Is it possible to recharge the battery of my ipod shuffle and to share musics from only an ipad? In other word, can I work without a PC? thx for your answers

Hi everobody,
Is it possible to recharge the battery of my ipod shuffle and to share musics from only an ipad? In other word, can I work without a PC? thx for your answers

Unfortunately, you can not. Content can only be synced to the Shuffle via iTunes on a PC or Mac. 
B-rock

Similar Messages

  • Do I need iTunes to recharge the battery of my iPod?

    I will be taking a 12 hrs flight on Friday and would like to watch iPod during the flight. However, I need to recharge my battery after 2 hours or do something else. I do have my company laptop (w/ USB port) with me but the laptop does not have iTunes (thks to company policy).
    Do I need iTunes to recharge the battery of my iPod? Or is the USB port is enough?

    you don't need itunes to charge it
    some laptops have low power usb ports, so it is worth checking before you travel to see how good a job of charging the laptop can do
    you can get external battery packs to go with the ipod, but this can be a pricey way of using it
    the owner of this page has many links to commercial options and also some diy versions... http://home.speedfactory.net/tcashin/ipodbattery.htm
    if your seat on the aircraft has power, there are also ipod cables available to use that

  • The battery of my iPod discharge and discharge so fast. What do I have to do?

    I have an iPod touch 5g, I bought it in January 2nd and also I bought the apple power adapter of 5w and I don't know what to do because it's charges in 1 or in less of two true full battery and also in almost the same it des charges the battery so I don't know what to do in front of that. Also I have turn off the location services in certain apps and I followed some tips of how to expand the battery life of your battery but sometimes seems to work sometimes it's the same situation so anybody please help me in this situation.
    I want to know how to fix the battery due to I'm abroad of US and where I am now  there's no apple stores or somebody authorized to help me.
    Thanks

    After you have updated your device to version 5.1.1, have you tried resyncing everything from your iTunes yet?

  • What is the battery mah of ipod shuffle 4th gen?

    Im searching in the internet but i cant find the battery mah of my ipod shuffle 4th gen
    Iwant to know it because i will buy a powerbank

    I ran a few calculations to find the result. The battery in the 4th gen iPod shuffle runs at 0.17 watt-hours and at 3.7 volts. Converting that to miliamp-hours,  you get 51.3 miliamp-hours. Since I originally did these calculations for my brother, I calculated some usage statistics as well.  I have a 15,000mAh Anker battery (about a year old)  that I use for charging my devices.  I found that the Anker battery could theoretically charge the iPod just under 300 times.  Even if you use it 12 hours a day,  7 days a week,  the battery should last exactly 365.1 days. In short,  any size of battery will keep it charged for weeks and weeks.

  • My daughter has a new ipod touch and when synced it had all of my iphone contacts. she deleted the ones she didn't want and they were removed from my phone as well. How can I get them back if they were deleted from the cloud? I also had them on my pc

    My daughter bought a new ipod touch and when synced received the contacts from my iphone. She deleted the ones she didn't want on her ipod and now they are gone from my iphone. I have the cloud and i thought back up on itunes. I have tried to re-sync and no luck. How can I get my contacts back?

    Your problem is that she used your icloud ID to connect to icloud and thus had all your data synced to her device.  Contacts are not saved in a backup to icloud, since they are stored independently in the Contacts section of icloud.  If someone deletes them, they are gone.  If you had them on the PC would they be available in some backup you frequently make of the PC?

  • Hi all, I am not able to open the game centre on my ipad! When I click on the icon the screen goes white and all I can see on the screen is the battery icon on top right and internet connection top left. Nothing else happens. Please can anyone

    Please can anyone help me to open game centre. Thanks in advance.

    Try closing Game Centre via the iPad's multitasking bar and see if it works when you re-open it :
    iOS 7 : double-click the home button to open the taskbar, and then swipe or drag the Game Centre's screen from there up and off the top of the screen to close it, and click the home button to close the taskbar.
    iOS 6 and below : from the home screen (i.e. not with Game Centre 'open' on-screen) double-click the home button to bring up the taskbar, then press and hold any of the apps on the taskbar for a couple of seconds or so until they start shaking, then press the '-' in the top left of the Game Centre app to close it, and touch any part of the screen above the taskbar so as to stop the shaking and close the taskbar.
    If that doesn't fix it then you could try a soft-reset : press and hold both the sleep and home buttons for about 10 to 15 seconds (ignore the red slider), after which the Apple logo should appear - you won't lose any content, it's the iPad equivalent of a reboot.

  • What is the best device to use to import non-purchased music from iphone to ipad?

    My problem is that I have a lot of music from CD's, etc. that I did not purchase from itunes that got lost from my computer but I still have on my iphone4.  I want to sync my phone to my ipad so I don't lose this music entirely.  Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.

    There are a number of legitimate 3rd party alternatives to iTunes for iOS device content management.
    This is but one;
    http://ecamm.com/mac/phoneview/

  • Can I charge the battery in my iPod using the iPad power source?

    Is it possible or safe to charge the battery in my iPod shuffle, using my iPad power supply.

