Posts Tagged ‘Apple’

Nubox in Singapore opens fifth and sixth store

Saturday, August 21st, 2010

Never has there been a better time to retail Apple products.

Logo of Nubox

Nubox, Apple retailer in Singapore

Nubox, an arm of Newstead Technologies in Singapore, has opened its fifth and sixth Apple Premium Reseller stores at Tampines Mall (1700 sq ft) and Raffles City (2100 sq ft), selling the complete range of Apple products.

Nubox already has an Apple Premium Reseller store at Jurong Point and three Apple Authorised Reseller stores at Sim Lim Square, Funan DigitaLife Mall and Causeway Point. The Sim Lim Square outlet, opened in 2008, was Nubox’s first store.

Facade of Nubox APR store at Tampines Mall

Nubox APR store at Tampines Mall

Evelyn Chua, Business and Marketing Manager at Newstead Technologies, revealed that Nubox will be opening another two outlets (one at the upcoming NEX, the new shopping mall at Serangoon Central) by the end of 2010, and another three next year.

Other Apple Premium Resellers in Singapore include EpiCentre and iStudio at many locations around Singapore. The list of resellers and their locations/tel can be found here.

Launch crowd at Tampines Mall outlet

Launch crowd at Tampines Mall outlet vying for store opening promotional deals.

BlackBerry BlackPad from Research In Motion (RIM)?

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

At last, I see signs of some movement from Research In Motion (RIM), the maker of the  BlackBerry smartphone, in response to the inroads that its rival are making into the smartphone scene.

Artist impression of a BlackPad.

Is this what a BlackPad will look like?

It is much too early to tell whether this move will help RIM stave off its rivals’ inroads into its market share, but it is at least something. However, I believe RIM needs more than just a new device. Apple is successful because of the entire framework – apps, iTunes, chic branding. RIM is lagging in the Apps arena and does not have any music framework. The only thing it can leverage on is its branding from the success of its BlackBerrys. Even that is fading fast in the face of the popularity of the iPhone. I wonder if people still use BlackBerry as a verb anymore? Assessing company email from the phone is old news. What do people talk about nowadays? Apps – Apple apps and Android Apps.

RIM has acquired the internet rights to blackpad.com, fueling speculation that it is developing a tablet device to challenge Apple’s wildly successful iPad.

According to the Whois database of Internet domain names, the domain name assigned to RIM was created on July 8 and expires Sept. 8, 2011.

Bloomberg reports that there was no record of a trademark application for “blackpad” with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as of today.

Apple, the maker of the iPad, claimed in June that it has sold 3 million of the tablet computers within 80 days of launch in the US.

Other device makers are vying to develop tablets following Apple’s success with its iPad, although the concept of tablet computers is not new and had been actively but not as successfully pursued by Microsoft nearly a decade ago.

Hewlett-Packard, which bought smartphone maker Palm earlier this month, applied to the Patent Office on July 9 to register the name Palmpad for computers and computer software. HP said last week it plans to produce a tablet device this year.

Promises from RIM for future BlackBerrys

Friday, July 9th, 2010
BlackBerry Bold 9650 smartphone

BlackBerry smartphone from RIM

Canadian based Research In Motion (RIM) is hoping to woo consumers as BlackBerry loses ground to Apple’s iPhone and smartphones running Google’s Android operating system. RIM currently leads with 41 percent of the market share for smartphones versus 22 percent for Apple, according to Gartner.

BlackBerry’s strengths lie in their strong security features and data capabilities, which is what corporate clients value. RIM had grabbed the lead in market share by enabling wireless email access easy and secure for BlackBerry users.

However, easy email access has become a basic feature in smartphones, with Apple’s iPhone and Android-based smartphones boasting hip handsets and vast librabries of applications that let users customize their phones.

As of July, there are 225,000 iPhone apps and 65,000 Android apps, compared to 7000 for the BlackBerry. RIM needs to persuade software developers to produce more apps for BlackBerrys, in order to attract consumers. Wade Beavers, US-based software developer has built 142 apps for the iPhone, 130 for Android, and “no more than seven” for the Blackberry.

Beavers griped that RIM is difficult to work with because the apps need to be customised for different BlackBerry models. He said that interest in BlackBerry apps among users is so limited that it’s hard to make money from the programs that he does write for it. Beavers added that “developing for RIM is just a waste of time until they can show there’s an appetite for apps on their platform”.

BlackBerry’s weak browser capability is another issue. Although CTOs do not covet or welcome fun features like games and video apps for their employees, more users want their companies to smartphones sexier than the BlackBerry.

