Tim Cook meets with China Mobile in Beijing

After a less than spectacular couple of months for sales in the Greater China area, Tim Cook paid a visit to Beijing to speak with China Mobile chairman Xi Guohua. Apple’s CEO was there to “discuss matters of cooperation,” according to Reuters, a conversation that no doubt included bringing iPhones and iPads to the the carrier’s massive subscriber base. Apple has yet to issue a comment on the discussion, but a partnership could mean huge numbers for Cupertino, delivering iOS products to the mobile provider with the world’s largest subscriber base.

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Source: Reuters

Apple CEO Tim Cook Reportedly Had A Meeting With China Telecom

Apple CEO Tim Cook Reportedly Had A Meeting With China Telecom

The smartphone market in China is lucrative. Right now it is catered to by big vendors such as Apple and Samsung, whereas there are a number of Chinese vendors who dominate the market with their own devices. iPhone’s performance in China hasn’t been that spectacular in the previous quarter, and that’s probably something that Apple doesn’t want to repeat as it gears up release its new iPhone, or even iPhones. Local reports from China reveal that Apple CEO Tim Cook was in the People’s Republic earlier this week and that he met with China Telecom, which carries the iPhone in China.

Apple is believed to be releasing two new iPhones in September. Carriers partners are vital to a device’s success, while the agenda of these meetings has not been disclosed, it is believed that the talks were focused on the iPhone and how its performance can be made better in China. It is unclear if Cook met with China Unicom and China Mobile as well. China Mobile is the world’s biggest carrier with over 700 million subscribers. Both of these tablets don’t officially carry the iPhone as yet.

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Tim Cook: high-end smartphone market hasn’t reached its peak

This week during the Apple earnings call that also saw Apple report a record quarter for iPhone sales, CEO Tim Cook suggested that the higher end of the smartphone market has not reached it’s peak. This was in response to a question about the iPhone and how possible it was that the “high end” was “reaching saturation”. This was in spite of, as the user asking the question made clear, the increase in iPhone sales this quarter.

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It’s not as if the iPhone is hurting for sales – even with the iPhone 5 being the newest model on the market and rumors of a next-generation device already saturating the airwaves. Instead, Apple’s attitude during the Q and A section of the earnings call this week remained wholly positive.

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“From a growth point of view for Apple, our key catalyst will always be new products and new services. In addition we have opportunities in distribution, carrier partnerships, the online store, and the indirect channel.” – Tim Cook

Cook added that he saw the iPhone’s market as healthy – not a place where too many devices on the market means no one will want a new machine.

“I don’t subscribe to the common view that the higher end of the smartphone market has hit its peak.” – Tim Cook

Does this mean no iPhone budget model? While no one asked such a question directly, Tim Cook’s representation of Apple as a company whose one goal is to make great products remained solid.

“We think if we focus on great products and do it well, the financial performance will also come. We don’t see those things as being mutually exclusive.

The most important thing is that the customers love the products – if you don’t start at that level, you end up creating things that people don’t want.” – Tim Cook

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What do you think? Do you think it’s time the smartphone market started seeing innovation in ways we’ve not yet thought of? Consider the Nokia Lumia 1020 and it’s massive 41-megapixel camera setup. Is that enough?

Or does Apple – in this case – need to create a smartphone that’s got something we’ve not even considered?

SOURCE: Apple


Tim Cook: high-end smartphone market hasn’t reached its peak is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Apple Q3 2013 Earnings Call On July 23rd

The Apple Q3 2013 earnings call is scheduled for July 23rd. CEO Tim Cook and CFO Peter Oppenheimer will also be answering analysts’ questions.

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Apple Hired the CEO of Yves Saint Laurent to Work On Special Projects

Apple Hired the CEO of Yves Saint Laurent to Work On Special Projects

For some reason, Apple has hired the CEO of fashion house Yves Saint Laurent Paul Deneve to work on ‘special projects’. He’ll report directly to Tim Cook and presumably help out on future wearable technology that Apple has in store or outfit Jony Ive with tighter fitting t-shirts or something we have no idea what. Probably something we have no idea what.

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Tim Cook’s Stock Compensation Now Subject To Performance Criteria

Apple has revealed that several top level executives’ stock compensation will now be subject to a performance based criteria. The criteria will also apply to Apple CEO Tim Cook, who was awarded one million restricted stock units in 2011.

