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Release Date: August 05, 2009
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Release Date: September 29, 2009
Genre: Rock
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  • Stadium Arcadium

    • 8 out of 10
    • Red Hot Chili Peppers
    • What? Only four stars, you stingy bastard? I'm asking myself the same question, so let me explain myself to myself... If I compare the new

  • Cocked & Loaded

    • 8 out of 10
    • Revolting Cocks
    • It's hard to believe it's been more than a decade since Ministry founder and front man Al Jourgensen's side project Revolting Cocks released any new material. 2006 brings us Cocked and Loaded

  • Jagged Little Pill (Acoustic)

    • 6 out of 10
    • Alanis Morissette
    • Ten years after the original release, comes the traditional celebratory acoustic re-recording. The album has held up remarkably well. While it is not as meaningful to me as it was when I was sixteen,
  • Spilt Milk

    • 10 out of 10
    • Jellyfish
    • The second and final album from this power-pop group makes me wish Jellyfish had been able to make just one more record together. The album is best enjoyed as a whole piece, flowing from one track to
  • The Wall (Deluxe Packaging Digitally Remastered)

    • 10 out of 10
    • Pink Floyd
    • Okay, someone had to say it, and though others on the iPO staff are more qualified to review this album, I decided the time was now. This is the quintessential concept album. Though others came before

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News

The Second Audition for Apple TV

The Apple TV, in its "Take Two" revival still faces some serious challenges in breaking out of the pack and delivering what people want, according to Ross Rubin at engadget on Tuesday.

"As Steve Jobs noted during his Macworld keynote, Apple now ’gets’ that video is what consumers want on their TVs," Mr. Rubin wrote. "And Apple TV should deliver. In fact, the movie rental and purchase proposition is now very similar to that of the device and service offered by Vudu, Inc., which has a head start on content but a higher price and nowhere near Apple’s brand or distribution power."


Apple TV

The problem now is that Apple has changed the proposition from being an iTunes broadcaster to a movie box connected to the Internet. In that realm, it faces competition from other boxes, like the Vudu, as well as customer confusion over which of many of these kinds of boxes to buy.

Another challenge faced by Apple is the dynamics of the content. Free music obtained by ripping drove the success of the iPod." With Apple TV, the tail is wagging the dog. Fresh content acquisition drives the need for the device. This is a much slower path to hardware adoption," Mr. Rubin noted.

The net result is that Apple falls in with all the other competitors in terms of the restrictions placed on HD movies by Hollywood. Because they must be streamed, the bit rate is necessarily low. [There’s no opportunity to accumulate a large, modestly compressed file on the user’s hard disk, then beam it to the TV.] Other companies like Sony, Samsung and Vizio can integrate content more easily into their systems because they manufacture TVs. In addition, game consoles which are very popular, like the Xbox 360 and PS3, have the ability to download movies as well.

One advantage that Apple has is their retail stores. [Even so, those stores pale in comparison to the number of Best Buys and Circuit Citys in the U.S.] The challenge for Apple will be to exploit their retail stores and brand recognition in order to rise above the competition.

"Apple could also choose to take its Apple TV ’hobby’ more seriously by entering the TV market," Mr Rubin noted. "Without the subsidization enabled by service providers, in the case of cable, or software, in the case of video games, Apple TV will likely continue to be a big fish in the small pond of digital media adapters and video rental venues that haven’t sneaked their way into the living room."

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