Apple is reigniting its push for the living room, investing more in original shows and following in the footsteps of Netflix, Hulu and Amazon. But there's no doubt that Apple, which reports have said is spending as much as US$1 billion on developing its own shows, is late to the party when it comes to courting audiences, and it's unclear how it will stand out to the average couch potato.
Apple is expected to announce at a September 12 event that Apple TV is getting support for 4K - an ultra high-definition format - which would see it catch up to competitors that already do.
When looking at Apple and its prospects for elbowing past its competitors in the streaming content space, one thing stands out: It has devices in millions of people's pockets and living rooms. Which raises the question: Can Apple take advantage of this fact when eyeing a move into streaming video?
That was an argument many made about Apple Music when the company moved into streaming music in 2015. Because Apple had a way to place Apple Music before everyone's eyes, getting people to try it should be fairly easy.
And to an extent, that is what happened. Within two years, Apple Music has racked up 27 million subscribers, though it still lags behind Spotify by about 20 percentage points in market share. Leveraging what analysts call its "install base" - the number of people who are already using its products - Apple could quickly build up a lot of users, said Angelo Zino, analyst at CFRA.