Apple chief executive
Steve Jobs has unveiled a new iPod Hi-Fi boombox that allows users to play songs
on their iPod portable music players around the home.
"It's home stereo reinvented for the iPod age," Jobs said at a company event
at Apple's corporate headquarters in Cupertino, California.
The $349 device is similar to appliances from high end manufacturers like
Denon and
Bose but costs significantly
less, according to Jobs.
The
iPod
Hi-Fi features a universal iPod plug that allows users to plug their Apple
music players directly into the device, and comes with a remote control which is
identical to the device already shipping with iMac computers.
Jobs also unveiled two new
Mac
Mini models powered by
Intel processors which ship
with the remote control and Apple's
Frontrow
application.
Frontrow presents users with a graphical interface to access music, video and
photos using the remote control rather than a keyboard and mouse.
The software has been equipped with support for Apple's
Bonjour
networking technology that allows devices on a network to detect each other and
connect.
This addition is the 'missing link' in building home networks in which users
can stream photos, music or movies throughout their homes on any television or
computer, according to Jobs.
"It allows devices to find themselves automatically over a network and commun
icate with each other without any configuration or settings," he said. " If you
have Bonjour running on your Macs or PCs [with iTunes] they can find each other
throughout your house."
A Mac Mini powered by a single-core Intel processor sells at $599 and a
dual-core model at $799.
Jobs cited benchmark tests for the new dual-core Mac Mini that showed a 550
per cent speed increase.
But if the experiences with the new Intel powered Mac Book Pro laptops
provide any guidance, users will see a far less impressive speed boost with
everyday applications.
At the introduction of the new laptops last January,
Jobs cited a 200 to 300 per cent speed gain based on benchmarks. But
tests using regular applications demonstrated a
performance increase of only 20 to 30 per cent.
Photos of the unveiling and products are available on the
Silicon Valley Sleuth blog for
the
Mac
Mini and the
iPod
Hi-Fi.
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