Posts Tagged ‘Apple’

Apple’s Cook visited Foxconn in 2010 suicide response

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011

It’s good to know that Apple took the situation seriously enough to act by sending its Chief Operating Officer to China. By the look of things, the problem seems to have been largely resolved.

Logo of Foxconn Technology Group Tim Cook personally visited supplier Foxconn’s Shenzhen facility in June 2010 as part of efforts to stop worker suicides, Apple revealed in its yearly report.

Tim Cook met Foxconn Technology Group’s CEO Terry Gou after 11 Foxconn workers committed suicide, mostly by jumping from high-rise dormitories provided by the company.

Foxconn briefed Cook on measures taken to prevent further deaths. Cook’s entourage included suicide-prevention specialists who made recommendations that Foxconn implemented. These included hiring psychological counselors, opening a 24-hour care center and installing nets in factories, Apple divulged.

Cook is now running Apple’s day-to-day operations while CEO Steve Jobs is on medical leave since January. Apple’s shares gained $2.33 to $259.18 in Nasdaq trading yesterday. Its shares have gained 11% this year.

Apple app (Free): Send Chinese New Year greetings in SMS and email

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011
Choose from a long list of pre-canned Chinese New Year greetings and well-wishes and send them as an SMS or email.

As an alternative or complement to traditional paper Chinese New Year cards, many have been sending well-wishes on SMS on the morning of the actual day, and throughout the day as well. You know – those long wordy festive greetings in Chinese characters that advertise the sender’s fingertip dexterity in churning out those characters on a tiny handphone.

Send SMS/email CNY greetings in Chinese

Look for this icon in the Apps store or its publisher's name "YYH Creative" in English.

This 春节短信 (兔年特别版)free app for Apple devices provides a long list of pre-canned Chinese New Year greetings and well-wishes that you can send as an SMS or email. There’s no english name, do a search for free Chinese New Year apps and look for the icon. The name of its publisher “YYH Creative” is in English though.

The well-wishes are organised into different categories based on recipients (mother, father, teachers, lover, boss) or theme (humour, sincere, classic). Many are customised for the Rabbit year since this will be the Year of the Rabbit in the Chinese horoscope.

There is also a small section for the upcoming Valentine’s Day although I have never sent a pre-canned Valentine’s Day message before.

Apart from sending a selected greeting through SMS or email, it can also be copied onto the clipboard or stored in a shortlist folder. Sent greetings are archived for future reference.

Although this app might be convenient for those who find it too tiresome to type their own New Year well-wishes, I would suggest amending the pre-canned greetings to personalise them.

A little knowledge of Chinese is needed to use this app, since the menus and categories are all in Chinese.

A word of caution to those who know only a little Chinese but want to impress by sending a bombastic greeting in Chinese, get someone to toss a quick glance at the message. A casual browse under the category for greetings to teachers contained one addressing the recipient as a lover, although the rest of the message was indeed written with teachers as the recipient. A typo perhaps?

Overall, a useful app for those trying to minimise RSI on their fingers from pressing out those long Chinese New Year SMS in Chinese characters.

Apple app (Free): Dress up as the God of Wealth

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

Bring a smile to friends and relatives this Chinese New Year by sending them a festive greeting dressed up as the traditional God of Wealth.

“A FREE single-trick app that does one thing, it ran pretty smoothly on my iPhone without hanging or major complains, and provided much amusement to my kids putting all manner of chimpanzee/orang utan faces onto the digital placard.”

The Lunar New Year is just round the corner. This year it falls on 3 Feb – that’s next Thursday.

Part of the Chinese New Year tradition is to send greeting cards carrying festive greetings. Many carry well wishes for good health, happiness, and success in career or studies.

The Chinese God of Wealth with your own face

Bring Chinese New Year greetings dressed up as the traditional God of Wealth.

By far, the favourite festive greeting is to for prosperity, such that “Gong Xi Fa Cai” has become a set phrase even in the English language. It means “Congratulations on hitting it rich!” And that usually happens when the Chinese God of Wealth (财神 – cai shen) pays you a visit.

