Apple Dumps PortalPlayer Chip
Quash writes to mention a BusinessWeek article about Apple's decision to not use the PortalPlayer chip in a future version of the iPod nano. From the article: "PortalPlayer stock promptly shed $9.46, or nearly 42% of its value, and more than $220 million in market value. Apple generally doesn't discuss future products, nor its manufacturing or component supply strategies. It had no comment on the matter. But theories about who may have been the beneficiary of PortalPlayer's misfortune are abounding."
Interesting that this announcement from Apple came the quarter after PortalPlayer announced a new technology (called Preface) that's designed to work with Windows Vista only.
So - were they dumped for practical reasons or for punitive reasons? What do people think?
Onto a different aspect of this story - the company being touted as the most likely supplier of replacement chips is Samsung (allready a supplier of a good deal of ipod flash memory). Is it really wise for Apple to trust a competitor with components crucial to Apple's core business? (ipods are Apple's core business now).
Well, I guess Apple are happy doing business like this
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
It's possible they are making their own chip, but wouldn't it be ironic if they went with Sigmatel (who bought Rio). Maybe then they can finally get gapless playback and a decent mp3 player.
You are treating Samsung as an evil business. Just because they are trying to enter a marketplace doesn't mean they will sabotage their reputation by selling faulty chips to apple. Seeing as how the volume of ipod's sold would tower over the volume of samsung players sold, samsung would probably be better off selling apple computer chips.
Apple decided not to use Microsoft software in the future version of their OS. The shares of Microsoft promptly went down by 50%.
Apple has NOT dumped PortalPlayer entirely. At least, not yet.
Instead, Apple announced that PortalPlayer's latest chip will not be used in an upcoming version of the iPod Nano. PortalPlayer is the supplier for this particular chip in the current Nano and Video iPods. The announcement made no mention of changing the supplier for the current product line.
The Nano got destroyed by suppliers not being able to provide product when the Nano oversold estimates. You will all remember how we were flooded with nano commercials at launch and then the commercials disappeared and so did the Nanos because Apple could not assemble any units to sell.
With this move Apple shifts from having a critical part supplied by a bit player to the part being supplied by one of the behemoths of the industry in Samsung.
Furthermore the Korean semiconductor companies are infatuated with marketshare. I am certain Samsung offered them a tempting deal as long as they were the singlesource.
And nowhere does it say that Apple made the announcement. Nice reading skills, AC.
This guy's the limit!
According to him it's Chevrolet!
You heard it here first folks!
If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
They are switching over to Intel's Xscale processor. Since they are buying bulk Core Duos they must have gotten a discount on the PXA27x.
I'm not sure what you're whingeing about. Nobody said anything in the title or summary about an "announcement" by anyone.
Hell, I guess technically, you're correct; within the context of what shows up directly up in /., Apple didn't make this announcement. But doinking the editors is just silly and trollish.
Hell, there are plenty of things to doink editors about here; making crap up is pointless.
Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
Uh - who said that Apple made the announcement? The summary says that BusinessWeek's article is about Apple's decision to drop PortalPlayer, not the announcement of its decision to drop PortalPlayer.
It's me. We'll always have the first Nano...
-Apple
In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
Ok, now you're simply making things up. From this article regarding Apple's most recent quarterly earnings reports:
"Apple said it shipped 1,112,000 Mac computers and more than 8.5 million iPods music players during the quarter. The iPod shipments represented a 61 percent increase over the same period last year."
Therefore what you have just said is patently incorrect. QED.
Yeah, I'm sure Apple's very disappointed in selling a mere 8.5 million iPods during the quarter when consumer demand is at its lowest.
Would that be the massive drop leaving them up only 40% on last year?
... are a real paranoid :D
Thanks for the ride, though. Food for thought!
Global warming is a cube.
There does seem to be a pretty strong backlash against iPods over the past few months, at least in my experience.
