Posts Tagged ‘Macworld’

Apple Drops Anticopying Measures in iTunes

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO — Apple said it would begin selling song downloads without the anticopying measures that have been part of its iTunes music store since it opened in 2003. It will also move away from its insistence on pricing songs at 99 cents.

Philip W. Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, announced the changes at the Macworld Expo here. They are the product of a new deal between Apple and the three largest music companies: Sony BMG, the Universal Music Group and the Warner Music Group.

As the recording industry has sought for years, the price of many older and less popular songs in the store will drop to 69 cents beginning in April, while the biggest new hits will go for $1.29. Others that are in more moderate demand will remain at 99 cents.

In 2007, Apple made a deal with EMI, the smallest of the four major record companies, to sell higher-quality audio files of its songs without digital rights management, or D.R.M., the security software that limits how many copies a customer can make of a download, and also restricts what devices the song can be played on.

Many analysts saw the demise of D.R.M. as an inevitability, since the major labels have been selling music without those restrictions through other large online retailers, like Amazon.com and Rhapsody.

But Apple’s concession over pricing was seen as a victory for the labels, which have been struggling for eight years with steep losses in sales of physical CDs.

“It’s not something that’s necessarily going to be a blockbuster,” said Russ Crupnick, an analyst with the NPD Group. “But if you could increase the value of the average customer by 10, 20, 30 percent, that’s a huge win for the labels, because they’re struggling to find those incremental revenue sources.”

Mr. Schiller said in his speech that Apple would immediately offer 8 million songs without D.R.M. and add the store’s remaining 2 million songs by the end of the quarter.

From NYtimes.com

Other Macworld Keynote News

Macworld 2009 - What’s the buzz

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Analysts expect evolutionary products at Macworld Expo

While Steve Jobs won’t be giving the keynote address during next week’s Macworld Conference & Expo, analysts still expect the company to introduce some products during the company’s last scheduled attendance at the annual trade show.

“We won’t see revolutionary products, but we very well could see evolutionary products,” Michael Gartenberg, vice president of market research firm JupiterMedia and editor of theMobileDevicesToday blog, told Macworld. “Phil [Schiller] isn’t going to get up onstage, say hi, and walk off.”……….. more here!! 

 

Other news items regarding Macworld 2009!

17″ Unibody MacBook Pro with Non-Removable Extended-Life Battery?

Macworld: White Covered Banners, Keynote Rehearsal Spy Shot

Five things Apple needs to do at Macworld

Macworld: ‘Even the Small Talk Will be Big’, Update: White Covered Banners

Mac Mini to Gain Support for Dual Displays?

Macworld 2009 preview: Will Apple launch an ‘iPhone nano’?

iPhone (Nano?), Smaller Shuffle and Cheaper MacBook in 2009?

Will Snow Leopard Be On Display At Macworld?

Friday, December 19th, 2008

Now that Apple has revealed CEO Steve Jobs won’t be giving his traditional keynote at next month’s Macworld Expo in San Francisco and after this year the company will be pulling out of the event altogether, it’s tempting to assume that Apple won’t be coming out with any major news at the event.But Thursday, The Guardian (U.K.), citing sources close to Apple that claim development of OS X 10.5.6 Snow Leopard is progressing ahead of schedule, suggested Apple could use the Macworld pulpit to show off the upcoming version of OS X.

Two new technologies in Snow Leopard have garnered the lion’s share of attention since Apple first started talking about OS X 10.5.6 in June: Grand Central, which adds support for multicore processors and parallel computing; and OpenCL, which lets applications tap into unused GPU computing power.

Some Apple resellers have speculated that these technologies could help Apple capture a larger share of the enterprise computing market. According to Forrester Research, Mac business adoption stood at 4.2 percent at the end of 2007.

Parallel processing will be difficult for Apple to sell, but it’ll give users snappier performance across the board in terms of moving around files, launching applications and using system utilities, according to solution providers.

Larry Stram, CEO of Mac Resource, a Huntsville, Ala.-based Apple reseller, doesn’t see parallel computing having a huge impact in the consumer market, but says it’s fast gaining favor in government and research sectors.

“Computers are so fast now that most consumers don’t really need the speed behind parallel processing,” said Stram. “But for Apple, parallel processing in OS X could represent a real marketing advantage over other consumer-based off-the-shelf operating systems, like Windows,” Stram said.