Apple didnt want Beats, it needed Beats.

Onstage at the Code Conference last night, Apple’s Eddy Cue and Beats’ Jimmy Iovine answered some questions about the marriage of their two companies. Beats is best known for its headphones, the product that built its brand and accounts for most of its revenues. But Cue made it clear that hardware was the less important part of the equation. “You just heard why we did this deal — it’s about music,” he told the crowd. Beats Music, he said, was the “the first music subscription service done right.”

IT’S ABOUT MUSIC, NOT HEADPHONES

That’s a big compliment for a product that launched less than six months ago and claims 250,000 customers, just a tiny fraction of the 10 million paid subscribers that industry leader Spotify recently touted. But Apple knows that the digital music industry is shifting rapidly, moving away from downloads and toward all-you-can-eat subscription services. It’s hoping that with its marketing muscle and Beats industry connections it can create a true rival to Spotify and keep Cupertino synonymous with the cutting edge of music.

When asked last night if digital music downloads were in trouble, Cue admitted that “the rate has leveled off, it’s true.” That’s a bit of an understatement. This chart, from tech investor Mary Meeker, illustrates the sea change happening the digital music market. Last year was the first time digital downloads didn’t just slow or flatline, they actually fell. Streaming services, meanwhile, continue to grow at a rapid clip.

Cf(Mary Meeker / Internet Trends 2014)

Apple dipped its toe into the streaming-music market with iTunes radio, which has reportedly been a disappointment. Past efforts at social music software, like Ping, also flopped. So it’s not surprising that Apple decided to try going outside for its next stab. And while Beats doesn’t have many paid subscribers right now, with Apple as its partner, the company suddenly has some very big advantages over competitors like Spotify, Rdio, and Deezer.

While streaming music services have been growing rapidly in recent years, none of the major companies in the space have figured out how to turn a profit. For Apple, which has hundreds of billions in the bank, this isn’t an issue. In fact, Beats announced a price cut on its annual subscription yesterday. So far its monthly price is still on par with the competition, but if Apple wanted to, it could easily afford to undercut Spotify in order to steal market share.

APPLE DOESN’T CARE IF STREAMING MUSIC MAKES A PROFITBeats can now also be bundled with the purchase of new Apple devices. And that brings us back to the reason Apple saw this purchase as so important. In the past music was Apple’s strong suit. There was the iPod, obviously, which set the standard for music players in the MP3 era. In the early years, iPhone and iPads reaped the benefit of being easy to sync with the music collections many people had built up in iTunes.

Streaming music services changed the equation. It’s easier to simply have almost all the world’s music available on demand for streaming — and to cache a few things for offline play — than it is to struggle with synching a huge collection of MP3 across multiple devices, or over stopgap services like Apple’s iCloud. Apple knew it needed to make a change or lose the musical advantage it had over Google and Microsoft.

As Tim Cook told Recode when discussing the Beats purchase, “Music’s always been at the heart of Apple. It’s deep in our DNA. We’ve sold Macs to musicians since the beginning of Macs. And we accelerated the music industry with the digital music revolution, with the iPod and the iTunes music store.” Those downloads are now dwindling, while streaming services rise. “So I see this right in the — if you were drawing a line, this would be the logical next data point.”

Source: The Verge.

Target Reveals Black Friday Deals, Including $479 iPad Air With $100 Gift Card.

Target-black-friday-deals

Target has today revealed its Black Friday deals for November 28 to November 30, which include some incredible savings on the latest Apple devices. Consumers will be able to pick up a 16GB Wi-Fi iPad Air — usually priced at $499 — for $479 with a free $100 Target gift card.

The 16GB iPad mini (original model) can also be had for $299 with a free $75 gift card.

Other Apple products in the sale include the latest Apple TV, which is down to $89 after a $10 discount; the fifth-generation 16GB iPod touch, which is $229 with a free $50 gift card; and the 16GB iPhone 5s, which is $179.99 with a free $30 gift card when you take out a new two-year contract with AT&T or Verizon.

Target is also offering $60 worth of iTunes gift cards for just $50.

Furthermore, the retailer’s $100 gift card doesn’t just come with the iPad Air — but any full-size iPad, including the cheaper iPad 2.

We don’t know what Apple’s Black Friday deals will involve yet, but last year the Cupertino company knocked up to $41 off the full-size iPad. If we see the same discount again, that’ll make it slightly cheaper than Target’s price upfront, but of course, you won’t get a $100 gift card with it.

Target’s Black Friday deals go live on November 28, and last until November 30.

Source: Cult of Mac.

Want an iPhone 5c for under $50? Head to Walmart.

13.09.11-iPhone_5c_Sprint

Everyone is discounting the iPhone 5c already, and it’s making for some great deals for prospective buyers. Yesterday Best Buy announced that it would be selling the iPhone 5c with a $50 gift card, and Radio Shack announced a very similar deal today. As to not be left out, Walmart has announced its very own deal, offering the iPhone 5c at the discounted rate of just $45.

The best part about this deal? It doesn’t end as soon as Best Buy’s or Radio Shack’s deals which end as soon as Monday. Walmart has announced that its deal isn’t just a short time discount, as it is scheduled to last through the holiday season.

While discounts are fairly common, it is rare to see such a significant price drop within just a couple weeks of the annoucement of an iPhone. Walmart is offering over 50% off the iPhone 5c, which is unheard of for a new Apple device. If you’re looking to buy a new iPhone 5c, it is likely that Walmart will be your best bet, especially if you want to wait until closer to the holiday season (after Best Buy and Radio Shack deals expire).

Source: TodaysiPhone.

Feral Games Bundle offers six sweet Mac games for $20.

