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Apple Store Bans Facebook For Life

by Jason Wilk on February 5, 2009

  • In an effort to thwart off time-theft and loiterers, Apple has decided to add Facebook to the list of banned websites at retail locations nationwide. When I asked some of the genius’ today whether or not anyone noticed the change, they all said that Facebook stopped working sometime in the past week. One of the genius’ said  “Apple Stores have become a regular Internet Cafe, so placing the most popular time-killer [Facebook] of them all on the banned-list will certainly help everyone get a chance to test out the computers”.

  • As you may have heard, MySpace was banned in May of 2007 from all Apple Stores. When asked why, Apple said “Nearly 2 million people visit Apple Stores every week. We want to provide everyone a chance to test-drive a Mac, so we are no longer offering access to MySpace in our stores.” Apple Stores, which now total 251 worldwide, see an average of 15,744 visitors weekly per store (Q4, 2008). So, currently about 16 million people per month are now denied the right to jump on for a minute (or an hour) to update their status or do their daily stalking. It will be interesting if Facebook will see a slight dip in traffic this month due to the change.

Trying to stay up on Apple? Check out these recent articles:

Is Apple Secretly Working With Axiotron?

Video Conferencing Plans For The iPhone

Flash Coming To The iPhone: Says Adobe

iPhone 2 Rumors Get Some Hard Evidence

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Palm Pre Release Date Leaked

by Jason Wilk on February 4, 2009

  • According to BGR, this is an internal document from Sprint outlining all their product release dates for 2009. Just as we thought, the Pre will not be getting any delays from Apple patent pressure. The phone is set to jump onto shelves March. 15th. There hasn’t been a phone coming out of Sprint with this much Hype since….never. I’m expecting big lines for the new phone. Here is the memo below:

Device Name – Projected Warehouse EOL – Replacement (if available)

* Sierra Compass 597 USB – Early February – Sierra 598 USB
* Motorola ic602 – Early February
* LG 160 – Mid-February – Samsung M220
* LG Rumor (blue) – Mid February – LG 265 Rumor II (target in-stock 2/15)
* Motorola i325IS – Mid February – Motorola i365IS
* LG Rumor (green) – Mid March – LG 265 Rumor II (target in-stock 2/15)
* Franklin Wireless U680 USB – Early April
* Palm 800W – April – Palm Treo Pro (target in-stock 2/15)
* LG Rumor (black) – Mid April – LG 265 Rumor II (target in-stock 2/15)
* Motorola i615 – Mid April
* Samsung M520 Lumina – Mid April – LG LX370 (slider)
* RIM BlackBerry Pearl (red) – May
* LG LX400 – Late May
* Palm 755P (blue) – Late May – Palm Pre (target in-stock 3/15)
* Sanyo 6750 Eclipse (pink) – June
* Palm Centro (berry) – June
* Motorola Q9C – Mid June
* Sierra 597E – July – Sierra 2-in-1 Aircard
* Palm Centro (green) – July
* Palm Centro refresh (black) – July
* Motorola VE20 – July
* HTC Touch Diamond – July
* RIM BlackBerry 7100i – August – RIM BlackBerry 8350i


Other must read Sprint/Palm articles:

For Palm And Sprint, It’s All About Pricing

Palm Goes All In With The Pre

Telecom Oligapoly Over Text Message Pricing

The Mobile Platform War Heats Up

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Microsoft Earnings And Future Looking Grim

by Jason Wilk on January 23, 2009

  • Microsoft Corp is expected to miss internal revenue projections when their earnings come out tomorrow. Wall Street is looking for quarterly revenue of $17.1 billion, according to Reuters Estimates, short of Microsoft’s own target of $17.3 billion to $17.8 billion.With that, there is further confirmation that the rumors of Microsoft announcing job cuts tomorrow are true. 6,000 to 8,000 employees or 6 percent to 8 percent of its 95,000 are expected to be getting cut.
  • Although Microsoft could hardly help this past year’s economic outcome seeing as global sales of software and video games have slumped, investors will be pressing Microsoft for what is to come of the still reigning software giant. In the last 5 years, the company has taken a few significant blows that put a grim outlook on the company over the next decade.

1. Zune. Microsoft missed an opportunity to be the top music player and application provider, having to settle for the mediocrity of the Zune player.Expect layoffs in this department, the game is over. Update: “Zune platform revenue decreased $100 million or 54% reflecting a decrease in device sales.”

2. Windows Mobile. Used to be ahead of the game, just not ahead of the times. Microsoft really missed the boat to be the first player in a standardized mobile platform for WinMo phones without a locked deck. Apple stormed onto the scene with a phone for consumers, combining the ease of the iPod with the user experience of a real internet browser. A year later the phone opened to third party developers to sell applications creating yet another billion dollar marketplace for Apple, The App Store. This could and should have been Microsoft. by the time the App Store came out, over 18,000 mobile applications for Windows Mobile existed around the web from third party developers that never had a home on deck where their creations were aggregated, promoted and sold. Investors will be hounding Microsoft about the upcoming release of Windows Mobile in Barcelona, which finally will feature an applications marketplace (Screenshots here).The iPhone has passed WinMo is market share, and faces increasingly stiff competition from new comer Google Android, Palm’s Pre and of course Blackberry. The question is, can they jump back into the game or is it too late?

