Posts Tagged ‘Apple’

Apple iPad 3 and 4 to come this year?

Saturday, January 7th, 2012

According to one source, the iPad 3 will ensure Apple continued supremacy in the tablet market till October, when the killer iPad 4 arrives to demolish the challenge posed by Windows 8 tablets powered by Intel Clover Trail-W processors.

Sources amidst Taiwanese component manufacturers tell Digitimes that the iPad 3, to be launched in March, will feature a QXGA (1,536×2,048 pixels) display and longer battery life.  Past reports have talked of a 14,000 mAh battery to be supplied by Simplo Technology and Dynapack International Technology.

Following the launch of iPad 3, Apple will reduce the price of iPad 2 to undercut competition from vendors such as Sony, Motorola Mobility and Samsung Electronics, who have products priced around the $359 mark.

I am skeptical, to say the least.  Apple rarely undercuts itself by releasing two products in the same year.  But we shall see.  I’m buying an iPad 3 whenever it’s released this year – cannot wait!

Image representing iPad as depicted in CrunchBase

Image via CrunchBase

Apple Creates Tie Clip Iphone Loudspeaker

Friday, November 11th, 2011

New Scientist magazine reports (at http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/onepercent/2011/11/apple-files-patent-on-tie-clip.html) that Apple is patenting a cilp on device that is a loudspeaker for plugging into ipods, ipads, iphones, and the like.

Interesting to see how this will be designed.

Apple Store

Image by FrogMiller via Flickr

Apple might be reinventing the Television

Friday, October 28th, 2011

Welcome back to the Digital Technology Blog!  I haven’t posted in while, but I’ve been busy with my beautiful new Apple MacBook Air and my iPhone 4 and my other technology endeavours.

The new biography of Steve Jobs, by Walter Isaacson, claims that the Apple CEO had “cracked” the secret of building a better television and was actively working on a prototype until he died.

Image representing Steve Jobs as depicted in C...

Image via CrunchBase

Over at ZDNet, Scott Raymond argues that the “the product,” whatever it is, “will likely be an attractive, quality device that will look stunning and be easy to use.” Still, as Raymond admits, the road will be a steep for Apple. The market, he notes, is already chock full of inexpensive, high-quality units.

“I’m not saying that Apple should give up on a television product,” Raymond writes. “I simply think that they should focus on an expanded product built on the existing Apple TV platform. Make it bigger. Add [recording] capabilities. Put Siri in it. Then allow it to be plugged into a TV of our own choosing. The market for televisions is huge because there are so many different categories that consumers want, based on size, location, affordability, and so forth.”

Note that he’s not writing about a TV set, but rather a box, much like the Apple TV box that already exists. A full TV set opens a whole new can of worms.

As Peter Pachal of PC World writes today – headline: “5 big obstacles standing in the way of a real Apple TV” – the television market isn’t exactly like the smartphone market, or the tablet market, which Apple has sounded dominated for the last year. For one, the TV market seems to be shrinking, with Sony and LG posting major losses in the consumer electronics categories.

“The Consumer Electronics Association agrees: its own statistics have seen the overall size of the TV market drop from a peak of 34.8 million units sold in 2009 to a projected 32.6 million in 2012,” Pachal writes. “On top of that, prices are in free-fall: In 2007 the average screen sold for $982; this year it’s $545. Apple’s brand is powerful, but is it strong enough to convince people to pay more for TVs while the market’s pressuring everyone else to go cheaper?”

Iphone… nano?

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

Another blog is reporting that there may be an even tinier iphone in the works – an iphone nano.

iPhone nano Revealed by a 3rd Party Case?

Ever since Apple announced the original iPhone, we believed that it would create an iPhone nano at some point. It would be smaller, less expensive but unlike what we originally thought, it would most likely retain most of the same functionalities (applications compatibility).

The current rumor is based on a case design from XSKN that found its way to the web. This is not much to speculate on, but the idea of seeing Apple go after a mass-market is interesting, but not unexpected.

