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March 16, 2009 3:28 AM PDT

Report: iPod Shuffle accessories to get Apple 'tax'

by David Carnoy
  • 89 comments

Getting chippy: Some bloggers think that the iPod Shuffle's accessory situation is a nightmare scenario for iPod fans.

(Credit: CNET)

In not-so-shocking news, iLounge is reporting that third-party headphones and headphone adapters for the new buttonless iPod Shuffle will require an Apple-licensed authentication chip.

This doesn't come as any great surprise to us because exacting licensing revenue from iPod accessory makers has become a brilliant way for Apple to add to the company's bottom line. But that "Apple tax," so to speak, does get passed on to consumers, and iLounge and others are now assuming that Apple headphone adapters will cost a minimum of $19 and possibly as much as $29. The handful of VoiceOver-compatible headphones that have been announced carry a starting price of $49.99.

The question, of course, is whether Apple has gone too far in requiring you to use only its headphones--or some sort of Apple-approved adapter or headphones for the device. (You can plug third-party headphones into the new Shuffle, and it will play music, but you can't control the volume or navigate songs).

iLounge is calling it a "nightmare scenario" for longtime iPod fans. "Are we entering a world in which Apple controls and taxes literally every piece of the iPod purchase, from headphones to chargers, jacking up their prices, forcing customers to repurchase things they already own, while making only marginal improvements in their functionality?" iLounge Editor in Chief Jeremy Horwitz asks in his review of the new iPod Shuffle. "It's a shame, and one that consumers should feel empowered to fight."

Meanwhile, over at Engadget, Nilay Patel is calling Apple's attempts to "lock down headphones" a sad new low that "makes the lack of physical controls on the Shuffle seem even more ridiculous."

What do you guys think? If the report is correct, is Apple going too far, or is this just a smart business move?

(Source: iLounge via Engadget)

Update: Gizmodo's posted a story going back and forth on whether the chip is an "authentication" chip or a "control" chip that's required for approval as part of Apple's "made for iPod program." It appears "control" is the correct description, but that hasn't been confirmed by Apple.

Originally posted at Crave
March 13, 2009 5:11 AM PDT

What's inside the new Apple Shuffle?

by David Carnoy
  • 21 comments

CNET tends to review products from the outside looking in (see Donald Bell's full review of the new Shuffle). But the good folks over at iFixit make it habit to start right from the inside. In the case of the third-generation Shuffle teardown, like with all recent iPods, Apple doesn't make it easy to crack the case. And although only one screw had to be removed, iFixit describes how it had to insert a "metal spudger into a crevice between the rear cover and the rest of the Shuffle" to get the device open. As you might expect, things are pretty simple--and tiny--under the Shuffle's hood.

There are a couple more pictures after the jump, but the full dissection (with lots more photos) is available at iFixit, where one unsatisfied reader writes:

"Have you disassembled the headphones with remote yet? Have you figured out, how the buttons work? Do they work by connecting two lines with a resistor? Is it possible to add such a remote to other headphones?"

As always, feel free to comment.

(Source: iFixit via Gizmodo)

See more pics after the jump. ... Read more

Originally posted at Crave
March 11, 2009 6:05 AM PDT

Apple shrinks its iPod Shuffle

by Jonathan Skillings
and
Tom Krazit
  • 176 comments
iPod Shuffle

The slender, new iPod Shuffle stands tall behind the relatively boxy older version.

(Credit: Jonathan Skillings/CNET, from Apple video)

Updated at 6:22 a.m. PDT with more details and new images, and 8:45 a.m. PDT with comments from Apple.

Apparently the tiny iPod Shuffle wasn't tiny enough. On Wednesday, Apple unveiled a 4GB Shuffle that's half the size of its predecessor.

The new device is smaller than a AA battery yet holds up to 1,000 songs, Apple said. The preshrunk Shuffle also adds a new VoiceOver feature that can recite song titles, artists, and playlist names, as well as provide status information, such as battery life. Speaking of which, Apple said the gadget's battery life clocks in at 10 hours.

