iPhone5 – Thin, sleek, and very capable.


Apple has finally unveiled the hugely anticipated iPhone 5.

CEO Tim Cook took the stage in San Francisco, saying ‘Apple has never been stronger’ as the new handset was revealed.

It has a larger 4″ screen, along with a new dock connector and headphone design.

The phone will go on sale on September 21st, and will cost the same as the previous version, the 4S.

With a casing made from glass and aluminium, is it also the thinnest iPhone ever made, at just 7.6mm thick

It also contains an eight-megapixel camera which can take 28-megapixel panoramic shots.

iPhone 5 measures a mere 7.6 millimeters thin and weighs just 112 grams.1 That’s 18 percent thinner and 20 percent lighter than iPhone 4S.

The handset also has a new chip, the Apple A6, which is twice as fast as previous versions but 22% smaller.

The iPhone is expected to become the biggest selling in Apple’s history, with an estimated 8m set to be sold as Apple fights increasing competition from Google’s Android software and Microsoft’s Windows Phone.

Apple boasted the new handset has eight hours of 3G talk time, and a 225 hour standby time.

It also has an eight megapixel camera with a 3264×2448 sensor, and has improved its performance in low light, and a lens made from sapphire crystal.

The handset also now has a panorama mode to create wide shots. ‘The ocean looks bluer, kids look happier,’ joked Phil Schiller, Apple’s vice president of marketing.

Schiller also confirmed the handset has a controversial new connector.

‘The iPhone from its start used the 30 pin connector, and it has served us well. A lot has changed and it is time for the connector to evolve – and out new connector is called Lightning.’

Apple also showed off a connector allowing people to use their existing chargers and accessories.

The handset will use iOS 6, and dumps Google’s maps for Apple’s own.

‘We’ve built in free turn by turn directions,’ said Scott Forstall of Apple as he demonstrated the new Apple Maps app.

‘We use a cinematic camera angle to fly you around corners.’

The firm also showed off a 3D flyover feature allowing people to virtually fly over an area, and showed off the software ‘flying’ over Big Ben in London.

A new app called Passbook also allows people to collect store cards, tickets and other information in a single app.

It can be used to show boarding passes on planes and for entry to concerts and sports games that support the codes.

Users can also share photo albums easily, and Apple’s speech recognition software Siri has been updated to give people sports scores, and even book restaurants.

Facebook has also been integrated into the service, allowing people to update their status via speech.

Sir Jonathan Ive, the man who designed the new phone, said: ‘When you think about your iPhone, it is the product you have with you all the time – we take changing it really seriously.

‘We want to make a much better phone.

‘What makes iPhone 5 so unique if how it feels in your hand.’

Apple also gave a glimpse of the manufacturing behind the iPhone.

‘We use crystalline diamond to polish the handset,’ revealed Sir Jonathan.

‘The variance between products we measure in microns’

The handset will cost the same price as the iPhone 4S, $199 to $399 depending on size.

It will begin shipping on September 21st in US, Canada and several other countries, and customers can pre-order from this Friday.

Apple’s iPhone5 launched


 

Apple unveiled the next generation of its wildly popular iPhone today, an event that will set the course for the closely watched company.

Apple CEO Tim Cook holds up the latest iPhone, which is larger but lighter than previous versions. (Jeff Chiu/AP)

At an event in Cupertino, Calif., CEO Tim Cook showed off the first version of the iPhone 5 to a gathering of technology journalists.

Despite the name, the phone is the sixth version of the device since the smartphone was launched in 2007.

The device is larger and taller than previous versions and now has a 4-inch screen. But at 112 grams, it’s 20 per cent lighter than the last version, Cook said.

The iPhone 5 is entirely made of aluminum and glass, he added.

As is customary for Apple, the event began with discussion about other, less high-profile news about Apple products. CEO Tim Cook addressed the crowd first.

Apple’s core business, the personal computer, has shrunk as the company’s phones and tablets have gotten popular, but the company remains dominant, Cook said.

