iTunes + Podmaxx = your iPods maximum potential!

Archive for the ‘iPod’ Category

Review of Podmaxx 08 by MyViewIs

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

See the recent review of Podmaxx08 by MyViewIs  They loved it.

Now You Can create your own iPod case here!!!

Monday, June 4th, 2007

Podmaxx is very pleased to announce that all Podmaxx customers can now create their very own customized iPod case right here on Podmaxx.com!!!

Please visit and create your own iPod case your way!!

Which iPod do you have?  Click on yours.

iFrogz delivers the absolute best for iPod accessories, create your own cover your way!

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

What can we say about iFrogz that hasn’t already been said.  These folks have created the most diverse,creative as well as simple system to custom design your own iPod cover.  Every color and style you can imagine, mix and match, at iFrogz you really do get it “Your Way”.  Tell them we sent you.

 See the Tadpole for kids.

Podmaxx salutes Belkin for their support for “the cure”, way to go Belkin!!

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

Belkin International has unveiled its new pink Sport Armband and “Hope” Remix Metal cases for Apple’s iPod nano, and revealed that 10 percent of all proceeds will go to support Komen for the Cure to help fight breast cancer. Belkin’s Sport Armband for iPod nano is hand washable and features “stitchless” construction with a water-resistant exterior. The “Hope” Remix Metal for iPod nano is made from clear acrylic and brushed metal, featuring a soft-touch click-wheel protector. Both cases protect first as well as second-generation iPod nanos, and both are priced at $30.

<

Podmaxx can’t stop talking about the iMep, the perfect Podmaxx compliment!!

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

New York — iPod audio systems will take new shapes and add new features with the shipment of models by Altec Lansing, Mondo Systems and Boston Innovative.

Milford, Pa.-based Altec Lansing plans May shipments of a one-piece home system with 8.5-inch LCD display for viewing videos and pictures stored on docked iPods. Boston-based startup Boston Innovative will launch two battery-operated boombox versions of the Altec concept but will add built-in CD/DVD player, AM/FM tuner and NTSC TV tuner. For music-only use, Mondo USA of Santa Ana, Calif., plans a home system consisting of two bookshelf speakers connected to a small amplifier/RF receiver, which receives iPod music wirelessly from a dock placed in a convenient location up to 100 feet away.

Mondo’s $349-suggested Mint, due in June, features two two-way wood speakers with white-piano-coat finish, 4-inch aluminum-cone woofers and 1-inch neodymium-magnet tweeters. The speakers are powered by a 2×70-watt (into 4 ohm) Class D amplifier. Mondo’s cradle converts the iPods’ analog output to digital and sends it wirelessly to the amp by using a proprietary wireless technology called Di-Fi. Mondo’s amp also connects to other music sources, including PCs and other-brand MP3 players, via USB and 3.5mm line-in jack. A supplied IR remote can be used to control the docked iPod.

Mondo, a subsidiary of Seoul-based startup Mondo Systems, plans June sales of the system through on-line and brick-and-mortar retailers, including Amazon and mondo-usa.com. It will be the startup’s second consumer product. The first was the XL7000 home theater system unveiled at last September’s CEDIA Expo but shipped only in Korea because the “market wasn’t ready,” a spokesperson said. That system consists of freestanding speakers, a DLP projector and a hard-drive music/video jukebox that rips CDs and DVDs.

Altec Lansing is likewise targeting home use of its $349-suggested inMotion iMV712, due in stores in May. Altec believes it’s the industry’s first home iPod station with an LCD screen for viewing iPod videos. The single-chassis iPod station, which runs solely on AC, is positioned for use in college dorm rooms, teen rooms, desktops and kitchen counters.

The iMV712 sports a widescreen 8.5-inch TFT LCD screen, top-mounted universal iPod dock, two 3-inch neodymium-magnet speakers, a built-in 4-inch subwoofer and Altec-proprietary SFX (Stereo Field Expander) technology to widen the soundstage. An aux-in jack connects to other-brand MP3 players, which would also sit in the dock. An RCA input connects other sources such as camcorders. An S-Video output connects to TVs to display iPod videos on the TV screen.

A wireless remote controls the device’s volume, treble/bass and mute functions as well as iPod functions, including forward/reverse, pause, menu, play and stop.

Boston Innovative Products, which has marketed residential air purifiers and commercial air conditioners for two years, lays claim to another industry first: iPod-docking boomboxes with LCD screens to view an iPod’s videos and pictures. Three $299-suggested iMep models feature different cosmetics but sport the same features: top-mount iPod-dedicated dock, 7-inch LCD screen, back-mounted CD/DVD transport, MP3-CD playback, integrated NTSC TV tuner, AM/FM tuner, and USB port and SD/MMC/MS memory card slot to play music and video files from memory cards and USB drives. The two devices also feature RCA-type A/V inputs and outputs, coaxial and optical digital outputs, and connections for AM and TV antennas. The iMeps are powered by 8 C batteries or AC.

