Newsweek scores exclusive first look at Apple’s 4G iPod

The iPod, the cigarette box-size digital music player (and its colorful credit-card-size little sister, the Mini) has smacked right into the sweet spot where a consumer product becomes something much, much more: an icon, a pet, a status indicator and an indispensable part of one’s life, reports Senior Editor Steven Levy in the July 26 Newsweek cover story (on newsstands Monday, July 19). To 3 million-plus owners, iPods not only give constant access to their entire collection of songs and CDs, but membership into an implicit society that’s transforming the way music will be consumed in the future. Apple CEO Steve Jobs tells Newsweek that the iPod’s impact hit home for him earlier this year in New York City. “I was on Madison,” he says, ” and it was, like, on every block, there was someone with white headphones, and I thought, ‘Oh my God, it’s starting to happen.'”

Newsweek takes an exclusive advance peek at the considerably tweaked fourth-generation iPod that will roll out this week, and reports that it looks a bit different, operates more efficiently, has a few more features and costs less than earlier models. Highlights include the elimination of control buttons in favor of the iPod’s “click wheel,” more efficient menus and a 50 percent boost in battery life.

Music hits people’s emotions, and the purchase of something that opens up one’s entire music collection — up to 10,000 songs in your pocket-makes for an intense relationship, reports Levy. A chorus of celebrity Podsters sing the same praises voiced by ordinary iPod users, but add a dollop of coolness to the device, as if it needed it. Will Smith has burbled to Jay Leno and Wired magazine about his infatuation with “the gadget of the century.” Gwyneth Paltrow confided her Pod-love to Vogue. And people who actually create music are among the biggest fans: “The layout reminds the musician of music,” says tunester John Mayer.

But fans of the devices use it for more than music. “It’s the limousine for the spoken word,” says Audible CEO Don Katz, whose struggling digital audiobooks company has been revitalized by having its products on Apple’s iTunes store. And computer users have discovered that its vast storage space makes it a useful vault for huge digital files — the makers of the “Lord of the Rings” movies used iPods to shuttle dailies from the set to the studio. Thousands of less accomplished shutterbugs store digital photos on them.

In 1997, when Steve Jobs returned to the then struggling company he cofounded, he says, there were no plans for a music initiative. “Our goal was to revitalize and get organized, and if there were opportunities we’d see them,” he says. Jobs & Co. initially failed to notice the impending revolution in digital music. Once that omission was understood, Apple compensated by developing a slick “jukebox” application known as iTunes. It was then that Apple’s brain trust noticed that digital music players weren’t selling. “The products stunk,” says Apple VP Greg Joswiak.

In February 2001, Apple set out to create a groundbreaking music player — and have it on sale for Christmas season that year. The requirements: A very fast connection to one’s computer (via Apple’s high-speed Firewire standard) so songs could be quickly uploaded. A close synchronization with the iTunes software to make it easy to organize music. An interface that would be simple to use. And gorgeous. Assessing the final product, Jobs bestows, for him, the ultimate accolade: “It’s as Apple as anything Apple has ever done.”

The October 2001 launch was barely a month after 9/11, with the country on edge and the tech industry in the toilet. Skeptics scoffed at the $399 price and the fact that only Macintosh users, less than a twentieth of the marketplace, could use it. But savvy Mac-heads saw the value, and the Pod was a hit, if not yet a sensation. From that point sales began to spike. No one was surprised that Apple sold an impressive 730,000 iPods during the Christmas season last year, but the normally quiet quarter after that saw an increase to 807,000. And last week Apple announced that sales in the just-completed third quarter, traditionally another dead one-hit 860,000, up from 249,000 a year ago.

To the delight of Apple (and the chagrin of Sony), the no-brainer description of the iPod is “the Walkman of the 21st century.” And just as the Walkman changed the landscape of music and the soundscape of our lives, the iPod and the iTunes store are making their mark on the way we handle our music, and even the way we listen to it. An equally big deal is the way the iPod is changing our listening style. Michael Bull, a lecturer at University of Sussex, has interviewed thousand of iPod users, finding that the ability to take your whole music collection with you changes everything. “People define their own narrative through their music collection,” says Bull.

Full articles start here.

9 Comments

  1. My 10 gig, 2nd gen one is starting to show it’s age. If they had never made a 3rd gen / mini / a 4th gen – i’d be happy, but noooooooooo. Now it looks old and outdated. But still w/ about 8 hours of batterly life! Can’t complain about that in a year and a half.

  2. The problem with Apple is that their products are always insanely great AND they are always improving SO I am always wanting the new one. ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”wink” style=”border:0;” />

  3. And still no integral voice recording capability!

    Is it just me… or can anyone else understand why Apple doesn’t include a simple microphone and dictation software? The iPod would conquer the corporate world tomorrow IF it had a voice recording capability.

    Call me extremely sad.

  4. Glick7:

    At a time when companies are being warned about iPods being potential threats to corporate databases, what makes you think that a company would be dumb enough to buy iPods for it’s employees now, with or without voice recording capability? I totally disagree with your assessment. The iPod already dominates the market it was intended for; consumers.

  5. when I was in college there were lots of peope who would record lectures and play them back later. They’d pop a blank tape in for class, and when class was over they’d pop in a music cassette and listen to that on their way home. Voice recording may not be a big hit in the corporate world, but you can bet the college kids would eat it up.

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