ansem (Xehanort). ^ Theresa Howard. Billy Zane .. The first iPod television ad. as DiZ (Ansem) [6]. ^ Beat. Christopher Lee .. Accessed on August 23, 2005. as Mickey Mouse. ^ "Hewlett-Packard to Stop Reselling iPods." Forbes. Wayne Allwine .. Accessed on January 18, 2006. as Roxas [5]. ^ "Apple Reports First Quarter Results." Apple. Jesse McCartney .. Accessed on August 23, 2005. as Kairi [4]. ^ "Apple Reports Third Quarter Results." Apple. Hayden Panettiere .. Accessed on August 22, 2005. as Riku [3]. "It's iPod's Revolution: We Just Live in It." Fortune. David Gallagher .. ^ Andy Serwer. as Goofy. Stan Ng — Director of iPod Product Marketing. Bill Farmer .. Danika Cleary — iPod Product Manager. as Donald Duck. Sanjeev Kumar. Tony Anselmo .. Jeff Robbin. as Sora [2]. Tony Fadell — Apple Vice President of iPod Engineering. Haley Joel Osment .. Jonathan Ive — Apple Vice President of Industrial Design. His team attack with Sora is somewhat cinematic, as Sora will be reminded of his adventures in Neverland in the first game (with pictures floating across the screen) while Peter and Sora fly around hitting anything in their path. [57]. Tinkerbell heals Sora constantly at the same time. Apple announced on October 14, 2005 that Jon Rubinstein will retire on March 31, 2006 and be succeeded by Tony Fadell. Peter comes with Tinker Bell, and flies around attacking much like he did in the first Kingdom Hearts when he was a temporary party member. Jon Rubinstein — Apple Senior Vice President of the iPod Division. Peter Pan is the boy who never grows up and the titular character of Peter Pan. Steve Jobs — CEO of Apple. His team attack with Sora is a ukelele jam session where different buttons can be pressed to prompt different musical attacks for big damage. It featured Wynton Marsalis performing "Sparks". He will actually climb around the menu screens as well as the screen itself (as if he were on the surface of your screen), and do various things while shooting the enemies with his plasma gun somewhat nonchalantly. The ad is in blue and features many circular shapes in the background. When summoned, Stitch is somewhat unique. On January 10, 2006, Apple premiered a new silhouette ad, based on the modified silhouette campaign (read above). Stitch is the cute but destructive anti hero of Lilo & Stitch. [56]. Depending on the form he is in, Genie will be able to perform an enormously damaging move. The silhouette of Eminem also shows more highlights and shadows. The drive form to mimick must be unlocked first. Instead of a solid background, the background is a busy montage of different shapes and buildings in similar tones of orange. Genie attacks with a humorous recreation of Sora's keyblade, and has a command to mimick any one of Sora's drive forms. The other was a video of Eminem performing Lose Yourself in a modified version of the silhouette style. Genie is the blue genie in a lamp who helps the titular character of Aladdin. One featured a video of U2's Original of the Species playing on the new iPod's screen, held by a hand in the same style as the iPod nano adverts. His attack with Sora, "FPS", is, as suggested, a First Person Shooter-like mode where Chicken can throw baseballs in rapid fire from a first person view. On October 12, 2005 Apple introduced two ads for the iPod fifth generation. Chicken when summoned, chucks baseballs at enemies when on his own. They focused instead on the diminutive size of the product, with live-action shots of a hand holding an iPod nano on a black background, flipping it round and fiddling with it, to show how small and light it was. Chicken Little is the titular character of Chicken Little. The TV adverts that accompanied the release of the iPod nano were the first for a long time not to incorporate the silhouette theme. The World That Never Was. The giveaway lasted for two months and included 100 million codes under the caps of Pepsi drinks, of which only 5 million were redeemed by its end. Disney Castle. In conjunction, Pepsi also launched ads featuring young teenagers who had been accused of unauthorized filesharing by the RIAA, who go on to say they will still download music for free thanks to the Pepsi iTunes Giveaway. Hollow Bastion. Each bottle had a 1:3 chance of winning a free download. Destiny Islands (Unplayable). On February 1, 2004, during the Super Bowl, Pepsi and Apple kicked off their promotional deal to include a free iTunes download under the caps of Pepsi bottled soda. Twilight Town. The iPod shuffle was released alongside TV commercials featuring silhouettes dancing on a green background with Apple's shuffle symbol moving underneath them, showing their intent on incorporating their silhouette campaign with each of their products. Space Paranoids, from Tron (1982). [55]. Pride Land, from The Lion King (1994). To commemorate the launch of the U2 iPod, Apple released an ad featuring the music video of Vertigo (changed to characteristic iPod silhouettes). Halloween Town, from The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993). These commercials featured popular songs, such as The Vines' Ride, The Caesars' Jerk it Out, Gorillaz' Feel Good Inc., Steriogram's Walkie-Talkie Man, Jet's Are You Gonna Be My Girl, Propellerheads' Take California, Ozomatli's Saturday Night, N.E.R.D.'s Rock Star (Jason Nevin's Mix), Franz Ferdinand's Take Me Out, Daft Punk's Technologic, and many more. Agrabah, from Aladdin (1992). It featured silhouettes dancing to music while listening to iPods. Port Royal, from Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003). In October 2003, Apple released their first TV commercial of the silhouette campaign, which had already been featured for some time in print. Atlantica, from The Little Mermaid (1989). The commercials featured a wide range of music, including The Who's My Generation, Sir Mix-a-lot's Baby Got Back, Pink's There You Go, and Eminem's Lose Yourself. 