The widely reported rumours, which Apple declined to address, suggest that the company will unveil an inexpensive iPod that will cover the end of the market dominated by cheaper MP3 players from Creative, Rio and Dell.
The risk in such a move would be undercutting brisk sales of iPods, which now range in price from $299 for a 10GB drive to $499 for a 40GB drive. In Apple's fourth quarter, ended 27 September, sales of the iPod generated $121m in revenue, up 9 percent from the prior quarter and 128 percent from a year ago. The company has said the iPod business is profitable.
"I don’t think Apple currently needs to sell a $100 iPod at risk of cannibalising sales of existing models and sacrificing gross margins," said Tim Deal, analyst with Technology Business Research. "Apple already has the market lead, so I don't see the need for (the $100 version) when people are buying $299 and $399 models."
Still, other industry analysts think Apple will find more benefit than risk in a low-end iPod, which is expected to be flash memory-based.
"At $100, they would make excellent penetration into the flash market," said Ross Rubin, an analyst with eMarketer in New York City. "If the rumours are true about mini-iPods, it's a great opportunity for them to extend their brand toward a more-affordable player. Apple hasn't been the value leader in digital music. They've been the high-end. But they have stolen the category away from the Rio brand."
Other rumours suggest Apple will introduce new colours or perhaps replaceable skins for the iPod. And some analysts speculate that the company might announce -- if not at this coming Macworld then later in the year -- a media player for music and movies. Microsoft has detailed its plans for such a device, and products already exist from RCA and Archos.
"There's little question in my mind Apple will put out a portable media player this year [2004]," said Rob Enderle, analyst with the Enderle Group. "It's important to [Apple chief executive] Steve [Jobs] to get there first."






Talkback
hilarious!
Releasing a new iPod would canibalize iPod sales! Only on Cnet can you read stuff like this, priceless. How selling an iPod can prevent you from selling an iPod, come on...
By the way, Cnet is amongst the publication that once suggested that the iPod was too expensive and that a cheaper version should be availlable, now that Apple is doing it, you still complain. Fact is, Cnet is nothing more than an Apple bashing publication, Apple has to be really influencial for it frightens the computer world with only 3% market share, Cnet is bound to downplay everything they do, even if that means contradicting themselves, hilarious, I'm telling you!
The thing is you know that with a cheaper iPod, there would be no reason not to buy one when going mp3 player, more iPod sold for Apple means more eyes toward the mac and eventually more macs sold, and that is exactly why you are, again, whining.