What will the New Apple TV look like?
Update: You'll finally be able to get your hands on the new Apple TV next week, according to Apple CEO Tim Cook.
Update #2: Looks like the new Apple TV isn't the only shiny new set-top box on the market this holiday season. Recently Amazon announced that it will launch a 4K version of the Amazon Fire TV, called the new Amazon Fire TV, later this fall.
Not to be outdone, Google held a brief conference on September 29 to announce that the successor to the Chromecast called, you guessed it, the new Chromecast would be available immediately after the show.
Finally, techradar caught wind of the new Roku 4 thanks to a filing with the FCC in late September that points to a mid- to late-October launch of the system that includes 4K on top of the universal and voice search functions it added to the Roku 3 earlier in the year.
Original story below...
Three years of waiting for a major upgrade and six months of rumors have lead to this point: the new Apple TV, announced earlier this week at the company's iPhone 6S event.
When it came time to think about the upgrade to the Cupertino company's seminal streamer, it seems one Steve Jobs-ian point made it through the chopping board: the new Apple TV needs to be just as smart if its predecessor and just as easy to use. It needs to offer a slew of contemporary features but still remain relatively clean looking.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the new Apple TV is all of those things.
Now, before you go down into the comments and leave a nasty retort, we know that "new Apple TV" is a fairly confusing name. But Apple bows to no numerical and/or logic system, and since the Apple TV has yet to see a true sequel until now, instead receiving iteration after iteration of internal upgrades, this is just the way the Apple peels.
It's been about two years since the last minor change to the Apple TV and three since the last major one. Which, for a company that's bound and determined to release a new iPhone every 12 months, seems a little strange that Apple's popular streamer has been MIA since the iPhone 5.
But our patience has been rewarded, and Apple has delivered the next iteration of a great streaming device. It packs a faster processor than its predecessor, a great-looking UI, too. It has an all-new remote that comes with a built-in microphone and works with Siri, not to mention the fact that it doubles as a Wii-like motion game controller.
When it comes out in October it's going to have a sharp new OS - a hybrid of OSX and iOS - and will come with a loaded app store that Tim Cook says will usher in a new age of television. It's ostentatious and bold vision packed into a tiny box. But that's Apple for you.
What is it? The next generation of Apple's set-top box, the Apple TV
When is it out? Late October in over 80 countries worldwide
How much does it cost? The 32GB version will cost $149 (about £96, AU$200) while the 64GB version will come in at $199 (about £129, AU$280)
Why is it better? It has a faster processor, better interface, more apps, a Wii-esque remote and has voice search functionality
When WWDC 2015 came and went without an Apple TV announcement, we were a little disappointed. But when rumors started to circulate about the Cupertino company's September 9 event, our hopes and dreams for a brand-new set-top box started to solidify into reality. It turns out it wasn't all wishful thinking, either. Rumors of Apple's next set-top box practically boiled over until most, if not all, of the Apple's big secrets saw the light of day before the 9th. (You can find the key points highlighted in bold!)
New Apple TV user interface
User interfaces are absolutely crucial, and Apple built its reputation on putting together some of the sleekest, most easy-to-use pieces of software on the market. The new Apple TV harnesses that long tradition of doing things right and wildly improves the old model's layout into something more modern.
The new UI is purposefully flat, with top-level boxes for music and movies on the iTunes store, your most used apps like Netflix and Hulu, as well as the recently added App Store - which is like to pack TV-optimized games alongside Apple Music and its music-streaming kin.
It's all built on top of a new OS called tvOS that works like a hybrid of iOS and OSX. There are 11 million developers on the platform according to Apple senior vice president of Internet Software and Services, Eddy Cue, which means you can expect a ton of third-party apps available on the first day.
tvOS will support Siri and include universal search results that enable searches across multiple streaming video services as well as Apple's iTunes Store. That means instead of searching for a movie on each individual app, you'll be able to see a select number of services in every search (think Netflix, Amazon Prime Instant Video, Hulu, YouTube, Vimeo, etc).
New Apple TV remote
Also, we know that the New Apple TV will include an updated remote control (goodbye, boring aluminum IR remote) that operates over Bluetooth and features a mix of physical buttons and a touchpad.
