Tim Cook to Climate Change Deniers: Get Out of Apple Stock - Mashable

Tim Cook advises climate change deniers to get out of Apple stock - CNET

In his job as Apple CEO, Tim Cook is mostly known for having a demeanor that's in some ways antithetical to that of Steve Jobs. Instead of bombast and bold claims, Cook's soothing Southern-tinged speech and steely temperament have marked him as a man whose head could be nothing but level. That is, unless you're a shareholder who thinks climate change is bogus.


At Apple's annual shareholder meeting Friday, Cook shot down the suggestion from a conservative, Washington, D.C.-based think tank that Apple give up on environmental initiatives that don't contribute to the company's bottom line.


The organization, the National Center for Public Policy Research (NCPPR), hasn't taken too kindly to Apple's increasing reliance on green energy, nor Cook's hiring of Lisa Jackson, the former head of the Environmental Protection Agency, to spearhead sustainability efforts for the iPhone-maker. And NCPPR General Counsel Justin Danhof said as much in a statement issued to Apple ahead of the meeting.


"We object to increased government control over company products and operations, and likewise mandatory environmental standards," Danhof wrote alongside NCPPR's demand that the pledge be voted on at the meeting. "This is something [Apple] should be actively fighting, not preparing surrender."


Cook came back with a harsh reminder that despite the company's mounds of cash, it is not in the business of caving to shareholder demands, especially politically motivated ones. "We do a lot of things for reasons besides profit motive," Cook said. "We want to leave the world better than we found it."


Danhof's proposal was voted down, of course, but not before Cook put the final touches on his rebuttal. To any who found the company's environmental dedication either ideologically or economically ill-advised, they can "get out of the stock," Cook said.


(Via Mashable)






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UPDATE 2-Apple CEO promises new products, says Apple TV no longer a "hobby" - Reuters


By Alexei Oreskovic



Feb 28 (Reuters) - Apple Inc sold more than $1 billion of Apple TV set-top boxes in 2013 and is investing heavily in the next generation of products, Chief Executive Tim Cook said at the company's annual meeting on Friday.



Apple's ability to again transform the fast-moving technology arena is the central question in investors' and Silicon Valley executives' minds as the company's growth slows, and rivals like Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Google Inc take chunks out of its market share.



Industry executives and Apple observers continue to believe that the company will come up with some sort of wearable device, like a smartwatch, and speculation persists about a long-rumored TV product of some sort to shake up the living room viewing experience.



"We're working on some things that are extensions of things you can see and some that you can't see," Cook said at the annual meeting, referring to a 32 percent increase in research and development costs last year.



Responding to a question about innovation, Cook said Apple preferred not to talk about new products under development so as not to tip off the competition.



"You can see we're getting ripped off left, right and sideways," he said.



Apple's shares fell 0.27 percent to close at $526.24 on Friday. They have clawed back substantial ground since falling below $400 in June, but remain well below the record-high $700 level of 2012, weighed by concerns about whether the company has any new hit products in the pipeline.



Though Cook steered clear of that discussion, he shed some more light on the Apple TV business, which executives have long referred to as a "hobby" for a company expected to chalk up some $181 billion in sales this fiscal year.



The $99 Apple TV set-top box, which streams content from Netflix and other video sources to a TV, had racked up $1 billion in sales in the past year, he said.



"It's a little more difficult to call it a hobby these days," Cook said.



FEEDING FRENZY



Cook took pot shots at Google, saying that most users of its Android mobile operating system are using older versions, presenting a security threat. In contrast, he said, 89 percent of users of devices based on Apple's iOS operating system have the most recent version of the software.



Shareholders at the annual meeting at Apple's Cupertino, California, headquarters re-elected all board members.



In the run-up to the meeting at 1 Infinite Loop, many investors had publicly debated whether Apple should not put any of its massive cash pile to better use.



Cook said the company will provide an update within 60 days on how it will use the cash, which totaled nearly $160 billion at the end of 2013. That time frame is in line with Apple's previous comments that it would announce its latest cash management plans around April.



Apple repurchased $14 billion in stock in a two-week period earlier this year, under pressure from activist investor Carl Icahn, who had been publicly calling for the iPhone-maker to buy back an additional $50 billion of stock on top of its existing buyback program.



The billionaire investor, who in late January said he held more than $4 billion of Apple shares, withdrew his shareholder proposal following Apple's announcement of the buyback.



Some analysts believe Apple may eventually dip into its coffers to buy something big. The iPhone maker has so far shied away from the mega-acquisitions that far more aggressive rivals like Google and Facebook Inc have pursued, though Cook did not rule out forking over a big sum of cash if warranted.



Cook said Apple has acquired 23 companies in the last 16 months and remained on the lookout for interesting technology and companies.



Apple is not in a race to acquire the most companies or to spend the most money, but that "doesn't mean we won't buy a huge company tomorrow afternoon," he said.



And he warned shareholders not to focus too narrowly on short-term gains.



"If you're in Apple for only a week ... or two months, I would encourage you not to invest in Apple," he said.



"We are here for the long term."






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Apple chief turns up TV ambitions - Financial Times


Apple’s television division, long dubbed a “hobby” by its executives, is now a billion-dollar business, Tim Cook told investors at an annual meeting on Friday.


The announcement is the biggest hint yet that Apple is stepping up its ambitions in the TV market, as it searches for new sources of growth, ahead of a new product launch which could come as soon as next month.



More


On this topic


IN Technology



“That hobby was over $1bn in revenue last year,” Mr Cook, Apple’s chief executive, told shareholders gathered at its Cupertino, California headquarters. “It’s a little more difficult to call it a hobby these days.”


The figure includes both the devices and the content sold through its $99 set-top box. In mid-2013, Mr Cook said the existing Apple TV box – which has sold for the same price since it was introduced in 2010 – had sold more than 13m units to date.


Apple has not previously disclosed annual revenues from its TV business alone, but it said in June last year that it sold 800,000 TV episodes and 350,000 movies every day on iTunes, netting around $3m a day. People with Apple TV devices tend to buy more content, executives have said.


Apple made its first foray into TV equipment in 2007 but analysts have long seen potential for it to become a multibillion-dollar new product line.


Mr Cook said that Eddy Cue, Apple’s services chief, has negotiated “a lot of new content” for TV, including 85,000 movies and, in recent months, new channels from HBO, NFL, Sky News and PBS. Earlier this week, Disney launched a new cloud-based app for iPhone and iPad, called Movies Anywhere.


However, Apple’s innovations in TV have lagged behind the likes of Microsoft’s Xbox One, which allows users to access cable TV through voice control, and Google, whose Chromecast device for connecting mobile devices to TV sets retails for a third of the price of Apple TV.


Horace Dediu, technology commentator with Asymco, estimates that the company has sold a total of 28m TV boxes since 2007, generating cumulative hardware revenues of about $3.5bn. An implied growth rate of 80 per cent would make it Apple’s fastest-growing device, Mr Dediu said on Twitter.


‘We are working on a lot of new products. We are working on some extensions of things you can see. We are working on some things you can’t see.”

- Tim Cook



In another possible signal that an upgraded box is on its way, Apple began to offer an effective discount to the current Apple TV by selling it with a free $25 iTunes gift card through its retail stores this week. Apple often discounts older products to clear inventory ahead of a new release.


One source familiar with Apple’s plans has told the FT that Apple is likely to introduce a new TV peripheral – but not a full TV set – before its June developer conference, as has been previously reported elsewhere.


The significantly redesigned hardware will include greater support for video games, already a popular pastime on its iPhones and iPads, as well as other new features which could include bringing its App Store to the TV set for the first time.


The release, which was delayed from the end of last year, could come “any week now”, this source said. Apple has not commented on the rumours, which were first reported by 9to5Mac .


Sitting cross-legged on a stool, wearing a dark blue untucked shirt and jeans and reading comments from folded piece of paper, Mr Cook discussed a range of topics from human rights to the company’s cash pile at Friday’s annual meeting.


He said that Apple had now sold a total of more than 800m devices running its iOS operating system, up from 700m in November. “Several billion” texts and photos are exchanged everyday over its iMessage system, he added.


We are not in a race to pay the most. We are not in a race to get the headline. That doesn’t mean we won’t buy a huge company tomorrow afternoon

- Tim Cook



Emphasising that he was focused on long-term shareholder returns and not short-term investors, at a time when Apple has been targeted by corporate raider Carl Icahn, Mr Cook said that he expected to announce an update to its share buyback and dividend scheme “within the next 60 days”.