3. Search. 2008 could have been the beginning of a prosperous new search brand combining Microsoft and Yahoo. Microsoft Live is down to a measly 5.56% market share against Google’s 72%. This is yet another market Microsoft was too late to get into and the future doesn’t look bright. The only real hope is to buy Yahoo, which will most likely happen in 2009, although even Yahoo’s market share is declining and may be on the fritz for good. Yahoo market share is down to 17% from 21% last year. Investors will be asking some serious questions tomorrow regarding the future of this deal and if it’s likely to happen. I hate to say the search game has been won, but has it?

4. Software. Sales of Windows software for PCs and laptops are expected to drop 3 percent from a year earlier, making it the toughest quarter in eight years. The popularity of netbooks using Linux based software in 2008 and increasing market share from Apple Laptops is seeing Windows left in the dark. It’s tough to bet long term on Microsoft Software as you can see where young computer users are adopting Apple products. Let’s not forget the conversation about the shift of software into the cloud, making desktop applications extinct for 90% of us that don’t need encrypted enterprise desktop apps. Windows 7, which just released in Beta will be a big topic tomorrow, as Vista contained many bugs and dissatisfied many loyal users. Needless to say, I am down all the way on Microsoft.

Update. Microsoft outed their earnings. Here is what happened. You guessed it, TinyComb was right on again. Microsoft Corp. today announced revenue of $16.63 billion for the second quarter ended Dec. 31, 2008, a 2% increase over the same period of the prior year. Operating income, net income and diluted earnings per share for the quarter were $5.94 billion, $4.17 billion and $0.47, declines of 8%, 11% and 6%, respectively, compared with the prior year. Client revenue declined 8% as a result of PC market weakness and a continued shift to lower priced netbooks. However, strong annuity licensing drove Server & Tools revenue growth of 15%. Entertainment and Devices revenue grew 3% driven by strong holiday demand for Xbox 360 consoles with a record 6 million units sold in the quarter. As part of this plan, Microsoft will eliminate up to 5,000 jobs in R&D, marketing, sales, finance, legal, HR, and IT over the next 18 months, including 1,400 jobs today. These initiatives will reduce the company’s annual operating expense run rate by approximately $1.5 billion and reduce fiscal year 2009 capital expenditures by $700 million.

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Hi, We’re Nintendo And We’re The Sh**

by David Heyerman on January 16, 2009

Nintendo

  • Gaming giant, Nintendo, just released its 2008 report which is just dripping with industry record breaking specifics.  Of the many impressive statistics mentioned in the report, here are a few of the highlights:
  • The industry’s top 4 selling games of 2008 were: Wii Play at No. 1, Mario Kart Wii at No. 2, Wii Fit at No.3, and Super Smash Brothers Brawl, at No. 4.
  • Industry annual revenues jumped 19% in 2008 over 2007, and Nintendo products were responsible for 99% of those additional retail dollars.  **See above pie chart**
  • Nintendo DS set another industry record for system sales in any month, with 3.04 million units sold in December.
  • Wii broke its own monthly record, set in December 2007, by selling 2.14 million units last month.
  • In December, Nintendo titles filled 20 of the top 30 spots on the best-seller list. Six games made for Nintendo systems placed in the top 10.

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solar

  • Since I wrapped up the Solar Sector in 2008, there’s been a a steady stream of new 2009 announcements coming out of the same companies covered before.  The wires have been, for the most part, unfortunately flooded with negative expectations from research analysts pushing to sell, plants shutting down, and workers being laid off.
  • First Solar, SunPower, Yingli Green Energy, Suntech Power, JA Solar, and Evergreen Solar all saw quick share price increases early last week.  Now, they’re all down to below where they were on the 1st.  Some analysts are pushing the sell because of an expected lowering of solar panel and module prices over the next year.  In fact, Christopher Blansett, from JP Morgan was unapologetically urging investors to sell solar stocks because of this expectation.
  • Evergreen Solar announced the closing of their Marlboro, Mass. plant.  Although, they expect “continued progress” at another plant, they’ll be hit pretty hard as shutting down the plant will have cost the company upwards of $30 million from Q4 2008, into 2009.
  • Suntech Power had some mixed news with a huge milestone, raising their Wuxi factory production capacity of photovoltaic cells and modules to 1 GW.  This is a huge achievement, considering 2007’s output of 540 MW.  CEO of Suntech, Zhengrong Shi, is expecting an oversupply of polysilicon this year, which could potentially cut their prices 20-30 percent from 3rd quarter 2008.  On the other side of things, Steve Chadima, vice president of external affairs has announced that 800 people or 10% of their workforce were cut in the fourth quarter of 2008.
  • Workforce cuts have seemingly been widespread in the solar industry, with layoff announcements from Day4Energy, GT Solar, Emcore, Ausra, and Advanced Energy.  Even OptiSolar laid off 300 employees because of a lack of funding.
  • On the positive side of things, the Federal Bureau of Land Management has seen a huge jump in the amount of applications they’re receiving for solar energy projects. The number of applications rose from 125 to 223, a 78% increase since July.  All the applications were for projects over 10MW in capacity and were located in California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Colorado.
  • So on one hand, we have this industry that is experiencing such incredibly growth as far as technology and necessity goes, but on the other hand we have this pesky little thing called the economy which likes to sway industry at it’s, sometime unjustified, hand.  The only thing us investors and cleantech enthusiasts can trust is that we, as a world, need renewable energy and solar is at the forefront of that effort.  It is an unfortunate and as I mentioned before, ironic situation, but I’m still confident the future for solar is bright.  How bout you guys?

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