• On MovieTome: The next Spider-Man villain?
January 6, 2009 1:41 PM PST

A quick recap of Apple news at Macworld 2009

by Tom Krazit

At Macworld 2009, Apple's Phil Schiller revealed that the iTunes Store will now sell DRM-free tracks.

(Credit: James Martin/CNET News)

For all of you who weren't able to follow our live coverage of Apple's keynote address at Macworld 2009 earlier Tuesday from San Francisco's Moscone Center, here's a quick recap of the highlights.

•  DRM-free iTunes: As first reported last night by CNET News' Greg Sandoval, Apple announced plans to lift DRM technology from its entire catalog of 10 million iTunes songs by the end of April. Eight million songs are DRM-free as of today, and labels will be allowed to charge different prices for their songs, in a departure from the previous iTunes Store policies.

We're not exactly sure at the moment how the details will work with this announcement, but it sounds like a big win for iTunes customers. One downer is that you'll have to pay 30 cents to replace existing DRM-laden tracks with the new DRM-free versions, essentially upgrading those songs to iTunes Plus tracks. Check out this story from Greg for more details. The iTunes Store was slammed in the aftermath of the keynote, and service was spotty.

•  New 17-inch MacBook Pro: Apple completed its notebook refresh with this new model, which brings the unibody design, trackpad button, and new displays to the company's largest laptop. It will cost $2,799, the same price as the current 17-inch MacBook Pro.

The most interesting part of this announcement, however, is the notebook's battery. Apple is using a new type of battery that it says will allow the notebook to get between seven and eight hours of battery life, depending on which graphics chip is running.

In order to get that technology into the notebook, however, Apple had to make the battery completely enclosed within the chassis: like the iPod and iPhone, you won't be able to replace it yourself. Apple representatives did not have details on how the battery replacement program will work, although it won't ship until later this month. Apple expects the battery to last five years.

Update at 2:08pm: Gizmodo reports the battery will cost $179 to replace, and it can be done at Apple stores or Apple resellers.

•  iLife '09: There were some nice improvements with to the components of the iLife suite, such as geotagging support in iPhoto '09, improved editing capabilities in iMovie '09, and rock star instructors in GarageBand '09.

Are they compelling enough to upgrade? That probably depends on the individual. Travelers will like the geotagging, budding musicians will like the lesson plans. One sour note: it doesn't appear that anybody who bought the new MacBooks released from October onward will be able to upgrade to the new software without paying the full $79 fee.

•  iWork '09: Does anybody actually use iWork? Easily the most underwhelming section of the keynote, the latest version of Apple's office software didn't appear to have anything compelling enough to cause a mass upgrade, other than perhaps Keynote Remote, which lets you use your iPhone or iPod Touch to control Keynote presentations.

But iWork.com will be interesting to watch evolve. It's in beta form for now, but if Apple works out the kinks, it could increase the usage of iWork especially if Apple finds a way to hook it into MobileMe.

•  The Philnote: Phil Schiller acquitted himself well in the starring role, usually accustomed to playing the role of Steve Jobs' sidekick at these events. He wasn't Jobs, although to be fair I've been covering technology events for eight years and haven't run into an executive with anything even approaching Jobs' presentation skills. But he engaged the crowd, made the proper offerings to the demo gods the night before, and ensured that the show would go on.

•  The rest: No Steve Jobs sighting. No new Mac Mini. No new iMacs or Power Macs Mac Pros. The line outside the keynote seemed smaller than in years past, although it also seemed that IDG did a better job moving the line along.

And Tony Bennett is the true ageless wonder.

The last San Francisco Macworld with Apple's participation saw Tony Bennett close out the show.

(Credit: James Martin/CNET News)

Click here for more Macworld Expo coverage from CNET News.