“We look at it [cash redistribution policy] all the time but we update it on an annual basis so we can be thoughtful and deliberate about it,” he said. “If you are only [investing] in Apple for two weeks or a month, I would encourage you not to invest in Apple because we are here for the long term.”


Following Facebook’s $19bn acquisition of WhatsApp Messenger, a competitor to Apple’s iMessage chat app, Mr Cook touted a 32 per cent increase in its in-house research and development spending last year.


“We are working on a lot of new products,” he said. “We are working on some extensions of things you can see. We are working on some things you can’t see.”


However, after acquiring 23 companies in the past 16 months, he did not rule out big deals in the future.


“We are not in a race to see how many we can acquire,” he said. “We are not in a race to pay the most. We are not in a race to get the headline. That doesn’t mean we won’t buy a huge company tomorrow afternoon. But it has to be a fit for us and help us make great products that enrich people’s lives.”


All of the motions Apple put to a investors’ votes on Friday were passed at the meeting, and every shareholder motion was defeated. Mr Icahn withdrew a proxy motion pressing for greater cash returns to shareholders ahead of the meeting.


A change to Apple’s articles of incorporation that requires majority voting for the election of directors was narrowly passed by a 54 per cent majority of votes cast. Corporate governance advocates had praised the move.


Apple shareholders’ approval of its executive compensation plan increased markedly to 97 per cent in its non-binding “say on pay” vote, up from 61 per cent a year ago. Last year, Mr Cook changed the structure of his bonus to tie it more closely to corporate performance.



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Apple CEO promises new products, says Apple TV no longer a 'hobby' - Chicago Tribune



CUPERTINO, California (Reuters) - Apple Inc sold more than $1 billion of Apple TV set-top boxes in 2013 and is investing heavily in the next generation of products, Chief Executive Tim Cook said at the company's annual meeting on Friday.

Apple's ability to again transform the fast-moving technology arena is the central question in investors' and Silicon Valley executives' minds as the company's growth slows, and rivals like Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Google Inc take chunks out of its market share.


Industry executives and Apple observers continue to believe that the company will come up with some sort of wearable device, like a smartwatch, and speculation persists about a long-rumored TV product of some sort to shake up the living room viewing experience.


"We're working on some things that are extensions of things you can see and some that you can't see," Cook said at the annual meeting, referring to a 32 percent increase in research and development costs last year.


Responding to a question about innovation, Cook said Apple preferred not to talk about new products under development so as not to tip off the competition.


"You can see we're getting ripped off left, right and sideways," he said.


Apple's shares fell 0.27 percent to close at $526.24 on Friday. They have clawed back substantial ground since falling below $400 in June, but remain well below the record-high $700 level of 2012, weighed by concerns about whether the company has any new hit products in the pipeline.


Though Cook steered clear of that discussion, he shed some more light on the Apple TV business, which executives have long referred to as a "hobby" for a company expected to chalk up some $181 billion in sales this fiscal year.


The $99 Apple TV set-top box, which streams content from Netflix and other video sources to a TV, had racked up $1 billion in sales in the past year, he said.


"It's a little more difficult to call it a hobby these days," Cook said.


FEEDING FRENZY


Cook took pot shots at Google, saying that most users of its Android mobile operating system are using older versions, presenting a security threat. In contrast, he said, 89 percent of users of devices based on Apple's iOS operating system have the most recent version of the software.


Shareholders at the annual meeting at Apple's Cupertino, California, headquarters re-elected all board members.


In the run-up to the meeting at 1 Infinite Loop, many investors had publicly debated whether Apple should not put any of its massive cash pile to better use.


Cook said the company will provide an update within 60 days on how it will use the cash, which totaled nearly $160 billion at the end of 2013. That time frame is in line with Apple's previous comments that it would announce its latest cash management plans around April.


Apple repurchased $14 billion in stock in a two-week period earlier this year, under pressure from activist investor Carl Icahn, who had been publicly calling for the iPhone-maker to buy back an additional $50 billion of stock on top of its existing buyback program.


The billionaire investor, who in late January said he held more than $4 billion of Apple shares, withdrew his shareholder proposal following Apple's announcement of the buyback.


Some analysts believe Apple may eventually dip into its coffers to buy something big. The iPhone maker has so far shied away from the mega-acquisitions that far more aggressive rivals like Google and Facebook Inc have pursued, though Cook did not rule out forking over a big sum of cash if warranted.


Cook said Apple has acquired 23 companies in the last 16 months and remained on the lookout for interesting technology and companies.


Apple is not in a race to acquire the most companies or to spend the most money, but that "doesn't mean we won't buy a huge company tomorrow afternoon," he said.


And he warned shareholders not to focus too narrowly on short-term gains.


"If you're in Apple for only a week ... or two months, I would encourage you not to invest in Apple," he said.


"We are here for the long term."


(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; Editing by Leslie Adler and Richard Chang)






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Upcoming Apple TV Product Will Include Video Game Support, Launch Date ... - Mac Rumors

appletv.pngApple's much-rumored revamped Apple TV product will be revealed "any week now" according to a new report from the Financial Times , though notable Apple journalist Jim Dalrymple poured water on a separate report, saying an Apple TV will not be launching soon.

Though a launch date is uncertain, rumors have indicated the redesigned Apple TV product will include support for games, which the Financial Times confirms. It may also include a fully-fledged App Store, bringing apps to the set-top box for the first time.


The significantly redesigned hardware will include greater support for video-games, already a popular pastime on its iPhones and iPads, as well as other new features which could include bringing its App Store to the TV set for the first time.

The release, which was delayed from the end of last year, could come "any week now", this source said. Apple has not commented on the rumours.



Rumors of a revamped set-top box first began appearing in early 2013, with TechCrunch's MG Siegler pointing towards an Apple TV product with a focus on gaming. Later in the year, hints of a delay surfaced, and it appears that the product was indeed scheduled for a 2013 launch that was later pushed back to 2014.

A recent report from Bloomberg suggested Apple was on the verge of revealing a new set-top box, possibly at some point in April, but indicated an actual product launch might come somewhat later in the year, which could potentially account for the discrepancy between launch reports from the Financial Times and other media outlets and a "Nope" from Jim Dalrymple.


In addition to games and support for Apple's iOS 7 controllers, other Apple TV rumors have pointed to a hardware product that combines the Apple TV with the router features of the existing AirPort Express. It has also been suggested that Apple is planning to work in conjunction with cable companies to build an Apple TV interface over existing cable content, essentially replacing the cable box.


Earlier today, Tim Cook told shareholders that the Apple TV generated $1 billion during 2013, counting hardware sales and movie/TV show rentals. He also noted that it was "a little more difficult to call [the Apple TV] a hobby these days" given its ever-increasing growth.


The company has also began offering a $25 gift card with the purchase of an Apple TV, possibly in an effort to clear out existing inventory ahead of a new product launch, and the Apple TV has also gained its own product section on Apple's online storefront.


Related roundup: Apple TV



Dalrymple only Nope'd the imminent release, but not the rumor of an announcement.


It's entirely possible that this new Apple TV would be revealed months in advance, just to give time for developers to make apps in time for launch.




Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised if they announce it at WWDC with a fall release.

"I've Cracked it!" ...yeah right, its been 3 years already




Or, he cracked it and Apple is dealing with unresponsive cable companies...

The Beard has spoken.

"I've Cracked it!" ...yeah right, its been 3 years already

Dalrymple only Nope'd the imminent release, but not the rumor of an announcement.

It's entirely possible that this new Apple TV would be revealed months in advance, just to give time for developers to make apps in time for launch.


That's what happened with the iPad for instance. They gave developers the iPad SDK (part of iPhone OS 3.2 Beta) right after the announcement.



I think he cracked the hardware/UI, but the content providers are stubbornly uncracked. I always thought an actual TV would be odd, there are so many screen sizes people want. A way cool set top box would be more like it.


though notable Apple journalist Jim Dalrymple poured water on the report (http://ift.tt/1i04oe4), saying an Apple TV will not be launching soon.




nooo. dude is rarely wrong.

Maybe software update now, new hardware end of the year?



4k...4k...4k...





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Apple CEO promises new products, says Apple TV no longer a 'hobby' - Reuters

Shoppers are pictured inside an Apple store on 5th Ave during Black Friday Sales in New York November 29, 2013. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri



Shoppers are pictured inside an Apple store on 5th Ave during Black Friday Sales in New York November 29, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Carlo Allegri







(Reuters) - Apple Inc sold more than $1 billion of Apple TV set-top boxes in 2013 and is investing heavily in the next generation of products, Chief Executive Tim Cook said at the company's annual meeting on Friday.



