WHAT ARE WE… CHOPPED LIVER?

By in News
on Saturday, December 3rd, 2005

The Apple-oriented rumor site Think Secret has a must-read piece up in which it claims that Apple will introduce a revised Mac mini at January’s Mac World Expo, a new home computer that will serve as the hub of a new digital delivery service with a new digital rights management system.

From the piece: “In an effort to appease media companies wary of the security of digital rights management technology, Apple’s new technology will deliver content such that it never actually resides on the user’s hard drive. Content purchased will be automatically made available on a user’s iDisk, which Front Row 2.0 will tap into. When the user wishes to play the content, robust caching technology Apple previously received a patent for will serve it to the users computer as fast as their Internet connection can handle. The system will also likely support downloading the video content to supported iPods but at no time will it ever actually be stored on a computer’s hard drive.”

The article goes on to say that alongside this product announcement will be news of new programming available for Apple’s form of home streaming. However, Nitin Gupta, a tech consultant with the Yankee Group, hopes that Apple doesn’t get too indie with its new venture. “”What will be the draw is access to great content they can’t get elsewhere,” Gupta is quoted as saying. “Yes, this needs to includes movies and a lot more television shows, but it needs to include exclusive content. If it doesn’t and it includes niche programming, like independent films, it’s going to have limited appeal.”

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  • Guy Brighton

    Apple related:
    Did you see the piece on PSFK entitled ‘Will Video iPod Kill The Feature Film’ – check it out here: http://www.psfk.com/2005/12/will_video_ipod.html

  • Scott Macaulay

    I think the Apple strategy seems to be pretty much embodied in the headline of the article you linked. I’m sure there’s a grand plan to get out in front with a workable digital rights management system, but I think the question of what people will choose to watch on their video iPods, if anything, is still an open one. Yeah, for commuters it could be last night’s hit TV show. I’m hoping, unlike the tech columnist in the blog I linked to, that it is more niche work.

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