Tom Krazit writes about the ever-expanding world of Internet search, including Google, Yahoo, online advertising, and portals, as well as the evolution of mobile computing. He has written about traditional PC companies, chip manufacturers, and mobile computers, spending the last three years covering Apple. E-mail Tom.
Recent posts from Apple
Apple rejects MAD artist's iPhone caricature app
In Apple parody, Florida says 'there's no app for this'
Apple updates Mac OS X Snow Leopard
Apple Store opens in the Louvre: Where next?
Rickrolling iPhone worm is never gonna give you up
Apple said to be working on 'world mode' iPhone
Smartphone market unfazed by recession
Steve Jobs, Fortune's CEO of the decade
Add a Comment (Log in or register) (35 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
by ace10134 January 6, 2009 2:26 PM PST
(Yawn)...Going to check out Microsoft's CES Show now!
Reply to this comment
by myles taylor January 6, 2009 7:22 PM PST
Why? Because Microsoft is known for it's exciting announcements? The leaks for CES were even worse than Macworld. I'm not saying this was all that exciting, but I doubt Microsoft will be able to top it.
by Mark_Anderson January 7, 2009 9:24 AM PST
You mean aside from probably giving details about Windows 7 you mean? Something Apple appear to have failed to do with Snow Leopard?
by PC-PieceOfCrap January 9, 2009 1:48 AM PST
Mac users are not gasping for Snow Leopard... we have no concept of going back in droves to an earlier operating system like XP just to get things done. Some users seem to have looked out the Windows, sold on the promise of a great Vista... only to see a wall of bricks.

In the PC-Parallel Cosmos, I can imagine people really are chomping-at-the-bit for Windows 7. Already (under the pretense of "giving details") the Microsoft machine is cranking up expectations ~ which, as before, will be driven to a frenzy by a PC press (designed on Macs).

When the biggest part of your business is generating excitement, and always about some future OS... it's kind of saying, "what we are using is not very good" and I don't like that name ~ 'Windows 7'. It implies: another 3 and we'll be as good as MacOS 10... I can already see the ad.

"Hello. I'm a PC." ~~ "And I'm a Mac."
"Well, aren't you gonna ask why I'm so happy today?" ~~ "Yeah, yo do look kinda... what~?"
"I just finished installing Windows 7... Didn't take too long ~ And it's really great!" ~~ "Insanely great?"
"What d'you mean? ~ Are you making fun of me again?" ~~ "Man, you're not a stereotype... you're my friend."
"Well, at least I wash my hair!" [putting his happy face on again:] "You can't spoil my enjoyment of Seven." ~~ "Hey, man! ~ wouldn't want to." [awkward pause:] "And we are all thrilled with MacOS TEN."
by www.chrillo.at January 6, 2009 2:37 PM PST
I really wanted to buy a new mac mini :-(
Reply to this comment
by o2bnited January 6, 2009 3:24 PM PST
Agreed. I was very disappointed.
by BenzTech January 6, 2009 4:37 PM PST
Seriously. I was so hoping they'd be updating this platform. iMacs are great, but I've already got enough monitors and keyboards sitting around just begging for a sweet Mac Mini...
by myles taylor January 6, 2009 7:23 PM PST
Yea me too. They could still do it. The whole pulling out of Macworld thing proves that they don't need to use tradeshows to announce product launches and updates. I wouldn't be surprised to see them update it in a couple months.
by davehong January 6, 2009 7:47 PM PST
I was disappointed too, but still am looking forward to whatever they've got planned down the pike!
by Polarsunray January 7, 2009 2:02 PM PST
Yeah. i wanted to see what the Macs are like to see any possibility of me ever getting a Mac Book or i Mac. The Mac mini could have been a great apple starter package for people that are curios ( like myself) but don't want to spend $1k+ for a computer i might not like.
by SeizeCTRL January 6, 2009 2:46 PM PST
No wonder Stevie didn't want to show up for this one. Not enough here to even hype up a press release.
Reply to this comment
by thefilebunch January 6, 2009 2:52 PM PST
Returned an iMac I received for Christmas in anticipation of a new iMac. Maybe the Easter Bunny will bring me an updated iMac....
Reply to this comment
by RobinQueens January 6, 2009 3:05 PM PST
Boring! why bother going? let the macdroids continue to blather over themselves, who cares? I was hoping for an updated mac mini, perhaps a less expensive iPhone but either those concepts seem dead or they are saving it for another apple campus kissassathon . At this point. I dont even care. Macworld is making CES look relevant by comparison, Can the macdroids handle that?
Reply to this comment
by Chapmaniac January 6, 2009 3:19 PM PST
You guys all missed the real Apple introduction - the MacBook Wheel!
http://www.theonion.com/content/video/apple_introduces_revolutionary
Reply to this comment
by Polarsunray January 7, 2009 2:03 PM PST
A terrible idea, even for a prank.
by Mark_Anderson January 6, 2009 3:44 PM PST
You can see why they've dropped it, can't you? No more rabbits to come out of the hat it seems.
Reply to this comment
by sanenazok January 6, 2009 5:25 PM PST
What an awful event. I guess the point was to show that it wasn't needed anymore, and did they every prove THAT point. The audience still went uuuuuhh and aaahhh even though all that was being unveiled was iLife '09 strangely enough for the year 2009. It comes with new features, why what a surprise!
Reply to this comment
by rccoffee January 6, 2009 5:32 PM PST
No new Mac Mini. No new i-Mac. The best part of this show was Tony Bennett. I hope he sang "I Left My Heart In San Francisco." This man is a great entertainer.