Apple's ability to again transform the fast-moving technology arena is the central question in investors' and Silicon Valley executives' minds as the company's growth slows, and rivals like Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Google Inc take chunks out of its market share.



Industry executives and Apple observers continue to believe that the company will come up with some sort of wearable device, like a smartwatch, and speculation persists about a long-rumored TV product of some sort to shake up the living room viewing experience.



"We're working on some things that are extensions of things you can see and some that you can't see," Cook said at the annual meeting, referring to a 32 percent increase in research and development costs last year.



Responding to a question about innovation, Cook said Apple preferred not to talk about new products under development so as not to tip off the competition.



"You can see we're getting ripped off left, right and sideways," he said.



Apple's shares fell 0.27 percent to close at $526.24 on Friday. They have clawed back substantial ground since falling below $400 in June, but remain well below the record-high $700 level of 2012, weighed by concerns about whether the company has any new hit products in the pipeline.



Though Cook steered clear of that discussion, he shed some more light on the Apple TV business, which executives have long referred to as a "hobby" for a company expected to chalk up some $181 billion in sales this fiscal year.



The $99 Apple TV set-top box, which streams content from Netflix and other video sources to a TV, had racked up $1 billion in sales in the past year, he said.



"It's a little more difficult to call it a hobby these days," Cook said.



FEEDING FRENZY



Cook took pot shots at Google, saying that most users of its Android mobile operating system are using older versions, presenting a security threat. In contrast, he said, 89 percent of users of devices based on Apple's iOS operating system have the most recent version of the software.



Shareholders at the annual meeting at Apple's Cupertino, California, headquarters re-elected all board members.



In the run-up to the meeting at 1 Infinite Loop, many investors had publicly debated whether Apple should not put any of its massive cash pile to better use.



Cook said the company will provide an update within 60 days on how it will use the cash, which totaled nearly $160 billion at the end of 2013. That time frame is in line with Apple's previous comments that it would announce its latest cash management plans around April.



Apple repurchased $14 billion in stock in a two-week period earlier this year, under pressure from activist investor Carl Icahn, who had been publicly calling for the iPhone-maker to buy back an additional $50 billion of stock on top of its existing buyback program.



The billionaire investor, who in late January said he held more than $4 billion of Apple shares, withdrew his shareholder proposal following Apple's announcement of the buyback.



Some analysts believe Apple may eventually dip into its coffers to buy something big. The iPhone maker has so far shied away from the mega-acquisitions that far more aggressive rivals like Google and Facebook Inc have pursued, though Cook did not rule out forking over a big sum of cash if warranted.



Cook said Apple has acquired 23 companies in the last 16 months and remained on the lookout for interesting technology and companies.



Apple is not in a race to acquire the most companies or to spend the most money, but that "doesn't mean we won't buy a huge company tomorrow afternoon," he said.



And he warned shareholders not to focus too narrowly on short-term gains.



"If you're in Apple for only a week ... or two months, I would encourage you not to invest in Apple," he said.



"We are here for the long term."



(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; Editing by Leslie Adler and Richard Chang)






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CNBC's Jim Cramer: What shareholders want from Apple - CNBC.com



Cramer: What Apple shareholders need from Tim Cook


Friday, 28 Feb 2014 | 9:14 AM ET

As Apple shareholders attend the company's annual investors meeting Friday morning, CNBC's Jim Cramer breaks down what they want from the tech giant.




As Apple shareholders descend on Cupertino, Calif., Friday morning for the tech giant's annual shareholders' meeting, CNBC's Jim Cramer said they're hoping for something big from the company.


How big? Apple investors, most of them also Apple enthusiasts, want something "revolutionary," Cramer said Friday.


"No one ever stops with that," Cramer said on "Squawk on the Street." "I thought the software in the phone was revolutionary, but I guess that's not exactly a reason to buy a stock. But a lot of people are in this stock because they love their iPhone."


(Read more: CEO quest: Seeking the next Steve Jobs)


The vast majority of people own Apple because it remains a cheap stock compared with other tech companies, Cramer said. But it fails to hold the same kind of growth as rivals such as Google, and investors will want Apple CEO Tim Cook to explain why Friday morning, he added.


"You need catalysts. People need growth," Cramer said, adding: "Apple had a big move going into this meeting and I think people say, 'Well, why did we buy it then?' "







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This Week's Apple Rumors, Ranked From Dumbest to Most Plausible - Wired


In the future, Apple could employ gesture control to augment mouse controls.

In the future, Apple could employ gesture control to augment mouse controls. Photo: Alex Washburn/WIRED



Each week, there are dozens of Apple rumors, reports, and patent filings that hint at what’s coming out of Cupertino next. Some are legit, but many are totally bogus. As always, we’ve parsed the week’s rumors, ranking them in order from “utterly ridiculous” to “duh, of course.” First up…


ASK AGAIN LATER: Future iDevices Could Have a Self-Healing Display Coating

In a patent application, Apple detailed how it could prevent scratch-induced display artifacts using a self-healing coating. This one requires some background: The backlight of a display is composed of a light source, a light guide plate, and a diffuser. Light shines from the light source through the guide plate and diffuser, and onto the LCD. Sometimes the light guide plate and diffuser can get stuck together, so a binding material and beads are used to prevent that from happening. But with normal wear and tear on a phone, those beads can end up scratching the light guide plate, resulting in screen artifacts like white spots. It’s all very unfortunate. According to the patent, by using a pattern of convex bumps, a self-healing or non-stick coating like Teflon, or a combination of these, the scratching and resulting display artifacts could be avoided. This is something Apple could quietly implement in its display manufacturing technology, or perhaps tout as a feature in a new, redesigned future Retina display. Or it could just be an idea Apple patented one time.


ASK AGAIN LATER: Embedded LEDs Could Light Up Your Face During FaceTime Calls

Another patent filing reveals that Apple could be investigating how to embed LEDs in the bezel of a Mac so that they could illuminate the user during FaceTime calls. The hidden LEDs could be illuminated for teleconferencing, or could act as a scroll indicator, switching on when you’re scrolling up or down the screen. They could also work in conjunction with a proximity sensor, giving you visual feedback for gesture controls. Sounds potentially useful, but no way to know just yet if this is anything Apple would actually put into a Mac or Cinema Display.


SIGNS POINT TO YES: Apple Investigating Gesture Control

In a continuation of an existing patent, Apple detailed more ways sensors could be used to detect a user’s presence. In the patent, a proximity sensor-based system would adjust a given device’s user interface depending on how close or far you are to it. It could also do things like automatically switch from mouse or trackpad controls to gesture controls as you move further away. Though the exact implementation is still up in the air, I’d bet that gesture control will be included in Apple products at some point in the future.


SIGNS POINT TO YES: More Signs of a Sapphire-Display Equipped iPhone This Fall

According to projected Q4 2013 earnings from Apple’s sapphire component maker, GT Advanced, it looks like a fall launch for the next iPhone is imminent. We’d expect a fall launch for the iPhone regardless. Still, the next iPhone is also expected to utilize a sapphire crystal display. Sapphire is extraordinarily hard (it’s already used on the iPhone 5s’ touch sensitive home button), but in the past, it’s been too costly to manufacture to use as a display glass.






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Tim Cook: Apple TV did over $1B in ... - CNET

CUPERTINO, Calif. -- While the iPhone and iPad have come to dominate Apple's business, the television has often been relegated to an afterthought for the company. So much for Apple TV being just a hobby, said Chief Executive Tim Cook.

"That hobby was over a billion dollars of revenue last year," Cook said during the company's annual meeting with shareholders here. "It's a little hard to call it a hobby anymore."


The billion-dollar figure includes content sales conducted by Apple on the platform -- like movies and TV shows -- and not just hardware sales of its set-top box. At Friday's meeting, Cook did not specify the breakdown between the two revenue streams.


Still, the milestone means the product is getting attention from consumers. A little over a year ago, Cook announced that in the first quarter of the 2013 fiscal year, the company sold more than 2 million Apple TVs, up from 1.4 million a year before. (Although it's worth noting that Apple's first quarter includes results from the holiday shopping season.)


The company also is said to be refreshing the product during the first half of this year, but the update is reportedly to enhance its content experience -- possibly adding a game center and a version of the App Store.


