Apple Backing Away From FireWire 554
farmdwg was one of several readers to submit stories about Apple backing away from FireWire. The latest generation of iPods no longer ship with FireWire cables, but instead use USB 2... although FireWire can still be purchased seperately.
Backing Away? (Score:5, Interesting)
Certainly not. FireWire is still integral; it is the standard for communication with a DV camcorder; it is important to the function of iMovie. The iLife suite is a big draw. I know people buying Macs just because of iLife.
Arguments of which standard is better aside, USB 2.0 is more widely available. As the article states, "It's more cost efficient to ship with one cable rather than two, and USB is more broadly supported on both platforms." It's not Apple backing away, it's Apple making a business decision. If they later remove FireWire support from the device, then you can get upset.
Using USB in the Shuffle was key because the, as mentioned, USB 2.0 is more broadly supported, and the connector is built it. Using FireWire on the Shuffle would have prevented it from reaching its target audience.
Apple is trying to save money and drop prices at the same time. Sure it sucks for us FireWire users. I have several FireWire peripherals and will probably spend the extra $20 getting the FireWire cable when I get my next iPod (hopefully soon). But it's a luxury, because I have USB 2.0 anyway.
Re:Backing Away? (Score:2)
This happens all the time! Remember Betamax? Minidisks? I'm know there are many examples, they just don't come to mind.
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, they must be, since no longer include a dock with most of the iPods.
They also must be backing away from alternating current power, since they don't include an AC adapter with iPod mini any longer.
...
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, Oh! And their backing away from displaying video display, because the Mac Mini doesn't ship with a display like the Imac does.
That settles it: I'm backing away from this article.
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Funny)
Easy for you to say. What are those poor Mac users supposed to do now that Apple has backed away from the keyboard and mouse because the Mac Mini doesn't have those either? Hit the back button? They don't have one!
[ insert no-button mouse joke here ]
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Funny)
Today Apple Computer again revolutionizes the computer industry again by unveiling the no-button mouse! This amazing breakthrough once again affirms apples commitment to simple computing interfaces "for the rest of us".
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Funny)
Think about the wonderful implications of that interface! Now when writing your next email, you can feel like a disk jockey: First, insert "start email" DVD, then insert the DVDs for the letters of the email address (several common address part like
Of course it has a slight drawback: Since you get a few hundred DVDs for the interface, you need some space to store them. But then, you can impress everyone with your big DVD collection!
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Backing Away? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Backing Away? (Score:3, Insightful)
Now that we've established that Apple is "backing away" from FireWire, docks, and AC power, we must also presume that they're "backing away" from keyboards and mice, as the Mac mini no longer ships with them! Clearly, they're also "backing away" from screens: just look at the iPod shuffle!
It couldn't possibly be a decision made to save money! It must be tacit acknowledgment that the standard "lost", and now they're "backing away" from it.
Right?
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Informative)
The *ONLY* difference is that they are no longer shipping the FireWire *CABLE* by default. That's it. That's the only change.
Re:Backing Away? (Score:3, Interesting)
It does, but I'm pretty sure that is because nobody has bothered to make a "smart" USB controller, or if they have because almost everyone puts a dumb USB host controller on their motherboards.
Please note packet size limits, DMA capabilities and the like are all made up for the remainder of this post, because I don't know them and I'm only using them to make a more general point.
It's like all the USB host
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Insightful)
And Mac's still don't amount to a significant percentage of the market.
Apple has realized that, at the right price, they can be a huge player. We all know it isn't in the best interest of the end-user, but if Apple switches from Firewire to USB for most, if not all of their infrastructure, they can attain lower price points. And that's what its all about.
Re:Backing Away? (Score:3, Insightful)
This is only a means of eliminating extra components in the iPod box so the iPod itself can be cheaper without cutting margins much. Also, Apple eliminated the AC charger block with several models, and it's not as if Apple is trying to make it harder to charge an iPod
Re:Backing Away? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a silly statement, and I think you know it. Who is "most people?" If you average it out over the whole world, even the least expensive, $100 iPod shuffle costs something like a year's wages. Of course the iPod is too expensive for most people.
So you have to define your market. Who is the iPod for? It's for people who listen to a lot of music, and it's for people who already own computers. That puts it pretty squarely in the 25-44, $40,0
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Backing Away? (Score:2)
Thats not news, where have you been ?
