Monday, February 7, 2011

Full Apple TV to Challenge Google TV: Munster

Another interesting article on connected television that I thought would interest my readers. Personally I think this has a lot of mileage, but still needs a bit of refinement on the content side.


Is Apple preparing to build televisions with full computing functionality? Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster sure thinks so. The service would provide a stiffer challenge for Google TV.


Some analysts who follow Apple believe the company is hoarding larger display technology to build a more robust Web television product.

Apple COO Tim Cook said during the company's first-quarter earnings call that it had paid $3.9 billion in inventory component prepayments and capital expenditures to three companies.

Based on an analysis of Apple's existing supplier relations, intellectual property ownership, and licensing and technology, those companies may be LG Display, Sharp and Toshiba Mobile Display, IHS analyst Vinita Jakhanwal said Feb. 1.

Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster said the investment in components revolves around LCD displays used for Apple's iPad and iPhone lines, Macs with 27-inch screens, and possibly up to 50-inch-screen Apple televisions in the future.

An Apple television, not to be confused with the current Apple TV service that streams Netflix content and YouTube videos, would be a comprehensive, Web-based TV. The device would include a Safari Web browser and sync content and services across users' iPhones, iPads and Macs, as well as grant users access to Apple's App Store.

"While Apple's commitment to the living room remains a 'hobby,' we continue to believe the company will enter the TV market with a full focus, as an all-in-one Apple television could move the needle when connected TVs proliferate," Munster wrote in a research note Feb. 3.

He added that of the 220 million flat-panel TVs sold in 2012, nearly half will be Web-connected, of which Apple could sell 1.4 million units. An Apple television could add $2.5 billion, or 2 percent, to revenue in 2012, and grow to $4 billion in 2013 and $6 billion in 2014.
Simply, Apple would add yet another significant revenue stream to its fleet of successful consumer products. These include the iPhone, which shipped 16.2 million units in the holiday quarter; the iPad, which shipped about 15 million units in 2010; the always popular iPod music players; and Mac computers and laptops.

A whole Apple television offering would put Apple in closer competition with Google TV, an Android-based service with a Chrome Web browser powered by an Intel Atom processor and running on a Logitech Revue companion box, as well as on Blu-ray players and TVs from Sony.

Users can search for Web and TV programs using special Google TV Search and access their digital video recordings from a keyboard controller, a special remote, or even mobile phone applications from Logitech, Google and Samsung. Google TV received a poor reception for being expensive, buggy and hard to use by media. Moreover, some broadcast companies have been loath to embrace the service, which has seen improvements to the Netflix application and other programs. 

Apple TV has been kicking around for a few years, but Apple streamlined the hardware and software in September. Where Apple once offered a $229 box for users to buy, the company is now offering a $99 device that offers high-definition Netflix movie rentals for $4.99 and a TV rental option for 99 cents a show, along with YouTube, Flickr and MobileMe integration. 

1 Comments:

At February 13, 2011 , Blogger The_ImBROglio said...

I have used both Apple and Google TV. I can tell you that I am in love with my Logitech Revue with Google TV. It is great to be watching TV and being able to pull up ESPN.com for stats on the same screen. The update to the Netflix app has made it one of my most used apps. I got my Revue from DISH Network, where I work, for $179. The great news is that is not an employee price but that is the price for everyone.

 

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