By kerry morgan / Published on March 31th, 2008 / Sports
You select music by using a scaled-down version of the easy-to-use clickwheel on larger iPods. Though little bigger than a postage stamp, the Nano's color display is easy to see under most lighting conditions. You can easily create slide shows with music (though you can't play them on a TV, as with more expensive iPods). The Nano is also the first iPod with an address book that works with Microsoft Outlook on your computer.
Quibbles: A 2-gigabyte (500-song) Nano costs $200 ($A299), which bought you a 4-GB iPod Mini before it was discontinued. (There's a 4-GB Nano for $250 ($A359), which used to buy you a 6-GB iPod Mini.) The Nano's claimed music-playback time of 14 hours, while more than the Shuffle's, is about half that of some other flash-memory players.
The bottom line: The Nano is the top choice among MP3 players, with what may be the best-yet combination of size, storage, and ergonomic ease. That said, consider a flash-memory player from another brand if you want additional functions such as recording capability or an FM radio. Such players typically cost less than the Nano but hold only a quarter to a half as many songs."
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