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Apple Surpasses Microsoft In Market Capitalization

je ne sais quoi writes "Today Apple surpassed Microsoft in market capitalization, a metric of the perceived worth of a company. At around 2:30 pm EDT, the total number of Apple shares were worth $227 billion, whereas Microsoft's were worth $226 billion. Both companies' stocks ended the day in the red, and have dropped in value since the Greek crisis began, but Apple's share price has been falling less quickly. Of American companies, only Exxon-Mobil has a higher market cap at this point at $278 billion. According to the article: 'This changing of the guard caps one of the most stunning turnarounds in business history, as Apple had been given up for dead only a decade earlier. But the rapidly rising value attached to Apple by investors also heralds a cultural shift: Consumer tastes have overtaken the needs of business as the leading force shaping technology.'"

557 comments

  1. LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Only the free market could value these two companies so poorly.

    1. Re:LOL by aliquis · · Score: 1, Insightful

      My thoughts exactly, came in here to post:
      "Time to buy some Microsoft stock then"

      Surely Apple make money of their (not trolling here even though it may look like that) over-priced hardware, and also got some software titles beyond OS X. But Microsoft isn't all about Windows either and their market influence and brand-knowledge / weight on the market should still weight higher, or at least so I'd assume.

      The phone and tablet business I see as fast growing markets where one product or company may be great one year just to slack 2-3 years later. Sure market value may reflect the current status but yeah.. One great phone right now don't make it the best phones forever.

      And the greatest phones would had been HTCs anyway ;D

      Their computers are just like any other computers. So nothing special with them except the price ..

      Make me wonder what the value is of Apples non-OS X software business though, compared to Microsoft. Anyone got any values? How many products have each? How much do they sell for and how big are the profits?

      Office may have lost some of its perceived value compared to the free options but it's still what's used and sold so I doubt it have affected sales much.

    2. Re:LOL by SETIGuy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Call me when Apple's PE ratio gets back down to 14 or so. Then maybe I'd buy it.

      Apple's income last year $5.7B. IBM's income last year $13.4B. Apple's PE is 22, IBM's is 12. And IBM pays a dividend rather than back dating options for Steve Jobs

    3. Re:LOL by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm wondering if Microsoft has simply plateaued. Yes, they'll sell lots of the flagship products, but I suspect for the most part these are people buying new computers and/or upgrading Windows or Office installs. There's a point at which growth is going to stall out, which is why Microsoft has burned considerable amounts of money trying to branch out, and burned money they have. How much money have they blown on the Xbox, on the rebranding of MSN every four or five years, on Zune?

      I'm no fan of Apple, but where Microsoft seems at times like a crazed octopus just wildly flinging out its arms trying to hit on the next BIG THING, Apple has taken a much more disciplined approach, and for the most part over the last decade has simply kicked ass. Jobs has steered the company in an extremely profitable direction, translating Apple's hardware expertise into product niches that exploded. There was a time when Gates was that good at reading the market, but Ballmer is just a mean-spirited one-dimensional bean counter (to be fair, even Gates screwed up plenty, nearly missing the growing importance of the Internet, but Microsoft had the sheer dominance to push out a horrible OS with the worst TCP/IP layer in history and sell it). Jobs is a monopolistic megolomaniacal whackjob, but he goes got a good market compass.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    4. Re:LOL by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Call me when Apple's PE ratio gets back down to 14 or so. Then maybe I'd buy it.

      That makes no sense. AAPL has been growing like crazy. IBM has not. So you'd rather buy IBM and get a bit of growth and some dividends, over AAPL, which would give you massive growth and no dividends?

      PE ratio is not some hard and fast rule. In fact, the only real rule is how things end up. AAPL is so high because of Apple's continued growth. Investors see the iPhone and iPad as major growth markets for Apple. Microsoft, on the other hand, isn't growing at all. In almost every market, from OSs to phones to browsers, they are losing market share. The only place they are doing well, in terms of market share, is in gaming, and somewhat ironically, they've only lost money there.

      So there's no real growth for Microsoft, so their PE is low. There's lots of growth for Apple, so their PE is higher. Same with IBM, no real growth, lower PE.

    5. Re:LOL by symbolset · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Good luck with that. Apple's been a growth company for the last decade and seems to intend to remain so. IBM isn't a growth company, it's in utility mode for more than 20 years turning good dividends but not trying to take over the world. As a result, Apple has more cash on hand today than 3x the entire value of the company 10 years ago and no debt. As a growth company that doesn't dominate most of the segments it's in, Apple's upside potential is huge.

      IBM is still a strong conservative investment for folks who want to be confident their investment will grow into enough of an asset to retire on - especially if they reinvest their dividends.

      There are several modes for companies, but Growth, Utility and Salvage modes are the commonest. In Salvage mode the folks with the most influence in the company get what they can out of it, and to hell with the common investor. This subsector of corporate governance is quite interesting for the morbidly curious. For companies that have achieved the heights we're talking about it turns into a freeding frenzy where a school of lawyers turn into a feeding frenzy of zombie sharks. It becomes a cancer that affects every company the giant ever touched. The lawyers eventually take conditional fractional options on the success of hopeless suits against unrelated third parties, because what else are they going to do with their idle time - work?

      Growth companies pull more PER because they're agressive about growth. Duh. You want some of those in your folder if you're going to retire with something more in your retirement account than you put in.

      Microsoft though? One big dividend ever on Bill's retirement from CEO (Coincidence? I think not.), and some symbolic trivial dividends since. Microsoft isn't managed to be a good value for all investors - it's managed to be a good value for a specific set of five investors, all of whom have incidental investments in related companies and who are incidentally on the board of directors. It's clear the company isn't managed for the benefit of the common investor.

      Q: If a public company like Microsoft's Board of Directors chose to offload all of the value of a company onto affiliated companies in unwise for the company but wise for the boardmembers deals, how long would it take? A: an afternoon.

      Q: How likely is this to happen during the course of my investment? A: Follow the money. Nature abhors a vacuum.

      Q: If this huge value transfer happened how soon would it be public information? A: Several months later.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    6. Re:LOL by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Call me when you can rationally discuss something instead of being a blind hater.

    7. Re:LOL by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      That makes no sense. AAPL has been growing like crazy. IBM has not. So you'd rather buy IBM and get a bit of growth and some dividends, over AAPL, which would give you massive growth and no dividends?

      You seriously believe that Apple is going to be so profitable that it will be the largest company in the world in a year, and that this rapid growth will continue forever, justifying a market cap never seen before in any company? I believe that's what they call drinking the koolaid. There is a limit to the sales growth that can be achieved in a finite economy. There are growth opportunities that have a fairer price. But if you love Apple, feel free to buy and hold.

    8. Re:LOL by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      I love how people can't seem to distinguish between IBM and Microsoft.

