Month: February 2019

Forbes: Apple begins to look like Microsoft

When it comes to its stock performance, Apple is following Microsoft. It’s where Microsoft’s stock was at the end of Dot-com bubble.

A value play for conservative investors.

That’s according to Jeff Yastine, senior equities analysts at Banyan Hill Publishing. Apple’s “days of ‘hockey stick’ superfast growth might be over,” says Yastine. “But it's just beginning a far longer era of moderate, sustainable growth that makes it a core holding for more conservative-minded investors.”

Conservative investors can count on Apple’s cash, which can be used for dividend hikes. “With $66 billion in cash, strong consistent cash flow from its services operations, and a dividend payout ratio of roughly 25%, Apple is just beginning to be an income investor's favorite stock,” adds Yastine. “I expect Apple to once again raise its dividend sometime in late April or early May by another 5-10%.”

That’s not bad in a low inflation environment.  Meanwhile, Apple’s momentum could be revived again once the next big thing comes along.

What might that be? 5G internet technology, according to Yastine.

 “The key to Apple's next big gusher of profits is superfast 5G internet technology,” explains Yastine. “The rollout of 5G won't happen in earnest until 2020, so it’s just a little too far off the radar yet to make a difference to the stock right now. But as Americans begin to experience what it's like surfing the internet with 5G technology, I believe they will run not walk to their local Apple stores to buy a 5G-enabled iPhone, and Apple will start a whole new cycle of rising profits.”

Then there’s Apple’s potential in India, a country with a big fortune at the bottom of the pyramid, to use a term C.K. Prahalad a couple of decades ago. That’s the trillions in disposable income waiting in the hands of the masses of poor at the bottom of India’s income pyramid.

Tapping into this market could make it up for Apple’s shortfall in China. But it won’t be easy. It requires cheaper versions of iPhone, which will depress Apple’s margins.

Meanwhile, there’s Apple ID, the company’s vehicle for making the transition from a manufacturing to a service company. Apple’s service revenue jumped 27% in 2018 to reached $10 billion. And it has been highlighted on its recent financial reports.

This transition to services could set the stage for the adoption of SaaS (Software as a Service), Apple’s  software distribution model in which a third-party provider hosts applications and makes them available to customers over its devices. SaaS has already been tested successfully in a number of high-tech companies, including Systems and Salesforce. It has provided them with steady revenue and earnings flow, attractingWall Street’s attention.

And it could do the same for Apple.

Advanced Tip: Adding QUIT Option to the Finder for Mac

The Finder is the most used icon on the Mac. The end user can find him/herself using it several times a day.

One thing that should be enabled by default is a Quit Finder option, because their will be times that a user would need to quit it in order to re-enable it for one reason or another.

Advanced users can enable such a option by using the Terminal, and typing in the following:

You can enable the quit option by entering the following command in Terminal:
defaults write com.apple.finder QuitMenuItem -bool true; killall Finder

To revert to the original settings:
defaults write com.apple.finder QuitMenuItem -bool false; killall Finder

That’s it!

Now when selecting the Finder top menu option, you’ll see the Quit command.

Man punched and robbed in Brooklyn, New York after arranging iPhone sale via ‘Let Go’ app

Police lookin for 3 suspects in "Let Go" app robbery

DITMAS PARK, Brooklyn — Police are looking for three men in Brooklyn they say punched and robbed a man of two cell phones, after he showed up to sell one of them.

The 32-year-old victim made an arrangement with a buyer on the app "Let Go"  to sell his iPhone X, police said Saturday.

When the victim drove up to 1111 Ocean Avenue on Feb. 7 at 8:50 p.m., intending to meet the buyer from the app and complete the agreed-upon sale, two males approached his vehicle.

Authorities say one of the suspects got into the victim's car, punched him in the face, and stole both the iPhone and the victim's Blackberry phone.

The two men fled back to the building, where the third suspect reportedly opened the door and let them inside.

Police have released the above surveillance footage of the three suspects, in hopes that the public can help identify them.

Submit tips to police by calling Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477), visitingwww.nypdcrimestoppers.com, or texting 274637 (CRIMES) then entering TIP577. Spanish-speaking callers are asked to dial 1-888-57-PISTA (74782).

Via: WPIX TV, New York, United States

Guest Star of Star Trek TOS: Morgan Woodward, dies at 93

Any actor would envy the career of Morgan Woodward, who died on February 22 at the age of 93, in Paso Robles, California. He was a two-time Star Trek: The Original Series guest star who, over the course of five decades, from the 50s to the 90s, amassed 400-plus film and television credits. Along the way, he played some mighty memorable roles, including Shotgun Gibbs on The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, Boss Godfrey in Cool Hand Luke, Jock Ewing’s pal Punk Anderson on Dallas and (Old) Harry Cokely on The X-Files.

But, perhaps most enduringly, he had the distinction of portraying two wild-eyed, emotionally volatile characters on Star Trek: The Original Series: Dr. Simon Van Gelder in “Dagger of the Mind” and Captain Ronald Tracey in “The Omega Glory.

Back in 2015, StarTrek.com interviewed Woodward, who marveled at the fact that with so many credits to his name, Star Trek is arguably his greatest claim to fame. “Star Trek is a cult, and any time you’ve got a cult, it continues and continues,” he noted. “They’re getting ready to do another Star Trek movie now and some of the original people could be in it. It just keeps going. So, no, it doesn’t surprise me. It doesn’t surprise me, not at all. The (conventions and autograph) shows that I’ve gone to, most of the people want me to sign pictures from Star Trek. I sign pictures from Dallas and the westerns and Cool Hand Luke, too. The Man with No Eyes from Cool Hand Luke is still very, very popular, and that’s almost 50 years, too. But it’s mostly Star Trek that people want me to sign pictures of, and I get that.”

Please join StarTrek.com in offering our condolences to Woodward’s family, friends, colleagues and fans.

Via: StarTrek.com

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