Not saying people are ready to dump their iPods in the trash, but up until last year everyone wanted to talk about their iPod or plans to buy an iPod almost incessantly. This year so far I never hear people talk about their iPods. They still use them, and are everywhere, but the excitement and novelty really seems to be gone. And the little I do hear from people seems to be of the tone "I'm sick of hearing or seeing iPods"
Even though it has only been a few years that Apple has been growing due to iPod sales, if they really do continue to fall off Apple is going to be in a world of hurt since Mac sales appear to continue to shrink.
I think if all Apple does is come out with another colour change or other such tweak that is just a way to try to get existing iPod owners to buy a new one, people are going to seriously start looking at other players. The competition have come a long way in catching up to the iPod interface.
Sorry, didn't post the link
"...as the massive drop in iPod sales shows."
For more information on this "massive drop in iPod sales" please read: http://www.ipodobserver.com/story/26405
Highlights from the above story:
iPod shipments are up 61 percent compared to last year, and the company has now sold over 50 million units.
The iPod market share is up, too, accounting for 78 percent of the portable music players sold. In December 2005, that number was at 71 percent
Outside of the United States, the iPod is the top-selling MP3 player in the United Kingdom, Japan, Australia, and Canada.
Despite strong iPod sales, Apple sees room for major growth in the MP3 player market. Based on sales of other consumer electronic devices, Mr. Oppenheimer noted, "The MP3 player market has a lot of room for growth. According to Forester research, U.S. household MP3 player penetration was less than one quarter that of digital cameras as of the end of 2005."
The pursuit of absolute tolerance leads to the most rigorous and ludicrous intolerance. - REX MURPHY
Ever wonder why Apple choose Intel, not AMD for their x86 products? Especially that 32 bit wanna-be dual core, when AMD's design is so much better?
My answer is that there were two categories of chips in the running: computer chips and potable product chips. By combining both chips in a deal, Apple could leverage much better pricing and have more influence over whoever was their supplier. It's a little known fact but AMD also have an ARM like product based on the MIPS architecture (Alchemy AU1200) which has media extensions. My speculation is that AMD and Intel were both in the running. However AMD lost because its MIPS product was weaker than the StrongARM product, but the Intel CPU was good enough.
Wow, amazing how much power Apple has to just decide they're going to switch chip makers and therefore crush a company.
Macintosh humor! MacComedy.com
You are out of your fucking mind if you think anyone at Apple is anything but in a panic over this chart:
(red line, a little hard to see)
http://www.pegasus3d.com/macsales9904.gif
Apple's main cash cow just had a 50 percent drop in sales! Wake the fuck up!
Portal Player solution is very expensive. Last time I checked, it requires 2 ARM 7 chips with an external auio codec chip to run the the non video version iPod. There are plenty of more cost effective solution from the competitors such as Sigmatel, Philips or Freescale.
It is probably just a cost cutting move for Apple.
The purpose of writing is to inflate weak ideas, obscure poor reasoning, and inhibit clarity....Calvin
As an unhappy PortalPlayer stockholder, I have been reading everything I could find on the company since the news hit the street yesterday morning. The stock price has been driven down to less than two times the cash (on a per share basis) the company has in the bank - a very pessimistic valuation. Something not mentioned in the article is pricing. Some believe that either PortalPlayer has been too greedy or the new supplier (not known now) very agressively priced its chip. The new supplier might be Samsung, who already supplies flash memory for the iPod. Samsung could give Apple a "twofer" price on memory and processor. Another potential supplier might be Sigmatel. Until someone at Apple leaks the name of the supplier we will not know who the new supplier is. Apple employees, get busy! Doing business with Apple is not always a happy experience - ask IBM.
Bzzzttt!!!
The chart of iPod sales over the past few years is all anyone needs to see the massive drop in sales for the first time since the iPod was introduced:
http://www.pegasus3d.com/macsales9904.gif
Throwing around unitless words like 'strong' mean nothing. Apple themselves are warning that next quarter is looking weak, too.
Something is clearly rotten in iPod land.
They're doing the same with the iPod?