  2. So close... by v1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Consumer tastes have overtaken the perceived needs of business as the leading force shaping technology.

    There, fixed that for you. The day of the PHB making decisions based on the novelty of the promo mugs and pens they just received is coming to an end. Thank god.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    1. Re:So close... by Knara · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Consumer tastes have overtaken the perceived needs of business as the leading force shaping technology.

      There, fixed that for you. The day of the PHB making decisions based on the novelty of the promo mugs and pens they just received is coming to an end. Thank god.

      That's pretty funny, and it seems like you actually believe it, too.

    2. Re:So close... by dangitman · · Score: 2, Informative

      There, fixed that for you. The day of the PHB making decisions based on the novelty of the promo mugs and pens they just received is coming to an end. Thank god.

      That's pretty funny, and it seems like you actually believe it, too.

      Seems pretty accurate to me. Companies that operate that way might hang on for a bit longer, but their days are definitely numbered.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    3. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Back in my younger, stupider days, I got an MBA. One of my professors once asked me the question, "Have you ever seen a dog eat its own penis?"

      I responded "No", at which point the professor told me that, yes, I had seen a dog eat its own penis. He then explained to me how America's middle management had sold it out and destroyed its economy due to stupid decisions based not on need, but perceived need created solely by marketeers.

      Back then, he was referring to management's decision to ship heavy manufacturing overseas. Today, we see it happening with high technology. But the effect is the same; America the Dog has eaten its own penis, in effect. It has destroyed its ability to reproduce wealth, and as a result it is suffering economically.

    4. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must not read /. ...wait...

    5. Re:So close... by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 1, Redundant

      Your professor needs a better analogy ... if only to allow America the Dog to dine more than once.

    6. Re:So close... by guspasho · · Score: 1, Funny

      Have you considered changing your sig to "I work for the Department of Redundancy Department, where I work"?

    7. Re:So close... by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 1

      And by analogy I mean metaphor.

    8. Re:So close... by Low+Ranked+Craig · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Based on my 11 years working for a large company his statement is hyper-accurate.

      --
      I still cannot find the droids I am looking for...
    9. Re:So close... by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Perhaps eatings its own offspring might suffice?

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    10. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Honestly, those perceived needs of business brought tech to 2006. If you think about it, it was worth it. When Apple released the touch devices, consumers basically took over (since that's the source of Apple's success).

      And since 2007, all we have is facebook, twitter, complex mobile devices, always connected lifestyles, and as much Apple fanfare as MS had in 1997--except it's now all about you (iUniverse and stuff-aboutMe. All dictated by consumers... Do you really want this? Cause what you're asking for may not end up being the great panacea you maybe thinking (and with Apple's closed, exploitative thinking...)

    11. Re:So close... by dilvish_the_damned · · Score: 1, Troll

      I would say its spot on, or near enough. MS dominance was not engineered through superior or even more appropriate software, but more by convincing executives of the perception that it was already dominant due to these. To bool it down just for you, none of it was true until they sold the perception that it was. And then it still wasn't, except for the dominance part.

      And you should be able to remember Oh! wait... were you in a coma from `90 - `97?

      --
      I think you underestimate just how much I just dont care.
    12. Re:So close... by 644bd346996 · · Score: 1

      PHBs will perhaps base their decisions on the shininess of the product rather than the shininess of the brochure. It's a step in the right direction: it gets the PHBs looking at the actual product.

    13. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      "Consumer tastes have overtaken the needs of business as the leading force shaping technology."

      Oh how I wish that were true. I, and all my friends, switched to Linux and libre software at home during the past few years. I frankly know almost nobody who is still using Microsoft at home. A few Macs, sure, but mostly Linux in our crowd (mostly young professionals).

      But none of our employers have switched - they're still using what we consider inferior Microsoft products. It's all "XP-this" and "Office 2007" that, with "Vista 7 is coming" and "Office 2010 is comng."

      The only justification for this which *might* possibly make sense is if our employers need certain admin controls not available in the libre stuff. But what's convenient for them makes our lives so more difficult. It is so depressing to go into work and sit at a Microsoft-based workstation and have to deal with its failures all day long.

    14. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever seen a dog eat its own penis?

      No, but this one time I did see a dog lick his penis so much that it just fell off.

    15. Re:So close... by theskipper · · Score: 2, Informative

      Further, a dog licking his anus is akin to lobbyists courting Congressmen.

    16. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      um... I think that if I had a professor use that analogy with me I would have reported him.

      Dude wants your tight anus.

      It would have been forgivable if he had said "balls" instead of "penis". The penis is unnecessary-- the balls are not.

    17. Re:So close... by jrumney · · Score: 1

      It ate its testicles, one at a time. Is that better? Soon enough you'll run out of new wealth creation opportunities as you give the older ones away as soon as their profit making ability stabilizes to a low but steady income stream.

    18. Re:So close... by node+3 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And since 2007, all we have is facebook, twitter, complex mobile devices, always connected lifestyles, and as much Apple fanfare as MS had in 1997--except it's now all about you (iUniverse and stuff-aboutMe. All dictated by consumers... Do you really want this?

      Absolutely, yes. I'm a consumer, not a business. I think it's absolutely wonderful that the driving force in tech is now consumer oriented and not business oriented. I would be happy (but less so) where the driving force Android or Linux. Less so only because both serve the consumer less capably, but at least they aren't as business-centric as MS, or IBM before them.

      Cause what you're asking for may not end up being the great panacea you maybe thinking (and with Apple's closed, exploitative thinking...)

      It's far better than having MS drive the market, as they have always been far more closed and exploitative than Apple. In fact, Apple is not exploitative at all (not in the way you mean it), and only closed in one[*] very specific way, a way which serves the consumer better. Once that manner of being closed ceases to serve the consumer, I'll be against it, but more likely than not, Apple will have already changed course. They tend to head for where the puck will be, not where it was.

      [*] I'm referring, of course, to the App Store. Two other ways, but which are not as severe as the App Store lock-in, are iPods/iPhones/iPads requiring iTunes, and Mac OS X requiring Apple hardware. Neither of those are so severe as to be called "closed" in any meaningful sense, except from a Linux-type point of view.

    19. Re:So close... by MoeDumb · · Score: 0

      Insufficient data. If the dog ate the penis but left the balls alone we still have a shot. Keep hope alive, America!

      --
      Mod Me Up. You'll make a grown man cry.
    20. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > by dilvish_the_damned
      >> ... Oh! wait... were you in a coma from `90 - `97?

      From someone who "became a statue, and for many decades it resided within the square of a nearby town that he had formerly saved from enemy conquerors", I'd say that's a pretty clear case of the pot calling the kettle black!

    21. Re:So close... by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Perhaps eatings its own offspring might suffice?

