This post was written while listening to music and, chances are, some of you are reading it while doing the same. There’s this inexplicable vitality in having the eardrums coated in these tantalizing sounds. Stop that thought and rewind: twenty years ago those sounds gained a new personal rhythm as the original iPod was being born.

It wasn’t the first machine to put a library of sound in your pocket, but it’s the tool that accelerated its democratization, iTunes be damned. My first iPod was the nano, scratched and dented by now, it was the rectangle that made me understand that memories with music are more colorful, deeply etched in a life with its own soundtrack.

I remember, however, seeing the original iPod for the first time whilst on a bus, white earbuds turned fashion statement visible to the world to see and covet. I wanted to meet that person; to ask him how it was to live in the cool lane. It was never about musical taste, but about that convenience, that isolation from the sea of voices and car horns.

My nano, then, was not just the reliable ascension when the dull world of noises was muted, but me listening to what I wanted, when I wanted. Gone were the finicky, analog limitations of my first Walkman and the unpredictable jumps, skips and cuts sponsored by my Discman.

With the iPod, Apple revolutionized one of our senses.

And if you are thinking that sentence sounds like marketing lingo ready to be printed on the side of a bus, the iPod also triumphed because of that, the art of selling you something and shaping the overall feel you have with it. But here it’s not detrimental, because it was a good product when the world needed precisely that solution.

I hope this thread has two parallel muscles in the comments. The first is about these two decades; it’s my honest invitation for you to celebrate the machine that through the years was polished and adjusted, transformed, engulfed by the smartphone. And what better way to start by looking at this prototype, iPod’s inside disguised in an ugly, oversized plastic shell. It was to hide its final design and it existed really close to the official unveiling.

The second muscle is your trajectory with music products. Which ones did you use until the point where the ear (1) became part of your daily routine? My only request is that you also bring to this thread the memories and the feelings you have attached to them.

My favorite product can be a terrible one, that’s fine; and your heart may hate the iPod, that’s fine too. This is about your walk of life, about what you utilized and what those products left behind in you. Do you think the ear (1) will have a place in your personal hall of fame or is the tech consumerism nothing more than a revolving door, product in, product out?

    I first joined the white headphones club as a kid with the 2nd Gen iPod Shuffle - a vital accessory to gaining respect in the school playground at the time! And whilst I don’t recall every device that I’ve owned since then, the one that stands out in my memory is the Archos 405 - which even for the time, was absolutely awful 😆. 0/10, would not recommend.

    Archos 405 review: Archos 405 - Page 2 - CNET

    I like to think that I’ll remember my ear (1) fondly, my experience with them continues to be great, and I’ll likely always attribute them to the fun I’ve had being a part of this Community.

      Archive (bot) Indeed, this thread made me proper think about my first Walkman. I remember it had a button that always confused me. “Mega Bass” was its name, and I also remember not being able to hear a difference.

      The Discman arrived during my teenage years, so I was a kid when I dedicated part of my sanity trying to understand that feature. I guess that I can see it now as an early lesson: marketing is a powerful tool. 😆

      So you were powerless to fix the button of your MP3 player? 🥲 😅

      Rob ⚡️ Hah, I saw the image before reading your post and it looks really stylish and futuristic for the time, I thought your were going to give it a glowing review.

      I completely agree with you about the ear (1) - and I think this sends a clear message to the company. Yes, the product is good, charismatic even, but for many of us it is associated with this place, now and for the foreseeable future.

      Speaking about the Walkman, I was always curious to try the Sony NW-WM1Z (yes, Sony truly loves to make their models easy to remember). It takes the word “premium” to a whole new level. 💸

      a month later

      Cheetosdust

      Great discussion and like @[deleted] mentioned, it’s always great to head back down memory lane with these topics!

      I wasn’t rich enough at the time to initially own an iPod, so I had to settle for a standard MP3 player that held about 50 songs at the time, it looked a little like this:

      However, after getting myself a job at the local supermarket and saving up a little bit, I managed to join the iconic iPod club at the Nano stage, closely followed by the 5th Gen Classic which essentially kept me going through secondary school, until mobile phones started having storage and music players. It was at this point that I jumped ship to the Sony W810i and left the whole iPod scene.

      I actually wrote a really compelling dissertation at University all about the iPod, with a focus on how the iPod had a hand in killing MP3 as a player, the whole marketing around the white earphones and cables, PR successes and then ultimately introducing iTunes and the first iPhone.

      I definitely can’t wait to start my ear(1) journey soon, but in the meantime I thought i’d jump in on the audio action and share my story 😃

      2 years later