Apple Offering Software Developers New Hardware for Apps

Jun 07, 2017

Apple is expected to present new hardware at its Worldwide Developers Conference for the first time in four years, including new tablets and laptops.

Apple CEO Tim Cook.
Stephen Lam, Getty Images

For the first time in years, Apple Inc. will use its annual developer conference to tout its software and its hardware.

When the Worldwide Developers Conference kicks off today in San Jose, California, the iPhone maker is likely to unveil iPads and Mac laptops along with new versions of the operating systems for those devices, according to people familiar with the plans. CEO Tim Cook might even lift the cover on a smart speaker based on the Siri virtual assistant.

It will be the first time Apple has presented new hardware at the conference since 2013. For more than a year, Cook has been showcasing the strength of Apple’s services businesses, such as the App Store and iCloud storage, in part a reflection of a dearth of new blockbuster gadgets and slowing growth for Apple’s flagship iPhone. Now as the device pipeline fills, the company is shining more of the spotlight on hardware to woo the developers needed to create accompanying apps.

The company will also try to win over programmers with updates to Apple’s operating systems for computers, mobile devices, Apple TV and Watch.

“They’re there to spoil the developer community,” said Shannon Cross, an analyst at Cross Research.

Debuting a smart speaker competitor to Amazon.com Inc.’s Echo and the Google Home at WWDC would be a logical step, since it would give developers the tools to build apps for the device before its release later in the year. 

“They may not be able to put enough information into the developer community without showing them the hardware too,” said Brian Blau, an analyst at Gartner Inc. “It will be part of a broader strategy that says these are devices that are interesting now and we need to let our customers know about them.”

Amazon makes little or no profit selling the high-end $179 Echo, which mostly serves as a foothold in consumers’ homes and a way to get them to sign up for Amazon Prime and buy more products. Google Home, which sells for $129, is a window to Google’s plethora of services from Search to YouTube Red music streaming and its Calendar app.

It isn’t yet clear how much Apple will charge for its own smart speaker. But it could also be a play to boost the profitable services business, which last year generated revenue of more than $24 billion — or 11% of total sales. There’s plenty of incentive for developers to get behind the new gadget. So far this year, they have reaped about $10 billion from the App Store.

WWDC follows similar events held recently by Facebook Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google. At those gatherings, the software giants sought to burnish their credentials in augmented reality and artificial intelligence. Like Google, Apple has been developing its own dedicated processor for AI, according to a person familiar with the plan. Analysts expect Apple to show off improvements to Siri and advances in AR technology as part of the iOS 11 mobile operating system, which will hint at features in the next iPhone to be introduced later this year.

“AI will play a larger role with this release by leveraging enhanced capabilities around Siri,” Brian White, a Drexel Hamilton analyst, wrote in a note to clients. “Given our view that the 5.8-inch iPhone 8 will come with 3-D sensing technology, we expect some AR-related features to be integrated into iOS 11.”

The updated operating system will also include the second revamp of the Apple Music streaming service in as many years. With the company planning as many as 10 original television series by the end of this year, the update will make video content far more prominent, Apple’s music guru Jimmy Iovine told Bloomberg in April.

By Alex Webb, with assistance from Mark Gurman.

Source: IndustryWeek


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