Wi-Fi iPod on it's way

Wi-Fi iPod Expected Soon

Joint chip development by PortalPlayer and CSR would enable wireless iPods.
February 10, 2006

Apple shares jumped 3.6 percent Friday on speculation that the company will soon introduce wireless iPods that could download music and videos from anywhere.

The talk came after chip maker PortalPlayer and CSR, a Bluetooth tech company, said they’ve added Wi-Fi and Bluetooth technology on chips used in personal media players. The companies didn’t say which media player, but promised to demonstrate their joint product within a few days at 3GSM in Barcelona.

About 95 percent of PortalPlayer’s business comes from iPod-related sales, according to CFO Svend-Olav Carlsen, and that fact suggests Apple plans to use the chips in its red-hot devices.

“Having talked to PortalPlayer recently, it seems very probable we’re going to see a Wi-Fi-enabled iPod in the next six months,” said Chris Crotty, senior analyst of consumer electronics for iSuppli.

Apple didn’t reply to RedHerring.com’s requests for comment. Investors, however, liked the idea enough to lift Apple shares $2.36 to $67.31. To be sure, that’s still well below the high of $86.40 set January 12 during Macworld, the company’s unrelentingly upbeat trade show.

Portable media players with Wi-Fi and Bluetooth built into their processors would be able to wirelessly sync content with a PC, download content like podcasts directly from the Internet, and access the Web through Wi-Fi hotspots or city Wi-Fi networks.

“Consumers will no longer have to dock their media player to change playlists or add new songs, photos, and videos,” said Scott Tandy, vice president of marketing for PortalPlayer, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He called wireless personal media players a “rapidly growing segment.”

Allowing iPod users to hook into the Internet via Wi-Fi could greatly expand the Wi-Fi market. In the United States—iPods’ largest market—cities are expected to spend $405.6 million on Wi-Fi networks in 2007, and could charge users about $25 per month for access.

iSuppli’s Mr. Crotty said a move to make iPods wireless makes business sense for Apple’s iTunes service, which sells audio and visual content on the web.

:tup: IMHO

I hate how they keep coming out with new versions every fricken year. I wish there was like an upgrade program where you could pay like $25-50 to upgrade to the new Ipod. Makes me regret buying my 60gig video last month

DrImodium… see previous ipod article for explination.
Sure you can use an upgrade program to upgrade hardware… no problem.

This article doesn’t make much sense, talking about share prices rising based on unsubstantiated rumors is bad… the shares may have gone up that much that day without the “news”

I think the reason they are so hush-hush about new models is so people don’t just say I’m going to wait to get the new one.

Exactly… they didn’t unveil a new ipod in their “apple-show” yesterday. I would bet on hearing about it relatively soon. I think they wanna get the Video out there for another month or so.

April 1st is the rumored date for the new iPod.

damnit my video ipod is already out dated :frowning: lol