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To: MGV who wrote (6483)1/8/2016 9:11:13 AM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 11191
 
BREAKING..Major Apple supplier Hon Hai of Taiwan posts 20 pct slump in Dec sales
Fri Jan 8, 2016 5:40am EST
reuters.com

Jan 8 Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision Industry Co, which assembles the bulk of Apple Inc's latest smartphones, saw its December revenues slump by a fifth and full-year sales miss expectations on Friday.

The results come as concerns are growing about slowing shipments of the latest iPhone 6S models, which Hon Hai assembles, during the non-peak first quarter, although analysts say past iPhone cycles have been similar where the interim update on a model edition tends to see slower sales.

Hon Hai, which goes by the trade name of Foxconn, reported a December revenue of T$409.65 billion ($12.30 billion), down just over 20 percent both compared to a year ago and from November.

For the full 2015 year, Hon Hai's revenue totalled T$4.48 trillion, up 6.42 percent, but below analysts' expectations for an annual gain of 7 percent, according to the average of forecasts of Thomson Reuters Starmine.

Hon Hai's revenue in 2014 rose 6.53 percent.

Samsung Electronics Co Ltd said on Friday its fourth-quarter operating profit likely rose 15 percent from a year earlier, missing expectations and fuelling concerns the tech industry may be in for a tough year of slack gadget sales.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, the world's largest contract chipmaker, said on Friday that its December sales fell both on month and on year. The annual growth in sales for 2015 more than halved from the rapid pace of 2014, when the new iPhone 6 models were first launched. ($1 = 33.2970 Taiwan dollars) (Reporting by J.R. Wu; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)



To: MGV who wrote (6483)1/8/2016 5:37:31 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 11191
 
That disproves all the excuses you've been giving CRAPple all week long... and that is Samsung shipped 12.5% more phones so the implosion that Apple supplies are seeing is NOT coming from Samsung but CRAPple and in a much bigger way now... cause they are shipping more to Samsung but shipping a hell of a lot less to CRAPple....

To: Moonray who wrote (187096)1/8/2016 2:49:28 PM
From: MGV Read Replies (1) of 187128
Samsung reported preliminary earnings for the December quarter, missing analysts' profit estimates while shipping 12.5 percent more smartphones over the year-ago quarter.



http://appleinsider.com/articles/16/01/07/samsung-reports-weak-profits-for-q4-while-shipping-125-more-smartphones-casting-doubt-on-apple-incs-peak-iphone-rumors
Samsung Elec Q4 guidance underscores tech sector headwindsReuters - 11 hours ago



To: MGV who wrote (6483)1/11/2016 9:51:30 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 11191
 
BREAKING..Apple loses more ground to Google's Chromebook in education market
Jon Swartz, USA TODAY4:04 p.m. EST January 11, 2016
usatoday.com


(Photo: Laraine Weschler, The (Waterbury, Conn.) Republican-American via AP)

SAN FRANCISCO — Apple is no longer the undisputed head of the K-12 class.

For the first time, Chromebook sales surpassed 51% in the K-12 market nationwide in the third quarter, according to a recent report by market researcher Futuresource Consulting. The surge reflects a fundamental shift in how American schools are buying tech in bulk and assessing students online, placing an emphasis on low-cost, easy-to-manage machines.

“It's a tidal wave: Chrome is the clear U.S. market leader now,” says Mike Fisher, associate director of education technology at Futuresource. He says districts are drawn to the Chromebook’s Web-based operating system, ease of use, IT manageability and $200 to $300 price range.

Chromebooks — laptops running Google's Chrome OS as their operating systems — made significant strides, year over year. Chromebooks' market share jumped to 51% from 40%. Apple products, mostly iPads but also laptops and Mac desktops, declined to 24% from 32%. Windows-based machines remained steady at 23%.

And Chrome's growth is accelerating, says Rajen Sheth, director of product management, Chrome and Android, for work and education, at Google. "We were at 1% to 2% (in 2012)," Sheth says. He was at the Consumer Electronics Show last week, where OEMs were launching new Chromebooks, many of which will find their way into schools. "This has been trending for three years."

Microsoft, through national contracts and Windows-based machines, remains on top for the K-12 market worldwide, with a 47% share. Chromebooks follows at 19% and Apple at 13%, Futuresource says.

Winning students at an early age is considered crucial for tech companies in the approximately $15 billion K-12 market in the U.S.

