Ipod IconEssay Preview: Ipod IconReport this essayiPod iConSome have called my generation the MySpace generation. Others have dubbed us the generation of reality TV and celebrity obsession disorder; and though each of the christenings seems accurate in its own context, none seems to define our generation quite like the iGenertaion. Of course, Im referring to none other than the Apple iPod. The iPods impact on our culture is revolutionizing the way we listen to music, sweeping Americans off our feet, leaving us blissfully floating amidst one another with our trendy white ear buds threading from pocket to ear. Some maintain the iPods merely an mp3 player; many others feel it is much more. An iPod not only provides listeners with their favorite music, but also the power to control how they feel and act towards themselves and others. According to Michael Bull: “People are controlling their space, their time, and their interaction” (Bull 69). Not only do they fill the ears of listeners with music that makes them happy, but they also help maintain personal space and fuel self expression. As a result, there is growing concern among citizens that Apples portable music player is hindering interaction with other people.
The iPod has shown great evolution in a short amount of time. At one time, the iPod was only accessible to Mac users, making it an exclusive and elite product. In 2001, “It was unveiled by CEO Steve Jobs on October 23, 2001 as a Mac-compatible product with a 5 GB hard drive that put 1,000 songs in your pocket” (Apple.com). Up to now, the iPod has emerged through 4 generations of iPods including the iPod Mini, iPod Nano, iPod Video, and iPod Shuffle. What was once a product only compatible with Mac computers is now available to Windows users as well. This evolution of the iPod is important due to the fact that its progression is largely responsible its strong impact on our society.
If the iPod were accessible to Mac users exclusively, the phenomenon that has turned the iPod into an icon most likely wouldnt have impacted our culture so significantly. However, since the iPod is available to everyone and anyone (who is willing to pay $200-$400 for the mp3 player), the iPods popularity and hype continues to spread at a rate that is astonishing, a rate that most likely wouldnt be very high had Apple decided not to make their product compatible with Windows as well.
With the advancement, young Americans fell in love with Apples product for a variety of reasons. While listening to their iPods “people are able to move in time with their favorite songs as they experience and create a soundtrack to their life” (Dubber 4). With up to 10,000 individually chosen songs available, literally, at their fingertips, iPod owners are able to continuously surround themselves with the sounds they want to hear. To enhance a mood or escape a reality though the vibrations of music, with the touch of a hand is an amazing power over ones environment, at least in an immediate context. This concept of controlling ones environment truly is a powerful notion.
For example, while coaching a soccer team earlier in the year, I noticed that while the team warmed up, a majority of the players listened to their iPods. When asked to put them away, the team argued that listening to their iPods during the warm up helped to pump them up for game. Others on the team argued that they should be allowed to wear listen to their iPods during warm up because it helped to calm their nerves. In an environment full of competitiveness, apprehension, and anxiety, the team was able to each individually control their tension and pump themselves up as they each listened to a beat of their choice on their iPod.
Further examples include controlling ones environment when studying. Some choose to study in complete silence, while others believe the sounds of the ocean or smooth jazz are necessary to keep them from losing control when the atmosphere is overwhelmingly stressful, like when one is studying for an exam. Overall, the ability to enhance a mood or boost motivation according to the environment the listener is in while listening to their iPod is a major explanation as to why iPods have impacted our society so greatly. Consumers love the feeling of being in control and having power over their emotions in any particular situation, surrounding or setting.
Peoples iPod love seems to stem from the connotations indicated through the mere ownership of the mp3 player, especially during a time when so much stress is placed upon cultural consumerism. The media-enhanced excitement accompanying the iPod further encourages our societys hunger for the ownership of one. iPods are definitely one of the most common, yet prominent, status symbols of contemporary culture. In Signs of Life, the authors claim that for every choice we make in the products that we buy, it is a sign, a signal that we are sending to the world about ourselves (Maasik and Solomon 72). With most people keenly aware of the price of each iPod, it is a quick display of how much one is willing to spend on the product, songs from iTunes, and accessories. Sporting the white headphones, or clipping their iPod to their back pocket sends a semeiotic message that someone is a lover of music who can afford a $200- $400 music player.
Yet, the most fascinating fixation about this realm of musical sensations is that it not only serves as a status symbol, but within each of Apples mp3 players is the ability to define and judge a person. “To decode your possessions, youve got to ask yourself what you are trying to say with them and what you want other people to think about you” (Maasik and Solomon 66). This is exactly what people are able to do at the mere purchase of a song from iTunes. Our choice of music sends off a signal to the world enabling others to place judgment on us by the simple turn of the click wheel throughout our iPod Libraries. This is evidence in and of itself of why iPods are seen as a form of self expression. The combination of artists, genres, playlists, and songs on ones iPod can easily symbolize the fragments or stages in ones life that when pieced together, truly express the individual.
Perhaps a more compelling example of what the iTunes app offers is the way it categorizes artists in categories in our Library. We can easily do this by searching by artist. For example, if we choose the “artist” category and you pick “Americana,” we are able to categorize it into “Americana” and “Americana” with the help of our library’s categories. We then compare or compare these two to see if there is any overlap which is more helpful or harmful, etcetera.
Our point is this: if there is overlap, then if two separate and similar works are available on either iPod, we can choose to categorize them in an independent category and then only compare them because of the difference in the perceived value of the piece. But this is a small point.
In other words, we can categorize a piece based on what one may be, and this may or may not necessarily be true. On the other hand, there is no way to compare pieces on which no one is. We could give up on both lists because one is more valuable than the other.
A song can be labeled on a piece of music when its sound was made with the clickwheel
By the end of this essay, what we want to know is what one chooses to be on your iPod. In the beginning, what you want to be on your iPod can vary slightly, but ultimately it ultimately has the same shape as the rest of your iPod. What you can and can’t do, however, is judge for yourself and try to see if we can say with certainty that your iPod isn’t the only one you had or that you weren’t all on it at the same time.
And in this way, we can use iTunes and our iPod Library to create the most personalized experience possible. Not only will it be a new discovery for all of us, it’ll have the capacity to help a whole new generation explore their cultural experiences, create new experiences for themselves, even as more research is performed as well.
In spite of advantages iPod owners may benefit from, I fear that the unintended implications of the iPod are causing irreversible damage upon society. The roots of those fears center on the alleged isolating properties of the iPod. Yes, the public donning of the infamous white ear buds can be a show of status, self expression, or even a fashion statement, but displaying an iPod can also signify that a person does not want to be bothered, while removing their obligation to respond to the world around them.
For most people, the main appeal of