Jason Jenkins
Jason loves anything tech-related and drives his partner crazy by bringing home the latest gadgets to play with. So crazy, in fact, she has finally persuaded him to buy a new place to house all the junk -- sorry, life-changing consumer technology -- he has amassed over the years
Wednesday 10 September 2008, 2:11pm
New iPodzzz: Man, that was dull
I can't begin to explain how much of a let-down the Apple launch was last night, and Steve Jobs has only got himself to blame.
He has single-handedly created an expectation that every time he holds a press conference, he's going to unveil the most amazingly amazing thing Captain Amazing has ever produced from his amazing shed.
The lack of official pre-launch information. The over-controlling PR machine. The drama of his arrival on the stage, followed by a measured delivery that drops each new product bombshell at exactly the right time. All these things normally work brilliantly -- think iPhone 3G and MacBook Air to give just two recent examples. But not this time.
This time, he pulled out a nano that looks like the one from 2006, a few trivial upgrades to iTunes that I've already forgotten about and an iPod touch with a built-in speaker that talks to your shoes. Ta-da!
Perhaps I'm just sore that I had to work late. But the truth is Steve didn't need to pull an amazing new iPod out of his magician's hat. As he made very clear, Apple has won the digital music war.
The company is the number-one manufacturer of MP3 players in every country that it cares about, and by a massive margin. It's simply inconceivable that anyone else could ever catch them up in terms of sales, except by giving them away in packs of Frosties. And even then, it probably wouldn't make any difference.
That means there's simply no overriding imperative to innovate like there used to be. Apple can afford to focus its attention on the new version of OS X, or updated MacBooks, or whatever else it's working on now.
iPods are really good products just as they are -- I've bought them pretty much from the beginning and loved them all. They are easy to use, look cool and best of all, they just work.
Ultimately, I've no problem with there being no gargantuan iPod advances left, but perhaps next time, Mr Jobs, you could give the big press conference a miss and just send out a memo instead?
Comments on this post
Couldn't agree more! I would guess the most significant problem is the fact that since previous apple press conferences have lived up to such immense hype, delivering and showing off really good new innovations (ipods, macbook air, OSX etc), that Steve himself simply can't keep up with the pressure and demand that apple has appeared to achieve in the past. I for one was perhaps looking forward to an anecdote towards the end... "by the way.. we have new macbooks with aluminium casing, dedicated graphics..." (the macbook lineup are in sore need for a refresh), but appreciating that the main purpose of the event "Let's Rock" would have blatently focused on iPods and iTunes... Maybe I too had far to high hopes? But as you say, lulled into a false sense of security driven by previous brilliant press conferences by the "apple PR machine" and it's sidekick Super-Steve.
Posted by Matt on Thu 11 September, 2008 10:33 AM
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Madness! Ok I agree with the PR stunts, but are you seriously asking Apple not to innovate just because they are the market leader? Are you in favour of monopolies?
Posted by Steven L on Thu 11 September, 2008 3:11 PM
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There will be a time where you can only add so much to what is just an mp3 player at its core.But im sure the cult of apple will one day fizzle out just like microsoft probably after Steve jobs has left.
Posted by Gully on Mon 22 September, 2008 10:01 AM
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