    Pvmex wrote:
    Is it possible or safe to charge the battery in my iPod shuffle, using my iPad power supply.
    Probably not, especially since the connector on the iPad is not "powered" meaning that it does not power anything. Moreover, I doubt you could find a connector that would work.

  • Whats better for my mbp 2013 retina in the long run? Keep it plugged in as much as possible or letting the battery hit 10% and then recharge it?

    Whats better for my mbp 2013 retina in the long run? Keep it plugged in as much as possible or letting the battery hit 10% and then recharge it?

    Odd you ask that, since both are HORRIBLE,   ... especially often draining your battery low.
    General consideration of your MacBook battery
    Contrary to popular myths about notebook batteries, there is protection circuitry in your Macbook and therefore you cannot ‘overcharge’ your notebook when plugged in and already fully charged.
    However if you do not plan on using your notebook for several hours, turn it off (plugged in or otherwise), since you do not want your Macbook ‘both always plugged in and in sleep mode’.
    A lot of battery experts call the use of Lithium-Ion cells the "80% Rule", meaning use 80% of the full charge or so, then recharge them for longer overall life. The only quantified damage done in the use of Lithium Ion batteries are instances where the internal notebook battery is “often drained very low”, this is bad general use of your notebook battery.
    A person who has, for example, 300 charge cycles on their battery and is recharging at say 40% remaining of a 100% charge has a better battery condition state than, say, another person who has 300 charge cycles on their battery and is recharging at say 10-15% remaining on a 100% charge. DoD (depth of discharge) is much more important on the wear and tear on your Macbook’s battery than the count of charge cycles. There is no set “mile” or wear from a charge cycle in specific. Frequent high depth of discharge rates (draining the battery very low) on a Lithium battery will hasten the lowering of maximum battery capacity.
    All batteries in any device are a consumable meant to be replaced eventually after much time, even under perfect use conditions.
    If the massive amount of data that exists on lithium batteries were to be condensed into a simplex, helpful, and memorable bit of information it would be:
    1. While realistically a bit impractical during normal everyday use, a lithium battery's longevity and its chemistry's health is most happy swinging back and forth between 20% and 85% charge roughly.
    2. Do not purposefully drain your battery very low (10% and less), and do not keep them charged often or always high (100%).
    3. Lithium batteries do not like the following:
    A: Deep discharges, as meaning roughly 10% or less on a frequent basis.
    B: Rapid discharges as referring to energy intensive gaming on battery on a frequent basis (in which case while gaming, if possible, do same on power rather than battery). This is a minor consideration.
    C: Constant inflation, as meaning always or most often on charge, and certainly not both in sleep mode and on charge always or often.
    From Apple on batteries:
    http://www.apple.com/batteries/notebooks.html
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1446
    "Apple does not recommend leaving your portable plugged in all the time."
    Keep it plugged in when near a socket so you keep the charging cycles down on your LiPo (lithium polymer) cells / battery, but not plugged in all the time. When not being used for several hours, turn it off.
    DoD (depth of discharge) is far more important on the wear and tear on your Macbook battery than any mere charge cycle count.  *There is no set “mile” or wear from a charge cycle in general OR in specific.    As such, contrary to popular conception, counting cycles is not conclusive whatsoever, rather the amount of deep DoD on an averaged scale of its use and charging conditions.
                              (as a very rough analogy would be 20,000 hard miles put on a car vs. 80,000 good miles being something similar)
    *Contrary to some myths out there, there is protection circuitry in your Macbook and therefore you cannot overcharge it when plugged in and already fully charged
    *However if you don’t plan on using it for a few hours, turn it OFF (plugged in or otherwise) ..*You don’t want your Macbook both always plugged in AND in sleep mode       (When portable devices are charging and in the on or sleep position, the current that is drawn through the device is called the parasitic load and will alter the dynamics of charge cycle. Battery manufacturers advise against parasitic loading because it induces mini-cycles.)
    Keeping batteries connected to a charger ensures that periodic "top-ups" do very minor but continuous damage to individual cells, hence Apples recommendation above:   “Apple does not recommend leaving your portable plugged in all the time”, …this is because “Li-ion degrades fastest at high state-of-charge”.
                        This is also the same reason new Apple notebooks are packaged with 50% charges and not 100%.
    Contrary to what some might say, Lithium batteries have an "ideal" break in period. First ten cycles or so, don't discharge down past 40% of the battery's capacity. Same way you don’t take a new car out and speed and rev the engine hard first 100 or so miles.
    Proper treatment is still important. Just because LiPo batteries don’t need conditioning in general, does NOT mean they dont have an ideal use / recharge environment. Anything can be abused even if it doesn’t need conditioning.
    Storing your MacBook
    If you are going to store your MacBook away for an extended period of time, keep it in a cool location (room temperature roughly 22° C or about 72° F). Make certain you have at least a 50% charge on the internal battery of your Macbook if you plan on storing it away for a few months; recharge your battery to 50% or so every six months roughly if being stored away. If you live in a humid environment, keep your Macbook stored in its zippered case to prevent infiltration of humidity on the internals of your Macbook which could lead to corrosion.
    Considerations:
    Your battery is subject to chemical aging even if not in use. A Lithium battery is aging as soon as its made, regardless.
    In a perfect (although impractical) situation, your lithium battery is best idealized swinging back and forth between 20 and 85% SOC (state of charge) roughly.
    Further still how you discharge the battery is far more important than how it is either charged or stored short term, and more important long term that cycle counts.
    Ultimately counting charge cycles is of little importance.  Abuse in discharging (foremost), charging, and storing the battery and how it affects battery chemistry is important and not the ‘odometer’ reading, or cycle counts on the battery. 
    Everything boils down to battery chemistry long term, and not an arbitrary number, or cycle count.
    Keep your macbook plugged in when near a socket since in the near end of long-term life, this is beneficial to the battery.
    In a lithium battery, deep discharges alter the chemistry of the anode to take up lithium ions and slowly damages the batteries capacity for the cathode to transport lithium ions to the anode when charging, thereby reducing max charge levels in mAh. In short, radical swings of power to lithium cells disrupts the chemical ecosystem of the battery to hold charges correctly which likewise impedes the perfect transfer of lithium ions both in charging and discharging.  In charging your lithium battery, lithium ions are “pushed uphill” (hard) to the anode, and discharged “downhill” (easy) to the cathode when on battery power. Deep discharges, damages this “upward” electrolyte chemistry for the battery to maintain a healthy charge and discharge balance relative to its age and cycles.
    Optimally, in terms of a healthy lithium battery and its condition, it is most happy at 50% between extremes, which is why low-power-drain processors such as the Haswell are ideal on lithium battery health since a partially charged battery with a low-drain processor has, in general, much more usage in hours
    Battery calibration, battery memory, battery overcharging, battery training, …all these concepts are mostly holdovers from much older battery technology, and on older Apple portable Macbooks ranging from early nicads, NiMh and otherwise; and these practices do not apply to your lithium battery and its smart controllers.
    Calibrating the battery on older Apple portable Macbooks with removable batteries.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/PH14087
    There is no calibration of current Apple portable Macbooks with built-in batteries.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1490
    There is no battery calibration with current Apple portable Macbooks with built-in batteries. Lithium batteries have essentially a 0-‘memory’, and all such calibration involve the estimations fed to the system controller on the SOC (state of charge) of the battery over long periods of time as the battery degrades. The software based battery controller knows the battery's characteristics, or SOC and adjusts itself. This is why there is both no need and purpose to periodically deeply drain your macbook battery, since it doesn’t affect the characteristics of the battery, and further still deep discharges are something you should not do on purpose to any lithium battery.
    From BASF: How Lithium Batteries work
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PjyJhe7Q1g
    Peace