      I think the farming metaphor would be "eating the seed corn". (I'm not sure if it's quite the same metaphor, but it at least has the advantage of not being horrifying to think about)

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    22. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand how sending work overseas destroys the ability to reproduce wealth. Can someone explain this to me?

    23. Re:So close... by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

      And you should be able to remember Oh! wait... were you in a coma from `90 - `97?

      I hadn't even heard of Microsoft until somewhere around 1995 and even then I didn't own a computer until some time after 1998.

    24. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just crazy. Where have you ever seen a dog eating corn kernels???

    25. Re:So close... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      That is the most disgusting metaphor I've read in a long time. Thanks, getting the image out of my mind is gonna take a long time.

    26. Re:So close... by DJRumpy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      For my company, the answer is a bit more clear cut. They have money invested in MS. ALOT of money, both in infrastructure, and client software. They also fear Open Source (that one puzzled me when I first heard it). They don't fear it because it's open, but rather because it comes from a group of people who may or may not be responsive to their needs. They actually find comfort in getting legal contracts for support, and working with a 'known' vendor.

      Oddly enough, the iPhone itself seems to be making them more comfortable with Apple in the corporate world. They are already looking at the iPad (the execs seem to love the thing), and they've opened up limited usage for Mac, although they still support those via yet another outside vendor rather than our in-house IT shop.

      It actually takes more hoops to get FOSS approved in our environment than it does for pay to play software.

    27. Re:So close... by Wovel · · Score: 1

      He should believe it, it is true. Very few corporate IT decisions are based on actual requirements.

    28. Re:So close... by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

      Were you two? Seriously, how did you not hear of MS until 95?

      --
      "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
    29. Re:So close... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      I went almost as long. To me a PC was always married to the label "IBM". Microsoft didn't enter my consciousness as a serious player until Windows 3.x (about 1993). I had known Microsoft developed software like "MS Basic" for 8-bit machines, but otherwise they were just a small player compared to Atari, Apple, Commodore, and IBM, and of no more importance than MicroProse or Electronic Arts.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    30. Re:So close... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      (1) I suspect Apple's stock has been inflated above its real value. Yes they make iPods which are popular, but does that make them the second most-valuable company? Not really. It's hype. Apple's iPod could be dead tomorrow, just as Sony's Walkman eventually lost relevance. And what would be left? 5% share in the computer business?

      Apple's stock appears to be a "bubble" based on hype rather than reality. I hate Microsoft but still think their TRUE value is far higher - 90% of computers, plus Xbox gaming, plus the solid 20+ year backing of businesses (via sales of MS Office). I'd feel safer investing in MSFT than APPL.

      (2) This brings new insight as to what Apple is acting like Microsoft. Big megacorp == acting to protect that wealth, at the cost of users' freedom, via locking down devices.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    31. Re:So close... by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

      I was about 9, and hadn't really dealt with computers at all. My family didn't own one, and none of the classrooms at school had one either. The extent of my computer knowledge at that point revolved largely around playing Cannon Fodder at a friends place. If you mentioned Apple, Atari, IBM or Microsoft to me, I probably would have given you a blank look. Kids at that age don't have much disposable income to be able to pick and choose what technology they grow up with.

    32. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... is Apple the penis?

    33. Re:So close... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      You forgot the exclusion of Flash. How am I served if I can't access my online accounts (some of which use flash).

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    34. Re:So close... by yankeessuck · · Score: 3, Informative

      Let's look at facts instead of hyperbole.

      1. The iPod has been around for almost nine years and iPhone for three years. Hardly a hyped up fad that will disappear overnight. The Walkman lost its relevance when CDs came out. Perhaps there's a new disruptive music technology sometime in the future but we'd be hard pressed to name it right now.

      2. Microsoft's earnings are flat over three years while Apple's has more than doubled. That's not even including the iPad. Microsoft's growth will come from Windows 7, server and office products but that's mostly coming from corporate spending which is still down in the dumps. Xbox is basically a break even product line so it's not even worth mentioning in this conversation.

    35. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Back in my younger, stupider days, I got an MBA. One of my professors once asked me the question, "Have you ever seen a dog eat its own penis?"

      Whereupon you filed a sexual harassment grievance and were awarded your MBA without need of attending further classes, in return for dropping the charges. And they all lived happily ever after.

    36. Re:So close... by Knara · · Score: 1

      I agree with this. You have a responder at this same reply level who has a problem with long term thinking and some issues when it comes to using multipliers and percentages, though ;)

    37. Re:So close... by Knara · · Score: 1

      PHBs will perhaps base their decisions on the shininess of the product rather than the shininess of the brochure. It's a step in the right direction: it gets the PHBs looking at the actual product.

      Your reply is one of the few who got the point of my response. I don't think PHBs will qualitatively change any time soon.

    38. Re:So close... by ubermiester · · Score: 1

      Your rather gruesome analogy aside, you have a point. The transfer of its industrial base overseas has resulted in a great deal of turmoil in the US economy.

      However, the reduction in manufacturing jobs is by no means a negative for the US. The rest of the world - and by that I mean the 4+ billion people living in developing economies - need something to drive their growth, and they do not have the educational resources to transition to a service/IP economy anytime soon. And before you scream about how much better schools are in China or wherever, remember that those schools were built in the industrial boom kicked off by the very phenomena you are referring to. And that's just primary and secondary education. Colleges serve only a tiny fraction of the general population in both China and India.

      A better educated, employed, upwardly mobile population is far more likely to share US/Western values (free-speech, human rights, individualism, etc.), than an uneducated mass of subsistence farmers being told time and again that their poverty is the result of a monopoly on production by the West.

      Moreover, those same people are making things for Western companies who bring profits back to the West. Consider Dell or Apple, who generate enormous amounts of corporate income taxes for the US govt, which gets all the cash with none of the labor headaches that go with it. Plus, Dell and Apple are now also selling to very Chinese and Indian workers who make the stuff.

      I agree that the loss of a real manufacturing base in the US is a problem for the "losers" in an information-based economy, but similar pressures forced 19th century farmers into the city where they were "modernized" and educated. Now the line-workers who can't find a job will have to migrate and evolve as well.

      We dont need more factory jobs, we need more education. We need vocational training. We need people to be flexible skill seekers, not robots pulling levers and attaching wires all day. Imagine a nation of knowledge workers with varying degrees of expertise resulting in varying degrees of value and all the productive natural competition that such an environment creates. (With, of course, the appropriate "safety net" to make sure no one falls too far).

      Making steel is no different than making software, processing information or managing systems. Both create value for a society and both result in wealth creation. Don't get confused by the ephemeral nature of information. It is, pound-for-pound, the most valuable thing human beings produce.

    39. Re:So close... by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      I don't know that "taste" overtaking "perceived needs" is necessarily any better.

