Technology news and Jobs
Seeking Nerdvana
Apple iTV to reap what Amazon, TiVo and Wal-mart sow
Seeking Nerdvana
Apple iTV to reap what Amazon, TiVo and Wal-mart sow | Apple iTV to reap what Amazon, TiVo and Wal-mart sow |
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| Written by Adam Turner | |
| Friday, 09 February 2007 | |
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Page 1 of 2 This time around the existing players will put up a much stronger fight that the iPod's competition, but few will survive the Apple onslaught. Despite they media hype, video over the internet is not a Mums and Dads mainstream phenomenon yet. It's poised to happen, which is when Apple likes to make its move. Content is king when it comes to any kind of entertainment system, which is why recent announcements from the likes of Amazon/TiVo, Wal-mart and BitTorrent focus on the number of movie houses and television networks they've signed up. You can bet Apple will announce some impressive content deals when the iTV launches, but the key is digital rights management. Apple can get away with it's iPod/iTunes closed shop because it dominates the market, but will this approach work with video? Will the iTV and iTunes have the same symbiotic relationship? Will Jobs bet the farm on the hope Apple can sweep away the competition and establish its video DRM as the de facto standard? It's a big risk but I think Apple's arrogant enough to do it. Most iPod owners don't seem to care about not being able to play music from Windows-based music download stores because they can always rip their existing CD collection to compliment what they download from iTunes. iTV owners won't have this luxury - unless there are some dramatic revisions of copyright law in the next few months it will still be illegal in most countries to rip a DVD to you hard drive the way you do a CD. So for iTV users it could be iTunes or nothing, with Jobs betting on the fact iTunes offers enough to keep them happy. Actually it's not quite iTunes or nothing. Just as the iPod plays DRM-free MP3s, you can bet the iTV will play DRM-free video files such as DivX. So if other online video stores offered their video files DRM-free - just as Jobs is calling on the music industry to do - then iTV owners will have an even bigger market to choose from. This isn't going to happen. Pirate DivX files downloaded from P2P applications are also DRM-free, but I couldn't see file-sharers jumping on the iTV band wagon or vice versa. So lets look at the iTV/iTunes' competitors... CONTINUED |
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