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Why the iPod is Losing its Cool

An anonymous reader writes "The Guardian Unlimited has a provocative article on the recent decline in iPod sales: 'Analysts warn that the iPod has passed its peak. From its launch five years ago its sales graph showed a consistent upward curve, culminating in a period around last Christmas that saw a record 14 million sold. But sales fell to 8.5 million in the following quarter, and down to 8.1 million in the most recent three-month period. Wall Street is reportedly starting to worry that the bubble will burst.'"

8 of 563 comments (clear)

  1. 60M sold? that's a lot. by yagu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the article:

    Although it has sold nearly 60 million actual iPods and a billion downloaded songs worldwide, cracks have begun to appear in the edifice.

    There doesn't seem so much of a crack in any edifice as much as there's ultimately a saturation of the marketplace. At some point, pretty much everyone who wants an iPod gets one, and by now that's pretty much done (anyone hear any recent "I want an iPod" whines from anyone?).

    Jobs (from Apple) isn't letting the grass grow ... with his

    most ambitious iPod service yet - the sale of feature-length films via the internet for viewing on the devices, which may receive an expanded 'widescreen' and improved storage capacity. If downloading movies from a computer to an iPod proves even half as revolutionary as it did for music, the multibillion-pound DVD industry could be quaking.

    As seen in a previous slashdot discussion (the Amazon Unbox article) on video download, it isn't going to happen, or is at least unlikely. There is a slew of articles and surveys showing consumers, especially the target demographic of "younger folk" aren't that interested in long (full length features) videos. Video downloads, management, etc., is just a messier beast for consumers, enough so it's a long way from emergent (storage considerations, price, quality of small devices, battery power for video, DRM, download times, backups, etc.).

    Also, consumers are getting hip to the snake oil that is iTunes: (from the article)

    ..., We have heard from some conspiracy theorists that the batteries are made to die soon after the warranty ends.

    'Other complaints are that iTunes [Apple's online music store] is overpriced and the format is not easily transferred on to other players. In our ethnography interviews, some long-time iPod-users told us that they have stopped updating their iPods because it's too much work, while other consumers who had bought iPods more recently had not even taken theirs out of the package to set it up.'

    Yeah, initially all were in love with the iPod because for the return on effort, it seemed like magic. Consumers eventually get tired of jumping through even the tiniest of hoops to continue "enjoying" their gadgets. They want to turn it on, and not have to worry that the computer from which they're trying to transfer music is "iTunes anointed" or not. DRM-fatigue, finally, sets in (it's about time!).

    This is the SONY walkman all over again, then the SONY CD walkman... it's done. It's hard to imagine quantum leaps of coolness and convenience beyond an iPod or video iPod. The curve had to level, there just isn't any there there. Apple should be happy with what they've done, but I don't think this is a growth niche any longer.

  2. Running out of Customers?? by EEBaum · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seems kinda obvious to me... we're running out of people who want one and don't have one already.

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  3. Duh by Supersonic1425 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it's basic business. product lifecycles are virtually all the same. launch, rise, saturation and decline. right now ipod reaching saturation, and it will go into decline sooner or later. that said, it is still very profitable for Apple, and the brand is still stupidly strong. it will most likely stay like that for a few more years at least.

    this is news?

  4. Gasp! by Jerf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Market not infinite. Film at 11.

  5. What to worry about? by Klaidas · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Wall Street is reportedly starting to worry that the bubble will burst.
    What's to worry about? IT WILL.
    We had cassette walkmans popular. No more.
    We had CD players popular. No more
    We had mp3 players popular. No more
    We have iPods popular. After some time, we will not.
    That's how hardware, software and all the computing works. After some time we will be laughing at those iPods, because we will have something new.
  6. Re:60M sold? that's a lot. by kamapuaa · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Yeah, initially all were in love with the iPod because for the return on effort, it seemed like magic. Consumers eventually get tired of jumping through even the tiniest of hoops to continue "enjoying" their gadgets. They want to turn it on, and not have to worry that the computer from which they're trying to transfer music is "iTunes anointed" or not. DRM-fatigue, finally, sets in (it's about time!).

    The majority of iPod users use MP3s, which aren't affected by DRM. And DRM isn't anything at all new to iPod, either. There's no reason to assume the correlation that you take as a given. Any random anti-DRM screed is sure to get modded +5 on Slashdot, but you should put in the extra work and have it at least make some kind of sense.

    And it isn't a scientific survey, but every person I know who's technologically savvy enough to be downloading MP3s is also downloadings .avi's. Here in China MP4 compliance is a big selling point for cell phones, PDAs, and other random gadgets. I gotta believe it's the same in the US. Amazon may not be impressing people, but that has more to do with the price than the fundamental concept.

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  7. Re:60M sold? that's a lot. by Soul-Burn666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In my opinion, portable video will never be really as successful as portable music.
    Music, unlike video, requires only one sense (hearing) and can be passive while one is doing other things.
    You can listen to music while you browse the web, jog, write code.
    You can't really watch a video using a portable device while doing those things. (other than porn...)

    It can work though for people who travel a lot in public transportation.
    That niche is partly filled by portable gaming which is also an activity that requires your attention.

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  8. Re:60M sold? that's a lot. by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree. People don't buy music to listen to it. They buy music so that they can do something else and not get so bored doing it.

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