100 Acre Wood, from The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977). The ads featured informally dressed persons wearing iPods and giving animated silent renditions of popular songs, accompanied by dancing, air guitar, and other performances. Timeless River, from Steamboat Willie (1928). In April 2003, Apple introduced a new ad campaign in conjunction with the launch of the iTunes Music Store. Olympus Coliseum, from Hercules (1997). [54]. Beast's Castle, from Beauty and the Beast (1991). The ad can be viewed on Apple's web site. The Land of Dragons, from Mulan (1998). The first iPod ad, featuring the tagline "A thousand songs, in your pocket" was launched alongside iPod in November 2001. [31] [32]. Honda will be the first to include text-to-speech capabilities that allow drivers to search for playlists, artist and album names or genre. More than thirty percent of the cars in the United States now include iPod support. With these deals Apple now has 15 car companies worldwide planning to offer iPod integration. Apple announced in September 2005 that they now have deals with Acura, Audi, Honda and Volkswagen to integrate iPod into their car stereos during the year. [28] [29] [30]. Apple announced at Macworld Expo in January 2005 that Mercedes-Benz USA, Volvo, Nissan, Alfa Romeo and Ferrari would offer similar systems. The iPod attached to a cable harness in the car's glove compartment and allowed the driver to create up to five unique "BMW playlists" that were displayed through the vehicle's radio head unit. [27] The interface allowed drivers of late-model BMW vehicles to control their iPod through the built-in steering wheel controls and the radio head unit buttons. BMW released the first iPod automobile interface to come from an automotive company. Volvo: S40, S60, S80, V50, V70, XC70, XC90. Volkswagen: Beetle, Jetta, Golf, GTI, Passat, Touareg. Suzuki: Aerio SX, Grand Vitara. Scion: xA, xB, tC. Nissan: Frontier, Pathfinder, Armada. Mini: Cooper, Cooper S. Mercedes-Benz: C-Class, CLK, CLS, E-Class, SLK, M-Class, R-Class. Jeep: Liberty, Wrangler. Honda: Accord, Civic, CR-V, Element, Odyssey, Pilot, Ridgeline, S2000. Dodge: Caravan, Grand Caravan, Neon, Ram, Stratus Sedan. Chrysler: Pacifica, Sebring, Town & Country. BMW: Z4, X3, X5. Audi: A3, A4, Allroad. Acura: MDX, RL, TL using Acura Music Link (option only - installation and parts required). iPod shuffle (512 MB and 1 GB). iPod nano (1 GB, 2 GB and 4 GB). iPod (30 GB and 60 GB). 'Center' (the button in the center of the scroll wheel; this selects a menu or a menu item). 'Next' (which skips forward through tracks in play). 'Previous' (which skips back through tracks in play). 'Play/Pause' (which plays or pauses the track in play). 'Menu' (which backs up one level in the menus). A hole on the bottom of the case allows access to the dock connector port on the circuit board. Wires connect the ports and switch on the top of the case to a small plug. The rear of the iPod. The layer of rubber also helps to protect a spinning hard drive from shock damage while the owner of the iPod moves about. The hard drive, surrounded by a layer of soft rubber which also extends beneath it to insulate it from the circuit board. The lithium ion battery. Note three connectors: the battery connects in the lower-right corner; the hard drive connector lies to the left of the black area in the lower left; and the headphone jack, wired remote control jack, and Hold switch (all located on the top of the iPod) connect as a single plug in the top right. The lighter green circuit board controls the iPod (and leaves room for the battery to fit beside it), and the darker green board beneath it controls the touch-scroll wheel and the buttons. The front of the iPod casing (facedown). An intact third-generation iPod. This allows the user to read small text files. Notes: iPod also has the function to read eBooks through use of the Notes Function. No record is kept of the score, and there is no limit on the number of songs played; however, the songs repeat after the first 100. Music Quiz became available through a free firmware update for third-generation iPods released in October 2003 and later came standard with the iPod mini and fourth-generation iPods. The faster the users choose the right song, the more points they get. A song drops off the list every few seconds. The game plays a portion of a random song and prompts the user to identify it from a list of 5 (or of 4 on the iPod mini). Music Quiz: an interactive music quiz featuring the user's own songs. Solitaire: a simple card game resembling the Klondike solitaire card game. Parachute is similar to the Apple II game Sabotage by Mark Allen. Parachute: a game in which the user controls a turret and attempts to shoot down paratroopers and the helicopters which release them. |