Slashdot Mirror


Apple Eyeing EA?

yerktoader writes "There are rumors that Apple might buy EA, but some interesting counterpoints abound. File this one firmly under 'unconfirmed,' but it's nevertheless a tantalizing rumor. According to Fast Money's Guy Adami, Apple is 'eyeing Electronic Arts as a takeover target.' EA is currently the second-largest games publisher in the world and owner of the smash hit NFL-licensed series of football games. Could we be facing the possibility of an iMadden? Well, probably not. Apple has indeed been bolstering its games know-how, hiring a major Xbox strategist away from Microsoft in recent weeks. And EA is no stranger to Apple platforms: in the last year it's brought several of its major franchises to the iPhone (with more on the way), including Sim City, Tiger Woods, and Spore, with considerable success. But it's a far cry from there to a takeover, and that's putting it mildly. Video games analyst Michael Pachter seems to agree. Speaking to Gamasutra, he pointed out that if Apple was looking to make some entertainment acquisitions, it could buy Warner Music — which controls 20% of the music industry — for roughly half of EA's estimated price."

4 of 151 comments (clear)

  1. Can apple afford it by googlesmith123 · · Score: -1, Troll

    Is apple actually big enough to afford to buy EA?

    --
    Say NO to unpaid Internships!
  2. Re:What do you get combining Apple + gaming compan by Khyber · · Score: 0, Troll

    And I'll be there to grab Apple by the balls and sue the crap out of them just like I'm doing to EA.

    I will DESTROY DRM. EA is just my first target. I am tired of people making shit that restricts how I use *MY HARDWARE* and I'm going to one way or another get real laws passed to enforce the security and full control of my property.

    Microsoft will be next. I have enough video footage to destroy their entire "Get The Facts" campaign, exposing it for the solid lie that it is. I can prove how Microsoft lies saying they are new and improved when in reality they've just restricted us even further.

    Anybody else want to give me some backup? I've made the first move, how about the rest of you stand up and start doing stuff?

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  3. Apple needs much better gameing hardware at a bett by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: -1, Troll

    Apple needs much better gameing hardware at a better price the mac pro is joke and comes with a very week video card for it's price and the video card upgrades are a rip of as well. ATI Radeon HD 4870 512MB [Add $200.00] on top of the base NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 512MB at $150.00 makeing it 200+150 = 350 for a 4870 512???.

    also the imacs at $1,199.00 and $1,499.00 used to come with a better video card now they come with the week 9400m Also the $1,799.00 needs to have much better then a NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 with 256MB.

    The mac pro should be about $1000 less with x2 the ram and better base video.

    The mini at $800 should have it's own video card as well with 2-4gb of system ram.

  4. Re:What do you get combining Apple + gaming compan by earlymon · · Score: 1, Troll

    Jacked up the price and sampling bitrate for higher fidelity (insofar as that's even possible with digital music).

    Yes, they are about the money. But who isn't?

    Everyone's Apple-DRM anger would make more sense if they had pioneered the per-song deal without DRM, then added a "gotcha" lower-price, lower-quality, DRM-laden product. But they did the opposite.

    As for point #1, replacing your DRM-laden songs. Now that is typical Apple - typical American corporate beast. They didn't even offer the option, trade up to DRM free (with higher sampling bitrate) for 30 cents. I or anyone could argue the problems with ensuring the old copy was gone, etc, etc, and how poor Apple would have pay again for the license because that's how the music guys would look at it.

    But that part is just the way-sucky part of American business ethics. Is it Apple's fault you can't convert your DRM songs? The record companies'? Both? The end result is the consumer has a moving target, accepts (in general) that the market has moved on to newer/better, and bites the bullet. To be clear - I'm not saying it's ok because it's understandable, I'm saying it's less ok because it's understandable.

    Meanwhile - can't you burn your DRM-laden music to CD, then import it DRM-free? I thought you could do this, I don't know. I know the quality **may** take a hit - not sure. But you might try it - CDs are way cheap, hold a lot of songs, it's worth a try.

    http://www.jakeludington.com/itunes/20060513_unlock_itunes_music_store_files.html

    And for a bit of Apple-DRM background, from a few years ago, check out:
    http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughtsonmusic/

    Hope this helps you have a better day!

    --
    Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.