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已有 506 次阅读2011-11-5 11:04

"With iPod, Apple has invented a whole new category of digital music player that lets you put your entire music collection in your pocket and listen to it wherever you go," said Steve Jobs as the first iPod launched in 2001. "With iPod, listening to music will never be the same again." Thanks to the iPod's far-reaching impact over the last decade, you could argue that the consumer electronics industry has never been the same again. [More from Mashable: Top 12 Mashable Infographics] On the tenth anniversary of the iPod's debut we take a look at just how influential Apple's portable digital music player has been. Take a look at our analysis, complete with comment from experts. Have your say in the comments below. "The iPod truly ushered in the era of portable digital consumer electronics, much as the Walkman did for analog audio," states Jordan Selburn, principal analyst of consumer electronics at IHS-iSuppli. In just 10 years the iPod has been so influential that the word has come to represent a portable digital music player in the same way "Hoover" dominates the vacuum cleaner market. Apple wasn't the first to introduce such a device, so why has the iPod brand dominated all others? "The iPod wasn't the first MP3 player out there -- before it came out I'd used models from Rio for my runs -- but it took the shortcomings inherent in the existing products in the market and improved on them," explains Jonathan Seff, executive editor, MacWorld. "It held much more music than a typical MP3 player, and its use of FireWire meant transfer speeds much faster than the slow 12Mbps USB everyone else was using," Seff continues. "Plus the combo of hardware and software (iTunes) made it easier to use than much of what else was out there. And in very little time, the iPod took over the digital music player section of the market." Apple has had something like 70% market share for years now. There are still competing products (minus the Microsoft Zune, which was recently killed off), but the others are fighting over a pretty small sliver of the pie." Leander Kahney, editor of Cult of Mac and author of The Cult of iPod, sees the iPod's primary impact in terms of the "connected device." Digital Voice Recorders Refurbished Q88 Quad Band Dual Card With Bluetooth Unlocked Cell Phone maid cosplay costume Watches 5.0 inch DAPENG T8500 Wifi Analog TV Java Dual Cards Black Leather Case Touch Screen Cell Phone(Black) Camping Gear TV E81 Quad Band Dual Card With Analog TV Bluetooth Unlocked Cell Phone iPod Shuffle Accessories 9.7 inch android 2.3 tablet gps bluetooth Castlevania Cosplay ScoPad 7 inch Google Android 2.1/2.2 Capacitive Multi-touch Ultra Thin Gravity Sensor Tablet PC C100 Quad Band Quad Cards Analog TV FM Bluetooth Cell Phone(Black) DR X12 Quad Band Dual Cards with Android 2.2 Wifi Analog TV AGPS Touch Screen Smart Phone(Black) precious package monster beats by dr. dre 3.5mm in-ear tour headphones EM73A Google Android 2.3 7 inch HDMI Telechips 8803 Cortex-A8 1.2GHZ Tablet PC Black Kids' Watches WIFI Phones Wifi C6000 Quad Band Dual Card WIFI Analog TV JAVA FM Touch Screen Cell Phone(Red) bmw x5 e53 dvb-t Tales of Symphonia TV E500 Quad Band Dual Cards with Analog TV Java Cell Phone(Champagne) MID707 7 inch Google Android 2.2 Resistive Screen Flash 10.1 Support Tablet PC Silver "Gadgets are no longer stand-alone products," Kahney says, "they connect to a range of software and online services. Think Internet TVs, stereos like Sonos, handheld gaming devices, GPS bike computers, in-car stereos, high-end watches, Internet radios, even printers -- the list goes on and on -- and the iPod was the first to do that. "In terms of connected devices, Selburn sees the iPod as essential tool for hooking consumers to content. He says the device "ignited the idea of ubiquitous access to content," an influence that can now be seen across all areas of consumer electronics. "The era of the connected consumer, ignited by the iPod, is now coming to fruition. In the very near future, consumers will truly have access to all of their content anywhere they are, and on a wide range of devices spanning from home theaters and large screens to media tablets and smartphones and, of course, their iPods." The iPod's design is iconic. Design museums around the world display iPods proudly. Apple's senior vice president of industrial design, Jonathan Ive, has earned multiple awards and accolades. "One of the major reasons for the iPod's success is its unique design, which is simple and aesthetically appealing, making use of high-quality materials like stainless steel," says Dr. Peter Zec, CEO and intellectual and creative head of red dot. "The Apple Industrial Design Team, led by Jonathan Ive, focuses on strict and sustainable design politics: The first iPod fitted perfectly into Apple's product family of that time -- just like the latest models do, which pick up today's unibody design of the iMac or MacBook Pro. "The simplicity of the iPod's design speaks for itself: There are no unnecessary buttons or wheels, just one single element to navigate intuitively through the product's entire music library. "When the first iPod was put into the market in 2001, it was a breakthrough and changed portable music from scratch, continues Zec. "There are only few products that shaped the lifestyle of a generation, found its way into popular culture and became the archetype of an entire product group like this. It's not just the iPod's hardware that has been influential. Apple's user interface and experience also had an enormous impact on the market. "The iPod had an enormous effect on the UI/UX of consumer electronics, completely changing the game from the day it was launched," says Joshua Porter, interface designer and director of UX at HubSpot. Porter says the iPod's simple interface was optimized for music playing. The "fun" scrollwheel let users easily move through large lists of music, and the device's pocket-sized ergonomics had rounded corners and was generally comfortable to use. "I would say that, in general, the addictive nature of all of these pieces created an amazing user experience that just wasn't possible with anything else on the market," concludes Porter. "Apple was the first company to truly think of the overarching activity of purchasing, organizing, and listening to music -- and designing their ecosystem to make that activity pleasurable -- a good experience from beginning to end." Even the iPod's headphones were strategically designed. "The white headphones were interesting at first, but it was quickly realized that they were an amazing advertisement for iPods," says Porter. "I even heard stories of people switching to black headphones because thieves were targeting the white ones!" Over the last 10 years, the iPod's companion software, iTunes, has evolved from a simple music management application to a multi-billion dollar online store, with agreements with all the major record labels. "Without easy-to-use software such as iTunes, the iPod would be as useless as most of the other players on the market," says Patrik Wikstr?m, author of The Music Industry - Music in the Cloud. "In the early days of the iPod and iTunes, Apple was considered by the industry to be part of 'the digital problem' and to encourage piracy," continues Wikstr?m. The industry argued (probably correctly) that most music on peoples' iPods was illegal. The iPod and iTunes was a cog in the global piracy machinery and probably contributed to the shrinking CD sales rather than anything else. It was not until 2003 when iTunes Music Store was launched when the industry started to believe that Apple was going to save them all. It was indeed an important step when Apple was able to convince all the major labels to license their music to iTunes." Wikstr?m says one could argue that iTunes has been more a hindrance to the industry than a help. Despite the billions of sales using the platform, the music industry has still suffered over the past decade. Did the dominant iTunes business model blind the industry to alternatives? "iTunes prolonged the industry's dependence on the old model, and made them believe that it actually might be possible just to shift from CD to MP3, just as they had done in the past when they moved from vinyl to tape to CD," says Wikstr?m. "This is just speculation, but perhaps the most important impact on the music industry is that iTunes delayed the shift from a retail model based on control to what we now start to see emerge as various kinds of cloud-based retail models, such as Spotify and its peers."

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