Showing posts with label Tech Giant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tech Giant. Show all posts
Friday, December 6, 2013
China may mean gold for Apple
SAN FRANCISCO—It could be a huge breakthrough for Apple to win a place in the line-up of China’s largest telecom provider and a big shakeup for the smartphone market.
A report in the Wall Street Journal said Apple had reached agreement with China Mobile to bring the iPhone to customers in a market dominated by low-cost Android smartphones.
The Journal quoted unnamed sources as saying that the two companies have inked an agreement to add iPhones to the colossal telecom firm’s roster of compatible devices later this month. China Mobile denied the report.
“Talks between China Mobile and Apple on cooperation are still going on and we currently do not have anything to announce,” the carrier’s spokeswoman Rainie Lei told AFP.
Yet such a deal would be a major coup for the US tech giant, which could gain a beachhead in the world’s most populous nation,
China Mobile had more than 750 million subscribers as of October, according to Cantor Fitzgerald Research, which estimated that 35 million to 45 million iPhones were on the network despite the lack of a deal between the companies.
The market tracking firm estimated that Apple could sell as many as 24 million iPhones on the China Mobile network next year if it were added to the network’s formal line-up.
Ben Thompson of tech new website Stratechery referred to Apple getting in synch with China Mobile “a very big deal.”
“Feel free to ignore anyone making snarky comments about China’s average monthly wage being the same as the price of an iPhone 5C,” Thompson wrote in a blog post.
He listed two pertinent facts about China for Apple as there being “tremendous income disparity” and “a ton of people” in a country with a population estimated at topping 1.3 billion.
“China consumers appear to us to have a deep admiration for Apple’s products,” Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Brian White said in a note to investors giving shares a “buy” rating.
“Apple now has the opportunity to tap into the largest carrier in the world,” he added, noting that China Mobile was just granted a license to upgrade to a new-generation network better suited for iPhones.
Apple chief Tim Cook has made China a priority for the company, and may travel there to take part in an announcement at a China Mobile conference later this month.
Industry tracker IDC forecast that smartphone sales in China will reach 360 million this year and, with the issuance of 4G network licenses and iPhones launched on China Mobile, top 450 million in 2014.
China Mobile has a unique 3G standard of its own that is not compatible with any existing iPhone models, although the Californian giant’s handsets can be used on other networks in China.
The Chinese government on Wednesday granted three operators, all state-owned, licenses to offer services on the faster and better quality 4G network, expected to usher in a new era of competition between mobile phone makers.
Apple will still have to compete with low-priced smartphones powered by Google’s free Android software, but the massive China market includes an abundance of people who have money to spend on iPhones, according to some analysts.
“It is difficult to displace Android’s dominant position in the Chinese market within a short period of time, but IDC predicts that its share in China’s mobile phone operating system market will reach the peak in 2013, and that the mobile phone vendors and telecom operators will adopt new operating systems with a more open attitude,” IDC China mobile phone market analyst James Yan said in a recent quarterly analysis.
IDC anticipated rapid growth of iPhone sales in China next year, but noted that budding mobile operating systems such Samsung’s Tizen and Firefox should “enable healthy competition.”
source: technology.inquirer.net
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Apple offers to refund Australian iPad customers
SYDNEY — U.S. tech giant Apple on Wednesday offered to refund Australian customers who felt misled by advertising about the 4G capabilities on its new iPad, reports said.
Australia’s Competition and Consumer Commission has taken Apple to the Federal Court for false advertising over its “iPad with WiFi + 4G” promotion because the popular tablet device does not work on the local 4G frequency.
Apple’s lawyers said the tech firm was prepared to publish a clarification about the iPad’s Australian capabilities and refund any customers who felt they had been misled by the 4G reference, Dow Jones Newswires reported.
Paul Anastassiou, counsel for Apple, said in court that the company was confident very few people would apply for a refund.
Anastassiou added that Apple was not prepared to put corrective stickers on iPad boxes, as sought by the ACCC, but would email customers to clarify that the device was not compatible with local carrier Telstra’s 4G network.
However, Anastassiou said that when the matter came to full trial Apple would contest the ACCC’s claims that it had misled consumers because the latest-generation iPad did work on other Telstra frequencies.
“It will be contested by Apple there are in Australia networks that, according to international definitions, are 4G,” he told the court according to The Age newspaper.
“What Apple says is that other networks operated by Telstra are in fact properly described by international standards as 4G, even though Telstra itself does not so describe them.”
Anastassiou added that Apple had, “at no point in any promotional material… said at any time” that the new iPad was compatible with Telstra’s 4G network.
“No such representation, in our submission, is conveyed by the use of the acronym 4G in the name of the device,” he said according to The Australian newspaper.
source: japantoday.com
Australia’s Competition and Consumer Commission has taken Apple to the Federal Court for false advertising over its “iPad with WiFi + 4G” promotion because the popular tablet device does not work on the local 4G frequency.
Apple’s lawyers said the tech firm was prepared to publish a clarification about the iPad’s Australian capabilities and refund any customers who felt they had been misled by the 4G reference, Dow Jones Newswires reported.
Paul Anastassiou, counsel for Apple, said in court that the company was confident very few people would apply for a refund.
Anastassiou added that Apple was not prepared to put corrective stickers on iPad boxes, as sought by the ACCC, but would email customers to clarify that the device was not compatible with local carrier Telstra’s 4G network.
However, Anastassiou said that when the matter came to full trial Apple would contest the ACCC’s claims that it had misled consumers because the latest-generation iPad did work on other Telstra frequencies.
“It will be contested by Apple there are in Australia networks that, according to international definitions, are 4G,” he told the court according to The Age newspaper.
“What Apple says is that other networks operated by Telstra are in fact properly described by international standards as 4G, even though Telstra itself does not so describe them.”
Anastassiou added that Apple had, “at no point in any promotional material… said at any time” that the new iPad was compatible with Telstra’s 4G network.
“No such representation, in our submission, is conveyed by the use of the acronym 4G in the name of the device,” he said according to The Australian newspaper.
source: japantoday.com
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