Macworld Rumor Round-Up 179
seamuskrat writes to mention that LoopRumors has a round-up of many of the different Mac rumors making the rounds for the next Macworld. Among the front runners are the ITV, iPhone, and Mobile OSX. From the article: "In an uncharacteristic move, Steve Jobs previewed this new digital lifestyle device and gave us a release timeframe of 'early 2007.' iTV will stream movies, pictures and more from your Mac or PC to your television wirelessly. We expect to see the 'hidden features' of iTV spelled out, and a release date announced, if not immediate availability at the keynote. Apple has said it will not use the name iTV for the product, so we can expect a new moniker for the media device."
iTV (Score:5, Insightful)
Knowing Apple, that isn't going to happen. A shame.
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I actually think the next hurdle to be crossed is going to be live distribution. CNN and Fox News trade on the idea of immediate access to information; other people are also fascinated by the potential of live webcasts as a means of staying co
agreed, completely. (Score:5, Insightful)
The bottom line is, shows like The Daily Show and Colbert Report have millions of dollars of budget per year, and even their day to day production values are pretty crappy. Comedy Central may run a lot of teaser compositing done by Interspectacular [interspectacular.com], but for the most part the graphics in the shows we're talking about are pretty low in quality (and this is coming from productions who have millions of dollars to play with.. if they have trouble coming up with slick graphics on a show-to-show basis, imagine the hurdles you will face).
Even if you're lucky and you already own a lot of the equipment and posess many of the skills needed, you will still be several orders of magnitude below anything produced for TV nowadays. The only place where video podcasts may excel is in giving people *SUBSTANCE* that they can't find on tv-- a different opinion or commentary from what you normally hear from broadcast media, access to interviews and coverage of subjects that would never make it on tv (because they are too specialized, or too tabboo [google.com] or whatever the case). For instance, a Vegan Cooking Podcast may be able to draw many viewers simply because even the most specialized shows (on the cooking channel) don't ever cover vegan foods (let alone regularly devote a timeslot to it).
Video podcasts can definitely outperform traditional broadcast media in some ways, but to even imagine that they will supplant/usurp regaulr television is naive. (I know one post mentioned "goodbye to regular tv" and another mentioned this would be a "good opportunity" for new media.. so I want to make it clear I am not combining those posts inside my head.. re: post #2, this could indeed be a good opporunity for new media.. but even under the best circumstances, it won't even draw a fraction of a percent of users away from watching American Idol [which is what i am trying to say by agreeing with my parent post])
However, let me temper my analysis by saying that obviously some videos on YouTube, with low production values [youtube.com], have garnered hundreds of thousands or even (in a few cases) millions of views. It would be unlikely that all but a handful of video podcasts could regularly do this themselves (other than LonelyGirl15 [youtube.com] and a few select others, most of these videographers don't have repeat success), but some might see this type of success.. which, when measured against the daily viewing of even reruns of Alton Brown or MythBusters, may not shatter any records, but it's still pretty impressive.
As someone who has done a lot of independent videography.. (spending one to two years shooting and traveling just to put together a film wit
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Podcasting is where its at for amateur media, in my opinion. Anybody with a Mic and a dream can compete quality wise with Talk Radio (I exaggerate, but not that much, as little as $1000-$2000 will get you equipment that, at least from a listener's perspective is as good or better than Broadcast, a
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Not for long. Can we really expect podcast-type audio-only content to stay as popular as it currently is, now that YouTube and other online video options are competing with them for our time? No. Portable video devices are phasing out portable audio-only devices in all but the value segment. Mainstream media companies are now also competing for our Internet A/V time with "webisodes." Audio-only net content (excluding music) will be gett
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If you want it to look decent in a studio environment, then yes, you need a pro-sumer grade video camera. Usually the differences lie in better optics & control over focus and exposure settings, multiple CCDs for better color definition (especially important when you have brigh
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$3K for the camera is still a bit much. If I were looking to do a video cast I'd be looking at the Canon GL2 [bhphotovideo.com] for $1700 (after a manufacturer's rebate). The porn industry loves them, with good reason. They're small, easy to use, excellent quality, and inexpensive for what you're getting.