      How about making it a priority to satisfy "actual needs"?

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    40. Re:So close... by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      The Walkman lost its relevance when CDs came out, but then they made a CD-walkman, and then a (rather good range) of mp3 walkmans, and then mpeg walkmans. I'm not sure what's next, nor are they probably - but they'll make a walkman for it when it appears.

      The same applies to all the no-name manufacturers too.

      XBox isn't even close to being a break-even product, not if it sells profitably for the next 10 years, its had so much cash sunk into it. Pretty much that applies to the rest of E&D and Online division losses (lovely graph) at MS.

      I think Windows revenues will fall, (as people have bought a copy by now), and MS will try to drive server sales as much as possible (via Office freebies), but as Office is becoming a free commodity, I think even that cash-cow will stumble. As Google gives office tools away, MS follows suit, and naturally their revenue fails to keep up.

      And the market knows it, has known it for some time. Microsoft's only real hope is to start selling into countries like China, and get them to pay top dollar for the products. I don't hold out much hope for that happening.

      There's some interesting comments on the MiniMicrosoft blog.

    41. Re:So close... by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      1) I think it's safe to say that the portable music player as a dedicated device will cease to be relevant sometime in the near future. That is, the iPod may be the king of the hill, but I believe that hill will soon become an anthill. The iPhone almost certainly cannibalized sales from the iPod -- how many people do you know that have bought an iPod after they already had an iPhone? -- and it's only a matter of time before other phones do the same. (Same goes for dedicated GPS, I believe).

      2) Microsoft's revenue may be flat, but their profits are still higher than Apple's; ~25% higher, on ~10% more revenue.

      Moreover, I believe that Microsoft's position is much more stable than Apple's, because their product is essential to ~90% of the desktop and ~50% of the server market. If Microsoft went tits up, the computing world would be in disarray for years; possibly longer. Apple doesn't compete in most of MS's core products, namely Office and servers, so they're certainly not in any position to pick up the slack.

      Meanwhile if Apple disappeared, MS could capitalize on the void left by nearly all of Apple's products.

      I believe that MS has a far stronger market position. Its market may well be saturated, which limits growth potential, but neither is its market likely to decline appreciably in the near term. OTOH, Apple itself may not be a fad, but the devices it produces are certainly faddish, and subject to the often brutal whim of the consumer. What's popular today may be unthinkable tomorrow. All of this leads me to believe that either MS is undervalued, Apple is overvalued, or a combination of the two.

      If I had to invest in these two companies, I'd put 75% in MSFT and 25% in AAPL. If I saw any path for Apple to establish dominance in any significant market, I might go 50/50. Unfortunately, I don't see the tablet becoming a pervasive fixture, and the sustainability of iPhone growth is just too uncertain; particularly given their penchant for the walled garden, the heavy lag time of expanded features (often months or even years behind competitors), and perhaps most importantly, their exclusive dealings with AT&T.

    42. Re:So close... by yankeessuck · · Score: 1

      No doubt there's some iPhone cannibalism but, in the end, the iPhone is a huge net positive for Apple. Also, don't write off the iPod just yet. Not everyone is going to buy a iPhone/Android/whatever. Unit sales are essentially flat year over year despite the new crop of improved smartphones.

      2) The whole investing thing is about growing profits. If a company doesn't grow then neither will its value. Microsoft's share price is flat over the trailing 5 years yet Apple is up 400%. That's no accident. Hey maybe you're risk averse and don't care for the high beta of a fast grower and that's cool but I wouldn't be chalking up Apple's success to faddish products.

      iPod has been around for 9 years so I don't see how that's a fad. If people are switching to a converged device then it's mostly to the iPhone. I guess that's a fad too.

    43. Re:So close... by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      I think the farming metaphor would be "eating the seed corn". (I'm not sure if it's quite the same metaphor, but it at least has the advantage of not being horrifying to think about)

      Part of the point was the horrifying aspect....

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    44. Re:So close... by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Growth is not the only way to increase shareholder value. Returning profits through dividends is another (arguably better) method, and you won't see any dividends from AAPL.

      Fads can last longer than a few months. Bell bottoms lasted 15 years. That doesn't mean that a manufacturer can't re-tool when a fad ends, but the question is whether it can continue to lead the trend, or even keep up. Re-tooling and redesign takes time. I'm not sure Apple will continue to lead the fads, especially in light of the iPad (on which they seem to be betting heavily) with no track record and questionable utility/longevity, despite initial sales. I concede that I may lack the vision to see its potential: I was wrong about the iPod, but I was right about netbooks.

      iPhone sales have been spectacular to be sure, but Apple is *still* a small fish in the mobile pond. I give them the nod with easy access to iTunes and the App Store, both of which generate returning sales, but I'm not sure this will sustain them for long, especially given the backlash over their walled garden. If they open up a bit, I would be more confident, but as it stands, the situation is too unpredictable.

      Finally, Steve Jobs won't be around forever, and will almost certainly remain less than another decade at the helm of Apple in any event. Can the company succeed without him? That's a huge question.

      I'm not risk averse, but there has to be compelling motivation to take risks, otherwise you might as well close your eyes and throw darts at the financials. I wish I had bought Apple two years ago, but I was divesting out of necessity at that time, not investing. At present, I see limited potential for a significantly higher AAPL stock price, and no dividends in sight; in other words, plenty of reasons to sell (if I had stock), but none to buy. I'm not suggesting that anyone act based on my opinions, just explaining how I see it.

    45. Re:So close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up.

    46. Re:So close... by foxylad · · Score: 1

      It's far better than having MS drive the market, as they have always been far more closed and exploitative than Apple.

      Actually they haven't - once Microsoft was very open, and you could argue that that openness was the basis of their success. DOS succeeded at least in part because anyone could write and distribute programs for it, leading to a rich ecosystem of innovative applications.

      The current equivalent is Android, and Apple's attempts to totally control (and monetize) which applications run on their platform is already back-firing. Their offering will become the safe but stale option for corporate drones and grandma, but the risky exciting stuff will all be Android. I'm not saying there isn't a market for both, but it's going to be interesting to see how Apple cope with losing their aura of "cool".

      Back on topic, the fact that Microsoft has missed both major paradigm shifts (the internet and mobile) is at the root of their fall from grace. Why their shareholders let Steve Ballmer survive is beyond me.

      --
      Do as you would be done to.
    47. Re:So close... by cavebison · · Score: 1

      China, having long been the underdog, was in a good position to take a few bites as well.

    48. Re:So close... by centuren · · Score: 1

      Perhaps eatings its own offspring might suffice?

      I think the farming metaphor would be "eating the seed corn". (I'm not sure if it's quite the same metaphor, but it at least has the advantage of not being horrifying to think about)

      I'm pretty sure there's no way to rescue the metaphor and have it still be the professor's own, "penis-eating" choice of imagery. What a bizarrely convoluted attempt to illustrate so simple a concept.

