Apple Opens Up
by
Leah Messinger
on
10 August 2007, 14:38
Categories:
Internet
Topics:
apple
,
gartner
,
social networking
,
iTunes
,
blogs
,
myspace
,
Greg Sterling
,
Mike McGuire
,
bebo
,
iLike
,
Sterling Market Intelligence
Apple has launched three new iTunes widgets,
marking the computer maker’s second move in two months into the world of social
networking.
Apple in
June partnered with Bebo—popular in the United Kingdom—to sell iTunes
digital music tracks through the San Francisco-based social network. The new
widgets let users create embeddable Flash tools they can post to a variety of social
networks, blogs, and other web pages.
Gartner
media analyst Mike McGuire said the widgets signify a recognition by Apple of
the growing popularity of social networking across the web and of the ability
of social sites to promote viral spread of media, such as music.
The
widgets, which can be used on MySpace and other sites, let users list their
recent purchases, display their music reviews, or show their favorite artists.
Although
others have offered similar tools in the past, Mr. McGuire said Apple’s
decision to create and distribute its own music widget will allow it to promote
its brand and track purchase patterns as users move from social networks to the
iTunes store. Moreover, he said, users have come to require these types of
tools. “There’s increasingly an expectation consumers have to share taste and
not necessarily share files and content,” he said.
Greg
Sterling, founder of Sterling Market Intelligence, said the music widget space
is a fairly well-tested area as music recommendation tools from companies such
as Seattle, Washington-based iLike have taken off.
He added
that the integration of iTunes with Bebo and now all other social networks that
allow embeddable widgets, taken with Apple’s extension of its Safari browser to
Windows in June, indicates that Apple appears to be opening up a bit from its
previously more closed-off system.
“There’s
been a way in which it’s held itself aloof from some of these trends,” he said
of Apple. “This now sort of seems to reflect a movement down into more of the
fray of the social media sites and the widgetization of the Internet,” he
added.