Still, a billion dollars is less than one percent of the company's total net sales late year. And the set-top box is far from what many fans have wanted for a long time -- a full-fledged Apple TV set. Cook has said that the company will be entering new product categories this year. And on Friday, he had a little fun with all the anticipation. "I'd like to unveil some new products today," he said, as an overflow room full of reporters gasped. "I was just kidding about that last part," he added, laughing.

But on the topic of innovation and research and development, Cook did say that the company has acquired 23 companies in the last 16 months. Thus far, the company's recent playbook has been to buy out smaller companies for technological gains, and Cook reiterated the point on Friday. "We're not in a race to pay the most. Not in a race to get the headline," he said, likely a veiled reference to Facebook's blockbuster acquisition of messaging service WhatsApp for as much as $19 billion. But he didn't rule out a splashy buy. "That doesn't mean we won't buy a big company tomorrow afternoon."


At the meeting, all of the motions proposed by Apple to shareholders were approved, while the motions proposed by individual investors were denied.


The gathering was originally billed as a showdown between activist investor Carl Icahn and Apple over the company's buyback program. Icahn has been vocal about Apple repurchasing more of its stock. In December, Icahn announced a nonbinding proposal for Apple shareholders to vote on a buyback at Friday's meeting.


But Icahn then announced earlier this month that he would pull the proposal, mainly because the Institutional Shareholder Services, a trade organization, urged shareholders to vote against it, and because Apple had increased the volume of its stock repurchasing. After investors were disappointed with first-quarter results, Cook announced that the company had bought back $14 billion worth of shares in two weeks. The company is said to be on course to repurchase $32 billion by year's end, just $18 billion off Icahn's $50 billion sum.


Still, Cook said on Friday that the company is still deliberating its buyback plan, and will issue an update of its plans in the next 60 days.


But even without the Icahn drama, the meeting was not without its excitement. A group of Silicon Valley security guards -- including Apple's own -- held a protest at Infinite Loop to coincide with the gathering of the company's shareholders. The protest was just another example of the culture clash engulfing the tech industry in Silicon Valley and the Bay Area.






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Apple has the size, Google has the momentum, but the smart money has been ... - BGR

Apple Retail Stores Pushing Sales of Current Apple TV with $25 iTunes Gift ... - Mac Rumors

apple_tv_buy_99With rumors of a new Apple TV set-top box swirling, Apple's brick and mortar stores have launched a one-week promotion offering customers who purchase the current model a $25 iTunes Store gift card, reports 9to5Mac .

The promotion naturally sparks speculation that Apple is trying to clear stock of the current model ahead of new hardware. A recent report from Bloomberg claimed, however, that while Apple was aiming for an April introduction of the new Apple TV, a launch would not come until much later in the year around the holiday shopping season.


The Apple TV recently received added prominence in the Apple online store with its own major heading as opposed to its previous placement as an accessory, suggesting that Apple may be laying the groundwork to move the Apple TV from its longtime "hobby" status to a full-fledged product on par with its other lines.


Apple has reportedly considered a new set-top box that would combine the features of the current Apple TV with the Wi-Fi router features of the existing AirPort Express. The new Apple TV could also leverage iOS devices and Bluetooth accessories as game controllers for a potential Apple TV App Store, while also adding an Apple software layer on top of users' existing cable television services. Apple has also reportedly been in talks with Time Warner Cable about a potential content deal.


The new gift card offer on the existing Apple TV runs through March 5 and is currently not offered on the Apple online store. As with all iTunes gift cards, the credit can be used in any of Apple's digital content stores, including the iTunes Store, App Store, Mac App Store, and iBooks Store.


Update 8:20 AM: Apple has now posted the Terms and Conditions [PDF] for the offer, indicating that it is valid both in-store and online, but only in the United States.


Related roundup: Apple TV



I am finally guying to buy an Apple TV as soon as they add this feature, which I want more than anything else:

I push AirPlay on my iOS device, and in




I am finally guying to buy an Apple TV as soon as they add this feature, which I want more than anything else:

I push AirPlay on my iOS device, and in




Umm, mine is already instant? Even with the Apple TV already off, it takes five seconds tops.


Maybe your network is the problem?




Agreed. That sounds like 'his' network. If the ATV is on it is instant, and even from an off state it is ~5 seconds.

I love new hardware! Come onnnn update! :D

I am finally guying to buy an Apple TV as soon as they add this feature, which I want more than anything else:

I push AirPlay on my iOS device, and in

I knew this would happen! I just bought one from Best Buy two days ago!

Very interesting. My only concern with a new revamped Apple TV is a price hike. If it adds an App Store and some other features I can see Apple jacking up the price. Right now the ATV is great because it's only $99.

Yeah apple really knows how to make a bargain when they want to get rid of a product.

Yes, hopefully I can get a new Apple TV in March :D

And who knows what else may accompany the refresh. Maybe the Macbooks will update. :)





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Apple, If Samsung And Sony Can Make A Waterproof Phone, So Can You - TechCrunch


Just this week Samsung revealed the Galaxy S5. It’s water-resistant. Sony also announced the Xperia Z2, the waterproof successor to the also waterproof Z1. So where’s my waterproof iPhone? The technology and demand are here. Water-resistant or waterproof, Samsung and Sony’s latest flagships are waterproof enough that a drop in the toilet will not destroy the device. That’s what the iPhone needs. It needs to be toilet-proof.


The iPhone has long been a delicate device. An entire industry exists to protect it. However, each new iPhone is a bit more durable than the last. Advances in material have resulted in tougher screens and more shock-proof innards. Yet one errant drop of water will still destroy it. But not the new Galaxy S5 or Z2.


Other phone makers have taken a different route. Instead of employing unorthodox materials, Samsung, Motorola and Sony employ good ol’ plastic. And for good reason. The phones are on average more durable. HTC is the exception. Like the iPhone 5, the fantastic HTC One is made out of aluminum, but a type that’s much more resistant to dings, scuffs and scrapes.


Apple, it’s time for you to follow this trend.


Sony introduced its first waterproof in early 2013 — the Xperia Z. It wasn’t a blockbuster hit, but it did spawn different variations. Most of Sony’s 2013 phones and tablets lineup turned out to be waterproof. Sony is even selling earbuds in a bottle of water now. You know, for marketing reasons.


Motorola tried this before, too. The company released its first water-resistant Android phone in 2009. HTC also sold a waterproof headset and it wouldn’t be surprising if the next HTC One is waterproof.


Several firms offer waterproofing. Liquipel will waterproof an iPhone 5s for $60 or earbuds for $30. There was even a report out of CES 2012 that another waterproofing company, HZ0, was in talks with Apple and Samsung. Both companies use a similar water-proofing process: injecting a coating inside the phone that protects it from liquids.


The iPhone 5c is a step in the right direction. The plastic casing feels fantastic and the phone handles bumps and scrapes better than the aluminum on the iPhone 5. It’s not waterproof but it’s more resistant to abuse than its more expensive brother.


It’s a shame, too. The iPhone is a gorgeous device, yet most owners stuff it in bulky and ugly cases. Even if the next iPhone is still made out of the same scratch-prone aluminum, it’s time to be at least waterproof.


Follow Samsung and Sony’s lead, Apple. Waterproof the iPhone.


Illustration by Bryce Durbin






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Apple TV $25 gift card offer reported as rumors of new device swirl - Los Angeles Times

By Salvador Rodriguez


8:14 AM PST, February 28, 2014



For the next week, customers who buy an Apple TV at one of the tech giant's retail stores will reportedly receive a $25 iTunes gift card as part of a promotion that could signal a new Apple TV is on its way.


Apple news website 9to5Mac reported that Apple informed its retail employees about the promotion Friday morning. The bonus of a $25 gift card will be available to customers who buy a $99 Apple TV at an Apple Store between now and March 5, the report said.


In the world of tech, discounts and promotions can often be signs that a newer version of a product will soon be rolled out.


PHOTOS: Five ways the Samsung Gear 2 is better than its predecessor


That was the case earlier this month when the Samsung Galaxy Gear smartwatch was heavily discounted by two retailers. Soon after the discounts kicked in, the South Korean company announced two new smartwatches.


The same could be happening with the Apple TV, a small set-top box that users connect to their TVs to stream content from the Internet from services like HBO Go and Netflix.


The Wall Street Journal, 9to5Mac and Bloomberg have recently reported that Apple has a new set-top box on the way. One report said the new version could be announced and go on sale as early as April.


