Posts Tagged ‘apple cloud hosting’

Apple TV rumored to be Cloud-Based

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Engadget reports on the potential next iteration of the Apple TV that may move it from a back burner hobby to the front lines.

The Website is reporting on tips that the next generation Apple TV could be an impressive upgrade. With the rumors, the system would move to the iPhone OS platform. This isn’t too shocking as we’ve ponder as such just last week. (Google TV implies competition with Apple TV, but not really) Along with the iPhone goodness would be 1080p output, which would seem a given if it were to be a serious contender for the living room. Furthermore, the device would run on Apple’s A4 processor and come equipped with 16 GB of storage. The storage needs would be minimal as Apple would also offer up cloud-based media serving. Such has been rumored with the purchase of music streaming company LaLa and the company building a giant new server farm on the east coast. Beyond the cloud and built-in drive, the device would also reportedly pull content from local network storage such as TimeMachine.

The gadget blog says that a tip they’ve since confirmed with “a source very close to Apple” suggests that Apple has been working on the next version of the Apple TV. The goods according to them: it will be a very small box (smaller than the current one) with perhaps only outputs for power and TV-out cables. It will run on Apple’s new A4 chip (the one found in the iPad and soon the new iPhone). It will still do 1080p video, but may have as little as 16GB of flash memory. That’s because the thing will be based around streaming over the cloud (or from other computers in your home) rather than local storage. Most significantly, it will run the iPhone OS.

Basically, it’s an “iPhone without a screen,” is how Engadget hears it. Oh — and it will cost only $99, supposedly.

Engadget notes that there’s no word on if apps will be included with the product or not. But it makes little sense to use the iPhone OS for this device and not includes apps (at least eventually). As I noted, the reason Apple hasn’t been taking the Apple TV seriously up until now is because they hadn’t figured out the best way to make money from it. That’s largely because Apple makes money off of hardware sales, and for devices like the iPod, those are driven by the availability of content at a good price. That’s the reason the Apple TV has failed to catch on: not enough content at a good price.

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Music in the Cloud

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Apple is building a $1 billion data center in a 500,000 sq. foot building in North Carolina to house a massive amount of servers. What’s the servers for?  Well, Apple isn’t saying. But cloud storage is a definite possibility. Do you think that this is for cloud storage?

Why 2010 will be the year of  music in the cloud
Dvice reports “Today mSpot launches a private beta of a cloud music service of its own, this one aimed at smartphone users. It’s not as complete an experience as Lala (there’s no way to listen to songs you don’t have), but it’s made to stream to Android (and, later, BlackBerry) phones over 3G networks — a huge step in cloud music. That’s miles ahead of MySpace Music and its rather cumbersome, ad-supported interface or Spotify, which has been limited in the U.S. due to copyright restrictions.”
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Apple moving to the cloud?

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

According to an Associated Press story, Jobs and Apple may be moving iTunes toward a model where people would no longer have to download individual songs; rather, they’d simply access the songs they want from a central server via their iPod, or computer or other device, delivered via the cloud.  What does this mean for us?

Last year a company named Lala came up with a plan for the iPhone that would enable customers to pay a small fee to host all their songs online.  The  program would stream songs instantly to the phone after a user spent 10 cents per song to house them on a cloud-based server. The dime would be credited back to buyers who subsequently bought an updated, permanent download.  Apple, as it turns out, didn’t allow Lala to market its application through the iTunes App Store, and then ended up buying Lala.  Coincidence, I don’t think so…

Apple has to be moving toward cloud computing; the AP story says that the company is building one of the world’s largest data centers about three hours from Raleigh, in Maiden, N.C., more than three times as large as its current data center in California. Meanwhile; Apple will never release anything till their worldwide events or the day it happens.  It’s pretty obvious that Apple is moving toward the cloud to distribute songs and other content through iTunes, as well as beef up its Mobile Me cloud-based data storage service.  Buying Lala was just the first step, the new Apple cloud server data center is step two.

I think that everyone out there is very excited about cloud hosting, cloud servers, cloud everything.  It will help businesses to save money, help the user to save money, and help everyone to spend less on hosting costs.  I think it will also help the way that we configure our IT.  We now will squeeze every penny out of that server that we have.  Apple cloud hosting will work.  Amazon cloud hosting will work. Rackspace cloud hosting will work.  Soon, everyone will have a different cloud hosting platform.  Hopefully someone will standardize what it will be!

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