Ready for your wireless iPod?
Reading between the lines, such a product in the short-term pipeline seems to be the implication of a recent announcement from
PortalPlayer (PLAY Quote) and from what executives of the chipmaker had to say at an investor conference on
Wednesday.
PortalPlayer, which provides multimedia processors for
Apple
Computer's iPods, announced Tuesday that it had signed a deal
with
CSR, a maker of WiFi and Bluetooth wireless chips, to add
wireless capabilities to digital media players. The companies said
they expected to have an integrated chipset available by the second
half of this year.
A day later, at the Thomas Weisel Partners Technology Conference in San
Francisco, PortalPlayer CEO Gary Johnson said the company expected to announce customers of the new chipset product by later this year. That same day, CFO Svend-Olav Carlsen said iPod-related sales comprised 95% of PortalPlayer's business, while predicting that such sales would be around 92% to 93% of total revenue this year.
In an interview with
TheStreet.com, Johnson declined to say if or
when Apple will release a wireless iPod. An Apple representative did not return a call seeking comment, but the company is typically tight-lipped about future product plans.
But it's hard to believe that PortalPlayer would launch a new
product for the digital media player market without its biggest
customer on board. Indeed, at the conference, Johnson said
PortalPlayer had a "strong" relationship with Apple and was focusing
on upgrading its technology for the iPod maker.
"I do believe we're keeping them [Apple] on the technology roadmap," Johnson said at the conference. "We're delivering the key attributes which keep them very successful."
Apple's resurgence over the last three years has been driven by the
success of its iPod, which has become increasingly important to
the company's overall operations. In the
holiday quarter, for instance, the company sold 14
million of the digital music players and for the first time sales of
the devices made up a bigger portion of total revenue
than its Macintosh computers.