No Media Center Macs

November 6th, 2003  |  Published in Out Loud

Many people are surprised by this, but I have to agree with Jobs, there’s little market for media-center PCs, outside of dorm rooms and cramped manhattan apartments—both of which are awash in activities far more immersive than watching taped sitcoms on a 17” LCD.

The truth, for Apple at least, is not so much whether an iMediaPC would be cool, it’s whether it would make $$. Consider the Gateway DVD player with the streaming media functions—it’s $200, people. Apple can’t beat that.

The point being that it is extremely easy to design new circuit boards and pop chips on them. And upgrading functionality through firm/software (read: Linux) is easy too.

It’s becoming clear that the PC, though still necessary as a central management/storage device, is actually too complicated for most media applications. An entertainment center is ruled by the remote—if you can’t fit your interface on it, forget it.

Apple says could move to Intel, but happy with IBM

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