Survey of workers at Apple and elsewhere highlights H-1B visa controversy
A survey of foreign workers employed by Apple and other tech giants has highlighted controversy around the H-1B visa that…
A survey of foreign workers employed by Apple and other tech giants has highlighted controversy around the H-1B visa that…
At its last earnings call, Apple announced that it is expanding its capital return program by more than 50%. This…
Just in case you haven’t guessed already, the analysts over at Goldman Sachs are speculating the next-generation iPad will appear…
Apple’s attempt at 99-cent TV show rentals is off to a choppy start, with NBC Universal chief exec Jeff Zucker…
Speaking of the change-everything iPad as I seem to from time-to-time AT&T has some interesting wit and repartee for us…
http://www.viddler.com/simple/30fe0cca/ According to Business Insider, Apple COO Tim Cook told Goldman analyst Bill Shope, “he sees no reason why the tablet…
On strength of the multiplicity of soon-available applications, Apple will sell 20 million iPhones by the end of 2009, selling another 10 million in 2010, says Goldman Sachs.
"Third-party applications will differentiate the iPhone from a growing number of its smartphone competitors,” analyst David Bailey told The Financial Post. The analyst pointed out that deployment of Mac OS X on the device offers a “more robust” application development environment for developers, with the App Store promising a much better user experience, likely to sell more applications than existing smartphone application purchasing systems.
It’s all about financial chatter and multimedia on the Apple news front this morning, with more analysts offering positive targets on the company’s stock and the debut of ITV on the Mac.
In other news, Apple ships the Aperture SDK and reveals many plug-ins to match; Apple further improves its Chinese retail presence; MacBook Pro software updates and news Apple plans an IM client for iPhone. Read on…
As reported here Saturday, PayPal’s denial of a rumoured plan to block Safari users from using the online payments service leads the agenda this morning. In other news, analysts predict Apple’s Q2 results will once again excel against guidance; China becomes the world’s most-connected internet country; Apple plans virtual stores; a defamation lawsuit against the company has been thrown out of court and reports claim the next Leopard upgrade is currently being tested by developers.
Apple CEO Steve Jobs took a moment to let the world know he really isn’t dead during his ‘Let’s Rock’ keynote last night.
The health of the Apple boss has been in the spotlight for months, with some analysts, investors and media outlets attempting to force the company to issue some kind of statement on the health of America’s most disruptive business leader.
Editors note: We’ve heard from a number of unconfirmed sources (and a friend who is into this sort of thing who is totally sure) that Jobs is a recent follower of Calorie Restriction dieting. The main goal of calorie restriction is to lower metabolism and increase longevity. This kind of "thinking out of the box" diet/medicine is par for the course with Jobs who has a long history of living outside of the norms. Again, this is just something we’ve been told – we have nothing to back it up.
Apple’s iPhone may be in the ascendant, but competing players continue to face problems in the space, with Research In Motion shares falling 11 per cent on the pre-market this morning and the recently-introduced Palm Pre Phone this morning discounted to just $100 on Amazon.
Palm Pre carrier, Sprint, recently cut the cost of the Pre to $150 (after rebate on a 24-month contract), but Amazon today discounted that. That’s a $400 saving on the original retail price…and probably not a pretty sign for Pre…
Palm was in the news a lot this week, with market rumours speculating Nokia may make a bid to take over the company emerging at the same time as Palm issued a major tranche of new stock options in an attempt to pull in cold, hard investment cash.
From Reuters: Otter Products LLC, the privately held company that makes the OtterBox protective cases for mobile phones, is exploring…
Hidden in among Apple’s chief operating officer Tim Cook’s speech to the Goldman Sachs Technology Investment Symposium was a critical barometer of Apple’s success – Apple beat Dell in laptop sales in the US higher education market.
While most reports focused on Cook’s optimism as regards iPhone sales this year, the executive also told analysts: "We just received word on Monday that Apple surpassed Dell as the number one supplier of portables to US higher education for 2007," Cook claimed.
"The ceiling for the Macs is nowhere in sight. Even if the market itself isn’t growing, for us, switching Windows users is an enormous opportunity," Cook also added.
This is a critical metric for Apple, which once dominated computing on college campuses.
I’m taking this with a pinch of salt at this time, but speculation that Apple may be on the verge…
Unlikely, but Mashable is throwing it out there (Update: Not happening): It’s the second piece of information from our tipster that…
CNBC’s Jim Goldman, who is a fanboy amongst journalists if there ever was one, breaks down the intangibles of the…
The popular podcast app Stitcher Radio has been accused of stealing content from Podcast One, which claims to have the exclusive…
Apple has announced that its CFO Peter Oppenheimer is leaving Apple for retirement in September this year. Luca Maestri, vice…