For only a bit more than $3000 you could be doing HD with an XH-A1 [bhphotovideo.com]. And I'm willing to bet that there are other manufacturers that make other possible choices, but Canon is what I'm familiar with.
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NO, $3000 is VERY low. Sony GL2s cost about $2000, and they're basically crap. One thing that is basically a neccessity if you're going to look semi professional, is WEIGHT, because ligheter cameras are just going to jiggle like crazy every time you do a simple pan on a tripod, or even just standuing still. I work as a videographer and producer in a very small local network station (50 odd so employees, one of the smallest NBC affiliates in the country). We use JVCs that cost in the neighborhood of $7000-$9
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The Canon GL-2 is a bit tinny feeling, yes. But that light weight makes it a good field camera when you have to drag it around by foot, and since it's so inexpensive you can spend more on a nice tripod head and mic kit. Plus, it has a 20x zoom and many other nice little prosumer features that make it a bargain MiniDV camera. While most documentarians would prefer sony's prosumer offerings like vintage PD-170's because they're rugged, the GL-2 holds its own.
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I'd expect that for certain types of video, you could easily get away with a high end consumer camera. There's several on the market that have many of the features you listed; e.g. the PV-GS500 has multiple CCDs, focus ring, manual exposure settings and reasonable optics for a
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Ah but you are missing the point. Podcasts are a distribution mechanism for video content, not a separate form of content. Podcasts could indeed supplant regular television as a broadcast medium, just as the Internet has supplanted television and newspapers for a lot of our entertainment already. The big players will just move to the new medium,
Good points... but.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Like all small ventures, it needs to focus on what it can do that larger productions can't. A video podcast can: address more controversial issues, use humor/language that is not FCC approved, be distributed fre
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The dream of hordes of amateur filmmakers doing the sam as hordes of amateur photographers ain't gonna hapen. The extra costs, infrastructure and compromises involved in shooting 30 photos per second and adding audio to boot is simply an order of magnitude mor
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They aren't. What they can do is focus on niche markets with their low budgets that the big guys can't hit.
Re:iTV (Score:5, Insightful)
In other words, Internet isn't going to kill the television star anytime soon.
Re:iTV (Score:4, Interesting)
Second, although there are devices and protocol that can do what is needed, none of the providers of them have the kind of backing and connections that Apple has. With an established, positive relationship with media companies, Apple could (and has) help push true Internet-delivered TV.
In other words, Internet isn't going to kill the television star anytime soon.
Probably true, but I can dream of having literally every episode of every TV show just a remote click away, and still complaining that nothing is on TV. (You heard it here first!)
Re:iTV (Score:5, Insightful)
Take Airport Express. Apple has encrypted all the music that goes from your Mac to the Airport Express so that evil people can't intercept it and steal music, thus making it impossible for anyone other than Apple to take advantage of the audio capabilities of Airport Express in their applications.
It'll work the same here. Some people who have signed the appropriate paperwork may be able to get access to it (eg, El Gato) but I doubt Apple will allow just anybody to work with it.
Re:iTV (Score:4, Interesting)
I understand how it would be nice to stream other content to an airport express, but I wonder if it isn't simply companies being unmotivated to support the APE. There is for example airfoil [rogueamoeba.com] which will stream non-itunes to the APE. Perhaps it's a trick though, like redirecting a stream through iTunes somehow and thus avoiding the issue of directly communicating the APE?
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Microsoft Media Center with MCE extenders provides exactly what iTV will provide but adds full HD support.
Xbox 360 is already an extender.
Microsoft licences the tech to others.
So there are several manufactures who build extenders other than Microsoft.
However I haven't seen anything to indicate that it will kill cable/sat or OTA.
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See http://search.live.com/results.aspx?q=%22media%20
XBox 360 is the only Vista compatible extender.
But several manufactures have announced MCE extenders for Vista at CES.
