
BBC director general - it will happen this year
By Tim Ferguson
Published: 8 February 2008 12:47 GMT
The download version of the BBC's iPlayer will be available for Mac users by the end of the year, according to director general, Mark Thompson.
Thompson made the commitment in a blog posting responding to questions about the BBC's approach to platform neutrality with iPlayer.
In his posting he said: "I am happy to be able to confirm here that we are aiming to launch a download version of BBC iPlayer for Mac this year."
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He added users of Firefox for PCs can now also use the download version.
Thompson admitted he had taken "quite a grilling" from MPs at a recent Public Accounts Committee over concerns that iPlayer focused on a Windows-based approach.
iPlayer was initially launched in beta form last summer for Microsoft's Windows XP and Internet Explorer and attracted criticism as a result.
There was even an e-petition made to the government which was signed by 16,000 people.
The service has been available in streaming form for Macs and Linux - in addition to Windows XP and Vista - since December last year.
Thompson said that when iPlayer was originally launched, the BBC had the option of launching it for a single platform (Windows XP) or to wait until it had been developed for all other platforms and it chose the former.
BBC stats suggest around 90 per cent of people using the streaming version of iPlayer are running Windows, with around nine per cent on Macs and just under one per cent on Linux.
Thompson said the issue of making the download version available for platforms other than Windows was complicated by technical and rights issues.
He explained that with the availability of "robust, compatible" DRM software for PCs meant a Windows-based service was the first to emerge.
Find out what UK ISPs and Ofcom think of iPlayer here.
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