sree

About

Username
sree
Joined
Visits
96
Last Active
Roles
member
Points
331
Badges
0
Posts
154
  • Huawei again estimated to have overtaken Apple as world's No. 2 smartphone vendor

    While these articles are excessive nonsense, I do think apple is facing some feature saturation in the smartphone market. Newer features aren't generating the same amount of desire, and a large section of people (not all) are starting to feel they don't need the latest and greatest.

    While once these chinese knockoffs were under-performing junk phones that frustrated users, they are now pretty good for most people who don't need the latest and greatest phones. The gap has narrowed significantly on the capabilities, but the price divide has remained. I think Apple is facing some real risk here.

    [P.S.: Just my experiences based on the fact that I have been using apple stuff for the last decade, and my wife has been using androids for almost as long.]
    croprwatto_cobra
  • Apple's rumored 18W USB-C adapter might not be sold separately at launch

    bluefire1 said:
    I was told by an Apple employee that high power quick chargers can impact battery life and it was a better bet to charge at a slower speed.
    I have been using the iPad charger for my iPhone for a long time. 3years, and the battery capacity is still 91%. 
    doozydozenireland
  • How to start copying and pasting between your Mac and iPad using Universal Clipboard

    Only problem, it rarely ever works. Frustrating actually. Have a Mac, iPhone and iPad.
    Sometimes it works, mostly it doesn't.
    london11SpamSandwichStrangeDays
  • Apple's iPhone X takes top premium smartphone spot in India, crushing OnePlus, Samsung

    Rayz2016 said:
    Okay.  

    I find this very hard to believe. 
    Most people that comment about the buying power of indians have rarely visited india and definitely don't have an understanding of how vast and varied india is.

    Just the middle class in india is larger than the population of america. The rich might be small as a percentage of the population, but still the pure numbers will be larger than the population of many countries. The number of people who can easily afford an iphone X india is about the population of australia.
    muthuk_vanalingammmatzanantksundaramjony0
  • Apple's India chief reportedly departs amid sluggish sales

    maestro64 said:
    sree said:
    sree said:
    India does not discriminate for or against apple. It does not allow any used or refurbished goods to be sold in the country (from any company), since such a regulation can and will be misused by the 'global' corporations to dump electronic junk in the country. 

    The restriction exists for the sake of the environment, and we don't see any reason why it should be changed.
    Do you believe this yourself? Is it better for the environment to give a piece of electronics a second life or to discard it and manufacture a new one? If there is consumer-demand for refurbished devices at considerable prices they're definitely *not* electronic junk.
    Ofcourse. It is not a matter of faith, it is fact. Because it is expensive to handle e-waste in the west and many small European countries have run out of landfills, a host of dubious organisations have come up that try to ship e-waste to countries like india where unregulated operations without safety measure are run. Results in a lot of lead/mercury poisoning. This happens despite all of it being illegal. Thankfully they have really cracked down on this stuff since 2010, and so it is highly contained.

    Here's an article from 2004 that gives an idea of the situation before:

    https://www.outlookindia.com/magazine/story/india-use-me/222679

    This is an article from last year, outlining the situation despite the crackdown.

    http://www.business-standard.com/content/b2b-manufacturing-industry/us-china-account-for-70-of-india-s-e-waste-imports-116030400460_1.html

    Now imagine if they leave a loophole like the one that apple is asking for. It is not going to happen.


    Lets all get this straight, it was not like US companies just back up dump truck in india and started to offload this stuff in India. Some Indian company along with its government allowed this to happen. I suspect some Indian entrepreneur thought they were going to cash in on recycling electronic and recover the gold and silver. Then realize India does not have the technology to recover the gold or found out real fast it was too costly. Before they new it the all stack up and they did not know what to do with. I also notice they were attempting to recycle cargo ships and they did not work out real well since no one would buy the poor quality steel India product. China steel is better grade and is mostly made from new iron ore.

    Typical, blame everyone else for the short coming of India's government. There is so much corruption in India, that is why government workers make more than most people in the country. 

    I really wanted to provide a logical reply, but your post is so not going anywhere, I don't even know what to say. 

    So, i'll stick to one point. Ofcourse there are indian business people culpable in sending e-waste over to india. It is a low-cost way of obtaining over 100+ metals that go into electronics. Business folk don't belong to a nation, they are only interested in profits. But, that doesn't mean the people of india or the government want it that way. They do the best they can to limit the situation, just like any other country. If the people or government were capable of stamping these things out a 100% you wouldn't have poverty, mafia, drugs or any other ills anywhere in the world including china and US. China has an equally bad e-waste problem BTW.

    And regarding the ships / steel random digression in your post - you should check out which is the largest steel company in the world today - ArcellorMittal owned by Sunil Mittal is three times the second largest company china state-owned Baosteel. I rest my case.
    muthuk_vanalingamgatorguy