Yes, Apple's share is suffering from catastrophic collapse...unless you look at the fact that Apple continues to gain share in the total mobile market...
Where is Android taking share from? Not iOS but feature phones. As long as Apple grows sales faster than the total handset market it's doing okay.
Apple started with zero percent marketshare just 7 years ago. What collapse?
He said the same thing last year, and all we got were updates of existing products. Tim needs to stop with the red herrings, and focus on actually releasing new products in new categories.
Why? No one else is innovating. Why must be Apple the ones who innovate? Why before 2020?
According to the latest statistics from Kantar WorldPanel, iOS growth is contracting while Android continues to amass more users. Research firm Strategy Analytics concurred in its fourth quarter 2013 findings, noting a 4.4 percent dip in worldwide marketshare for the iPhone year-to-year as sales of cheaper offerings from smaller OEMs grow.
Yes, Apple's share is suffering from catastrophic collapse...unless you look at the fact that Apple continues to gain share in the total mobile market...
Where is Android taking share from? Not iOS but feature phones. As long as Apple grows sales faster than the total handset market it's doing okay.
Well, but Nokia, Motorola, LG, Sony, Asus, Dell, HP and all all have awesome market share. Right? It's a shame that by pursuing such thing, they are corpses bleeding money on PC, phones and tablets.
Just curious are other companies asked about whether the stuff they're working on is improvements to existing products or new categories? It seems like Apple is the only company where this question is constantly asked. I can't remember the last time Google or Microsoft was asked this question.
I am interested in how you can make the statement that you do and don't remember what Google and Microsoft have been asked. There are sooooo many stories about both companies. Do you have that much free time to follow them all?
Furthermore, someone who follows this scene as closely as you seem to must surely know why Apple would and should be asked this question far more often?
He said the same thing last year, and all we got were updates of existing products. Tim needs to stop with the red herrings, and focus on actually releasing new products in new categories.
Be it iOS glasses or driverless cars, I would be looking forward to the new category products. After all, I'd love to already add to my list: http://blog.teks.co.in/mac-magic-22-facts-apple-mac-know/ ...so help me out, Tim Cook!
Also, since when did commercial shipment become the key benchmark of innovation? Only in the eyes of those who don't know any better. There are many instances of innovation when it has nothing to do with shipment of commercial products.
Not arguing with that. But it makes the argument that Apple isn't innovating a blind guess since no one who is saying that has any access to their research labs.
He said the same thing last year, and all we got were updates of existing products. Tim needs to stop with the red herrings, and focus on actually releasing new products in new categories.
Honestly to needs to stop talking about new products especially when everybody knows he's not going to offer up any details. All we get now is the media mocking his statements because they're the same statements he's made umpteen times before.
And when Apple introduce iTV or iWatch they'll get it. Chill.
Just curious are other companies asked about whether the stuff they're working on is improvements to existing products or new categories? It seems like Apple is the only company where this question is constantly asked. I can't remember the last time Google or Microsoft was asked this question.
When you think about it it is justified though. People look to Apple to lead the way so it makes sense asking them such a question over other companies.
I know, right? Some people have a selective memory. If memory senses me correctly in 2013 he promised exciting products in 2013 for the end of the year and 2014.
If a tree falls in a forest, but no one hears it, does it still make a sound? If you have a brilliant idea, but never make a product that effects anybody's life, is that still innovation? "Real artists ship" - Steve Jobs
In all fairness I consider driverless cars innovative. And google glass.
Had those same things come from Apple I guarantee you they would have been dubbed merely 'evolutionary' by Wall Street because we have had cars and glasses for a long time, then AAPL would have gone down.
Comments
Apple started with zero percent marketshare just 7 years ago. What collapse?
Why? No one else is innovating. Why must be Apple the ones who innovate? Why before 2020?
Well, but Nokia, Motorola, LG, Sony, Asus, Dell, HP and all all have awesome market share. Right? It's a shame that by pursuing such thing, they are corpses bleeding money on PC, phones and tablets.
meh
Just curious are other companies asked about whether the stuff they're working on is improvements to existing products or new categories? It seems like Apple is the only company where this question is constantly asked. I can't remember the last time Google or Microsoft was asked this question.
I am interested in how you can make the statement that you do and don't remember what Google and Microsoft have been asked. There are sooooo many stories about both companies. Do you have that much free time to follow them all?
Furthermore, someone who follows this scene as closely as you seem to must surely know why Apple would and should be asked this question far more often?
He said the same thing last year, and all we got were updates of existing products. Tim needs to stop with the red herrings, and focus on actually releasing new products in new categories.
No he didn't. Don't make stuff up.
Time will tell whether Cook is bullshitting or not.
that is irrelevant.
Be it iOS glasses or driverless cars, I would be looking forward to the new category products. After all, I'd love to already add to my list: http://blog.teks.co.in/mac-magic-22-facts-apple-mac-know/ ...so help me out, Tim Cook!
Time will tell whether Cook is bullshitting or not.
Cite an instance when he has clearly BSed.
Zero shipped.
Untrue.
Also, since when did commercial shipment become the key benchmark of innovation? Only in the eyes of those who don't know any better. There are many instances of innovation when it has nothing to do with shipment of commercial products.
And when Apple introduce iTV or iWatch they'll get it. Chill.
When you think about it it is justified though. People look to Apple to lead the way so it makes sense asking them such a question over other companies.
The iLash.
I know, right? Some people have a selective memory. If memory senses me correctly in 2013 he promised exciting products in 2013 for the end of the year and 2014.
that is irrelevant.
If a tree falls in a forest, but no one hears it, does it still make a sound? If you have a brilliant idea, but never make a product that effects anybody's life, is that still innovation? "Real artists ship" - Steve Jobs
Had those same things come from Apple I guarantee you they would have been dubbed merely 'evolutionary' by Wall Street because we have had cars and glasses for a long time, then AAPL would have gone down.