Apple computers currently own 26 per cent of the global market. And the company’s tablet business has grown quickly. To date, Apple has sold 84 million iPads worldwide, good enough for 62 per cent of the global market share. The company has 250,000 apps for sale in its iTunes App store.

 

 

 

 

Best Portable Chargers for your Smartphones


It is frustrating to run out of battery when you are on a business trip or on a trek camp. Now-a-days smartphone are comes with high-end hardware and highly developed operating system which needs extra power for longer run, but the problem lies due to the fact that battery technology never evolved with the phase of gadgets technology and therefore these high-end devices always runs out of juice often.

Portable charger is a must have accessory if you are a heavy gadget users. These chargers provides a convenient way to power up your portable devices like smartphones, tablet, Bluetooth headset, MP3 Player and lots more. Have a look at these five best power chargers which are worth a buy.

1. Sony CP-A2L

The Sony CP-A2L charger comes with a smooth edges design and can charge many gadgets let it be smartphone, iPad, iPod, walkman or Sony’s portable gaming console. The charger comes with a larger 4000mAh capacity Lithium-ion battery, which is capable of charging a smartphone twice a day. The charger is equipped with USB ports for charging two different devices simultaneously. This portable charger is available for 1990.

2. Nokia DC-11

The Nokia DC-11 portable charger is especially made for Nokia handsets which have Nokia’s standard 2 mm charging port. The charger has two charging ports, micro USB port along with 2 mm charging port.

The charger comes with Lithium-Ion 1500 mAh battery and can charge two devices at a time. It also has LED indicator for charging status and using micro USB charging port you can even charge other micro USB compatible gadgets. The charger is just 11 mm thick allowing you to carry in your pocket anytime. It has a price tag of 2400.

3. iBall Portable Power Charger

The iBall Portable Power Charger is a multi-purpose charger which comes with 8 different charging ports like micro USB, mini USB, Nokia 2 mm, MP3 Player, iPhone, iPod, Ericsson port and Samsung charging ports.

The device features huge 5000 mAh battery capacity, built in Auto power saving, retractable USB cable and has an easy to carry portable design. This multi-purpose charger is affordable too costing only 2499.

4. Cooler Master Choiix

The Cooler Master (CM) Choiix has a stylish and portable design. It is compatible with wide range of smartphones and tablets. The charger has a bigger 5600 mAh Lithium-Ion battery which helps you to charge your gadget two or three times a day.

The charger has four LED indicators which show the remaining battery life and has some cool features like charge protection, over discharge, protection and over current protection. This fully loaded portable charger costs 3680.

5. Genius Universal Power Pack ECO-U600

The Genius Universal Power Pack ECO-U600 offers two USB ports for charging two different devices simultaneously. The charger is compatible with a wide range of smartphone and tablets. The charger comes with a heavy 6800 mAh Lithium-ion battery and is compatible with Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, BlackBerry, Apple and HTC smartphones and tablets as well. It is a bit pricy

costing 4750.

The best-selling Nokia phones ever



Nokia‘s heydays: Surpassed by Apple, Samsung and facing tough competition from other rivals, Nokia has lost its crown and the charm is also fading. The Finnish mobile phone giant is fast losing its market share. But there was a time when Nokia ruled over the mobile phone market and that too for a long time. Now that the company is trying to revive its lost glory we take a look at some Nokia phones that set and shattered sales records.

Nokia E71: The smartphone was released in 2008 and has a QWERTY keyboard, targeting business users. The phone has managed to attract many users, and the company has sold over 15 million units.

Nokia 5800 music express: Introduced in January 2008, the company is said to have sold over 15 million handsets. The phone was introduced as a part of the XpressMusic series of phones, which emphasised music and multimedia playback.

Nokia E63: The phone was released late in 2008, and is marketed as a budget business phone. The phone looks very similar to E71, but its body is made of plastic, unlike E71′s aluminium body.

Nokia 6300: The 6300 was a more style driven replacement for the Nokia 6030. Introduced in 2006, around 35 million such devices were sold by the company.