    49. Re:So close... by centuren · · Score: 1

      Let's look at facts instead of hyperbole.

      1. The iPod has been around for almost nine years and iPhone for three years. Hardly a hyped up fad that will disappear overnight. The Walkman lost its relevance when CDs came out. Perhaps there's a new disruptive music technology sometime in the future but we'd be hard pressed to name it right now.

      2. Microsoft's earnings are flat over three years while Apple's has more than doubled. That's not even including the iPad. Microsoft's growth will come from Windows 7, server and office products but that's mostly coming from corporate spending which is still down in the dumps. Xbox is basically a break even product line so it's not even worth mentioning in this conversation.

      Just to interject a minor point as we're looking at facts, the Walkman lost it's relevance when the iPod itself came out, drawing enough popularity to dedicated MP3 players. Sony's CD Walkman line was right in tune with what Sony did well with portable music: play physical media in a sexy package.

    50. Re:So close... by node+3 · · Score: 1

      You forgot the exclusion of Flash. How am I served if I can't access my online accounts (some of which use flash).

      I can't speak for you personally, but the consumer in general is served by not having their batteries drain, and their web experience becoming a frustration of not being able to interact with things that were not designed for multitouch, and their videos a slide-show,

      Additionally, everyone (even Adobe and Flash developers, although they may not recognize the benefit at first) benefits from the move from Flash to HTML5.

    51. Re:So close... by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Actually they haven't - once Microsoft was very open, and you could argue that that openness was the basis of their success.

      No, they've been closed and proprietary since day one. What you're referring to is that they licensed DOS to all comers, and you're right that that is the source of their success. Being open in one specific way is not the same as being overall more open.

      DOS succeeded at least in part because anyone could write and distribute programs for it, leading to a rich ecosystem of innovative applications.

      As opposed to the Mac or Amiga? What computers are you referring to that didn't allow anyone to write and distribute programs for, that allowed DOS to overtake them? The Atari 2600?

      The current equivalent is Android, and Apple's attempts to totally control (and monetize) which applications run on their platform is already back-firing.

      Apple is not attempting to totally control and monetize which applications run on their platform. They are trying to prevent a certain set of programs from being available, but they don't exert any real control over those that are good to go. Additionally, the App Store is not a significant source of revenue.

      As for it backfiring, aside from a handful of internet tirades, how has this affected Apple? iPhone is still outselling Android, the App Store still has more apps, and customer satisfaction with the iPhone still leads the industry, and Apple is still the most profitable phone maker in the world. If this is backfiring, I can't imagine what unbridled success would look like.

      Back on topic, the fact that Microsoft has missed both major paradigm shifts (the internet and mobile) is at the root of their fall from grace. Why their shareholders let Steve Ballmer survive is beyond me.

      MS's problem is they have no growth. They make so much money that they don't want to upset the apple cart by getting too crazy. Apple, on the other hand, is the boldest tech company out there, and fortune, it appears, favors the bold. Their stock prices and market caps reflect this.

  3. so what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    i guess if it makes the fanbois happy...

    but for most of us we know that this is like comparing boeing with southwest airlines.

    1. Re:so what? by sortius_nod · · Score: 1

      Uhh, no, it's like comparing Boeing with Lockheed-Martin.

    2. Re:so what? by nomadic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      i guess if it makes the fanbois happy...

      No, because then they're not as elite anymore because Apple is all mainstream. An analogy:

      It's like when that band is followed by shaggy-haired, goateed art school graduates in faux homeless clothing, but then the band becomes popular and all the shaggy-haired goateed art school graduates in faux homeless clothing get mad because they "sold out."

      Only instead of a band it's Apple.

      And instead of shaggy-haired, goateed art school graduates in faux homeless clothing, it's...well it's still shaggy-haired, goateed art school graduates in faux homeless clothing, don't really need to analogize that part.

    3. Re:so what? by nacturation · · Score: 4, Funny

      So what, you ask? Everyone thought Apple was dead a decade ago. Little did they know that Steve Jobs was merely pining for the fjords. And now he has reached the fjords and waved to Microsoft on the way by. Tie this in to Steve Jobs recent statement that he will reveal something surprising at the upcoming WWDC keynote, and this indicates that Steve Jobs will unveil a new product: the iFjord.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    4. Re:so what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > the iFjord

      And here I thought it might be a "iNeedANewRandomOrgan".

    5. Re:so what? by kongjie · · Score: 1

      No, the parrot really was dead. The seller tried to cover it up by saying he was pining for the fjords. The joke doesn't make sense.

  4. I think I speak for us all when I say... by Dirtside · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...and?

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    1. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by beakerMeep · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And don't forget that they're the underdog and can't be investigated for anti-competitive behavior!

      --
      meep
    2. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And... we're still using the borg icon for Microsoft and yet using the actual Apple logo. Maybe we can get some update graphics on the site?

    3. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and apple is dying and bsd is dying ooooops sorry wrong decade.

    4. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      You must not read /. over the past couple of weeks....

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    5. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by fustakrakich · · Score: 5, Funny

      The borg icon is ok for Microsoft. The Apple icon should be changed to something like this

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    6. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by hedwards · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps that's why Apple's now being investigated for anti-trust violations with respect to the ITMS.

    7. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...and?

      And..."That's it then".

      Game, set and match.

      All Windows users are expected to start turning in their computers at 0800 tomorrow. And while you're waiting for your assigned Apple content delivery device to be delivered, here's a little song for you by the great Ray Davies:

      Dedicated Follower of Fashion

      They seek him here, they seek him there,
      His clothes are loud, but never square.
      It will make or break him so he's got to buy the best,
      'Cause he's a dedicated follower of fashion.

      And when he does his little rounds,
      'Round the boutiques of London Town,
      Eagerly pursuing all the latest fads and trends,
      'Cause he's a dedicated follower of fashion.

      Oh yes he is (oh yes he is), oh yes he is (oh yes he is).
      He thinks he is a flower to be looked at,
      And when he pulls his frilly nylon panties right up tight,
      He feels a dedicated follower of fashion.

      Oh yes he is (oh yes he is), oh yes he is (oh yes he is).
      There's one thing that he loves and that is flattery.
      One week he's in polka-dots, the next week he is in stripes.
      'Cause he's a dedicated follower of fashion.

      They seek him here, they seek him there,
      In Regent Street and Leicester Square.
      Everywhere the Carnabetian army marches on,
      Each one an dedicated follower of fashion.

      Oh yes he is (oh yes he is), oh yes he is (oh yes he is).
      His world is built 'round discoteques and parties.
      This pleasure-seeking individual always looks his best
      'Cause he's a dedicated follower of fashion.

