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Apple Devotes Entire Home Page To Jerome York Obituary

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If ever you needed a sign that Apple was a different kind of technology company, this is it.
What other computer manufacturer would remove its top-selling, hype-inducing, industry-altering new product from the prime spot on its website home page, and replace it with an obituary to an investor?
This is one of those “Here’s to the [...]

Coming Soon: Steve Jobs, the Sitcom

Fake Steve creator Dan Lyons just signed a deal to bring Steve Jobs to another small screen near you.
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What’s Next For the iPad? A Tabletop iPad, According to Xerox PARC Circa 1991

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iPhone App Arms Users With Silent Panic Button

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Survey: 22 Percent of Teens Plan To Purchase An IPhone

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Apple has once again won the “cool factor” with teen iPhone owners now nearly triple ( 8 percent versus 3 percent) compared to a year ago. The Piper Jaffray survey also revealed 22 percent of teens say they plan to buy the Apple handset – up from just 9 percent in 2007.

Other good news for Apple: 84 percent of MP3 players purchased by teens were iPods. Microsoft’s Zune came in a distant second, capturing just 3 percent of the teen marketshare.

Apple’s iTunes music download service now has 93 percent of the market. That’s up from 79 percent uncovered a year ago.

Although 60 percent of music still comes from file-sharing, that number is four percent less than a year ago, when 64 percent of teens said they turn to peer-to-peer services for music. Online music sales appear to have gained from that shift.

“This is essentially an untapped market for legal download services like Napster, Rhapsody, eMusic and Amazon,” Piper Jaffray analyst Andrew Murphy told Cult of Mac.

The buying decisions of teens are an important leading indicator for consumer electronics firms, Murphy said.

“It is clear that Apple’s got the ‘cool factor’ among teens. This gives them an advantage in the teen demographic, where brands are paramount,” Murphy said by e-mail.

Although growth in the MP3 market appears to be slowing, Murphy has upped his estimate for iPod sales to 56.3 million in fiscal 2009, an increased from the 54.8 million expected for this year.

The survey of 769 high school teenagers was conducted “over the last several weeks,” according to Piper Jaffray.

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About the author

Ed Sutherland

Ed Sutherland is a veteran technology journalist who first heard of Apple when they grew on trees, Yahoo was run out of a Stanford dorm and Google was an unknown upstart. Since then, Sutherland has covered the whole technology landscape, concentrating on tracking the trends and figuring out the finances of large (and small) technology companies.

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3 comments

    igh. Why does this make me so embarrased to be a teen?

    Amazon mp3 is SO much better. No DRM – play it on your cell phone – still automatically imports into iTunes, often cheaper, and using iTunes is locking these teens into the apple system for a long while. Ugh.

    Agreed, Rachel.

    I don’t see how Apple can hide behind the “Well, it’s the record companies who want the DRM!” excuse. iTunes is now the undisputed leader and Apple excs should know market power when they see it.

    Tell the record companies no more DRM or shut ‘em out! >_<

    It’s iPhone, not “IPhone”

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