So no examples of good DLNA hardware then?
Even ignoring the price-point, is there even any DLNA hardware on the market which can do half of what the 2004 AirPort Express does?
And I think fitbrit makes a good point about AirPlay - even if it were discontinued tomorrow, which seems extremely unlikely, it would still be worthwhile to support it considering the number of devices on the market.
I know several people who I've been trying to wean off iTunes, and this is the last sticking point for them. $50 for a Media Center license is already more expensive than they would like.
$50 for the MC license plus $400 to replace perfectly functional AirPlay hardware in each room is unreasonable.
Unless Apple suddenly starts selling high res hardware that requires "AirPlay 2" and discontinues the original devices, I'm not sure what would obsolete it.
But why would they replace the old protocol and stop millions of devices working overnight rather than expand it to support high resolution instead?
Considering that they only recently added support for AirPlay as an audio device in OSX (rather than playing through iTunes) it would indicate that they plan to continue using it.
I'm not sure that your investment would need to be as much as developing iPod support from scratch when there is already 9+ years worth of open-source software written to use the protocol.
Let me know if you want to risk your $100,000.
Since you did not answer my previous questions at all, I'm still unclear on whether iPod support still works for classic models or not. I'm assuming that it does.
Looking back, it seems that iPod support was added in 2003. The first iPhones and iPod Touches were introduced in 2007 so that is at least four years of support.
I don't remember the iPhone/iPod touch really becoming mainstream devices until after the first couple of revisions (~iPhone 3GS) in 2009 or so.
And it's not like people aren't still using older iPod devices. While you may not support iOS hardware, Apple still sells the iPod Classic.
Was 6+ years of iPod support worth that investment? You would know better than I do, but it seems reasonable to me.