Monday, November 18, 2013
Samsung hurt iPhone, iPad demand — Apple exec
A top Apple Inc executive testified on Friday that Samsung Electronics Co Ltd undermined his company’s marketing efforts, reputation and business by selling devices that copied the iPhone and iPad.
Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller appeared as a witness during a damages retrial between the two companies in a San Jose, California, federal court. Schiller also denied that Apple launched the iPad mini as a response to competition in the tablet market, saying Apple was merely trying to make a better product.
“It’s much harder to create demand and people question our innovation and design skills like people never used to,” Schiller said, adding that Samsung “weakened the world view of Apple as this great designer and innovator.”
Apple and Samsung are engaged in global litigation over each other’s patents. Last year, Apple was awarded over $1 billion after it convinced a jury that Samsung copied iPhone features, such as using fingers to pinch and zoom on the screen, along with design touches such as the phone’s flat, black glass screen.
However, in March U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh ordered a retrial on about $400 million in damages, ruling that the previous jury made some errors in its calculations. Samsung manufactures phones that use the Android operating system, which is developed by Google Inc.
Apple argued Samsung should pay $379.8 million for violating five patents on the iPhone, including about $114 million in lost profits. Part of Apple’s argument to recover lost profits is that Samsung customers would have bought the U.S. company’s iPhones had Samsung phones not incorporated Apple’s patented features.
However, Koh ruled on Friday that Apple had not presented sufficient evidence to recover lost profits on four out of the five patents in the retrial. That could pare back how much lost profits the jury ultimately awards to Apple.
An Apple representative declined to comment on Koh’s ruling. Samsung says it should only have to pay a total of $52.7 million.
Schiller has led Apple’s marketing efforts since the iPhone was launched in 2007. He touted the pioneering design and “ease-of-use” of Apple’s products before the six-woman, two-man jury.
Samsung copied “many attributes of Apple’s products; its designs and features … the very essence of what Apple is about,” Schiller told the jury on Friday. “If we don’t have that, we don’t have Apple’s business.”
Under cross-examination, Samsung attorney William Price tried to push Schiller to concede that Apple was not the first to create an attractive and easy-to-use phone.
“Apple doesn’t own a patent on a product being beautiful or sexy, isn’t that correct?” Price asked.
“The industry does tend to follow trends of products that are doing well,” Schiller said.
Price also tried to get Schiller to admit that Apple followed Samsung’s lead in introducing smaller tablets by offering its iPad mini. But Schiller said the introduction of the mini “had nothing to do with competition.”
“We were simply trying to make our product better,” Schiller added.
Schiller was the last of Apple’s six witnesses. Samsung is expected to begin presenting witnesses on Friday, and Koh has set closing arguments for Tuesday.
source: interaksyon.com
Monday, October 21, 2013
Apple expected to rev up iPad line as tablet market heats
SAN FRANCISCO — Apple is expected to rev up its iPad line Tuesday as the tablet market heats up with competition from devices powered by software from Google and Microsoft.
Analysts agree that iPads will star at an invitation-only event being held in San Francisco on the cusp of the prime year-end holiday shopping season.
“Job One for Apple is to get something out there on the large-size iPad that gets people excited, then obviously from a specification focus, the Mini needs to catch up with what everybody else has done,” NPD analyst Stephen Baker told AFP.
“There are a lot of other things happening in that large-size tablet space and there is a huge amount of choices in smaller devices.”
Tablets face mounting competition from touch-screen notebook computers powered by Microsoft Windows software and priced between $350 and $500, according to the analyst.
“Apple will… be number one in large-size tablets probably for a long time, but the definition of competition will change,” Baker said.
Apple is also under pressure to adapt to the popularity of premium tablets with high-quality screens in the seven- to eight-inch (18- to 20-centimeter) range where the Mini competes.
Online retail titan Amazon.com on Friday began shipping new seven-inch Kindle Fire HDX tablets with boosted display quality and computing power at the starting price of $229.
“We can’t wait to get this tablet into our customers’ hands,” said Amazon Kindle vice president Peter Larsen.
Google’s latest Nexus 7 tablet powered by its Android software has been a hot seller at a similarly tempting price.
Emailed invitations to the Apple event revealed little other than the time and place, and bore the message: “We still have a lot to cover.”
A graphic in the shape of an iPad showed Apple’s iconic logo under a shower of colorful leaves.
Unconfirmed reports are that Apple will show off a new version of its full-size iPad that will be thinner than its predecessor and boast improved camera capabilities.
Scrutiny of Apple’s supply chain has industry trackers thinking the new iPad will get “narrower, thinner, and lighter” and possibly be built with processors at least as powerful as those used in the freshly-launched iPhone 5S, according to Gartner analyst Van Baker.
An upgraded version of the iPad mini with an improved screen is also expected.
Gartner’s Baker will be watching whether new iPad models have 64-bit processors as engines in a significant boost that would enable tablets to handle more heavy weight programs and games.
“It has the potential to make tablets much more compelling devices in terms of content creation; making devices more sophisticated with more horsepower-hungry applications,” the analyst said.
“It will increase the likelihood that tablets will displace PCs (personal computers).”
Analysts agreed that top-end, full-size iPads may get a fingerprint recognition security feature that has been a hit in the iPhone 5S.
Such upgrades would promise to entice buyers to pay a bit more for full-size tablets from Apple instead of choosing lower-priced Mini models, boding well for the company’s bottom line.
The iPad remains the largest-selling tablet, according to surveys, but its market share is being eroded by rivals using the Google Android operating system.
“Mobile connectivity continues to grow and its impact is much broader than business stories about which computer makers are selling the most units,” said Kristen Purcell, associate director for research at the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project.
“We see mobile connectivity affecting everything from the way people get news and learn to the way they take care of their health and the way they share their lives through social media.”
Apple was also expected to discuss its computer operating system and its MacBook laptop line at the event.
The company is coming off a wildly successful launch of two new iPhone models last month. It estimates selling a record nine million iPhones in the three days after launching two new versions of the smartphone.
source: interaksyon.com
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Tablets to overtake notebook PCs by 2016: study

Tablet computers are expected to overtake notebook PCs by 2016 as consumers shift to newer devices like the Apple iPad, a survey said Tuesday.
The survey by research firm NPD said tablets will be “the growth driver” for the mobile computer market over the next few years.
Overall mobile PC shipments including tablets will grow from 347 million in 2012 to over 809 million by 2017.
Notebook PC shipments are expected to increase from 208 million in 2012 to 393 million by 2017, but tablet shipments are expected to grow from 121 million to 416 million in the same period.
A key driver for tablet growth is adoption in North America, Japan and Western Europe, which will account for 66 percent of shipments in 2012 and remain in the 60 percent range throughout the next few years, NPD said.
“Consumer preference for mobile computing devices is shifting from notebook to tablet PCs, particularly in mature markets,” said Richard Shim, analyst at NPD.
“While the lines between tablet and notebook PCs are blurring, we expect mature markets to be the primary regions for tablet PC adoption. New entrants are tending to launch their initial products in mature markets. Services and infrastructure needed to create compelling new usage models are often better established in mature markets.”
In its most recent quarterly survey on mobile devices, NPD said in May that Apple’s iPad had 62.8 percent of the tablet market, with Samsung a distant second at 7.5 percent.
Since then Google said it would sell its own branded tablet made by Asus, while Microsoft introduced a tablet that converts to a notebook, to be on sale later this year.
source: interaksyon.com