There's also been controversy, with many a Windows user lamenting its usability while Mac owners smugly sniggered. More recently, Apple came under fire when it was revealed that Kiwis were being charged up to 88c more for per track on iTunes than their US counterparts.
In April 2009 Apple also finally eliminated copy protection on music, introducing a three-tiered pricing structure. Before then a selection of higher-resolution, DRM (digital rights management) free songs branded "iTunes Plus" were available at a premium sticker price.
All songs (by now there was a staggering nine million tracks available) on iTunes became DRM-free, 256Kbps and priced at $1.29, $1.79 or $2.39 depending on how popular the track was.
The most popular song sold in New Zealand on iTunes during its first year of operation was Brook Fraser's Deciphering Me, with the top 10 iTunes New Zealand songs including Opshop, Maybe, Snow Patrol, Chasing Cars, Fergie, Big Girls Don't Cry, MIKA, Grace Kelly, Rihanna, Umbrella, Timbaland, Apologize, The Fray, How to Save a Life, Regina Spektor, Fidelity, Nelly Furtado, Say it Right,, The Way I Are (feat. Keri Hilson & D.O.E.)
No matter how you look at it, the growth of iTunes has been staggering. By January 2007 iTunes song downloads had reached 2 billion tracks. By July, a further 1 billion downloads had happened, taking the 2007 total for iTunes downloads to a whopping 3 billion tracks. In 2008 Apple launched the App Store with a mere 500 apps.
The number of iPhone apps has since swelled to a massive 775,000 apps. Since then ITunes has clocked up a massive 40 billion app sales so far.