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iOS 7 gets flat with Apple banner at WWDC [UPDATE: OS X]

Just days away from the start of the multi-day event, Apple has begun to decorate the Moscone Center West in San Francisco for its yearly developers conference WWDC. This year’s first banner appears to bring iOS 7 to the mix with a clear and present – and massive – number 7 in rainbow-colored font. Though

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The Daily Roundup for 05.29.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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Apple CEO Tim Cook’s full AllThingsD interview video now available

Apple CEO Tim Cook‘s full interview on the D: All Things Digital stage has been posted, with the 80-minute long video showing the chief exec weighing in on wearables, taxes, and more. Cook’s appearance – and grilling at the hands of Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher – saw the Apple CEO relatively tight-lipped on the sort of breaking news his interviewers were digging for, though he did drop hints about a new iOS version at WWDC 2013 next month.

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Some of Cook’s attitudes suggest an Apple at odds with Google’s approach to mobile computing, with comments about Glass lacking in broad appeal. Instead, Cook says, he sees more value in more single-purpose wearables, namechecking Nike’s Fuelband as an example (it’s worth noting that Cook also sits on the Nike board).

Elsewhere, Cook commented on Apple’s lack of a social network – something the chief exec doesn’t think the company really needs – and dropped some hints about the incoming new version of iOS. That’s believed to be due for unveil at WWDC, with a new, flatter interface style to replace the much-criticized “skeuomorphic” UI of the current version.

Cook does a good job at avoiding dropping any hardware details whatsoever, despite the best efforts of Mossberg and Swisher. However, he does comment on possible iPhone variations, suggesting that just because Apple hasn’t come up with a mid- to -low-range iPhone so far, that doesn’t mean the door is closed to the possibility in the future.

In all, it’s a typically low-key showing for Cook, who lacks some of the confident bombast that Steve Jobs brought to the position. Whether that’s something the chief executive should be working on is a point of contention, though arguably with nothing concrete to announce, it might have been difficult for him to frame the interview in any other way.

The big news is undoubtedly being saved for the Worldwide Developers Conference, which kicks off June 10 in San Francisco. We’ll be there to bring back all the details from the opening keynote.


Apple CEO Tim Cook’s full AllThingsD interview video now available is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Tim Cook suggests iPhone variations could be in Apple’s future

Many critics have stated that Apple needs to branch out from its current device line up and toss variations of the iPhone into the mix, offering larger screens, different price points, and hardware variations. The logic behind such ideas is that more competitors than ever are emerging, and some consumers prefer larger screens and different hardware than the iPhone offers, driving them to different products. When asked about this at the D11 conference this evening, Apple’s Tim Cook addressed the issue, but not before suggesting such devices could be in Apple’s future.

Tim Cook

The question initially started with using the iPod as an example, with the device having been offered in many different iterations at different price points, such as the Nano, Mini, Classic, Shuffle, etc. Why was Apple willing to produce such a variety of iPods, yet has never branched out in a similar way with the iPhone, with the only price point variations resulting from the subsidization differences between current and previous-gen models?

Before answering the question, Cook kicked off his response with a simple suggestion that such could be a reality for Apple in the future. “Well, we haven’t [launched variations of the iPhone] so far, that doesn’t shut off the future. But let me answer the question on why we haven’t so far. It takes a lot of work, a lot of really detailed work, to do a phones right when you manage the hardware, software, and services around it. We’ve chosen to put our energy into getting those right, and have made choices in order to do that.”

He went on to explain that with the iPod example, each iPod played a different role in some way over the others, with the Shuffle in particular getting heavy focus in his response. The Shuffle was different from the Nano, the Nano from the Classic, and each appealed to a specific type of consumer. The products Apple offers, he said, serve different needs, and the question is whether it is yet at that point with the iPhone.

He was also asked about phablets – devices with larger screens and possibly also styluses, and whether that is something Apple should pursue. Said Cook: “A large screen today comes with a lot of trade-offs. People do look at the size, but they also look at things like whether the photos show the proper color, battery life, brightness, longevity … At this point, we’ve felt the Retina is overwhelmingly the best.”

SOURCE: AllThingsD


Tim Cook suggests iPhone variations could be in Apple’s future is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.