1) Marketing slogan - "If you like your iPod, you'll love your iMac" ... the irony, of course, that people don't just like their iPods... very directly making a case to the potential switchers
2) ITMS song buyback - its annoying that you buy a song to test an album, like it, buy another off the album and so on until you have about 4 and then decide to buy the whole album. At which point you realize you wasted 4 dollars. That $3.96 should be applied to the cost of the new album. A marginally good move from a business perspective because it would probably get people buying more albums.
3) Tivo-like capabilities - I don't think a "set top box" is the answer. I would expect more like an Airport Intense or something that streams to and from your TV to your computer (digital hub) and carves out a piece of your hard drive for the storage. Then lets you edit the shows and burn in iMovie. I am among the I suspect many people who want to use Apple's movie editing capabilties but have neither a camcorder or anything to shoot. My Tivo is great (except for that Tivo-to-go spurned Apple) and there are rumors of Apple buying them but I think that even at a cheap $400mm market cap, this is the kind of thing Apple could do on its own in an even better and more integrated manner than buying someone else's technology. My understanding is that the next generation of 802.11g will have fast enough throughput for HD.
4) Lines at Apple retail stores - those who have been to the Soho or Magnificent Mile store can relate... what better way to show off the portability and power of powerbooks than wheeling a couple out on carts when the line gets too long and setting up impromptu temporary cash registers?
5) Dot Mac for free - Maybe sell enhancements (larger storage space, etc.) The .mac email address is good advertising for Apple, the storage space just can't cost them that much to provide. Help keep the faithful happy.
6) Podcasting - Team up with more TV shows/concerts to get things on the Web immediately. When Anwar Robinson killed on What a Wonderful World (an Apple Macworld favorite) on American Idol last week, me and thousands of others would have gladly immediately gone to ITMS to plunk down our 99 cents to download it. Or Jaime Foxx's acceptance speech at the Oscars. Or the Presidential debates (oh, wait, they did do that... for free). Or Jay Leno's Johnny Carson rememberance monologue. Or Jack Johnson last Saturday on SNL. Or Steve Jobs at Macworld. You get the idea. I understand there are copyright issues to get through, but they made it happen with online music when no one thought they would. In addition to incremental revenue, I just think this would go a long way to further engrain the iPod at the center of pop culture.
Thanks for reading... your thoughts welcomed
2) ITMS song buyback - its annoying that you buy a song to test an album, like it, buy another off the album and so on until you have about 4 and then decide to buy the whole album. At which point you realize you wasted 4 dollars. That $3.96 should be applied to the cost of the new album. A marginally good move from a business perspective because it would probably get people buying more albums.
3) Tivo-like capabilities - I don't think a "set top box" is the answer. I would expect more like an Airport Intense or something that streams to and from your TV to your computer (digital hub) and carves out a piece of your hard drive for the storage. Then lets you edit the shows and burn in iMovie. I am among the I suspect many people who want to use Apple's movie editing capabilties but have neither a camcorder or anything to shoot. My Tivo is great (except for that Tivo-to-go spurned Apple) and there are rumors of Apple buying them but I think that even at a cheap $400mm market cap, this is the kind of thing Apple could do on its own in an even better and more integrated manner than buying someone else's technology. My understanding is that the next generation of 802.11g will have fast enough throughput for HD.
4) Lines at Apple retail stores - those who have been to the Soho or Magnificent Mile store can relate... what better way to show off the portability and power of powerbooks than wheeling a couple out on carts when the line gets too long and setting up impromptu temporary cash registers?
5) Dot Mac for free - Maybe sell enhancements (larger storage space, etc.) The .mac email address is good advertising for Apple, the storage space just can't cost them that much to provide. Help keep the faithful happy.
6) Podcasting - Team up with more TV shows/concerts to get things on the Web immediately. When Anwar Robinson killed on What a Wonderful World (an Apple Macworld favorite) on American Idol last week, me and thousands of others would have gladly immediately gone to ITMS to plunk down our 99 cents to download it. Or Jaime Foxx's acceptance speech at the Oscars. Or the Presidential debates (oh, wait, they did do that... for free). Or Jay Leno's Johnny Carson rememberance monologue. Or Jack Johnson last Saturday on SNL. Or Steve Jobs at Macworld. You get the idea. I understand there are copyright issues to get through, but they made it happen with online music when no one thought they would. In addition to incremental revenue, I just think this would go a long way to further engrain the iPod at the center of pop culture.
Thanks for reading... your thoughts welcomed