AMITIAE - Monday 7 April 2012
Cassandra - Monday Review: It Will Soon be Friday |
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By Graham K. Rogers
Opening Gambit:When Apple is wrong, headlines. When Apple is not wrong, keep quiet? Tim Cook is not Steve Jobs: this means Apple must fail according to some. Apple improves iPad 2. Apple to be sued for finding out someone's location. The iPhone that caught fire on a plane: due to unauthorised (botched) repair. That iPad beater, the Kindle sells 750,000; iPad 11.8 million. The world according to Google (interesting if it were real). Testing space ship parts on a motorcycle; and on Route 66. Map Ta Phut: situation normal
Apple StuffThere has been an awful lot of news recently that has, in my opinion, been anti-Apple. Whatever you may think of what the company is or what it stands for, it seems to have had far more than its share of negative publicity when other companies that do exactly the same are left unmentioned. A good example concerned its relationship with Foxconn and the operations in China. No matter that many companies use the same company, Apple was the focus.As for using the factories in China (and other countries), that has been put forward recently as the cause of job losses at many US companies in one article -- the links being tenuous at best with some and despite many of those being named also making good use of manufacturing in China. The same has occurred with its green credentials; again something that other companies deal with, but Apple is the negative poster boy every time. My view is that the focus is because of Apple's massive profits and its cash reserves: everyone wants a share. This what I tend to call the Chicken in the Barrel syndrome: as soon as one gets near the top, the others pull it down. Following on from the recent Greenpeace attempts to embarrass Apple with the type of power that it may use at its data centers for Cloud operations (and note that this weekend Japan closed its last nuclear plant), another group chained itself to train tracks and put an Apple logo over a coal truck MacNN reports. Not that anyone really knows how much power will come from fossil fuel or how much from other (green) sources are to be used at Apple's new center, but it looks good, eh? And do none of the others -- Dell, Microsoft, Google, HP, GM, Ford, et al -- use electricity that comes from the grid: anyone protesting them? Of course not. Also a bit miffed with output of those who can do little little but put out negative comments on Apple is John Martellaro who focuses on the bloggers who take it out on Tim Cook. Take what out? The man has made it to the head of the largest company in the world, made some great deals on the way, and is heading the company in such a way that is impressing an awful lot of people. But not those who seem to blame him most of all for not being Steve Jobs, and therefore Apple must collapse. The logic fails somewhere I am afraid, but this makes for good hits. Martellaro takes these faux-commentators to task and outlines some of the more impressive achievements of Apple's CEO and on the way references Woody from Phuket for his amazement at the way Cook managed to get Oracle to take over Java updating, something that Steve Jobs did not manage. As a related note, Topher Kessler has some useful information on the Java updates and how this will work.
Nonetheless, with the outcry, Apple made some changes, but there are always people who want to sue, with the best possible intentions of course (like the guy we wrote about last week who is suing Apple for $5 million because of a couple of iTunes store charges). We are told by AppleInsider that a case is ongoing in California (where else?) and the judge (Lucy Koh, who is involved in other Apple cases) has ruled that Apple must proceed despite their being no demonstrated injury.
The cause was investigated by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau, Luke Hopewell reports on ZDNet, and they found a loose screw that had not been properly reinserted during an unauthorised repair [my italics]: a screen replacement. While a couple of IT sources had this as well as the Apple-centric sites, where was the mainstream press? Looking in the other direction for hits I expect. My source for this was the ever-useful MacDaily News.
Half and HalfWe wondered if this might happen when delays were evident a short while ago, but this time the judge has had enough of Samsung's tactics and as Florian Mueller reports on Foss Patents, because of the way that "Samsung has been particularly uncooperative when Apple touched on sensitive issues" the court has ordered preclusive sanctions and Mueller explains how this is going to have serious implications for Samsung.
Other MattersI read a report on the arrest of John McAfee concerning drugs in Belize late on Friday and the first thought (unfairly as it turned out) was DeLorean, remembering the car exec who tried to hasten finances along with some large deals concerning white powders.There is far more to this that meets the eye as the former head of the anti-virus company is in the country using his fortune for good purposes and the problems began for him when he declined to make a donation to Belize's ruling United Democratic Party. Jamillah Knowles on TNW fills in a lot of the background, with a lot of comments from McAfee's own statement to a local TV station. More to this than meets the eye and there is a ring of truth about the idea of dealing with certain politicians outside the West.
Local ItemsI went into a local DTAC store during the weekend to pay the phone bill. Beside the iPhone desk which was fairly busy was a lot of advertising for the latest iPad. That was the first time I had seen anything from DTAC so when I arrived back home I looked at the English PR site. Although they have information on a free 2012 Admission Result service, strong result in Q1 2012 and making it possible for everyone to buy 3G smartphones with "the best devices, best packages and best experiences" (experience should be an uncountable noun here: "experiences" is a totally different ball game), there is no PR on the iPad. Does DTAC sell the iPad to Thai customers only?
Then on Sunday evening there were reports of a second accident: a chemical leak. Never mind, the people who make the money will still keep their Benzes, wear their designer clothes and shop in the most exclusive stores. They will also pressure the government against the 300 baht a day minimum wage because they will (they say) be unable to operate profitably. Chemical fires, disco fires, refinery fires, minibus accidents, building violations, sex, drugs . . . life goes on as normal in the Land of Smiles. Now, even if they don't actually come right out and say it, someone will probably be thinking, "If you don't like it, leave". All well and good, but my Thai friends and my students cannot leave. And this is not just a problem here. Most countries have the same (or similar) problems.
Graham K. Rogers teaches at the Faculty of Engineering, Mahidol University in Thailand. He wrote in the Bangkok Post, Database supplement on IT subjects. For the last seven years of Database he wrote a column on Apple and Macs. |
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