Tag Archive for Dell

Tablet Notes

iPad sold three million units in the first 80 days after its April 2010 release and its current sales rate is about 4.5 million units per quarter, according to Bernstein Research. This sales rate is blowing past the one million units the iPhone sold in its first quarter and the 350,000 units sold in the first year by the DVD player, the most quickly adopted non-phone electronic product.

Dell Inc.Apple iPad Will Fail in the Enterprise: Dell

Andy Lark, Dell‘s (DELL) global head of marketing for large enterprises and public organizations told CIO Australia that the Apple (AAPL) iPad would ultimately fail in the enterprise.

… longer term, open, capable and affordable will win, not closed, high price and proprietary [Apple has] done a really nice job, they’ve got a great product, but the challenge they’ve got is that already Android is outpacing them.

Apple is great if you’ve got a lot of money and live on an island. It’s not so great if you have to exist in a diverse, open, connected enterprise; simple things become quite complex.

Mr. Lark claimed Dell had taken an enterprise approach toward tablet PCs, which would ultimately give the company, which has a major stake in Microsoft Windows and the desktop PC market, an edge. “We’ve taken a very considered approach to tablets, given that the vast majority of our business isn’t in the consumer space,” he said.

The cost of Apple products was another deterrent to iPad deployments, with Lark claiming that a the economics on a fully loaded iPad did not add up. “An iPad with a keyboard, a mouse and a case [means] you’ll be at $1500 or $1600; that’s double of what you’re paying,” he claimed. “That’s not feasible.”

Despite the company’s history with Microsoft, it had embraced both Windows Phone 7 and Android operating systems “…Our strategy is multi-OS,” Lark said. “We will do Windows 7 coupled with Android Honeycomb, and we’re really excited. We think that giving people that choice is very important.”

Get Outlook Offline on the iPhone and iPad

PST MailApple (AAPL) iPhone and iPad owners who need access to their Microsoft (MSFT) Outlook e-mail even when they don’t have an Internet connection, help has finally arrived says AppScout. Arrow Bit has released Pst Mail an iPad app that provides offline access, potentially saving money on the user’s data plan. With the app, you can carry around a year’s worth of messages with you. Pst Mail can interact with the Mail app on your iPhone or iPad to reply to or forward messages. It can also open pst files created with any version of Microsoft Outlook.

AppScout says to find messages in large pst files, Pst Mail includes an advanced search feature. You can search by sender, recipient, subject text, message body, or even attachment name. You can also limit the search to a particular time frame. The developers offer a free lite version of the app in the iTunes Store, which has all the same features as the full version but is limited to the number of messages a user may open in each folder. The full version costs $9.99 in the iTunes app store.

GoToMyPC: iPad App

GoToMyPCiPad Citrix (CTXS) has launched an Apple (AAPL) iPad version of GoToMyPC, a remote desktop application that lets you login to your computer and control it on the go. Up until recently you needed a PC to login to a remote PC using the service. But the iPad app lets you do it anywhere you can get an internet connection on an iPad.

Mobilputing says GoToMyPC is hardly the first app of its type for the iPad. LogMein, TeamViewer, Parallels and Splashtop all offer similar apps. But the GoToMyPC app has tight security features including 128-bit AES encryption, user authentication, and dual passwords, oriented for business.

Apple Sued Over Applications Giving Information to Advertisers

Law SuitApple (AAPL) and Apple app developers have been sued over the collection and sharing of user data with outside companies (which I wrote about here). Two suits were filed in the Northern District of CA against the iPhone and iPad manufacturer. Apple is named in Lalo v. Apple, 10-5878.

Lalo seeks class action and claims that iPhones and iPads are encoded with identifying devices that allow advertising networks to track what applications users download, how frequently they’re used and for how long. “Some apps are also selling additional information to ad networks, including users’ location, age, gender, income, ethnicity, sexual orientation and political views,” reports Bloomberg’s BusinesWeek.

According to Wired the second suit, Freeman v. Apple seeks both monetary damages and a court order to stop the profiling by  app makers being sued are Pandora and Dictionary.com, Toss It, Text4Plus, The Weather Channel, Talking Tom Cat and Pimple Popper Lite.

iPad sold three million units in the first 80 days after its April release and its current sales rate is about 4.5 million units per quarter, according to Bernstein Research. This sales rate is blowing past the one million units the iPhone sold in its first quarter and the 350,000 units sold in the first year by the DVD player, the most quickly adopted non-phone electronic product.

