I currently have a 16GB iPhone and a 30GB iPod Classic. I'll keep both.
Andy Ihnatko's revised book tells you how to manage keeping multiple iPods topped off and current with smart lists. (Although I've spotted at least 4 minor errors in it so far.
)
You end up with multiple ipods because each has significant strengths and weaknesses.
I have an ipod touch and a "classic". The ipod touch has software capabilities the classic doesn't have, but the ipod touch has a small flash-based storage capacity, and the classic has a hard drive big enough to carry my entire MP3 collection. I can't drop one without losing something significant.
I don't like listening to music during "active pursuits", e.g. running, biking, whatever, but the 'nano' and 'shuffle' are tiny, light weight, and have flash-based storage that seems more appropriate for "bouncing around". So it wouldn't be too hard to rationalize adding the third one.
-harry
Usually there *is* something significantly better. For example, on the latest rev, the iPod Nano gained the ability to do video.
I've had only two iPods and the iPhone. My latest iPod (several years old now, the 60G iPod "photo" version) crapped out a while back and since I hadn't been using it since I got the iPhone, I didn't bother doing anything with it. I really do wish that my iPhone had enough storage to hold my entire music library (25.2GB), all my videos (about 8GB and climbing rapidly), and all the apps I want (a relatively tiny 0.1GB) so it would do everything I want without needing another gadget.
Unfortunately, I think the 64GB iPhone is probably still a year or two out.
And I get all that in theory. But I'm sorry, having more than 2 is very, very difficult to honestly justify IMO.
And it
still doesn't make sense to have, taking a co-worker as an example, a 16GB Nano, a 120GB Classic or whatever, and a 32GB brand-new Touch all in addition to God knows how many older versions and *still* be ready to jump in line to buy whatever next iteration there is. I mean you're talking, what, $850 in the last year alone? I mean
come on. That's just the result of looking for ways to spend money.
Edit: And lemme be clear, here... Spending exorbitant amounts of money on things that can't really be justified most certainly isn't something I'm innocent of myself. But let's be honest about it, y'know? I just grabbed the co-worker's Touch I'm using as an example above (and I had it wrong... it's a 16GB ): 1578 songs, 0 videos, 0 photos, 14.6GB capacity, 7.7GB available (that's his whole collection). I mean... Come on, right?
Edit #2: I had dinner/drinks with another Apple fanatic tonight who's guilty of the same as above. I asked him what the deal was and he said, "Why would you want anything other than the newest version?" Again, I've got no problem with that. My issue is all the "Bu-bu-bu-bu-but no, like, uh, really... I can, uh, realistically justify spending that much because... uh... It... uh... Does video (which I'll probably never use.)" Know what I mean? I mean I'm not saying I've never gotten creative into talking myself into buying stuff, but I'd have a lot less problem with it if people would just come right out and say, "Hell yeah, man! I just want the new stuff because it's
new!" and skip the disingenuous hemming and hawing over what amounts to an insignificant array of "new features."