27

Wait… $20 for 5 Apps!?

iPod Touch IconHmm, that sounds like a good deal, if we’re talking about Mac apps designed to run on your Mac desktop/laptop. With most Mac shareware priced at (much) more than $10 a pop, it certainly sounds like a good deal.

But what about the iPod touch? iPod touch apps aren’t as fully-fledged as their desktop/laptop counterparts, so is the $20 that Apple is charging for an additional 5 apps still reasonable? Let’s take a look.

Let’s look at the five applications that you get. They are Mail, Maps, Weather, Stocks and Notes. Let’s start with the last three. On the desktop/laptop, you’ll typically find these apps in Dashboard, meaning they’re simply widgets. Now, as we all know, widgets aren’t as complicated as standalone programs; with Dashcode, things have become even simpler. So it’s obvious that these apps should be extremely cheap or even free.

iPod Touch Apps

Then there’s Mail and Maps, the two cornerstone apps on the iPhone. Notice I said iPhone instead of iPod touch. That’s because I believe these apps are geared more towards PDA users, who in this case would be buying an iPhone. The iPod touch, on the other hand, is an iPod. It is geared towards providing entertainment on the go. So when you look at it from this perspective, it makes more sense why Apple would charge an extra $20.

The funny thing is, you do get all these apps when you buy a brand new iPod touch. Doesn’t that seem unfair? Call it the “early-adopter tax” or whatever you want, but I think this is the sort of thing will be here to say. And it’s not the first time it’s happened. Remember the uproar from early adopters when Apple dropped the iPhone’s price to $399? I guess it’s going to be hard to avoid it, especially when buying first generation products.

For iPod touch customers who already own one of said gadget, it must feel like a slap in the face, knowing that new owners would be able to get these apps without paying. There is an online petition running in hopes of removing the $20 early-adopter “tax”. But of course, I’m sure there are other more *cough* nefarious *cough* ways to obtain it.

27 Comment(s)

Legend: Guest Article Author Contributor
  • 1

    Christopher said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 7:27 am

    Here’s a suggestion for you…..

    If you think $20 is too much for 5 apps, then don’t buy them.

    Quite simple really!

     Add karma Subtract karma  -4
  • 2

    Greg Healy said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 7:27 am

    I think that there was something about a law that Apple had to charge for new features. Sarbanes-Oxley or something to that effect…

     Add karma Subtract karma  +0
  • 3

    Jonathan Wilson said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 7:47 am

    Sarbanes-Oxley makes no sense…look at the Apple TV. Free upgrade and price lowered.

    (subscribed to comments)  Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 4

    wphj said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 7:50 am

    The only real consideration is whether or not the appsa re worth $20 to the person buying it.
    They bought that iPod touch with the features that it had, and now Apple is offering them the option of making the device better without buying a new one.
    The iPod price drop was much larger and not really comparable to this situation.

     Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 5

    Matthieu Aubry said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 7:52 am

    (Apologies for my english)

    In my opinion, the matter is not to know if those apps worth the price (which I believe they do).

    I believe that most of the iPod Touch users (at least me) fear having to pay 20$ every month to get the best from them iPod.

    (subscribed to comments)  Add karma Subtract karma  +2
  • 6

    Serge said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 7:57 am

    …or you could find a friend with an iPhone or who had already paid for the apps and simply copy them to your jailbroken touch.

     Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 7

    Jim said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 8:45 am

    By law, Apple has to charge an upgrade fee to existing users. It’s some stupid accounting law required by the SEC. I’ve read that they’re lowering the price of existing iPod Touch units left in stores by $20 until they sell out of them (which will probably take all of a few days at most).

     Add karma Subtract karma  -3
  • 8

    Tim said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 8:53 am

    I’ve read elsewhere that the iPod Touch will not get the full benefit of the 1.1.3 upgrade unless the applications are also purchased. Also, I’ve noticed its called the ‘January’ update. Does this mean there will be monthly software updates all charged at $20?

