iPod Nano 2010
Apple’s iPod nano has been completely redesigned with the same Multi-Touch technology running iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. Now it’s 46 percent smaller, 42 percent lighter, in sleek anodized aluminum, and seven bright colors.
The new built-in clip makes it easy to attach to your sleeve, jacket, running shorts, or bag so you can walk, run, ride, workout, or dance with your favorite songs. iPod nano also doubles as a pedometer. The 1.5-inch color display with 240-by-240 pixel resolution allows you to show off your album art, photos, or wallpaper.
Give iPod nano a shake and it shuffles to a different song in your music library. Shake to Shuffle is perfect for when you’re not in any particular music mood. Or, say you’re listening to a song you love and you want to stay in the groove. Just tap Genius. It finds other songs on your iPod nano that go great together.
You can ride the FM airwaves while the screen shows the artist, song, or program you’re listening to. Just tap to see the radio controls, flick the radio dial to change stations, and tap to set your favorites. The built-in rechargeable lithium-ion battery gives you up to 24 hours of nonstop music.
Multi-Touch Magic Mouse
Apple has built a better mouse… the world’s first Multi-Touch mouse. There’s no scroll ball, no wheel, no cord, and no visible button. Instead, Magic Mouse uses Multi-Touch technology to let you control everything with simple gestures.
The seamless Multi-Touch surface covers the entire top surface of Magic Mouse, and the mouse itself is the button. Scroll in any direction with one finger, swipe through web pages and photos with two, and click and double-click anywhere. Inside Magic Mouse is a chip that tells it exactly what you want to do.
Scrolling with Magic Mouse isn’t your everyday scrolling. It supports momentum scrolling, where the scrolling speed is dictated by how fast or slowly you perform the gesture.
Magic Mouse uses powerful laser tracking that’s far more sensitive and responsive on more surfaces than traditional optical tracking. That means it tracks with precision on nearly every surface without the need for a mousepad.
Built-in software lets you configure Magic Mouse any way you want. Its smooth, seamless design is ambidextrous, and it supports two-button clicking – without buttons.
And, it’s wireless, too. A quick flick of the on/off switch helps conserve battery power while Magic Mouse is tucked in your bag. Even when it’s on, Magic Mouse manages power efficiently, by detecting periods of inactivity automatically.