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Backing Away? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Informative)
Parallel parallel (Score:3, Funny)
This isn't the Apple of old (Score:5, Interesting)
That tells it all. Apple is keeping FireWire, of course. The C|Net "oh my God, we're gonna DIE" headline aside, FireWire is still a very important technology for Apple, particularly because of their investment in FireWire for DV. The distinction is in how a more nuanced Apple is handling it. In the old days Apple would have kept FireWire cabling in the box simply because they felt FireWire was a better technology.
These days Apple has a much, much firmer grip on the realities of the consumer electronics and computer markets, and decisions like this bear that out. As Oculus Habent stated, it does suck for FireWire users, but it's not a terrible burden to bear to have to buy a FireWire cable. This is a case of Apple keeping costs down in an effort to stay one step ahead of the competition.
Re:This isn't the Apple of old (Score:4, Interesting)
At work we have about 15 devices that support firewire and that doesn't count any computers with firewire support.
Mostly, DV Decks, Sony Camcorders, and even a portable drive or two.
Now, I don't particularly love firewire, but it does serve as a cost effective means to get video between our high end equipment and lower end editing computers.
My only annoyance is there is a real lack of deck to deck communication and that in itself is probably the fault of the manufacturers. (varies wildly). I do remember the praises that firewire intelligent devices wouldn't necessarily require a host computer to work with each other. (I believe there are sony dv decks that do this though)
In summary, most of the editing and video stuff is already litered with IEEE1394 interfaces... I'm sure it will die just as soon as beta goes away.
Apple killed firewire with their $ fees (Score:5, Interesting)
But then apple demanded $1 per port, which would mean $5-$10 per PC, plus something for every peripheral.
The result: USB2.0. That's right: USB2 came into existence primarily because of Apple's pricing strategy for 1394 ports.
So it is kind of ironic that they are not shipping firewire on ipods to better serve the PC market. If they hadnt got greedy, there might not be a USB2.
Don't forget the other half of that equasion. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Don't forget the other half of that equasion. (Score:4, Interesting)
Where USB is Intel-centric is in the fact that it is hub and spoke, not P2P. There always needs to be a hub in the connection, which is where the PC fits in. 1394 lets you do fun things like hook up two devices and share data, no pc inside.
If 1394b had also taken off in the consumer space, my back-of-TV infrastructure would not be the mess of SCART, SVHS, Analog and SPDIF cabling that I'm scared of. But either apple or the MPAA got in the way; there is only one 1394 port on the DVD-R, and it is input only. We'll have to wait for gigabit ethernet to become common on home AV kit for that universal home network to become real.
Incidentally,
1. WinXP lets you run TCP over firewire at about 30 MBps (for a 100 or 200 mbit card)
2. WinXp does not support any firewire cards built on chipsets that have promiscuous mode. PCs dont ship with firewire cards that enable sniffing, even with other operating systems installed. that really sucks. I do have some of the older cards around, for just such emergencies.
Re:Backing Away? (Score:3, Interesting)
I already have an iPod and I really don't want to pay for another Dock, carry case or FireWire cable when I upgrade my 30GB 3G.
I think Apple is just responding to the current upgrade situation. With millions of iPo
Re:Backing Away? (Score:5, Funny)
I knew some people need to get a life, but Mac prices these days...
Re:Backing Away? (Score:4, Interesting)
Except this is crap. When I bought my 40GB 3G iPod, it came with only a Firewire cable. At the time, I had a PC with only USB, so I went to the Apple store and bought a cable that has both USB and Firewire connectors. For $20! You could even plug the USB part into the PC and the Firewire into the AC adaptor and you could sync and charge at the same time.
Why doesn't Apple just ship all iPods with this cable and make everyone happy?
Re:Backing Away? (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember, much of Apple's appeal is based on simplicity, and they're delivering it here.
D
Re:Nice way of putting it (Score:3, Insightful)
So you could say... (Score:2, Funny)
Oh, great (Score:5, Informative)
Apple is not "backing away" from FireWire.
What's happening is that the iPod is shipping primarily to Windows PC owners. Many of whom, you know, don't have FireWire. And for the small minority who do, it's anyone's guess whether it's a 4-pin or 6-pin connector.
But they all have USB, and most, USB 2.0.
Apple also isn't shipping some iPods with a dock. Does that mean Apple is also "backing away" from the iPod dock?
