Best piece I’ve read in the aftermath of the Aurora massacre. I agree with every word.
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Add to myYahoo!Jakob Henner, a Copanhagen-based designer-developer has developed a very simple and elegant weather app, called, Sun. What makes it special? Well, it is not a native iOS app, but instead is a mobile web app. You can hardly tell the difference, though I found it working better on my iPad 3 that on my iPhone. It uses the location feature of Safari to show off weather from up to four cities. You can swipe and pinch and customize the app by using between Celsius and Fahrenheit, picking your cities and themes. It is a great showcase of the potential of web-based mobile apps. Try it out at pattern.dk/sun and follow Henner on Twitter and Dribble.
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Add to myYahoo!Matt Asay:
Apple has given us much with its pleasing-on-the-eye iPad. But what it hasn’t given us is a serious replacement for the lowly laptop or desktop.
As much as magazines like MacWorld may hype it as “The New Business Machine”, the reality is that the iPad is only enterprise-ready in iFantasyLand.
If Apple were smart they’d make laptop and desktop computers, too.
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Add to myYahoo!MG Siegler:
Points like this one get quickly shot down by folks because people have been wanting to be the first to call Microsoft?s downfall for years. But this time, I think we?re actually seeing it. You can disagree, of course. But I?m not writing this out of some misguided hatred for Microsoft. I?m writing it to have it on record because I believe I?m right. Time will tell, obviously.
Six billion here, eight billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking about real money.
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Add to myYahoo!“Let?s see how the competition goes.”
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The Apple rumor mill never stops. Lately, people have been chattering about the supposedly imminent iPad Mini. Speculating about Apple’s next product release may be fun, but analyzing the impact such a device would have on Apple?s bottom line is even more interesting. Let?s try to get into the minds of Apple?s strategy team, albeit without the advantage of data they have, to make a call on the iPad Mini.
There are three steps to this process: The whys, what and what-ifs, and the final decision.
Why would Apple even consider an iPad Mini? The simple answer is profit. The question is whether this is about incremental profits or a defensive strategy to retain current profits that are under threat. Based on Apple?s history in the past 10 years, it is more likely about adding yet another billion dollar product line. Reviews of Nexus 7 aside, it alone cannot warrant a defensive move by the 800-pound gorilla.
And yes, ?billion dollar? is the key phrase here considering the multiple investment opportunities available to Apple and the impact of the product line on its earnings per share. Apple?s machinery is set up to make the most when it sells millions of units of a product. Anything less than that is not the best use of their investment and marketing resources. The opportunity cost is huge.
There are three ?C?s at play here: customer, competition and cannibalization.
Apple would likely consider targeting the following three customer segments:
The competitors here are the low-end volume players who sell devices at or below cost in the hope of driving future revenue from content and other sales. If Apple is the price setter in the premium tablet category, Amazon is the price setter in the low end. Entering this segment would mean becoming the price taker or making an effort to become a price setter with a different price point.
By design, Apple has never been a price taker. In any market, the price setter gets to control its own profit while a price taker is at the mercy of market forces. Trying to become a price setter when there already is one requires Apple to either go low or just a bit higher. Either way, Amazon has set the price anchoring. The most likely scenario is a $299 price point for the iPad Mini.
A $299 iPad is a threat to multiple product lines.
Cannibalizing your own products is better than competitors devouring them, but that is nothing more than a cliché. No cannibalization is good. And there is no need for Apple to cannibalize itself, as there is no competitive threat in the near term.
What is Apple?s final decision going to be? Anyway you look at it, the iPad Mini poses a significant risk to Apple?s profits while not adding new profits. Unless they have data that shows the demand for a third device between the iPhone and iPad, and Apple?s marketing can pull it off, it is highly unlikely that an iPad Mini would have a positive impact on Apple?s profits.
Rags Srinivasan is a management professional who specializes in product strategy and strategic marketing. He is currently working on big data products. He blogs at Iterative Path and tweets at @rags.
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Add to myYahoo!Bottom line: who gives a shit about Windows apps?
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Add to myYahoo!That’s how you send a cease-and-desist request.
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Add to myYahoo!Available in stores this summer, The XAPPR gaming gun allows smartphones owners to connect their smartphone to the Xappr and play various games. MetalCompass today revealed the names of some of the apps that are already adapted to the XAPPR, an amazing variety of virtual and augmented reality apps that will allow players to interact with virtual and real rivals. MetalCompass offers game developers an easy to use SDK to adapt their games to the company's gaming accessories.
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Add to myYahoo!Longtime Macintosh developer and publisher, Lemke Software GmbH today announces GraphicConverter 8.2, an important update to its popular image utility for Mac OS X. GraphicConverter 8 has been completely rewritten and now supports 64-bit and 32-bit Intel-based Apple computers. The new GraphicConverter 8.2 is now able to take full advantage of the latest 64-bit systems, allowing you to work with larger files and in less time.
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