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David Bird
10-01-07, 02:11 PM
Apple Computer CEO Steve Jobs took the wraps off of the company's long-awaited "iPhone" on Tuesday, touting it as a three-in-one piece of hardware that acts as a mobile phone, a widescreen iPod with touch controls and an Internet communications device.

"This is a day I've been looking forward to for two and a half years," Jobs said. "Every once in a while a revolutionary product comes along that changes everything."

In 1984, said Jobs, Apple introduced the Macintosh and changed the computer industry. In 2001, the company introduced the iPod and changed the entire music industry.

"Well, today we're introducing three revolutionary products of this class," Jobs said. "The first one is a widescreen iPod with touch controls. The second is a revolutionary mobile phone. The third is a breakthrough Internet communications device."

But, he added, "these are not three separate devices. This is one device. And we are calling it iPhone. Today Apple is going to reinvent the phone."

The device, which will be sold by Apple and US mobile operator Cingular Wireless, is priced at US$499 for a 4GB model and US$599 for an 8GB model. It will be available in the US from June and requires approval from the U.S. Federal Communications Commission, Jobs said. The iPhone will not be available in Australia until 2008 and there is no localised pricing available at this time, according to Rob Small, marketing director for Apple Computer Australia.

The Apple iPhone will not be available in Australia until 2008 and no regional pricing has yet been announced.

The entire front of the quad-band GSM phone serves as the screen, Jobs told attendees at the MacWorld Expo. He also noted that the operating system behind the phone's various features is Mac OS X and said that it will sync up with a user's iTunes, plus mail, notes and bookmarks. It will also display visual voice mails.

The phone, whose screen measures 3.5 in. diagonally, plays video and includes a 2-megapixel camera. The screen offers a higher-than-normal resolution of 160 pixels per inch, Jobs said. He also said that the iPhone has a proximity sensor so that when it's held up to a user's ear during a call, the user interface is turned off.

Jobs pointed out that the phone will offer Wi-Fi and Bluetooth wireless connectivity, comes with the company's Safari Web browser and displays Google maps.

The iPhone features a small "Home" button on it. It's also remarkably thin -- at less than half an inch, it's thinner than any smart phone out there, according to Jobs.

On one side, it sports a ring/silent switch and volume up-and-down controls. On its silver back is the digital camera. The bottom features a speaker, microphone and iPod dock connector.

According to Jobs, the phone offers five hours of talk/video time and 16 hours when playing music.

The announcement confirmed rumors that had been swirling around the company for months. Earlier Tuesday, The Wall Street Journal had reported that Apple would announce a cell phone with wireless service from Cingular.

But in something of a break from past keynote talks, Jobs offered no updates on the company's plans for its next operating system update. Mac OS X 10.5, Leopard, is due out by midyear.

In introducing the new phone, Jobs explained that smart phones provide phone and e-mail and what he called "the baby Internet. They're not so smart and not so easy to use."

"We don't want to do these," he said. "We want to do a leapfrog product that's way smarter than these phones and much easier to use. So we're going to reinvent the phone."

The iPhone does not use a keyboard, nor does it use a stylus, as many smart phones do today. The device uses new technology, called Multitouch.

"We're going to use the best pointing device in our world," said Jobs. "We're born with 10 of them, our fingers."

Multitouch is far more accurate than any touch display, according to Jobs. It ignores unintended touches and supports multifinger gestures. "And boy, have we patented it," he added.

Apple TV
In addition to the phone announcement, Jobs also reintroduced the iTV, now called Apple TV. The device, which sells for AUD$449 and will be available next month, allows a user to stream music, movies and photos from a computer wirelessly to a TV, using the Apple TV.

It includes a 40GB hard drive, wireless networking using 802.11b/g/n, 720p high-definition playback and Ethernet and HDMI connections. The Apple TV will also play or display content from other users' computers, Jobs told those on hand for his speech.

Before unveiling the new hardware, Jobs noted that the company's move to Intel Corp. processors in its laptops and desktops in 2006 went smoothly. "It was just a year ago that I announced we were going to switch to Intel processors. I said we'd do it in the coming 12 months. We did it in seven months.

"It's been the smoothest and most successful transition that we have seen in our industry," he said.

Half of all Macs in the U.S. are now being sold to people who are first-time Mac users, said Jobs.

He also stressed that music sales through the company's iTunes Store remain strong. Apple has sold more than 2 billion songs via its iTunes Store to date. And the iPod is the world's most popular music player.

"There was an article recently that said iTunes sales have slowed dramatically. I don't know what data they're looking at," said Jobs. "What we see is iTunes sales were really up this year. We doubled the number of songs we sold in 2006. We are selling over 5 million songs a day. Isn't that unbelievable? 58 songs every second."

He also poked fun at rival Microsoft's Zune music player, noting that the Zune has a 2% market share. "So no matter how you try to spin this, what can you say?" Jobs said. Behind him, an image of the Zune on the screen burst into flames and faded away.

Jobs said that the iTunes Store has sold 50 million TV shows, and within four months, the service has sold 1.3 million movies. "Which I think has exceeded all of our expectations," he added.

Jobs then revealed that Apple has struck a deal with Paramount to offer its films.