What Apple is doing is a cost saving measure, plain and simple. ANYONE on any machine running Mac OS or Windows can use USB for syncing, and most of these customers have USB 2.0. including all recent Macs. And if you really want a FireWire cable, you can get one. I really don't see the problem. The iPod retail boxes are also now not platform-specific, as they were previously.
And far from "backing away" from FireWire, Apple is one of the primary members of the 1394 Trade Association [1394ta.org], an Apple employee is the Chairman of the Board of the 1394 TA [1394ta.org], an Apple employee has perennially been chair of the IEEE-1394 working group, Apple now allows free licensing of the "FireWire" name and logo for all 1394 products, and Apple is shipping 1394b (FireWire 800) on almost all of its products, save some of the "consumer" oriented products, and ALL Apple computers include FireWire. Many include both FireWire 400 (6-pin) and 800 (9-pin).
FireWire is FAR more robust than USB 2.0, and even FireWire 400 is faster in all benchmarks than USB 2.0. FireWire doesn't require a host as USB 2.0; all devices can be peers of one another. Additionally, the latest iterations of FireWire supports speeds up to 3.2 Gbps. There are wireless FireWire over 802.11x implementations planned. See the FireWire 800 Tech Brief [apple.com] for more information.
Additionally, all digital video cameras and decks, including new HDV cameras and decks, include FireWire as the primary - or only - connectivity. Further, starting 1 July 2005, all cable operators must provide a functional FireWire port on all HD digital set top boxes.
So no, Apple isn't "backing away" from FireWire. It's saving money on the new round of iPods by including a cable that 100% of its purchasers are guaranteed to be able to use, instead of a FireWire cable that the Mac users might be able to use, but the vast majority of PC users won't, and even if they HAVE FireWire, would have a 50/50 chance of being the wrong one. Not to mention that Apple got away from the iPod "for Mac" and iPod "for Windows" delineation and now ships them generically for both platforms.
I had a first generation iPod (Score:5, Funny)
One time I left the wire at a friend's house. Long story, don't ask. It involved making a CD. And then I couldn't use the firewire. I had a conversation on the phone and gave a bunch of reasons why I needed the firewire. My friend thought his house was going to catch on fire and he got very scared.
Long story? NO it is very short. But the key thing is that USB is a bit easier to find at Circuit City. It takes longer to say. Maybe Fire wire can be shortened to FI WI.
Anyway. I love animals. I want to get a iPod Photo so I can keep pictures of deer on it. Does it take USB or FI WI?
THanks you president Washington.
Re:Oh, great (Score:3, Insightful)
After all
-S
Re:Oh, great (Score:3, Interesting)
So why not offer the purchaser an option? (Score:5, Insightful)
Flexibility is a good thing.
It increases their cost to market. (Score:2, Informative)
Also, retailers probably wouldn't stock the Firewire version since there's less of a market need for it.
I'm sure if Apple thought it would sell, they would do it. As it is, Apple cables are $20 and aftermarket cables will probably be even cheaper.
Re:So why not offer the purchaser an option? (Score:2)
Re:So why not offer the purchaser an option? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So why not offer the purchaser an option? (Score:3, Insightful)
Imagine buying a new HP/Gateway/whatever at the store. You get the computer box, and then they say, "Now, do you need the US power kit or the International power kit? Do you need the stereo speaker cable, or the 5.1 surround-sound cable, or do you have your own? Do you want the black cartridge, the color cartridge, the black and color, or
Re:So why not offer the purchaser an option? (Score:5, Insightful)
4 colors of iPod Mini in two sizes (4&6GB): 8 SKUs
4 colors of iPod Mini in two sizes (4&6GB) with USB/FW option: 16 SKUs.
All of this includes subtle changes to packaging, manufacturing, and support. IT's far nicer for Apple to say "Here's USB. If you like Firewire go buy a cable for it, after all, it'll still work"
I Call Bullshit (Score:4, Insightful)
They did not include a firewire cable. There is still a firewire connector.
This was a cost savings move and nothing more.
And it makes the front page of /.
Why do I come here anymore?
SteveM
.Re:I Call Bullshit (Score:5, Funny)
While I normally despie "I call BS" posts ... (Score:5, Interesting)
This was a cost savings move and nothing more.
And it makes the front page of
Why do I come here anymore?
