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#1
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news service reports macintosh is now at less than 4% marketshare. but
ipod is keeping the money going at apple. |
#2
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iPod isn't a money maker neither is the iTunes music store. It's kind
of a whack marketing chain. At least this is how my Apple sales rep explained it to me. The iTunes music store helps sell iPods which in turn helps sell Macintoshes. Their biggest money makers are the desktop and powerbook computers. A lot less over head on the computers when compared to the mark-up. Where as the iPod they make a few bucks on each sale, not to be taken litterally. I'm sure it's more than five dollars per sale but far less than 200. cheers garrett On 2004-12-10 16:45:56 -0800, said: news service reports macintosh is now at less than 4% marketshare. but ipod is keeping the money going at apple. |
#3
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#4
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![]() -- Somewhere in Texas, a village is missing its idiot. "Stephen Boyke" wrote in message ... On 12/10/04 4:45 PM, in article , " wrote: news service reports macintosh is now at less than 4% marketshare. but ipod is keeping the money going at apple. Your point? I drive a Range Rover. As far as auto sales, the Range Rover is less than 1/10th of 1 percent of the market share. Should I be concerned or something? Maybe I should buy a Ford Explorer. I'm sure I would feel more comfortable knowing it has a higher market share. The other thing to remember is that the PC market share is split amongst 1000 different vendors. |
#5
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4 percent of the marketshare is like 20 million computers a year world
wide. It is a big enough volume to make good products and make money. Had it been 15 years ago than 4 percent might be problematic. |
#6
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In article .com,
transmogrifa wrote: 4 percent of the marketshare is like 20 million computers a year world wide. It is a big enough volume to make good products and make money. Had it been 15 years ago than 4 percent might be problematic. I pretty sure Apple shipped a little over 800,000 Macs last quarter. And a hair over 2 million ipods. David Correia Celebration Sound Warren, Rhode Island www.CelebrationSound.com |
#7
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david, your figures are pretty much on,
but they are for the last quarter only. http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/TechNews...667793-ap.html |
#8
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transmogrifa wrote:
4 percent of the marketshare is like 20 million computers a year world wide. It is a big enough volume to make good products and make money. Had it been 15 years ago than 4 percent might be problematic. Precisely. It is still sort of depressing to see how Microsoft and Intel have taken the industry over. The guys making Amiga machines today, though, would drool for 4% of the marketplace... --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#9
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david, your figures are pretty much on,
but they are for the last quarter only. http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/TechNews...667793-ap.html BRBR which is pretty much what you said.... it was early, i thought you meant for the year..... i'm awake now.... |
#10
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"Digidog27" wrote ...
david, your figures are pretty much on, but they are for the last quarter only. http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/TechNews...667793-ap.html which is pretty much what you said.... it was early, i thought you meant for the year..... i'm awake now.... "Apple officials believe the popularity of the company's music products, which also includes the online ITunes Music Store, is also creating a "halo effect," translating to more sales for the computer business, Oppenheimer said. " Wait till they find out that Apple charges $100 to replace the battery. The halo may turn out to be a liability. |
#11
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![]() Wait till they find out that Apple charges $100 to replace the battery. The halo may turn out to be a liability. Wait 'till they find out they can buy a newer battery with significantly more capacity for $35 and change it out themselves.... |
#12
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The battery of the ipod or the computers? The battery of a Sony laptop
cost 199 to replace. 100 would be a deal. Mike http://www.mmeproductions.com |
#13
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In article , Digidog27
wrote: david, your figures are pretty much on, but they are for the last quarter only. http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/TechNews...667793-ap.html BRBR which is pretty much what you said.... it was early, i thought you meant for the year..... i'm awake now.... I've done the same thing myself. I keep close touch cuz I own the stock. It's been breath taking the last 2 years. David Correia Celebration Sound Warren, Rhode Island www.CelebrationSound.com |
#14
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In article , Particle
Salad wrote: Wait till they find out that Apple charges $100 to replace the battery. The halo may turn out to be a liability. Wait 'till they find out they can buy a newer battery with significantly more capacity for $35 and change it out themselves... One of the unmentioned powers of the iPod is the diverse 3rd party business ecosystem that has grown around it. All kinds of products from all kinds of companies. From BMW to Bose. As Mark mentioned above, replacement iPod batteries are easy to get and cheap. e.g. http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/ipod/ David Correia Celebration Sound Warren, Rhode Island www.CelebrationSound.com |
#15
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![]() "Garrett Cox" wrote in message news:2004121017594216807%garrcox@yahoocom... iPod isn't a money maker neither is the iTunes music store. It's kind of a whack marketing chain. At least this is how my Apple sales rep explained it to me. The iTunes music store helps sell iPods which in turn helps sell Macintoshes. Well, that's the theory, but most of Apple's significant wad of ready cash came from iPods this year, not macs. And only a very tiny bit came from iTunes. So what's the next rabbit from the hat? jb Their biggest money makers are the desktop and powerbook computers. A lot less over head on the computers when compared to the mark-up. Where as the iPod they make a few bucks on each sale, not to be taken litterally. I'm sure it's more than five dollars per sale but far less than 200. cheers garrett On 2004-12-10 16:45:56 -0800, said: news service reports macintosh is now at less than 4% marketshare. but ipod is keeping the money going at apple. |
#16
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reddred wrote:
