iPod Fully Loaded: If You've Got It, You Can iPod It | 
enlarge | Author: Andy Ihnatko Publisher: Wiley Category: Book
List Price: $19.99 Buy New: $1.69 You Save: $18.30 (92%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 103627
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 312 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 0.9
ISBN: 0470049502 Dewey Decimal Number: 006.5 EAN: 9780470049501 ASIN: 0470049502
Publication Date: October 23, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Let Mac guru Andy Ihnatko show you how to put everything but the kitchen sink on your iPod—from old LPs, radio programs, television shows, and movies to spreadsheets, presentations, and PC rescue files. You'll quickly discover that music is only a small part of the picture as you learn how to record TV shows for an iPod, record radio broadcasts and automatically convert them into podcasts, convert Web pages into formats that can be read or listened to on an iPod, and even translate Microsoft Word, Excel, or PowerPoint documents for the iPod screen. Whether you're a PC or a Mac user, or have a past, present, or even future iPod, Inhantko advice works perfectly.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
An iPod must-have! February 3, 2008 This book, unlike many others, delivers what it promises. It shows you exactly how to load stuff onto your iPod. The author even recommends good software to use with it. Do not hesitate to buy this book.
Make your iPod more like an iPhone July 23, 2007 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
iPod Fully Loaded by Andy Ihnatko
While I'm sure Andy has an iPhone, this excellent book was written when the iPhone was only an apple in Steve's eye, Andy does a great job of helping the average user tweak some extra features from their iPod. Those suffering from iPhone envy will find some solace in Andy's tips. This book is best for techheads who want to impress their friends, families and associates with all the incredibly cool things they can do with their iPod. iPods have evolved into mini PDAs that can do practically anything (it's the inputing that's the challenge!)
The first few chapters of the book were obvious tips that even beginner iPod'ers know and would annoy the intermediate to advanced audience the book is designed to reach. We all know we can copy songs from our CDs to our iPod. Yawn. Another distraction of the book is the annoying quips and too much personal info about Andy. Sorry, Andy, I'll read your blog to find out your opinion about Battlestar Galactica or the Simpsons, but I don't want it in a book about how to use an iPod. No offense, just not interested. Also, Andy played a bit fast and loose with disclosure on the risks of copyrights. It may be his opinion that some things should be legal, but in the murky legal environment today, more warnings of the risks of copying copyrighted materials should have been discussed.
Just like diamond surrounded by unimpressive coal, there are true gems in the book that I was able to immediately put to use. For example. Andy discussed programs for the Mac and PC that allow you to digitize to voice your emails and sync them with your iPod. I definitely downloaded some of his great tools and now I can laugh at those iPhone people because my iPod is almost as impressive. Almost. Also Andy does a great job of explaining how to use Automator in Tiger to get some really amazing features of your iPod working for you such as "listening" to a website. Take that iPhone! The most impressive iPod tricks Andy teaches is converting any text file to audio for listening, or simply easily breaking up the file for transport to the iPod. Many of the tricks don't require software, but use some neat ideas Andy has for existing tools such as taking a screen shot of a subway map and then putting it on your iPod.
As stated earlier, I quickly got annoyed by Andy's personal tips and societal opinions. Not tips on how to use your iPod, but tips on various SciFi TV shows. Again, Yawn. The tips interfered with the flow of the book because they were visual annoyance on the page. I expect those sidebars to give me exceptionally useful information. It's Andy's style as the "42nd most beloved industry personality" I'll give him leeway because he is an industry veteran and promoted the "Macquarium," just like I give my grandfather when he tells me story about the war (which one?)
Pros: Great tips to use your iPod to it's absolute potential. Great cure for iPhone envy. Cons: Andy's style, which gets in the way of the information and artificially increases the length of the book.
Four out of Five Dogcows
iPod Fully Loaded: If You've Got It, You Can iPod It May 31, 2007 1 out of 5 found this review helpful
Lots of useful information.
Super helpful and fun to read! January 29, 2007 19 out of 19 found this review helpful
Imagine that you have, on your iPod, music from your old vinyl LPs, audio from cassette tapes, old videos you made or copied from TV, your own audio input, long (book-length if you like) documents, spreadsheets, presentations, your e-mail (in audio form if you prefer), radio programs, RSS news feeds in audio, TV programs, whatever. Yes, all possible, and, even for the techno-challenged, all easy with Ihnatko's visuals and clear step-by-step instructions. In addition to plentiful screen shots and a number of photos of hardware, there are lots of Tips (how-tos you may not know) and Tidbits (info bites), and occasional Trouble (watch-out alerts) sidebars.
Peripherals are essential for most iPodding beyond music; hard/software ranges from $20 to $200, and some, like eBook Creator software/service or apps the Mac contains by default, are free. One of the gifts of this book is frequent explanation of how to smooth the rough spots in your recordings (and the rationale thereof). How to search your eBooks/text docs or how to input text (you can input audio while riding the subway, though) onto your iPod remain futuristic dreams that have nothing to do with Ihnatko's expertise. After all, iPod with voice recorder, memory card slot, and interactive note input/search would no longer be the lean-and-mean iPod we all know and love.
If you want to go high-end, you learn about the $150 analog-to-digital video bridge (ADS Tech's Pyro A/V Link box), or the recommended-for-Mac eyeTV ($199). You can get a RadioShark for $70 ("TiVo for radio") or the "adorably cheap" iMic with Final Vinyl ("everything that GarageBand isn't") for $40, essential for audio recording since the computer's built-in audio is never adequate for more than chat and there is no line-in input. All how-to-use explanations are in the book.
I wanted this book because I need to get old audiocassettes onto my iPod without paying to have them converted to CDs first. Done, Walkman-to-iPod. After reading it, I'm intrigued by lots more iPod possibilities, like conversion of Web pages to audio--my RSS news feeds can go on my iPod via NewsAloud while I shower and have my morning muffin so I can listen to them during my commute, along with the morning's new e-mail (no external utilities and no conversions needed on the Mac).
Ihnatko is copyright-savvy, and distinguishes between copyright and vendor protection, respecting the first and offering work-arounds for the second. He seems to know copyright law inside out, and is clear on what the law and the Supreme Court's interpretation of it allow. He's also clear on what is legally free, and often on how to get it.
The Wiley Web site for this book gives a free download (566K) of Appendix C (not in the book), the "Super Skim," a chapter-by-chapter bulleted summary of the whole book. The full text of the very basic "Startup" Chapter One and the sketchy Index are also available for download.
Serving both Mac and PC users, the book does not belabor either, and the introduction says that the Mac shortcuts will come first, but Windows is always first throughout. It is easy to use it for the Mac with minimal Win distraction, perhaps because the layout is so well done. And, the 10-page Appendix A on using Automator on the Mac is a very welcome section.
Andy Ihnatko is a prolific, multi-interest writer, has long hair, lives in Boston, and is a Mac geek. You may know him from the "MacWorld" back-page column, or his books, forthcoming of which is "The Mac OS X Leopard Book." For now, I have plenty to do with maximizing my iPod to the nth degree, thanks to Andy's "iPod Fully Loaded"!
Great book! January 29, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I skipped around and used the chapers about transferring DVD to ipod and also learned about TV to ipod via EyeTV. Although I haven't purchased EyeTV since, it seems that all they said about it seems very simple. I enjoyed the random humor throughout. Easy to understand, step by step instructions for everything. I used the instructions for Mac, but a friend also took a peek and used some things for Windows that also worked out well. I think it's a great book for all of us ipod fanatics.
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