
Not content to have something smaller than a matchbox, Apple has now made the Shuffle smaller than a key. It provides great bragging rights “smallest in the world”, but it has some negative implications — because the buttons have been moved from the Shuffle (to save space) to the headphones.
Dan Moren of Macworld points to problem #1: the controls need a manual:
The fact that Apple has to put up this diagram tells you how much more complicated it is: how would you figure out the controls without this chart? …This is of course contrary to all the principles of human factors and user-centered design that Apple has been espousing for 25 years. Didn’t anyone notice?
Look, even buttons have their place: having discrete controls for discrete functions is not necessarily a design failure. Sometimes it's just the best way to get the job done. There's no inherent, intuitive cognitive connection between double-clicking to go forward or triple-clicking to go back; it requires the forging of a new link in our minds. Where does it end? Will future versions require you to quadruple- or quintuple-click? Will there be a system where you can spell out the name of the song, artist, or album you want in Morse code?
The second problem is even more serious — the one everyone’s complaining about. Having the controls on Apple earbuds means no third party headphones.
This is a nonstarter for me, as for many users. I’ve never used the earbuds on any of the iPods I’ve owned. I use clip-on headphones for day-to-day use, and over-the-ear noise reducing headphones for long flights. An iPod that doesn’t work with 3rd party headphones doesn’t work.
I know Apple has been a systems company for 30 years, they design end-to-end solutions, and they take advantage of the control in a way that many of their competitors do not. On the other hand, they also have an inclination (not always indulged) to lock in their customers by locking out a choice of third party solutions. (I made hundreds of thousands of dollars from the entry barriers Apple created for 3rd party printers).
Perhaps Apple will license the technology for a third-party adaptor product, analogous to the the SmartTalk adaptor from Griffin turns ordinary headphones into iPhone mike/headphones. Even so, that raises the price of the iPod Shuffle from $80 to $100.
Or perhaps Apple has sold iPods to everyone who needs a small, cheap portable iPod and now is trying to peddle an impractical fashion statement to impractical fashion-conscious teens.
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