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Posts Tagged ‘Apple CEO’

Apple iPad Costs $499-$699, “Should Be Available In 60 To 90 Days”

Ending one of the worst-kept secrets in the world of technology, Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled the much-hyped iPad tablet reader in San Francisco Wednesday.

“We want to kick off 2010 with a truly revolutionary and magical product,” CEO Steve Jobs told a packed audience at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.
So everyone’s wondering just [...]

Apple Aims to Validate Tablet Concept with iPad Design

With the usual Apple drama and anticipation, Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduced the new iPad tablet that his company is banking on to set the design standard that will make the tablet a must-have device for the technically savvy. Here’s our first hands-on look at the device Jobs thinks will create a new category of mobile computing devices and make consumers forget about all earlier tablet and e-reader designs.
– …


Apple iPad Offers New Way of Accessing the Web

Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled the iPad, the long-awaited, much speculated tablet computer, Jan. 27 in San Francisco. Jobs positioned the tablet as a new way of accessing the Web for work and play, allowing users to leverage their iPhone applications on a larger platform and at greater speeds. eWEEK provides a walk-through of the new product, which will be available in a Wi-Fi version in March and with Wi-Fi and 3G service from AT T in April. Apple said the 16GB Wi-Fi-only model starts at $499. Users can pay $599 for a 32GB Wi-Fi-only model, or $699 for a 64GB Wi-Fi unit. These models will ship in March from the Apple Store and retailers. Consumers who opt to buy an iPad with Wi-Fi and 3G will pay $629 (16GB), $729 (32GB) and $829 (64GB). These will be available in April with prepaid data plans from AT T.
– …


Apple iPad Unveiled In San Franciso

In San Francisco just moments ago, Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled the Apple iPad — a highly-anticipated device that is expected to change media as we know it. Steve calls the gizmo one of his most important projects ever — that’s saying a lot for a guy who spearheaded the MacBook, iPhone, and iPod. The [...]

Apple iPad Tablet Ushers in New Era of Computing

Updated: Apple CEO Steve Jobs caps months of rampant speculation by introducing the Apple iPad tablet computer. The device is only one-half inch thick, weighs only 1.5 pounds and features a 9.7-inch IPS display. Powered by Apple’s 1GHz A4 chip, the iPad also boasts full capacitive multitouch, essentially bringing the fine user experience of Apple’s smash-hit iPhone to a larger device. The 16GB Wi-Fi-only model starts at $499. Users can pay $599 for a 32GB Wi-Fi-only model or $699 for a 64GB Wi-Fi model. These will ship in 60 days. There will also be more expensive iPad models with Wi-Fi and 3G connectivity.
– Apple CEO Steve Jobs capped months of
rampant speculation by introducing the Apple iPad
tablet computer Jan. 27.
The device is only one-half inch thick, weighs only 1.5 pounds and features
a 9.7-inch IPS display, according to
Engadget, which is live-blogging the event and has provided several e…


Apple iTablet Rumors Swirl

Apple CEO Steve Jobs is expected to announce the debut of the world’s first touch screen computer in a press conference set for later this morning.

Apple Tablet Expected to Debut Amid High Anticipation

Today is the day Apple is expected to release its fabled tablet device, but what can consumers (and businesses) expect to find, and how does it change the portable PC ecosystem?

After months of speculation, rumors and flat out
misinformation, Apples closely guarded, worst-kept secret, a touch-screen
tablet device, is expected to debut at an Apple press event in San Franciso. In
the week leading up to the event, Apple CEO Steve Jobs hinted at the products


Bruce Sewell to Join Apple as General Counsel & SVP

Daniel Cooperman to Retire Apple® today announced that Bruce Sewell, formerly senior vice president and general counsel of Intel Corporation, will join Apple as the company’s General Counsel and senior vice president, Legal and Government Affairs, reporting to Apple CEO Steve Jobs. Daniel Cooperman, who has served in these roles at Apple for the past [...]

Apple’s App Store Reaches 85,000 Apps, 2 Billion Downloads

Apple announces that more than 2 billion apps has been downloaded from its App Store and that its catalog now features some 85,000 apps for the iPhone and iPod Touch. Apple’s success in the mobile device arena has led other companies, such as Microsoft, Palm and Research In Motion, to launch their own mobile applications stores to take advantage of a growing market for portable programs.
– Apple
announced on Sept. 28 that its App Store now features 85,000 apps for its
iPhone and iPod Touch devices, and that more than 2 billion apps have been
downloaded since the services launch in July 2008.
In a press release, Apple CEO Steve Jobs
said that users had downloaded quot;more than …


Analysts Torn on Whether Google-Apple Competition Is Heating Up

Analysts debate the growing rivalry between Google and Apple in the wake of Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s exit from Apple’s board. Google and Apple compete in mobile operating systems with Android and iPhone, Web browsers with Chrome and Safari, and soon computer operating systems with Chrome OS and Mac OS X. How can the competition not be heating up? Maybe Apple should launch a search engine.
– When Google CEO Eric Schmidt stepped down from Apple’s board of directors Aug. 3, it
touched off a wellspring of questions.
How did it happen? Did Apple CEO Steve
Jobs boot Schmidt, or was it a mutual decision to alleviate regulatory
concerns? Maybe it was the Federal Communications Commission’s…



Google and Apple not off the hook

By Maggie Shiels
Technology reporter, BBC News, Silicon Valley

Google sign

The resignation of Google’s Eric Schmidt as a director of Apple’s board has failed to halt a government inquiry into possible antitrust violations.