      Oh yes he is (oh yes he is), oh yes he is (oh yes he is).
      He flits from shop to shop just like a butterfly.
      In matters of the cloth he is as fickle as can be,
      'Cause he's a dedicated follower of fashion.
      He's a dedicated follower of fashion.
      He's a dedicated follower of fashion.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    8. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Gerald · · Score: 1

      The borg icon is ok for Microsoft.

      Is it? As iconic as he is, Bill Gates isn't really the face of Microsoft any more.

    9. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by peragrin · · Score: 4, Funny

      Steve ballmer with devil ears is already being used for BSD so we are stuck with Borg Gates until MSFT folds or a new CEO is put into place.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    10. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by timeOday · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Personally, I think this is amazing. Apple was a HAS BEEN thought to be headed soon for liquidation, like 99% of all computer companies founded over the last 30 years. Michael Dell said they should just give up. And now their market cap is higher than Microsoft. What could be bigger news in the computer industry?

    11. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And they have the ability to buy Dell with cash.

    12. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are the underdog in some markets... and they can't (or shouldn't be investigated because they have not abused any monopoly power even if they had a monopoly.

    13. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by blai · · Score: 2

      how can it be anticompetitive? It's white - it's the colour of the angels! It's holy!

      --
      In soviet Russia, God creates you!
    14. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are the underdog in some markets... and they can't (or shouldn't be investigated because they have not abused any monopoly power even if they had a monopoly.

      Actually they are being investigated now for abusing their monopoly power (yes, by all definitions) in the digital music market to pressure labels away from doing low-price offers with Amazon (citation if you haven't heard: Google it). Sounds very much like old MS tactics to me.

    15. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and they're smart enough not to do it.

    16. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by dkf · · Score: 5, Funny

      Steve ballmer with devil ears is already being used for BSD so we are stuck with Borg Gates until MSFT folds or a new CEO is put into place.

      I thought that the BSD logo was just Ballmer without his makeup on.

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    17. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Critter · · Score: 1

      People seem to forget that Bill Gates saved Apple (made a substantial investment) or they *would* have gone bankrupt. Gates also bailed out... Sun Microsystems.

      Market caps are meaningless in a vacuum: PE ratios, cost of good sold, gross margins would favor Microsoft. Apple relies on creating the next big fad, first time they fail the stock will tank. Remember the Newton?

      Microsoft on the other hand makes huge margins selling the same thing... over and over and over again.

    18. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I think this is amazing. Apple was a HAS BEEN thought to be headed soon for liquidation, like 99% of all computer companies founded over the last 30 years. Michael Dell said they should just give up. And now their market cap is higher than Microsoft. What could be bigger news in the computer industry?

      Market cap is a poor way to compare companies. If you look at just about every other metric like revenue, profits, etc (you know, the stuff that actually dictates the company's success) Microsoft holds the lead by a large margin. The other thing to consider is that market cap can be inflated by not paying dividends to shareholders (which is exactly what Apple does). By withholding dividends they build up large cash reserves, making their stock price go higher without actually releasing any of that value to shareholders. Microsoft used to do the same thing, but has now payed out something like $45.5 billion dollars in dividends to shareholders over the past 6 years.

    19. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Wingsy · · Score: 2, Informative

      "People seem to forget that Bill Gates saved Apple (made a substantial investment) or they *would* have gone bankrupt."

      Oh God, not THAT myth again. How can people seem to forget something that never happened???

      I wonder who first re-wrote that tidbit of history. It was certainly a re-write, because the fact of the matter is that Apple had well over a BILLION dollars in cash when MS bought 150 Million in non-voting shares. The essential part of that deal was that MS would continue supplying Microsoft Office, Internet Explorer, and development tools for the Macintosh, in exchange for Apple to drop its Look & Feel lawsuit against MS. MS was also hoping the deal would help keep the anti-trust headhunters at bay for a while. The money was just a little icing on the cake, and was certainly not needed to keep Apple going.

      The people who believe the opposite are the people who see anti-Apple headlines and see no more. They seem to be the same ones who choose to help propagate the myth.

      --
      If I didn't have absolutely NOTHING to do, I wouldn't be here.
    20. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well, it’s proof again of the virtue of being extremely successful in business:

      Being a dick and tricking people into buying dreams that in reality are not nearly as great. And then when they have, raping them.

      Exxon Mobil — Well, if you think they even have a conscience, you live in fantasy world.
      Microsoft — I don’t think I have to explain this one. Just look at anything listing the factual history. Their product are crap, but they keep winning because of a dick move frenzy.
      Apple — Totalitarian Nazis in gay fashion suits. ;) Lure people in with shiny stuff, and then you either play exactly by their rules, or you will be either ignored or ass-raped like there is no tomorrow.

      I could write this for every single one of those huge companies. Eli Lily, Monsanto, Haliburton... you name it...
      It seems that only by being that way, you get to the top.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    21. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      I think this also fits nicely: http://iranpoliticsclub.net/photos/nazi-girls1/images/Fashion%20Nazi.jpg
      (Result of a Google image search. Don’t blame me for that domain name / URL. ;)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    22. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by intheshelter · · Score: 3, Informative

      Microsoft most definitely did NOT save Apple. Another reply to you already pointed this out so I won't bother duplicating his/her details, but you are absolutely incorrect on this issue.

      " first time they fail the stock will tank. Remember the Newton?"
      - Incorrect again on many levels. First of all, the Newton was about 20 years ago and the landscape has changed drastically. Dragging this out again and again borders on ridiculous, especially considering your own example proves you wrong. Newton failed and Apple is not dead. Apple has also had what many consider failures in the last 5 years such as that apple boombox, AppleTV (not a big failure, but certainly has not been a standout product) and the stock has not tanked.

      "Microsoft on the other hand makes huge margins selling the same thing"
      - Yes, they do. The same thing. Never changing. Never innovating. 10 years and the stock has been stagnant. Tell me again how great MS is?

    23. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Apple did almost go bankrupt in 1996, due to previous lousy years.

      Many people including me thought Apple would go-out just like Atari and Commodore went out of business. The Microsoft deal was announced in 1997 a partnership with Microsoft. Since that happened when Apple was near-bankruptcy many viewed it as MS saving Apple.

      Apple did not become profitable again until 1998.
      http://www.osnews.com/story/16056

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    24. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by Wingsy · · Score: 1

      I should post a link to back up what I'm saying, if that makes any difference. It usually doesn't with people who have already made up their minds what they want to believe. But anyway...

      http://news.cnet.com/2100-1001-202143.html

      And in case you don't feel like reading the entire article, the important line is: "Apple, which ended its third quarter with $1.2 billion in cash, will use the additional $150 million to invest in its core markets of education and creative content, Anderson said."

