News

iPod Becomes Dominant in Japan

The iPod had 51.3% of the MP3 player market in Japan at the end of 2005, up from around 32% in 2004 and dwarfing its nearest competitors, second-place Sony (16.2%) and third-place Panasonic (8.2%). BusinessWeek's Ian Rowley explained that while Japan has "one of the most competitive consumer-electronics markets on the planet," consumers in that country "are jazzed by iPod's sleek and hip design, easy-to-use functions and first-class software."

Gartner Dataquest analyst Jon Erensen told Mr. Rowley that "other companies, including the Japanese consumer-electronics giants, have been focused on one or two pieces of the equation." As an example, Mr. Rowley said that Sony's players have been praised for their design and sound quality, but the company's Connect software is oft-maligned.

Japan's overall market for MP3 players rose 50% during 2005, to 4.2 million units sold. Part of the credit for Apple's gain, according to Mr. Rowley, goes to last August's opening of the iTunes Music Store in Japan, along with the opening of an Apple Store in Tokyo's Shibuya district, which is well-known as the center of all things cool in Japan.

Apple, however, still faces threats on a number of fronts, including Sony's release of a new Walkman that "has been well-received in Japan," according to Mr. Rowley. He also said that the Japanese digital music service Mora, which offers Japanese pop stars not available through the iTMS, saw its downloads increase 190% from December 2004 to December 2005.

In addition, cell phones pose a substantial threat, with Toshiba offering one that includes a 4GB hard drive that can store 2,000 tracks. Japanese carrier AU has sold 33 million songs since November 2004 and in April will add an online music store that will enable consumers to download music to their computers or to their cell phones. "Apple claims iTunes is the leading supplier of downloadable music via PCs in Japan," Mr. Rowley wrote.

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A guest said: (hide)

rrrr

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A guest said: (hide)

the ipod has taken over the rave of the minidisc completely

god damm this is hotttttt....

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A guest said: (hide)

I don't know how long this will last though...

I'm seeing SONY players a lot recently (but they'll never catch up), and mobile phones with music players are popular too (I'm sure these will overtake the iPod in the near future)

After all, why carry an iPod when you can listen to music on your mobile phone?

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A guest said: (hide)

Guest wrote:

After all, why carry an iPod when you can listen to music on your mobile phone?

Because your phone isn't as easy to use as an iPod, doesn't have the capacity of an iPod, doesn't have the battery life of an iPod, and looks plain fugly compared to an iPod, in most cases?

Trust me, music phones and iPods will co-exist happily for many years to come. 'Cuz the music phone is a jack of all trades, master of none.

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A guest said: (hide)

Guest wrote:
Trust me, music phones and iPods will co-exist happily for many years to come. 'Cuz the music phone is a jack of all trades, master of none.

You don't know Japanese mobile phones... They're stylish and super easy to use. More people know how to use a mobile phone than a computer. Everything from e-mail, web browsing to music and image editing are standard even on the cheapest mobile phones. They're nothing like ones sold in the U.S.

Capacity can be added using an miniSD card, and one mobile phone from au includes a 4GB HDD.

The only difference between an iPod and a music compatible mobile phone is sound quality.

The sound quality of music played on a mobile phone isn't as good as the iPod... probably because the bitrate itself is low or just because the earphones are crap. However, the quality is enough to satisfy most people who just want to listen to music on-the-go.

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Intruder said:

member since 07 Jul 2004 with 2970 posts, TMO Mac Specialist, send him a message or view his profile

Isn't sound quality and bitrate one of the major "complaints" made by iPod-haters?

(not saying you are an iPod-hater at all. It is just ironic that the higher quaility from an iPod is a discriminator in this case!)

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A guest said: (hide)

Intruder wrote:
Isn't sound quality and bitrate one of the major "complaints" made by iPod-haters?

I've trolled too much to be taken seriously.

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