25 Tech Firms Sued for Breaching 3G Patents

patent trollTechEye points out a case started by Golden Bridge Technology (GBT) which lists 25 tech firms alleged to breach a number of 3G patents.  In the case Golden Bridge Technology (1:11-cv-00165-SLR, U.S. District Court District of Delaware)  GBT alleges the companies have breached patents 6,574,267 B1, and 7,359,427 on standards for 3G wireless communications including devices and base stations. The defendants, the filing says, have refused to license the patents.

GBT said its developments were adopted by 3GPP “as an important and necessary part of the 3G and UMTS standards.” GBT is seeking damages from the defendants’ alleged past and present infringement. All of the defendants, in one way or another, use GBT’s technology, it alleges. GBT is seeking damages from the defendants’ alleged past and present infringement.

The defendants in the case are:

  1. Amazon (AMZN),
  2. Acer,
  3. Barnes & Noble (BKS),
  4. Deutsche Telekom,
  5. Dell (DELL),
  6. Exedea,
  7. Garmin (GRMN),
  8. Hewlett Packard (HPQ),
  9. HTC,
  10. Huawei,
  11. Lenovo (LNVGY)
  12. LG Electronics,
  13. Novatel (NVTL),
  14. Option NV (OPTI),
  15. Palm,
  16. Panasonic (PC),
  17. Pantech,
  18. Research in Motion (RIMM),
  19. Sharp (SHCAY),
  20. Sierra Wireless (SWIR),
  21. Sony (SNE),
  22. Sony Ericsson,
  23. T-Mobile,
  24. UTStarcom (USTI)  and
  25. ZTE (783).

In addition, it wants treble damages against T-Mobile, HTC, LG, Palm, RIM and Sony Ericsson, and lawyers’ costs.

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Like I have pointed out again and again and again, many firm’s business plan has de-evolved into patent trolling.

Does GBT deserve to collect a tax from every innovator?

Foxconn – The Empire Apple Made

AppleHon Hai Precision Industry Foxconn is now the biggest exporter out of China. The firm churns out products like iPadsiPhones and PlayStations for Americans. Among its clients are Apple, Cisco (CSCO), Dell, HP, IBM, Microsoft (MSFT), Nokia (NOK) and Sony (SNE).  Most American consumers never head of Foxconn, which is also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry, until employees began to commit suicide by leaping off its buildings. However the firm has a longer history.

Terry Gou aka the ‘general’ founded Foxconn in 1974 with a $7,500 loan from his mother. According to a recent Buisnessweek article his first world headquarters was a rented shed in a gritty Taipei suburb called Tucheng, which means Dirt City in Mandarin. Mr. Gou, then 23, had done three years of vocational training and served in the military. He then worked for two years as a shipping clerk, where he got a firsthand view of Taiwan’s booming export economy and figured he ought to stop pushing paper and get into the game. With the cash from his mother, he bought a couple of plastic molding machines and started making channel-changing knobs for black-and-white televisions. His first customer was Chicago-based Admiral TV, and he soon got deals to supply RCA, Zenith, and Philips (PHG).

Mr. Gou’s first step into American consumer electronics came in 1980 when he started supplying Atari with connectors that linked the joystick cable to its 2600 video-game console. At the height of the Atari craze, Hon Hai was producing connectors for the 15,000 video-game consoles that Atari’s Taiwanese plant made daily. Buisnessweek says Mr. Gou wasn’t content to be a mere supplier of dumb parts. He applied for patents on the technology his company developed, and he kept pressing into new areas.

IBMIn the early ’80s, Mr. Gou took an 11-month tour of the U.S. covering 32 states, during which he dropped in on companies unannounced. Buisnessweek reports that during this trip, he spent three days in Raleigh, N.C., motel close to an IBM (IBM) facility to get an appointment after which he came away with a firm order for connectors. “He is really one of the top sales guys in the world,” Max Fang, the former head of procurement for Dell in Asia who did business with Mr. Gou and was his regular golf partner told Buisnessweek. “He is very aggressive and always on your tail.”

Mr. Gou was early to recognize that China offered an almost limitless supply of cheap labor and was not deterred by  the primitive infrastructure or the Communist government. He set up shop in a suburb of Shenzhen across the border from Hong Kong.  In 1991, Mr. Gou listed Hon Hai Precision on the Taiwan Stock Exchange to fund expansion, mostly into China. By 1996, Mr. Gou told Buisnessweek, it was clear to him that China would become a manufacturing juggernaut, and he started investing heavily in his facilities at Longhua Science & Technology Park aka “Foxconn City.”