I'm starting to wonder the same thing. Slashdot has never been known for its "vetting" of stories, or even much editing of the captions, but the last few weeks it's become really terrible. Stories spinning the broadcast flag and attempted banning of digital HDTV VCR-like hardware as "piracy prevention", pro-ms stories rearing their heads more and more in what is (or was) supposed to be a free software/opensource news and discussion forum, and an ever increasing number of flat-out misleading headlines that misrepresent TFAs, and links to TFAs that are flagrant products of MPAA/RIAA shills
Anyone know of any decent competitors out there?
Re:While I normally despie "I call BS" posts ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Um. Hold on there, Sparky. The motto says "news for nerds." (The "stuff that matters" part is clearly sarcasm. I mean, duh.)
Contrary to what you seem to think, not all nerds buy into the propaganda that hobbyist-made software is better than, or even as good as, professionally-made software. In fact, speaking purely from my own anecdotal experience with zero scientific validity, I don't know anybody who still drinks the Li
Re:Where did all of the Apple fanboys come from? (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, you're completely wrong.
Mac OS X is actually the number one shipping UNIX/UNIX-like OS in the world, surpassing Linux and all commercial UNIXes.
Yes, surpassing Linux.
No, not just on the desktop.
Yes, even servers.
(Okay, maybe not on embedded devices, but definitely in computers/servers/workstations. By far.)
Apple, in unit shipments, is the largest vendor of UNIX systems in the world. They may not be us
Errata (Score:3, Informative)
The "12 million" figure is from June, 2004 (source: 23:40 of WWDC keynote [apple.com])
As of January 2005, the figure is now over 14 million. (Source: 5:20 of Macworld Expo San Francisco 2005 keynote [apple.com])
I know why I keep reading /. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I know why I keep reading /. (Score:4, Funny)
By that metric, I'm more than twice as cool! Yeah, I'll probably get modded down because this post was stupid but I'll take any opportunity I can to show off...
Re:I know why I keep reading /. (Score:5, Funny)
By that metric, I'm more than twice as cool! Yeah, I'll probably get modded down because this post was stupid but I'll take any opportunity I can to show off...
Holy shit, I'm 4 times as cool! I must be frickin Cool as Ice [google.com]
(What's sad is this is, atleast, the second thread about UIDs attached to this story... maybe because there is no story here so we are all just going to sit around bs-ing.
Which raises the question: (Score:2)
Re:Which raises the question: (Score:4, Informative)
Excellent obfuscation! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Which raises the question: (Score:3, Informative)
My memory could be faulty, of course, so your takeaway should be this: not much speed difference.
Re:Which raises the question: (Score:3, Insightful)
Both have their advantages, and their place. The differences are likely inconsequential for the common use case - i.e. load up a bunch of crap, add and change incrementally from there on in - and packaging the cable for the nigh ubiquitous technology in the box makes a lot of sense from a co
misleading headline (Score:5, Insightful)
They are simply making a very logical business decision for their iPod line. There are a number of people who may opt to not buy an iPod because they do not have firewire inputs on their machine. Apple has got around this by including adapter cables in the past, but because the bulk of their business goes to Windows users (many of whom don't have firewire)... the cables are an unneded expense now that the iPod can be powered through USB2.
Firewire is still very intregal to Apple... the same way Firewire has become very intregal to the industry at large.
"Backing away"??? (Score:2, Insightful)
It doesn't mean that Apple is "backing away" from Firewire, just that they've done some market researc
Unlikely (Score:2)
Cost-cutting genuis (Score:2, Insightful)
Why not?
Nothing to see here... (Score:4, Informative)
No change in iPods themselves or in functionality or in future functionality as far as anyone can tell. Apple knows most PC users throw the firewire cable in a drawer or leave it in the box.
If you want to use firewire and don't already have an extra cable you'll need to buy one. (Or hit up your PC using friend for their old one.)
Okay... I'm still not seeing the story here.
=tkk
even as a Mac fan/user... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:even as a Mac fan/user... (Score:5, Informative)
It's been a long time since I read up on this, so correct me if I'm wrong.
Re:even as a Mac fan/user... (Score:5, Informative)
Re: firewire, USB and bandwidth (Score:3, Interesting)
After much testing and speculation, folks seemed to pretty much determine it was a problem caused by Apple's iSight firewire camera combined with an iPod on the firewire interface. Apparently, the iSight, when turned on, consumes the majority of the bandwidth on the firewire 400 b
Re:even as a Mac fan/user... (Score:3, Interesting)
There's one good reason to have both cables... (Score:3, Informative)
Listen to what you're saying... (Score:5, Insightful)
OK, think about that. Now think about this: A majority of the people buying iPods have Windows PCs. I'm going out on a limb and saying most PCs I've seen do not have Firewire by default. So why include a cable that most people aren't going to use when you can leave it out, save money by leaving it out AND get more money when people have to buy the cable seperately.
