Difference between revisions of "Chronology"

From freemyipod.org
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 30: Line 30:
 
| 5G (Video)
 
| 5G (Video)
 
| 2005-10
 
| 2005-10
 +
|
 
|-
 
|-
 
| 5.5G (Video)
 
| 5.5G (Video)

Revision as of 14:53, 3 August 2009

The timeline of iPod releases (from Wikipedia)


iPod Series

Model Introduced Notes
1G 2001-10
2G 2002-03
3G 2003-04
4G (Greyscale) 2004-07
4G (Color) 2004-10
5G (Video) 2005-10
5.5G (Video) 2006-09
6G (Classic 1G) 2007-09
6.5G (Classic 2G) 2008-09

iPod Mini Series

Model Notes
Mini 1G
Mini 2G

iPod Nano Series

Model Notes
Nano 1G
Nano 2G
Nano 3G
Nano 4G

iPod Shuffle Series

Model Notes
Shuffle 1G
Shuffle 2G
Shuffle 3G

The Motive

Understanding the mindset and motives behind Apple is key to understanding how and why the iPod was encrypted. While many people believe that the iPod was encrypted to put an end to iPodLinux and Rockbox, the main reason for the encryption was to thwart third-party imitators. Apple was not as concerned with iPodLinux and Rockbox because people were still buying their (overpriced) hardware, and therefore still generating profits. The main reason was because there were many imitations that replicated the hardware and ran the exact firmware that was run on normal iPods. This was a major drain of money for Apple. Another reason was that the DRM mechanism in the unencrypted firmware was being hacked. This allowed pirated content like games to be run without being bought.

The Response

Since Apple was losing money from the iPod imitators, they encrypted the firmware so the iPod clones could no longer use Apple firmware on their devices. There are still iPod clones out there (just search eBay), but very few use the Apple firmware anymore. Apple has encrypted all of their portable devices since the iPod Nano 2G.

The Change

In order to stop the fake iPods from using their firmware, Apple encrypted the firmware so only their devices could decrypt it. Apple changed their processor to Samsung and no longer used PortalPlayer.