"Garrett Cox" wrote in message iPod isn't a money maker neither is the iTunes music store. It's kind of a whack marketing chain. At least this is how my Apple sales rep explained it to me. The iTunes music store helps sell iPods which in turn helps sell Macintoshes. Well, that's the theory, but most of Apple's significant wad of ready cash came from iPods this year, not macs. And only a very tiny bit came from iTunes. So what's the next rabbit from the hat? A follow-on to the Newton. Apple is really good at pulling disconnected rabbits out of hats, and they have been doing so since they started. Aside from a couple mistakes, like the Apple III and the Mac Portable, they've done surprisingly well at it. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#17
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![]() "david" wrote in message ... In article , reddred wrote: "Garrett Cox" wrote in message news:2004121017594216807%garrcox@yahoocom... iPod isn't a money maker neither is the iTunes music store. It's kind of a whack marketing chain. At least this is how my Apple sales rep explained it to me. The iTunes music store helps sell iPods which in turn helps sell Macintoshes. Well, that's the theory, but most of Apple's significant wad of ready cash came from iPods this year, not macs. And only a very tiny bit came from iTunes. So what's the next rabbit from the hat? jb But separating out the iPod earnings is hard to do, and it something the company has not done. We know that Macs represent roughly half of Apple's sales. Sales for macs are up marginally this year, like the PC industry, but Apple's operating income has gone up roughly 400 percent, and revenues rose 33 percent. Parts costs for computer manufacturers have gone up, so the margin on the machines is lower, and lower still because of demanding new price points. I think it's logical to assume that the margins are pretty big on a box like the iPod. There's not much in there, and most of the R&D was in design. That huge rollout, a 400 percent increase in income, is not due to macs or logic express taking over the world. And the 1/3rd increase in revenue is not due to macs being sold, it is due to relatively cheap little boxes being sold for $400 apiece. I know I could probably get by on the interest generated by $5 billion ; I sure would have a kickass studio. As to the next rabbit, Wall St. says it's lots and lots more iPods. Apple with sell more in 2005, and supposedly even more in 2006 and even more in 2007. Personally, I think that's an easy one. The price points are going to come down, they have to. I'm wondering if we'll see more of the iPod licensing like Apple and HP have done. And those Apple Retail Stores are boosting their numbers every quarter, and the company continues to open more. I don't know if those are making money or not yet. Add to this what Wall St. is calling "a halo effect" - happy iPod owners become a source of more Mac sales. And Jobs obviously has a few more tricks up his sleeve. A kind of natural iteration imo is a combo iPod/Cellphone. You can go anywhere with it, I'm guessing a larger screen and some kind of expansion port for wifi. That would fit in with a cell, but they might have to partner with someone to make it work right. Given the huge run up in AAPL the past 2 years - trust me, if you owned the stock you noticed it ; - there was a surprising article in the Wall St. Journal 2 days ago intimating the stock has considerably more upside. I think there's a lot more growth, but nothing like this year. They need to make another great big fat rabbit, or they need to buy someone. jb |
#18
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... reddred wrote: "Garrett Cox" wrote in message iPod isn't a money maker neither is the iTunes music store. It's kind of a whack marketing chain. At least this is how my Apple sales rep explained it to me. The iTunes music store helps sell iPods which in turn helps sell Macintoshes. Well, that's the theory, but most of Apple's significant wad of ready cash came from iPods this year, not macs. And only a very tiny bit came from iTunes. So what's the next rabbit from the hat? A follow-on to the Newton. That's like what I was thinking, or in the short term partner with Sirius to compete with XM's portable players. But yeah, I don't see any reason not to have a pc inside an iPod. Apple is really good at pulling disconnected rabbits out of hats, and they have been doing so since they started. Aside from a couple mistakes, like the Apple III I don't think they supported that much. Things like the Newton were just too weird at the time for people to embrace. I kind of like what they're doing now, coming at it from the entertainment gadget angle. jb |
#19
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reddred wrote:
"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message Apple is really good at pulling disconnected rabbits out of hats, and they have been doing so since they started. Aside from a couple mistakes, like the Apple III I don't think they supported that much. Things like the Newton were just too weird at the time for people to embrace. I kind of like what they're doing now, coming at it from the entertainment gadget angle. They didn't support the III at all, as far as I could tell, which is why nobody bought it. It could do everything the Apple II could do, for a whole lot more money. That's not a good marketing plan. Apple does not seem to really do careful investigation of the market before making products; they make products that are neat and some of them find a market share and some of them tank. And _some_ of them, like the Newton and like Hypercard, start out poorly, build momentum, and then get discontinued just as they are starting to develop a market. The Ipod caught on, but if it hadn't, I am sure Apple has plenty more things waiting in the wings. Some will be great and some will be useless. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#20
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... reddred wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message Apple is really good at pulling disconnected rabbits out of hats, and they have been doing so since they started. Aside from a couple mistakes, like the Apple III I don't think they supported that much. Things like the Newton were just too weird at the time for people to embrace. I kind of like what they're doing now, coming at it from the entertainment gadget angle. They didn't support the III at all, as far as I could tell, which is why nobody bought it. It could do everything the Apple II could do, for a whole lot more money. That's not a good marketing plan. The emulation mode was a dumb idea, too. I think a IIe was basically what the III should have been. Apple does not seem to really do careful investigation of the market before making products; they make products that are neat and some of them find a market share and some of them tank. That's one of the things I like about them. It's more like media companies used to be, it's very odd for a technology company to be like that once they are any size at all. It seems to work for them, though. jb |
#21
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iPod isn't a money maker neither is the iTunes music store.
