Apple CEO Steve jobs revealed a thinner, more game-friendly iPod Touch at a Wednesday Apple event attended by Gamasutra.
Aside from slimmer dimensions, the updated version of the device, which hits stores next week, will have the A4 chip found in the iPhone 4 and iPad, the sharper Retina Display screen, a 3-axis gyro for increased control, a front and rear camera (the latter with HD recording) and iOS 4.1, which includes the Game Center social network.
The new iPod Touch will come in three flavors: 8GB for $229, 32GB for $299 and 64GB for $399. Apple CEO Steve Jobs said the iPod Touch last year overtook the iPod nano as the company's most popular iPod.
Apple said it's making major inroads into the competitive portable gaming market. Jobs claimed the iPod Touch "has become the most popular portable game player in the world. The iPod Touch outsells Nintendo and Sony portable game players combined."
He added, "It has over 50 percent market share for both the U.S. and worldwide. It has by far become the most popular game player in the world. And over 1.5 billion games and entertainment downloads have been downloaded from iTunes just to the iPod Touch."
Total application downloads on Apple devices have hit 6.5 billion units, Jobs said, with the App Store hosting 250,000 apps.
Worldwide, among dedicated portable game players, the Nintendo DS is the leader with over 130 million sold. Sales of the device are flagging, but Nintendo recently cut prices on the hardware as the anticipated 3DS waits in the wings for a launch early next year. Sony's PlayStation Portable has sold 60 million units worldwide. Both the DS and PSP launched in 2004, while the iPod Touch launched more recently in 2007.
Since the launch of the iPhone in 2007, Jobs said iOS devices, including iPad, iPod and iPhone, have sold 120 million units worldwide.
Also on hand at the event Wednesday were Epic Games and subsidiary studio Chair Entertainment, which revealed the Unreal Engine 3-powered iPhone game Project Sword.
Apple also revealed the new iPod nano, a lighter, smaller version of the previous model that sells for $150 for the 8GB model and $180 for the 16GB model.
The company has been busy launching new devices this year -- it released the iPad in April, which sold 3 million units in its first three months, and the iPhone 4 in June, which sold 1.7 million in its first three days.
More popular than the Nintendo DS? Mmmm, lets see those numbers.... O.o
So the iPhone has sold a 120 millions unit. That is nice. Not all of those are playing games. All of those 130 million Nintendo DS/DS Lites are playing games. This claim by Jobs is disingenuous to say the least.
I want to see how many iPhone games they have sold VS how many DS game they have sold. Then it will mean something.
That would have to be in dollars, not units sold. You can push more units at $0.99 per download on the iPod than you can $39.99 via retail box for the DS. Only the DSi and later are capable of playing the DSiWare downloaded games.
I still want to see the number before I believe any of it. Sorry, but I do not believe that game sales from the iPhone is making more from game sales than the DS is making from games sales.
I would want to see game sales charts before I would believe any of it.
Also, that quote of "6.5 billion units, Jobs said, with the App Store hosting 250,000 apps." is also disingenuous. Yes, that is great. 250,000 "apps". What about games? How many of those are actual games? 6.5 bullion units sold? If Apple had sold 6.5 billion games it would have rocked the gaming industry to core. How many of those units sold are games? He does not want us to know because then it would not be as impressive I am sure.
I also want to know how much money they are making at the Apple store off of game VS other handheld devices. It would put it all in perspective.
I wonder how it would compare against all the other 'game player' devices out there. Since nearly every cell phone, PC, and TI calculator (assuming people still play games on their TI calculators... :( I feel old) can play games, shouldn't they also be included?
"Most Popular Portable Game Player" is just corporate talk, you guys are too easy; DS is still the king, iDevices second, and the PSP third (turd... Zing!).
Worldwide I'm not convinced that iDevices are second. It would be nice to see some straightforward facts instead of corporate spin, but I'm fairly certain the PSP brings in more game software revenue than the iDevices.
That's interesting to see how well the iPhone is doing in the US. I'm still pretty sure the PSP is second worldwide though. The PSP has been doing pathetically in the US, while the US is the best market for iDevices.
For example the PSP is still competitive with the DS in Japan where mobile gaming devices are more important than home consoles.
You can't take anything Steve says about the rest of the world seriously. He also said Google was counting upgrades in it's number of Android activations per day. Google was quick to say no, and that they do not have a way to track non-Google branded Android devices.
So, in his world (the Apple campus), the i-devices are the most popular thing there is. End of story.
So the iPhone has sold a 120 millions unit. That is nice. Not all of those are playing games. All of those 130 million Nintendo DS/DS Lites are playing games. This claim by Jobs is disingenuous to say the least.
I want to see how many iPhone games they have sold VS how many DS game they have sold. Then it will mean something.
I would want to see game sales charts before I would believe any of it.
Also, that quote of "6.5 billion units, Jobs said, with the App Store hosting 250,000 apps." is also disingenuous. Yes, that is great. 250,000 "apps". What about games? How many of those are actual games? 6.5 bullion units sold? If Apple had sold 6.5 billion games it would have rocked the gaming industry to core. How many of those units sold are games? He does not want us to know because then it would not be as impressive I am sure.
I also want to know how much money they are making at the Apple store off of game VS other handheld devices. It would put it all in perspective.
Check the wording here: It's a game player, not a pure gaming device, big difference.
That was last year, expect an even bigger increase this year.
For example the PSP is still competitive with the DS in Japan where mobile gaming devices are more important than home consoles.
So, in his world (the Apple campus), the i-devices are the most popular thing there is. End of story.