I modded an iPod Classic from 2008 to add Bluetooth, USB-C, and an SSD here’s how
We've long said that the best way to keep an old device up and running for longer is to swap out the slow hard drive it came with for an SSD. But does that same advice apply to an old iPod? You may have forgotten that early iPods shipped with custom hard drives 1.8-inch HDDs for the iPod Classic and 1-inch HDDs for the iPod Mini with the same spinning disks as the drives on old laptops and PCs. However, unlike laptops and PCs with hard drives, iPods are far from stationary devices. They were kept in pockets, dropped, and mishandled. That's why many old iPods have hard drives that no longer work, or are on their way to breaking.
We’ve long said that the best way to keep an old device up and running for longer is to swap out the slow hard drive it came with for an SSD. But does that same advice apply to an old iPod? You may have forgotten that early iPods shipped with custom hard drives 1.8-inch HDDs for the iPod Classic and 1-inch HDDs for the iPod Mini with the same spinning disks as the drives on old laptops and PCs. However, unlike laptops and PCs with hard drives, iPods are far from stationary devices. They were kept in pockets, dropped, and mishandled. That’s why many old iPods have hard drives that no longer work, or are on their way to breaking.
Azuma Luevano
Mexico
Mexico
Published by: aplhsindia.in
