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  3. The responses to this make me feel old.

The responses to this make me feel old.

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  • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D This user is from outside of this forum
    David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D This user is from outside of this forum
    David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    RE: https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116079430711748391

    The responses to this make me feel old.

    For those who answered ‘no’ and didn’t look it up, this was the Slashdot review of the original iPod, which subsequently became an enormously successful consumer electronics product. It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product (which seems relevant with respect to Discord at the moment).

    The Nomad (from Creative Labs, the maker of SoundBlaster and related lawsuits) had a terrible UI and exposed itself as a mass-storage device. You just had to copy your files across. The iPod required you to use iTunes (the next version that worked with Windows also allowed an alternative music player).

    iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation. Only 10-20% of the population thinks of hierarchies as the structure for organisation and music is a great example of their limitations. If you do band/album/track, how do you find all of the track by a particular artist on compilations (you’ll end up with a big ‘Various Artists’ folder)? If you want a playlist that is ‘all music from the ‘60s that isn’t classical or by The Beatles’ (an actual playlist I had in iTunes), the hierarchical view doesn’t help, but iTunes model of a soup of tracks filtered by metadata did. Gmail also leaned into this model, with tags and searches rather than traditional mail folders.

    The iPod itself had 5 GB of space on a micro drive (1.8” hard disk). That was enough for 40-50 CDs at 128 Kb/s, which was more music than a lot of people owned, so just plug it in and it syncs all of your music was a much better interface than copying files in a file manager. I think my hard disk, when the iPod came out, was 20 GB, and I didn’t want to use 1/4 for music! You put a CD in your computer, iTunes ripped it automatically and then the next time you plugged in the iPod it was sync’s (and play counts for the tracks were sync’s back. These also were usable in smart playlists. I had one for ‘underplayed good songs’ which found things with a rating of 4-5 stars with a low play count). If you had more music than would fit, you could select playlists to sync and it would copy those. This included smart playlists, so you could create simple saved metadata searches and sync all the tracks they found, even if you never played them as a playlist.

    You had less control in this model than with the Nomad, but it didn’t matter because the thing that most people wanted to do almost all of the time was very easy, whereas the Nomad made it harder.

    As Jef Raskin argued, making difficult things possible shouldn’t come at the expense of making simple things easy.

    Neil BrownN Marcos DioneM T Owl EyesD Frederic ThevenetF 8 Replies Last reply
    1
    0
    • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)

      RE: https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116079430711748391

      The responses to this make me feel old.

      For those who answered ‘no’ and didn’t look it up, this was the Slashdot review of the original iPod, which subsequently became an enormously successful consumer electronics product. It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product (which seems relevant with respect to Discord at the moment).

      The Nomad (from Creative Labs, the maker of SoundBlaster and related lawsuits) had a terrible UI and exposed itself as a mass-storage device. You just had to copy your files across. The iPod required you to use iTunes (the next version that worked with Windows also allowed an alternative music player).

      iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation. Only 10-20% of the population thinks of hierarchies as the structure for organisation and music is a great example of their limitations. If you do band/album/track, how do you find all of the track by a particular artist on compilations (you’ll end up with a big ‘Various Artists’ folder)? If you want a playlist that is ‘all music from the ‘60s that isn’t classical or by The Beatles’ (an actual playlist I had in iTunes), the hierarchical view doesn’t help, but iTunes model of a soup of tracks filtered by metadata did. Gmail also leaned into this model, with tags and searches rather than traditional mail folders.

      The iPod itself had 5 GB of space on a micro drive (1.8” hard disk). That was enough for 40-50 CDs at 128 Kb/s, which was more music than a lot of people owned, so just plug it in and it syncs all of your music was a much better interface than copying files in a file manager. I think my hard disk, when the iPod came out, was 20 GB, and I didn’t want to use 1/4 for music! You put a CD in your computer, iTunes ripped it automatically and then the next time you plugged in the iPod it was sync’s (and play counts for the tracks were sync’s back. These also were usable in smart playlists. I had one for ‘underplayed good songs’ which found things with a rating of 4-5 stars with a low play count). If you had more music than would fit, you could select playlists to sync and it would copy those. This included smart playlists, so you could create simple saved metadata searches and sync all the tracks they found, even if you never played them as a playlist.