    (subscribed to comments)  Add karma Subtract karma  +1
  • 9

    Greg Healy said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 10:07 am

    Actually reading into it a little further, there doesn’t seem to be anything in the Sarbanes Oxley act that says they have to charge for upgrades…

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarbanes-Oxley_Act

     Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 10

    John said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 10:30 am

    The Sarbanes-Oxley Act is about financial reporting. The iPhone and AppleTV both have revenue from sales recognized over a 12-24 month timeframe instead of all at once, like the iPod Touch. By recognizing the revenue differently, Apple is able to provide updates without charging the customer.

    However, since all the revenue from the iPod Touch (like all the computers) was recognized up front, any major upgrades that would provide additional features will see a charge. Security updates and big fixes will continue to remain free (i.e. Leopard upgrade vs. security update).

     Add karma Subtract karma  +1
  • 11

    Arjun Muralidharan said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 10:32 am

    As has been pointed out, it has to do with Accounting. In a nutshell:

    Apple cannot increase the value of sold goods manifold over a period of time - the books would still have an entered worth of the original price.

    The books will thus reflect a false reality. And since the iPods are not accounted on a subscription-basis (like the iPhone AND Apple TV are), they have to charge for this update.

    In other words, Apple’s Income from iPhone, OS X or Apple TV are spread out over the course of a year or two, or some time period they fix. iPods are not, there revenue is booked as they are sold. This is one reason why Apple’s iPhone sales figures will take affect on the quarterly statements only later in the year, or next year.

    The question is, do they have to charge $20 for it? Well, I guess they just grabbed the opportunity.

    Remember the 802.11n upgrade for Airport? Same thing.

     Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 12

    Todd said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 11:26 am

    Sorry, but this is a poor analysis and seems more about getting readers’ ire worked up than anything. As a package, these apps deliver quite a bit of value. I would have paid $20 more on buying the ipod touch originally just to get Mail, Notes and Maps. That I get Stocks and Weather (which I don’t use) doesn’t really factor into my decision. I have a hard time believing that any 3rd party developer could have delivered a Mail, Maps OR Notes app of the same quality for as low of a price, and given how much I like them, I’m very happy to shell out 20 bones.

    That’s my perspective, which isn’t everyone’s of course, but I do tend to agree - if you don’t like the price, don’t buy it.

     Add karma Subtract karma  +1
  • 13

    Todd said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 11:29 am

    One more thing - the idea that people who want PDA functions will choose an iPhone is off. In Canada, where I live, we can’t get the iPhone (yet) because we have a dinosaur-minded carrier as our only GSM network (Rogers). Adding these apps makes using a Touch much more palatable in that environment until the iPhone has a Canadian carrier. Hopefully you can see now that this isn’t as much of a ripoff as it was answering a demand. You know, that listen to customers and they will give you money thing.

     Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 14

    Raffers said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 11:48 am

    The problem I have with this update is that 1.1.3 without the applications package only updated the look of the taskbar. You say that these are PDA features, but the one critical iPod feature: displaying lyrics, only worked after paying the $20!

     Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 15

    Jonathan Wilson said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 12:02 pm

    How is the revenue any different on a Apple TV from a iPod? They both support adding your own media (free) and from the iTunes store?

    (subscribed to comments)  Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 16

    John said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 12:19 pm

    It’s not the purchases made for the device that is considered revenue. It’s how the initial purchase is reflected in the books.

    Apple has already stated that the iPhone and AppleTV will see feature updates after being sold to the public at no additional cost. In order to do this, they have to recognize the sales differently from an iPod. Arjun Muralidharan said it best above.

    Again, this has nothing to do with what the device can do. It’s about reporting finances.

