Apple iPod nano (3rd gen, video) review

In this review

Features
The third-generation nano's piece de resistance is its support for video playback. Like the video iPod, the iPod nano supports H.264 or MPEG4 video in either MOV, MP4 or M4V file formats, with a maximum resolution of 640x480 pixels at as much as 30 frames per second.

You can buy videos through the iTunes online store or import them into iTunes and convert them for playback. (Many third-party software video converters also do a great job converting videos for the iPod.) Despite its size, the nano supports video features we seldom find on portable video players twice its size.

For instance, the nano can recognise and skip between the DVD-like chapter markers embedded in QuickTime movie files. It also does a dependable job automatically resuming video playback at the point that you last left off. As a bonus, the new iPod nano and iPod classic now properly launch video podcasts ('vodcasts') as videos, instead of mistaking them for audio podcasts when launched from within the Music menu.


Split-screen menus make browsing much more fun

Another major new feature is support for iTunes videogames. While the selection of iPod videogames has grown slowly, three tried-and-true standards come bundled with the nano right out of the box: a congenial game of Solitaire, a trivia game called iQuiz, and the brick-pummelling Vortex (think Breakout on steroids). While the games are a handy way to pass some time, don't expect the nano to compete with the Sony PSP anytime soon.

Looking past the obvious big-ticket improvements, the new nano includes some small touches that are easy to miss. Apple's music shuffle function, for instance, has made a subtle evolution, now letting you easily engage and disengage the shuffle function on the fly with just a few presses on the Click Wheel's centre button. By placing the shuffle setting options (Shuffle Song, Shuffle Album or Shuffle Off) in a song's Now Playing window, Apple is effectively giving you the ability to randomise songs until you find an artist you like -- a lazy listener's dream come true.

Apple hasn't changed its audio file format support. Copy-protected AAC files purchased through iTunes are supported, of course, as well as MP3, Apple lossless, AIFF, WAV and Audible files. We're happy to see that despite the iPhone's unique file-management requirements, the iPod nano allows for the manual addition and deletion of music and video files without the hassles of playlist syncing. The nano can also double as a USB flash drive in a pinch.

While the iPod nano is a top-tier product, we long for some additional features, including the ability to use the headphone jack as a composite-video output, allowing photos and videos to be played to your television set without a third-party interface.

While we can understand removing the little-used AV output feature to save on construction costs, we're even more surprised that Apple has rendered all current iPods incompatible with a number of third-party fifth-generation video accessories as well.

If you're hoping to use a new iPod nano or iPod classic with an existing video dock, be sure to check that the product explicitly states it is compatible with third-generation iPod nanos. Apple's own Universal iPod Dock and Component AV Cable are guaranteed to work, of course.

Plus, there's our standard list of long-neglected iPod features: FM radio, line-input recording, SD memory expansion, custom equaliser, and native support for WMA and subscription music services. We're not holding our breath.

User reviews4

Add your review

Znxs67's avatar
3.5 stars out of 5

Znxs67 4 October 2010

Good: Small & Light

Bad: iTunes

Comment: Good little ipod but i would still go for a Zen as it is alot easier to organize you music.

I own it
Charlie Amos's avatar
2 stars out of 5

Charlie Amos 20 September 2010

Good: Easy to carry

Bad: Scratches easily, The system crashes frequently, Itunes is a pain.

Comment: m

I own it
Richard Matthews's avatar
4.5 stars out of 5

Richard Matthews 22 June 2008

Good: Best MP3 player I've owned by miles

Bad: Too easy to leave in a pocket and put in the wash

Comment: Once again, CNETs reviews just don't ring true with me. I've disliked iPods for one of the reasons you've criticised this one, i.e. they just haven't sounded any good. But the 3rd gen nano is a different story. Gone is that boring lifeless sound thats completely lacking in dynamics and we now have something that really does convey instruments, timing and the communication that the musicians intended. It's had me listening to more music than anything I've played MP3s with before.
I have done a blind comparison between the other MP3 players you mention and the nano beats all of them. The Creative Zen V Plus is not a very good sounding player and goes into distortion once you get the volume beyond 20, it's brash and spitty treble is a put off after about 20 minutes of listening. The iAudio machines on the other hand are excellent and I have used one of these for the last few years as they have been the best sounding players up until now. The 3rd gen nano has all of the qualities of the iAudio but the iAudio by comparison has a slightly metallic sounding edge to instruments. The nano is just that bit more natural sounding.
What does sadden me is that this excellent new sound quality level that Apple have found for the nano has not been carried over to the iPod Touch. The Touch loses a lot of the subtleties and detail that the nano conveys and sounds mushy by comparison, although even the Touch is still a big improvement over anything going backwards from a 3rd gen iPod.

Tell us what you think

Log in with your CNET UK or Facebook account to post a user review, or click Join to create an account

Step 1

0 out of 5

Step 2

Submit

Please log in, register or login with Facebook to add a review or comment

Should I buy it?

Front view of Apple iPod nano

Ask your Facebook friends and Twitter followers if you should buy the Apple iPod nano (3rd gen, video)

About CBS Interactive

Copyright © 2012 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved.