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The Prehistoric iPod
Oct 13th, 2006 by scaredpoet

RooPaq

You’re looking at what was the State of the Art in portable hard drive-based MP3 players, before Apple finally released the iPod in late 2001. Meet the Genica RooPaq. Essentially, it was little more than a 2.5 inch hard drive enclosure, with a USB interface, two-line LCD text-only display, a battery and the bare minimum chipset needed to play MP3 audio files. It came with exactly zero bytes of disk space; the idea was that you could open the unit up and install a laptop hard drive of “any size,” and you could then dictate how much space you wanted the player to have. The cost? $299 plus the cost of the hard drive.
It was released shortly after rumors began surfacing of Apple’s pending entry into the music player market, and I imagine its manufacturer wanted to get a head start in order to beat Apple at its own game. They probably thought they had a winner, too. Why would anyone pay $500 for an overpriced iPod when for almost a quarter of the price less you could have something that does the same thing?

And I agreed. A full summer before the original iPod debuted, I bought a RooPaq off eBay. It was a bit larger than a brick, and came about as close in weight. With the 20GB hard drive I installed constantly spinning when powered up, the player had a then-impressive 1.5 to 2 hours of run time between charges. There was no slick iTunes-like interface to manage content; the method of transfer was simple drag-and-drop of the files through a connected computer’s operating system. Yes, it was The Shit. And as I lugged this beast around with me, I too thought “what is Apple thinking? No one is going to buy an iPod when they can have one of these!”

Then I got to see an iPod on display. Marvelled at its tiny size and 10-hour battery life, stood agog at its elegantly simple yet effective interface, and realized that sometimes looks are everything. And I knew I had been robbed.

Well, not really robbed. No matter how great the interface was, I still fresh out of college and quite broke at the time. Barely able to justify the RooPaq’s expense, there was no way I could shell out $500 for a simple mp3 player, no matter how good the features. But I did save my pennies for the day when I could get one.

A plane crashes and it’s panic, panic, panic!
Oct 11th, 2006 by scaredpoet

crash

So, a small single engine plane crashed in a Manhattan high rise today. It wasn’t a notably big plane, and it didn’t hit a notably significant building. The Department of Homeland Security has said there is no reason to believe that this is a prelude to a terrorist attack. Even so, the cable news networks are all over the story, and the stock market decided it was TIME TO PANNIXORZ!

Sadly, 9/11 has launched us well into the age of hypernews, where ever minor event evokes extreme panic and sends shockwaves through financial markets for absolutely no reason at all.  Where every sneeze of a suspected terrorist, true or not, is caught in the 24/7 TV news ticker (which is also an invention of 9/11).   Where anchorpersons gasp the word “unbelievable” to describe a sad-but-routine news story amid repeated looping footage of the event from an amateur videographer.  And where more “boring” but significantly more important stories, like the fact that North Korea can nuke people now, are swept aside.

Ah journalism, what has become of you?


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