 

Boston Innovative Products iMEO.

The black iMEP, the MP-701-388, features a screen on the front and a light-absorbing coating to ward off glare outdoors. The MP-702-388R and 388B feature flip-up screen and silver trim. The former is red, the latter is black.Boston Innovative, owned by 3P Electronics of China, will sell the products through the Front Gate catalog and other retailers.

Podmaxx loves the Griffin iVault for nano, Please see Mr. Horowitz Review

Thursday, April 12th, 2007

Courtesy of iLounge.com

Posted 04.12.07 | By Jeremy Horwitz

An update to the iLounge reader-favorite series of machined aluminum iVault cases for iPod shuffles, Griffin’s iVault for nano ($25, aka iVault nano) is long in coming: we’d heard a first-generation nano version was on track for release last year, but as it emerges in April, 2007, it’s now compatible with both first- and second-generation nanos. Unlike its predecessor, the new iVault uses magnets rather than screws to hold closed, and includes a convenient rubber Dock Connector cover — which fits the second-gen nano better than the first — to protect your nano’s accessory port. Integrated clear screen and Click Wheel protectors are also found in the front half of the case, with a rubber inner lining to keep your nano from scratching against the aluminum body.

iTune hostage count continues to rise, Podmaxx to the rescue.

Monday, April 9th, 2007

In our efforts to eventually free all iTune hostages, Podmaxx is offering a 30% discount to everyone who emails here with a link of this post.

Send email here to free your iPod. Press@podmaxx.com

Apple Inc.’s announcement Monday that it has sold 100 million of its iPod music players marks more than just a business milestone for the once-struggling computer company.

The remarkable sales figure also is evidence that Apple has, in just a few short years, played a major role in transforming a fringe technology into a mainstream phenomenon — spawning massive ripple effects in both the music and technology industries

What’s more, analysts say, Apple’s more recent forays into selling movies and TV shows — and, soon, its own cell phone — could be poised to transform those industries as well.

 

“It’s pretty clear to me, as to most people who have watched it, that the record label business is just the canary in the coal mine,” said Phil Leigh, an analyst with Inside Digital Media who has followed the digital music business for years. “The Hollywood studios and the TV production companies — they need to pay attention because their businesses are going to change just as rapidly, and they need to adapt.”

Apple said Monday that it had sold 100 million iPods since the gadget was introduced in November 2001. The company also noted that it had sold more than 2.5 billion songs, 50 million TV shows and more than 1.3 million movies through its iTunes music and media store.

If there was any doubt, the numbers offer definitive proof that the iPod has crossed from being a gadget for music lovers and technology geeks to being a mainstream hit with everyone from kids riding the bus to grandparents out for an afternoon walk.

Of course, there were other companies before Apple that offered the ability to listen to music over the Internet, and to play back songs on small digital gadgets. But while most of those systems required a fair amount of technical prowess, experts credit Apple with making the technology easy enough to appeal to a mass audience.

“Apple took a totally different approach than most of the other companies,” said Roger Kay with Endpoint Technologies Associates.

While other companies saw digital music players as primarily for gadget geeks, Kay said Apple decided to “human engineer this so that people will like the experience. That was very, very key (to) setting the pace for everyone else in the industry.”

The understated device, with its clean look and easy click wheel, was mirrored by an iTunes music service that offered a simple way to buy songs at a relatively low price.

By contrast, companies such as RealNetworks Inc. offered a variety of services, including subscriptions that essentially let people rent songs. Other portable digital devices often required complex steps to program and use, and it was sometimes extremely difficult to transfer songs from computers to the devices.

Apple also had an advantage in that its music service and device were made to work together, whereas other music services and devices were built by different companies that tried to mesh them. The result could be frustrating and rife with glitches.

It didn’t take long for music lovers to see the convenience of not just listening to songs over a digital player, but also buying them via an online service. Experts credit Apple with helping to legitimize online music downloads, which was rife with piracy.

Now, thanks in large part to iPod’s popularity, many think it will just be a matter of time before the tried-and-true method of going to a store and buying a CD becomes a thing of the past.

Click for related content

“It’s high time the record labels realize that the CD is as dead as General Custer,” Leigh said.

The change has been dramatic for the music industry, which is now struggling to understand how to make its business work in a vastly different distribution model. Even now, not every label is allowing all their songs to be sold online.

As downloading television and movies becomes more popular, Leigh expects those industries to have to grapple with the same major changes. That could mean job cuts, changes in product lineups or any number of other moves.