As for Apple, it was a waste of time. I-Life 09, i-Work 09. Yawn! i-Work.com is hopefully not being produced by the people who brought us MobileMe!!!

I buy my music at amazon.com and it has always been DRM-Free and they include the album art, too.

Ah, well. A slice of cheesecake and a good cup of coffee at Eppler's is worth the trip anyway. Perhaps a slice of Divine Decadence Chocolate Cake at Just Desserts plus Tony Bennett. It wasn't a complete waste.
Reply to this comment
by vinnyrb January 6, 2009 5:40 PM PST
"iWork '09: Does anybody actually use iWork?" I do, Cheaper and easier to use than MS Office. But i still think this incremental upgrade is nothing to go crazy about. I had actually kept cash to order a new Mac mini the moment they were out. Too bad.
Reply to this comment
by random truth January 6, 2009 6:40 PM PST
I use it too, however I dont see a reason to upgrade.
by grand2--2008 January 6, 2009 7:55 PM PST
I use Pages a lot. I write multipage technical papers with lots of pictures and graphs. Word goes crazy after several pages, throwing pictures all over the place, and always a pain when it does work. Finally, I started using Pages for the same work and all goes very smoothly - no crashing and erratic behavior. When I am finished, I simply export as a Word Doc and all the world can read it.

I don't use Numbers. It is a dog! Slow as molasses.

Keynote has PowerPoint beat hands down, except for the few features missing. The new one seems to push the lead further out.
by kelmon January 7, 2009 7:26 AM PST
Yes, I use iWork as well and will give this new version a trial and see what it is like. Both Pages and Keynote are rather good applications that I prefer using over their Microsoft equivalents. Numbers wasn't great in version 1 so it will be interesting to see how much it has improved in version 2. Pages was a bit rubbish in version 1 so I have faith that it will all be good this time and the demo allows me to "try before I buy".
by napereira January 6, 2009 7:18 PM PST
Umm.. did you say no new "Power Macs"? I guess you meant Mac Pros! LOL
Reply to this comment
by Tom Krazit January 7, 2009 9:48 AM PST
Wow, that was a good one. Welcome to the 21st century. I'll fix.
by myles taylor January 6, 2009 7:37 PM PST
Well nothing too exciting. I am actually looking forward to iLife '09 but disappointed to not see updates to the hardware. As I said above however, Apple is showing that it doesn't need tradeshows to announce new products. They could announce it tomorrow and to quote Phil, they have more people in their stores in a week than 10 Macworlds.
Reply to this comment
by ThreeMilesNorth January 6, 2009 8:33 PM PST
Any news on Snow Leopard, Tom?
Reply to this comment
by Tom Krazit January 7, 2009 9:49 AM PST
None, which was surprising.
by AppleSuxLeo January 6, 2009 11:55 PM PST
Snow leopard is suffering from frostbite , so it`s a no-go.