Hmmm.. Christmas sales spike the curve, creating an unheard of demand, it descends after the holidays but to 40% above last years sales. I'm sure they're terrified, you troll.
Wow, you're an idiot. Year over year sales increased 61%.
Cringley predicted this months ago. Cringleys speculation was that the reason Apple chose Intel over the nominally superior AMD was to get access to intel technologies on a broad level, including their low power embeded chips for the ipod. (Which they were familiar with from the Newton).
Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
Go away little Apple troll!
Checks for post holiday drop after 2002...nope!
Checks for post holiday drop after 2003...nope!
Checks for post holiday drop after 2004...nope!
Checks for post holiday drop after 2005...nope!
Checks for post holiday drop after 2006...look out below!
Warning from Apple for next quart...check!
Party's over Mac loonies.
...Intel is expected to announce what it is going to do with all of the Pentiums with the FDIV bug that were recalled... stay tuned...
So, congrats to Apple for finally ditching them. You should all look forward to some better performing and longer lasting iPods in the future. Yes, I'm rather bitter from having to deal with the muppets at PortalPlayer in the past.
When Sony and other digital music players are getting 30 - 50 hours playback, why can't Apple release a product that truly offers more then 14 - 18 tops?
Apple also needs something a little more robust, to offer such features as some PDA like functionality, games, or better video support (i.e. HD video out).
Either that, or someone just offered Apple a cheaper version of the same concept so Apple can make more profit on their cheaper product lines.
I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
Today MICROSOFT CORP. (MSFT) announced the imminent rollout of PortPlay, it's new chip designed to work seamlessly with all varieties of MP3 players, including iPod. Speculation of a Microsoft/Apple merger led to a wild office party in the Justice Department's Anti-Trust wing. Details are still sketchy at this point, but rumor has it that a truckload of cigars was dropped off compliments of Fmr. President Clinton. Microsoft stock was up sharply on the news, but was outpaced by SWISHER INTERNATIONAL GROUP INC. (SWR), which posted a 250% increase, a company record.
"It's entirely personal, though at one remove."
That was then, this is now. The Times reported today a huge drop in iPod sales. Steve Jobs was quoted as saying "To be honest, nobody ever sold 8.5 million music players in a quarter before anyway".
I can stream my entire music collection (regardless of format) in stereo to my samsung a900 phone from Orb ( http://www.orb.com/ ) running on my home computer, from anywhere I get sprint coverage ( which is more places than I ever go ) limited only by the size of my hard drive and no syncing or even thinking about it. So without some drastic changes the next generation of phones (or some kind of wireless net connected music playing device) should kill the ipod. (I said should)
Does this drive anyone else nuts? FTA: ...one of Apple's main suppliers for so-called NAND flash memory.
It seems like anytime some media type doesn't understand tech, they drop 'so-called' in front of the name.
Holy shit is that what I've been looking for.
What type of battery life do you get with it? And what quality can you stream your music at?
I think I might be ready to toss my two year old 10gig iPod for one of these.
Holy shit! The crazy Apple fans are in full Protect The Hive mode!
Onward Mac Soldiers! Let the unbelievers perish in a hail of moderation!
That chart CLEARLY says that product breakdowns after q1/2005 are ESTIMATED. Given the latest SEC filings from apple, the estimates were clearly wrong.
Think outside the... Hey, where'd the friggin' box go?
I think it's a bit early to draw that conclusion, I think it's more likely that the iPod sales just had a massive spike during the christmas shopping season. There was an extreme jump in sales last quarter, and if an extraordinarily large number of people were given iPods for christmas, they don't need to buy one the following quarter.
Wikipedia iPod sales graph.
My magic 8-ball predicts... 9.5M-10.5M units sold in Q3 2006 (from 8.5M in Q2).
refers to a portion in the periodic table. Specifically the group contains anions of oxygen, sulfur, selenium, tellurium and polonium. I imagine what you're actually referring to is a newer solid state material containing some binary/ternary solid state material that includes chalconides (chalcogenide) - unless they hijacked the nomenclature for marketing....
