Archive for February, 2012

Apple Surpasses $500B, Making It 20th Largest Economy

Wednesday, February 29th, 2012

apple-store-nyc.jc.top.jpg

Apple passed the $500 billion market capitalization this morning. Its market capitalization hit $509 billion at the peak this morning.

CNBC’s Courtney Reagan reports that if Apple were a country with a gross domestic product of $500 billion it would be the world’s 20th largest economy as per Wikipedia.

To put that into further perspective, that is bigger than the entire media industry, bigger than all the leading auto makers combined, bigger than the US retail clothing industry, bigger than the global coffee industry, all the gold in the New York Federal reserve, 10 years of silver production combined, more that the top drug makers Pfizer, Novartis and Sanofi-Aventis combined, 45 days of global oil consumption, all 32 major EURO banks combined. Let me stop there so you can process that.

To understand what is really going on read my post on iPad The Game Changer.

Apple Surpasses $500B, Its The 20th Largest Economy

Wednesday, February 29th, 2012

apple-store-nyc.jc.top.jpg

Apple passed the $500 billion market capitalization this morning. Its market capitalization hit $509 billion at the peak this morning.

CNBC’s Courtney Reagan reports that if Apple were a country with a gross domestic product of $500 billion it would be the world’s 20th largest economy as per Wikipedia.

To put that into further perspective, that is bigger than the entire media industry, bigger than all the leading auto makers combined, bigger than the US retail clothing industry, bigger than the global coffee industry, all the gold in the New York Federal reserve, 10 years of silver production combined, more that the top drug makers Pfizer, Novartis and Sanofi-Aventis combined, 45 days of global oil consumption, all 32 major EURO banks combined. Let me stop there so you can process that.

To understand what is really going on read my post on iPad The Game Changer.

The Future of In-App Purchases

Wednesday, February 29th, 2012

Mobile applications worldwide provide several different ways for developers to earn money from consumers as well as advertisers, and revenue from in-app purchases is expected to surpass revenue from pay-per-downloads in 2012.

The “Mobile Application Business Model” study released in February by market intelligence company ABI Research found that overall revenues from mobile applications, including in-app purchases, pay-per-downloads, in-app advertising and subscriptions will reach $46 billion by 2016, more than four times greater than the $8.5 billion earned in 2011.

ABI also reported that 2012 will be the year when revenues from in-app purchases will surpass those from pay-per-downloads, as in-app purchases become more widely available in applications other than mobile games.

In January, IHS Screen Digest, a media-focused research and consulting company, released the report “Mobile Media Intelligence Service,” predicting that in-app purchases will eventually bring in the majority of revenue from smartphone apps. IHS Screen Digest reported that in-app purchases worldwide earned $970 million in 2011, or 39% of total smartphone application revenues. This is expected to rise to $5.6 billion, or 64% of smartphone app revenues by 2015.

In-App Purchase Revenues Worldwide, 2011 & 2015 (millions and % of total smartphone app revenues)

The forecasts from IHS Screen Digest are smaller than those from ABI Research, as ABI also counted subscriptions and in-app ads in its forecasts; IHS Screen Digest reported just in-app purchases and pay-per-downloads.

In-app purchases are an interesting aspect of mobile revenue, as a majority of such purchases are made by high-level or power users of applications, particularly games. In January, mobile app analytics company Localytics found that 44% of mobile application users who made an in-app purchase did so after their 10th session in the app.

Timeframe in Which Mobile App Users Worldwide Make Their First In-App Purchase, 2011 (% of total)

To continue to capitalize on in-app purchases, mobile app developers—and the marketers they work with—must get non-power users interested in making purchases, and include in-app purchase options in applications besides games.

HP Layoffs Cut 50% Of Tablet WebOS Workers

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

HP jon rubinstein todd bradley

HP is laying off 50% of the workers from its Tablet WebOS team.

It makes sense now that WebOS is becoming an open source project, and HP is no longer building hardware based on it.

The team was around 600 at the beginning of the year, so this means about 300 people from the team are gone.

HP told it did this so it could continue to afford supporting WebOS as an open source project.

Most of the affected positions are in engineering, but related positions like quality assurance and business development were also affected. All laid off employees will be able to apply for other jobs at HP.

Previously, mediocrity like HP’s Tablet project would have passed as innovation but with the efficiency and market readiness of Apple projects is pushing companies like to cut the fat much sooner.

The Department of Homeland Security Is Spying On Your Social Media Updates

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

Homeland Security

Tweeters beware.

The Department of Homeland Security is monitoring our social media activities to look for “Items Of Interest” (IOI) that could predict potential threats.

