1st generation Apple introduced the first-generation iPod (M8541) on October 23, 2001, with the slogan "1,000 songs in your pocket". They went on sale on November 10, 2001. The first iPod had a monochrome
LCD (liquid-crystal display) screen and featured a 5 GB hard drive capable of storing 1,000 songs (encoded using MP3 160kbit/s, fewer if using a higher bitrate) and was priced at . Among the iPod's innovations were its small size, achieved using a 1.8" hard drive, whereas other HDD-based competitors (like earlier DEC
Personal Jukebox player) were using 2.5" hard drives at the time, and its easy-to-use navigation, which was controlled using a mechanical scroll wheel (unlike later iPods, which had touch-sensitive scroll wheels), a center select button, and four auxiliary buttons around the wheel. The iPod had a rated battery life of ten hours. On March 20, 2002, Apple introduced a 10 GB model of the first-generation iPod for . VCard compatibility was added, allowing iPods to display business card information synced from a Mac.
2nd generation The second-generation of the iPod was introduced on July 17, 2002. They went on sale in August 2002. Using a similar body style as the first generation, the top of the iPod was redesigned, switching from a single swooping cutout in the backplate to mount the FireWire port, hold switch and headphone assembly, to individual ports being cut into the backplate to allow these ports to be accessed. Furthermore, the hold switch was redesigned, a cover was added to the FireWire port, and the mechanical wheel was replaced with a touch-sensitive wheel. The second-generation class was available in 10GB for and 20 GB for . The first-generation 5GB iPod was carried over, but its price was reduced to . Notably, the second-generation iPods and the updated first-generation iPod were now Windows-compatible. These versions came with a 4-pin to 6-pin
FireWire adapter and were bundled with
Musicmatch Jukebox. At that time
iTunes was Mac only and unavailable for Windows. In December 2002, Apple unveiled its first limited-edition iPods, with either
Madonna's,
Tony Hawk's, or
Beck's signature or
No Doubt's band logo engraved on the back for an extra .
3rd generation On April 28, 2003, Apple announced a completely redesigned third-generation iPod. They went on sale on May 2, 2003. Thinner than the previous models, the third-generation models replaced the
FireWire port with a new proprietary
30-pin Dock Connector and introduced the Touch Wheel, a completely non-mechanical interface with the four auxiliary buttons located in a row between the screen and the touch wheel. The front plate had rounded edges, and the rear casing was slightly rounded as well. A new wired remote connector was introduced. Whereas first and second-generation iPods had an auxiliary ring around the headphone port for the remote, the third-generation iPods had a 4-pin jack adjacent to the headphone port. A 10 GB model was sold for , a 15 GB model for , and a 30 GB model for . All iPods were now compatible with Mac and Windows out of the box, simply requiring Windows users to reformat the iPod before use on a PC and both iTunes and Musicmatch Jukebox were bundled with all iPods. The battery life was reduced to 8 hours, partially due to the use of a smaller
lithium-ion battery as opposed to a
lithium-polymer battery. The 15 GB model was replaced by a 20 GB model and the 30 GB model was upgraded to 40 GB on September 8, 2003. The Windows-based Musicmatch Jukebox software was made obsolete and replaced by
iTunes 4.1, the first version available for
Microsoft Windows.
4th generation Announced on July 19, 2004, the fourth-generation iPod replaced the touch wheel from the third-generation iPod with the Click Wheel from the
iPod Mini, putting the four auxiliary buttons underneath a touch-sensitive scroll wheel. The casing was also slightly slimmer. Pricing was reduced and the lineup was simplified, as the 20 GB model was sold for and the 40 GB model for . Notably, Apple began reducing pack-in accessories starting with the fourth generation. While a dock, carrying case, and wired remote were previously included with higher-end iPods, the higher-level 40 GB iPod only came with a dock, earphones and an interchangeable proprietary cable capable of USB and FireWire interface. In addition to using the iPod Mini's Click Wheel, the fourth-generation iPod used the more energy-efficient components of the Mini, allowing the fourth-generation iPod to over 12 hours of battery life while using the same battery as its predecessor. A special
U2 edition was announced on October 26, 2004, to
cross-market U2's
How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb album. The plastic front piece of the U2 edition iPod was black and the scroll wheel was red,
to coincide with the color scheme of the U2 album. With 20 GB and the signatures of all four members of U2, the special edition iPod was priced at and also included a coupon for a collection of U2's entire back catalog. U2 iPod customers also received 30 minutes of exclusive U2 video downloadable from the iTunes Music Store. A Special
Harry Potter Edition was announced on September 7, 2005. It was released in conjunction with the Harry Potter
audiobooks in
iTunes. It had a
Hogwarts logo engraved on the back, and all six Harry Potter audiobooks which were available at the time preloaded.
