The headline is not all about Wozniak,it's also a nice direction for iTunes from an Android user perspective.I'd like to listen my music from iTunes account without buying again from Google Music.
For now iTunes and the distribution deals Apple have are a competitive advantage that Apple wouldn't be willing to give up by integrating tightly with Android.
But in a few years time when Google have similar deals in place and any advantage is marginal (if that), it might happen. While Apple aren't really in the business of selling music (obviously they do but it's a relatively small part of their revenue mix next to hardware sales) there is an opportunity there.
That said over time as these deals become more common, the music business is going to be commoditised which will squeeze profit margins. It may be that those lower margins mean that even with access to a significantly larger potential market Apple aren't interested - they've never really been a high volume, low margin business.
I would argue that it has not been done before because Apple needed to give the ipod the competitive advantage. I think that its hard to say what would happen if iTunes now opened up to android devices too. Would the Music Play store sales decrease and Apples music sales increase? Would there be more music Apple sales with both iOS and Android but less iPods sold?
As I said it is hard to say what would happen and by how much.
First time when I submitted this article the title was :"Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak gives jailbreaking...",like the original link title.I rewrite it because somehow I agree with you.But Wozniak will always remain the Apple's cofounder and his oppinon will metter for some people.
iTunes supporting Android would be great for all Android users. iTunes is a great market with excellent apps which are not ported for Android.Unfortunately,like you said,Google will never allow this.
I was thinking more for a music point of view. How many users could Apple win over into the ecosystem just by letting you sync your iTunes library with your Android phone? I'm thinking a lot.
I'm sure that, to Apple, the more relevant question is: How many iOS device users would they lose by letting you sync iTunes library with your Android phone?
I'd guess a lot, but even if that's wrong, it takes hundreds of incremental music sales to offset the loss of just one iPhone sale.