| iPod Accessories: An Addiction Waiting to Happen |
| Dr. Samuel Says - New Toys | |
| Written by Dr. Samuel Centralia, Ph.D., D.D.S., Esq. | |
| Tuesday, 16 October 2007 | |
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In some areas of science I am ridiculously ahead-of-the-curve. Tesseracts, for instance. I crafted my first hypercube sophomore year at MIT, and have since enjoyed many interstellar holidays. I try to use the time-traveling aspects sparingly -- causal violations and all -- and only when my research funds are running low. Let's just say I made a bundle when the Detroit Tigers "miraculously" beat the New York Yankees in last year's American League Divisional Series. Loyal readers know my allegiance to the Tigers. And my feelings about the Yankees.
However, in some areas I am hopelessly behind the times. My iPod, for
instance. I have only recently come to appreciate how versatile this
little monkey is. An old CIA colleague recently sent me an iTrip
as a birthday gift. (Nice thing about maintaining several aliases -- I
have about 45 birthdays.) The iTrip is a third-party accessory for the
iPod that converts audio output into a weak FM radio signal, which can
then be picked up by any adjacent receiver. I click the iTrip into my
Nano, then set it atop my home theater nexus, or in the cup holder next
to the radio in my car. No wires, no problem. (Don't forget the iTrip Station Finder freeware.) Trackback(0)
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