lifehacker.com — With a new generation of iPods on the market this holiday season, your reliable old iPod may not seem as shiny as it once did. But with the help of third party applications and utilities, you can unlock tons of useful functionality you never knew was there and revive that aging iPod so it doesn't look quite so bad next to its successors.
Dec 4, 2007 View in Crawl 4
thundrosDec 4, 2007
Actually, I've had a few iPods (4G, 1G shuffle and 1G nano) and I've activated them with new codes, on different machines, without issue and without the need to fork over another $30 (of course I haven't "upgraded" to the 5G and higher, which do required the "new" universal anapod and the $ that goes with it).I do agree support is sketchy at times, but I have noticed that they then to fix issues reported to them in future versions of the software. I mainly use Anapod now to access my iPod at work and to stream music over the network without resorting to iTunes (since my iPod is setup to sync only at home).
sumanbhattaDec 5, 2007
I found sound check fail on me on many occasion, volume too loud etc. I wish there was a decent implementation of Replaygain.
Closed AccountDec 5, 2007
<a class="user" href="http://www.ifixit.com/">http://www.ifixit.com/</a>
ravimohanvDec 9, 2007
important information for i pod users
lolo2007Mar 5, 2008
I liked the stuff that they said, but I think that I have probably tried most of that stuff at one point. When it comes to putting linux on your ipod and stuff, it's cool, but for the most part I found it impractical and of little value.<a class="user" href="http://download.paramegsoft.com/">http://download.paramegsoft.com/</a><a class="user" href="http://game.paramegsoft.com/">http://game.paramegsoft.com/</a>
gettaratApr 15, 2008
Really nice pack of them <a class="user" href="http://aphonesite.com">http://aphonesite.com</a>