Summary: The iPod nano was introduced in 2005 and came with a flash memory, solid state memory, no moving parts and a 2-inch diagonal screen. Discover how the iPod nano has many of the same feature of the classic iPod with help from a digital technology specialist in this free video on iPod nanos.
Christopher Rokosz has been an actor, director and producer for more than two decades, and he is now the co-owner and executive producer of Rokosz Media Studios in St Petersburg, Fla....read more
"It's Rokosz, your digital lifestyle expert here talkin' about the iPod Nano. Well, the iPod Nano was first introduced to the market in September of two-thousand and five, came on board to us with a flash memory, solid state memory, no moving parts and the actual hard drive itself, and a two inch diagonal screen. A little tiny, but when it first hit the market, I mean, we're lookin' at something this thin, this small, and you could watch a major motion picture on it, absolutely ridiculous. It was, it was something special. Now they've now released a newer version of it but the only thing that's really changed with that is A, it's available in more colors, and B, it's got a slightly different umm, slightly different body style. It's a lot more contoured and a lot more, umm, oblong, if you will. It's a here that the iPod Nano really takes a lot of it's styling from it's bigger brother the iPod classic, including the classic click wheel navigation. The navigation of it becomes exactly the same. It really has almost all of the features of the iPod classic, just well, Nano-er, Nano-ier, smaller. I mean, you could lose this thing. Do I have it? Do I not? Whoo! And you can, like I say, watch a major motion picture. So it becomes a really neat device. It's a good starter iPod for those of you want to teach your children responsibility and maybe not wantin' to jump up to the bigger one, or flat out don't have the need to have a gigantic hard drive to carry different things in it. Also another use for these is well, running and exercising. It's still full feature, full functioning, but it doesn't, it doesn't have the weight. I'll be honest, with the iPhone and the bigger classics, no matter how good your casing is, when you get some bouncing going on, you know, it's a little tiny bit of weight there and well, physics takes over and you get the bouncing effect so the iPod Nano, huh, kind of a cool device if you're lookin' for somethin' to take a lot of entertainment with you in a small package, consider it. Rokosz, your digital lifestyle expert sayin' "stream ya later!""
eHow Article: About the iPod nano