Year: 2016

Apple has Shipped 1,591,092,250 Computers

27InchiMac2013“In Apple’s first 40 years it shipped 1,591,092,250 computers,” Horace Dediu writes for Asymco. “This shipment total is higher than any other computer company in its first 40 years. Actually there are no other PC makers that are 40 years old. One computer maker (IBM) is older but they only sold PCs for 24 years and what they still sell they don’t sell in high numbers.”

Dediu writes, “Combining the history of customer creation and customer preservation with the value obtained from each customer implies that the next 40 years will be about creating another large tranche of customers whose willingness to spend on whatever Apple creates will be relatively unchanged.”

“We don’t know the limit,” Dediu writes. “One billion was hard to imagine even one year ago. We might see two billion devices in short order. Perhaps not. Perhaps as we have a multitude of devices about us all day the number will become less meaningful. But if the number of middle class customers grows and as Apple keeps its products within their reach, there is no reason to think that there will be a reversal of the last 40 years in terms of customer acquisition.”

Tons more in the full article – here.

Google’s April Fools Day Joke Backfires

GoogleLogoThe Mountain View giant is usually very good at April Fools' jokes. This year they didn't get it right.
Google's "Gmail Mic Drop" featured a special "send" button, which ended your emails with a gif showing a Minion dressed as a king dropping a microphone.
"Simply reply to any email using the new 'Send + Mic Drop' button," the company said in a blogpost.
"Everyone will get your message, but that's the last you'll ever hear about it. Yes, even if folks try to respond, you won't see it."
The way it was implemented confused many users though. Some used it in error, which caused serious problems.
After the blacklash, Google turned it off and updated the post with an apology.
Via: CNN.COM

San Francisco Museum Makes Apple Watch your Tour Guide

AppleWatch-2“The de Young Museum in San Francisco is experimenting with a new way for visitors to experience art,” Heather Kelly reports for CNNMoney. “Starting Thursday, anyone with an Apple Watch will be able to go through the museum and hear recordings about the nearest display when alerted by a vibration on their wrist.”

“Made by the startup Guidekick, it’s an expansion of the museum’s recent iPhone app,” Kelly reports. “When you walk up to one of the elaborate gowns in the Oscar de la Renta retrospective, the Apple Watch vibrates to let you know there’s an audio component. Tap the watch and Andre Leon Talley or de la Renta himself will discuss the influences behind the piece.”

“The idea, says de Young’s active director and COO Richard Benefield, is for the watch to act as an invisible tour guide, delivering information in real time so visitors don’t have to to look away from the art itself,” Kelly reports. “‘I’ve made it known to Silicon Valley, our museum is your laboratory,’ said Benefield.”

Read more in the full article here.

Plumbers and Pipe Fitters Protest Outside Apple’s New Campus

Plumbers and pipefitters with Local Union 393 are picketing outside Apple's new space ship campus under construction.

Dozens of workers rallied outside one the gates. The Santa Clara County sheriff's says there have been some traffic issues. But, so far no arrests or citations. Workers are upset at Preston Pipelines. The company is doing work on apple's new campus. Workers say it's not paying a prevailing wage and they want Apple to put pressure on Preston Pipelines to pay a fair wage.

Apple and Preston Pipelines have yet to respond ABC7 News after being reached for comment.

Source: Channel 7 News, KGO Bay Area and San Francisco

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