2006 September 10 Sunday
Apple iPod Losing Popularity? Sales Down

The popularity of the iPod is creating a backlash of resentment as the iPod becomes too ubiquitous to be chic.

The Zandl Group, a New York-based trends forecaster which regularly interviews a panel of 3,000 consumers aged 25-35, recently picked up its first significant criticisms. 'The iPod is far and away the most popular tech gadget with our panellists - however, for the first time we are hearing negative feedback about the iPod from some panellists,' said the organisation's spokeswoman, Carla Avruch. 'Panellists cite that the batteries are not replaceable, so when they die the entire player must be replaced,' she said. 'We have heard from some conspiracy theorists that the batteries are made to die soon after the warranty ends.

Certainly other companies can develop devices that equal or surpass the iPod in functionality. The technological challenges are not very high.

Sales have peaked.

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.

Apple may have saturated its target market. However, the success of the iPod might have spawned so many competitors that the peak might be due to sales by the competition. Anyone know of a source for industry sales of MP3 players?

Mac Daily News thinks the original article paints far too pessimistic a picture.

This is a semi-annual article that's dusted from time to time for republication. The formula: Ignore cyclical holiday buying patterns to show "declines" in iPod sales, dig up some out-of-context focus group lines that iPod is "losing its cool," and insert this year's "threats" to iPod+iTunes (oh, David, basic iPod FUD 101: you forgot "iPod scratches," dummy).

But cell phones are beginning to get built-in MP3 players. Cell phones have already caused a peak in PDA (personal digital assistant) sales. Apple is responding by planning to bring out an iPod model can play downloadable movies. But when walking around people have less time to watch movies than to listen to music or converse on a phone. Though I can imagine people watching part of a movie or a favorite TV show when on a work lunch break or while stuck in a car waiting to pick up a kid from school or sports practice.

Are there better portable music players for MP3, WMA, and other formats? Anyone have suggestions on better value propositions or more richly featured portable music devices?

Apple will be far from first in the paid video download business. Amazon has begun a movie download service that can only work with Microsoft Windows XP PCs.

While Amazon's service carries thousands of TV shows and movies from more than 30 studios and networks here and abroad, it has many of the same prohibitive features that impede other movie-download services.

With a typical DSL/cable home Internet connection, it takes 55 minutes to download a hourlong TV episode and one hour and 50 minutes to download a two-hour movie, although Amazon has a feature that allows customers to watch a video during the process.

The Amazon Unbox video player works solely on Microsoft's latest operating system, Windows XP — not on Macs or older versions of Windows. The system is not compatible with the iPod, the center of a technological ecosystem that Apple strictly controls.

You could download a video onto a laptop and then watch it on an air flight instead of the standard in-flight movie - at least until anti-terrorism measures lead to a ban on carry-on laptops.

By Randall Parker    2006 September 10 05:50 PM   Entry Permalink | Comments (6)
2003 July 11 Friday
Bose QuietComfort 2 Headset Cancels Noise Without Generating Hiss

Simson Garfinkel, "Gadget Master" for the MIT Technology Review, says the new Bose QuietComfort 2 headsets are so superior in noise cancellation that they are worth their US $299 price.

But until now, all headsets with active noise reduction have shared a common problem: in the process of erasing the background noise, they added their own unmistakable hiss. These new Bose headsets are the first on the market to eliminate that audible artifact.

Shoshana Berger is also suitably impressed with the QC2.

Don't expect these headphones to eliminate all sound -- they're not designed for that. You'll still hear someone talking to you directly, but the plane's engine noise now sounds like an ebbing tide -- a soft white noise that's almost comforting.

You can plug the thing into a Walkman and listen to music even as surrounding sounds are cancelled out. Though the sound quality is not as good as that from a top-of-the-line regular audio headset.

CNet has reviews of the Bose QC2 along with Koss, Sennheiser, Panasonic, and Sony competitors. Also, check out Bose's web page on the QC2.

A good noise cancelling headset would be very useful in a lot of work situations. I'm continually struck by how much employers fail to appreciate how the noise in cubicle land is a frequent distraction and obstacle to getting real work done. In one job as a computer programmer I was placed next to a machine shop. Back before the era of electronic noise cancelling headsets I went by a gun shop and bought a noise muffling headset that is sold for gun range use. It is also a useful device for signalling to people that you do not want to be interrupted.

Anyway, this Bose QC2 sounds useful. I want one.

By Randall Parker    2003 July 11 01:17 PM   Entry Permalink | Comments (4)
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