
Web page shuffle when shut donw full#
A green light indicates a full charge yellow indicates a low charage red indicates a battery on its last legs, and no light at all indicates a dead (battery-wise) iPod shuffle.Īutofill is a special function where a playlist can be chosen in iTunes 4.7.1 and later versions of iTunes for the iPod shuffle to fill in songs. However, older models allowed you to press the button next to the battery icon (just like on an iBook or PowerBook). There is no battery meter at the back of the newer iPod shuffle. From the topmost button on the outside ring-shaped button in clockwise order, there are the volume up, forward, volume down and reverse buttons.

The central button is the play/pause button. The side with the rounded buttons contains two buttons with five functions. To switch hold mode off, hold down the play/pause button for three second until the LED flashes orange three times. A sign that hold mode is on can be seen when the user presses any button a orange LED flashes (instead of a green LED when hold mode is off). To switch hold mode on, hold down the play/pause button for three seconds until the LED flashes green three times. Like other iPods, hold mode is available on the iPod shuffle, although activating it is more tricky. No bit of green showing means that the iPod shuffle is in play in order mode a bit of green showing indicates that the music will be shuffled. IPod shuffle can play songs either according to a set order in the playlist, or can play songs from that playlist in a random order ("shuffle"). Like other iPods, disk mode can be activated, and on a USB 2.0 connection, the transfer speeds roughly equate to that of FireWire 400 disk mode. ITunes 4.7.1 and later revisions, which support the iPod shuffle, actually contains a switch (in iPod Preferences), which allows the user to choose between how much space is given to the iPod for music and for other data files. Storage can be doubled if AAC encoding is used for songs.

A smaller version (512 MB) was briefly sold and then discontinued. The capacity for the iPod shuffle is 1 GB, which can hold up to 240 songs (based on a standard of 4 minutes per song in AAC format). Following the launch of the iPod nano in September 2005, the price of the 1 GB version was reduced again to $99, and the 512 MB version was lowered to $69. On June 28, 2005, the 1 GB version of the iPod shuffle had its price lowered from US$149 to 129.
