DieMonkeys wrote:Then I guess I won't be using my iRiver, that's got a hard drive. I do have a Juicebox which uses solid-state memory, aka, SD cards.
Keep it in your pocket!
Just don't mount it to the handlebars
I was thinking I would put it in my tank bag, but then I remembered the six huge magnets on either side of the bag. That'd be fine for my CD player though.
Those magnets aren't anything to worry about.
They're orders of magnitude too weak and too far away to do anything.
DieMonkeys wrote:Then I guess I won't be using my iRiver, that's got a hard drive. I do have a Juicebox which uses solid-state memory, aka, SD cards.
Keep it in your pocket!
Just don't mount it to the handlebars
I was thinking I would put it in my tank bag, but then I remembered the six huge magnets on either side of the bag. That'd be fine for my CD player though.
Those magnets aren't anything to worry about.
They're orders of magnitude too weak and too far away to do anything.
but they don't get along with your debit card very well.
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Justice75 wrote:Does anyone know if they make wireless or Bluetooth earbuds for the iPod?
Just to make your search easier, Apple's iPod has a standard headphone output. Anything that takes a standard headphone jack and transmits the data via Bluetooth to the headphones will work.
Ah, Apple's marketing wins yet another.
[url=http://www.motoblag.com/blag/]Practicing the dark and forgotten art of using turn signals since '98.[/url]
Justice75 wrote:Thanks everyone for all of the reply's. I would have mounted it on the handlebars if I didn't ask. So in a jacket pocket or clipped to a belt ok?
Sev wrote:I had that happen to my Rio. I had it in my tank bag... I'd done it 100 times before, but on my way home about 30 minutes into a 6 hour highway trip the damn thing just died. Hard drive froze up and it was game over.
God damn do I hate straight lines with no music.
Hard drives are extremely sensitive to vibration.
Inside a hard drive, there are several metal-coated platters that spin at high speed. Above, below, and in between these platters there are tiny magnets that swing in and out, just like the needle on a record player. The difference is that the magnets sit a fraction of a millimeter off the surface of the spinning disk.
Hard drives, especially the small ones used in iPods, have some measure of anti-vibration built in by using rubber mounting, etc. However, any significant shock or vibration - especially prolonged vibration - causes the tiny magnetic heads to occasionally bump into the surface of the disks. This causes scratches, which totally destroys data by removing some of the thin metal surface where it is stored, as well as damages the head and arm. This adds up to very premature hard drive death.
Since they're close-tolerance, high-speed mechanical devices that literally rely on micron-sized groups of particles holding magnetic charges, all hard drives die. It's just a matter of when. So, back up your data, and expect any hard drive subjected to vibration from a motorcycle to die sooner rather than later.
copy/paste? Haha.
Of course I'm generalizing from a single example here, but everyone does that. At least I do.
Sev wrote:I had that happen to my Rio. I had it in my tank bag... I'd done it 100 times before, but on my way home about 30 minutes into a 6 hour highway trip the damn thing just died. Hard drive froze up and it was game over.
God damn do I hate straight lines with no music.
Hard drives are extremely sensitive to vibration.
Inside a hard drive, there are several metal-coated platters that spin at high speed. Above, below, and in between these platters there are tiny magnets that swing in and out, just like the needle on a record player. The difference is that the magnets sit a fraction of a millimeter off the surface of the spinning disk.
Hard drives, especially the small ones used in iPods, have some measure of anti-vibration built in by using rubber mounting, etc. However, any significant shock or vibration - especially prolonged vibration - causes the tiny magnetic heads to occasionally bump into the surface of the disks. This causes scratches, which totally destroys data by removing some of the thin metal surface where it is stored, as well as damages the head and arm. This adds up to very premature hard drive death.
Since they're close-tolerance, high-speed mechanical devices that literally rely on micron-sized groups of particles holding magnetic charges, all hard drives die. It's just a matter of when. So, back up your data, and expect any hard drive subjected to vibration from a motorcycle to die sooner rather than later.
copy/paste? Haha.
No, that wasn't copy and paste. I typed it out for that post.
Thanks for your productive contributions to the thread, though.
DieMonkeys wrote:Which is why I bought an iRiver. I'm not up to paying $$$ just for a name.
I have an 8GB Nano and a 30GB iPod Video.
The 30GB iPod was the same price as the Creative knockoff, is much smaller, and has a far superior user interface.
For the Nano? Creative didn't even offer anything remotely close at the time I bought it.
Remember ladies and gentlemen: "it's the size that counts." Not the sound quality, not the software, not the number of availible codecs/music/video types, not the fact that apple uses a proprietary codec system, not the fact that apple doesn't allow you to sync to more then one computer, not the embedded DRM in apple's codec system, not the battery life.
"It's smaller, so it's better."
Of course I'm generalizing from a single example here, but everyone does that. At least I do.