Simple economics. So for all you tin-foil hat wearers:
Removing the Firewire cable from the iPod package does not mean they're backing off support for Firewire.
Removing the ability for the iPods to connect via Firewire DOES mean they're backing off support for Firewire.
But the latter has not and probably will not happen. The FW cable being included was just legacy from when iPods were Mac-only since most Macs had FW for sometime and USB1.1 was inadequate for transfering GB to the iPod.
Can you boot from the iPod now? (Score:3, Interesting)
Might be backing away for iPod ONLY (Score:5, Insightful)
My guess is they are trying to standardize on USB to cut costs.
USB 2.0 is good enough for simple file transfer for 3-8 MB music files and pictures. Syncing an iPod doesn't copy over all 40 GBs of music files at the same time from one device to the other. Firewire is better for high end device connectivity and that big ass multimedia some Mac users are famous for.
There is a problem though... they are leaving their older mac customers a little cold. Many older macs only have USB 1.0 but have firewire. Macs were unfortunately slow to adopt USB 2.0 compared to windows. Intel was trying to compete with the firewire speeds by getting USB up to a comparable transfer rate. Now in order to buy the same thing a 2 year old windows user can use, they have to buy an extra cable at extra expense.
It could be argued that the company that sells computers considered to be "second class" to the computing world is making second class users out of their Mac/iPod loyalists. Irony doesn't begin to describe it.
CNet's Ina Fried is a HACK (Score:5, Informative)
But, don't take my word for it, just notice the next time Ina writes about Apple (or search on Google for previous articles). This really is the epitome of hack writing.
To wit: the "subheading" on the 2nd page of this article is "Who's a niche technology now, huh?" setting up the entire thing as some sort of vindication on the USB v. FireWire wars.
As others have noted, this is a business move to cut costs by not shipping a FW cable. That's it. No cable.
I truly believe Ina does this to draw eyes to CNet.
(also check out Ina's "breaking" news from Microsoft...ever couple of weeks there's an article with the tag "CNet has learned" that wraps a puff piece pushing some new MS technology. "Hi Ina? This is X from Microsoft. Here's a scoop. Oh, and here's the article you're supposed to write. Thanks and nice article on FireWire the other day!")
Not likely... (Score:5, Informative)
More likely, this is just because USB is more ubiquitous and it's cheaper to ship one cable than two.
Just refocusing for their user base (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple is making a business decision to remove one cable and sell it seperately. This won't affect their video products or the fact that a firewire port will continue to be included on every Mac.
Get a Clue (Score:3, Interesting)
Plus they get the 19.99 from people who want firewire cables.
Geez...
this made out to be a big freaking deal.... it's not
now microsoft selling products to protect you from their insecure products... that's disturbing
Everyone wins (Score:4, Insightful)
In the end this allows Apple to sell their products for less and get rid or redundancy. Honestly, how many non- geeks benefit from having the option of a Firewire connection?
The real question: Is Apple backing away from AC adaptors?
From TFA (Score:5, Funny)
"Completely dismayed??" Seriously? Not only do these people apparently have no lives such that the discontinuing of standard firewire support would leave them completely dismayed, but APPLE ISN'T EVEN DISCONTINUING FIREWIRE SUPPORT! They're just not including a cable in the box.
These people are dedicated Mac fans, spending the substantial sums you pay for Mac quality, but they can't bear to pay a little extra to get a firewire cable? Not only that, but if they have a previous iPod with a firewire cable, I'm sure they can continue to use that cable if they upgrade.
Now, I do think it would be nice if Apple gave an option between USB and Firewire, but this is really NOT a big deal.
Backing away ... with iPods (Score:4, Insightful)
I'll buy "backing away from Firewire" when we stop seeing Firewire ports on their desktops. Not until then.
Backing away or responding to a market? (Score:3, Insightful)
This is just a case of serving your market. New Macs support USB 2.0 and iPod buyers that don't have USB 2.0 can purchase the FireWire cable.
Yeah it stinks that the APPLE owners are the ones to get burned on this deal, but it doesn't make sense to offer a feature most of your users cannot make any use of when an alternative feature exists that most can.