Nokia N97 mini: It was a touch screen mobile phone in the N-series of smartphones by Nokia, with a slide-out QWERTY keyboard. The phone was released in June 2009, and in September 2009 it was reported that around 2 million N97 handsets had been sold in three months. The phone lured scores of users.

Nokia N72: The phone was introduced in May 2006 and was effectively a re-branded Nokia N70. As an N-series phone, its features were pretty limited. The company sold around 45 million units.

Nokia 7610: It was Nokia’s first smartphone featuring a 1 megapixel camera. Introduced sometime in the middle of 2004, the phone had stylish looks.

Nokia N-Gage: The N-Gage was a mobile telephone and handheld game system by Nokia. It was actually designed to lure gamers. Released in October 2003, the company sold around 3 million N-Gage handsets. Later, the N-Gage QD replaced the original N-Gage in 2004.

Nokia 5200: This handset was very similar in appearance to the Nokia 5300, but there were some differences. Collectively (both Nokia 5200 and 5300), the company sold around 30 million units.

Nokia 5610: The Nokia 5610 was released as an XpressMusic phone in the fourth quarter of 2008. The company managed to sell around 15 million handsets.

Nokia 1600: Released in 2006, the Nokia 1600 was a part of Nokia’s Ultrabasic series of mobile phones. The phone was originally released specifically to be used by customers in developing countries. Nokia sold approximately 130 million of 16xx series, which included Nokia 1600/1650/1661.

Nokia 2626: The phone was very popular and the company sold around 135 million handset units of 26xx series (Nokia 2600/2610/2626/2630).

Nokia 6600: The phone was launched in 2003, and around 2 million handsets were sold worldwide. At the time of release, this phone was the most advanced product ever launched by Nokia. In the year 2007, Nokia stopped production of the 6600 handsets.

Nokia 3310: Released in the fourth quarter of 2000, it replaced the then popular Nokia 3210. This phone sold quite well, and became one of the most successful phones with approximately 136 million units sold.

Nokia 1100: Around 250 million units of this phone have been sold since its launch in late 2003, making it the world’s best selling mobile phone. This low-end mobile phone was once the best selling consumer electronics device in the world. The model has been discontinued by the company.

The day Steve Jobs saved Apple


Image representing Apple as depicted in CrunchBase

Image via CrunchBase

Sometimes it’s hard to fathom just what Steve Jobs has done at Apple Inc. during the 14 years since he rejoined the company as chief executive. You could call it remarkable, but would come up short.

Sure, it was a tour de force of visionary management and human force of will. But it was also world-changing, a testament to what a determined and passionate person can achieve when he or she knows to compromise on even core principles, when the time for compromise is right.

Now that Apple’s products have a rising share of the PC market and a leading share of huge, fast-growing markets such as smartphones and electronic tablets, it’s easy to forget what Jobs had to do to rescue Apple AAPL +0.62%  from its role as a niche player teetering on the brink of existence, as it was in 1997.

 

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What to expect at next Apple event?

Apple is expected to unveil the next iteration of its popular iPhone, the iPhone 5, and all eyes will be on CEO Tim Cook. Kara Swisher reports.

Before Jobs could transform the markets for music, phones and PCs (a second time), Jobs had to save his company. To do so, he did what had been, until the very moment he announced it, unthinkable: He struck a deal with Apple’s fiercest rival.

On Aug. 6, 1997, Jobs appeared at the Macworld conference in Boston and revealed to the Apple faithful that the company was entering into a strategic partnership with Microsoft Corp. MSFT 0.00% , its longtime technology enemy.

Jobs was visibly nervous on stage, taking a drink of water before saying that Apple “needs help from other partners … and relationships that are destructive are no help to anybody in this industry today.”

Needing some help

Apple certainly needed a lifeline at the time. As Jobs spoke, the company was in its fourth consecutive quarter in the red, a period when it lost more than $1 billion in aggregate. Sales were stagnant even as the tech world boomed. At the same time, Microsoft was flush with cash as its Windows 95 operating system gobbled up PC market share like a vacuum cleaner.

