apple

iPhone day 14: Walt Mossberg finds 12 bugs in MobileMe

Paul Boutin · 07/24/08 11:00AM

"Apple's MobileMe is far too flawed to be reliable," the Sage of Potomac pronounced yesterday. It's a rare swipe from Walt Mossberg, the guy better known for writing Steve Jobs's marketing slogans ("the most elegant desktop computer I've ever used.") What's important is that Mossberg isn't complaining about MobileMe's launch glitches — even when it works, he says, it's not solid. Here's the bullet list of Walt's gripes:

iPhone day 13: Dude, where's my mail?

Paul Boutin · 07/23/08 11:00AM

Apple's .Mac email — relaunched as MobileMe in conjunction with the iPhone 3G two Fridays ago — is still flying as crooked as Drinky Crow on payday. MacRumors has aggregated customer gripes. Apple's hard-to-swallow response: Only 1 percent of customers are having problems after Apple's server migration. MobileMe mail works for stationary old me, but see these screenshots from readers:

Cramer: "Apple is too dangerous until we hear about Jobs"

Nicholas Carlson · 07/22/08 03:20PM

After giving a lower forecast for its September quarter than Wall Street expected, Apple saw its shares drop 3 percent today. TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says not to blame the numbers, but the numbskull PR move Apple made in refusing to discuss plans for Jobs's successor. "Look," Cramer says in the clip embedded below, "I thought the forecast was great. This is all about [Apple saying] Jobs's health is a 'personal matter."

Will Art Levinson leave Genentech after a Roche takeover?

Owen Thomas · 07/22/08 12:20PM

South of the City and hard by the shores of San Francisco Bay, Genentech rarely attracts the attention of the founders of flashy Internet startups as they drive past its offices on the way to the airport. But the biotech company's longtime CEO, Art Levinson, is an integral part of the Silicon Valley scene, serving on the boards of both Google and Apple. That's why Swiss pharmaceutical giant Roche's move to buy the 44 percent of Genentech it doesn't already own for a price north of $38 billion could have reverbations well beyond the world of automated pipetting systems.

Apple calls Jobs's health a "private matter," scares shareholders silly

Nicholas Carlson · 07/22/08 10:20AM

Apple beat Wall Street estimates for its latest quarter's revenues and profits yesterday, but worried shareholders with unimpressive guidance for the next quarter. During the conference call, Apple executives refused to answer an analyst's question about CEO Steve Jobs's health, replying: ""Steve's health is a private matter." Silicon Alley Insider's Henry Blodget disagrees:

Street Talk

cityfile · 07/22/08 04:50AM
  • An Abu Dhabi investment fund says it has agreed to an $8 billion commercial-finance partnership with General Electric. [WSJ]

Slavish fanboy purchases of Macs and iPods pad another profitable quarter for Apple

Alaska Miller · 07/21/08 04:20PM

Apple reported numbers for its third fiscal quarter today: Based on the sales of 2,496,000 Macs and 11,011,000 iPods, Apple generated revenues of $7.46 billion and a net profit of $1.07 billion. In the same time period last year, Apple's revenue was $5.41 billion, with a profit of $818 million. Apple didn't release numbers for iPhone sales — those come next quarter. Steve Jobs, skipping over talk of his health, also hinted at more new product releases in the coming months. New products from Apple? Yes, we're not shocked, either.

iPhone sales chief sued by ex-employer Motorola

Paul Boutin · 07/21/08 12:40PM

Motorola has sued Mike Fenger, the former head of Motorola's mobile gadgets for Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Fenger allegedly broke a two-year noncompete agreement by jumping to Apple to run global sales for the's iPhone in March. “He cannot perform his duties for Apple without inevitably disclosing Motorola’s trade secrets,” says the lawsuit, which aims to keep Fenger away from Apple and other mobile makers for two years. Trade secrets? Here's a more honest appraisal: If Fenger did so well selling the Moto Q, imagine what he'll do given an iPhone.

Investors want Apple's gaunt Jobs to name his successor

Nicholas Carlson · 07/21/08 11:20AM

Quarterly earnings reports are supposed to be about a public company's financial health, but during today's call, Apple's institutional investors want a checkup on CEO Steve Jobs. They haven't gotten over Jobs's overly thin appearance at WWDC in June. "Apple's hedge-fund investors are very worried," a Wall Street source tells the New York Post. In the weeks following WWDC, Apple told reporters Jobs looked so ill because of antibiotic treatments for a cold.

Doctor Quits Practice To Blog About Apple

Ryan Tate · 07/21/08 03:21AM

This morning's Times brings the story of Arnold Kim, the blogger behind MacRumors.com. Kim just quit his job as a freshly-minted physician to blog full time. Wait, what? Well, see, MacRumors has been estimated to be worth $85 million — more valuable than the Huffington Post. So, for Kim, going full-time was "on paper... an easy decision." Also he has a 14-month-old daughter (awww) who he'd like to spend more time with. Even his dad approves! "When he told his father, also a doctor, about the decision, Dr. Kim was pleased that 'he was very supportive of it, which was sort of surprising to me,'" the Times said. Only an hour after publication, the Times story has already reached number two on the Technology section most-emailed list — no doubt thanks to platoons of vindicated bloggers forwarding the piece to their parents. I think I'll join them! [Times] (Photo via blakespot on Flickr)

iTunes Steals Mad Men's Smokes

Hamilton Nolan · 07/17/08 03:25PM

The image you see on top is a standard ad for Mad Men, AMC's series about hard-paryting admen in the good old days that conveniently advertises itself everywhere. The image on the bottom is what you see when you visit iTunes to purchase the full season of Mad Men. The difference? On iTunes, the man has had his cigarette taken away. Steve Jobs does not understand the point of this show at all. Click to enlarge the Apple-approved scrubbing of our culture.

iPhone day 7: Store getting remodeled, but lines still long

Paul Boutin · 07/17/08 11:40AM

A tipster snapped this late-night shot of Apple's Union Square store being overhauled. You — yes, you waiting in line with your old iPhone — send us photos of the results when the store opens at 10, willya? Separately, we've been told that Apple Store employees at the San Francisco flagship cut off would-be buyers who arrived after 5:30 p.m. Shoppers timed the morning line at 2.5 hours yesterday. That's even more time than I spend watching my BlackBerry reboot.

Apple's weekend profits for the iPhone 3G: $330 million

Nicholas Carlson · 07/17/08 11:00AM

Apple profited some $330 million from 3G iPhone sales over its first weekend, Fortune's Philip Elmer-DeWitt estimates that . His back-of-the-envelope formula factored in iSuppli's estimate of the manufacturing costs of each iPhone 3G, Apple's numbers on how many iPhones it sold over the weekend, analyst estimates on how much AT&T and other carriers subsidize each phone, and what a survey says about the sales split between the iPhone's $199 and $299 iPhones models. All that, a little bit slower now, in Elmer-DeWitt's bullet points below.

Amazon limps its way to 4 percent of U.S. digital-music market

Alaska Miller · 07/16/08 05:20PM

eMusic CEO David Pakman estimates that Amazon.com's MP3 store may have sold 27 million tracks since opening 6 months ago — which sounds good until you consider that Apple's iTunes moves 2 billion songs a year. Pakman also estimates that Amazon's store is adding $7 million, after the labels' take and expenses. At least people are looking forward to a new Kindle, right? [Silicon Alley Insider]