Comment: Apple turns up the heat on PlayStation Portable




Posted by blade527

"It may not be a games device, but Apple's iPod is arguably the single biggest threat to the PlayStation Portable's ascendance as the handheld media system of choice - not because of the hardware, but because of the software that underpins it", writes Rob Fahey.

According to Sony's chief executive producer Phil Harrison, the company isn't fazed in the slightest by Apple's decision to launch a video-enabled version of the iPod, a move which essentially means that the world's favourite portable music player can now compete with the PlayStation Portable on yet another front.

Of course, this isn't strictly speaking anything to do with the games business. It's easy to shrug and say, "well, that's the video market", or the music market, or whatever. The iPod doesn't play third-party games, any more than the Macintosh range - which is positioning itself gradually as a living room rival to Microsoft's Windows Media Centre PC and Xbox 360 - plays console titles. In theory, this has nothing to do with us.

In practice, it has everything to do with us. Videogames doesn't exist in isolation any more; we are part of the entertainment industry at large, and it's becoming increasingly hard to ignore the fact that many of the hardware platforms which we like to think of as videogames consoles are being viewed by mass market consumers as media systems, with games simply being one of the types of media they can access through them.

The PlayStation Portable is the best example to date of this, and here in the UK at least, Sony has pushed the music, movie and photo capabilities of the device as hard if not harder than the gaming aspect in all of its marketing. It's impossible to say, of course, how many PSPs are being sold to people for use as portable movie players and how many as games consoles, but it's worth noting that almost half of people who bought a PSP are thought to have bought a UMD movie in September. We'd love to see statistics for the sales of 1Gb and 2Gb Memory Sticks in the same timeframe.

So when Apple announces that the iPod, a device which Sony was happy to compare the PSP to throughout the development of the handheld, is going to add video functionality, it's a big deal. It suggests that a major show-down is brewing in the portable media market, and this is merely a border skirmish - the real action probably won't be seen until 2006, and the victor is difficult to call at this point.

Harrison is correct in implying that the video iPod announced last night isn't really a threat to the PSP; while it has major advantages in terms of size and storage capacity, the iPod Video has a very small screen compared to the PSP and a very limited library of video content. However, this is only a toe in the water for Apple, and it would be foolish to assume that the company doesn't have a much more capable video device in its labs with a view to releasing it further down the line.

What's much more important than the hardware, after all, is the software and services which surround it. The PSP is a wonderful piece of kit, but if Apple want to build something as good as the PSP for video playback, they certainly can, given a sufficiently large investment. The real battle will be fought over content and user experience - and in that regard, it's clear that Sony has a lot of work to do.

Apple, after all, has a lot of experience of delivering content to users digitally thanks to the iTunes Music Store, which is the most successful service of its type in the world. Last night the firm added music videos and a selection of television episodes to the purchase options in the store; expect this selection to grow rapidly, and possibly to expand to full-length movies when the firm finally introduces a "proper" video playback device down the line. The experience of downloading these videos and placing them on your iPod Video is as seamless and painless as the music experience is; an end-to-end solution which even the most technically inept consumers can manage with ease.

By contrast, it's early days yet for Sony's PSP content download service. The PSP only gained the ability to handle DRM-protected files this week, and even if the company were to release a decent PSP media downloader and manager tomorrow, there's much user education to do before they get used to using that with their device. While almost every iPod owner uses the iTunes software by default, most PSP users currently use third-party tools for encoding video for their handhelds and uploading it to the Memory Stick.

In other words, Sony faces a major struggle in ensuring that its device remains the platform of choice for mobile video. Right now, it has the hardware advantage - but the hardware advantage can evaporate overnight. What the firm needs to do, and what the games industry must hope and pray that it succeeds at, is to create a software and service platform that rivals Apple's, and build a user experience for acquiring and watching video content that is painless and simple.

We're sure that Sony is already working on this, just as Apple is working constantly to improve its own solution - and we fervently hope, for the sake of all consumers, that it's on this playing field that the battle is fought. The alternative is a grim vision of another standards war, where certain movies are available to iPod users and certain movies to PSP users, with consumers being denied access to some content depending on what system they have. The net result of that kind of standards tug-of-war will be simple - a bonanza for online movie piracy, from which nobody will benefit.

My Site: http://www.bladez.co.nr




Posted by GameMiestro

The iPod? Sony should be worrying about the DS, or at least getting a strong fan base before the PSP starts to dwindle in popularity. The PSP never was the "platform of choice for mobile video". Laptops still are, but if Sony can take over this market, perhaps the PSP will be a staple of gaming- just not in the way they planned.

If they REALLY want to compete with the iPod, they need to get exclusive video and movies on the PSP. And, they need to make it look cool- solid black boxes of plastic are not that "social worthy".




Posted by KoH

Who gives a fuck about ipod? Personally, I hate 'em. But yeah, Miestro pretty much got it. There are already dozens of vendors selling different mp3 players with video playback quality. The trick here though is that the screens used are incredibly small. Or if you want a screen like the PSP's, you're going to have to pay far more than a measley 200 dollars.

To put it bluntly, ipod's for losers. And to be honest, I think that the ipod is a fad that might be running out of luck soon.




Posted by Vampiro V. Empire


Quoted post: There are already dozens of vendors selling different mp3 players with video playback quality


The only problem with those, though, is that they don't have the band power that iPod does. While they have been on the market for awhile now, it should only take the iPod a few months to catch up.



Posted by GameMiestro

iPods are very popular, to a point that they have saturated the market. The majority of people who want an iPod already have one, and there isn't much reason to change. The Nano has caused another spike in popularity, but there really isnt going to be many sales for the iPod video.




Posted by muffla

what is this about the macontosh rage? is it gonna b a system or a psp ripoff
as for the ipod vido it might go well if you can record vidos just look at cellfones one comes out with picture an they all do




Posted by Vampiro V. Empire


Quoted post: but there really isnt going to be many sales for the iPod video.


Just like every iPod before it, it's going to be huge. It's already sold out in many places and it doesn't hit the shelves for a few months.



Posted by GameMiestro

I dont know what you're looking at, but the predictions I've seen don't agree.




Posted by Vampiro V. Empire


Quoted post: I dont know what you're looking at


Stores in and around my city. Which means little on a larger scale, but meh.



Posted by GameMiestro

[quote=Vampiro]Stores in and around my city. Which means little on a larger scale, but meh.

Hmm. Well, I guess it may vary by region.

Let me rephrase that: If I already owned an iPod, I would see no reason to spend $300 just to watch videos, and if I didn't, well, then, I still wouldn't pay $300. Money isn't cheap.