Apple Reports $19 Million Profit for Q3
pinqkandi writes "Apple released it's quarter three results today, which revealed a $19 million net profit ($0.05/diluted shared). Revenue reached $1.545 billion as 771,000 Macs were shipped. CEO Steve Jobs called it 'a great new product quarter', citing the new generation of iPods, iTunes Music Store, and the PowerMac G5."
$4billion cash reserve that makes nice interest as it sits in the bank.
Here's a little revision for us capitalists:-
1) Listen to customers.
2) Sell them what they want.
3) Profit.
See the difference?
That was classic intercourse!
Yeah, that is a good point. Apple comes out with something uber-cool, and the PC world just sits back and says: "We just increased our processor speed by .5 gHz" or "The New version of Windows will be out in 6 months". Apple works on getting things done that haven't been done before, or done at all, consequences be damned.
...the economy. A lot of people are tightening their belts, and are not in the mood to buy anything from anyone. For any tech company to be making any sort of profit in this climate is a minor miracle in and of itself.
--R.J.
Electric-Escape.net
Doesn't seem too sad when you look at the state of the economy, when you take into account that many purchases of Apple Macintosh computers were put off until next quarter because of the upcoming next generation hardware.
It doesn't seem sad at all.
Notes From Under *nix: blas.phemo.us
From Investor's Business Daily:
This says to me that xServe isn't managing to push the Mac into the business server market, but OS X and nifty hardware have lead to a major jump in consumer sales.
GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
Why? Because profit is money wasted. Better to invest your capital than give it away to shareholders.
A little confusion over who's money it is? The investors quite literaly own the company and it is their money, their company and it is (supposed to be & is legally obligated to be) run for their benefit. Actually, stictly speaking they ARE the company - a collective body of individuals (the shareholders) that in a limited way can legally act as though they were a single individual (to do things like hire you to make them more money). They are usually more than happy letting you reinvest their profits if it will lead to a bigger, healthier, MORE PROFITABLE company in the future but that is a very different thing froms saying profit is "money wasted" and that it is better to inveset than "give it away to shareholders".
It's all a matter of who Linux is suited for and targeted at. Linux is a great operating system that kicks ass as a server platform and is great for many tasks but it is not really an operating system for the masses, no matter how great the strides have been in attempting to make it so. It is because of this that there aren't droves of non-technically inclined people rushing to it. This doesn't make Linux any less great, it just means that you won't see it pushing other operating systems off the desktop just yet.
As for MacOS, it is designed especially for the non-techs with the addition of a stable BSD and Mach core for the techs. It tries to give the best of both worlds to its users without sacrificing much of either and it succeeds fairly admirably. In addition Apple seems to be smart enough not to try to compete with any of the other minor platforms but instead tries to work with and even enhance them by giving back code and working on free (speech, beer...whatever) projects.
Sapere aude!
Rougly 771,000 x 4 periods would be roughly 3 million units per year.
In 4 years that would be rougly 12 million units.
Apple hardware tends to last 4 years so nice guaranteed business.
Assuming interest peaks as the job market goes from the Abyss back to normalcy and people start spending money you'll see more of a surge in purchases as more and more compelling pieces of software keep surfacing with each innovation.
Being Porsche has never been being Ford, but everyone would love to own a Porsche and outside of the battle of Chevy vs. Ford on trucks who the hell wants to settle for a Ford if they can enjoy a Porsche?
Porsche seems to survive and has been around quite a long time.
Apple's growth prospects are all wrapped up in Music.
So outlook for growth in Apple profits is tied strongly to its music business, much more so than computer sales.
Best,
-jimbo
XML Tools for Mac OS X