Apple Expected to Ditch iTunes on June 3
The Picture: iTunes was introduced by Steve
Jobs on January 9, 2001. The software was instrumental to the success of the
iPod and individual song sales but it wasn’t without its faults. Detractors
over the years criticized the software for being overly bloated, a stigma that
never washed away with subsequent releases.
WWDC 2019 kicks off on June 3 at
the McEnery Convention Center in San Jose and runs through June 7
Apple at its annual developers
conference next week is expected to retire iTunes, replacing it with a trio of
standalone apps for the Mac.
Mark Gurman from Bloomberg notes
that Apple is preparing standalone Music, TV and Podcasts apps – presumably for
inclusion in macOS 10.15 – to collectively replace iTunes. The intelligence
lines up with earlier predictions from 9to5Mac who claimed iTunes would be
renamed to Music and focus exclusively on that category.
In the absence of iTunes, users
will be able to manage their Apple gadgets through the Music app.
Potential changes to iTunes for
Windows weren’t mentioned.
Apple earlier this week
introduced a refreshed version of its iPod touch, adding a faster processor and
larger capacity options to its long-running media player. It’s a bit unusual
for hardware to outlast software but it appears as though that will be the case
here.
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