( Frankly. If that's true, I'll be off to buy the biggest baddest IBM
PowerPC G5 - based  non-DRM-enabled box I can get and have my order placed
well before Jobs finishes his keynote speech at WWDC........rick)


Hollywood Orders: Apple Wed Intel
By Leander Kahney

Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/mac/0,2125,67749,00.html

11:46 AM Jun. 05, 2005 PT

The weather's absolutely beautiful here in San Francisco but I blew the
entire weekend in front of the computer (again) trying to figure out Apple's
purported move to Intel.

At first, it was just too hard to believe, and I dismissed it as nonsense,
but two serious news organizations are reporting it as a done deal (News.com
and WSJ), and on Sunday morning a couple of things fell into place making it
look a lot more plausible.

I guess Apple will move to Intel, and they're relying on a fast, seamless
emulator to do it.

But it's really about Hollywood: Apple's looking to transform the movie
industry the same way the iPod and iTunes changed the music business.

As initially reported, there are a couple of big problems with Apple moving
to Intel. The biggest is shifting all the Mac software to a new platform.
Apple apparently mulled moving to Intel a few years ago, when Motorola's
chip development fell woefully behind, but Steve Jobs nixed it because of
the massive disruption it would cause developers.

What's new this time is a fast, transparent, universal emulator from
Transitive, a Silicon Valley startup.

Transitive's QuickTransit allows any software to run on any hardware with no
performance hit, or so the company claims. The techology automatically kicks
in when necessary, and supports high-end 3D graphics. It was developed by
Alasdair Rawsthorne.

When I wrote about the software for Wired News last fall, the company had
PowerBooks and Windows laptops running Linux software, including Quake III,
with no performance lag whatsoever.

If Apple has licensed QuickTransit for an Intel-powered Mac, all current
applications should just work, no user or developer intervention required.

Programmers could port their software to the new platform slowly and
steadily, and the shift would be as relatively painless as the recent move
from OS 9 to OS X, which, of course, relied on emulation in the Classic
environment.

But why would Apple do this? Because Apple wants Intel's new Pentium D
chips.

Released just few days ago, the dual-core chips include a hardware copy
protection scheme that prevents "unauthorized copying and distribution of
copyrighted materials from the motherboard," according to PC World.

Apple -- or rather, Hollywood -- wants the Pentium D to secure an online
movie store (iFlicks if you will), that will allow consumers to buy or rent
new movies on demand, over the internet.

According to News.com, the Intel transition will occur first in the summer
with the Mac mini, which I'll bet will become a mini-Tivo-cum-home-server.

Hooked to the internet, it will allow movies to be ordered and stored, and
if this News.com piece is correct, loaded onto the video iPod that's in the
works.

Intel's DRM scheme has been kept under wraps -- to prevent giving clues to
crackers -- but the company has said it will allow content to be moved
around a home network, and onto suitably-equipped portable devices.

And that's why the whole Mac platform has to shift to Intel. Consumers will
want to move content from one device to another -- or one computer to
another -- and Intel's DRM scheme will keep it all nicely locked down.

Presumably, Jobs used his Pixar moxie to persuade Hollywood to get onboard,
and they did so because the Mac platform is seen as small and isolated --
just as it was when the record labels first licensed music to iTunes. The
new Mac/Intel platform will be a relatively isolated test bed for the
digital distribution of movies and video.

Will current Mac users like this new locked-down platform? I doubt it, which
I guess is why it's going into consumer devices first.

In the PC industry, Apple lost the productivity/office era to Microsoft, but
it's trying to get the jump on the next big thing: the
entertainment/creativity era, and it's going to drag it users, even if
they're kicking and screaming, with it.

Check Leander Kahney's Cult of Mac blog for his musings on Applemania.

End of story



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