Animal uncovered a full list of terms the DHS looks for, and some of these words are pretty general.

Aside from names of government agencies, such as the DHS or the CIA, words like “dirty bomb,” “scammers,” “biological,” and even “pork” made the cut.

If your tweets or Facebook status updates are deemed questionable, the Media Monitoring Capability team may hand over your personal information to the DHS, perhaps even by phone if the situation is that urgent.

However, the DHS notes that its got an internal privacy policy that will eliminate Personally Identifiable Information (PII) from its string of aggregated tweets and updates, so they won’t entirely snoop on your private life – not unless you post a sentence full of dangerous keywords.

For example, a status like “Jake is shooting a video of himself destroying a plate of uncooked pork chops in China, that’s some food extremism, his toilet is going to be a disaster afterward” might land you in some hot water.

So take a gander at the full list and you might want to watch the way you’re expressing yourself on the web.

Source: SAI

IBM Quietly Laid Off 1,000 Workers This Week More To Come

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

IBM has reportedly laid off just over 1,000 employees so far this week, and more could be coming, according to documents from a workforce group.

IBM didn’t comment on the layoffs, but word leaked from Alliance@IBM/CWA Local 1701, which is IBM employees’ Communications Workers of America union.

It gathers its data directly from IBM employees, reports Computerworld. Some put the total at less than 1,000 so far, with seven to eight business units being hit, reports WRAL Tech Wire.

The employees are from locations in the U.S., and nearly half of them are “mobile or work from home,” according to statements made by a union spokesman given to Computerworld.

IBM wouldn’t confirm the layoffs but it did release a statement saying that it is “rebalancing” its workforce … meaning layoffs for some spots in the world and hiring in other spots.

Computerworld also points out that IBM stopped disclosing its specific U.S. head count in 2010. So the union estimates that IBM’s U.S. workforce is somewhere less than 100,000.

The Windows Operating System Is Dying

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

broken window

Microsoft Office On The iPad Is Killing Windows
Windows is dead. Microsoft Office killed it. Or it will, once Microsoft ports Office to the iPad. For just as porting Office to Mac OS X back in 2001 sowed the seeds of Apple’s relevance as a credible desktop alternative to Windows, so too will Microsoft’s capitulation to the iPad ensure that Windows will die even as Office takes on a new, multi-billion dollar relevance. Right now, Microsoft’s only real money in mobile comes from Android licensees. So Microsoft needs a winner in mobile, and Windows isn’t it. At least, not anytime soon. All said and done, Windows is still the number one operating system. But rivals are changing that, and quickly. In a recent survey, 68% believe iOS and Android will take over desktops as well.

Source: The Register

Non-Tech Workers In Silicon Valley Are Still Getting Crushed By The Recession

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

Silicon Valley

MENLO PARK, Calif. (AP) — Daniel Macias is the face of Silicon Valley seldom seen by those who don’t live there.

When he was 19, he wasn’t starting what would become one of the world’s most successful tech companies, like Mark Zuckerberg did at that age when he founded Facebook. Macias spent his 19th birthday behind bars, where he’d been sentenced for assault.

Now 20, Macias spent a recent day learning to build houses as part of a construction job training program near Facebook’s headquarters. He hopes to join the carpenters union when he finishes the program.

“If I wasn’t going to school, I would have been in the streets,” Macias said.

Money and jobs abound in Silicon Valley for people with the right high-tech or business skills. For those who don’t, the Great Recession has meant the same challenge as anywhere else in the country.

Facebook moved into its new offices on the former campus of Sun Microsystems along San Francisco Bay not long before announcing plans for an initial public offering. Inside, employees wrestle with the enviable problem of what to do with their money once the IPO makes them overnight millionaires.

A short drive down the road, East Palo Alto saw the number of murders double from four to eight, a significant spike for a city of just 28,000 people. Average income hovers just under $18,000 annually, compared to more than $66,000 for Silicon Valley as a whole. The unemployment rate in December was 17 percent, compared to 8.3 percent region-wide.

Those disparities stem in part from the complicated histories of the small cities that span the Highway 101 corridor threading through the heart of Silicon Valley, and in part from national economic trends that have spared few struggling communities. They also reflect some changes unique to the most recent tech boom, fueled by social media, cloud computing and mobile apps.

As per capita income rises in the region, the median income has fallen, suggesting that as some people are getting richer, more are making less. The percentage of students in Silicon Valley public schools receiving free or reduced-price lunches has increased steadily over the past several years, an indication of hard times for more families.

