AirPlay allows users to to stream video and audio from iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad to Apple’s own Apple TV 2, and the company currently licenses AirPlay to third party companies, but only for audio streaming. Apple has had some success with this licensing program, even though it is effectively limited to speakers and stereo receivers as it stands now.
Expanding the program to include video could allow the company to not only expand support for Apple’s iOS device products, it would effectively give the company a chunk of the TV market, which Bloomberg pinned at US$100 billion a year.
On the audio side, Apple charges $4 per device that includes AirPlay support, according to other unnamed sources — Apple hasn’t announced licensing terms for the technology. The company is likely to use a similar licensing model for video streaming.
It also contrasts sharply with Google’s strategy for the living room, which is called Google TV and seeks to essentially bring the browser and a keyboard to a TV near you. If Bloomberg’s sources are correct, Apple is looking to expand its presence in the living room by focusing on what users actually want to do with their TVs.