Jobs told his audience that Apple’s relationship with Microsoft was one that “hasn’t been going so well, but had the potential to be great for both companies.”

To the disbelief of the Apple developers in the audience, he then announced a new partnership with the software giant. Many in the crowd booed.

First, Jobs said the two companies had signed a broad five-year patent-licensing agreement, ending the legal hostilities. Apple and Microsoft also agreed to work together to make sure their versions of the Java programming language were compatible.

AAPL 404.30, +2.48, +0.62%
MSFT 25.06, 0.00, 0.00%

At the time, Apple was in court against Microsoft, having sued Gates and company for patent infringement, accusing Microsoft of copying the Apple desktop look and functions that helped make Windows 95 such a hit.

The agreement took away the cost of all that litigation. Jobs’s timing also was impeccable: He knew that Gates and Microsoft, which had been sued by the U.S. Justice Department for monopolistic practices, needed a public-relations win. Settling the lawsuit would prevent government antitrust attorneys from arguing that Microsoft had ripped off Apple’s designs for its biggest-selling piece of software.

Next, Jobs said that Microsoft also had agreed to release an Apple version of its flagship Office product whenever it released a Windows version, again for five years. That agreement gave Macintosh lovers another reason to stick with Apple’s platform, even as Microsoft software applications (and licenses) were proliferating like rabbits in the business and consumer markets.

Shouts of ‘no!’

Jobs then dropped another bomb, sharing the biggest concession that Microsoft forced out of Apple: making Internet Explorer the default browser on the Macintosh platform. The announcement was roundly and loudly booed, twice. Several members of the audience shouted “no!”

Remember, this was a Jobs keynote, an event that’s now regarded by some in the industry as something akin to a religious sermon.

“We think Internet Explorer is a really good browser, and we think it’s going to make a fine default browser” on the Macintosh operating system, Jobs added, to zero applause.

But Apple’s chief assuaged the faithful by saying that users would also have the freedom to choose other browsers, “because we believe in choice,” assuring that Apple would indeed be shipping other browsers. He knew that Apple could have a competitive browser of its own — if the company could stay alive long enough to develop one.

Given that Apple had been racking up losses, Jobs couldn’t be sure just how much time was left. He had just gotten himself reinstated as Apple’s leader, after all, in no small measure because of the Microsoft deal.

Then Jobs revealed how much Gates and Microsoft would be paying Apple in return for ending the long feud: $150 million. That’s how much Microsoft was investing by buying shares of Apple at market prices.

Microsoft agreed not to sell the shares for three years, thereby helping to put a floor under Apple’s stock price. They were nonvoting shares, so Jobs kept control of decision-making. Gates gained some goodwill, as well as a significant minority stake in a company whose market cap would end that quarter at $2.5 billion.

Turn enemies into allies

On Aug. 10, 2011, exactly 14 years and four days after Jobs announced the deal with Microsoft, Apple’s market capitalization hit $365 billion — making it the world’s most valuable company. Today, it’s worth $375 billion. For those of you who are counting, that’s more than a 100-fold rise in shareholder value.

Meanwhile, Microsoft’s market cap sits at about $210 billion, less than half of where it topped out in early 2000, yet not far from its value at the time of the Apple deal.

It’s easy to see now that Jobs got the better part of the bargain. It’s perhaps more useful to hear what he told the audience that day — just after he showed them a videotaped speech from Gates, who explained why he, the Microsoft founder, believed the Macintosh was worth supporting.

Gates noted that 8 million Microsoft users were on the Apple platform, and he talked up the forthcoming product, called Mac Office 98, saying it took advantage of the unique capabilities of the Mac. He added that “in many ways it’s more advanced than what we’ve done on the Windows platform.”

For tech consumers, amen to Gates’s acknowledgment of Apple ingenuity and his foresight in helping to save the company. From the perspective of Microsoft shareholders, of course, Gates would have served them better by buying Apple outright (and perhaps firing its workers and burning its buildings down).

Jobs, for his part, gave the crowd a lesson that could have come straight from the Tao Te Ching or other Eastern texts that he reportedly reads: “We have to let go of the notion that for Apple to win, Microsoft has to lose,” he commented.