[CNET editors' note: Offensive content deleted.]
Reply to this comment
by trd1282 January 7, 2009 12:55 AM PST
You want to go ahead and give me a release date on any other operating systems?
by PC-PieceOfCrap January 9, 2009 12:56 AM PST
Mac users are not gasping for Snow Leopard... we have no concept of going back in droves to an earlier operating system like XP just to get things done ~ "does not compute". But in your world, I can imagine people really are chomping-at-the-bit for Windows 7. Already the Microsoft machine is cranking up expectations ~ I do hope it at least meets those for the PC user; ideally, exceeds them.

BUT when you are generating a tide of excitement always about some future OS... it's kind of saying, "what we are using is not very good" and I don't like that name ~ 'Windows 7'. It implies: another 3 and we'll be as good as MacOS 10... I can already see the "I'm a PC ? and I'm a Mac" ad.
by PC-PieceOfCrap January 9, 2009 1:09 AM PST
TRY AGAIN:
Mac users are not gasping for Snow Leopard... we have no concept of going back in droves to an earlier operating system like XP just to get things done ~ "does not compute". But in your world, I can imagine people really are chomping-at-the-bit for Windows 7. Already the Microsoft machine is cranking up expectations ~ I do hope it at least meets those for the PC user; ideally, exceeds them.

BUT when you are generating a tide of excitement always about some future OS... it's kind of saying, "what we are using is not very good" and I don't like that name ~ 'Windows 7'. It implies: another 3 and we'll be as good as MacOS 10... I can already see the "I'm a PC ~ and I'm a Mac" ad.

[That question mark should have been a dash ~ the PC guy is in no doubt that he's a PC guy! And he's not a "stereotype" ~ he's someone all Macheads have great affection for... and more than a little compassion]
by Snakespeare January 7, 2009 3:34 PM PST
I believe the Keynote address had a more subtle message than the above analysis and sundry comments have noted. I think the message is, nobody's going to buy new stuff this year, so we are tightening our belts and going into austerity mode. Expect more exciting news when the economy turns back in a bullish direction. Therefore, iTunes will have no DRM and some songs will be cheaper. The only new addition is a new widescreen laptop. iWork and iLife are updated, and they are also inexpensive. I have customers who use iWork. It does not interact with translation software. If you plan to use your files beyond your own desktop, you might save a lot of money by choosing an older more established program, even one from "the evil empire".
Reply to this comment
by 3rdalbum January 7, 2009 6:57 PM PST
I wonder how much the song "Rich Girl" will cost? $10? :-P

The caption "DRM-free iTunes" is incorrect. Only the music will be DRM-free. Video will remain locked-down.
Reply to this comment
by mycrapsgame January 12, 2009 8:58 AM PST
I am missing the new, way more better Mac Mini announcement. The current Mac Mini I have is nice and the only Mac box of the five computers in my office.
Reply to this comment
by scooterchick08 January 12, 2009 9:38 AM PST
What happened to the 32gb iPhone? I am so disappointed.
Reply to this comment
(35 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement

After 5 years, Firefox faces new challenges

Mozilla helped reshape the Web since releasing Firefox 1.0 five years ago. Now it's got a reawakened Microsoft and Google Chrome to reckon with.

There's a map for that: GPS or smartphone?

Almost every handset comes with mapping software these days, but standalone GPS devices are becoming more affordable than ever.

About Apple

At the start of the 21st century, there's no tech outfit more influential than Apple. CNET News' Erica Ogg and other reporters will attempt to make sense of the rumors, hype, products, and people that will shape the future of the company. But Apple's not the only game in town, as the established cell phone companies and others strike back against the iPhone. E-mail Erica at erica.ogg@cnet.com.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Apple topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right