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Apple announces new TV streaming and news subscription service

canada-man

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Jun 16, 2007
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Toronto, Ontario
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CUPERTINO, Calif. -- Jumping belatedly into a business dominated by Netflix and Amazon, Apple announced its own TV and movie streaming service Monday, enlisting such superstars as Oprah Winfrey, Jennifer Aniston and Steven Spielberg to try to overcome its rivals' head start.

Apple didn't disclose the price or the launch date except to say that Apple TV Plus will be available this fall. It will feature Apple's original shows and movies .

The company also unveiled a news subscription service that will give customers access to roughly 300 magazines and a few major newspapers for $10 a month. And it announced a new branded credit card.

The video-streaming venture is fraught with risk for a company scrambling to diversify beyond its star product, the iPhone, whose sales have started to decline . Netflix, which started its streaming service in 2007, has 139 million subscribers worldwide.

But Apple has lots of money, more than 900 million active iPhones, and a track record for innovation that has enabled it to overtake its rivals, even when it enters a business late, as it did with smartphones, tablets and smartwatches.

In the past, of course, Apple has mostly jumped into relatively small and undeveloped markets. Streaming video, by contrast, is dominated by huge services like Netflix, Amazon and Hulu, with more seeming to be bowing into the competition daily, including AT&T's WarnerMedia, Disney and Comcast.

"Great competitors make for great consumer experiences," Netflix said in a statement. Netflix stock rose $5.22 to $366.23 Monday. Apple's stock fell $2.31 to $188.74.

Among the upcoming programs on the new Apple service will be Winfrey-created documentaries; a show about TV morning talk shows, starring Aniston, Reese Witherspoon and Steve Carell; a futuristic drama starting Momoa; and a sci-fi show called "Amazing Stories" from Spielberg.

Apple TV Plus will be featured in the existing Apple TV app, which brings together different streaming services such as HBO and Showtime and traditional cable subscriptions.

Video will be delivered to iPhones and iPads, Apple's own Apple TV device, smart TVs and, soon, streaming gadgets from Roku and Amazon.

Netflix, which isn't included in the Apple TV app, has turned "binge watching" into a worldwide phenomenon become a powerhouse in both Silicon Valley and Hollywood since it shifted its emphasis on original programming in 2013..

Apple was long focused on making on gadgets: iPhones, iPads, computers. Apple co-founder Steve Jobs toyed with the idea of building a powerful TV business but couldn't pull it off before his death in 2011. It has taken his successor, CEO Tim Cook, nearly eight years to draw up the plan the company will now try to execute.

"Apple is very late to this game," eMarketer analyst Paul Verna said. "Netflix has become the gold standard in how to create and distribute content, using all the data they have about their viewers."

Industry analyst Colin Gillis of Chatham Road Partners said Apple TV Plus is "not going to be a Netflix killer." And Martin Garner of CCS Insights said the service so far lacks "the full range and diversity of content available through Netflix, Amazon and others."

Several analysts, however, warned not to count Apple out.

Apple has reportedly spent more than $1 billion on its original TV shows and movies -- far less than Netflix and HBO spend every year. It has plenty of money to spend, though, with about $245 billion in cash and marketable securities.

As part of its effort to catch up, Apple hired two longtime Sony television executives in 2017. They have signed up stars such as Spielberg, Ron Howard and Sofia Coppola.

Winfrey received a standing ovation during her appearance at Apple's announcement Monday in Cupertino.

"I'm joining forces with Apple," she said. "They're in a billion pockets, y'all."

Apple News Plus, the news subscription service, will include such major papers as The Wall Street Journal and the Los Angeles Times. Other major newspaper publishers have reportedly been wary of Apple's terms.

The Journal will feature general-interest articles, not its entire slate of stories, although Apple said any article the Journal publishes could be searched for on the Apple app.

Apple said advertisers won't track readers inside the app. That will distinguish it from Facebook and Google, the other major online news hubs.