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ITV? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:ITV? (Score:4, Funny)
It won't be called iTV because Steve Jobs said it wouldn't, and he's the guy who gets to make that decision (being CEO and all).
Re:ITV? (Score:5, Informative)
SUN Microsystems got bit by this sort of thing when they labeled their online directory service Yellow Pages. British telecom's lawyers got all over it, and SUN ended up renaming it NIS, but they never bothered to renaim the scripts which continue to these days with names like YP, YPCAT, YPWHICH, /var/YP/ ....
And, of course, Apple also got into trouble with Apple Records back in the '70s ... and then again when they released the I-POD (they had promised Apple records that they wouldn't go into music distribution).
As such I can see them being really itchy about releasing a TV oriented product who'se name would start dead in the sights of ITV's tradmark lawyers in both Canada and Britain (not to mention any number of other venues).
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ITV has several channels not ITV-1 which was the original second channel in the UK. ITV-2, ITV-3 & ITV-4 are all available on Cable, Satellite and Freeview (Broadcast Digital TV)
Apple will certainly be in the sights of the ITV Lawyers if they want to call their product "iTV".
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Some rumors not listed (Score:5, Interesting)
I've read 'em in the last year, for whatever they're worth:
Re:Some rumors not listed (Score:5, Informative)
Wow, no way. There's been work toward language extensions to "hint" to the compiler what can be parallelized - Sun's done some of this work as well - and fancier compilers, for C and for higher-level languages. But it's not an OS thing. The kernel won't just magically make your already-installed copy of Photoshop go four times as fast - Adobe would need to recompile, at the very least. More realistically, they'd have to do a bunch of profiling, add hints around the bottlenecks, possibly reorganize some algorithms and data structures to avoid mutating data structures all processors will be accessing. The best Apple can really do - short of an incredibly complicated JIT-like machine code translation thing that would be a Herculean effort to produce - is give the vendors better tools.
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Wow, no way... The kernel won't just magically make your already-installed copy of Photoshop go four times as fast - Adobe would need to recompile, at the very least.
Actually, one of the announced features of Leopard is a way to take some existing OpenGL applications and spawn a second "feeder" thread for the graphics card which encompasses some of the functionality of the OpenGL libraries. Theoretically, this means and OpenGL application designed to run in a single thread could obtain up to double the speed on Leopard with a multi-core processor, provided it was CPU bound and exactly half the bottleneck was feeding the GPU. Realistically, this will probably result in
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I wonder what the ISP's would think of that. I know comcast has something in their ToS about not reselling bandwidth...I wonder if this would qualify?
Article (Score:5, Informative)
As promised, LoopRumors is posting a round-up of all the rumors we expect to become a reality at this year's Macworld Expo. Please take into consideration that the following article is purely speculation, and nothing is concrete until Steve Jobs says it is. This is our best hypothesis as to what we might expect at Macworld based on the information we've been given. If you have any comments or questions regarding this round-up, or the Macworld keynote, you may address them here. So here's what we have:
iTV:
In an uncharacteristic move, Steve Jobs previewed this new digital lifestyle device and gave us a release timeframe of 'early 2007.' iTV will stream movies, pictures and more from your Mac or PC to your television wirelessly. We expect to see the 'hidden features' of iTV spelled out, and a release date announced, if not immediate availability at the keynote. Apple has said it will not use the name iTV for the product, so we can expect a new moniker for the media device.
Leopard:
Steve Jobs has been touting Apple's next generation operating system, Leopard, for quite some time. He promised to hold back on unveiling some 'Top Secret' features so Microsoft wouldn't be able to copy them prior to their Vista release. We initially thought Steve might surprise the crowd with an early release of the new OS at Macworld, but that seems to be more unlikely as the time draws near. New information targets a release date of Saturday, March 24th, exactly 6 years to the day of the initial OS X release.
Mobile OS X:
LoopRumors told you first that Apple is developing a mobile, 'lite' version of its OS to be used in smaller devices. It's possible this OS may make its debut at Macworld. Some of Leopard's hidden features may have tie-ins to this mobile OS. One possible 'Top Secret' feature of Leopard may be the ability to sync with the scaled down version of itself.
