Apple looking less shiny?

By Peter Burrows , BusinessWeek
Thursday, January 17, 2008 11:18 AM

There was little loving for Apple on Wall Street after Steve Jobs delivered his keynote speech at his company's Macworld Conference & Expo on Jan. 15.

The company's shares fell 5.5 percent, more than twice the 2.5 percent decline by the tech-laden Nasdaq Composite Index, as analysts and investors digested news of an ultra-slim laptop, a video rental service, and a much improved Apple TV set-top box.

The lineup satisfied the Mac fans in the crowd, but none of it was unexpected or as dramatic a move as the introduction of the iPhone at last year's show.

But longtime Apple watchers say the disappointment will not last. Ultimately the new lineup will help Apple take fuller advantage of the demand it has already created among both Mac fans and the swelling ranks of consumers weighing a jump from PCs to the Mac.

"Even in a year where there were no tsunamis coming out of Macworld, the company showed that it can still make waves," said Jupiter Research analyst Michael Gartenberg.

Seductive laptop
More than ever, Apple is offering a complete slate of products that share Apple's aesthetics and ease of use; there is even a new Time Machine gizmo that can back up all of your Macs or PCs.

"One of the digs on Apple at past Macworlds was that they were preaching to the choir," said Gartenberg. "But they've broken out of that mold. They're creating products that hard-core fans and new customers can love, too."

Case in point: the svelte MacBook Air. At just 0.8 inches thick, the computer feels sturdy in the hands and offers a screen and keyboard just as nice as those on high-end laptops.

And rather than pursue the same corporate muckety-mucks who tend to gravitate toward such devices, Apple priced the Air for wide appeal. It costs US$1,799, or about US$200 less than a top-of-the-line MacBook Pro. Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster thinks the MacBook Air could become Apple's best-selling portable, resulting in a 10 percent increase in the number of Macs sold this year.

"This is a really mainstream price--or to put it another way, a really, really low price," Jobs said, though he expects the US$1,100 MacBook to remain Apple's biggest portable seller.

Apple made a few compromises with the Air. For instance, it has only a single USB port, the battery is not replaceable, and there is no optical drive for playing CDs or DVDs. Still, analysts including Jupiter's Gartenberg say the new computer will bring people into stores. "Even if they don't buy one, they may leave with a MacBook instead," he said.

Apple TV: "Nailed it"
What is more, the new products will reinforce an already widely held perception that Apple stands for products that are tied together by the iTunes store and its ever-widening selection of entertainment content.

"They are building an entertainment ecosystem, and that's going to be a major driver of the stock," predicted Piper Jaffray's Munster.

For that ecosystem to flourish, Apple has needed to extend its influence to the TV, by far the most-used screen in most homes for entertainment. The company went a long way toward that goal with the improved Apple TV and movie rental service unveiled at Macworld.

Scuttlebutt before the conference held that Sony and Vivendi's Universal would never agree to rent through iTunes. Yet they, and all four other major studios, agreed to make some of their films available.

"When Steve came to us with this idea, it was a no-brainer," said Jim Gianopolus, CEO of News Corp.'s 20th Century Fox. While he admits there are many other ways to get movies, he thinks Apple can cut through the clutter. "I think this will be a transformative version of the rental model," Gianopolus said.

Holders of Blockbuster shares appear to concur. The company's shares plunged 17 percent amid concern Apple will eat into its film-rental business.

Jobs denied there were any last-minute dramatics or super-charged negotiations involved in getting the studios to back his plan. "It wasn't a big deal," Jobs said in an interview. "The studios are all run by smart guys. They have iPods, and their kids have iPods, and they just want to get their movies out there."

He said studios were enthusiastic when Apple came to them with an Apple TV that lets consumers buy from iTunes without leaving the couch. That was not possible with the first iteration of Apple TV, which even Jobs conceded was ill-conceived. "I used [the first Apple TV model] for a few weeks, and then I didn't use it much," Jobs said. "This time, I think we've nailed it."


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