Jobs punches the elevator button to the fourth floor, where his small office is located. For a man who is as responsible as anyone for the wonder and chaos of Silicon Valley, Jobs' view of it all is surprisingly modest: shrubby treetops extending out toward San Francisco Bay, the distant whoosh of the freeway below.
There is nothing modest, however, about Apple's recent accomplishments. In the past few months, Jobs' company has rolled out the PowerMac G5, arguably the fastest desktop computer on the planet; has redesigned the Powerbook and iBook laptops; and introduced Panther, a significant upgrade of the OS X operating system. But Jobs' biggest move, and certainly the one closest to his heart, has been Apple's plunge into the digital-music revolution. It began two years ago, with the introduction of the iPod portable music player, which may be the only piece of Silicon Valley hardware that has ever come close to matching the lust factor of the original Macintosh. Then, in April of this year, Apple introduced its digital jukebox, the iTunes Music Store, first for the Mac, and then, in October, for Windows. The result: 20 million tracks downloaded, close to a million and a half iPods sold, aggressive deals with AOL and Pepsi, and lots of good PR for Apple as the savior of the desperately fucked-up music industry.
Still, Jobs' bet on digital music is a hugely risky move in many ways, not only because powerhouses such as Dell and Wal-Mart are gunning for Apple (and Microsoft will be soon, as well), but because success may depend on how well Jobs, a forty-eight-year-old billionaire, is able to understand and respond to the fickle music-listening habits of eighteen-year-olds in their college dorms.
Do you see any parallel between music revolution today
and PC revolution in 1984?
Well, obviously, the biggest difference is that we're on Windows.
It's still very early in the music revolution. Remember there are
10 billion songs that are distributed in the U.S. every year
— legally, on CDs. So far on iTunes, we've distributed about
16 million [as of October]. So we're at the very beginning of this.
It will take years to unfold.
Bringing iTunes to Windows was obviously a bold move.
Did you do much hand-wringing over it?
I don't know what hand-wringing is. We did a lot of
thinking about it. The biggest risk, obviously, was that
we saw people buying Macs just to get their hands on iPods. So
taking iPods to Windows was really the choice. That was the big
decision. We knew once we did that that we were going to go all the
way. I'm sure we're losing some Mac sales, but half our sales of
iPods are to the Windows world already.
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.