Even those among us who need order in our homes and office spaces occasionally like to throw conservatism to the wind and lose our organised selves in a windstorm of spontaneity. Maybe, then, it’s no surprise that our favourite iPod tool is the shuffle key. In the times of the record and tape cassette, our only listening option was a sequential one.
And because even our profound favourite album often has a song or 2 that doesn’t quite hit the spot, we ended up listening to it anyway, skipping the needle over ( pretty often making hideous scratches in the process that usually cut through the tunes we did like ), or pushing blindly on fast forward to get to the tune’s other side. But with the appearance of CDs, our options expanded, offering us for the 1st time a maybe more frolicsome way of listening. Now we’ve got the iPod, and the well implemented listening of the CD has been mingled with a storage system that allows us carry with us nearly as much music as we could ever need.
But with that huge choice available to us on a constant basis, it can be tough to know where to start your listening pleasure.
Naturally there are always days when you have a hankering for a specific song, but when the music stored comprises all of your own non-public favourites, how does one select? Perhaps that is why the iPod’s shuffle option is among the device’s best loves features. So much so that Apple, the company who make the iPod, have produced a version of their digital music player that is quite descriptively called, yes, you got it, the Shuffle. Realizing the feature was one of the iPod’s preferred, they invented a music player that thinks this mode by default. You can still store all of the music you like on the new iPod version, only now you do not have to choose which song to play the Shuffle plays your music at random , so you are commonly treated to that part of surprise. Shuffle to the music!
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