New Macs:
After all, this is Macworld. We expect Apple to introduce new Macs at the Expo. Signs point to new Mac Pros, with Core 2 Quad processors by Intel. Apple's flagship models have been lagging since there is no native Intel version of Adobe's creative Suite software available yet.
New Displays:
Apple recently discontinued its iSight camera which enables iChat video conferencing for computers without built-in displays. Since updating to Intel processors, all of its computers with the exception of the Mac Pros have included built-in iSight cameras. Information suggests that Apple will include iSight cameras in its new displays which are expected to be unveiled at Macworld. Some reports have expected the new displays to come in sizes up to 50-inches. The new displays are said be even thinner, with a lighter design and have more mobility.
Partnerships:
We've heard a lot of rumblings about Apple making partnerships with other companies such as Google and Disney. Expect more partnerships, possibly a collaboration with Google. Also, we expect more movie studios to make their films available on iTunes. Apple has worked very hard to ensure its iTunes Store stays up-to-date and offers a wide variety of media. Currently, only Disney movies are available for download on iTunes, but we expect that to change in the very near future. This won't happen over night, but the information we gathered suggests Apple will offer new films from other movie studios with the launch of iTV.
One more thing...
iPhone?
Notice the question mark. We are skeptical about this one. So much speculation about an Apple Phone has been made all over the internet and television, that we are going to remain conservative on this one. So-called authorities in the tech business have claimed unabashedly, that Apple will deliver a new iPhone at Macworld. At this point, the possibility of an iPhone at Macworld may be more wishful thinking than actual concrete evidence. We do believe that Apple is developing an iPhone, and there is information to support that. But Apple is
Re:Article (Score:5, Funny)
This comment might be true and accurate. Additionally, it might be true.
RE: Mobile OS X (Score:2)
I still don't think this is going to happen.
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Apple had a mobile MacOS for a pen based computer along time ago. They dumped working on it because it'd compete with the Newton. Then Steve Jobs returned and dumped Newton. Now there are rumors of a mobile MacOS, again.
Was it that it would compete with the Newton, or just that the Newton was designed from the ground up to use pen input while MacOS isn't?
The one I was specifically referring to was the Allegro-Lite rumors which Apple came straight out and denied on the Newton developer conference call in 1997.
Site been /.-ed but here's the overview: (Score:5, Informative)
Leopard, the new OS
New displays, some rumors about that going around
iLife '07, new year, new iLife, new iWorks
video iPod, new full video iPod's? Maybe
Apple Phone, lots of vibe about that
Mac Pro with 8 processors. Intel got the chips, did Apple implement them?
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"Hidden features" (Score:3, Funny)
Digital Lifestyle Device = DiLDo
12" Macbook Pro? (Score:5, Interesting)
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As a side benefit, this would finally put to rest the silly notion that a Mac's hardware is separable from its software, any more than the mind is separable from the body. It's holistic, I tell ya.
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In general, Apple computers have had comparable performance to PCs costing 50-70% of their price. Yes, they ha
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I have had good experience with Apple hardware is a factual statement. You have had bad experiences with Apple hardware is an equally factual statement.
"Apple computers have had comparable performance to PCs costing 50-70% of their price"
I'm not chasing you down this rathole. Apple machines are priced more competitively than ever, and when you compare them against other manufact
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I like how you gloss over the issues with laptops. I will not buy any laptop, at least not new, with less than three mouse buttons.
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Your "10+ years of experience" is an argument from authority. Just like my "25+ years of experience" is.
trumps your proof by assertion.
You can't trump me, I played in suit. My argument from authority has 15 years seniority over your argument from authority.
I'm not chasing you down this rathole.
You just did:
What are you going to put in the expansion slot? A better video card?
That's the #1 most common upgrade o
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If Apple comes out with that, I'm going to have to kill someone -- after waiting about six months, I broke down and bought a (non-Mac) Thinkpad X60 tablet to replace my iBook (granted, I had to wait for the X60 too, but I was hopeing for a tablet Mac the whole time).