Mr Schmidt stepped down because the search giant’s business increasingly competes with Apple’s.

The Google CEO recused himself when Apple’s board discussed the iPhone.

In a statement the Federal Trades Commission said "we will continue to investigate remaining interlocking directorates between the companies".

"We commend them for recognising that sharing directors raises competitive issues, as Google and Apple increasingly compete with each other," said the FTC’s Bureau of Competition director Richard Feinstein.

"Clubby"

Former Genentech CEO Arthur Levinson still serves on both boards.

The Consumer Watchdog has called for him to step down from either Google or Apple to avoid antitrust violations.

"It took Eric Schmidt far too long to realise that the two roles are incompatible; that’s not surprising considering the clubby atmosphere of Silicon Valley," said the non-profit’s consumer advocate John Simpson.

"Nonetheless, we’re glad Schmidt finally did the right thing; we call on Levinson to act responsibly and choose one company or the other."

Eric Schmidt

News that the FTC will continue with its inquiry has highlighted a shift in how regulators are prepared to act under a new administration said Jo-Ellen Pozner, assistant professor of organisational behaviour at Berkeley’s Haas School of Business.

"Clearly the tone has changed in Washington and that makes it more difficult for a marriage like this of Google and Apple at the board level to go unnoticed and not scrutinised.

"When there is a visible conflict or issue like this, regulators will pay more attention to that sector. If these firms are smart they will regulate themselves and figure out which relationships they need to keep, or rectify or fix," Ms Pozner told BBC News.

The areas of competition between the two companies include mobile telephone technology and computer operating systems.

Aside from the issue of competition, Ms Pozner noted there were some practical reasons for Mr Schmidt’s much needed departure.

"It would have been increasingly difficult to attend to board matters. Apple has a small board so there is not that much room for someone constantly recusing themselves from so many areas of discussion if you want an active board."

"Enemy"

Industry watchers said Mr Schmidt’s resignation will allow Google to take the gloves off and compete more openly with Apple. The danger warned one top blog is that it could also turn the company into public enemy number one.

"If nothing else it does mark a shift in where power resides in Silicon Valley and who is the perceived enemy," said TechCrunch co-editor Erick Schonfeld.

Steve Jobs

"For a long time you could say that Mr Schmidt on the Apple board was because both Google and Apple looked at Microsoft as the enemy, the main competition for different reasons.

"As computing shifts to these web based apps it’s almost as if Google is taking the place as the most feared company in technology. Certainly for a lot of companies it has already taken that spot," Mr Schonfeld told the BBC.

"The bigger shift that is now happening is this shift to more web centric computing and Google wants to be the central player there.

"They want to be the operating system of that world and that world doesn’t care if you are using a MacBook, an iPhone, BlackBerry or Android. All this stuff happens in the cloud," said Mr Schonfeld.

"It’s not Goggle versus Apple. It’s really Google versus the old model of computing which increasingly means Apple has more in common with Microsoft."

"Fiasco"

TechCrunch is not the only blog to warn of trouble ahead.

The highly respected blogger Om Malik of Gigaom.com has said that when it comes to the issue of smartphones the "battle between Google and Apple is going to get very ugly – as it should."

Apps store

He highlighted the recent decision by the iPhone’s App store to reject an application called Google Voice. That is now being investigated by the Federal Communications Commission.

"As the Google Voice apps fiasco has taken on a life of its own, I have been busy pointing out that this battle was between Apple and Google."

The timing of Mr Schmidt’s resignation has also resulted in comment coming days after the FCC announced its inquiry.

"The way I see it, he (Mr Schmidt) got shown the door by (Apple CEO) Jobs. Back in May, Schmidt said he had no plans to resign from Apple’s board," noted Mr Malik

For Harry McCracken, the editor and founder of Technologizer there remains a lot of unanswered questions.

"I would love to know the back story here because it was late on Friday that the FCC news came out about it investigating the rejection of Google Voice and here we are a few days later and Mr Schmidt has resigned from Apple.

"From the outside it looks like there is a connection, but who knows" said Mr McCracken.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Google CEO Eric Schmidt Resigns from Apple’s Board

UPDATED: Citing the increased competition of Android with the iPhone and Chrome OS with Mac OS X, Apple said that Google CEO Eric Schmidt has resigned from Apple’s board of directors. The move comes just a few days after the Federal Communications Commission sent letters to Google, Apple and AT T inquiring why Apple denied the Google Voice application from its iPhone App Store.
– Apple CEO Steve Jobs said that Google CEO
Eric Schmidt has resigned from Apple’s board of directors, citing the fact that
Google’s Android mobile operating system and forthcoming Chrome operating system
compete with Apple’s iPhone and Mac OS X desktop computing OS, respectively.
Jobs said in a …


What?! Apple launches iPhone 3GI, but can only be seen by fanboys

Apple has just launched its fastest and most powerful iPhone to date, the iPhone 3GI, that can only be seen by the Apple fans “who believe in the company more than anything else in the world”, the Onion reports.
It’s reportedly that the light-weight 3GI offers the significant hardware and software upgrades, superior processing speeds, multi-touch [...]