Priced at $79, it comes in silver or black. The aluminum body of the third-generation Shuffle stands 1.8 inches tall and is 0.3 inch thick. The navigation and volume controls are in a small protrusion on the right earphone cord.

With the new Shuffle, users can organize songs by multiple playlists. The VoiceOver feature can speak in 14 languages: English, Czech, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Mandarin Chinese, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, and Turkish.

VoiceOver is Apple's term for the text-to-speech engine built into Mac OS X Leopard in order to let blind people use a Mac more easily. The "Alex" voice generated by that software is the one that Leopard users will hear, while Windows users and Mac OS X Tiger (10.4) users will hear a different voice, said Greg Joswiak, Apple's vice president of iPod and iPhone marketing.

The first time you sync one of the new iPod Shuffles with iTunes, Apple will install software on your Mac or PC that makes the voice feature possible. This isn't speech recognition; you can't speak into your iPod headphone and order up Bob Dylan's "Blood on the Tracks," but the voice feature is more useful than just reminding you of the name of that song you downloaded three years ago but had forgotten about until it randomly came up on your Shuffle.

... Read more
May 6, 2008 4:00 AM PDT

A bridge to the future of the iPod

by Tom Krazit
  • 13 comments

What does Apple CEO Steve Jobs have in mind for the next generation of iPods?

(Credit: Ina Fried/CNET News.com)

More than six years into the iPod era, Apple still stands atop the music player landscape. But what comes next?

Apple is at a crossroads in the evolution of the product that arguably saved its bacon. Without the iPod fueling Apple's profits and investments, we probably wouldn't have spent the past year talking about Apple's surging Mac business or its game-changing iPhone.

After years of double-digit gains, iPod growth has finally trailed off. The market is arguably saturated: do you know anyone who wants to take their music on the go who hasn't bought an MP3 player? But at the same time, the iPod is undergoing a bit of a revolution: it's morphing from a simple music player to a full-fledged computer.

Apple has sent clear signals that it thinks the iPod Touch and the iPhone are the future of its iPod business. It considers the Wi-Fi-enabled iPod Touch "a new type of device," Greg Joswiak, Apple's vice president of worldwide iPod and iPhone marketing, said when Apple unveiled a higher capacity iPod Touch in February.

But that doesn't mean the whole world is ready to step up to a more sophisticated device like the iPod Touch: lots of people just want to play their tunes and watch their shows on the go, and don't want to break the bank to do so. While Apple is taking sure steps toward evolving the upper echelon of its iPod product line, what should it do to keep its iPod cash cow going into the next decade?

Look to the clouds. IaaS (iPod as a service) will thankfully never catch on as a buzzword, but Apple could bridge the gap between today and the future by bundling regular iPods with services, adding wireless as fast as possible, and bringing OS X down into a new generation of iPods as soon as Moore's Law lets it happen.

Coming back to earth
At some point last year, iPod growth began to slow. Year-over-year unit growth dropped from 50 percent during the 2006 holiday season to just 5 percent growth during the 2007 holiday season. But revenue growth remained steady, at 18 percent during the 2006 holiday season and 17 percent during the same period in 2007.

That suggests that people are making the jump from older iPods to newer models, a trend backed up by our recent iPod survey. The iPod Classic (defined as any generation of video-playing iPod) is the day-to-day music player for 31 percent of respondents. Fifty-two percent of all respondents have owned one or two iPods, and 34 percent bought their first model in 2003 or 2004.

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But 60 percent of same respondents indicated that the iPod Touch would be their next iPod purchase. And 68 percent said given their choice of possible music player/cell phone combinations, they most want the iPhone. This kind of "trading up" to the starting price of $299 for an 8GB iPod Touch--or the $499 32GB model--helps Apple offset the slow growth of the basic iPod models with stronger revenue and profits from the iPod Touch while it adds a whole new source of cash with the iPhone.

