Showing all posts tagged: apple

Apple Reveals New “All-Time Top Apps” Following Countdown To 50 Billion Downloads:

(Via www.macstories.net)

Check out what’s different from the last time Apple ran a similar promotion. Get downloading and you might win a $10,000 gift card.

The MacBook Air 13 inch is the best computer I’ve ever owned. Nothing compares with its speed, form factor and it just works.

Indeed, the Chromebook Pixel seems like another bit of evidence that Google is getting better at what Apple does best faster than Apple is getting better at what Google does best.

John Gruber

Eying Apple

newyorker:

  

   

Since September, Apple stock has fallen 35%. Here, James Surowiecki explains why the company will likely prevail despite its sudden fall from grace: http://nyr.kr/US26BF

“Read Later”

Apple - iPad - TV Ad - Together

Another great demonstration.

Apple - iPad - TV Ad - Alive

Nice demonstration.

Bad news for Apple as they make progress into the enterprise.

parislemon:

Steve Kovach for Business Insider:

That means (if we’re being conservative) at least 80% of all smartphones sold through AT&T, the second largest carrier in the U.S., were iPhones. The rest were Android, Windows Phone, BlackBerry, or whatever else is out there.

Now let’s look at Verizon’s earnings last earnings report for the same quarter. Verizon, the largest carrier in the U.S., sold 6.2 million iPhones out of a total of 9.8 million smartphones. That means the iPhone made up 63% of Verizon’s smartphone sales.

This is not some survey of a few thousand people. This is not data extrapolated from ad impressions across a vague number of devices. This is sales data. It does not lie. On the two largest carriers in the U.S., the iPhone dominated last quarter.

You can argue about whether that’s important or not. But clearly, when Apple launches a new iPhone in the U.S., it sells a lot of new iPhones — even more than the plethora of Android options combined. (A trend which has continued for a few years now.) Which suggests one of two things:

1) People buy an insane amount of iPhones in the U.S. because of the subsidy model. Verizon and AT&T (and now Sprint, and it looks like T-Mobile soon as well) allow you to get one for $299, $199, $99, or free. Those price points matter a lot, and they would matter in other countries as well.

2) The U.S. market is just different. For some reason, consumers in the U.S. want iPhones even when those in other countries do not as much.

If the first point is indeed the case, it’s a hell of argument for a lower priced phone without subsidy. It’s suggests that it’s not that people don’t want iPhones, it’s that they want new iPhones at good prices.

The data is also a pretty good argument as to why Apple may want to speed up the release cycle of new iPhones. (Though such a move would undoubtedly dampen the yearly “bulge” in sales.)

Folks love their iPhones… Do folks other than über geeks love their androids? It’s the general consumer that matters.

Why I sold my iPhone 4S

To buy an iPhone 5. It’s the best phone I’ve ever owned.

Apple® today announced pre-orders of its iPhone® 5 topped two million in just 24 hours, more than double the previous record of one million held by iPhone 4S. Demand for iPhone 5 exceeds the initial supply and while the majority of pre-orders will be delivered to customers on September 21, many are scheduled to be delivered in October. iPhone 5 is the thinnest and lightest iPhone ever, completely redesigned to feature a stunning new 4-inch Retina™ display; an Apple-designed A6 chip for blazing fast performance; and ultrafast wireless technology*—all while delivering even better battery life.**

Apple - Press Info - iPhone 5 Pre-Orders Top Two Million in First 24 Hours

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