Bloomberg reports that “PayPay has gone from all BlackBerrys two years ago to about half iPhones today”. Other companies like OCBC bank in Singapore are also switching from BlackBerry to other platforms.

A friend of mine carries two phones – a BlackBerry issued by the company and her personal smartphone. She uses the BlackBerry only to access the company’s messaging system and the Windows-based Acer smartphone for everything else. She does not enjoy the Acer at all, but at least she does not change the company name – she has nicknamed RIM to RIP and strongly believes it will follow the footsteps of the killed KINs in the not-too-distant future. That’s how much she enjoys her BlackBerry – not to mention the hassle of having to carry two handphones.

RIM is poised to unleash a wave of new technology which Co-Chief Executive Officer Jim Balsillie promises will have consumers “blown away”. Although RIM’s sneak peek of the BlackBerry 6 technology in April did not spark much enthusiasm, Balsille says he is planning a new look for BlackBerry’s devices, enhanced software and a better user experience.

I am looking forward to hearing more specific details of what these features are.

iPhone 4 debut floods secondhand market with older models

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010
iPhone 3GS, the model before the new iPhone 4

Old iPhones flood the market

A deluge of used iPhones are hitting eBay, recyclers and discount sites, following Apple’s wildly successful debut of the iPhone 4.

Ryan Flinn from Bloomberg reports that in the two weeks after preorders for iPhone 4 started, Gazelle.com – a site that buys electronics from consumers – bought 20,000 used iPhones – compared to 350 in a typical two-week period.

Apple aficionados scramble to purchase the latest iPhones in the annual introduction of new models by the company. While many of the old phones are thrown away or abandoned in a drawer, millions are recycled via secondhand dealers.

Secondhand stores can sell them at more than the price of a new phone from AT&T because AT&T subsidizes the price but comes with a contract.

eBay’s online site has seen the number of used iPhone 3GS and 3G listed for sale increase by 124 percent between June 5 and June 28.

BuyMyTronics.com, which purchases used electronics, has gone from buying 10 iPhones a day, to a daily averaged of almost 40 in recent weeks.

The flood of old iPhones has led to a drop in price in the secondhand market. Gazelle’s offer price for a mint-condition 32 GB iPhone 3GS – last year’s model – has fallen from US$304, prior to the launch of iPhone 4, to US$168.

Apple sued for reception problems on iPhone 4

Thursday, July 1st, 2010
Is iPhone 4 sweating yet"?

Is iPhone 4 sweating yet"?

Two separate complaints were filed against Apple Inc. in federal court in San Francisco on 30 June, accusing the company of unfair business practices and false and misleading advertising because of reception problems with its new iPhone 4.

The two lawsuits were filed separately by a New Jersey resident and a Massachusetts resident. They had bought the new iPhone 4 and seek to represent other buyers of the new mobile phone in a class action, or group, lawsuit.

The iPhone 4 was launched on 24 June but criticism surfaced over diminishing signal strength when users cover the bottom left corner of the phone with their palm.

Apple has sold 1.7 million iPhone 4 within the first three days of its launch, making it the fastest selling gadget Apple has launched to date.

(more…)

Steve Jobs at All Things Digital Conference in Los Angeles

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010
Steve Jobs at D8 in Los Angeles on 1 Jun 2010

Steve Jobs at D8 in Los Angeles on 1 Jun 2010

Steve Jobs kicked off the 8th annual All Things Digital Conference in Los Angeles on 1 Jun 2010. The three-day tech event will feature other industry leaders including Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, AOL Chief Tim Armstrong and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerburg. Steve Jobs last appeared in the series of conferences in 2007 alongside Bill Gates.

Here are Steve’s main bullets from his one-and-a-half hour interview with hosts Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg.

  • Passing Microsoft in valuation was “surreal”.
  • Flash is a technology that’s waning.
  • HTML5 is starting to emerge as a rival to Flash.
  • Gaps on iPhone/iPads caused by HTML5 are getting solved.
  • The market will decide whether iPhone/iPads without Flash is viable.
  • There’s a debate about whether the lost iPhone prototype was left behind at the bar or stolen out of the Apple engineer’s bag.
  • The Foxconn suicides are troubling but the 400,000-employee Foxconn factory is not a sweatshop. Apple is trying to address the situation.
  • Apple has no plans to go into the search business because others do it well.
  • Google started the competition with Apple by moving into the mobile platform with the Android OS.
  • The iPhone OS was conceived for a tablet but the iPhone was rolled out first.
  • Consumers are likely to migrate away from the PC to tablets within the next 5 years due to the evolution of demographics and demand.
  • Rules for approving/rejecting an iPad App:
    • It has to do what it’s advertised to do
    • It has to not crash
    • It can’t use private APIs
    • It can’t defame other people
  • 95% of Apps are approved within 7 days.
  • The current Ad delivery system in the industry sucks and iAd hopes to do it better

Two million Apple iPads in less than 60 days

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Apple sold 2 million iPads in less than 60 days since the tablet’s launch on April 3, the company said. It took 2 years for the iPod to reach the 2-millionth mark, and about 4 months to sell its 2 millionth iPhone. In fact, it took the hugely successful iPhone 74 days just to reach the 1-millionth mark.

