iPod Birth Announcement

CUPERTINO, Calif., Oct. 23— Apple Computer introduced a portable music player today and declared that the new gadget, called the iPod, was so much easier to use that it would broaden a nascent market in the way the Macintosh once helped make the personal computer accessible to a more general audience.

But while industry analysts said the device appeared to be as consumer friendly as the company said it was, they also pointed to its relatively limited potential audience, around seven million owners of the latest Macintosh computers. Apple said it had not yet decided whether to introduce a version of the music player for computers with the Windows operating system, which is used by more than 90 percent of personal computer users.

“It’s a nice feature for Macintosh users,” said P. J. McNealy, a senior analyst for Gartner G2, an e-commerce research group. “But to the rest of the Windows world, it doesn’t make any difference.”

Steven P. Jobs, Apple’s chief executive, disputed the concern that the market was limited, and said the company might have trouble meeting holiday demand. He predicted that the improvement in technology he said the iPod represented would inspire consumers to buy Macintosh computers so they could use an iPod.

Introduces What It Calls an Easier to Use Portable Music Player – NYTimes.com

Ten years ago today. Industry analysts were wrong.

One thought on “iPod Birth Announcement”

  1. I was wrong too. I was sitting in the audience the day Steve announced the iPod. I thought the device would be a hit, but I thought the name, iPod, was a big marketing fail. I *hated* the name and found it silly and believed it would be changed in time.

    Boy was I ever wrong. Now it’s a household word.

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