Data on these economic trends are collected every year in the Silicon Valley Index, compiled by local nonprofit analysts. This year’s report highlighted the recovery of the region’s high-tech economy as wildly successful companies like Facebook go on hiring sprees.

But that recovery has not had the same ripple effect on the region as a whole compared to previous tech booms, said Russell Hancock, head of Joint Venture, one of the groups behind the index.

In the past, companies like Hewlett-Packard Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp. brought mid-level jobs to Silicon Valley along with the expected science, engineering and management positions, Hancock said. But globalization has sent the manufacturing jobs overseas. Meanwhile, information technology has made once-plentiful clerical and office positions obsolete.

“The technologies that we invented here have actually eliminated entire classes of jobs,” Hancock said. Without those jobs, the prospects for workers without high-end tech skills have become even more challenging:

“If you took away tech, our region would look like any other region, maybe even worse,” he said.

The contrast between the haves at Facebook and the have-nots in East Palo Alto nearby has stirred some tension. City Councilman Carlos Romero is pushing for the company to do more to address traffic and the resulting air quality issues created by the influx of new workers. He also worries that especially after Facebook’s IPO, newly flush employees will start buying up the city’s relatively affordable real estate close to their offices and send housing prices spiraling higher than low-income residents can afford.

“This is not about making sure that Facebook doesn’t come into the community,” Romero said. “This is about making sure East Palo Alto is not left out.”

Nearly half of Facebook’s employees take some form of alternative transportation, and the company is placing a hard cap on the number of vehicles allowed on and off campus to keep traffic down, said Facebook spokesman Tucker Bounds. Facebook has also been working with local developers on efforts to build housing for employees on vacant land near the campus to lessen the impact on the existing housing market, Bounds said.

Facebook has initiated some outreach into the surrounding community, including support for the program where Macias is learning to be a carpenter, known as JobTrain.

Kail Lubarsky, director of marketing at JobTrain, said no graduates have gotten jobs with Facebook yet, but she said she’s working with the company in hopes of establishing an internship program. JobTrain has culinary arts training that could lead to jobs for students in Facebook’s cafeterias. But the real goal is to place students in entry-level jobs that could let them advance to join the ranks of the in-demand coders, designers and executives who thrive most in Silicon Valley.

At JobTrain, some students said they were gunning for Facebook jobs. But many said they were simply grateful for the chance to start over, to get a foothold in an economy that has challenged many of them, even in a place where on paper the recovery is in full swing.

Macias said he sees parallels between his effort to get ahead and the Facebook employees up the road, whom he sees as average people who worked hard and succeeded.

“They took advantage of opportunities,” he said.

___

Marcus Wohlsen can be reached on Twitter: http://twitter.com/marcuswohlsen

Source: Business Insider

Here’s How Facebook Is Bypassing Google For Mobile Apps (GOOG, FB)

Monday, February 27th, 2012

Facebook new headquarters with Zuckerberg

Facebook is letting developers of mobile Facebook apps send charges to your phone bill, so users don’t need a credit card to buy the apps.

This won’t work on iPhones — Facebook and Apple have a deal where all Facebook apps must be sold through Apple’s App Store.

But it will definitely work on Android apps.

So, instead of forcing users to buy Facebook apps through the Android Marketplace (which gives Google a cut of every sale), or enter their credit card info for some new kind of Facebook-specific market (which very few people would probably do), users can just click and buy.

That goes for just about anything a developer wants to sell — another app, extra game levels, or physical goods.

In the U.S., participating carriers will include AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon.

We thought this would be coming when Facebook bought Bango, a company specializing in mobile carrier billing, last month. But today, the company confirmed it on a blog post.

In the same blog post, Facebook explains that it’s also making it easier for Android users to discover Facebook mobile apps without having to go through the Android Marketplace.

Specifically, Facebook is now letting developers use its Open Graph platform to push apps right on Facebook. For instance, if I use Foodspotting to recommend a particular dish at a restaurant, my friends on Facebook will see that recommendation. That might encourage them to download the app themselves.

Facebook already lets iOS and Web app developers use Open Graph, but today it announced it’s extending that to Android developers as well.

Source: SAI

Apple Rises To All Time High To Salute Its Maker

Monday, February 27th, 2012

Apple opened at an all time high on Friday, February 24th, the day its founder Steve Jobs was born. Steve Jobs would have been 57. To top it up, Apple closed the day at an all time high of $522.41. I guess Apple’s shares were echoing the sentiment of the stock market by saluting its maker, the Great Steve Jobs. Apple has been firing on all cylinders since the return of the Great Guru in 1997. I am long Apple.