26 October 2011

New from Apple

Bloomberg.com has the story by Adam Satariano:
Apple Inc. is turning to the software engineer who built iTunes to help lead its development of a television set, according to three people with knowledge of the project. Jeff Robbin, who helped create the iPod in addition to the iTunes media store, is now guiding Apple’s internal development of the new television effort, said the people, who declined to be identified because his role isn’t public.
Robbin’s involvement is a sign of Apple’s commitment to extending its leadership in smartphones and tablets into the living room. Before his death, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs told biographer Walter Isaacson that he had “finally cracked” how to build an integrated television with a simple user interface that would wirelessly synchronize content with Apple’s other devices.
“It will have the simplest user interface you could imagine,” Jobs told Isaacson in the biography Steve Jobs, released yesterday by Simon & Schuster.
Trudy Muller, a spokeswoman for Cupertino, California-based Apple, declined to comment. Outside of Jobs’ remarks in the book, Apple hasn’t acknowledged that it’s developing a television; set. And, according to one person, it’s not guaranteed that Apple will release a television. Until now, the company’s television efforts have been limited to Apple TV, a small $99 gadget (photo) that plugs in to a television and gives users access to content from iTunes, the Netflix streaming service, and YouTube. Jobs had called it Apple’s “hobby,” rather than something designed to be a serious moneymaker.
That may be changing. Apple has a prototype television in the works, and may introduce a product for sale by late next year or 2013, according to Gene Munster, an analyst with Piper Jaffray. He based that timing on meetings with contacts close to Apple’s suppliers in Asia, industry contacts, and Apple’s patent portfolio. Munster said Apple also is investing in manufacturing facilities and securing supplies of LCD screens. Apple’s introduction of the voice-command software Siri and web-storage service iCloud also could be used for a future television, Munster said in a note to investors yesterday. Siri may help search for videos, while iCloud allows customers to store video, music, pictures, and other content on the company’s servers instead of their own hard drives.
One of Apple’s goals for a new television is to let users more seamlessly search for a show or movie, said one of the people. For example, instead of having to separately check to see if a movie or show is available through Netflix or a cable service, all the material could be integrated, this person said.
One challenge will be getting makers of movies and television shows to change how they make their content available. Apple has considered adopting new business models for delivering video, including a subscription television service, media executives said last year. Those talks didn’t lead to a deal.
Building a full television set would put Apple in closer competition with consumer-electronics companies such as Samsung Electronics and Sony. Apple could sell 1.4 million televisions next year, out of about 220 million flat-panel sets for the total market, according to Munster. That could add $6 billion in revenue to the company’s top line by 2014, he said.
Google, which competes with Apple in the smartphone market, also is attempting to attract customers to an operating system it has created for televisions. Unlike that approach, Apple would be building both the hardware and the software.
Apple fell two percent to $397.77 at yesterday's close in New York. Its shares have climbed 23 percent this year.
Robbin, the software engineer helping lead the television effort, was hired in 2000 to develop iTunes after Apple bought the SoundJam digital music player he developed. ITunes, introduced in January of 2001, became Apple’s digital hub for synchronizing music, video, and applications across Apple’s devices, including the iPod, iPhone, and iPad.
According to the biography, Jobs considered Robbin such a valuable employee that he wouldn’t let a Time magazine reporter meet him without agreeing not to print his last name, for fear that he would be poached by a competitor.
Robbin was among the Apple executives who helped persuade Jobs to allow computers running Windows software to use iTunes, according to the biography, a move that helped the company add millions of new customers. The iTunes digital store, with more than 225 million registered users, generated almost $1.5 billion last quarter.
Robbin also was closely involved with the development of the iPod, including participating in a crucial 2001 meeting when Apple decided on the spin-wheel design of the digital music player and charted its expansion beyond personal computers to mobile computing, according to the book.
Rico says he'll buy one, for sure...

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