      --
      If I didn't have absolutely NOTHING to do, I wouldn't be here.
    25. Re:I think I speak for us all when I say... by starglider29a · · Score: 1

      ...and?

      Well, all fanboi-ness aside, here's an and...

      Apple Surpasses Microsoft In Market Capitalization... and in 1997, we all thought that this would NEVER happen.

      In 1997, Apple was already in the obituary columns. Now, it's the second largest company in the world (market cap). But they made some changes

      • innovated where necessary (did we forget how hard it was for your mom to get onto the internet in 1997?)
      • got with the program: adopted *NIX, adopted Intel, adopted standards like USB, DVI, DisplayPort, MP3
      • allowed coexistence: Boot Camp, Parallels/VMFusion, for those who MUST run Windows.
      • jettisoned proprietary/arcane technology: ADB, ADC, SCSI gawd I miss powering up my machine from the keyboard :(
      • recognized what people (not users, people) wanted (easy music, easy access to mobile data)
      • damned the torpedoes and stood behind their source code model (You may 'make install, not war', but nearly everyone else DOESN'T!)

      These are great lessons for any company, but perhaps, FOSS should learn from this. Or else FOSS will 'never' make it big on the desktop.

  5. ladies and gentlemen: by nimbius · · Score: 5, Funny

    the mother of all flame wars. The only way this article could only be more dangerous is if it were posted to 4chan.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

      the mother of all flame wars. The only way this article could only be more dangerous is if it were posted to 4chan.

      Well, what's stopping you?

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    2. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by royallthefourth · · Score: 3, Funny

      A basic level of human decency, probably

    3. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Exactly. But I don't understand why the Apple hate seems to be across their product line. Most people here are the designated IT support person for their family and friends. Why would I recommend a linux/Windows, or even Apple computer to anyone, when the vast majority of them can surf the web/IM/email with an iPad.

      The unpaid support calls would drop off the chart.

      I know this is a big "if you can't open it up it ain't yours" crowd, but if mom can't open it up, or use it for anything it's not designed to do, I don't get spend my Saturday fixing crap.

      Give Apple credit where credit is due.

    4. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by pandrijeczko · · Score: 5, Insightful

      when the vast majority of them can surf the web/IM/email with an iPad.

      Yes, because of course web/IM/email are the *ONLY THREE THINGS* done on any PC in an average home... absolutely no-one writes or prints out any documents, plays any 3D accelerated games, uses their home PC to stream movies to a media player, uploads and edits photos from their camera, rip movies and music for convenient storage, etc. etc.

      And *OF COURSE* nobody ever has more than one application running at once on a home PC, laptop or netbook.

      So an iPad is a *PERFECT* replacement for them.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    5. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by hondo77 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I see you've met my parents.

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    6. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by poetmatt · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      apple is very customer centric. They are also, however, completely proprietary. So thus their products are great for the people whom windows products used to be great for. Meanwhile, anyone with a shred of technology understanding wants nothing to do with apple.

    7. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 1

      Why would I recommend a linux/Windows, or even Apple computer to anyone, when the vast majority of them can surf the web/IM/email with an iPad.

      Uh, because a Linux PC with a full-size monitor can do more than an iPad can at half the price or less? What makes you think that an old technophobe will abandon the familiar point-and-click interface to squint at a tiny screen and futz with gestures? Not all old people have cushy retirements to spend on toys, and many who do are often frugal.

      The unpaid support calls would drop off the chart.

      This is where most Slashdotters get it wrong. If they're too technophobic to set up their own computer then they'll also need you to hold their hand through setting up a paypal account, using ebay, paying for just about anything online, setting up an e-mail account, setting up a Facebook or Flickr account, etc.

    8. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by lennier1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      On /. ???

    9. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Yes, for all those things, I have the iMac that the iPad syncs with.

      It also acts as the server for my XBMC box.

    10. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

      Yes, and my Android phone syncs with my PC but that does not mean my Android phone replaces my PC.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    11. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      "completely proprietary" - which is why they have so many open source projects going, and use .mbox, documented xml, aac, h.264, .ics...

      They are strongly vertically integrated, yes, but they use formats that enable you to easily move your data around.

    12. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, anyone with a shred of technology understanding wants nothing to do with apple.

      The numbers indicate that's a very small group.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    13. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      After I use the camera to edit ...because NOTHING beats editing a photo on a 3" camera screen...

      and post the pictures to the web

      Huh! Would you credit it? And there's boring old me storing my photos safe in my home on hard disks and USB memory sticks...

      the picture frame takes the little memory thingie right out of the camera

      Ah, okay, so in order to successfully edit and transfer photos in your world, you also need to purchase a picture frame. Okay, do carry on...

      the printer lets me copy them to another memory thingie

      Okay, gotcha. So you need *TWO* memory thingies whereas I only need the one of them in the camera that stays in the camera because I have a USB port and cable for use by the camera...

      the IPad plays music while I do the other 3 things

      Yep, my £99 mini CD hifi sat on my desk also plays music, as do any of my laptops, desktops or netbooks in my immediate vicinity...

      the big screen TV is hooked up to an Apple TV it plays music through my stereo and puts the movies on the TV the XBOX takes care of the games.

      My Shuttle PC beneath my TV that has a £40 TV card in it acts as a MythTV PVR on FreeSat, but it also plays games, runs an Office suite, acts as a media player, lets me surf the Internet and write emails, etc. etc. But is this relevant?

      The PS3 plays the rest of the high end games and plays Blue Ray and the Wii is the exercise unit and also streams Netflix

      Like I said, is this really relevant? If it is, then let me tell you about my fridge...

      With this arrangement at my house and an IPad at the parents (they hardly ever play games or stream movies) I don't have to go over the their house and fix their stupid Windows piece of crap that always falls off the network, gets a virus/malware or is being crashed by Flash!

      WHOOSH!! That's the sound of your anti-Windows comments going straight over the head of a *primarily Linux user* like me. But I do use XP and never had it fall off a network (unless the network or an IP address was maybe configured wrongly) and Flash never appears to have crashed it - made it chug a little occasionally but that's better than not being able to play any Flash... whoops, sorry, a bit below the belt, that one...

      Yes, the very infrequent piece of malware that I need to fix but not enough to make me such an unhappy person that I wouldn't help friends or relatives fixing their PCs.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    14. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by aliquis · · Score: 1

      the mother of all flame wars.

      No, who cares for the second place? We still know Amiga rules!

    15. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

      WHOOSH!! That's the sound of your anti-Windows comments going straight over the head of a *primarily Linux user* like me. But I do use XP and never had it fall off a network (unless the network or an IP address was maybe configured wrongly) and Flash never appears to have crashed it - made it chug a little occasionally but that's better than not being able to play any Flash... whoops, sorry, a bit below the belt, that one...