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People knock the glossy screen, but in real-life use, it's far superior.
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Before I studied in Japan a couple years ago, I bought the smallest cheap laptop I could get. I bought an Averatec 3200 Series that is 12.1" and well under 4 lbs. Now I'm shopping around for a Mac Book, and would really like to have a Mac Book Pro that was smaller than 15". The Mac Books are nice, but I wonder if I could run XGL on it (cannot with my current laptop, as it's 64MB of onboard graphics, similar to the MacBook).
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Sure, not everyone who uses a MacBook Pro will use Aperture or other "Pro" apps, but that's who Apple is marketing the "Pro" to.
Nothing exciting. (Score:2, Funny)
Apple is just playing catch-up.
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seriously....
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But it's not a troll, or incorrect (Score:3, Interesting)
The iPod was great for the time, and as a hardcore PC backer it was EMBARASSING for me to see how slowly the rest of the industry responded.
Today, however, a good chunk of the industry has caught up. The iPod has serious
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No children, over 25, already owns a mac - that's a relatively tiny market. In fact, I know of only two (including myself). But let's assume I'm wrong, for the moment. Those types are also the kind who have already purchased Tivos, or they're the type who have already toiled away at their 1337 HTPC / MythTV boxes. Typically, they've already filled the niche that Apple has been too la
Blu-Ray Drives (Score:2)
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I suppose I could change the default behavior, but I'm lazy... and it's supposed to be Mac-easy, dammit.
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I also wondered why HDMI (instead of DVI w/HDCP) when I read about the first Blu-Ray/HD-DVD notebooks. In case you didn't know, Sony's Blu-Ray notebooks and Toshiba's HD-DVD notebooks have HDMI ports instead of DVI ports. HDMI has already become the standard high-quality video output port (re
new software not new hardware (Score:2, Interesting)
Missing iWork and iLife (Score:2)
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Or a new Aperture (Score:2)
I agree that iLife and iWork will see a makeover, though it seems to me they will launch with Leopard, as they would want to take full advantage of new OS features (especially Time Machine). The same may well be true of Aperture.
Looprumors suspended (Score:2)
If it was the latter, does that mean they were hot on the trail of something?
Apple's "innovation" (Score:2)
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predictions? (Score:2, Insightful)
New iPod (Score:2, Interesting)
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I purchased a MacBook (black) and maxed out the RAM at 2GB (Crucial), all for a mere $1750 dollars.
Also a Mac Mini Core Duo and maxed out that RAM, for about $850
Both of them kick the crap out of my desktop (P4 HT 3.0E Ghz) which I haven't booted in a month.
I'm not a fan of the 400 dollar rebated notebook from Compaq.
I guess it depends on your preferences. I was able to effectively eliminate the Windows based PC's in my life for Under the 3 grand you speak of.
Maybe you should change your
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Any more the prices for Macs are equivalent to -similarly equipped, quality- hardware. That's not to say you can't go to Fly-by-nite Computers and get a clone box thrown together for a lot less. The last 3
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Huh? In order to spend $3k on an iMac, I had to really crank it up.
I would never actually buy RAM fro
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There isn't, however, "enough demand to make it worthwhile and profitable."
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Don't think Apple hasn't gotten their eye on this, though. Their market share is growing. If the growth turns out to be proportional to the rest of the PC industry (which admittedly it probably isn't), more and more people are demanding this. I do think that the product will eventually come into existance - or everyone will simply adapt to having an iMac. We know all-in-ones aren't the sacks of crap they used to be a few years ago.
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I see your upgradable video and I raise you an easily accessible hard drive. Do you think more people need to upgrade their graphics or their hard drive?
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I wonder how hard it is to get at the hard drive in the current iMac?
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Either you're using a crappy VGA cable, the refresh rate is wrong for your monitor and it's screwing the analog signal or you're simply using the wrong resolution for your LCD monitor, in which case it's you