Combine the two and you get an Apple app that allows you to make a simple greeting card on your iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch, dressed up as the ubiquitous god bearing a well-wishing banner and smiling favourably on the recipient.

Remember those cardboard placards of cartoon characters with the face cut-out so that you can scramble up behind the placard and stick your face through the hole and pose as the cartoon character? Well, “God of Wealth camera” simulates that.

Using the app

The app is simple and comprises four simple steps with a few options to choose from. You can jump to any step by pressing the four buttons at the bottom of the screen. Look here for screenshots.

Step 1: Take a photo with the camera on your Apple device or choose one from the photo album. A front facing portrait works best here.

Step 2: Identify the face. A translucent Cai Shen face is initially placed where the app thinks the face is. You can move the face, rotate it and resize it to superimpose it on the face in the photo ( if there is more than one face) that you want to use.

Step 3: The face is put in the hole in the placard. There are five designs available, and for each of these, you can change the default text greetings on the banner that Cai Shen holds in his hands. You can also choose to remove the long beard (actually it’s the moustache) from the face.

Step 4: Export the picture to your album as a jpeg file, or post it to your Facebook account from inside the app. All done in a few minutes.

Wish-list

Potentially, the most time-consuming step is the second step. If you’re lucky, the face is properly positioned when you first go into Step 3. Otherwise, you have to go back and forth between Steps 2 and 3 until you get it right: adjust face position, size and rotation in Step 2, see its result in Step 3 and go back to Step 2 to re-adjust.

Some might find it tiresome, but take it as a challenge or game of sorts and it can actually begin to become a little fun, especially when you finally position it right. If only you can adjust the face directly in Step 3, it would be more intuitive and less iterative.

It also gets difficult to activate the side and corner handles to adjust the size and rotation of the face when it is very small. If only you could zoom in to make the face bigger just for making adjustments. But then again this is a free app. So just snap or choose a photo where the face is large.

Why the option to to remove the moustache? I found that out soon enough. It makes it so much more tricky (fun?!) to position the face with the moustache in the right place! So if you don’t have the gumption, just turn off the “beard” option.

I tend to leave the greetings alone. Typing in English is no go, only the first four letters appear on the banner. You have to type in Chinese characters in typical four-worded wishes. Even then, I find the Chinese characters stiff and blocky. The default calligraphy based greeting on those banners look much nicer unless you have a compelling reason to change the greetings – like putting a funny or naughty greeting instead.

Overall, a pleasant app that doesn’t hang, does one thing pretty well, kills time and keeps the kids entertained.

Disclaimer: I am not associated with the developer in any way. Just thought I’ll post a digital-imaging related app for the festive season.

Google and Apple parallels

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011
Though co-founder Larry Page is taking over from chief executive Eric Schmidt at Google, Apple’s co-founder Steve Jobs has had no choice but to hand over day-to-day running of Apple to COO Tim Cook.

I can’t help but to observe a parallel between the “triumvirate” at Google, and the trio at Apple.
  • Eric Schmidt – Tim Cook (the professional manager)
  • Sergey Brin – Steve Wozniak (co-founder, co-innovator, who is more comfortable inventing stuff)
  • Larry Page – Steve Jobs (co-founder, more hands-on founder who wants to personally steer the company)

The triumvirates at Google and Apple

Whether Larry Page can be as successful as Steve Jobs is not proven yet, thought that must be what he’s aspiring to.

Indeed, that’s how companies are run. you need the visionary and the manager.

Many visionaries have tried to also run the company and have crashed the company. But Steve Jobs is an exception and I bet Larry Page believes he is another.

Only time will tell.

Google’s 4th quarter earnings (Ended 31 Dec 2010)

Friday, January 21st, 2011

Google reported a net income of US$2.54 billion (or US$7.81 per share) in the quarter ended 31 Dec. This is an increase of 29% from US$1.97 billion (or US$6.13 per share) in the quarter a year earlier.