      You had less control in this model than with the Nomad, but it didn’t matter because the thing that most people wanted to do almost all of the time was very easy, whereas the Nomad made it harder.

      As Jef Raskin argued, making difficult things possible shouldn’t come at the expense of making simple things easy.

      Neil BrownN This user is from outside of this forum
      Neil BrownN This user is from outside of this forum
      Neil Brown
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @david_chisnall

      > It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product

      Or not everyone valuing the same things?

      Ben CurthoysB Jennifer Moore 😷U 2 Replies Last reply
      0
      • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)

        RE: https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116079430711748391

        The responses to this make me feel old.

        For those who answered ‘no’ and didn’t look it up, this was the Slashdot review of the original iPod, which subsequently became an enormously successful consumer electronics product. It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product (which seems relevant with respect to Discord at the moment).

        The Nomad (from Creative Labs, the maker of SoundBlaster and related lawsuits) had a terrible UI and exposed itself as a mass-storage device. You just had to copy your files across. The iPod required you to use iTunes (the next version that worked with Windows also allowed an alternative music player).

        iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation. Only 10-20% of the population thinks of hierarchies as the structure for organisation and music is a great example of their limitations. If you do band/album/track, how do you find all of the track by a particular artist on compilations (you’ll end up with a big ‘Various Artists’ folder)? If you want a playlist that is ‘all music from the ‘60s that isn’t classical or by The Beatles’ (an actual playlist I had in iTunes), the hierarchical view doesn’t help, but iTunes model of a soup of tracks filtered by metadata did. Gmail also leaned into this model, with tags and searches rather than traditional mail folders.

        The iPod itself had 5 GB of space on a micro drive (1.8” hard disk). That was enough for 40-50 CDs at 128 Kb/s, which was more music than a lot of people owned, so just plug it in and it syncs all of your music was a much better interface than copying files in a file manager. I think my hard disk, when the iPod came out, was 20 GB, and I didn’t want to use 1/4 for music! You put a CD in your computer, iTunes ripped it automatically and then the next time you plugged in the iPod it was sync’s (and play counts for the tracks were sync’s back. These also were usable in smart playlists. I had one for ‘underplayed good songs’ which found things with a rating of 4-5 stars with a low play count). If you had more music than would fit, you could select playlists to sync and it would copy those. This included smart playlists, so you could create simple saved metadata searches and sync all the tracks they found, even if you never played them as a playlist.

        You had less control in this model than with the Nomad, but it didn’t matter because the thing that most people wanted to do almost all of the time was very easy, whereas the Nomad made it harder.

        As Jef Raskin argued, making difficult things possible shouldn’t come at the expense of making simple things easy.

        Marcos DioneM This user is from outside of this forum
        Marcos DioneM This user is from outside of this forum
        Marcos Dione
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @david_chisnall I might be older than you, but I was not so much a /.er myself, so no. I think that at that time I read more FreshMeat and mailing lists than /. 🙂

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)

          RE: https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116079430711748391

          The responses to this make me feel old.

          For those who answered ‘no’ and didn’t look it up, this was the Slashdot review of the original iPod, which subsequently became an enormously successful consumer electronics product. It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product (which seems relevant with respect to Discord at the moment).

          The Nomad (from Creative Labs, the maker of SoundBlaster and related lawsuits) had a terrible UI and exposed itself as a mass-storage device. You just had to copy your files across. The iPod required you to use iTunes (the next version that worked with Windows also allowed an alternative music player).

          iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation. Only 10-20% of the population thinks of hierarchies as the structure for organisation and music is a great example of their limitations. If you do band/album/track, how do you find all of the track by a particular artist on compilations (you’ll end up with a big ‘Various Artists’ folder)? If you want a playlist that is ‘all music from the ‘60s that isn’t classical or by The Beatles’ (an actual playlist I had in iTunes), the hierarchical view doesn’t help, but iTunes model of a soup of tracks filtered by metadata did. Gmail also leaned into this model, with tags and searches rather than traditional mail folders.