Feral Games Bundle offers six sweet Mac games for $20

If you don’t take advantage of this, you’re crazy. Feral Interactive and Mac Game Store have teamed up to offer the Feral Games Bundle, a collection of six Mac games conversions by Feral for a mere $20. The promotion runs from May 27th through June 2nd, but pre-orders are now being accepted.

The bundle includes:

  • LEGO Star Wars: The Complete Saga, which combines content from all six Star Wars movies
  • DiRT 2, a spectacular off-road racing game
  • Battlestations: Pacific, a World War II-era action strategy game that puts you in command of land, air and sea forces
  • The Movies: Superstar Edition, a sim game that puts you in charge of a Hollywood movie studio
  • Tropico 3: Gold Edition, a strategic city building game that makes you the leader of a Caribbean republic; and
  • Batman: Arkham Asylum, the award-winning action game in which you, as the Caped Crusader, must foil the Joker after he and the other inmates take over Gotham City’s home for the criminally insane.

The package would cost $149.90 separately, so it’s already an awesome deal. To sweeten the pot, if you preorder it this weekend, you’ll get a $10 coupon usable towards any other Feral game from the Mac Game Store, good through the end of June.

What do you say, Mac gamers? Does this bundle satisfy your need to save some coin? Or is it not what you’re looking for?

Source: iMore.

Apple’s ‘iRadio’ Streaming Excites Labels, Sony Hung on Skipping.

Warner Music Group and Universal Music are both excited about Apple’s planned streaming service (dubbed “iRadio” in the media), but Sony Music is apparently hung up on how much it gets paid for songs that are skipped. Citing unnamed sources, CNet reported that the other labels are frustrated about the hang-up because they believe that Apple can help grow the Internet streaming market.

Apple Reportedly Plans Streaming Service

Rumors have swirled and whirled about Apple’s planned streaming service, so much so that many in the media saw Google’s All Access launch this week as some sort of major victory because the search giant beat Apple.

Of course, the reality is that it won’t matter, and even though Apple is coming to market behind Google, Spotify, Pandora, and Rdio, it’s Apple’s service that is going to set the bar and define success. It would seem that at least some of the labels understand this.

At issue with Sony is how much the company will get paid when a user skips a song. You read that correctly, the hang-up stems from Sony wanting to get paid more for having a song not played. It’s kind of disgusting, in my opinion, akin to the labels wanting a share of Apple’s iPod hardware profits and saddling us with DRM for so long.

Then again, what more can you expect from Sony Music CEO Doug Morris, a music executive who thinks that Steve Jobs screwed the labels by saving their bacon and dragging them kicking and screaming into the age of iTunes.

When last we paid attention to Mr. Morris in 2007, he was busily rallying the music industry to support Microsoft’s Zune in order to beat Apple. At the time he said that the labels had ceded too much control to Apple, and that, “We got rolled like a bunch of puppies [by Steve Jobs].”

That same year, he told Wired, “We were just grateful that someone was selling online. The problem is, [Apple/Steve Jobs] became a gatekeeper. We make a lot of money from [Apple], and suddenly you’re wearing golden handcuffs. We would hate to give up that income.”

How’d that work for you, sir? Microsoft’s Zune went the way of the Microsoft Kin, and Apple still feeds hundreds of millions of dollars into you coffers through iTunes. Gods forbid that you get rolled like that again…

This weird myopia that some music (and TV/movie) execs have about Apple has always mystified me. They’re terrified of licensing content to Apple because Apple will get it right, get all the customers, and then own the experience. Never mind that other companies don’t get it right and that part of why Apple is so successful with things like iTunes is because the company owns the customer experience.

In the meanwhile, other services like Pandora also have to pay for songs that get skipped, but CNet’s Paul Sloan noted that Pandora’s deal is governed by federal statute, while Apple is working out individual licensing deals with the labels.

Apple is also keen on getting all of the labels on board with the same deal lest there be problems further down the road. This is how Apple has worked out all of its licensing deals in the past, and it’s how the company runs iTunes, the App Store, the Mac App Store, and iBooks.

What precisely Sony is holding out for is unknown, but what the other labels are excited about is revenue sharing from subscriptions and ads that Apple plans to run, as well as the potential for increased music sales. Apple will reportedly be making it easy for customers to buy a song they’re streaming direct from iTunes, offering a third revenue stream to the labels.

As demonstrated by his ability to roll music execs like puppies, Steve Jobs was an amazing negotiator. He may be gone, but the company he built still has a lot of negotiating weight.

It remains to be seen how this will work out, but we’re interested in seeing the company put the pieces in place to roll out its streaming service and hope that Sony slaps on this new, even bigger pair of golden handcuffs.

Source: The Mac Observer.

Box offering 25 GB for free in promotion.

Box offering 25GB for free in promotion

Filesharing service Box is offering up 25 GB of free cloud storage in a new promotion (supposedly for “Gameday,” but it seems to still be in effect anyway). To qualify, you must be a new customer on a free plan, or just sign up for a new account with a new email address. The deal is also for non-commercial use only, and because it’s free, there’s a file-size cap of 250 MB that you’ll have to duck in under.

But even with those catches, who couldn’t use some extra storage, right? Box’s deal is as up for as long as they leave it up, so definitely jump on it soon if you’re interested.

Source: TUAW.

Two Dollar Tuesday it spawns One Dollar Wednesday.

Two Dollar Tuesday’s Mac app promotions have been so popular that the company has launched a new iOS daily deal section called One Dollar Wednesday. Borrowing from the Two Dollar Tuesday model, One Dollar Wednesday offers three different iPad apps for US$1 every Wednesday.

The deals last one day and offer up to an 80 percent discount off the regular price of the app. You can check out the deals on the One Dollar Wednesday website and bookmark it for next Wednesday when the next set of deals goes live.

Source:  TUAW.