The lesson, which I’ve also read in a few fortune cookies over the years, can be put this way: “The best way to rid yourself of an enemy is to turn them into an ally.”

Technologies That were Banned


Every country is thriving to get higher pace of technology, each one of them desires to be the leader of innovation. But it is very much possible that some technologies may become threat to government itself and pose serious concern to its internal, external security, these calls for scrutiny over these modern technologies.

 Keeping some of the ongoing threats in mind, several countries have taken a bolder step to ban some of the technologies. Here are few of the countries and the technologies.

  Israel bans iPad

Israel bans iPad

In April 2010, the anger of tech lovers went on its peak in Israel, as the much talked about iPad became inaccessible for them. The Communications Ministry announced that it was imposing a blanket ban on the import of Apple’s new tablet computer, the iPad, citing incompatibility with the European Wi-Fi standard, which is used in Israel. For this reason, several such computers have been confiscated by customs officials at Ben-Gurion Airport. The public went furious as the ban was only revealed when several of the devices were confiscated by customs officials.

 Pakistan Bans Facebook

Pakistan Bans Facebook

In the year 2010, following a court’s order Pakistan officially blocked Facebook for offensive content.

A country with over 2.3 million Facebook users is temporarily restricted from its use due to a Facebook group called “Everybody Draw Mohammed Day.” Cartoon sketches of Prophet Muhammad were considered as an act of blasphemy by Muslims and this Facebook page incurred huge criticism from several Muslims.

Facebook has a history of allowing controversial groups to develop a presence on their site. From death of Obama to Holocaust denial groups, Facebook consist of groups that is considered offensive by most.

UAE and Saudi Arabia banned Blackberry

Saudi Arabia banned Blackberry

On August 2010, two Gulf States, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia announced bans on some functions of the mobile phone amid national security concerns. Users of the BlackBerry in the UAE were barred from accessing email, web browsing and instant messaging from October 2010.

 The concern of both the countries came as they were unable to keep tabs on instant messaging and this affected almost half a million users.

Germany bans Galaxy Tab 10.1

Germany bans Galaxy Tab 10.1

Upholding Apple’s injunction request in the legal battle between the tech giants Apple and Samsung, German court banned the sales of Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1.
Judge Johanna Brueckner-Hoffman ruled to pull the 10.1-inch tablet from German shelves, saying the device’s “smooth, simple area” copies Apple’s iPad design.

 Greece barred Google street view

Greece barred Google street view

In 2009, Greece restricted the Google’s drivers running in the country to mount their camera for Google street view,highlighting a growing fear among Greeks of the threat posed by new technologies. Athens’s data protection agency barred the search engine saying Google has to provide “additional information” and concrete guarantees that the service was not an invasion of personal privacy before expanding the programme to Greece.

U.S. ban iPod

U.S. ban iPod

iPod player are a huge companion for marathon runners, but the U.S. Track and Field competitions banned the use of iPods and headphones to avoid competitive advantage to runners. The organizers defended its ban saying that runners must focus on the marathon and not on the music.

Cuba baned cell phones

Cuba baned cell phones

Cuba’s government had limited access to mobile phones and other products and services deemed to be luxuries in an attempt to preserve the relative economic equality that is a hallmark of life on the Communist led island.
Cubans and foreigners holding key government posts had been allowed to have cell phones since the technology first appeared in Cuba in 1991.
A major government restriction was changed since the 76-year-old Castro took over as leader of the island nation from his older brother Fidel Castro as he lifted the age old ban on April 2008.

India bans Chinese phones and gadgets

India bans Chinese phones

Chinese products have been doing a great business in the Indian Market as it comes in low coast but with all kinds of features. India’s Department of Telecommunications (DoT) has issued a directive that calls for the banning of the import of mobile phones made by Chinese manufacturers. The move comes after the Indian Home Ministry expressed concerns regarding the proliferation of Chinese handsets in India. They were worried about the spyware and malware threat that these handsets posed. The ministry was also worried that these phones will offer intelligence agencies from China, access to telecom networks in India.