     Add karma Subtract karma  -2
  • 17

    elle said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 1:13 pm

    i purchased a 16GB iPod touch as soon as it became available in france. i downloaded/ran ijailbreak and basically have been using these apps (mail, weather, notes, stocks, maps) and MANY MORE (including cal with the ability to edit entries) for more than 3 months now. everything works flawlessly. with additional apps like customize and smdpreferences i now have whichever photo i pick as the background image in the main interface. all this for free.

    to people that complain about price - i suggest they run ijailbreak. it doesn’t brick the ipod touch because it doesn’t mess with its hard drive. and you can always reset it to factory settings with a simple click in itunes.

    my two cents…

     Add karma Subtract karma  +3
  • 18

    Austen said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 6:20 pm

    It’s $20, guys! $20 extra for every feature of the iphone except for a phone???? I think it’s a good deal. Apple isn’t wrong to make people pay for the upgrade, it’s worth it.

     Add karma Subtract karma  -4
  • 19

    F1sh said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 6:30 pm

    +1 to elle.

     Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 20

    Dubben said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 6:52 pm

    I don’t know about some of you, but I’ve not only received free software and feature updates for my expensive electronics in the past, I’ve grown ACCUSTOMED to receiving them. The fact that it’s an “accounting” issue only shows that Apple’s accountants are far less creative than its designers.
    $20 or 20 cents, it doesn’t matter - these apps should be a free upgrade.

     Add karma Subtract karma  +1
  • 21

    Mac Lim said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 7:55 pm

    sign petition here if you think it isn’t fair as iPhone user wasn’t

    charged.
    http://www.petitiononline.com/freeappi/petition.html

    Apple seems to be so money-minded.
    Eg, they ditched the iPod Camera Connector compatibility with new iPod

    due to minor issue, but instead focusing on movie streaming, playback,

    etc because they’re making money from movies but not photos.

    & for the Accounting people discussed here,
    come on… iPhone wasn’t being charged dude!

    (subscribed to comments)  Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 22

    Mac Lim said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 7:56 pm

    sign petition here if you think it isn’t fair as iPhone user wasn’t charged.
    http://www.petitiononline.com/freeappi/petition.html

    Apple seems to be so money-minded.
    Eg, they ditched the iPod Camera Connector compatibility with new iPod due to minor issue, but instead focusing on movie streaming, playback, etc because they’re making money from movies but not photos.

    & for the Accounting people discussed here,
    come on… iPhone wasn’t being charged dude!

    (subscribed to comments)  Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 23

    Geoff said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 9:17 pm

    One of the BIG downfalls of this site for me is that the reviews seem to be written by kids who think things should be free. As a business owner and person that uses Apple products everyday to generate income I’m down for paying things. Anyone know of a place that reviews Mac based on value of product instead of cost?

     Add karma Subtract karma  -2
  • 24

    Mac Lim said on

    January 17th, 2008 at 11:26 pm

    Smart Geoff,
    So why didn’t they needed to pay for similar iPhone version update?
    Mind you volunteer to pay for iPhone please!

    It’s not an upgrade it’s an update dude!
    Apple must have deliberately excluded that for future income.

    If the new applications are stuff like apps for movie/music download (where Apple could dig your wallet) bet they’d never charge you the apps.

    (subscribed to comments)  Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • 25

    Umberto said on

    January 18th, 2008 at 11:29 pm

    @Mac Lim: Read the comments above yours. The iPhone and Apple TV are on a subscription model. The iPod Touch is not. People really ought to spend a little time to read previous comments before posting their own.

     Add karma Subtract karma  +0
  • 26

    sheckiot said on

    January 19th, 2008 at 10:38 pm

    that is a great idea $20 for 5 news applications is like free

    (subscribed to comments)  Add karma Subtract karma  -2
  • 27

    TekkieMom said on

    January 19th, 2008 at 11:30 pm

    Ok at first I thought “Rats, I just got this for Christmas and not even a month later I have to pay to upgrade it”. Whoa! These apps rock! I have everything I need now — I would have paid twice that much just to have email without a data package contract — and how much is a GPS unit? My Treo buddies are SO jealous!

     Add karma Subtract karma  -1
  • More at MacApper

    • Discuss 'Wait… $20 for 5 Apps!?' in our new Mac Forums

    Post a Comment


    Post your comment below (spam filtered)