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iPod Repairman Defrauds Apple, Gets Arrested

iPod Repairman Defrauds Apple, is Arrested

We've talked about the business of iPod repair and how a number of industrious people in NYC opened businesses fixing music players. The trend has spread since and, naturally, one of these repairmen saw fit to use his talents for for more than the joy of helping customers -- he was arrested for tricking Apple into sending him 9,000 Shuffle players.

Nicholas Woodhams, 23, from Kalamazoo, Michigan started a business fixing people's players, but reputedly soon figured out that he could generate bogus serial numbers to get new ones. By typing in a fake serial number on the Apple support Web page, he would trick the company into sending him a replacement for a player that didn't exist. Apple sent him the new model with the expectation that it would receive a faulty one in return (a cross-ship) or, if nothing was received, would charge his credit card. But, Woodhams used fake credit cards so that he got the players for free. He'd then turn around and sell them for $49 apiece, netting a tidy profit.

Woodhams is now charged with fraud and money laundering, and Apple has its own lawsuit pending. We're guessing he won't be able to shuffle out of this one. [From: SFGate]

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New iPod shuffle Only Usable with Apple-Authorized Headphones


Sigh, it looks like Apple's habit of squeezing iPod accessory manufacturers for license fees has now extended to freaking headphones -- iLounge is reporting that the new iPod shuffle can only be controlled by headphones with a special hardware authentication chip. That means that third parties will have to pay Apple for the privilege of making shuffle-compatible accessories, and you can bet they'll just pass that cost right on to consumers -- we wouldn't expect any cheap headphone adapters or inexpensive replacement headphones for the littlest iPod. iLounge calls this a "nightmare scenario" for iPod fans, and we're inclined to agree -- it's one thing for Apple to require the Made For iPod certification for accessories that interface with the dock connector, but trying to lock down headphones is a sad new low, and it makes the lack of physical controls on the shuffle seem even more ridiculous. Anyone still planning on buying this thing?

Audio/Video, iPod, Portable Audio, Handheld Devices

Apple's New iPod Shuffle Talks to You



Bam, another Apple rumor vindicated. Apple just doubled the capacity of its iPod shuffle to 4GB while ditching the control wheel entirely. The new design keeps the clip and adds VoiceOver -- a new feature that gets around the lack of display by telling you which song is playing and who performs it at the touch of a button on the earbud cable. It'll also call out your playlists and let you navigate to others. No word on which languages are supported. Available in black or silver for $80 and your claim to what Apple calls the "world's smallest music player."

Head to Engadget for a gallery and more specs.

Update: VoiceOver in English, Czech, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Mandarin Chinese, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish and Turkish.

Audio/Video, iPod

Creative Challenges iPod Shuffle

Creative Labs is encouraging you to "rock in color" with its latest digital music player, the ZEN Stone. Screen-impaired like the iPod Shuffle, the incredibly petite Stone measures a minute 53.67 x 35.34 x 12.82 millimeters and weighs a mere 18.5 grams, making it only slightly larger and heavier than the Shuffle. The Stone rocks the same one-gigabyte of storage space as the Shuffle, but at half the price: $39.99, compared to the $79.99 Shuffle. It's available in yellow, white, red, blue, black and pink.

The Stone also boasts some nice features over the Shuffle that make it a bit more useful, including easily replaceable AAA batteries that are good for ten hours of playback, as well as support for WMA , Audible files, and MP3 files. In addition, Creative plans to release a series of skins that will let you wear your Stone as an armband, thread it onto your key-chain, or just clip it on your belt, IT-guy-style



From BetaNews and Creative Labs.

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