CONTINUED: Other industries affected as well

Record labels and other digital music services aren’t the only ones who have been forced to adapt to an iPod world. The change also has affected companies such as Sony Corp., whose Walkman products had long been synonymous with portable music.

Sony, along with companies including Creative Technology Ltd. and even Microsoft Corp., have put out products meant to compete with the iPod juggernaut. But so far, none have been able to create a serious dent in Apple’s lead.

(MSNBC.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal.)

The iPod’s success also has marked a transformation of sorts for Apple, which has struggled over the years as a higher-end, niche competitor to the big players of the PC industry, most notably Microsoft.

Leigh said one concern Microsoft should have now is that people may love their iPod enough to consider also switching to an Apple computer, instead of a PC powered by Microsoft’s Windows operating system.

Still, Cupertino, Calif.-based Apple has its share of challenges ahead. Although the company is enjoying a commanding position right now, analysts caution that it never pays to get comfortable in a market as fickle as digital music.

“I don’t think any company in an industry that’s changing as rapidly as this one can ever declare victory,” Leigh said. “If that means, ‘We’re the winners and we don’t need to do anything more,’ you’ve just written the epitaph.”

Instead, he thinks Apple will have to keep doing what it has been doing — introducing new products and finding new customers — if it wants to keep its lead.

Click for related content

But expansion can lead to its own problems as well. For example, Kay thinks Apple’s move to offer its own cellular iPhone, due out later this year, could be risky. One big concern is that, while it’s only an inconvenience if your iPod doesn’t work, having a phone that isn’t always reliable would be much more problematic.

To succeed, Kay said, the company will need to be make sure that the iPhone’s battery is dependable, and that other offerings such as e-mail work reliably for business users.

“Why do people like the iPod? Well, they like the iPod because it plays their songs simply,” he said. “But if you say, well, why do people use phones? They use it for a totally different purpose.”

Don’t miss this on MSNBC.com

EMI will sell DRM-free music on iTunes

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

2 April 2007 10:58 by DVDBack23

EMI will sell DRM-free music on iTunesIn a huge announcement, Apple and EMI have announced that all of EMI’s catalogue will be sold through the iTunes music store without DRM. EMI said in the announcements that all the songs will be available for $1.29 and users can upgrade their DRM locked songs to the DRM-free versions for 30 cents if they wish.

The bitrate of all of EMI’s tracks will also jump from the now available 128kpbs to excellent quality 256kbps AAC files.
“We believe that offering consumers the opportunity to buy higher quality tracks and listen to them on the device or platform of their choice will boost sales of digital music,” said EMI CEO Eric Nicoli during this morning’s press conference.

Customers can still choose to buy the DRM locked, low bitrate tracks for 99 cents.

EMI also said that they would be selling unprotected music videos and albums at the existing prices through iTunes.

We can only hope that the rest of the Big Four labels will watch this revolution closel

iFrogz new Tadpole protects your childs iPod from the occasional “oops”

Monday, April 2nd, 2007


Tadpole, by ifrogz quickly converts your iPod™ into a portable entertainment device for your child. A rugged case and clear protective screen cover offer unmatched protection and style.

Comfort grip handles make viewing easy and fun! Download movies, cartoons and educational videos, then take them anywhere!

boy watching an ipod with a tadpole case

Case Design

The tadpole ($ 19.99 without screen protection) takes key design elements and features from the original ifrogz concept and expands them into kid proofing your iPod. The tadpole case engulfs the whole iPod while leaving open areas for the click wheel, iPod view screen, hold button, and headphones. The bottom port is not accessible with a tadpole case. In addition to these design elements the Tadpole has added the comfort grip handles for kid friendly and iPod safe viewing. Just as with the entire product line of silicone ifrogz cases, the tadpole is made from 100% silicone that is coated to repel dust and lint. The silicone tadpole case also ensures extra shock absorption to protect your iPod from everyday drops and bumps!

screenz description and outline on an iPod

boy watching an ipod with a tadpole case

Screen Protection

The Tadpole comes with an optional ifrogz Screenz ($24.99 with screen protection). ifrogz™ Screenz are a protective sheet of transparent plastic that lays over the whole front of the iPod, protecting the iPod from scratching and wear and tear. Screenz also include stock or custom decals that cover and protect the click-wheel, allowing the user to style their Tadpole with an image of their choice. With hundreds of stock decal selections plus the ability to create your own custom screen decal you’re bound to find a tadpole style that fits you.

The click-wheel’s easy navigation is not hampered by these thin, yet strong and protective Screenz. With an ifrogz™ Screen placed on your iPod first and then secured by the tadpole, your iPod is kid proof in style!


Also Available at: