RadioRemote

Latest

  • iPod shuffle 2G and Radio Remote - separated at birth?

    by 
    David Chartier
    David Chartier
    11.12.2006

    I was rooting through a friend's treasure trove of iPod accessories yesterday when he whipped out his Radio Remote for the iPod. He then pointed out the striking similarity it has to the new iPod shuffle 2G he just picked up - and behold! They clearly must be related; possibly separated at birth - long lost siblings, happy to be reunited after many long quarters of product updates. Look! I think the shuffle is smiling!"Gee, you've really let yourself go," said the Remote. "But who cares! C'mere, gimme a hug big guy!"Ahhh... ain't a silly obsession with Apple products love grand?

  • Hands on with the new iPod Radio Remote

    by 
    C.K. Sample, III
    C.K. Sample, III
    01.12.2006

    So, yesterday was my birthday, and just like any other good Mac user, I had to drag my wife to the Apple Store before going to dinner. A pre-celebration celebration, if you will. In any case, they didn't have the new iMacs in yet, but they did have the new Radio Remote for the iPod, so I quickly bought one. I've posted a bunch of pics of the device and its packaging over on my Flickr account, so make sure you check out all the pics.So far, I've only done minimal tinkering with the device, but here's my mini-review of cool bits I've noticed:If you haven't run the latest iPod update, the Radio Remote will work as a remote, but not as a radio.Clicking on radio and tuning is a snap. Hitting play temporarily "turns off" the radio.The top headphone jack on my 5G iPod continued to work even when I had headphones plugged into the Radio Remote. So, it's not just a radio, it's not just a remote, it's also a way to share your tunes with your friend or loved one by plugging in two headsets (one to the iPod and one to the Radio Remote). Very cool.Station information shows up underneath the station number when listening. As I had it tuned to 92.3 K-Rock in NYC, the text FREE RADIO and BOOKER kept scrolling underneath the radio frequency.The remote is identical to the controls on an iPod shuffle, so I imagine it will have the same easy to control while wearing gloves quality.The included headphones have the smaller stereo plug that comes with the nanos.The headphones plugged into the Radio Remote act as the antenna, so you cannot listen through the top port on your iPod with no headphones attached to the Radio Remote. There's audio, but it is all static.I'll post more on this later after I really get a chance to put this sucker to the test. I wonder how the battery life is if you are just doing radio 24-7...

  • Apple brings FM radio to the iPod

    by 
    Dave Caolo
    Dave Caolo
    01.10.2006

    No, it's not as sexy as the iMac and MacBook Pro (I'm still not thrilled about that name), but today Apple announced the availability of the Radio Remote, which adds FM radio to the iPod nano and iPod with video.When connected to your iPod, a "radio" menu option becomes available. When selected, you're presented with an interface that looks like an analog radio dial. Search for a station within the range of 87.5MHz to 107.9MHz (US and Europe) or 76MHz to 90MHz (Japan). Also, you can save favorite channels for future reference and move from station to station with either your iPod's clickwheel or the wired remote.My feeling on this is "eh." The interface looks pretty cool, but I would have been happier had it supported satellite radio. The Radio Remote costs $49.00, works with the iPod with video and iPod nano and is shipping now.