Google IncProfit excluding some items was US$8.75 a share, exceeding the US$8.08 average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg, and exceeding the US$6.79 a share from the quarter a year earlier.

Sales of US$6.37 billion (excluding commissions paid to advertising partners) surpassed the US$6.06 billion average of estimates. This is up from US$4.95 billion from the preceding year.

According to ComScore, Android beat Apple’s iPhone in US smartphone subscribers for the first time in November, accounting for 26% of the market, compared with 25% for Apple. BlackBerry maker Research In Motion continued to lead with 33.5%.

In the search-engine business, Google continues to lead. In December, Google accounted for 66.6% of searches in the US (up from 66.2% in November) compared to a share of 28% (down from 28.2%)  from Microsoft and Yahoo combined. Yahoo began using Microsoft’s Bing technology for its online search in August.

Google Co-founder Larry Page replaces Eric Schmidt as CEO

Friday, January 21st, 2011
As Apple’s co-founder Steve Jobs hands over day-to-day running of the company to COO Tim Cook, Google announces in a shocker that its co-founder Larry Page will take over the reins of the company from chief executive Eric Schmidt.

As the new chief executive, 38-year-old Larry Page will “merge Google’s technology and business vision,” Schmidt said in a blog post. He is currently the president of products in Google.

What Larry's name card might look like

The 55-year-old Schmidt will be staying in Google as the Executive Chairman and serve as an advisor to Page and co-founder Sergey Brin. Schmidt will focus on external issues like “deals, partnerships, customers and broader business relationships, government outreach and technology thought leadership.”

37-year-old Sergey Brin, who is currently the president of technology, will focus on strategic projects, especially new products and assume the simple title of Co-Founder.

When Schmidt first joined Google in 2001, people in the Silicon Valley joked that the company was finally going to get some “adult supervision.” According to The New York Times, “neither Mr. Brin nor Mr. Page, the company’s co-founders, had much formal work experience in the technology industry besides the work they were doing at Google, which they started in 1998.” Neither of them has ever been the CEO of a public company.

Now, Schmidt writes on his Twitter account to some 225,000 followers that “Day-to-day adult supervision is no longer needed.”

Page will be helming a company with 24,000 employees – more than 100 times the 200 odd employees when Schmidt took over 10 years ago.

His challenges inlcude intense rivalry from Facebook, the world’s largest networking site founded in 2004, which boasts more than 500 million users. Google also competes with Apple in mobile advertising, and with Yahoo and Microsoft in its traditional search arena.

The management changeout was announced during the press release on Thursday of Google’s Q4 financial results, which beat forecasts by Wall Street analysts.

Bloggers can outshine the professional analysts too

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Amateur analysts can do as well as the pros on Wall Street – sometimes even outshine them.

Horace Dediu – a blogger writing from his home in Helsinki – is the most accurate analyst covering Apple Inc.

An ex-Nokia Oyj worker, Dediu has published on his blog the most accurate estimates about Apple for the past four quarters, beating professional analysts from reputable companies like Morgan Stanley, Citigroup and Deutsche Bank.
Horace Dediu as seen on Facebook
This is based on a tally maintained by another blogger, Daniel Tello.

According to Adam Satariano of Bloomberg,

“Dediu and Tello are part of a cadre of amateur analysts who study Apple and post their insights on personal blogs and websites such as Mac Observer’s Apple Finance Board. Their accuracy projecting Apple’s performance — data that can help predict stock movements — is giving investors a free alternative to Wall Street and creating a rivalry with the pros.”

Tello says that “Competitiveness with Wall Street analysts is a natural consequence of us bloggers backing each other as the
‘underdogs.’”

Read the full story on Bloomberg.

Apple stocks drop on Jobs’ absence

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011
As expected, Apple’s stocks dropped 6.15% at 327.05 USD (from last Friday’s close at 348.48 USD) when it opened in the US on Tuesday after the announcement on Sunday of his impending absence. Prices recovered somewhat to close down 2.25% at 340.65 USD.

