While I'm not going to argue with the information supplied by Apple on the link you provide, they fail to make it clear that an iPod Touch doesn't "usually" have a drive letter assigned to it. So what do you see on the screen - what symptoms are there? In other words, it would not stay in a loop. Once the battery is run down, whatever is keeping it in a loop would stop (because there's no power) and when power is restored, the first thing an iPod will (or should) do is reset everything back to the start. Were to just keep repeating the same thing over and over, (such as staying on the logo, or re-starting the logo procedure), I would wait for the battery to run down and then connect it to power. Usually, if my iPod Touch plays up, it's either that an App closes unexpectedly or it seems to take three minutes to get past the Apple logo if I have to re-start the iPod. What do you mean by "an endless loop"? What does your iPod do, or not do - what do you see on the screen? So let's examine the actual problem you have. Someone is probably going to argue with me about that because of the "camera roll" on the Touch and so on, but basically, no drive letter is assigned.) (The Touch is accessed by iTunes, not Windows. But since the iPod Touch does not have memory that is accessible by Windows, there will not be a drive letter assigned. To actually access the device, Windows assigns the device with the first drive letter that Windows has available. The "drive letter" refers to any device that Windows sees - that it can access (hard drives, memory keys, printers etc.). I don't know where you got that idea from, but it can't be correct. The solution seems to be to change the drive letter assigned to the Ipod touch. I have an Ipod Touch stuck in an endless loop of recovery mode.
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