Two hundred fifty movies are now offered on iTunes, said Jobs. "We're getting them up as fast as we can in the next week or so," he said. "We hope to add more movies as other studios throw in with us in 2007."

(Peter Cohen of Macworld contributed to this report.)

Ken Mingis and Yuval Kossovsky, Computerworld
10/01/2007 08:09:05
Source (http://www.arnnet.com.au/index.php/id;1523665296;fp;8;fpid;0)

David Bird
10-01-07, 02:24 PM
http://www.theage.com.au/ffximage/2007/01/10/appletv_narrowweb__300x314,0.jpg
Apple's new AppleTV, introduced by Apple CEO
Steve Jobs during his keynote address at MacWorld
Conference & Expo in San Francisco.
Photo: AP

Apple CEO Steve Jobs' Macworld keynote was largely focused on the iPhone, but he also debuted the long-awaited Apple TV.

Available worldwide, including Australia, next month, the Apple TV stores music and high definition video in a small white box that connects directly to the TV.

It was previewed in September as the "iTV", but its final name was never confirmed until today.

The Apple TV syncs with iTunes just like an iPod, storing the data on an internal hard drive. It can also stream audio and video directly from the internet or from computers in a local network.

The Apple TV will cost $449 in Australia.

Jobs spent little time or emphasis on the Apple TV, partly because it had already been announced, but also because his thunder had been stolen days before by a competitor.

Microsoft's uber-nerd Bill Gates had used the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas to outline his vision for the "digital decade" in which "connected experiences" were the key.

Home media servers chock full of digital music and video, networked through the home, and high definition television delivered on-demand over the internet, were at the centre of Gates' strategy, which he described as a combination of hardware, software and the all-important service providers.

Most parts of the puzzle were already real, available products. Microsoft's Media Center software is several years old and about to launch its first major revision.

Also at CES, companies such as SlingBox and TiVo offered similar products aimed at recording TV and re-broadcasting it around the home or over the Internet.

Nick Miller was flown to San Francisco by Apple

Nick Miller
January 10, 2007 - 9:59AM
Source (http://www.theage.com.au/news/home-theatre/apple-enters-living-room-with-apple-tv/2007/01/10/1168105022963.html)

doyles
10-01-07, 09:15 PM
I'd probably buy one of those if my tv wasnt in the same room as my mac

batb0y
11-01-07, 12:13 PM
got one on order already ;)

doyles
11-01-07, 05:54 PM
damn you!! :P

im thinking about it... ;)

batb0y
12-01-07, 11:29 AM
Hehe - Feb better mean start of Feb not end of it.

Hosko
12-01-07, 11:43 AM
I'll stick with the 360 and my Media Centre, its a far more advanced system. Probably not as flashy until I upgrade to Vista though.

batb0y
12-01-07, 03:04 PM
I guess one of the reasons I bought a 360 last year was to do something similar. Because before the 360 release it was SUPPOSED to work as a media streamer for all sorts of media on and XP install.

Then when it came out they ganked it so it only did photos and only over Windows Media Version. Screw microsoft. Trying to get everyone to upgrade to Media Centre. And now they give us videos but WMV videos? FFS.

Got sick of upgrading the damn thing everytime I turned it on - and I love it when Im told either I MUST upgrade or I cant use it anymore ??? WTF?

Screw em and their whiny noisy money maker.

doyles
12-01-07, 06:36 PM
I'll stick with the 360 and my Media Centre, its a far more advanced system. Probably not as flashy until I upgrade to Vista though.


dont you mean probably not as 'crashy' :tongue:

media center isnt bad, but it sure isnt great either. took me so long to get a tv card working in it, so many driver changes, updates, patches, reboots........

then I got eyetv and never looked back :biggrin:

Hosko
12-01-07, 11:43 PM
media center isnt bad, but it sure isnt great either. took me so long to get a tv card working in it, so many driver changes, updates, patches, reboots........

I didn't have any problems installing my Nova T500's into my media centre (well apart from receiving a broken card but that's not MS fault), did the registry hack to get 4 tuners working and haven't had a problem since.

I have even tested it out recording 4 HD programs at once, it worked a treat. I have 4 500gb hdd's in a RAID 5 array all internal. I don't want to think about how much it would cost to set-up similar on the Mac side.

Add the Ice guide(you shouldn't have to, it should be free but that's another argument) and the thing is a dream. Its left on permanently and also runs uTorrent which reads an RSS feed and automatically downloads new events when they become available.

I just noticed I hadn't installed a dictionary on my home Firefox, I should have realised when I had no red underlines all week lol

batb0y
13-01-07, 09:26 AM
Sounds cool.

Why would a raid cost anymore on a Mac than on a Windows machine? In fact you can spec out a Mac X-Server and a exactly specced Dell Blade Server and the Mac is a lot cheaper.

Im looking forward to seeing what I can do with the Apple TV. Be nice to be able to just plug it in and watch my stuff without going to registry hacks lol.

I'm already downloading TV Shows and Movies off iTunes and currently playing them through the iPod which works great. Be good not to have to copy crap around though.

With anyluck my BT files will work ok - otherwise its easy to convert to an ipod / itunes format for the DvX files.