 Australia bans laser pointers

Australia bans laser pointers

Australia banned laser point’s way back in 2008. The state has officially banned high-powered laser pointers specifically classifying them as ‘prohibited weapons.’ Anyone found carrying such a laser pointer in public without the Australian equivalent of a Firearms Certificate will be guilty of an offence punishable by up to fourteen years imprisonment.

UK bans Plasma TV

UK bans Plasma TV

UK has banned energy-guzzling flatscreen plasma televisions as part of the battle against climate change.

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names


Ever wondered where some of the famous tech companies got their names from? What would have happened if Steve Jobs had named his company ‘Orange’ instead of ‘Apple’? Here is a list of how few of the popular tech companies got their names.

Apple

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

It was the favorite fruit of Steve Jobs, the founder of Apple, who was three months late in filing the name for his company. He threatened to call his company Apple Computers, if the other colleagues didn’t suggest a better name by 5 O’clock. This name helped Apple to distance itself from the other cold, unapproachable, complicated image created by other computers like IBM, DEC and Cincom.

Cisco

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

The company was founded in San Francisco by Len Bosack, Sandy Lerner, and Richard Triano. The name was derived from the name of the city,San Francisco. Thus, the company’s engineers insisted on using the lower case “cisco” in the early days.

Compaq

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

The company was founded in 1982 by Rod Canion, Jim Harris, and Bill Murto–who were senior managers in a semiconductor manufacturer Texas Instruments. The name “COMPAQ” was said to be derived from “Compatibility and Quality”, but it was a name suggested by a name consulting company on several occasions–and it was the one which was not rejected.

Google

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

Sergey Brin and Larry Page had originally nicknamed their search engine “BackRub” as the system checked backlinks (any link received by a web node from another web node), to estimate the importance of a site. Eventually, they changed the name to Google, which originated from a misspelling of the word “googol” (the number one followed by one hundred zeros). The name was picked to signify the large quantities of information the search engine wanted to provide to the people.

Hotmail

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

Hotmail was founded by Sabeer Bhatia and Jack Smith, and was commercially launched in 1996. The name ‘Hotmail’, was chosen out of many possibilities ending in ‘-mail’, as it included the letters HTML (the encoding language used by the World Wide Web). Thus, to emphasize it, the original type casing was “HoTMaiL”.

Hewlett Packard

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

The company was founded in Palo Alto, California by Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard. Packard and Hewlett decided the name of the company (Packard-Hewlett or Hewlett-Packard) by tossing a coin, which Packard won. But, Packard decided to name the company “the Hewlett Packard Company“, and the company was incorporated in 1947.

Intel

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

Intel was founded in 1968 in Mountain View, California by Gordon E. Moore, Robert Noyce, and Arthur Rock. Moore and Noyce wanted to call the company “Moore Noyce”, but the name was a homophone for “More noise”. Noise in electronics refers to bad interference and is very undesirable. Hence, they used the name “NM Electronics” for almost a year before they finalized on “Integrated Electronics-’Intel’” for short. The name “Intel” was already trademarked by Intelco, a chain of hotels; thus, they had to buy the rights for the name.

Lotus

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

Lotus was founded in 1982 by Mitch Kapor and Jonathan Sachs. The name was derived from ‘The Lotus Position’ or “Padmasana”, by Kapor, who was a teacher of Transcendental Meditation of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Thus, the name “Lotus” referred to the three ways the product could be used–as a spreadsheet, graphics package, and database manager.

Microsoft

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

Microsoft was founded by Paul Allen and Bill Gates, who wanted to use a name to represent the company’s devotion to MICROcomputer SOFTware, and named the company “Micro-Soft”. The ‘-’ was later removed to form “Microsoft”.

Motorola

How Popular Tech Companies Got Their Names

Victrola was an internal horn machine, designed by Eldridge R. Johnson, which was later acquired by its Canadian counterpart, BerlinerGramophone of Canada in 1924. William (Bill) Lear and Elmer Wavering–both employees of Galvin Manufacturing Company–developed the first practical car radio, which was named “Motorola” by Paul Galvin (the name is a combination of “motor” and “Victrola”). Paul Galvin purchased the patents to the automotive radio and acquired the rights to their trade name “Motorola”.

