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#How the original iPod got me through the war

#How the original iPod got me through the war

I carried a Sig Sauer on my hip and an iPod in my pocket, but I was only authorized to use the pistol while on watch.

It was March 2003. The second gen iPod had already launched, but most of us were still rocking the first gens because that’s what they sold at the Navy Exchange back home and on the ship.

My position, that night, was as a gate guard. The squadron I worked in was stationed aboard the USS Nimitz and we were enjoying our last night in Pearl Harbor before we left for the Persian Gulf.

My fellow guards and I were tasked with verifying the identity of everyone headed toward the ship, ensuring good order and discipline, and checking everyone’s bags. Necessarily, we got to look at everything that thousands of sailors had purchased at the last minute before we shoved off.

And, from where I was standing, it’s clear we must have bought out the island’s entire iPod supply. It seemed like every third person who walked through the gate had an iPod in their hands. I’ll never forget seeing so many white wires hanging beneath sailors‘ chins that night.

The next day we steamed towards the Gulf to join the war. The USS Nimitz and its crew would conduct more than 6,500 combat missions before it saw US shores again.

an image of the USS Nimitz and a sailor from 2003
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