By silicon.com, 13 September 2006 08:25
NEWS
Apple overhauled its digital music and video offerings on Tuesday, introducing new iPods in three categories and announcing plans to make movies available for purchase through the iTunes store.
Movies from four studios owned by The Walt Disney Company will be available on iTunes 7, the new version of the download software, the same day they are released to DVD, Apple CEO Steve Jobs said in outlining the new offerings at a product showcase in San Francisco. Preorders and movies purchased in the first week will cost $12.99; the price then bumps up to $14.99 for new releases.
The studios are Miramax, Pixar Animation Studios, Touchstone Pictures and Walt Disney Pictures. Older titles will also be available for $9.99.
Movies can be downloaded in near-DVD quality, Jobs said during his presentation at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Consumers with broadband speeds of 5Mbps will be able to download movies from iTunes in 30 minutes, he added.
Apple also plans to introduce a product in the first quarter of 2007 that lets consumers stream their movies or music to televisions, Jobs said. The new device, code-named iTV, has 802.11 wireless built in. It will sell for $299 and works with PCs and Macs. "We think it completes the picture here," Jobs said.
Tuesday's announcements marked more than just a tweak to existing products and services, one analyst said.
Gene Munster, an analyst with Piper Jaffray, said: "The big theme today was Apple announced its intentions to take over your living room."
Apple would not say which flavour of 802.11 wireless networking the iTV would use. Apple senior vice president Phil Schiller said in an interview: "We're not talking about the technology inside iTV. That's next year's discussion."
But Apple has made its mark in digital entertainment with music, and for those who just want a music player, it is offering new iPod Nano and iPod Shuffle models, along with a new video iPod. The new Nanos feature twice as much capacity as the original generation of Nanos introduced last year, and are available in a variety of colours like the iPod Mini they replaced.
The new Nano will come in three models - a 2GB in silver only; a 4GB in silver, blue, pink and green; and a 8GB in black only. Apple will also use an aluminium casing on the new generation of Nanos, perhaps to counter complaints the Nanos were easily scratched. The 2GB version costs $149, the 4GB models cost $199, and the 8GB Nano costs $249.
The new video iPods have a 60 per cent brighter screen for watching movies and television shows and a higher-capacity battery, delivering up to six hours of video playback on the 80GB model. The 80GB version costs $349, and a 30GB version costs $249. Consumers will be able to play games on the devices, including Bejeweled, Cubis, Pac-Man, Tetris, Texas Hold 'em and Zuma.
Although the new video iPods have a brighter screen, better battery life and the ability to play games, Apple did not add wireless abilities or a larger screen, as some Apple watchers had predicted. Microsoft's forthcoming Zune player will include built-in wi-fi as well as a larger screen. However, it's unclear how bulky that player will be or what battery life it will offer.
As for the movies, notably, Apple launched with just Disney's studios, while rival Amazon.com announced last week its Unbox service will include films from 20th Century Fox, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures, Universal Pictures and Warner Bros Entertainment. Apple's desire to have new releases available the same day as the DVD may have been among the sticking points.
In addition, Apple now has a family connection with Disney. Jobs earlier this year became a member of the board at the venerable entertainment company, which acquired Pixar, where Jobs is CEO.
But Disney CEO Bob Iger said he doesn't expect Disney to be alone on iTunes for long. "I'm confident there will be many more after us," Iger said in a brief interview after the Apple event. "We're the first but we will be one of many fairly soon."
Apple is also offering relatively fixed pricing, though new releases sell for more than older titles. Iger said he is perfectly comfortable with that notion and doesn't think it will prove to be an insurmountable hurdle for the rest of the industry. However, Disney is likely to team up with others. "It's nonexclusive," he said of the Apple deal. "We're platform-agnostic."
Jobs said that although the movies are a US feature, the company hopes to offer films internationally next year. Iger said Disney is already in talks with Apple on overseas distribution.
Both the video iPod and iPod Nano come with a search feature that lets users find songs, artists or television shows by entering letters into a search bar rather than scrolling through the familiar menus. They will also allow users to sync their music collections on home and work PCs through the iPod, so songs added at home and synced to the iPod will transfer to a work PC when that iPod is plugged into a USB port.
Jobs called the new 1GB iPod Shuffle "the world's smallest digital music player". It's about half the size of the original iPod Shuffle, uses the same aluminium casing as the new Nanos, and has a clip built onto the back. It costs $79.
The new iPod and the iPod Nanos are available immediately, and the iPod Shuffle will be available in October.
Version 7 of iTunes is also available for download immediately. The addition of movies to the content available for purchase was the most significant new feature but the new version provides music videos at a higher resolution than before, now up to 640-by-480 pixel resolution. The screens on the new iPods and iPod Nanos support this resolution, which will also improve the quality of movies played on a Mac, PC or television.
The line-up of television shows available on the iTunes 7 store will also now include highlights of football games through a deal with the US National Football League's NFL Network, Jobs said.
Tom Krazit and Ina Fried write for CNET News.com

Comments
There are 7 comments. Join the discussion
1. Mick Mooney
iTV? ... ITV? Possible problem here?!
2. anonymous
Following Apple's litigation record...
... whereby they sue ar53 off anyone who dares to use any letters of the alphabet present in one of their product names, I cant wait for the fun to begin over the use of iTV as a product name.
No doubt the courts will uphold Apple's complaint, and a TV station which has been around since 1959 will have to change its name....
3. anonymous
Just what kids always wanted, they will now be able to stand round on the street corners watching films on their ipods on a tiny screen, and damage their eyesight.
Personally don't see the point, i can watch the dvd (which is better quality) on the TV (30" ish screen) in 6.1 surround sound. Better picture better sound and more comfort than the street corner, confident in the fact the battery won't go flat at the best part of the film.
When the TV part is avalable it may be a different matter (although i think not, when i already have the technology to watch the film).
4. Ken Munn
iTV eh?
Expect a courtroom battle with ITV, the UK's Independent Television company.
5. Simon
iTV, ITV, EyeTV
So, no room for confusion there then !
Just in case anyone doesn't know :
ITV = UK TV channels/broadcaster
EyeTV = TV receivers/software from Elgato.
Oh yes, and MyTV = the TV in the corner that I own ;-)
6. Don Tregartha
You're missing the point a bit Anonymous (UK, IT admin) - its the delivery channel. Apple have a robust and market tested system. Disney have probably entered into the deal to get the thing floated and give themselves a bit more cred than they have of late. When it takes off, as it surely will, the majors will pile in. They said the itunes music store would never take off! - What we all need now is a high bandwidth, low cost back up system to create offline storage of all this media we're going to buy.
7. MusicFan
Maybe your missing the point Don,
The point is, why would anyone want to watch a film on an ipod.
Maybe its because, as you say, you need something to spend your money on! After all, thats all ipods are good for.
You obviously just have too much money.