
The iPod
announcements were largely expected, and investors were less than energized,
sending Apple's shares down $6.24, 4 percent, to close at $151.68.
The iPod upgrades
Jobs revealed Tuesday in a theater in San Francisco include two slick new Nano
models, oval-shaped devices that Jobs said are the thinnest iPods Apple has
ever made. They are less than a quarter-inch thick.
A $149 version
comes with 8 gigabytes of memory (enough for 2,000 songs); a 16-gigabyte
version (which holds 4,000 songs) is $199.
The new models
acknowledge the incredible appetite for iPods _ Jobs said Apple has sold 160
million iPods since their introduction in 2001, making them the runaway leader
among portable music players. But Apple has to work hard to differentiate them
from the iPhone, Apple's cell phone/iPod/Internet device that threatens to
cannibalize some of the demand for iPods.
Jobs also showed
off three new versions of the iPod Touch, which is much like an iPhone except
that doesn't make calls. An 8-gigabyte version of the new model will sell for
$229; a 16-gigabyte Touch will be $299 and a 32 GB model will be $399.
Apple hopes the
32-gigabyte unit will appeal to people who download a lot of games and other
programs, and wouldn't be able to store them all on an iPhone, which tops out
at 16 gigabytes. Jobs said people have downloaded a "mind-blowing"
100 million applications for iPhones and iPod Touch devices since Apple began
offering the programs online two months ago.
"We don't
think of it as cannibalization," said Philip Schiller, Apple's senior vice
president of product marketing. "As long as they want an Apple product,
we're happy."
But Ross Rubin, an
analyst with market researcher NPD Group, said Apple's focus on the Nano and
its new features indicates otherwise. Among the new twists: A "shake to
shuffle" feature that lets people mix up their iPod playlists by giving
the device a hard, abrupt shake.
Jobs also showed
off a new "genius" feature in iTunes and the iPod's onboard software.
If a user clicks the genius button while listening to a song, the program
automatically creates a new playlist of similar songs from the user's own
library. The software determines similarity in part by analyzing which songs
other people have together in their libraries.
In the deal with
NBC, the television network is coming back to iTunes a year after pulling out
in a dispute over the prices Apple charges for shows it sells on the online
service. At that time, programming controlled by NBC Universal, a unit of
General Electric Co., made up an estimated 40 percent of the video downloads on
iTunes.
At the height of
the spat, Apple said NBC had sought more than double the wholesale prices for
its shows, which would have resulted in shows selling for $4.99 each. NBC
disputed that, and said it wanted only to be able to sell programs at different
prices.
But with its
muscle in the market for digital downloads, Apple largely appears to have won
the battle. NBC's programming will sell for the same prices as other TV shows
available on iTunes. High-definition shows, a new addition for iTunes, will
sell for $2.99 each. Shows in standard definition cost $1.99. Some older shows
are available for 99 cents apiece.
NBC was able to
wring some concessions. Jean-Briac Perrette, NBC Universal's president for
digital distribution, said NBC will be allowed to bundle programs together and
set prices for those packages as well as for full seasons of shows. Apple
wasn't willing to budge on those requests in earlier negotiations.
Perrette said NBC
is "thrilled to be back on iTunes" but noted the network also has
"a lot of other avenues" to sell shows online, including its own site
and a video Web site, Hulu.com, that it created with News Corp.
Jobs gave the
start of the event some buzz by flashing a message on a screen behind him:
"The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated."
Jobs borrowed that
line from Mark Twain in reference to obituary preparedness on Jobs that was
accidentally posted by Bloomberg News and then retracted. News outlets
regularly prepare obituary material on famous people.
Questions about
Jobs' health swirled after he appeared gaunt at a recent Apple event. Apple has
since said Jobs, 53, a survivor of pancreatic cancer, suffered from a bug and
is better. He appeared thin but energetic Tuesday.
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