Both the iPod Touch and the iPhone are much more than just music and video players: they can get online, send e-mail, and will soon be able to run a host of officially sanctioned games and applications.

As chips continue to get smaller, more powerful, and cheaper, it stands to reason that Apple could beef up the other versions of the iPod, the Shuffle and the Nano, with additional capabilities and features. Certainly, it will be able to keep increasing the amount of storage available on each device, the single largest request of MP3 player shoppers who responded to our poll. Wi-Fi capability was the second-most desired trait in a future iPod.

The iPod Touch may be the Next Big Thing for Apple's iPod business, but it won't be the only iPod of the future.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

At some point, the MP3 player market looks like it will diverge into at least three businesses: a low-end commodity business cranking out tiny standalone audio and video players for very specific tastes, the high-end portable computing business, and some third category that packs as many computing features of the iPod Touch that can fit, at the time, within $50 of a $199 price band.

This three-headed monster appears some ways off. At the moment, there doesn't appear to be any competitor making meaningful gains at Apple's expense, even in the low-end market. That suggests people are still buying their MP3 players based on design, brand identity, and the need for more storage.

If that changes, however, Apple probably doesn't want to spend a lot of effort on a low-margin commodity business. The iPod brand is easily the strongest in the portable music player world, but as the low-end of the market spreads out into countless niches (think USB drives), Apple would have no real advantage over other consumer electronics companies that know how to crank out widgets in huge volumes.

Also, basic mobile phones are growing more and more capable of handling simple music playback, said Ross Rubin, an analyst with The NPD Group. And at some point, the ability of manufacturers to add more and more capacity will outpace the growth of the average individual's personal music library, he said.

The iPhone and the iPod Touch are the kind of innovative high-margin products that Apple likes to have. In a crowded marketplace, you need to find some way to differentiate yourself, and Apple has traditionally focused on making high-end products with great design that are easy to use.

At your service
Something is going to have to fit in between the commoditized MP3 players you might find one day in Walgreens or 7-Eleven and the iPod Touch. As Apple waits for the advances in chip technology needed to bring larger screens, more capacity, and wireless capabilities into power-constrained devices, it can start offering services to increase the attractiveness of lower-priced iPods, Rubin said.

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Just a combined 13 percent of our survey respondents said they are considering an iPod Shuffle or an iPod Nano for their next iPod purchase. It's great for Apple that so many people want the iPod Touch, but that's leaving an awful lot of people on the sidelines who want a music player but can't justify spending $299. One thing the company could do is finally drop its long-standing opposition to a subscription model and start selling iPods in conjunction with such a service, Rubin said.

Apple has long maintained that people want to buy music, rather than rent it. However, that might not always be the case, as people are starting to get used to the idea of "cloud computing," where much of your data is stored by a third party.

And as more and more people buy iPods for video as well as music, such a subscription service makes more sense. Apple is now offering TV and movie rentals through iTunes, and could extend some sort of similar packaging to music if the demand was there. I think most of us have made enough hasty music purchases, only to grow sick of that song or album after a week, to consider a try-before-you-buy type of service from Apple.

Apple has a bit of a luxury in this area that it doesn't have in the Mac or iPhone market, in that it enjoys a dominant position from which to make its next move. The company seems to be in a similar position to when it introduced the iPod Nano, killing off its most popular product in the process. It had a killer design with the Nano, but had to make the tough decision to abandon its best-selling product.

Now, with the iPod Touch and the iPhone, Apple has a set of very compelling products that threaten its best-selling category. When recently asked if the iPod Touch would cannibalize iPhone sales, Apple COO Tim Cook said he'd rather Apple cannibalize Apple than someone else.

More capable mobile phones might take the less-profitable low-end, but Apple needs to make sure it keeps the meaty part to itself. Service-oriented iPods mixed with handheld computers might be the best way the keep the iPod gravy train going.

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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.

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