          The iPod itself had 5 GB of space on a micro drive (1.8” hard disk). That was enough for 40-50 CDs at 128 Kb/s, which was more music than a lot of people owned, so just plug it in and it syncs all of your music was a much better interface than copying files in a file manager. I think my hard disk, when the iPod came out, was 20 GB, and I didn’t want to use 1/4 for music! You put a CD in your computer, iTunes ripped it automatically and then the next time you plugged in the iPod it was sync’s (and play counts for the tracks were sync’s back. These also were usable in smart playlists. I had one for ‘underplayed good songs’ which found things with a rating of 4-5 stars with a low play count). If you had more music than would fit, you could select playlists to sync and it would copy those. This included smart playlists, so you could create simple saved metadata searches and sync all the tracks they found, even if you never played them as a playlist.

          You had less control in this model than with the Nomad, but it didn’t matter because the thing that most people wanted to do almost all of the time was very easy, whereas the Nomad made it harder.

          As Jef Raskin argued, making difficult things possible shouldn’t come at the expense of making simple things easy.

          T This user is from outside of this forum
          T This user is from outside of this forum
          Torbjörn Norinder
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @david_chisnall To be clear, Itunes *really* sucked in those days unless you were on a high-end Mac. Indexing was painfully slow on HDDs, etc.

          David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • Neil BrownN Neil Brown

            @david_chisnall

            > It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product

            Or not everyone valuing the same things?

            Ben CurthoysB This user is from outside of this forum
            Ben CurthoysB This user is from outside of this forum
            Ben Curthoys
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @neil @david_chisnall

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • Neil BrownN Neil Brown

              @david_chisnall

              > It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product

              Or not everyone valuing the same things?

              Jennifer Moore 😷U This user is from outside of this forum
              Jennifer Moore 😷U This user is from outside of this forum
              Jennifer Moore 😷
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              @neil

              But then wouldn't the review have been more like "this will probably be popular, because ABC, only not necessarily with people like us, because XYZ"...?

              @david_chisnall

              Neil BrownN 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • T Torbjörn Norinder

                @david_chisnall To be clear, Itunes *really* sucked in those days unless you were on a high-end Mac. Indexing was painfully slow on HDDs, etc.

                David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D This user is from outside of this forum
                David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D This user is from outside of this forum
                David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                @tnorinder I never used it on a G3, but on a mid-range G4 it was fine. Indexing took a while, but was a one-off operation. Adding things to the index took less time than ripping the CD and searching the resulting index was pretty much instant.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)

                  RE: https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116079430711748391

                  The responses to this make me feel old.

                  For those who answered ‘no’ and didn’t look it up, this was the Slashdot review of the original iPod, which subsequently became an enormously successful consumer electronics product. It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product (which seems relevant with respect to Discord at the moment).

                  The Nomad (from Creative Labs, the maker of SoundBlaster and related lawsuits) had a terrible UI and exposed itself as a mass-storage device. You just had to copy your files across. The iPod required you to use iTunes (the next version that worked with Windows also allowed an alternative music player).

                  iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation. Only 10-20% of the population thinks of hierarchies as the structure for organisation and music is a great example of their limitations. If you do band/album/track, how do you find all of the track by a particular artist on compilations (you’ll end up with a big ‘Various Artists’ folder)? If you want a playlist that is ‘all music from the ‘60s that isn’t classical or by The Beatles’ (an actual playlist I had in iTunes), the hierarchical view doesn’t help, but iTunes model of a soup of tracks filtered by metadata did. Gmail also leaned into this model, with tags and searches rather than traditional mail folders.

                  The iPod itself had 5 GB of space on a micro drive (1.8” hard disk). That was enough for 40-50 CDs at 128 Kb/s, which was more music than a lot of people owned, so just plug it in and it syncs all of your music was a much better interface than copying files in a file manager. I think my hard disk, when the iPod came out, was 20 GB, and I didn’t want to use 1/4 for music! You put a CD in your computer, iTunes ripped it automatically and then the next time you plugged in the iPod it was sync’s (and play counts for the tracks were sync’s back. These also were usable in smart playlists. I had one for ‘underplayed good songs’ which found things with a rating of 4-5 stars with a low play count). If you had more music than would fit, you could select playlists to sync and it would copy those. This included smart playlists, so you could create simple saved metadata searches and sync all the tracks they found, even if you never played them as a playlist.

