·5 min read·

iPod Nano: the seven-generation product nobody could pin down.

Apple shipped seven Nano generations across eight years and never quite settled on what it was. A tall thin scroll-wheel, then a watch face, then a tall slim square. Each version was confident and obsolete.

The original iPod Nano launched in 2005. The seventh and final generation shipped in 2012, was sold for another five years, and quietly disappeared in 2017. In between, the product was redesigned more often than any other piece of Apple hardware — and each version felt like a small bet on a different future.

Seven shapes, eight years

GenerationYearShapeNotable
Gen 12005Tall, thinScroll wheel. The original "pencil that plays music".
Gen 22006Tall, thinAnodised aluminium body. Same shape, completely different feel.
Gen 32007Short and fatUniversally mocked, still loved by some.
Gen 42008Tall and thinBrushed metal, accelerometer for screen rotation.
Gen 52009Tall and thinAdded a video camera. Yes, the music player had a camera.
Gen 62010Square, clip-onTouchscreen, watch-face mode. Half a Shuffle, half a Watch.
Gen 72012Tall, thinMultitouch, home button, Bluetooth. The longest-lived generation.
Seven generations of iPod Nano, 2005-2012.

What Apple was actually doing

Re-running the same product question every year: 'what shape should a personal music player be?' Each generation was a hypothesis. Some were brilliant (Gen 4), some were stranger than the brief suggested (Gen 6 as a smartwatch precursor), some were retreats (Gen 7 essentially admitting Gen 6 was a detour).

What the line taught Apple

  • 01The clip-on Gen 6 was an Apple Watch on training wheels. The DNA is visible in 2015's Watch in a way it wasn't visible in any iPhone.
  • 02Touchscreens at that scale work — and the Watch later proved how much.
  • 03An accelerometer in a tiny device opens up a class of interactions that became fundamental in every iOS device after.
  • 04When a product line lets the team experiment, the team experiments. The Nano was Apple's R&D lab dressed up as a product line.

The Nano was Apple's R&D lab dressed up as a product line. The Watch ate the Gen 6 use case. The iPhone ate the Gen 1-5 use case. The Nano didn't disappear; it became the Watch.

Why no Nano now

The Apple Watch ate the Gen 6 use case. The iPhone ate the Gen 1-5 use case. Streaming ate the underlying model. And Apple stopped needing a public lab — the Watch is the lab now. The Nano didn't disappear; it became the Watch.

If you have a drawer Nano somewhere, charge it. The fact that it still works tells you how stubbornly well Apple built it. And if you have a Gen 6: you have the Apple Watch's actual ancestor, and someone will care about that in a museum one day.

Talk to Remiam about a system like this.