Do these reporters ever buy a printer? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:First Post! (Score:3, Informative)
It does require additional components, and I can't speak to the cost or battery consumption thereof. I doubt it adds more than $10 to the manufactured cost... probably less.
Re:First Post! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Compatibility (Score:3, Insightful)
Last I checked, IEEE 1394 had less overhead than USB. What this means is that more of the transmission on IEEE 1394 is your data than some kind of header information, which translates to faster downloads to the device. Think of the cell tax when using ATM-based networks. It's a similar concept.
Besides, VHS may have won the home video tape wars, but that didn't make it better than Betamax.
Re:Compatibility (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually VHS was better for the consumer, and that's why it "won". Betamax may have had better picture quality, but it didn't have as much capacity per tape. No one wants to have to change tapes half way through a movie, particularly while recording. It was also more expensive, and VHS quickly moved into markets Betamax wasn't interested in (i.e. porn). These three factors added up to VHS being better for mo
Re:Compatibility (Score:3, Insightful)
I am glad for this, as firewire is less common than USB 2. The sooner we all agree on a single standard the better.
Yeah, but why does it always have to be the one that does not work as well?
Re:Compatibility (Score:5, Insightful)
So lets, see, my Mac has USB for the keyboard and mouse, Firewire for my external hard drives, a VGA port for the monitor and a 10/100/1000 ethernet port for network. Looks just about perfect! Oh, and guess what, my iPod will plug into either the USB or the Firewire ports, how convenient!
Re:Compatibility (Score:5, Insightful)
Ack! If you don't know what you're talking about, please don't talk.
There are many areas in which USB does not compare to Firewire. This isn't a field where we want to get rid of one just because it's less common than the other. Might just as well say we should drop Linux and Macs in favor of a single Microsoft Windows standard, because Windows is much more popular. Go find me a DV camera that has a USB 2.0 port and no Firewire port. USB is good for peripherals like keyboards, mice and printers. Firewire is good for higher bandwidth applications like digital video production and fast external storage drives. The two are not really in conflict, and even if they were, dropping Firewire would be the wrong answer.
That's also why this article is complete and utter FUD, because Apple is doing no such thing. The iPod still has a Firewire port, they are just saving a few bucks and leaving out the Firewire cable because most of the iPod buyers at this point don't use it (since most PCs don't have Firewire). Slashdot should really be ashamed for letting this kind of krud get to their front page. Ha!
Re:This really sucks. (Score:3, Informative)
I mean, you could stand on one hill, and I could stand on the other, and I could turn my flashlight on and off and send you the millions of 1's and 0's that compose the MP3, and when you typed them all into the computer the file would sound just as good.
Digital != Analog.
Re:This really sucks. (Score:2)
It's *digital*. You can transmit it over bent coat hangers and it won't change the quality. As long as the 1s and 0s get there intact, the result will be the same.
Re:This really sucks. (Score:2)
I'm not sure if you knew this or not, but the firewire cable doesn't play the music for you. It's used to send bits of data to the iPod. The bits of data are the same regardless of the cable you use to connect it to the computer.
Re:This really sucks. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Has Firewire Really caught on? (Score:5, Informative)
I mean is USB 2 good enough? Or do we need it?
Good enough for what? Firewire and USB are fundamentally different. Firewire isn't as ubiquitous as USB due mostly to marketing, but you won't find any digital video cameras with USB 2.0 ports instead of Firewire ports. Firewire isn't going anywhere, and neither is Apple backing away from it. Every Mac made in the last few years comes with at least one Firewire 400 port (powered 6-pin port, even on the little iBooks!) and new Macs also have Firewire 800, which blows USB 2.0 away speedwise almost as bad as Firewire 400 outstripped USB 1.1. Well, not quite, but it does kick ass.
Main point being, Apple would be totally insane to "back away" from Firewire in any way. This whole article is utter nonsense.
Firewire has a great many advantages in design, most of which I'm not qualified to describe, but one important thing to many of us is that Firewire drives are bootable on any Mac with a Firewire port. AFAIK you can't boot from USB devices on a Mac. Anyone doing DV work uses Firewire. It has more than enough bandwidth for even the fastest external hard drives. And that's just Firewire 400 (IEEE 1394a) not the new Firewire 800 (IEEE 1394b).
