Apple will manufacture the player, which will not have the iPod name but will have the same design and features as Apple's third-generation iPod players, Phil Schiller, senior vice president at Apple, said in an interview. Also, the HP music player will come in "HP Blue," he said.
"The way we look at it, HP will be reselling an iPod device," said Schiller, who noted that the device will display the Apple logo at start-up and will work with all of the accessories made for the white-hued Apple varieties.
In addition, HP will start preinstalling Apple's iTunes on its consumer PCs and desktops. HP previously said it planned to enter the digital music player and music store business, though sources familiar with the company's plans said partners are likely to be involved.
The deal comes amid a broader announcement from HP of a number of consumer electronics products.
HP said it will introduce an "entertainment hub" that will serve as a central point to store and manage digital music, photos and movies. The company also announced 42-inch plasma and 30-inch TV LCD (liquid crystal display) screens and confirmed its plans to offer digital projectors to consumers to use as part of a home theatre system. The company also said it will incorporate more strict content protection in future PCs and announced a new technology, dubbed LightScribe, for adding label information directly onto a CD or DVD.
Schiller said HP brings a large sales and marketing effort centred around digital entertainment and has a large customer base. "HP has a lot of customers, and they are a great company, a big company," he said. "They'll promote this iPod-based device and the iTunes music store."
The deal with HP involves only the traditional iPod design and not the new iPod Mini models, which use a one-inch hard drive that has 4GB of storage, Schiller said; though he added that's "obviously something we can look at in the future."
Schiller would not say whether Apple may look to craft similar deals with other computer or electronics makers. While that part of the deal is not exclusive, Schiller said HP's promotion of the iTunes Music Store through its PCs is a "multiyear, exclusive" deal.
HP chief executive Carly Fiorina said the company considered a number of alternatives before partnering with Apple. "We explored a range of alternatives to deliver a great digital music experience and concluded (that) Apple's iPod music player and iTunes music service were the best by far," Fiorina said in a statement. "By partnering with Apple, we have the opportunity to add value by integrating the world's best digital-music offering into HP's larger digital-entertainment system strategy."
Apple chief executive Steve Jobs said the move will ensure that more consumers use iPods.
"Apple's goal is to get iPods and iTunes into the hands of every music lover around the world, and partnering with HP, an innovative consumer company, is going to help us do just that," Jobs said in a statement. "As the industry balkanises by offering digital music wrapped in a multitude of incompatible proprietary technologies, consumers will be reassured in getting the same unparalleled digital music solutions from both HP and Apple, two leaders in the digital music era."
On its own, Apple has sold more than 2 million iPods, including 730,000 last quarter.
HP and Apple did not say how much the HP-branded iPod will cost or how much storage capacity it will offer, but the companies said it will be "competitively priced to other digital music players currently available."
Meanwhile, one analyst wondered how much Apple has to gain from working with HP.
"It's major news for Apple to essentially [build] a product for a Wintel competitor. That really says a lot about the perception of Apple in the market right now," said Tim Deal, an analyst with Technology Business Research. "The thing I question is: is Apple not able to reach that [iPod unit] volume on its own, and what hit does its margins take? I don't see how [Apple] is really going to benefit, since it's doing all right, as it is."
But offering iTunes software on the millions of PCs that HP sells could push Apple toward a greater overall mass of customers, making the service more profitable than it is now, he said.
The company also stands to gain from greater sales of iPod hardware. And if nothing else, "it's a testament to Apple's lead in digital-music distribution," Deal said. "It definitely says a lot about the amount of respect that Apple, as a company, is due, in regards to this."
CNET News.com's John Spooner contributed to this report.






Talkback
Better to be with THE leader in all things creative than a slave to proprietary Microsoft who is only capable of following and badly at that.
Microsft has never succeeded in a market where it can't force customers to use it's "good enough" offerings. Apple is the computer industries creative engine and market leader and HP is very smart to go with the winner since digital media integration and creation is the next wave in computing and Apple has ALWAYS owned this market. Microsft will no doubt keep the spreadsheet and word prcessing markets, of last century, after all it only requires the capabilities of the average calculator to do those things. Creative digital media requires many new skills, completely unkmnown to Microsoft, and following five years late with "good enough" products is Not going to compete with elegant consumer enpowering offerings from visionaries at Apple offered TODAY!
They should pay ME to be a pundit. I cannot see why NO ONE has commented on this yet...
Every copy of iTunes installs QuickTime on Windows. It cannot do without it...
THIS is what Apple gain. Not just legitimacy for AAC, MPEG4, FairPlay (their DRM technology) but an installed base of QuickTime on all shipping Compaq and HP machine. Apple had a similar deal with Compaq years ago (to ship QT on all Compaqs) but MSFT monopolistic behavior (at the time - they cannot do it now) scuttled that deal.
Mark my words - this is BIG - for this one reason, not the iTunes Music store, nor the iPod, but legitimacy to Apple's more open standards approach to Media - an OPEN MPEG4 (unlike MSFTs CLOSED MPEG4 in WM9) and OPEN AAC (not like MSFTs closed WMA) etc. This will allow HP to base new Media Center technologies that THEY develop around these OPEN standards rather than the closed (and royalty paying) WM9 standards.
Can anyone jump in and comment about this as well?
Eytan
Could HP (or other makers) branded Macs be in the cards?