The C stands for CANDY (because the new phones and OS look like colorful candy crush Skittles)
The C stands for CAN'T TOUCH US WE'RE GONNA SELL 700 MILLION IPHONES IN CHINA MOTHER *****RS
The C stands for CRUNCH ON THAT, KIT KAT! HA!
The C stands for CRUSHING IT IN CHINA
What I hate about the damn analysts squawking, is that they're going to build up impossible expectations of Apple selling a quadrillion phones in the last days of the quarter.
Watch the "market" be "disappointed" that Apple "only" doubled their market share in a month.
I don't think that's legal, is it? And the two accounts are the same.
Not sure why it wouldn't be legal? If the service is considered essential to the operation of the device, functionality would be greatly diminished if you chose not to sign up for it. Therefor, it would be required if you wanted all the advertised features.
iCloud and iTunes accounts are not the same. iCloud is a services account, iTunes is a content account and there are separate places for entering each, however, they can share the same log in credentials.
"When you set up your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch, you can use the same Apple ID for iCloud services and purchases on the iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store. You can also use one Apple ID for iCloud services and another Apple ID for store purchases (including iTunes in the Cloud and iTunes Match). You will get all the benefits of iCloud whether you use the same Apple ID for iCloud and store purchases, or different IDs for each."
Comments
The C stands for cook lol!
Here are a few more possibilities:
The C stands for CANDY (because the new phones and OS look like colorful candy crush Skittles)
The C stands for CAN'T TOUCH US WE'RE GONNA SELL 700 MILLION IPHONES IN CHINA MOTHER *****RS
The C stands for CRUNCH ON THAT, KIT KAT! HA!
The C stands for CRUSHING IT IN CHINA
What I hate about the damn analysts squawking, is that they're going to build up impossible expectations of Apple selling a quadrillion phones in the last days of the quarter.
Watch the "market" be "disappointed" that Apple "only" doubled their market share in a month.
I don't think that's legal, is it? And the two accounts are the same.
Not sure why it wouldn't be legal? If the service is considered essential to the operation of the device, functionality would be greatly diminished if you chose not to sign up for it. Therefor, it would be required if you wanted all the advertised features.
iCloud and iTunes accounts are not the same. iCloud is a services account, iTunes is a content account and there are separate places for entering each, however, they can share the same log in credentials.
From Apple's support page...
"When you set up your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch, you can use the same Apple ID for iCloud services and purchases on the iTunes Store, App Store, and iBooks Store. You can also use one Apple ID for iCloud services and another Apple ID for store purchases (including iTunes in the Cloud and iTunes Match). You will get all the benefits of iCloud whether you use the same Apple ID for iCloud and store purchases, or different IDs for each."
iCloud and iTunes accounts are not the same.
iCloud accounts are iTunes accounts. There's absolutely no point to signing up for both when you're forced to sign up for iCloud.
The only reason to have two accounts is if you had the latter before iCloud existed, since we can't merge them yet.