If you read the post carefully and don't even bother with the article, all it says is that you have to buy the $20 Firewire cable separately. In other words, the iPod still has Firewire built-in! Hello, McFly! This is merely to save costs since most of the buyers of iPods these days are PC users, most of which don't have Firewire, so the cables are being wasted if most of the users never use them. Now that (as another poster stated) the new iPods aren't platform-specific like previous versions, they can't do separate packaging for Windows users.
What's the big deal? If the iPod has a standard Firewire connector you don't even have to buy the cable from Apple. Get one from your local computer store or Newegg.com or Cyberguys.com and save a few bucks. Get one with a 4-pin connector to fit your PC laptop if it doesn't have a standard 6-pin connector. I would have to do this for my laptop.
I'm not too bright most days, but even I can state with certainty that this Slashdot article is pure, unadulterated F.U.D. Total bullshit. As we all know this isn't a real news site. If it were, any editor who let crap of this magnitude be posted on the front page would be looking for a new job.
I can also say this: If I had paid for a
Re:Has Firewire Really caught on? (Score:4, Informative)
A point of contention. Firewire 400 allows a maximum of 50 MBps but realistic throughput is around 30 MBps (LaCie has data on this). A 7200 rpm 3.5" IDE drive can r/w at around 80 MBps. That's why Firewire 800 is attractive to some.
However, that's not why DV people use firewire. They use it because it is the standard. Digital video is fixed at around 3.3 MBps, which USB 2.0 can handle, but USB is not the standard
You're right about booting though. I can even boot my Mac from a Firewire enclosure holding an NEC DVD+/-RW and Apple's install CD.
Re:Has Firewire Really caught on? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why 2 standards? (Score:3, Informative)
This must seriously be a joke, right? First, to clarify, Firewire 400, which the iPod uses, runs at 400 megabits per second, not 800. Firewire 800 runs at 800 mbps. Secondly, USB2 runs at 480 megabits per second, not "840," so I just don't know where this came from. Aside from the fact that all these figures are theoretical maximums and not real-world performance, it's not particularly likely that ANYONE is going to notice the difference between 400 and 480; the real bottleneck is the iPod
Re:So, what does it mean? (Score:5, Informative)
USB 2 will never take the place of FireWire for video. I mean, it just can't. FireWire 400 can be used to transport either compressed or uncompressed standard-definition video reliably; USB 2 can't. FireWire 800 can be used for studio-quality compressed HD; USB 2 can't come close.
On the other hand, you'd never plug your keyboard into your FireWire port.
So don't think of them as equivalent. They're not. They're two totally different technologies that happen to overlap in small-scale desktop mass storage. That happens to be the niche that the iPod fits into, so that's why we're talking about it.
For iPod users, it probably doesn't matter whether they pick USB 2 or FireWire. But for all those other applications, there's a clear delineation between the two interfaces.
Re:So, what does it mean? (Score:3, Insightful)
It didn't. Fibre channel did. And at that, it only replaced the physical layer. FC storage devices use SCSI protocols. Again, that's a case where there was very slight overlap between two technologies. IDE is only useful for host-to-internal-storage interfacing, and with a limit of two devices per bus it scales very poorly for other applications. SCSI wasn't targeted for that application.
Remember BetaMax and VHS?
Bad example. Betamax was a co
Re:Denial (Score:3, Insightful)
...is FireWire used as the only standard on all digital and HDV camcorders, professional cameras, and decks and VTRs?
...is FireWire required on all digital HD set top boxes [fcc.gov] beginning 1 July 2005?
...do all these high end consumer, "prosumer", and professional AV and computing devices [1394ta.org] ship with FireWire?
FireWire is *far superior* to USB 2.0 - for the things that its used for. We're not talking about keyboards and mice and printers here. We're talking about a high-speed, peer-to-peer (unlike USB, w
USB 2.0 high speed is not new on Mac (Score:3, Insightful)
I wouldn't want to transfer tens of gigs of music to an iPod with USB 1.1. It can do about 1 mbyte/s, so that's about 3.6 gigs per hour... 5.7 hours for 20 gigs, 8.5 for 30, 16.1 for 60.
'Course, my collection is 11 gigs, the subset I listen to is about 6, and when I transfer stuff to my shuffle the biggest slowdown is from transcoding to AAC (lower quality, but also lower
Re:USB 2 is better (Score:3, Insightful)
I take it you've never seen the iPod's FW cable? Both FW and USB cables that came with my 4G 20G clickwheel are equally thin and flexible (and yes, white ;-)).
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