The new Apple TV is expected to include a faster processor and a redesigned user interface.


ALSO:


Google Dude-le? White men dominate Google Doodles


Is Apple done supporting Snow Leopard and 19% of Macs?


Mt. Gox files for bankruptcy as 850,000 bitcoins go missing









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Apple Wins Dismissal of $2.2 Billion German Patent Suit - Bloomberg

Apple Inc. (AAPL) won the dismissal of a 1.57 billion-euro ($2.2 billion) lawsuit in Germany over technology used to decide priority for calls on mobile networks.


Apple doesn’t infringe two patents asserted by IPCom GmbH & Co KG, a court in Mannheim ruled today, without giving the reasoning for its decision. HTC Corp. (2498) also won dismissal of a related IPCom claim over one of the patents.


The rulings are a blow to Munich-based patent holding company IPCom which has sued mobile-device makers over technology it acquired from Robert Bosch GmbH in 2007. The “100” series patents, which also apply to methods helping to place emergency calls, are the central piece of its portfolio.


IPCom, which doesn’t make any products, is one of a group of firms that license its patents and file lawsuits to generate revenue, earning the moniker “patent trolls” from its targets. Apple was among 19 companies and associations that petitioned the European Union in a letter this week to weaken the ability of non-manufacturers to win injunctions in intellectual-property cases.


“IPCom’s story has come to an end” with the ruling, said Martin Chakraborty, HTC’s attorney.


The European patent in today’s case against Apple, called “100A” by IPCom, was struck down by the European Patent Office in 2012 after Apple, Nokia Oyj (NOK1V), HTC, Ericsson AB and Vodafone Group Plc (VOD) contested it. IPCom appealed and was granted a rehearing. Last month, the European Patent Office upheld the intellectual property while narrowing its scope.


IPCom will file an appeal, Bernhard Frohwitter, its managing director, said in an e-mailed statement.


“We are more than astonished by the dismissal especially because this court, just like other courts in Germany and the U.K., found a myriad of infringements of the 100A patent,” he said.


In a hearing earlier this month in the Apple case, Presiding Judge Holger Kircher said the patent’s new wording requires a fresh examination and the judges may deviate from a 2011 ruling finding Nokia liable because the patent had a different scope.


Apple spokesman Martin Kuderna declined to comment.


In a separate ruling as part of the IPCom case against Taoyuan-based HTC, the court said it will review a newly introduced argument by the German company separately.


IPCom argues device makers and phone companies are using the technology in the 3G wireless standard. The company was seeking 1.57 billion euros in damages from Apple for its use in the iPhone in Germany alone. The sum sought for using the technology in iPad tablets hasn’t yet been specified.


Today’s cases against Apple are: LG Mannheim, 2 O 53/12 and 2 O 95/13. The HTC case is LG Mannheim, 76 O 30/12.


To contact the reporter on this story: Karin Matussek in Berlin at kmatussek@bloomberg.net


To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anthony Aarons at aaarons@bloomberg.net






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Ex-Apple Engineer Launches Moov, The Next Generation Of Wearable Fitness ... - TechCrunch


Welcome to the next generation of wearable fitness tracking! The first round of fitness trackers focused on introducing the idea of data to your daily activity and workout, but a new company called Moov wants to go beyond basic “step” data to tell you how to improve your form and get the most out of your workout.


The band uses a combination of hardware (9-axis sensors) and software algorithms to pinpoint your body’s exact movements in space without the help of a camera, letting the device give you tips on how to run without putting strain on your knees, or how to lift weights with the proper form.


It’s pretty clever. When you’re running, the Moov will give real-time audio tips right through your headphones about how to shorten or lengthen your stride or speed up. And even better, the app can run while your music plays, only interrupting to hit you with a helpful tip.


The Moov band can be worn on different parts of your body, like your ankle or wrist, depending on the information you’re looking to get out of it.


“I see it as my AI coach who not only tracks my moves, but works out with me in real-time: watches out for me on how to avoid injuries; whispers to me the secrets of losing weight while I do cardio; yells at me when I cheat; and encourages me to beat the pros,” said Meng Li, cofounder.


The Moov can also help with more random workout activities like cardio boxing, cycling, or swimming (Hello, waterproof!) In the coming months, the team plans to offer other kinds of sports to track.


The app allows users to share and compare their workouts to encourage motivation among the community.


Moov was built by Nikola Hu, a former Apple and HALO game engineer, and Meng Li and Tony Yuan. They both struggled with working out and were not getting results because they weren’t conducting there workouts properly.


Moov is running its own crowdfunding campaign, opting out of the usual Kickstarter or Indiegogo campaign to “be closer to early supporters/users.”


The team is looking to raise $40K, which will allow for an initial shipment of about 650 Moov units at $59 a pop. If you’re interested in improving your form (in more ways than one), head on over to the Moov crowdfunding page and get to pledgin’.






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Apple preparing software update to enhance functionality of iPhone 5s Touch ID - Apple Insider


Apple is preparing to release a free software update designed to improve the fingerprint recognition experience of Touch ID, potentially fixing a "fade" issue that has been experienced by some iPhone 5s users, AppleInsider has learned.

A source familiar with Apple's development plans said the company is well aware of early adopter issues that many iPhone 5s users are experiencing with Touch ID, the fingerprint recognition feature introduced last year after acquiring AuthenTec in 2012.


After launching iPhone 5s last fall, Apple has continued to work with the original AuthenTec team to improve its recognition software and will release an update relatively soon, the source confidently reported. However, AppleInsider could not verify whether the update will ship as part of iOS 7.1, which is expected to drop in mid-March.


While initial reviews of Touch ID generally praised the "single touch" system for being easy to set up and consistently accurate, a number of users have reported what is being called "AuthenTec Fade," or intermittent recognition failures that begin to occur months after first configuring one's prints.


Multiple users affected by the "AuthenTec Fade" problem have noted that reconfiguring their prints seems to return the system to its initial performance, but after several weeks the so-called "fade" creeps back.


Another trick suggested in user forms is to configure your most commonly used finger multiple times as separate fingers, under the assumption that this makes it more likely that the system can recognize the print on the first try.


While there are certainly some issues with fingerprint recognition that Apple simply can't solve, including tissue damage that would render a fingerprint completely unreadable or extremely wet conditions that could either swell a user's skin to the point where the print is actually too different to recognize, there are improvements the company can deliver in a software update that will improve users' Touch ID experience.


Prior to its acquisition by Apple, AuthenTec had been rapidly innovating in both hardware and software at a regular pace. Modern electronic fingerprint sensors had appeared on netbook computers for at least five years, and Motorola had incorporated a swipe-style fingerprint sensor from AuthenTec on its ill-fated Atrix 4G phone in early 2011.


By the end of 2011, Atrix users were complaining in public forums that their fingerprint sensor wasn't working at all, and that newer versions of Android lacked support for the sensor hardware. Subsequent versions of Motorola's phone dropped the fingerprint reading feature.


AuthenTec began floating a new fingerprint recognizer package representing the most advanced sensor and software technology available for mobile devices in late 2011, but the company subsequently divulged in SEC filings that none of the companies that AuthenTec approached with its latest technology expressed interest in adopting it apart from Apple.


The company specifically noted that the main reason that no other companies had expressed any interest in the new technology involved the relatively high cost of its new sensor solution. Apple was impressed enough to quickly act to acquire the company entirely, in a $356 million purchase that represented one of the largest company acquisitions Apple has ever made.


Over the next year, Apple and AuthenTec enhanced their fingerprint solution, developing a sapphire cover to protect the delicate sensor incorporated with the iPhone 5s home button and creating a setup and recognition process appropriate for iOS 7.






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Apple CEO Tim Cook to face shareholders with company's stock still 25 percent ... - Minneapolis Star Tribune

CUPERTINO, Calif. — Apple stockholders will get a chance to grill CEO Tim Cook about the company's product strategy, acquisition plans and money management at the iPhone maker's annual meeting.


Friday's gathering, scheduled to start at 9 a.m. PST, isn't expected to be as dramatic as it was shaping up to be until recently. Activist investor Carl Icahn had been promising to spice things up by pushing for the passage of a nonbinding proposal urging Apple Inc.'s board of directors to spend even more money buying back its own stock.


Icahn, though, abandoned his high-profile campaign earlier this month after Cook revealed Apple that had spent about $14 billion on its own stock after the shares plunged following the Jan. 27 release of the Cupertino, Calif. company's latest quarterly results.


