News Poll
 
Where do you plan to spend most of your money on holiday shopping this year?
In San Benito County
Outside the county
On the Internet
From TV
Past Polls
   Top News
 
   Opinion
 

 Hollister leaders and a strategy called hope
Nov 5, 2009
 
 Editorial: Transit leaders should scale back Dial-A-Ride, raise prices
Nov 3, 2009
 
  More Opinion...
   

NEWS


Apple cuts copy protection and prices on iTunes
Jan 6, 2009
 By Associated Press

Phil Schiller, senior vice-president of worldwide product marketing for Apple, delivers his keynote address at the Macworld Conference & Expo today in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)
Photo by: Associated Press
JESSICA MINTZ

SAN FRANCISCO

Apple Inc. closed its final appearance at the Macworld trade show Tuesday by cutting the price of some songs in its market-leading iTunes online store to as little as 69 cents and disclosing that soon every track will be available without copy protection.

Apple's top marketing executive, Philip Schiller, said iTunes songs would come in three pricing tiers: 69 cents, 99 cents and $1.29. Record companies will choose the prices, which marks a significant change, since Apple previously made all songs sell for 99 cents.

Apple offered the record labels that flexibility on pricing as it got them to agree to sell all songs free of "digital rights management" (DRM) technology that limits people's ability to copy songs or move them to multiple computers. By the end of this quarter, Apple said, all 10 million songs in its library will be available without DRM.

While iTunes is the most popular digital music store, others have been faster to offer songs without copy protection. Amazon.com Inc. started selling DRM-free music in 2007 and swayed all the major labels to sign on in less than a year.

The iTunes updates marked the highlights of Schiller's stand-in for CEO Steve Jobs, who used to make Macworld the site for some of Apple's biggest product unveilings, such as the iPhone. But Apple said last month that Jobs would not address the throngs this time because the company plans to pull out of Macworld next year.

Apple shares slipped $1.18, 1.3 percent, to $93.40 in afternoon trading.

Schiller also unveiled a Macbook Pro laptop with a larger screen and unwrapped new versions of two software packages for Macs, including the iLife multimedia programs.

For instance, iPhoto '09 can recognize faces and sort photos based on who's in them. GarageBand '09 includes videotaped, interactive music lessons given by Sting and other musicians. Apple also added more professional video editing features to iMovie '09.

Apple's answer to Microsoft Corp.'s Office productivity suite, called iWork, also got a makeover, including zippy new ways to add animation between slides in the Keynote presentation software. And Apple unveiled a "beta" test version of a Web site for sharing documents, iWork.com. Unlike Google Inc.'s online documents program, however, Apple's version does not allow people to edit documents in a Web browser.

Apple said the new 17-inch Macbook Pro, which costs $2,800 and adds to the existing 13-inch and 15-inch models, will start shipping at the end of January. Perhaps the biggest twist is the laptop's battery, which is designed to last longer on each charge - up to seven or eight hours - and work after more charges than older batteries. But the battery will be sealed inside, and the owners won't be able to remove and replace it.

Jobs' decision not to attend Macworld sparked a new round of fears that the CEO, a survivor of pancreatic cancer who has seemed gaunt in recent appearances, was in worsening health. To put the questions to rest, Jobs said Monday he is getting treatment for a hormone imbalance that caused him to lose weight, and urged Macworld attendees to relax and enjoy the show.


Associated Press
Got a question or a comment? Send us an email.

POST A COMMENT

If you are under 13 years of age you may read this message board, but you may not participate. Here are the full legal terms you agree to by using this comment form.

blog comments powered by Disqus

Add to Google Add to My Yahoo!  Email This Article  Print
 News:
Job losses hit 2.6 million as layoff pain deepens
Jan 9, 2009
 
Verizon Wireless completes $5.9B Alltel buyout
Jan 9, 2009
 
Sales down 15 percent in retail-heavy Gilroy
Jan 8, 2009
 
Wall Street enjoys upbeat start to 2009
Jan 2, 2009
 
 News: City and Government
City audit finds $507K left over from deposits
Nov 4, 2009
 
Contentious hillside rules head back to the board
Nov 2, 2009
 
County lays out plan to address permitting issues
Oct 30, 2009
 
Downtown building next in line for facade funds
Oct 29, 2009
 
 News: Crime, Fire & Courts
Two men assaulted by group at 7-Eleven
Nov 6, 2009
 
Teacher accused of lewd acts has hearing set for Monday
Nov 6, 2009
 
Police investigate stabbing at Hawkins Street party
Nov 6, 2009
 
Police: Gavilan abduction story was a hoax
Nov 5, 2009
 
More ... More City and Government... More Crime, Fire & Courts...


 Obituaries

 Elaine Marie Liggett
8/14/1944 - 10/30/2009

 Bill J Key
1/29/1930 - 10/19/2009

 Hildur A. Wright
11/1/1908 - 10/30/2009

 Dolores R. Cortez
12/20/1947 - 10/25/2009

 Michael Robert King
2/14/1957 - 10/24/2009

 Luis Yanez Serrano
8/25/1913 - 7/13/2009

 Russell H. Garrett
9/22/1930 - 10/12/2009

 Russell H. Garrett
6/22/1930 - 10/12/2009

 John Anthony deSouza
1/16/1948 - 10/16/2009

 Photos
News
     
Sports
     
Special Events
     
Full Pages
     
 Videos
San Benito Score: Football, golf, tennis and cross country
Nov 6, 2009
 
San Benito Score: Baler football, golf and volleyball
Oct 30, 2009
 
San Benito Score: A Baler kicker arrives
Oct 23, 2009
 
News and You: What's the future of I.T. in the county?
Oct 21, 2009
 
 Special Reports
 Most Wanted
 
More Obituaries... More Photos... More Videos...
Advertise | Contact Us | Subscriber Center | RSS Feed
Copyright © 2009 | MainStreet Media Group | All rights reserved.