Unusual Ways That Made Apple the Most Admirable


Steve Jobs defines a generation with his great innovative ideas and legendary products. He has used different strategy and principles which is one of the reasons for the huge success of the company. Alyson Shontell has explained some unusual ways that Steve Jobs had implemented.

Partner with the enemy

apple-MS

In the business war, it’s hard to believe that two competitor companies getting together. It’s unimaginable that two rival companies can be together. But here, Steve Jobs applied his extraordinary ideas and he made Bill Gates to invest a $150 Million in Apple. Apple had a financial loss from 12 years and that’s make him turned to Bill Gates and in 1997 at Macworld Expo Apple and Microsoft announced their partnership.

Change the business plan

apple, before and now

When Apple started, it was only a Computer company. But Steve always wanted Apple to grow and he knew that the company needed to broaden its aspects for better growth. To become truly successful Apple needed to widen its approach. So the company began expanding its products. It did not stick to only computers and started release of Final Cut Pro, followed by MP3 players, music, iPhones and iPads. Even Jobs changed the company’s name from Apple Computer Inc. to Apple Inc. in 2007 to symbolize the new, broader vision.

Stylish Products

apple product

Apple products can be considered as the most stylish product till date. In the year of 1998, Jobs called a meeting at Apple, and said, “You know what’s wrong with this company? The products have no sex in them,” as he realized that Apple’s products looked dated. But today Apple is credited for creating the most beautiful and stylish technology, from colorful iMacs to sleek iPads.

 

Creating their own retail store

apple retail store

Apple owned their own retail outlet stores as other retailers were not giving Apple products adequate solutions. Now Apple has more than 255 retail stores worldwide and they are the most favorite of the retail industry. This is one of the most thriving formulas for the success of the company.

Hiring different employees

team

Graduates and Engineers are not the only employees that Steve had hired, according to him they are not the only people who can run a company. Jobs said “Part of what made the Macintosh great was that the people working on it were musicians, and poets, and artists, and zoologists, and historians who also happened to be the best computer scientists in the world.”

Think differently

think different

“Think Different” is an advertising slogan created for Apple in 1997. The campaign was one of the most effective of all the time. It inspired innovation and reinvention which Apple portrays today.

What Steve Jobs Got Wrong?


Steve Jobs personality reflects Apple in itself; he is the key person behind the persona created by Apple and its innovations. He created a whole new era with the introduction of iPhones and iPad, which are a rave in the society today. He is even responsible to give entertainment a whole new platform with Apple’s iPod, but the question is, did he always get it right from the beginning of his career. The answer is no, he had gone through his share of downfall and flops before arriving to the level of success that we all witness now.

His success has been cherished by the whole world with a loud applause and it is known to all. However his failures got wrapped up under his success stories, let’s go through the products that taught Steve tough lessons of business and failed to achieve its targeted hype.

1. Apple III

Apple III

In the year 1981, Apple released its next version to Apple II and named it as Apple III with an intention to revive the success of Apple II, however things did not seem to turn out as expected. Apple III ran twice as fast as the Apple II and has twice as much memory – 128k of RAM. It is also the first Apple computer to have a built-in floppy drive, a Shugart 143k 5.25-inch floppy drive. The Apple III has 4 internal expansion slots that are compatible with Apple II cards, and also has Apple II Plus emulation built-in. The whole process was build under the supervision of Steve Jobs. It was available at an introductory price of $7,800.

2. Lisa

Lisa

In the year 1983 Steve designed Apple Lisa, first commercial computer with a GUI, or Graphical User Interface, however it could not impact the market as predicted. Due to its high price and little availability of software applications this product failed to click.