                  You had less control in this model than with the Nomad, but it didn’t matter because the thing that most people wanted to do almost all of the time was very easy, whereas the Nomad made it harder.

                  As Jef Raskin argued, making difficult things possible shouldn’t come at the expense of making simple things easy.

                  T This user is from outside of this forum
                  T This user is from outside of this forum
                  Torbjörn Norinder
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  @david_chisnall Also, you had to use an application from Creative to upload tracks to the Nomad. There was a third party driver called Notmad Explorer which provided a USB mass storage interface (I know, since I owned and used a Nomad for a number of years).

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • Jennifer Moore 😷U Jennifer Moore 😷

                    @neil

                    But then wouldn't the review have been more like "this will probably be popular, because ABC, only not necessarily with people like us, because XYZ"...?

                    @david_chisnall

                    Neil BrownN This user is from outside of this forum
                    Neil BrownN This user is from outside of this forum
                    Neil Brown
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    @unchartedworlds @david_chisnall

                    I don't recall it being more than the three sentences, but perhaps there was a full review that I am not remembering?

                    (As an aside, if I'm commenting on something from my perspective - such as a review of piece of tech - my focus is on how it makes *me* feel / how it works for *me*, rather than trying to provide some kind of objective overview!)

                    David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D Jennifer Moore 😷U 2 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • Neil BrownN Neil Brown

                      @unchartedworlds @david_chisnall

                      I don't recall it being more than the three sentences, but perhaps there was a full review that I am not remembering?

                      (As an aside, if I'm commenting on something from my perspective - such as a review of piece of tech - my focus is on how it makes *me* feel / how it works for *me*, rather than trying to provide some kind of objective overview!)

                      David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D This user is from outside of this forum
                      David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D This user is from outside of this forum
                      David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      @neil @unchartedworlds

                      As I recall, this was the editor’s commentary on a link to the release announcement.

                      Neil BrownN 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)

                        @neil @unchartedworlds

                        As I recall, this was the editor’s commentary on a link to the release announcement.

                        Neil BrownN This user is from outside of this forum
                        Neil BrownN This user is from outside of this forum
                        Neil Brown
                        wrote last edited by
                        #11

                        @david_chisnall @unchartedworlds

                        Yes, that is my recollection too (albeit accepting that the passage of many years may have dulled this!)

                        Their, personal, view of what was announced, rather than a commentary on whether it would be a global success or not.

                        Jennifer Moore 😷U 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • Neil BrownN Neil Brown

                          @unchartedworlds @david_chisnall

                          I don't recall it being more than the three sentences, but perhaps there was a full review that I am not remembering?

                          (As an aside, if I'm commenting on something from my perspective - such as a review of piece of tech - my focus is on how it makes *me* feel / how it works for *me*, rather than trying to provide some kind of objective overview!)

                          Jennifer Moore 😷U This user is from outside of this forum
                          Jennifer Moore 😷U This user is from outside of this forum
                          Jennifer Moore 😷
                          wrote last edited by
                          #12

                          @neil

                          Yeah I realise some reviews are purely "I like it / don't like it and here's why", but when I think in the abstract of tech reviews, the writing-flavour which comes to mind does have a fair bit of "this will suit people wanting X, while for people wanting Y, it's just about adequate" etc.

                          I don't remember the original, though!

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)

                            RE: https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116079430711748391

                            The responses to this make me feel old.

                            For those who answered ‘no’ and didn’t look it up, this was the Slashdot review of the original iPod, which subsequently became an enormously successful consumer electronics product. It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product (which seems relevant with respect to Discord at the moment).

                            The Nomad (from Creative Labs, the maker of SoundBlaster and related lawsuits) had a terrible UI and exposed itself as a mass-storage device. You just had to copy your files across. The iPod required you to use iTunes (the next version that worked with Windows also allowed an alternative music player).

                            iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation. Only 10-20% of the population thinks of hierarchies as the structure for organisation and music is a great example of their limitations. If you do band/album/track, how do you find all of the track by a particular artist on compilations (you’ll end up with a big ‘Various Artists’ folder)? If you want a playlist that is ‘all music from the ‘60s that isn’t classical or by The Beatles’ (an actual playlist I had in iTunes), the hierarchical view doesn’t help, but iTunes model of a soup of tracks filtered by metadata did. Gmail also leaned into this model, with tags and searches rather than traditional mail folders.