iPod Photo On October 26, 2004, in addition to the U2 edition, Apple also unveiled the iPod Photo. Positioned as a premium version of the standard fourth-generation iPod, the iPod Photo featured a 220×176-pixel LCD capable of displaying up to 65,536 colors. The device can be attached to a television or other external display for slideshows, thanks to a bundled composite cable which fits in the headphone port ("iPod AV cable"); it is also forwards compatible with then-future dock connector based composite and S-video accessories. Battery life was rated 15 hours for music playback and 5 hours for slideshows with music. The iPod Photo was available in a 40GB version for and a 60GB version for . On February 23, 2005, both 40 GB models (photo and regular) were replaced with a slimmer and lower-priced () 30GB photo model leaving only a 20 GB black-and-white iPod left. The price for the 60 GB model was dropped to with fewer bundled accessories, making the dock, FireWire cable, and television cable extra-cost options. On the same day, Apple announced the iPod Camera Connector which allowed instant transfer of images from a USB-compatible
digital camera to the iPod Photo. The main difference between this and
Belkin's Digital Camera Link was that Apple's unit supported instant image viewing on the iPod Photo after transfer without having to connect the iPod Photo to a computer first.
iPod with color display On June 28, 2005, just nine months after its introduction, the iPod Photo was merged with the rest of the iPod line. The 30 GB model was dropped, and the 20 GB monochrome iPod received a color screen. The price for the 60 GB model was also dropped to .
5th generation ("iPod with video") The fifth-generation iPod was introduced on October 12, 2005, shortly after the introduction of the
iPod Nano. The fifth-generation iPod featured a 2.5" 320×240
QVGA screen and a smaller Click Wheel. It was the first iPod to be able to play videos. The fifth-generation iPod, sometimes known as the "iPod with video", which provides acceleration to play video in
MPEG-4 (up to 480p 2.5 Mbit/s) and
H.264 (up to 240p, 768 kbit/s,
baseline profile level 1.3 only) formats. The enhanced fifth-generation iPod, as well as firmware 1.2 for its predecessor, upgrade H.264 support to 480p 1.5 Mbit/s. As is the case for music, video content such as TV shows, podcasts, music videos, and movies may be purchased from the iTunes Store (with DRM, with rental options launched later), or sourced externally and imported via iTunes. Videos or photo slideshows may be played from the fifth-generation iPod on a television set, projector or monitor with the use of the Apple Composite AV cable or via an older dock providing an S-Video output. It is also possible to obtain composite video from the headphone jack, using an iPod AV Cable or generic equivalent (
appropriately wired TRRS minijack), a feature removed from the following generation. The iPod Classic has a 2.5" backlit display at a resolution of 320×240. The front plate was made of
anodized aluminium instead of
polycarbonate plastic, and "Signature iPod White" was replaced by silver. The sixth-generation iPod also introduced a completely overhauled user interface, incorporating more graphics and
Cover Flow. The iPod Classic was offered in an 80 GB model for MSRP and a 160 GB model for MSRP ; this capacity distinguished it from the iPod Touch, which was limited to 32 GB. The 160 GB hard drive is not fully ATA compatible, not supporting 48-bit LBA in favor of a proprietary addressing method; neither is
LBA48 supported by the Apple-supplied operating system, inconveniencing people interested in upgrading the internal storage. Video playback specifications also received an upgrade over the previous generation, with further improvements to H.264 decoding (advertised up to 640x480p, baseline profile level 3.0, 2.5 Mbit/s bitrate; actual capabilities up to 720x576 at 5 Mbit/s with caveats) as well as supporting the Apple
Component AV Cable with progressive scan, but removes support for cables without an authentication chip and those connecting to the headphone port. which are also available in other iPod models released at similar times; no firmware update provides either feature to the 2007 iPods. Also, the black model's faceplate was replaced with a space gray colored faceplate, while retaining the silver backing and the black Click Wheel. Prior to the 'It's Only Rock and Roll' event on September 9, 2009, the price of the 120 GB version dropped to . During the event, Apple replaced the 120 GB version with a 160 GB model, featuring the same slim profile of the 80 GB and 120 GB models. It retailed at . This model is unofficially labelled as the "7th generation" by the iPod community, despite it offering only a few new features, such as
Genius Mixes, as well as supporting 48-bit sector numbers removing the LBA28 addressing limitation in the stock operating system. ==Special editions==