Friday, March 14, 2008




The iPod Touch: Apple's Sleeper Device
The new flagship of the iPod line could be the harbinger of new products that blur the line between computers and consumer electronics


Since it first unveiled the iPhone more than a year ago, Apple has been heading down a new path. Having developed a version of the OS X operating system that runs not only on a Macintosh but also on a device that fits in your pocket, Apple has blurred the distinction between what we know of as a "computer" and what we think of as a "consumer electronics" device.

The best evidence of this point, which I've argued before in this space, is the iPhone's overlooked cousin, the iPod Touch (BusinessWeek.com, 1/11/07). On its face the Touch may seem to be little more than an iPhone without the phone features. It can't connect to cellular networks for calls or Internet access, relying instead on Wi-Fi to go online. Aside from playing music and video, it can fetch e-mail, clips from YouTube, stock quotes, and weather forecasts. It can also help you navigate from point A to point B via Google Maps (GOOG).

Notably, Apple (AAPL) Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook has taken to publicly describing the Touch as a "mobile Wi-Fi platform," as he did in remarks at a Goldman Sachs (GS) conference on Feb. 27. And in conversations with other Apple executives, I've been told that the Touch can now be considered the flagship product of the iPod family (not counting the iPhone, which remains a product category unto itself). Not the Nano. Not the Shuffle. The Touch.
An E-Book Reader?

This emerging realization about the Touch has multiple possible ramifications. If the screens on the iPhone and the iPod Touch are suitable for reading Web site content and e-mail, why shouldn't they be suitable for reading books and magazines? All that's needed are willing content suppliers for the iTunes Store, which could become a central distribution point for all kinds of digital media—a record store, a video shop, a bookstore, and a newsstand all at once.
John Markoff of The New York Times (NYT) and others have mused that a next logical step might be an Apple reader akin to Amazon.com's (AMZN) Kindle (BusinessWeek.com, 11/19/07). I think they may be at least partially right. After all, Amazon.com is now in the music business, selling unprotected MP3 downloads in direct competition with iTunes. Now that Apple offers most major types of entertainment media on iTunes—music, TV shows, movies, audio books—and will soon be in the business of selling applications for the iPhone and iPod Touch, it stands to reason digitized print media could be next.
But once print media becomes part of the equation, the size of the screen on the Touch, and for that matter the iPhone, becomes an issue. The screen on the Kindle measures 6 inches diagonally, nearly twice that of the iPod Touch. Having used both the Touch and the Kindle, I have to say that the larger screen is preferable for reading anything that takes longer than five minutes.

Yet even if Apple does actually have one in the pipeline, I'd say that a reading device alone would be thinking too small. If the iPod Touch is indeed the vanguard of a new family of media devices, any larger-screened descendant would have to do much more than simply add the ability to read digital versions of the printed page.

Thanks to Business Week for this story.

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