There are so many factors in play, though. There was a huge spike for Christmas -- possibly in response to price drops and the Nano. Despite that popularity, that level of sales isn't sustainable. It would be safe to say that the phrase "market saturation" is never far from some minds in Cupertino. New products are in the pipe, almost certainly. I personally expect to see Apple switch to an Intel chip in the next generation of iPod, but I don't expect it out until mid-summer -- to catch the back-to-school buyers.
iPod is both a technology and a fad. It is a pop-culture icon. Pop-culture status tapers off, but it remains to be seen how well the technology -- ever-changing as it is -- endures.
As for Mac sales shrinking, you'll note the PowerMac and the iBook have suffered the largest decreases, while the PowerBook/MacBook Pro
and the consumer desktops (iMac/eMac/Mac mini) increased substantially in 2005. This year is particularly ugly due to the architecture switch. Note that iBook sales fell off sharply because the product has not had an update since July -- far longer than it's average life cycle -- and an architectural change is anticipated. The PowerMac has been slowly losing market share to the increasingly-capable portables -- portables have been gaining market share across the industry. The PowerMac is also suffering from architecturitis, awaiting replacement with what I assume will be called the Mac Pro, but it will likely be the last release with the new architecture.
The raw numbers don't look great for Apple, but they don't tell the whole story. You have to look as the story that goes with them. Anything else is missing the big picture.
That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
One of several "ipod killers" with better features, cheaper, gapless playback etc. should have killed ipod.
How many times have we heard this item will kill the ipod? The only one who can kill the ipod is Apple, or maybe if for some reason it stops being cool.
Algerath
Algerath
1. The product breakdown disclamer refers to the fact Apple used to reported sales of iBooks, PowerBooks, iMacs and PowerMacs separately. Starting in 2005Qq they lumped everything into desktop and portable Macs. Thus, the totals for the desktop and portables Mac on the chart are exact, but the breakdown between iBook/Powerbook etc are estimates. This has nothing to do with iPods, for which they have never reported model breakdowns.
2. There was indeed a quarter-on-quarter drop in iPods sales of almost 40%, from 14mln to 8.5mln As you can see the chart is quite correct, and this was indeed the very first quarter-on-quarter drop in iPods sales in its 4 1/2 year existence.
3. For retail figures it is common to report growth compared to the same quarter of the previous year, which is a quick and dirty way to eliminate seasonal fluctuations. A quick glance at the chart, however, shows that the historical figures are too volatile and that there is far too little data to cleanly seperate trend from seasonal influence.
You are comparing a record breaking Christmas season quarter with the next quarter? Do you know anything about economics? There is always a significant drop in demand for consumer electronics in general in the quarter following Christmas. Looking at the year over year for the "same" quarter, there is a significant increase. The stats you quote may be accurate but your interpretation of the number is flawed.
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
I'm one of those "crazy mac fans" but I salute you on your post, some quality humor there.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
"There is always a significant drop in demand for consumer electronics in general in the quarter following Christmas."
Why would you make such an obviously false claim when the iPod sales figures show EXACTLY the opposite of what you are claiming in a chart just a couple posts above you?
iPod sales have NEVER decreased after the holiday quarter EVER in the life of the product. And for the first time sales not only didn't continue to accelerate after the holidays, they DROPPED 40% and you are trying to claim that is normal???
A 10% drop in sales would be major bad news for Apple.
A 40% is huge. Especially mixed with the warning they are giving on next quarters sales already.
I don't know your data transfer cost over cell phone, but where I live, I might as well buy it on CD, it's probably cheaper than downloading an entire album to the phone.
http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2006/jan/18results .html
"Apple shipped 1,254,000 Macintosh® computers and 14,043,000 iPods during the quarter, representing 20 percent growth in Macs and 207 percent growth in iPods over the year-ago quarter."
They saw a 207% increase year over year in the first quarter for iPod sales. This is why there was such a sharp drop. The previous quarter was an anomoly and should not be seen used to base trends on. You are forgetting this it was also the quarter when Apple revised their iPod product line significantly and grabbed marketshare away from competitors in the 2-6GB Flash mp3 player market.
