2007 Review of the Year
2007 Review of the Year

2007 Roundup: Apple gets to the core of its market

Soaring Mac sales and Leopard highlight mega-successful year

Shaun Nichols in California

Apple seemed to be synonymous with the iPhone throughout 2007. The mobile stole the spotlight all year and overshadowed the company's other operations.

Many of those non-iPhone offerings, however, logged banner years of their own in 2007.

Advertisement

The iPod continued its dominance of the portable media player market throughout the year. After dominating holiday sales in 2006, the iPod continued its reign in 2007 with a makeover of the iPod Nano.

A new model was also added to the line with the iPod Touch. The device had a touch-screen format similar to the iPhone and featured a Wi-Fi internet connection that allowed for web browsing and connection to iTunes.

ITunes made news of its own this summer when Apple's pricing model drew the ire of several major content providers.

Word surfaced in July that Universal Music was about to cancel its deal with iTunes owing to pricing issues. The label later decided to exclude iTunes from its DRM-free music line.

The pricing argument came to a head in September when NBC terminated its contract with Apple and eschewed iTunes in favour of Amazon's video download service.

The studio reportedly wanted a deal that would have raised download prices by as much as $3.

September also brought good news for Apple following an iMac redesign which proved to be a major success for the company in 2007.

MacOS X was less encouraging this year, however. Originally slated for June, the new Leopard version of the operating system was delayed by four months when developers were moved off of the project to work on the iPhone.

When Leopard did launch it was plagued by bugs, including claims that the built-in firewall was all but useless.

Apple experienced further security headaches when the first active malware sample was found for OS X. The Trojan was spread through social engineering and continues to be distributed on fake codec sites.

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Share

Tags:

Do you agree?

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Most watched

HTC Hero

Hands on with the HTC Hero

V3.co.uk gets a walk through of the Hero, which includes HTC's new Sense overlay for Android

Xperia X1

Video Review: Sony Ericsson Xperia X1

First Looks Editor Ian Williams gets hands on with the Sony Ericsson Xperia X1

IT white papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Poll

Poll: Summer smartphones

Poll: Summer smartphones

Which smartphone will you be taking to the beach this summer?

View poll results

Advertisement

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Spotlight

HTC Hero

Hands on with the HTC Hero

V3.co.uk gets a walk through of the Hero, which includes...

NetGear ReadyNAS NVX

Review: NetGear ReadyNAS NVX

NetGear's four-bay compact network-attached storage gets a serious speed boost

AMD

AMD adds to six-core Opteron line up

New HE processors promise even lower power consumption

Adobe Systems

Adobe launches ColdFusion 9 and ColdFusion Builder

Firm promises enhanced developer productivity

Primary Navigation