AMITIAE - Monday 7 January 2013
Cassandra - Monday Review: It will Soon be Friday |
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By Graham K. Rogers
Opening Gambit:Apple turned down by Waze. Apple and not paying taxes: $6 billion paid last year. Fusion drive now for lower end iMac. Optic Thunderbolt cable from Corning up to 30m in length. No Microsoft products were reported stolen: quote of the year? Patent trolls. Samsung and others fined again for price fixing in China. Google ads will shoot you in the foot.
Apple StuffLast week there were several rumours about Apple and the mapping company, Waze, which it was said to be after. There were denials all round, but now, Matt Brian on TNW reports that there had been some wooing of Waze, but that it had turned down Apple's offers. My source for this item was MacDaily News.I note that in the article, Brian uses the now apparently compulsory modifier when mentioning the Maps App, "much-maligned" which is like the BBC's Maida Vale studios that some DJs cannot announce without the adjective, "legendary". True, but overdone.
It was no coincidence to find that once the US girded its loins and formed a committee to look into such avoidance, so other governments got their acts together and played the same games, often targeting the same companies, with Apple, Google, HP and others being the star turns and thus a chance for the politicians to make the headlines. Now Mikey Campbell on AppleInsider reports that the investigation in the US is wrapping up and Apple was featured. We are told that Apple deferred taxes on over $35.4 billion between 2009 and 2011, but the Feds still relieved Cupertino of $3.3 billion in 2011 and commenting on the current year, Apple released a statement saying, "In fiscal 2012 we paid $6 billion in federal corporate income taxes, which is 1 out of every 40 dollars in corporate income taxes collected by the U.S. government". That would seem to makle Apple a pretty high roller. As Cupertino does most of its business overseas these days, and the penalty for moving large amounts of money back to the US is a 30% levy, it is not a surprise that Apple wants to keep the money there, rather than paying for a new aircraft carrier, although a new Nimitz class, USS Steve Jobs does have a certain ring to it. I know it is not smart to comment on what the former CEO of Apple would have done, but Steve would be horrified. Thus far there has been no suggestion of relief on that foreign cash, were it to be repatriated, but Apple is in talks, and if these talks were to be successful, that would help a lot of other US companies and stimulate the US economy just a bit (as long as they don't really go for more military spending).
Phil Schiller also announced the Lightning connector at the same product announcement and made much of the twin Thunderbolt and Lightning to some amusement. Steven Sande reports that the US Customs has seized some US$635,000 in counterfeit Lightning cables and adapters at Anchorage, Alaska, that came from China in boxes with fake Apple logos and Underwriters Laboratories (UL) trademarks, but the quality of the material the boxes were made from, was under par. In slightly related news, Corning has announced new Thunderbolt optic cables that can be up to 30 metres in length: 10m (32.8 feet), 20m (65.6 feet), and 30m (98.4 feet). Electronista reports on this and mentions that Apple's standard (copper) Thunderbolt cables are currently 2 metres long.
Half and HalfIn what must be a point of some embarrassment (well, we will try and make it so) Joshua Anderson on 9to5 Mac has a scan of a press clipping from a newspaper called the Daily Post which is based on Palo Alto. The report outlines a theft of equipment at the Mountain View campus of Microsoft when five iPads were taken. It is the last line, however, that is the gem and tickled people like Jim Dalrymple at The Loop who provided the original link: "No Microsoft products were reported stolen."
In another case, Patently Apple reports that a second lawsuit has been filed by Steelhead Licensing concerning a patent - Mobile Radio Handover Initiation Determination - that was originally owned by British Telecom. They sold the patent, knowing it would be used in this way. While Bell Labs developed the original technology for cell handovers (U.S. Patent 3,663,762), this lawsuit appears to be for LTE although I am not sure how the methods differ. I am sure the lawyers will explain.
Other MattersThat wonderfully innovative company, Samsung, that pitches itself as innocent in all its dealings with that nasty Apple, has just been charged (along with LG, AU Optronics and Innolux) for price fixing in China. Sam Oliver on AppleInsider reports that they held "53 secretive meetings in Taiwan and South Korea to agree on prices for LCD panels". Apparently this is not the first time that they have been dealt with for price fixing: not learning are they?
However, Roger Cheng reports that the shine seems to be going off this show as many of the big names in wireless are not making any appearance this year, so maybe this one has run its course as well. With Mobile World Congress running 25 - 28 February in Barcelona, perhaps some of the big names are waiting for that before making significant product announcements. We do have at least one mobile phone maker; and we have . . . Lexus. Casey Newton writes about an announcement from LG expected to be about the new Optimus G2; and Paul Sloan reports that the company is to make an announcement at around 11pm (Pacific Time) expected to be about autonomous driving features. Several other companies are to make announcement - probably too late by the time you read this - including Fujifilm, Intel, Cisco and Ford. Roll on Madrid.
Local ItemsLast week I wrote about the dire new TV guide that TrueVisions is foisting on its customers: bad luck if you want to see what is playing outside the hours of about 7pm to midnight. Their first reply did not show me that the reader had understood the general nature of the complaint: they wanted my user number so that they could examine the problem. Open the pages: look.I wrote back on Tuesday, "The new guide is not good enough. Not enough content. Cost-cutting. Not a proper service for all users." No reply so far. There's customer service for you.
And then the penny dropped. These are Google ads which use algorithms to ensure that those ads displayed are aimed at the user, as decided by the user's own web and search engine use.
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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