It could be that the market is becoming saturated and "growth" is levelling off but demand is not dropping. There is a difference between "growth" and sale numbers.
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
Careful there Mr. Apple Troll, all that hand waving you're doing is gonna hurt yourself or someone...
Yep! Right after they kill the digital camera, PDA and handheld game markets.
Using a cell phone has some definite disadvantages, from using air time to download music to not having the easy-to-use interface. Plus, I want to pick a phone based on its features as a phone and my music player based on its features as a music player. I don't want to have to worry about trade-offs for either one.
The battery life is not that great ( 3 hrs continuous? ) when streaming music ove the net ( I plug it in, in my car ) It streams perfect CD qaulity audio ( make sure to get the latest version of orb for the best sound quality ).
Umm yeah, your talking about purcahsing music via the cell phone stores. I'm not. I could go into it but if your actually interested check out http://www.orb.com/ This is streaming my own music from my net connected computer at home, again just check out Orb for the details. The unlimited data plan from sprint is an additional $15 a month, but I can also use the phone as a Bluetooth modem, for my laptop, or pda.
Yeah, I agree and the media player on the a900 is kinda crappy, but I'm speculating that the next generation of wireless devices will fix that (not nessasarily a phone, maybe a net enabled ipod? that would certainly sell to the religiously Apple\ipod faithful)
You want the whole story? Here's the whole story. You only need to look at two lines, the blue rising one (total PC sales) and the flat purple one at the bottom (total Mac sales).
You want the whole story? ...only need to look at two lines...
Ah, yes, that covers everything.
January and February are the 2 worst months in retail sales; people over-spend for Christmas, then take 2 months to pay the bills. The fact that an ex-niche product aimed at the rich (a 400$ discman-equivalent IS a rich boy's toy) became a normal consumer product explains that "huge" slump.
Or maybe Levi's are in trouble because they have a 2-month decrease in sales every year.... you choose.
You're not old until regret takes the place of your dreams.
There's XScale, of course, but they're a bit hot and high end for the flash players. Does Intel have a really low power ARM chip?
An account manager for Freescale told me that there i.MX31 http://www.freescale.com/files/32bit/doc/data_shee t/MCIMX31.pdf development boards are depleted because Apple had ordered 20 at once. So they must be wanting to use it for something :-)
...I can only say, it serves them right (Portal Player, Inc). Relying on Apple's iPod to go public is one thing, but relying upon one product to keep you going these years? Starting out with an initial IPO of $14, and closing that day at $28, I just have one question. Where did all that money go? Well, loosing $220M in one day must really suck, but its all apart of their management style at PortalPlayer, Inc.
THAT is one magic dac and final drive circuit.
the bass is well-known to be superior quality.
the one thing that stops me from buying OTHER apple players is that NONE of them (but the shuffle) use that really amazing DAC. shame!
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
There are many reasons for Apple to switch to processors used in cellular phones: -Already proven in the market -Easy to mass produce -ARM architecture similar to PortalPlayer's -Lowest power consumption in consumer electronics -Flexibility with supply line -Industry hookups due to the ROKR -Samsung (RTFA) makes cellphones -Apple only makes their own northbridges, contracts out all other ASICs The list goes on and on. There has also been some speculation that Apple is planning a wireless communication feature in future iPods. Maybe Apple is looking to diversify their featureset. Could we see a PDA-killer soon?
That's the matter of fact.
It's a good point and at 2x cash it seems like a no-brainer. But let's hope they don't Zayante the company.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
It seems like anytime some media type doesn't understand tech, they drop 'so-called' in front of the name.
Then it's a good indication the rest of the article is probably wrong too.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Throught everyone knew Apple's moving toward Broadcom and Freescale parts for iPod? Broadcom wins have been confirmed by teardown reports, but Freescale's still unconfirmed... yet. Never did like those PP chips... ARM7, come on!