Software Tools

How to Turn Your iPod Nano into a Triple-Monitor Workstation (Sort Of)

2026-05-03 20:26:45

Introduction

Triple-monitor setups are a staple for productivity enthusiasts, but what if you could achieve that look with a device smaller than a credit card? The 6th-generation iPod Nano—the one that clips to your gym shorts—can be tricked into powering three screens simultaneously. While it won't replace your desktop, this build is a hilarious conversation starter for your desk or podcast studio. Below we'll walk through the hardware and steps to replicate this retro-modern hack.

How to Turn Your iPod Nano into a Triple-Monitor Workstation (Sort Of)
Source: hackaday.com

What You Need

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Step 1: Prepare the Dock

    Place the 30-pin spacer adapter onto the Keyboard Dock's connector. This lifts the iPod Nano enough to make electrical contact, as the dock was designed for a taller iPad. Ensure the spacer doesn't shift—use a small rubber band if needed.

  2. Step 2: Connect the iPod Nano

    Slide the iPod Nano onto the dock with the spacer. The screen should come on and the device will start charging. Nothing else will happen on the keyboard side—those keys won't interact with the Nano.

  3. Step 3: Route Composite Video from the Dock

    The Keyboard Dock exposes the iPod's composite video through its 30-pin port. Use a 30-pin to composite video cable (or a breakout board) to get a single yellow RCA feed. Plug that cable into the input of your composite video distribution amplifier.

  4. Step 4: Distribute Video to Three Monitors

    Connect the output of the distribution amplifier to each of the three monitors using standard composite video cables. Each monitor will display the same image—no extended desktop here. Turn on the monitors and set them to the correct input source.

    How to Turn Your iPod Nano into a Triple-Monitor Workstation (Sort Of)
    Source: hackaday.com
  5. Step 5: Set Up Audio (Optional)

    The dock's 3.5mm four-pole jack carries both audio in and out. Plug a four-pole to dual RCA cable into the dock, then connect the red/white RCA ends to your speaker system. This lets you play music or voice memos through the Apple Pro Speakers (or any powered speakers).

  6. Step 6: Power Everything and Test

    Plug in the dock's USB power cable (it uses the 30-pin to USB cable usually included). Ensure all monitors are receiving the video signal. Navigate the iPod Nano's touchscreen to play a slideshow, music, or a voice memo. All three screens will mirror exactly what's on the tiny display.

Tips & Tricks

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