CompaqIn 1996, Mr. Gou offered to build the chassis for Compaq’s desktop computers at a fraction of what it would cost Compaq to do the job itself.  “He had this vision and the guts to do anything in a big way,” Mr. Fang is quoted in Buisnessweek. “When I first visited the factory, I saw the whole value chain nicely and effectively designed, starting from a big coil of sheet metal at one end that was cut, formed, welded, and stamped to make the top and bottom of the chassis. Then they did the in-line subassembly, adding a floppy drive, the power supply, and cables. It was all shipped to customers who only had to install the motherboard, CPU, memory, and hard drive. After this revolution by Terry, final computer assembly was easy.”

Buisnessweek says that to sustain an efficient Chinese workforce, Mr. Gou quickly discovered that he had to offer housing, food, and health care, additional costs that kept most of his competitors out of the country. He had to do everything himself. Michael Marks, then chief executive officer of contract-manufacturing giant Flextronics (FLEX), saw Foxconn’s Shenzhen operations taking shape in the late 1990s, “They were making wire out of ingots of copper,” says Mr. Marks. “They had chicken farms to lay the eggs for the cafeteria. One building had 2,000 toolmakers. We had none at the time. But we did after that.”

DellFoxconn was transforming the industry. It was shipping bare-bones computers to IBM, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), and Apple (AAPL). In 1998, when Mr. Gou won his first order from Dell (DELL) to make the chassis for its desktops, Dell insisted he do it in the U.S., close to the final market. “I bought a company in Kansas City. We quickly needed tooling shops and stamping,” Mr. Gou told Buisnessweek. “That factory was a money loser, but Terry had to build it to accommodate Dell against his own will,” recalls Mr. Fang. “For Foxconn, it bought a ticket into the Dell business.”

Dell Number 2 again

I wrote about Dell losing its #2 role in the PC market but now  iSuppli reports that Dell (NASDAQ: DELL) has regained its customary rank in the global PC market behind HP. After nine-months in third place, the Texas-based OEM retook the number 2 position from Taiwan based Acer (LSE: ACID) in the second quarter of 2010.  The change is primarily due to decreased Acer sales and not improved sales for Dell.

In the second quarter shipped Dell shipped 10.5 million units worldwide, down a negligible 1.2 percent from 10.7 million units in the first quarter. This gave Dell a 12.8 percent share of global shipments, down from 13.1 percent in the first quarter according to iSuppli.

However iSuppli says Acer experienced a 6.2 percent shipment decline in the second quarter, with its shipments falling to 10.2 million units, down from 10.9 million in the first quarter. As a result, Acer’s share declined to 12.4 percent, down from 13.3 percent in the first quarter. Acer’s decline was notable given the global PC market’s 1.1 sequential rise in the second quarter, with shipments amounting to 82.5 million units, up from 81.6 million in the first quarter.

“With its product line heavily focused on mobile PCs, Acer’s sequential decline in notebook shipments impacted its position at the total PC level more than its competitors, which were able to draw on the upswing in desktop shipments to bolster their total shipments,” said Matthew Wilkins, principal analyst, compute platforms research for iSuppli.

Dell’s share of the global PC market had been steadily declining since the second quarter of 2008, when the company accounted for 16 percent of worldwide shipments and held a 6.5 percentage point lead over Acer. However by the third quarter of 2009, Dell’s share had dwindled to 12.9 percent, allowing Acer to slip past and take the world’s No. 2 position.

“The second-quarter results show the market-share battle between Dell and Acer is not over and that it will continue to rage,” Wilkins said.

The second quarter marked HP’s 16th consecutive quarter as the No. 1 worldwide PC brand, with a market share of 18.1 percent.

Top 5 PC OEM Ranking Q2 2010

Q2 2010 RankOEMQ2 2010 ShipmentsQ2 2010 ShareQ1 2010 ShipmentsQ1 2010 Share
1Hewlett-Packard14,99518.1%15,96519.6%
2Dell10,54112.8%10,66813.1%
3Acer10,19112.4%10,87013.2%
4Lenovo8,32710.1%7,0208.6%
5Toshiba4,4565.4%4,5755.6%
Others34,02041.2%32,49939.8%
TOTAL82,490100%81,596100%
iSuppli (Ranking by Unit Shipments in Thousands)

Acer Beats Dell

I recently wrote about the troubles at Dell. Here is more proof of the downturn at DellBusinessInsider is reporting that Acer (LSE: ACID), the Taiwanese computer maker has posted another solid quarter of global PC sales, according to new data from Gartner.

The Asian and emerging markets drove Acer’s growth. It has also successfully ridden the explosion in netbook demand. The netbook market is drying up now, though thanks to Apple’s iPad. This could give Dell an opening, if it can execute well (a big if lately) and Taiwan based Acer has problems cracking the mainland China market.

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