                            The iPod itself had 5 GB of space on a micro drive (1.8” hard disk). That was enough for 40-50 CDs at 128 Kb/s, which was more music than a lot of people owned, so just plug it in and it syncs all of your music was a much better interface than copying files in a file manager. I think my hard disk, when the iPod came out, was 20 GB, and I didn’t want to use 1/4 for music! You put a CD in your computer, iTunes ripped it automatically and then the next time you plugged in the iPod it was sync’s (and play counts for the tracks were sync’s back. These also were usable in smart playlists. I had one for ‘underplayed good songs’ which found things with a rating of 4-5 stars with a low play count). If you had more music than would fit, you could select playlists to sync and it would copy those. This included smart playlists, so you could create simple saved metadata searches and sync all the tracks they found, even if you never played them as a playlist.

                            You had less control in this model than with the Nomad, but it didn’t matter because the thing that most people wanted to do almost all of the time was very easy, whereas the Nomad made it harder.

                            As Jef Raskin argued, making difficult things possible shouldn’t come at the expense of making simple things easy.

                            Owl EyesD This user is from outside of this forum
                            Owl EyesD This user is from outside of this forum
                            Owl Eyes
                            wrote last edited by
                            #13

                            @david_chisnall it's a great study in how UX matters.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Neil BrownN Neil Brown

                              @david_chisnall @unchartedworlds

                              Yes, that is my recollection too (albeit accepting that the passage of many years may have dulled this!)

                              Their, personal, view of what was announced, rather than a commentary on whether it would be a global success or not.

                              Jennifer Moore 😷U This user is from outside of this forum
                              Jennifer Moore 😷U This user is from outside of this forum
                              Jennifer Moore 😷
                              wrote last edited by
                              #14

                              @neil @david_chisnall

                              Aaah that makes sense.

                              (I _am_ old but obviously wasn't paying attention in that direction at the time 🙂 )

                              Neil BrownN 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • Jennifer Moore 😷U Jennifer Moore 😷

                                @neil @david_chisnall

                                Aaah that makes sense.

                                (I _am_ old but obviously wasn't paying attention in that direction at the time 🙂 )

                                Neil BrownN This user is from outside of this forum
                                Neil BrownN This user is from outside of this forum
                                Neil Brown
                                wrote last edited by
                                #15

                                @unchartedworlds @david_chisnall Perhaps you were too busy listening to your Nomad 🙂

                                Jennifer Moore 😷U 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)

                                  RE: https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116079430711748391

                                  The responses to this make me feel old.

                                  For those who answered ‘no’ and didn’t look it up, this was the Slashdot review of the original iPod, which subsequently became an enormously successful consumer electronics product. It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product (which seems relevant with respect to Discord at the moment).

                                  The Nomad (from Creative Labs, the maker of SoundBlaster and related lawsuits) had a terrible UI and exposed itself as a mass-storage device. You just had to copy your files across. The iPod required you to use iTunes (the next version that worked with Windows also allowed an alternative music player).

                                  iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation. Only 10-20% of the population thinks of hierarchies as the structure for organisation and music is a great example of their limitations. If you do band/album/track, how do you find all of the track by a particular artist on compilations (you’ll end up with a big ‘Various Artists’ folder)? If you want a playlist that is ‘all music from the ‘60s that isn’t classical or by The Beatles’ (an actual playlist I had in iTunes), the hierarchical view doesn’t help, but iTunes model of a soup of tracks filtered by metadata did. Gmail also leaned into this model, with tags and searches rather than traditional mail folders.

                                  The iPod itself had 5 GB of space on a micro drive (1.8” hard disk). That was enough for 40-50 CDs at 128 Kb/s, which was more music than a lot of people owned, so just plug it in and it syncs all of your music was a much better interface than copying files in a file manager. I think my hard disk, when the iPod came out, was 20 GB, and I didn’t want to use 1/4 for music! You put a CD in your computer, iTunes ripped it automatically and then the next time you plugged in the iPod it was sync’s (and play counts for the tracks were sync’s back. These also were usable in smart playlists. I had one for ‘underplayed good songs’ which found things with a rating of 4-5 stars with a low play count). If you had more music than would fit, you could select playlists to sync and it would copy those. This included smart playlists, so you could create simple saved metadata searches and sync all the tracks they found, even if you never played them as a playlist.

