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Welcome to iPod Beauty site. We hope you will enjoy all the information about iPods here, like the 120GB iPod classic, which is now Apple’s only hard drive-based iPod model.
All of the other offerings in Apple’s catalog use flash memory to store songs. And as flash memory density has increased steadily year after year and as Apple has gobbled as much of the market’s NAND inventory as it can get), using a hard drive to store songs on a portable device has seemed increasingly nachronistic.
Most consumers seem content with the iPod nano as the “sweet spot” of the iPod product line—a color screen and all of the capabilities of the iPod classic in a smaller, thinner package. Better for working out. Better to carry with you unobtrusively. As evidenced by the announcements Tuesday, Apple seems to be putting more and more innovation into the iPod nano, combining the best features of the iPod classic (a robust color screen, the click wheel) with the best features of the iPod touch.
If the iPod touch is the wave of the future, the iPod classic offers a more rearward-facing view. It’s the Model T to the iPod touch’s Lamborghini Reventón. But the classic retains appeal to some users, like me, who value its capacious storage capabilities.


