The Apple juggernaut is rolling on, leaving fellow tech companies in the dust. The shares are rising even as Microsoft, Google, HP, IBM, eBay, Amazon, Yahoo are diminishing in market value.

Apple sells 2 million iPads in less than 60 days

Apple sells 2 million iPads in less than 60 days

The company is hitting the headlines every few days. Apple first launched the iPad in the US on 3 Apr, achieved its first million sales of the iPad on 3 May after merely 28 days, released the iPad to 9 countries worldwide on 28 May, has now announced its two millionth iPad milestone on 31 May, will be speaking at the  All Things Digital D8 Conference in Los Angeles on 1 Jun, and will probably unveil the new iPhone during the WWDC on 7 Jun. The momentum of the steam engine that is Apple does not seem likely to ebb in the near future.

5000 new Apps have already been released for the iPad, while most of the more than 200,000 Apps already on the App Store can be run on the iPad, including those already purchased for the iPhone and iPod Touch.

iPad costs a quarter more in the UK than in the US

Monday, May 31st, 2010

The ipad costs more outside of the US, Reuters said, citing  an Australian CommSec study.

Prices of the iPads were the cheapest in the US, while prices in Europe, especially the UK, were the highest – almost a quarter of the price higher.

Chart of Apple iPad prices across the world

Apple iPad prices varies worldwide

The prices of the entry level 16 GB WiFi only iPad and the top end 64 GB WiFi + 3G version were both collated and converted to the equivalent US Dollars.

The tablet device is targeted at the niche between a laptop and a smartphone, with a form factor suited for surfing the web, watching movies and reading electronic books. It can also run apps designed for the iPhone as well as apps specially customised for it.

The detailed data is tabulated below.

(more…)

Worldwide launch of iPad maintains Apple’s momentum

Saturday, May 29th, 2010
Apple iPad goes on sale in 9 foreign countries on Friday 28 May 2010

Apple iPad went on sale in 9 foreign countries on Friday 28 May 2010

Apple shares continued its advance even though shares other companies including Microsoft, Google, HP, IBM, Yahoo, eBay, Adobe, Amazon fell. Apple now leads Microsoft by US$7 billion in terms of market capitalisation.

Maintaining the momentum through the anticipated release of the new iPhone at the WWDC on 7 June and further foreign release of the iPad in July, I won’t be surprised if Apple overtakes Exxon Mobil by then to become the most valuable company in the US.

The worldwide launch of the iPad saw the gadget released in 9 countries – UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Japan, Australia and Canada – two months after its initial launch in the US.

The much awaited release saw the expected queues build up at  Apple stores in these countries more than a day before the 28 May Friday launch date.

The iPad will be released to a further 9 countries – Austria, Belgium, Ireland, Luxemburg, the Netherlands, Mexico, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Singapore – in July, and additional countries later this year.

Expect the same pent-up demand to build to the same frenzy when glazy-eyed fans vie to be the first in their respective countries to buy the iPad from a local store.

Was it the iPad that propelled Apple past Microsoft?

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Curious as to how Apple has upstaged Microsoft in terms of market capitalisation, I plotted the market capitalisation of Apple against Microsoft between 1 June 2009 to 26 May 2010 (at monthly intervals except for the final data point).

Chart of Apple vs Microsoft in terms of market capitalisation

Was it the iPad that helped Apple overtake Microsoft?

Seems like the gap between Microsoft and Apple remained rather constant at  roughly US$60-80 billion until the announcement of the iPad by Steve Jobs on 27 Jan 2010 to a packed audience in the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco.

There was no looking back afterwards as the iPad was launched in April and sold its first million unit on May 3 after merely 28 days. This was less than half the 74 days it took the hugely successful iPhone to sell its first million units.

The gap between Microsoft and Apple closed rapidly until this week, when Apple finally overtook Microsoft in terms of market capitalisation.

At the rate it’s going, it won’t be long before Apple overtakes Exxon Mobil as the most valuable company in the US.