                                  You had less control in this model than with the Nomad, but it didn’t matter because the thing that most people wanted to do almost all of the time was very easy, whereas the Nomad made it harder.

                                  As Jef Raskin argued, making difficult things possible shouldn’t come at the expense of making simple things easy.

                                  Frederic ThevenetF This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Frederic ThevenetF This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Frederic Thevenet
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #16

                                  @david_chisnall

                                  iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation.

                                  As I recall it, my gripe with iTunes at the time wasn't that it would allow for metadata filtered playlists -- I thought this was great -- but that it would physically change the folder hierarchy of the underlying music libray to better fit its own data model.
                                  I had my own music library organized as one album per folder, and only ~70-80% of it was properly tagged (which back in 2002, was actually pretty good for a collection of self ripped CDs going back 5 years or so). With no warning, iTunes decided to rearrange it into an artist/album hierarchy, which rendered the whole thing unusable with other software and HW players lacking sophisticated metadata support.
                                  And you can imagine the havoc this wreaked among the part of library that was not tagged...

                                  Now, this happened to me specifically with the first version of iTunes that Apple ported to Windows, back in ~2002, I believe; I'm pretty sure later versions fixed that. But that certainly gave me cold feet about ever wanting to try it again.

                                  David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • Frederic ThevenetF Frederic Thevenet

                                    @david_chisnall

                                    iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation.

                                    As I recall it, my gripe with iTunes at the time wasn't that it would allow for metadata filtered playlists -- I thought this was great -- but that it would physically change the folder hierarchy of the underlying music libray to better fit its own data model.
                                    I had my own music library organized as one album per folder, and only ~70-80% of it was properly tagged (which back in 2002, was actually pretty good for a collection of self ripped CDs going back 5 years or so). With no warning, iTunes decided to rearrange it into an artist/album hierarchy, which rendered the whole thing unusable with other software and HW players lacking sophisticated metadata support.
                                    And you can imagine the havoc this wreaked among the part of library that was not tagged...

                                    Now, this happened to me specifically with the first version of iTunes that Apple ported to Windows, back in ~2002, I believe; I'm pretty sure later versions fixed that. But that certainly gave me cold feet about ever wanting to try it again.

                                    David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D This user is from outside of this forum
                                    David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D This user is from outside of this forum
                                    David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #17

                                    @fred

                                    Yup, and this was a legitimate concern for a lot of people who managed their own music like this (later iTunes had a 'leave files where they are' option). But for most people, managing this hierarchy was work and iTunes meant that they didn't have to do the work.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • Neil BrownN Neil Brown

                                      @unchartedworlds @david_chisnall Perhaps you were too busy listening to your Nomad 🙂

                                      Jennifer Moore 😷U This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Jennifer Moore 😷U This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Jennifer Moore 😷
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #18

                                      @neil @david_chisnall

                                      I was probably still on cassettes 🙂

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                                      • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)

                                        RE: https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116079430711748391

                                        The responses to this make me feel old.

                                        For those who answered ‘no’ and didn’t look it up, this was the Slashdot review of the original iPod, which subsequently became an enormously successful consumer electronics product. It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product (which seems relevant with respect to Discord at the moment).

                                        The Nomad (from Creative Labs, the maker of SoundBlaster and related lawsuits) had a terrible UI and exposed itself as a mass-storage device. You just had to copy your files across. The iPod required you to use iTunes (the next version that worked with Windows also allowed an alternative music player).

                                        iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation. Only 10-20% of the population thinks of hierarchies as the structure for organisation and music is a great example of their limitations. If you do band/album/track, how do you find all of the track by a particular artist on compilations (you’ll end up with a big ‘Various Artists’ folder)? If you want a playlist that is ‘all music from the ‘60s that isn’t classical or by The Beatles’ (an actual playlist I had in iTunes), the hierarchical view doesn’t help, but iTunes model of a soup of tracks filtered by metadata did. Gmail also leaned into this model, with tags and searches rather than traditional mail folders.