Well, that's the theory, but most of Apple's significant wad of ready cash came from iPods this year, not macs. But separating out the iPod earnings is hard to do, and it something the company has not done. Err, they just did it. Quote : Of the $8.279 billion in net sales reported for FY04, Apple's Macintosh line -- Power Macs, PowerBooks, iMacs, eMacs and iBooks -- brought in $4.923 billion. The iPod brought in another $1.3 billion for the company in FY04. Its iTunes Music Store and other iPod-related accessories and services brought in another $278 million. The remainder came from sales of peripherals, software and services. End of quote. From http://www.macworld.com/news/2004/12/03/10k/index.php Regards, -- Eric (Dero) Desrochers http://homepage.mac.com/dero72 Hiroshima 45, Tchernobyl 86, Windows 95 |
#22
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In article , Scott Dorsey
wrote: So what's the next rabbit from the hat? A follow-on to the Newton. --scott No chance for a Newton like device anytime soon, accord to Jobs on multiple occasions over the past few years. And when you look at the marketplace, you gotta tip your hat for the Steve-ing the Newton, Scully's baby. One of the things Apple's been doing is keeping the iPod "pure" by not filling it with a whole bunch of other functions. 3rd parties are hacking little programs into it but not yet Apple. Supposedly they are watching to see how the new photo iPod does before mucking the waters further. I always thought it obvious that they add an am/fm tuner to the thing. David Correia Celebration Sound Warren, Rhode Island www.CelebrationSound.com |
#23
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reddred wrote:
I don't think they supported that much. Things like the Newton were just too weird at the time for people to embrace. If by "weird" you mean "expensive and falling far short of its promise of recognizing handwriting", then I agree. ;-) And yeah, I know they released some update where the handwriting recognitiong was much-improved, but by that time it already had a reputation for being an impractical gadget that was desirable only to hard-core gadget freaks. - Logan |
#24
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In article , Eric Desrochers
wrote: iPod isn't a money maker neither is the iTunes music store. Well, that's the theory, but most of Apple's significant wad of ready cash came from iPods this year, not macs. But separating out the iPod earnings is hard to do, and it something the company has not done. Err, they just did it. Quote : Of the $8.279 billion in net sales reported for FY04, Apple's Macintosh line -- Power Macs, PowerBooks, iMacs, eMacs and iBooks -- brought in $4.923 billion. The iPod brought in another $1.3 billion for the company in FY04. Its iTunes Music Store and other iPod-related accessories and services brought in another $278 million. The remainder came from sales of peripherals, software and services. End of quote. From http://www.macworld.com/news/2004/12/03/10k/index.php Regards, -- Eric (Dero) Desrochers http://homepage.mac.com/dero72 By earnings, we weren't speaking gross numbers, but actual percent of Apple's net. David Correia Celebration Sound Warren, Rhode Island www.CelebrationSound.com |
#25
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reddred wrote:
I know I could probably get by on the interest generated by $5 billion ; I sure would have a kickass studio. While the money lasted... -- ha |
#26
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"david" wrote in message
... Inarticle , reddred wrote: "Garrett wrote in message news:2004121017594216807%garrcox@yahoocom... iPod isn't amoney maker neither is the iTunes music store. It's kind of awhack marketing chain. At least this is how my Apple sales rep explained it to me. The iTunes music store helps sell iPods which in turn helps sell Macintoshes. more tricks up his sleeve.A kind of natural iteration imo is a combo iPod/Cellphone. You can go anywhere with it, I'm guessing a larger screen and some kindof expansion port for wifi. That would fit in with a cell, but theymight have to partner with someone to make it work right. Theobvious one to me is a "satellite Radio i-pod" Of course Sirus and XMwill have to merge sometime soon. The all in one i-pod goesBlackberry, Cell Phone - Newton type thing must be on the Horizon too. 2 Lines: 1 Date: Thu, 16 Dec 2004 13:42:58 GMT NNTP-Posting-Host: 70.19.21.115 X-Complaints-To: X-Trace: trndny03 1103204578 70.19.21.115 (Thu, 16 Dec 2004 08:42:58 EST) NNTP-Posting-Date: Thu, 16 Dec 2004 08:42:58 EST Xref: number1.nntp.dca.giganews.com rec.audio.pro:1133282 |
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