With that buying flurry, Apple has spent more than $40 billion of the $60 billion earmarked for stock repurchase as part of a program unveiled shortly after last year's annual meeting. That was enough to satisfy Icahn, who had been campaigning for Apple's board to set aside an additional $50 billion for buying back the company's stock.


Icahn, who has valued his holdings in Apple at more than $3.5 billion, contends the company should be buying more of its stocks to help rebuild some of the shareholder wealth that has been lost during the past 17 months.


Since peaking at $705.07 in September 2012, Apple's stock has fallen by 25 percent amid concerns about intensifying competition in the mobile device market and a perceived lack of innovation. Apple's shares closed Thursday at $527.67.


Although that price is 19 percent above where the stock stood at Apple's annual meeting last year, many stockholders could still be feeling short changed because so an ever-growing list of other technology companies, including rival Google Inc., are hovering around all-time highs.


Cook, who became CEO shortly before the October 2011 death of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, has consistently tried to assure Apple shareholders will be rewarded in the long run. He has been hinting Apple intends to expand into new technology markets later this year, without providing any specifics. Speculation has centered on a high-tech watch could monitor the user's health and a television set that would include the same software that powers the iPhone and iPad.


Apple's handling of its nearly $159 billion in cash also tends to be a hot-button topic, as Icahn vividly illustrated with his theatrics. Cook has already said Apple's board is examining whether the company might wait to raise its dividend or raise its commitment on stock repurchases.


Some of that money could be used to buy other technology, although Apple so far has always focused on deals costing less than $1 billion. Recent reports that Apple's representatives met with electric car maker Tesla Motors Inc. has raised the possibility of Apple diversifying into automobiles. A Tesla acquisition would be expensive, given the car maker's current market value of $31 billion.


Tesla CEO Elon Musk has publicly confirmed that he met with Apple last year, though he wouldn't say if there would any discussions about a potential sale. Apple so far hasn't commented about Tesla, making it a potential matter of intrigue at Friday's annual meeting.






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Apple could be the latest casualty in patent war - CNBC.com

"I am astonished at the amount of the claim," said Anselm Brandi-Dohrn, a patent attorney with von Boetticher law firm in Berlin. "Because an amount of this size has been raised not by a direct competitor but by a patent troll not active on the market, I think judges will look closely at the brief and reasoning for it."


Judges at Mannheim Regional Court in southwestern Germany will decide Friday whether Apple will have to pay out over the patent of a technical feature owned by IPCom, a firm that owns more than 1,200 patents.


The patents involve ways to manage priority emergency access when wireless networks are overloaded. The technology must be used in cellphone manufacturing here, and companies are supposed to pay a licensing fee to IPCom for its use, IPCom says. IPCom claims that Apple has not paid the fee.


(Read more: Apple security flaw could let hackers beat encryption)


"As we in Germany don't have anything like punitive damages, which would have been quite common for these types of cases in the U.S., here the damages are only actual damages, mostly from a fictitious license fee," said Brandi-Dohrn. "It is what Apple would have paid as a reasonable license fee if they had taken out a license from the patent owner."


Apple has said it has been sued 92 times by patent companies in the last two years, and it has more than 220 unresolved patent claims, according to Bloomberg News, and has to employ two lawyers to respond to royalty demands its says are frivolous.


Companies such as IPCom have been criticized because they own a portfolio of patents, although they're not using them in industrial processes — making money instead from license fees, royalties and enforcing patents.


However, a spokesman for the firm rebuked the criticism, saying that the value of patents were made transparent by companies such as IPCom, rather than by the technology companies themselves, which used them for "blackmail."


(Read more: This is how bad itcould get for Apple stock)






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Ahead of the Bell: Apple to Hold Annual Meeting - ABC News




Apple stockholders will get a chance to grill CEO Tim Cook about the company's product strategy, acquisition plans and money management at the iPhone maker's annual meeting.


Friday's gathering, scheduled to start at 9 a.m. PST, isn't expected to be as dramatic as it was shaping up to be until recently. Activist investor Carl Icahn had been promising to spice things up by pushing for the passage of a nonbinding proposal urging Apple Inc.'s board of directors to spend even more money buying back its own stock.


Icahn, though, abandoned his high-profile campaign earlier this month after Cook revealed Apple that had spent about $14 billion on its own stock after the shares plunged following the Jan. 27 release of the Cupertino, Calif. company's latest quarterly results.


With that buying flurry, Apple has spent more than $40 billion of the $60 billion earmarked for stock repurchase as part of a program unveiled shortly after last year's annual meeting. That was enough to satisfy Icahn, who had been campaigning for Apple's board to set aside an additional $50 billion for buying back the company's stock.


Icahn, who has valued his holdings in Apple at more than $3.5 billion, contends the company should be buying more of its stocks to help rebuild some of the shareholder wealth that has been lost during the past 17 months.


Since peaking at $705.07 in September 2012, Apple's stock has fallen by 25 percent amid concerns about intensifying competition in the mobile device market and a perceived lack of innovation. Apple's shares closed Thursday at $527.67.


Although that price is 19 percent above where the stock stood at Apple's annual meeting last year, many stockholders could still be feeling short changed because so an ever-growing list of other technology companies, including rival Google Inc., are hovering around all-time highs.


Cook, who became CEO shortly before the October 2011 death of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, has consistently tried to assure Apple shareholders will be rewarded in the long run. He has been hinting Apple intends to expand into new technology markets later this year, without providing any specifics. Speculation has centered on a high-tech watch could monitor the user's health and a television set that would include the same software that powers the iPhone and iPad.


Apple's handling of its nearly $159 billion in cash also tends to be a hot-button topic, as Icahn vividly illustrated with his theatrics. Cook has already said Apple's board is examining whether the company might wait to raise its dividend or raise its commitment on stock repurchases.


Some of that money could be used to buy other technology, although Apple so far has always focused on deals costing less than $1 billion. Recent reports that Apple's representatives met with electric car maker Tesla Motors Inc. has raised the possibility of Apple diversifying into automobiles. A Tesla acquisition would be expensive, given the car maker's current market value of $31 billion.


Tesla CEO Elon Musk has publicly confirmed that he met with Apple last year, though he wouldn't say if there would any discussions about a potential sale. Apple so far hasn't commented about Tesla, making it a potential matter of intrigue at Friday's annual meeting.







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Why Apple Could Win Big With Tesla's Giant New Battery Factory - Wired


Photo: Jim Merithew/WIRED

Tesla CEO Elon Musk. Photo: Jim Merithew/WIRED



The first Tesla I ever saw was stripped down to the chassis, a bare-metal incarnation of the company’s flagship electric Roadster on display at an event in Silicon Valley. Without the need for an internal combustion engine, the two-seater’s petite frame was dominated by a huge battery. My first thought: “This looks like a giant cell phone on wheels.”


As it turns out, I was more right than I realized.


This week, years after that first sighting, Tesla announced plans for what it calls the “Gigafactory,” a 10-million-square-foot plant for making car batteries. The company hopes that the sheer scale of the operation, combined with the inventiveness of its engineers, will bring battery prices down far enough to finally bring its electric cars into the mainstream.


But it’s not just the prospect of a gasoline-free future that has sparked such excitement about the Gigafactory. The same basic lithium-ion tech that fuels Tesla’s cars also runs most of today’s other mobile gadgets, large and small. If Tesla really produces batteries at the scale it’s promising, cars could become just one part of what the company does. One day, Tesla could be a company that powers just about everything, from the phone in your pocket to the electrical grid itself.


Earlier this month, as rumors swirled that Apple might want to buy Tesla, San Francisco Chronicle reported that Tesla CEO Elon Musk had indeed met with the iPhone maker. Musk later confirmed that Tesla and Apple had talked, but he wouldn’t say what about.


Now that Tesla has announced the Gigafactory, Gartner auto industry analyst Thilo Koslowski thinks it would make more sense for Tesla to talk with Apple about something other than an acquisition. “Depending on the capacity of the factory and who the other investors will be, Tesla could start selling its batteries for other products besides cars,” Koslowski tells WIRED. “This could actually mean Tesla might build batteries for Apple.”


Better Batteries for Less Money


To begin erecting its factory, Tesla said it would seek $1.6 billion in debt financing — money that Apple itself could easily supply from its massive cash reserves. In fact, the world’s biggest company could easily put up the money for the entire Gigafactory, which Tesla estimates will ultimately cost between $4 billion and $5 billion. Though industry analysts say the global manufacturing capacity for consumer electronics batteries is already considerable, the economies of scale that Tesla is promising could give Apple access to a whole different level of efficiency, sophistication, and control.