The company's new Mastercard credit card, called Apple Card, won't have any late fees or annual fees and will offer 2 per cent cash back.

https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/apple-announces-new-tv-streaming-and-news-subscription-service-1.4351005
 

icespot

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Jul 7, 2005
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History has always shown that if you make something exclusive it will fail.

Only for apple devices means that your market is capped at a 130 million people worldwide. It's a lot of people but if they allowed it on every device then they be more likely to grow and be real competition to other providers.
 

Grimnul

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May 15, 2018
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A bunch of these streaming services are going to bomb hard. People loved Netflix because it let them “cut the cord” and cancel their cable (which is expensive as hell in Canada, comparatively). Now, Netflix and Amazon are losing content, because all these other companies are creating streaming services and buying up exclusive contracts. It’s getting to the point where you’ll have to subscribe to 10 different services to get access to everything you want, and that’s going to completely defeat the point of being able to opt out of cable. People don’t want to have to jump between 10 different services to watch their shows.

Eventually, a bunch of these services will fail, the rest will be amalgamated, and we’ll be right back where we started until the next big innovation comes out.
 

Insidious Von

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Sep 12, 2007
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Your right Grimnul a few of these streaming subscription services are already starting to fail. CBS All Access is already floundering, ST: Discovery can't save it. ATT-WB may have more success, the catalogues of HBO and TCM are included.

As for exclusive Apple.

 
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Mr Deeds

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Its a very crowded market and Apple is late to the table, will be interesting to see what happens.The good thing though is there are alot of actors that wouldnt be working if not for all these new services
 

Don Draper

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Nov 24, 2009
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Its a very crowded market and Apple is late to the table, will be interesting to see what happens.The good thing though is there are alot of actors that wouldnt be working if not for all these new services
Not just actors

Set designers

wardrobe people

writers

painters

editors

the list goes on and on.... why do you think so many new studios are being built in the GTA!!

In the end, it's quality content. That's what will draw people in.
 

james t kirk

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Aug 17, 2001
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This move on Apple's part tells me that it's time to short Apple.

They are bankrupt of new ideas.

What happened to Blackberry is going to happen to Apple. For years, Apple has been innovating when it came to cell phones (after they copied blackberry's ideas) and this is what led to explosive growth for Apple and a great rocket ride for investors. But lets face it, cell phones and what they can do have plateaued out. The big news in the last couple of Iphone releases? Wireless ear buds and 2 cameras on the back side. Wow. That's earth shattering. Enough to make me want to go out and drop 1200 on a new Iphone. (As if there is anything wrong with the old Iphone.) I can just picture a bunch of Apple guys sitting around and trying to come up with the next big thing.....and they come up with......(wait for it)... watches and another streaming TV. Wow, that's revolutionary.

The problem with Apple is that an entire company has been built around, and depends on, the success of the Iphone. Sure, they sell a lot of laptops, but the big prize is / was their phones. That's what made them rich. And the new phone isn't really any different than the old phone. I just can't picture Jobs getting up on stage in his black turtleneck about this one.
 

Insidious Von

My head is my home
Sep 12, 2007
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Showtime and HBO will not align with Apple, there's nothing in it for the parent companies (Sony, ATT-Warner). Nor is getting Oprah, Jennifer Analston and Steven Spielberg going to help, they're entitled fat cats with no incentive. Spielberg sells his content to the highest bidder anyway.

Apple could be a platform for original content which is how YT developed iron legs. YouTube: Red is the platform to watch. Once the feeding frenzy ends Netflix, Amazon Prime and YT Red will be left standing.

 

Insidious Von

My head is my home
Sep 12, 2007
38,257
6,516
113
Apple TV launch was aborted a few years ago, wasn't it?

Except for a brief time in college, I've never used Apple products. It's for kiddies. And now with "Glass Bottom Pool" girl pitching for Samsung, I never will.

 
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