                                        The iPod itself had 5 GB of space on a micro drive (1.8” hard disk). That was enough for 40-50 CDs at 128 Kb/s, which was more music than a lot of people owned, so just plug it in and it syncs all of your music was a much better interface than copying files in a file manager. I think my hard disk, when the iPod came out, was 20 GB, and I didn’t want to use 1/4 for music! You put a CD in your computer, iTunes ripped it automatically and then the next time you plugged in the iPod it was sync’s (and play counts for the tracks were sync’s back. These also were usable in smart playlists. I had one for ‘underplayed good songs’ which found things with a rating of 4-5 stars with a low play count). If you had more music than would fit, you could select playlists to sync and it would copy those. This included smart playlists, so you could create simple saved metadata searches and sync all the tracks they found, even if you never played them as a playlist.

                                        You had less control in this model than with the Nomad, but it didn’t matter because the thing that most people wanted to do almost all of the time was very easy, whereas the Nomad made it harder.

                                        As Jef Raskin argued, making difficult things possible shouldn’t come at the expense of making simple things easy.

                                        Stephen FoskettS This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Stephen FoskettS This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Stephen Foskett
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #19

                                        @david_chisnall I was a Creative Nomad Jukebox user with a 20 GB hard drive swap and I could have written this review. But once I switched I realized how wrong I was.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)D David Chisnall (*Now with 50% more sarcasm!*)

                                          RE: https://infosec.exchange/@david_chisnall/116079430711748391

                                          The responses to this make me feel old.

                                          For those who answered ‘no’ and didn’t look it up, this was the Slashdot review of the original iPod, which subsequently became an enormously successful consumer electronics product. It became a meme for geeks not understanding the things that make people actually like a product (which seems relevant with respect to Discord at the moment).

                                          The Nomad (from Creative Labs, the maker of SoundBlaster and related lawsuits) had a terrible UI and exposed itself as a mass-storage device. You just had to copy your files across. The iPod required you to use iTunes (the next version that worked with Windows also allowed an alternative music player).

                                          iTunes was also unpopular with the Slashdot set because they had folder hierarchies for organising music and didn’t want something else in the way of their organisation. Only 10-20% of the population thinks of hierarchies as the structure for organisation and music is a great example of their limitations. If you do band/album/track, how do you find all of the track by a particular artist on compilations (you’ll end up with a big ‘Various Artists’ folder)? If you want a playlist that is ‘all music from the ‘60s that isn’t classical or by The Beatles’ (an actual playlist I had in iTunes), the hierarchical view doesn’t help, but iTunes model of a soup of tracks filtered by metadata did. Gmail also leaned into this model, with tags and searches rather than traditional mail folders.

                                          The iPod itself had 5 GB of space on a micro drive (1.8” hard disk). That was enough for 40-50 CDs at 128 Kb/s, which was more music than a lot of people owned, so just plug it in and it syncs all of your music was a much better interface than copying files in a file manager. I think my hard disk, when the iPod came out, was 20 GB, and I didn’t want to use 1/4 for music! You put a CD in your computer, iTunes ripped it automatically and then the next time you plugged in the iPod it was sync’s (and play counts for the tracks were sync’s back. These also were usable in smart playlists. I had one for ‘underplayed good songs’ which found things with a rating of 4-5 stars with a low play count). If you had more music than would fit, you could select playlists to sync and it would copy those. This included smart playlists, so you could create simple saved metadata searches and sync all the tracks they found, even if you never played them as a playlist.

                                          You had less control in this model than with the Nomad, but it didn’t matter because the thing that most people wanted to do almost all of the time was very easy, whereas the Nomad made it harder.

                                          As Jef Raskin argued, making difficult things possible shouldn’t come at the expense of making simple things easy.

                                          Arnd LayerI This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Arnd LayerI This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Arnd Layer
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #20

                                          @david_chisnall
                                          I had a Nomad at that time end I liked it.
                                          I used iTunes because it was the best way to rip my CDs - if I remember correctly, it was the most reliable for getting metadata.

                                          I ripped my >800 piece CD collection at least 3 times in ascending quality, ending with lossless.

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