Unlike many parts of the consumer electronics industry, battery-making factories are, in general, highly automated, which means that labor doesn’t factor significantly into production costs. As anyone who has seen Tesla’s car-making robots in action can attest, factory automation is something the company does really, really well. Deep involvement in the project from the start — say, as an investor — could give Apple exactly the kind of intimate involvement with a key supplier that it relishes. This sort of control defines its approach to products. For consumers, that could mean Apple getting better batteries for its devices for less money, just like Tesla wants to do for its cars.


Image: Tesla

Tesla says it wants the Gigafactory, shown here in a mock-up released by the company, to be powered by solar and wind. Image: Tesla



Even if the Gigafactory never makes a battery for a single iPhone, however, its impact on the future of energy storage could be huge. The company says that, once fully operational, the plant will more than double the volume of lithium ion batteries produced in the world today. Sam Jaffe, a battery industry analyst with Navigant Research, says the price drops predicted by Tesla are in line with his firm’s forecasts, and that the cheaper batteries will bring Tesla closer to achieving its primary mission of making a widely affordable electric car, what Tesla is calling its “Gen III” mass market vehicle, or Model E. “The whole point of that model and the whole point of the company was to make that car,” Jaffe says. “It wasn’t to make sports cars or luxury cars. It was to make a family car comparable in price to a gasoline model.”


To reach that mass market, Tesla hopes to be cranking out batteries for 500,000 cars per year by 2020, supported by the Gigafactory. That’s compared to the 35,000 Model S sedans Tesla expects to make this year. Reaching that goal would mean not only a lot more electric cars on the road but a lot more batteries that would need to be replaced. The batteries that power Teslas are a lot like smartphone batteries: Eventually, they start losing their strength. Unlike smartphone batteries, getting down to 60 or 70 percent of their full capacity isn’t just inconvenient. It could leave drivers stranded. Tesla says it plans to fully integrate battery recycling into the Gigafactory’s operations, which could add to the cost savings.


Powering the Grid


But Koslowski says those old batteries could also become part of a robust secondary market. They could, for instance, store energy generated by home solar grids, which can make use of less-than-full strength cells because they don’t have to go anywhere. Already Tesla is supplying battery packs to SolarCity, the solar installer of which Musk serves as chairman, and the company believes that one day its batteries could even serve as backup energy sources for utilities themselves. Bullish Wall Street analysts even predict that, in addition to buttressing the renewable energy grid, Tesla could combine its expertise in cars, batteries, and digital technology to become a leading maker of self-driving vehicles.


Any of this coming to pass, of course, depends on whether the Gigafactory will actually accomplish what Tesla says it will. To bring prices down, battery industry consultant K.M. Abraham says, Tesla will have to figure out how to make its batteries without pushing up costs for component suppliers who would have to increase their output to meet the car maker’s demands. “Unless you come out with new low-cost materials, the battery prices will remain pretty much the same,” says Abraham, who is also a professor of renewable technology at Northeastern University.


Though details from Tesla are scant, a diagram released by the company suggests it does plan to bring as much of the battery making process as possible within the Gigafactory’s walls. Tesla is also pledging to power much of the plant with its own wind and solar energy, a potential testing ground for using its batteries as part of the electrical grid. Diversifying into different uses could be especially crucial if demand for Tesla’s cars doesn’t hit the company’s own projections. Building a factory on such a massive scale is a huge risk if it only makes one thing, but that risk diminishes if Tesla has the ability to use its expertise to make batteries for many uses. If nothing else, Tesla is creating an unprecedented space just to see what’s possible when energy becomes mobile.


“It’s breathtaking, just the sheer size of it,” Jaffe says of the Gigafactory. “This is so beyond anything by comparison.”






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Apple Better Watch Out. Samsung Wastes Little Time in Wheeling Out More ... - Bloomberg

Just six months after Samsung Electronics released its first smartwatch, the company will start selling three more.


Following up on the Android-based Galaxy Gear that came out in September, Samsung unveiled a trio of new watches this week at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. The South Korean electronics giant seems to be flooding the zone in the hopes of running out the clock on Apple before it can release the much-anticipated iWatch.


Samsung's Gear 2, which has a built-in camera, and Gear 2 Neo, which doesn't, can wirelessly connect with smartphones and run apps designed for a relatively new operating system championed by Samsung called Tizen A third watch, the Gear Fit, has a curved screen, runs basic software and is positioned more as a health device to rival the Fitbit — though it does tell the time.


The smartwatch wave isn't isolated to Samsung. Motorola Mobility, which Google is selling to China's Lenovo Group, said in Barcelona that it plans to release a smartwatch this year, and CNET reports that LG Electronics is working on one, too.


Seriously, they might as well call it Mobile Watch Congress. HTC, the Taiwanese smartphone company that’s currently in the red, is expected to be demonstrating the first of three wearable devices behind closed doors in Barcelona, my colleague Tim Culpan reported. On the show floor, Sony is showing the SmartBand, and Huawei Technologies has the TalkBand.


"We think that wearables in the future can be a large market," Colin Giles, an executive vice president at Shenzhen, China-based Huawei, told Bloomberg News in an interview this week at Mobile World Congress.


Not everyone is convinced. Despite a marketing blitz, Samsung’s original Galaxy Gear was met with a lukewarm reception. Research firm IHS estimates the market for wearable devices, which includes smartwatches, to be worth less than $20 billion a year until at least 2015. Apple alone sold more than that in iPhones last quarter.


Barclays analyst Ben Reitzes wrote in a note last week that a smartwatch isn't going to move the needle for Apple’s business. A spokeswoman for Apple declined to comment.


Timing is everything. Apple isn’t always the first, but it’s shown a knack for putting together the right list of features in a well-designed package along with marketing that shows people why they need to have one. There were plenty of music players on the market before the iPod.


Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty estimates that an Apple watch could generate as much as $17.5 billion in its first year on the market. That would be just under what the iPad did in its first full year available.


Of course, the tech industry is very different from the days of the iPod. For one, Samsung is relentless. First impressions of the Gear Fit coming from Barcelona have been glowing. If Samsung keeps releasing a handful of new watches every six months, it might just find a winner.






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Apple to Construct New Retail Store in Dayton, Ohio - Mac Rumors

Apple is preparing to open a new retail store in Dayton, Ohio by the end of the year, according to the Dayton Business Journal and ifoAppleStore . The company is expected to occupy a space formerly held by women's clothing retailer Lane Bryant at The Greene outdoor shopping center, as a black construction barricade was recently spotted at the location. Apple also posted 12 job listings for the area ranging from Store Leader to Specialist on Tuesday.

apple_store_the_greene_dayton_ohio


A site tracking future Apple Store locations reports it has confirmed by unofficial sources that The Greene is the next location and will open later this year, and sources have told the Dayton Business Journal that The Greene is expected to get the Apple Store.

A large space, formerly occupied by Lane Bryant at 4422 Cedar Park Drive, is currently under construction behind large black barriers. Greene County records list building permits for tenant work at the site, but don’t name the tenant.


Crews from Miller-Valentine Group were seen inside the construction site Wednesday morning, and said they didn't know what retailer was going to use the space.



An Apple Store in Dayton would be the company's seventh retail location in the state of Ohio, which also includes stores in Akron, Cincinnati, Columbus, Westlake, and Woodmere.

As part of its annual 10-K filing [PDF] with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Apple revealed that it plans to open 30 new retail stores in 2014, with approximately two-thirds of those to be located outside of the United States. A report last week stated the company is also planning to open a new retail store in Lansing, Michigan by the end of the year.






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In Wake Of TestFlight's Acquisition By Apple, Twitter's Crashlytics Launches ... - TechCrunch


Crashlytics, the testing and analytics company that was acquired by Twitter last year, is firing up a new beta distribution tool. The timing is pretty on-point as one of the major two players in the business — TestFlight — was just acquired by Apple along with its parent analytics company Burstly.


The new distribution tool is cross-platform — meaning that it works on both Android and iOS. That puts it on rough parity with Hockey, the other major player in the beta distribution space, though Hockey also supports Windows Phone.


The new tool comes out of Crashlytics Labs, the experimental arm of the crash-reporting and analytics firm. It’s been in private beta for a bit but is now expanding into public beta, and you can sign up here if you’re interested.


