Apple se lance officiellement dans la diffusion de films à télécharger avec l'aide du seul studio Disney et de ses filliales. Les films seront téléchargeables pour être visionnées ou bien sur son PC, ou bien sur son téléviseur au moyen d'une machine nommée le iTV (vendu 299 dollars pour le moment). Les nouveaux films pré-commandés ou achetés la semaine de leur sortie seront dispos à 12,99 dollars ; ensuite ils passent à 14,99 dollars. Les films de catalogue seront dispos à 9,99 dollars. On parle bien d'un achat définitif à ce prix, bien sur, pas d'une mise à disposition d'une journée. Tout ça sera disponible aux USA durant le premier trimestre 2007. A noter qu'Apple ne proposera aucune formule pour télécharger des films visionables sur ipod vidéo. Ils ne croient pas ua potentiel de ce dernier marché...
La news en anglais d'imdb :
"Apple Unveils Core of New Movie Biz
Apple's iTunes Store went into the movie business Tuesday as Apple CEO Steve Jobs and Disney CEO Bob Iger announced that future films made by Disney's four studios as well as 75 previously produced movies will be made available for online downloading for as little as $9.99 apiece. Other studios, however, refused to provide films that would be sold at that price fearing that it would undercut DVD sales and anger brick-and-mortar retailers. However, Disney's Iger said Tuesday, "We are perfectly comfortable with the pricing strategy." That strategy calls for brand new films to be sold for $12.99 when they are ordered prior to their release or during the first week of their release. The price will then jump to $14.99. Older movies will be priced at $9.99. Apple also unveiled a new $299 compact device called iTV that allows users to watch movies purchased online on their television sets. Jobs said that it will hit retail shelves in the U.S. in the first quarter of next year. It came as something of a surprise to Apple watchers, who had expected the company to offer a wider-screen video iPod. But Jobs, who has expressed skepticism about the market for portable video players, maintained that people prefer to watch movies on their TV sets. "This is the missing piece," he said Tuesday, as he displayed the iTV device. "It's going to let you enjoy your media on your big-screen flat TV." Reporting on the device, today's Wall Street Journal commented that it "is regarded as key to enabling mass-market acceptance of the growing range of movies, television shows and other videos that media companies are making available online."