  • I have an iPhone 4, but the computer does not not recognize, do not recharge the battery if it is off

    I have an iPhone 4, but the computer does not not recognize, do not recharge the battery if it is off

    Did you already try another USB cable or USB port?
    Did you try to reset the phone by holding the sleep and home button for about 10sec, until the Apple logo comes back again?
    Also try these tips as well:
    iOS: Device not recognized in iTunes for Windows

  • How can you recharge the battery on a MacBook pro 2011 with usb cable?

    How can you recharge the battery on Macbook Pro 2011 with a usbcable?

    No, unfortunately.
    You have to use the proper power adopter.
    Best.

  • I bought my Iphone 4 2 days ago and I cannot recharge the battery..I tried all the night (with Iphon4 swict on) but the battery levels show alwasy 24%??????

    How to recharge the battery for I-phone4????????????

    Hello Marynoemi
    Have you tried reset all settings
    settings > general> reset > reset all settings
    if that doesn't work try following this http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4137?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_AU
    you should probably also try another cable and charger if you have one  and if that doesn't work call apple.

  • Does anyone know if its possible to replace the battery on a 3rd gen nano and where and how much?

    does anyone know if its possible to replace the battery on a 3rd gen nano and where and how much?

    http://www.ipodjuice.com
    http://www.ifixit.com
    http://www.iresq.com
    https://selfsolve.apple.com/agreementWarrantyDynamic.do

  • Need to reset prefences settings after recharging the battery

    Hello,
    For some reason, everytime I recharge the battery after it is completely drained, I have to reset the language, date, time, etc on my Ipod.
    It dosent ever happen when I charge the battery after being only partially drained, only when it's is totally drained and recharged...
    Anyone have any ideas?
    Thanks!
    jcop

    Hi groundflight5150,
    I'm attaching a link below to the user manual for the 8150B series of controllers.  I don't believe that the BIOS is password protected by default, so you may want to contact the person you purchased this from to find out what the password is.  However, there is information in the manual regarding how to clear out the CMOS contents, so this might help.
    PXI-8150B Series User Manual
    http://www.ni.com/pdf/manuals/322321a.pdf
    Josh B
    Applications Engineer
    National Instruments

  • How do I recharge the battery? I plugged it in...but still at 0%

    how do I recharge the battery? I plugged it in...but still at 0%

    See:
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    You can set the pdfjs.disabled pref to true on the <b>about:config</b> page.
    *http://kb.mozillazine.org/about:config

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