Passing earwax-tainted earbuds between friends is nobody’s
favorite way to share iPod tunes. An integrated speaker in the
smaller iPod nano and iPod shuffle models could end that practice
for good, and provide opportunity for a host of new iPod
possibilities.
A newly published Apple patent describes how Apple could add a
teeny speaker dome to the clip on the iPod shuffle or iPod nano.
It’s a sneaky way to add some extra functionality to Apple’s
smallest media players — all without adding any extra bulk.
According to the patent, which was
broken down by Patently Apple, the addition of a speaker would
be a “natural evolutionary step for their media players.”
The addition of a speaker — along with Apple’s embrace of the
iPod nano as a wrist-worn device and the integration of Nike+
exercise software — would also position Apple well for targeting
the same fitness market that’s home to the
Motorola Motoactv, NPD analyst Ross Rubin says.
Over the past two years, several signs have pointed to one or
more iPod lines being
discontinued. Indicators include lackluster sales (last
quarter, Apple sold 6.6 million iPods, a 27 percent decline from
the same period in 2010), and a dearth of product refreshes for the
shuffle and classic models. Nonetheless, Apple continues to support
its beloved line of media players. And now it seems new energy may
be breathed into the line.
CEO Tim Cook said iPod is a “large and important product” for
the company at Apple’s 2011 iPhone event. And Apple recently
dropped
the prices of its nano and touch iPod models, making them more
competitive and more accessible to a wider market. Current
iterations of the nano and shuffle have no external speaker, but
the larger iPod touch does have one.
The iPod nano-like Motoactv, a wearable
fitness-tracking music player.
Rubin sees the addition of a speaker to, say, an iPod nano as a
gateway to a slew of new use-case scenarios.
“One thing it might point to is the nano being used to interface
with an iOS device,” Rubin says, much the way the Motoactv can sync
with an Android device, and be used to relay the arrival of calls
or text messages on its small screen.
Rubin says future nanos could be worn on your wrist, displaying
social media updates relayed from an iPad stowed away in your
backpack or messenger bag. A nano with a small speaker could also
feature an audible alarm, making timed work-out tracking all the
more convenient — useful when you want to use Nike+ without
earbuds.
Rubin also points out that you could activate Siri requests
using the small screen on your wrist and have answers relayed to
you through the speaker.
If the speaker only ended up being used as a music playback
mechanism, Rubin says, “It wouldn’t make a radical difference” in
how we use or perceive iPods. True, but not needing to share
earbuds anymore? Still a plus.