Apple, through its dominance of the education market during the Steve Jobs years, helped establish its strong brand and shaped the computing habits of millions of young Americans.

APPLE UPDATES IOS

The trend away from Apple products hasn't gone unnoticed by the Cupertino, Calif., company now run by Tim Cook. Monday, it released education updates to its mobile operating system, version iOS 9.3 — namely, a simplified login and the ability to more easily share and manage iPads in schools securely — in hopes of wresting back market share. It also has shaved iPad prices.

Apple is still big in education. There are about 170,000 education apps on the App Store, and the company maintains a large installed base of iPads and MacBooks in schools. It has sold 15 million iPads into educational institutions worldwide.

Apple CEO Tim Cook attends the inauguration of the academic year at the Bocconi University, in Milan, Italy, Tuesday, Nov.10, 2015. On a trip to Europe that coincided with the sales start for Apple's iPad Pro, Cook questioned why anyone would buy a PC. (Photo: AP/Luca Bruno)

But its position has changed. While Apple's dominance in K-12 has played an essential role in its success, "it no longer is a leader but a player" in the space, says Brian Blau, lead Apple analyst at market researcher Gartner.

The recent movement toward lower-priced, manageable devices reflects a sea change in the education market, Fisher says. "Districts need more volume (in technology equipment), and they need to deploy for the online assessment of students," he says. "Chromebooks offer the answer for now."

At many school districts nationwide, computer use increasingly is being segmented between iPads and tablets for younger students and Chromebooks and notebooks for middle grades and up, Fisher says.

'COST AND BENEFIT'

Its inexpensive price tag and free apps made Chromebooks an easy choice for Matt Smith, director of technology at Central School District 301 in Burlington, Ill., where 3,800 K-12 students primarily use Chromebook. "Cost and benefit makes it the best product," says Smith, who wanted each student to have access to a computing device.

At Aurora City Schools in Ohio, most of the 3,000 K-12 students use Chromebooks, school superintendent Pat Ciccantelli says.

"It is a powerful tool for $150 that opens up the world to kids," says Dayna Steele, CEO of yourdailysuccesstip.com, an advice website. Over the past two years, she has donated 135 Chromebooks to schools in Houston, Atlanta and Miami.

Chromebooks may soon find more competition in the low-price range.

Microsoft is partnering with software firm Lightspeedto better manage a range of devices at schools, and it is helping bring to market new devices that are likely to compete head-on with Google in the sub-$300 range.

"We recognize that schools have different uses, at a variety of price points, for the learning of subjects," says Anthony Salcito, vice president of worldwide education for Microsoft.

Carl Hooker, director of innovation and digital learning at Eanes Independent School District in Austin, where 8,000 K-12 students are enrolled, says he’s sticking with iPads after four years. “We looked at Chromebooks but felt it was limited in innovation and creativity,” he says.

Apple can still rely on its education bona fides, but given its rivals' growth, likely not for long.



To: MGV who wrote (6483)1/27/2016 5:58:02 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 11191
 
So how much money have you lost??? Come on... tell the truth... LMFAO... too funny...



To: MGV who wrote (6483)1/28/2016 9:21:20 AM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 11191
 
Google now just 3% away from passing POS CRAPple market valuation as the most valuable company on planet earth... Google earnings are on tap for Monday... let's hope they pull a facebook type of ER instead of a POS CRAPple type of ER... ROTFLMFAO... too funny...



To: MGV who wrote (6483)1/28/2016 10:49:08 AM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 11191
 
Google up 3% while CRAPple at 52 week low.... it doesn't get better than this.... ROTFLMFAO... too funny...



To: MGV who wrote (6483)1/28/2016 1:49:33 PM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 11191
 
Apple's Tim Cook is clearly a delusional liar.... and Kantar proved that with their recent market share numbers... and now more data is coming out that proves Time Cook is a compulsive LIAR.... great choice for CRAPple iSheep to invest on a liar... ROTFLMFAO... too funny...
markets.siliconinvestor.com

Apple iPhone Growth Slowest Of Major Smartphone Vendors
While other major smartphone vendors increased unit shipments by double-digit percentages last quarter, Apple‘s iPhone barely topped its year-earlier shipment count. Overall smartphone shipments rose 5.7% to 399.5 million units in the fourth quarter, market research firm IDC reported late Wednesday. No. 1 vendor Samsung increased its smartphone unit shipments by 14%, compared with just Continued..........