A teardown of the 7th-generation iPod Nano by iFixit finds the battery and other components soldered to the logic board, making them difficult to replace. Lance Whitney is a freelance technology ...
A system is only as strong as its weakest link and [Roberto Barrios] found that on the sixth generation iPod nano the buttons are the problem. It makes sense that the buttons would be exposed to wear ...
Apple this week has added another product to its obsolete category: the sixth-generation, Apple Watch-esque iPod nano. In being obsolete, the device is no longer supported by Apple customer service ...
Apple is no longer providing repairs or service for the sixth-generation iPod nano. The device was added to the company’s list of vintage and obsolete products on August 30, and a memo distributed to ...
Almost every component in the iPod nano is soldered together. Just days after pulling apart the fifth-generation iPod touch, iFixit have taken their tools to the new, seventh-generation iPod nano.
As indicated by a handful of MacFixIt readers and numerous posters to Apple's Discussion boards, the iPod nano (or at least some shipped currently units) are highly susceptible to scratches -- though ...
Cracking open the latest iPod nano, DIY repair experts iFixit have laid bare the device's inner workings. Besides the larger screen and increased storage capacity, the inside is largely filled with a ...
Owners of iPods who receive replacement iPod devices from Apple repair processes will no longer receive devices bearing engraving, with only non-engraved models being dispatched to customers without ...
The sixth-generation iPod nano is officially obsolete, meaning Apple will no longer repair or service the portable media player. Apple added the sixth-generation iPod nano to its internal vintage and ...
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