Of the developers I communicate with and those I polled after TestFlight was acquired, many had switched to Hockey in recent months. The ease of integration and better analytics tools were often cited as reasons that they liked Hockey over TestFlight, though the latter had been more popular for some time. Crashlytics also has a good rep among developers for how easy it is to integrate into their apps and for the quality and detail of its analytics.


If this gets off the ground in a big way, it could become a big player in the space very quickly, especially given the void that TestFlight will leave if Apple shuts down the iOS portions eventually. Of course, there’s always the possibility that Apple will integrate the improvements to the beta distribution system that TestFlight made into its own developer offerings — which would provide a significant incentive to utilize its in-house platform.


Either way, Crashlytics has the resources and the know-how to put out an interesting product here, so let’s see how this goes.






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Apple Explains Exactly How Secure iMessage Really Is - TechCrunch


Millions and millions of people use iMessage every day. But how many people know exactly what’s going on behind the scenes, or what happens to a message once you send it?


Maybe a handful. Up until now, the vast majority of what we knew about iMessage’s inner workings came from reverse engineering and best guesses. This week, however, Apple quietly released a document that breaks it all down.


If you know your stuff when it comes to cryptography, you can find the document here. The iMessage bit starts at page 20, but there’s all sorts of crazy interesting stuff regarding cloud keychain and hardware security packed in there too.


If you don’t know much about crypto, I’ll try to break it down a bit below. I admittedly have plenty of gaps in my crypto knowledge, but I’ve triple-checked this with people who know considerably more about this topic than I.


Before we dive in to the deeper stuff, you’ve got to understand one overarching concept at play here. It’s a fairly standard concept in the tech world, but it’s not something that most people ever have to think about. It’s called public-key cryptography.


To over simplify it: imagine you have a mail box. This box has two keys. One key lets you drop mail into the mail slot, and one key lets you take mail out. The input key and the pickup key are entirely different; one can never be used to replace the other. You can give away a million copies of your input key, and no one could use it to do anything but put mail in. Unless they find a copy of your pickup key or find a weakness in the way your mailbox was designed, your message is safe.


This is the thinking behind public-key cryptography. Your “public key” is like the mail slot key. You can share it with the world, and anyone can encrypt messages to send to you. But the public key only works in one direction. Once a message is encrypted, that public key can’t be used to decrypt it, or reverse the encryption. Once encrypted, your private key (the mail pickup key, in the analogy above) is the only way (barring exploits/brute force with a supercomputer) to restore the message to its original readable form.


With that, here’s how iMessage works:



  • When a user first enables iMessage, your device creates two sets of private and public keys: one set for encrypting data, and one set for signing data (read: signing data is a secondary blurp of data that helps to verify that the encrypted text hasn’t been modified after it was sent to the server. If these two things ever don’t match up, red flags start going off.)

  • Your public keys are sent to Apple’s servers. Your private keys are stored on your device. Apple never sees your private keys.

  • When someone starts an iMessage conversation with you, they fetch your public key(s) from Apple’s servers. Before that message leaves the sender’s device, it’s encrypted into something that only your device knows how to decrypt.

  • So if Apple never has your private key, how do messages arrive at all of your devices in a readable form? How do your private key(s) get from one device to the other?

    Simple answer: they don’t. You’ve actually got one set of keys for each device you add to iCloud, and each iMessage is encrypted independently for each device. So if you have two devices — say, an iPad and an iPhone — each message sent to you is actually encrypted (AES-128) and stored on Apple’s servers twice. Once for each device. When you pull down a message, it’s specifically encrypted for the device you’re on.



  • Some data (“such as the timestamp and APN routing data”, says Apple) is not encrypted.

  • All of this independently encrypted/non-encrypted data is then encrypted as a whole package, on the trips between your device and Apple’s servers. This makes it considerably tougher for attackers sitting between you and Apple’s server to figure out what data is what, and what they should actually try to decrypt.

  • Things change around a bit for long messages and pictures, allowing Apple to hold photos and other media on the iCloud servers without being able to view them. In those case, your device generates a new, random key and a URI (read: address for something on a server) which catalogs where on the iCloud servers the image/media is stored. Apple sends your device the key and URI (which again, only your private key can decrypt), and your device pulls that image down from Apple’s servers and turns it into something readable.

  • Once your device has retrieved a message, that encrypted copy of the message is deleted from Apple’s servers. If you have multiple devices, another encrypted copy meant for another device might sit on their servers until it expires. Messages are stored for up to seven days.


Too long, didnt read? Basically: Unless Apple is omitting something or there’s some backdoor tucked into their many-layers-deep encryption (which, while unlikely, isn’t inconceivable) they really can’t read your iMessages without a fairly insane amount of effort. Sure, they could theoretically brute force their way past your private key. Or they could scrap the entire system and replace it with something with glaring security holes, and hope no one notices.


But the same could be said for any service where someone else is even temporarily storing your messages — when you’re putting things into a black box, even if you think you know exactly how that black box works, you’re trusting that the black box hasn’t changed. And if Apple intends on ever lurking through your iMessages, they’ve made it pretty damned hard for themselves.


imessage graphic






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Visualizing 15 Years Of Acquisitions By Apple, Google, Yahoo, Amazon, And ... - TechCrunch

Apple ends security updates for Snow Leopard - CNNMoney

mac snow leopard

If you're running Snow Leopard, it's time to upgrade.




NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

If you're reading this on a Mac, there's a one-in-five chance you're not getting security patches anymore.


Apple (AAPL , Fortune 500) has stopped issuing updates for Mac OS X 10.6, known as Snow Leopard. That means the company won't be sending out software fixes to protect you from hackers and computer viruses.


The Snow Leopard operating system, released in 2009 remains popular. Snow Leopard is still running on 19% of Macintosh computers, according to data tracker Net Applications. Apple has since released three new iterations of its Mac operating system, including Lion, Mountain Lion and Mavericks.


The good news for Snow Leopard users is that upgrading to the latest operating system is relatively easy -- and free. Most Snow Leopard users can download Mac OS X Mavericks from the Mac App Store, so long as they have the latest Snow Leopard update installed and their Mac was purchased in 2007 or later. Mavericks won't work with MacBooks and iMacs sold before 2007.


Related: Apple fixes security flaw for Macs


Snow Leopard users don't have to upgrade -- Macs running Mac OS X 10.6 will keep working without upgrading to Mavericks. But without the occasional software patches from Apple, bugs and security flaws will go unaddressed, making computers running Snow Leopard a potential target for hackers.


Macs are increasingly targeted by cyberattackers. The recently discovered security hole in Apple devices -- which allowed outsiders access to emails, instant messages and online bank transactions -- shows how significant updates can be. That bug was fixed earlier this week.


Like Snow Leopard, Microsoft (MSFT , Fortune 500) has announced that it will discontinue security updates for Windows XP on April 8. That will pose a potentially much more serious security problem. An amazing 29% of computers across the globe are still running Windows XP, according to NetMarketShare. Comparatively, just over 1% of the world's PCs are running Snow Leopard.







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Former Apple exec apologizes over first iPhone - Times of India

NEW DELHI: Apple revolutionized the mobile landscape in 2007 with the launch of the original iPhone. However, a former Apple executive who was part of the team that worked on the first iPhone has apologized to users over the device.

Bob Borchers, the former director of product marketing at Apple, said the first iPhone was only an "okay" phone, rather than the game-changing product it has been called. At the ongoing Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, he said that the Apple team had its priority wrong and focused on user interface instead of technologies.


Borchers said, "What was interesting at Apple is that technology took a back seat to user interface. If you look at the iPhone as a technological element, everything had been done before; it was about bringing all that together into an experience that was compelling and then communicating it as an experience not as a technology."


He explained that instead of making a touchscreen phone or the best-ever iPod, Apple should have focused upon the 'internet-in-your-pocket' factor. He stated, "There were three value propositions in order of importance: a revolutionary phone, the best iPod ever and the internet in your pocket, but in fact it should have been the reverse. Having the internet in your pocket was the most important."


The original iPhone did not work on 3G networks, and could only access data via 2G and Wi-Fi; on the other hand, rival mobile phones at the time already had 3G access on-the-go.


Borchers credited faster internet access and app ecosystem for the smartphone revolution. He said, "It was a great iPod, but it was the connection to the internet and the app community that made the difference."


However, he acknowledged that the emphasis on user experience, rather than tech jargon, is among the key reasons behind the success of the iPhone line.






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