Steve Jobs last went on extended medical leave from January to June 2009. From the time he began exhibiting signs of weight loss in June 2008 till his return to work in June the following year, Apple shares were down 23.3%.

Apple stocks drop on 18 Jan 2009

Apple stocks drop 6.15% on opening and closed down 2.25%.

Apple's stocks during Steve Jobs' previous medical leave in 2009

Apple's stocks initially dropped before recovering when Jobs returned

Perhaps as an indication of the confidence that Tim Cook gained when he oversaw the day-to-day operations in Jobs’ absence, the shares actually gained some 70% from the time Jobs announced his absence on 14 January 2009 till his return on 29 June that year.

Perhaps there is a slight difference in the two situations. In his memo in 2009, there was an expected date of return – six months down the line – which was fulfilled. This time round, there is no hint on how long the medical leave is expected to be.

In the immediate term, any decline in Apple’s value may be cushioned by the expected positive earnings result to be announced today from the bumper quarter reported on. The strong outlook from the launch of the iPhone with Verizon is likely to provide further support.

Even the clogs for the next versions of iPhone and iPad would have been set in motion by now. The question will therefore be on when Steve Jobs returns and whether an Apple without him would be able to continue on the steam roller of innovation that it has been on in recent years.

Apple Steve Jobs on medical leave

Monday, January 17th, 2011

In a memo from Steve Jobs to all Apple employees today, he divulged that he will be on medical leave to focus on his health.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs

Apple CEO Steve Jobs

55-year-old Steve Jobs will remain as CEO and be involved in major strategic decisions for the company, while COO Tim Cook will drive day to day operations. The same arrangements were made when Steve Jobs took 6 months off from January to June in 2009 also on medical grounds.

There is no mention how long the medical leave of absence will last, nor whether it was related to the liver transplant in May 2009 or his earlier victory over pancreatic cancer in 2004.

US Markets are closed for Martin Luther King Day. Apple shares on Wall Street may suffer when it reopens on Tuesday. Between June 6, 2008 and June 26, 2009, when Mr. Jobs began exhibiting weight loss and then went on leave, Apple shares were down 23.3%.

Update: Apple stocks slumped in Europe as its shares fell 6.2% to 244.05 Euro (326.41 USD) at its closing in the Frankfurt stock exchange in Germany.

Apple COO Tim Cook

COO Tim Cook

50-year-old Tim Cook was invited to join Apple as senior vice president of operations from PC maker Compaq in 1998. Unlike Steve Jobs, who is well-known for his slick presentation and showmanship, Tim Cook is quiet, soft-spoken and low-key (wired.com), but adept at keeping a tight ship on operations.

Cook  first stepped up to stand in for Jobs as the latter recuperated from surgery for the tumor in his pancreas. Cook then held the fort during Jobs’ absence in 2009.

Perhaps as an indication of the confidence Cook gained during that period, Apple’s shares actually gained some 70 percent from the time Jobs announced his absence on 14 January 2009 till his return on 29 June that year.

Looking ahead, major items on Cook’s palette will include the rollout of the iPhone on Verizon and the widely rumoured launch of the iPad 2 and iPhone 5.

Hailing from Alabama, Cook graduated from Auburn University and enjoys the outdoors and cycling.

Steve Jobs’ email:

Team,

At my request, the board of directors has granted me a medical leave of absence so I can focus on my health. I will continue as CEO and be involved in major strategic decisions for the company.

I have asked Tim Cook to be responsible for all of Apple’s day to day operations. I have great confidence that Tim and the rest of the executive management team will do a terrific job executing the exciting plans we have in place for 2011.

I love Apple so much and hope to be back as soon as I can. In the meantime, my family and I would deeply appreciate respect for our privacy.

Steve

Apple’s one-day sale

Friday, January 14th, 2011

For those thinking of buying Apple’s stuff, there’s a one-day sale on its online store today.

Apple's one day online store sale on 14 Jan 2011