MP3 Players

If you want to hook it up to your car right now, right this minute, it’s a pod, pod, pod world.  You can jury-rig some others with a special jack but you won’t be able to use the car stereo controls.

Thing No. 1   Don’t pay sales tax.
Save yourself the dumb-guy sales pitch and take advantage of the easy-breezy return policy and buy online.  And, for music don’t be afraid to venture beyond iTunes.  Napster, MSN Music Store and even our dear friends in Bentonville (Wal-mart) can get you easily in the pink (or the Britney as the case may be).  Double check file formats though @
ebay.com/buy/guides/mp3-players, they may or may not be compatible with your player  .

Thing No. 2   Don’t fall for the extended warranty play.
The only trick here is the battery life. There’s a possibility that the extended warranty might make sense.  For example, an iPod battery can be recharged between 300=450 times.  After that, sayonara battery.  A new battery is $99.  Insert cost of warranty here and do the math.

Thing No. 3   Decide what you want it to do.
Just music or more?  If you’re going to use it for video, consider storage and screen size. Car and plane or jogging and gym?  This should factor into size, battery life and if you want flash memory or hard drive memory. Exercise use would suggest avoiding hard drives which have moving parts and can skip.  The car install is easiest for iPod.  See what we’re sayin?

Thing No. 4   Determine the appropriate amount of whiz-bang.
We’re talking Wi-Fi, gaming, Sirius radio and 7” wide screens.  Some of them in limited availability now, some soon, many with a price to be paid.  You’ve got to decide how big of a penile instrument you want to swing and how urgent your need to swing it is.  Look into the latest at gizmodo

Shop for price at: my Simon.

Thing No. 5   Be a savvy sleuth. 
Beware of the 100% positive reviews.  The Internet is crawling with message board shills – people paid to post positive reviews.  Stick to the reputable reviewers like cnet. When you do find some negative user feedback, oftentimes someone was unhappy with the retailer or the sales experience or something that will have nothing to do with you.

If all this is way more than you bargained for and is making your left eye twitch, go ahead and be a lemming and just get an iPod.  And download The Free iPod Book that tells you everything you ever wanted to know about one. iLounge.com