Inside the remote, Apple looks to be packing in some Wii-esque motion sensors, which would make playing games on the App Store that require tilt easy. Speaking of Bluetooth, we've heard whispers that you might be able to connect any console-style controller made for iOS to the Apple TV if the new remote doesn't do it for you.
Of course the remote will include an internal microphone so you can chat with Siri, meaning that the new Apple TV might be fully operable just with your voice.
Apps shown off so far that use the remote are a new-and-improved Crossy Road, Beats Sports - a Wii-like game, MLB At Bat and Apple Music. And for fans of the old-fashioned Home Shopping Network, Gilt will allow you to shop for deals from the comfort of your couch.
New Apple TV hardware
But like my mama always said, it's what's on the inside that counts. And inside the New Apple TV is packing a 64-bit A8 processor, currently found in the iPhone 6 Plus. It's several times more powerful than the current Apple TV, and gives it the necessary horsepower to truck through the latest wave of graphically intense games. Does this mean that your Apple TV will become the premier spot to play the latest Call of Duty or Madden game? Most likely not. But for fans of casual or semi-casual gaming, the New Apple TV will be a pretty mean gaming machine.
It will support Bluetooth 4.0 (necessary to work with the all-new Siri remote), 802.11ac WiFi with MIMO and come with either 32GB or 64GB of internal flash storage. None of this, however, is going to come cheap.
New Apple TV price
As expected, the 32GB will cost $149 (about £96, AU$200) while the 64GB version will come in at $199 (about £129, AU$280). It's about three times the cost of the current Apple set-top box, but that price feels justified with all the new bells and whistles.
The only thing that would've sweetened the deal? A subscription to the purported cable alternative Apple has been working on for the past few months. This feature is likely to be coming, but we can now confirm that it missed the Apple TV announcement on September 9.
New Apple TV release date
So when can you get it? Apple plans on launching the new Apple TV in over 80 countries in late October, and will expand to over 100 by the end of 2015.
Apple's new streaming service and defunct TV
The first rumors of an Apple owned and operated cable service was given life on the web around the same time Sling TV made a splash in the US. The only problem with this plan is that Apple would need a lot of partners - FOX, NBC, ABC, Viacom, etc… - within a short time period.
Possible? Sure. Probable? Not likely.
The potential package in question would have a number of channels you know and love from cable but streamed over your Internet service for a lower monthly cost than traditional vendors like Sky, Virgin, Verizon or Time Warner Cable.
A service like that, exclusive to Apple TV, could be a huge differentiator and killer app for Cupertino. Whether Apple's TV streaming dreams come to fruition - or actually exist at all - however, remains to be seen.
Apple pulls the plug on TV
After 10 years of research and development, Apple has officially stopped working on the fabled Apple television set, according to The Wall Street Journal.
According to a source familiar to the situation, because it was unable to add anything new to the world of flat-panels and 4K Ultra-HD TVs, Apple has thrown in the towel once and for all.
Apple is still expected to release both an updated version of the traditional set-top box as well as an over-the-top streaming service like Sling TV at its World Wide Developers Conference which starts on June 8.
How could have Apple's iTV worked? We have a few ideas.
The history of Apple TV
The history of Apple TV
The first Apple TV launched back in 2006 and stuck out from the crowd by boasting its own hard drive and composite cables to hook up to then-new SD TV sets. It had a measly Intel Crofton Premium M processor and 256MB of DDR2 memory.
Version 2 ditched the internal storage for a better 802.11a/b/g/n Wi-Fi antenna, upgraded Apple A4 processor and favored streaming media over anything stored on physical drives. While some lamented the disappearance of a HDD, some appreciated the Apple TV's smaller size as a result of the change.
Launching in 2012, Apple TV Version 3, the latest version of the Apple TV, didn't offer much of an upgrade over its predecessor. It still streamed media and had a streamlined user-interface based on iOS (at that time it was iOS7). Of course the processor got a bump to the A5 to handle 1080p video and it finally doubled down on RAM to a solid 512MB.
Starting on March 9, 2015, the currently available Apple TV will drop to $69 (about £45, AU$90) and has first-dibs on HBO's new standalone streaming service, HBO Now.
- What about Apple's screen for your wrist? Read our Apple Watch review!
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