I don't think that an iPod has a hard drive, but instead, a 80 gig set of memory chips or a single chip, which can store up to 80 gig of info.
So should it skip? No, not really. More likely it's a corrupted music file that you d'loaded into the Ipod.
Answer:Most of the large storage size iPods use a 1.8" hard drive (Toshiba), anything bigger than 10GB is likely a hard drive based iPod. Vibrations tend not to cause a problem (like a record album or CD player) BUT can cause damage to the drive itself. If your drive has sustained this it will most likely do this across a large number of songs, not just one. You can have the iPod tested for drive damage but you will have to wait for at least a week, if not more, to hear if it is hardware causing the problem. If it is the drive, be sure you have your data all backed up into iTunes - then if it is the drive, if you get it replaced, you can restore the music.An ipod's Hard drive/flash memory is fixed.
yes,all you need to do is drag & drop the file into itunes and sync your ipod make sure it is the right file type eg. mp3,mp4
The iPod nano was probably invented in the USA, though not by Steve Jobs, but it is basically a reduced form of the iPod, so it could have been a team who made it, by trying to make the iPod smaller, using a flash drive instead of a small hard disk.
Apple iPod has several models. a 64GB of iPod is using a SSD on an iPod Touch. It is possible to obtain a different model with higher gigabyte of space such as the iPod Classic. It uses the triditional hard drive space which can go up to few hundred GB of space.
The easiest way to make an internal hard drive portable is to purchase what's called a hard drive enclosure. Hard drive enclosures are kits that have everything you need to make your own portable hard drive. Make sure you get a hard drive enclosure that matches the size and interface type as your hard drive, as well as the means of connectivity that you wish. As an example, you can have a 3.5" IDE hard drive enclosure that connects to your computer with a USB cable. Most computer stores have hard drive enclosure. The best place to get one is probably tigerdirect.com. There are many of them available on eBay.
No, slow vibrations make a low pitch. Fast vibrations make high pitches.
If a hard drive is clicking then a person should make a decision to try and back up or recover any files on the hard drive. Files on the hard drive can be recovered by using professional hard drive recovery systems.
no
No; sound comes from vibrations.
The main drive is the drive with your operating system on it.
The hard drive cache is used when accessing files on your hard drive and a larger cache does improve file operation speeds.
disk cloning or dist imaging.