3. Next Computers

Next computer

Next computers were Steve’s nurtured child which took off in the year 1989. After his showdown with then Apple CEO and his resignation “Next Computers” was founded in the year 1985. NeXT introduced the first NeXT Computer in 1988, the sales of the NeXT computers was relatively limited, with estimates of about 50,000 units shipped in total. However ultimately Apple purchased NeXT on December 20, 1996 for $429 million and 1.5 million shares of Apple stock which marked Steve’s re entry to the company.

 

4. Puck mouse

Puck mouse

Apple’s puck mouse was released in the year 1998 with high hopes, but it lined up as another failure into Steve’s kitty. This was one big project for Steve after his much hype return to Apple. Although initially Puck mouse got overwhelmed response it lost its charm in a very short span of time and could not yield it big in the giant tech world.

 

5. The cube

The cube

The cube was offered at a price of introductory price of $1799 in year 2000. The Power Mac G4 Cube was a small form factor Macintosh personal computer from Apple by using the innovation from Next computers but its high price resisted its technology to boom. The diminutive 8″ x 8″ x 8″ cube, suspended in a 10″ tall Acrylic (PMMA) enclosure, housed a PowerPC G4 processor running at 450 or 500 megahertz, and had an unconventional vertical slot-loading DVD-ROM or CD-RW drive.

 

6. iTunes Phone

iTunes Phone

iTunes phone emerged in the market in the year 2005. It had the capacity to hold only 100 songs, above that the transferring process was also heavily time consuming; downloading was a big fuss in the device.

 

7. Apple TV

Apple TV

In the year 2007, Apple set its footprints and it was the result of Steve hunger for new innovation and creativity. It was a small box that connected to a TV and to a Mac in the home. A tiny remote allowed the owner to play music and movies from the PC on the TV. The set up and use was hugely complicated. Movies purchased from iTunes were low resolution and looked fuzzy on HDTV sets.

 

Unforgettable Quotes from Steve Jobs


The man who defined a generation with his great innovative ideas and legendary products, Steve Jobs restructured the world of computer hardware and software. Resigning his role as the CEO of Apple, he wrote to the Apple Board of Directors and the Apple Community, “I have always said if there ever came a day when I could no longer meet my duties and expectations as Apple’s CEO, I would be the first to let you know. Unfortunately, that day has come.” He has been an inspiration to may, a true visionary who the world of technology admired for many reasons. Announcing his resignation, Apple website quoted Art Levinson, Chairman of Genentech on behalf of Apple’s Board as saying, “Steve’s extraordinary vision and leadership saved Apple and guided it to its position as the world’s most innovative and valuable technology company.” Here are some of the unforgettable quotes from the tech legend.

Steve Jobs, great source of inspiration for the youngsters

Jobs has been a great source of inspiration for the youngsters. He has always boosted the spirit and morale of the young innovators through his great ideas and he says, “Sometimes when you innovate, you make mistakes. It is best to admit them quickly, and get on with improving your other innovations.”

Steve Jobs: The man who runs the richest company

The man who ran the richest company in the word over a decade, said, “Being the richest man in the cemetery doesn’t matter to me. Going to bed at night saying we’ve done something wonderful, that’s what matters to me.”

Steve Jobs on being fired as Apple CEO

On being fired as Apple CEO, Steve said in 1987, “I feel like somebody just punched me in the stomach and knocked all my wind out. I’m only 30 years old and I want to have a chance to continue creating things. I know I’ve got at least one more great computer in me. And Apple is not going to give me a chance to do that.”

 And in 2007, he said, “I didn’t see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from Apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me. The heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. It freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life. It was an awful tasting medicine, but I guess the patient needed it.”
Steve Jobs on life, love and work

Talking on life, love and the importance of finding the right career path, Steve says, “You’ve got to find what you love. And that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it. And, like any great relationship, it just gets better and better as the years roll on. So keep looking until you find it. Don’t settle.”

Steve Jobs on company policies

Commenting on the company policies and marketing strategies, Steve makes it very simple and says, “A lot of companies have chosen to downsize, and maybe that was the right thing  for them. We chose a different path. Our belief was that if we kept putting great products in front of customers, they would continue to open their wallets.”