What’s your take on this? Will this be an iPhone nano or a small iPod touch or both? Or do you think that this is just vapor? More images here

itunes application store downloading 2 million apps per day

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008
App Store

Image via Wikipedia

Apple’s App store is seeing more than 2 million applications downloads everyday. Even though people thought that the initial swell in applications downloads would eventually top off and slow down, the App Store is actually seeing more traffic flow than before.

It was not long ago that Apple advertised claims of 300 million downloads since the App Store opened. Just back on October 22nd Apple announced the 200 million download mark. At this rate, who knows when the daily downloads will start to peak? As more and more users download premium applications, Apple will see its residual iPhone income increase.

“It’s unbelievable,” says Piper Jaffray’s Gene Munster. “It’s a differentiator. We think in ‘09, it’s going to be a $1 billion market place and Apple will probably take about 30 percent of that. There’s virtually no operating expense for them. They just approve the apps.” Apple now has the most robust andintegrated software and media platform in the mobile world with over 10,000 applications to choose from.

[Via CNBC]

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Walmart to sell Apple iPhone

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008
Image representing iPhone as depicted in Crunc...

Image via CrunchBase, source unknown

December 8, 2008 (Computerworld) Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will begin selling Apple Inc.‘s iPhone later this month, employees at several stores in the discount retail chain said today.

Wal-Mart’s corporate headquarters, however, would not confirm that the company will sell the iconic iPhone. A spokeswoman said only that “we are not making an official announcement at this time.”

Over the weekend, reports surfaced claiming that Wal-Mart, the largest retailer in U.S., would soon sell one or more models of the iPhone. On Saturday, for example, the San Jose Mercury News cited managers and employees at stores in Northern California who said that they were undergoing sales training and that the iPhone would be on store shelves either shortly before or right after Christmas.

Today, employees at several stores in Oregon confirmed that Wal-Mart would sell the iPhone but that it would not be available before Christmas. “No, not before Christmas, after,” said an employee at a Eugene, Ore., store.

“Closer to the end of the year is what we’ve been told,” said an employee at a store in the Portland, Ore., area.

The Wal-Mart workers said that they didn’t know what Wal-Mart would be charging for the iPhone. Apple currently sells two models: an 8GB version for $199, and a 16GB device for $299.

Last week, separate reports surfaced that Wal-Mart would sell a 4GB model for just $99.

“I discounted these reports,” said Ezra Gottheil, an analyst at Technology Business Research Inc., “because if they were going to do it, they would do it before Christmas. But if Wal-Mart does sell the iPhone, it’s simply another way for Apple to deliver it. The [contract] obligation will be the same,” he said, referring to the two-year commitment consumers must make with AT&T Inc., the exclusive mobile carrier for the iPhone in the U.S.

Gottheil didn’t think that moving into Wal-Mart — known for its deep discounts — would affect Apple’s reputation, which is at the other end of the pricing spectrum. “Wal-Mart sells iPods, don’t they?” he asked. “I don’t see this changing the Apple image. I don’t see it terribly much affecting Apple one way or the other.”

But assuming it’s on the level, the move is proof of Apple’s seriousness about the mobile market, Gottheil argued. “Apple really wants to be a very significant mobile phone provider, and this would be another [sales] outlet.”

According to research firm Gartner Inc., Apple was the world’s third-largest smart phone seller in the third quarter of 2008, accounting for an estimated 13% of all sales. Nokia Corp. and Research In Motion Ltd. ranked first and second, respectively, with 42% and 16% of the market during the three-month period that ended Sept. 30.

“But I wouldn’t rule out a $99 iPhone,” said Gottheil. “If the current 8GB model brings in $587 to Apple, which is our estimate, then they would probably be willing to go as low as $487 for a 4GB iPhone. The puzzle to me is, will people buy it, knowing what the commitment [cost] is?”

At the moment, iPhones are sold at Apple’s own retail stores, in AT&T’s stores and at Best Buy Co., which began selling the devices in early September.

A month later, Apple announced that it had sold 6.9 million iPhones during the months of July, August and September, nearly seven times the number it sold during the same quarter in 2007.


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