      I just never see this picture that anti-Windows guys paint of it. I run 2 machines. One on XP, one on Vista 64 (yes, I should upgrade it). My father runs Vista. I've worked in businesses with anything from a few to hundreds of PCs. And I've just rarely seen problems with it. In a decade, on 2 PCs (1 laptop and 1 desktop) at home, I've had 2 BSODs. Total downtime/work loss? 30 minutes, at worst.

      I personally don't care what people use. I happen to prefer Windows, I also quite like Ubuntu and found it more straightforward than OSX. But I've yet to see any evidence since WinXP that there's huge problems with it.

    16. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by tepples · · Score: 1

      the XBOX takes care of the games. The PS3 plays the rest of the high end games and plays Blue Ray and the Wii is the exercise unit

      All three of these consoles are designed primarily for major-label games. On which system do you play indie games?

    17. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Hooya · · Score: 1

      uh.. hate to burst your bubble there but aac and h.264 aren't exactly open-source. aac is an 'open' standard, sure. but not 'open-source'. h.264 is nowhere near open source. haven't you witnessed the flurry of back-and-fourths between the h.264 and the theora camps? on /.?

    18. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by mhelander · · Score: 1

      >>>I know this is a big "if you can't open it up it ain't yours" crowd, but if mom can't open it up, or use it for anything it's not designed to do, I don't get spend my Saturday fixing crap.

      >>I don't have to go over the their house and fix their stupid Windows piece of crap that always falls off the network, gets a virus/malware or is being crashed by Flash!

      >WHOOSH!! That's the sound of your anti-Windows comments going straight over the head of a *primarily Linux user* like me.

      Did you notice the part about how the use case concerned family and friends?

    19. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by fullfactorial · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, because of course web/IM/email are the *ONLY THREE THINGS* done on any PC in an average home...

      You win the unintentionally hilarious award for the day. The iPad actually supports or will support every single thing you mentioned!

      1. Printing support may come as a part of the iPhone OS 4.0 SDK. If not, Google's Cloud Print Service could fill the gap.
      2. The iPad is such a good 3D game platform that Nintendo declared Apple the enemy of the future.
      3. The iPad itself is a solid media player, but you can also hook it up to your TV with Component or VGA cables.
      4. Apple sells a Camera Connector Kit for the iPad. You can upload photos from an SD stick, and edit them in an App on your iPad.
      5. iPhone OS 4.0 supports background tasks and multi-tasking, to the extent that you would even want to do that on a 10" screen.

      The only thing you can't do on an iPad is rip movies and music, but that's kinda what the iTunes store is for. I'm not saying that the way you do it on the iPad is for everyone, and you specifically are certainly better off with a PC. My mom, on the other hand, finds the iPad a much eaiser way to achieve every item you mentioned.

    20. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by ducomputergeek · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I just simplified after my house got destroyed last year and took the old G5 quadcore out along with 6 Mac Mini's I picked up cheap off ebay to play with Xgrid with and just bought a single Core2Duo Mac Mini with 4GB of Ram and hooked it up to the LED TV via the VGA port. My laptop at home is still my 6 year old 12.1" PowerBook G4, and recently an iPad 3G. At work I just gave my MBP to the new grad we hired as a developer (kid's worked for us for 2 years as an intern) and replaced it with an iPad docking station. Only thing the iPad is lacking the video camera for video conferencing.

      I don't write code anymore. All I really need to do is answer emails and Skype inquiries while on the phone and iWork does enough on the iPad version for the things I need.

      --
      "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    21. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by peragrin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And that's really the point.

      When it comes down to it, I use outlook(email, calendering) MS Office,( word processing but I prefer Open Office personally) a PDF viewer,and the front end for our database server.(runs over SSH).

      If apple were to fix the stupid document handling(itunes is not a file manager media syncs' work ok but documents?) I could easily fit an ipad into my work flow.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    22. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Informative

      > Printing support may come as a part of the iPhone OS 4.0 SDK. If not, Google's Cloud Print Service could fill the gap.

      In the old days we called this vaporware.

      > The iPad is such a good 3D game platform that Nintendo declared Apple the enemy of the future.

      Way to completely misrepresent what they said.

      > The iPad itself is a solid media player, but you can also hook it up to your TV with Component or VGA cables.

      No it isn't. IT IS A JOKE. It can play a subset of one format and nothing else.

      That includes the video that your still camera can generate that you think you will
      get somewhere by using the "camera connection kit".

      Doing anything but multi-touch parlour trick apps with an iThing requires considerable "stretching".

      It's time to stop swimming in the cool-aid. The nonsense about printing (and the fanboy excuses)
      are especially sad since Apple even went out of it's way to BUY the Unix printing subsystem.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    23. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That blindered view of the world is fine so long as you don't have
      anything like DVDs or home movies or old DIVX files or really
      interesting h264 files lying around.

      Much like iTunes, it does well if you start out with it and don't
      try to deal with any legacy data. Deviate in the slighted from
      Apple's assumption that you will stay inside of their walled
      garden and things deteriate quite rapidly. iTunes loses it's
      mind dealing with shell scripts and rock ridge translation
      tables.

      Apples are fine if you are willing to be led around by Apple
      by the nose and start over from scratch.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    24. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Nope.

      The numbers indicate otherwise.

      Sure they are a successful consumer electronics vendor. Beyond that they are pretty much a failure.

      Before these overpriced yuppie toys displace PCs, they first have to be able to exist without them.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    25. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Apple is vi and Microsoft is Emacs, Gnome is better than KDE!

    26. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by abigor · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Unix programmers use them. For example, I work with a very large US company that makes high-end switches, and OS X is the os of choice.

      Compared to me, and to the people I work with, I can assure you that it is you that lacks a shred of technological understanding, no offence meant.

      Incidentally, no one uses Linux on the desktop. It is a total failure. Sorry.

    27. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Beyond that they are pretty much a failure.

      Well yeah... They are a consumer electronics company. They don't make stoves and refrigerators.. And they are priced at what the market will bear. And it is very willing to pay those prices.. In fact, I don't even know what you're saying. How are they a "failure"? Because they are not number one in a market they don't seriously compete in?

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    28. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by mgblst · · Score: 1

      You are a fool. He said the vast majority, and somehow you seem to equate this to everybody. You write "absolutely no-one", which is not what the poster said.

      Most people do not do the stuff you do, how long before you realise this. I mean, most children start to comprehend that they are seperate from the world, at about the age of 6.

      So no, the iPad is not great for everybody, maybe not even for most people. But that doesn't stop it from being great for a lot of people, and doesn't stop the fact that the majority have simple needs.

    29. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      wow. what an argument. I work with a company that would dissolve themselves and the CEO would commit seppeku before we consider OSX.

      We have people who are not computer-retarded, so they do tend to understand that open source, especially for enterprise, is the way to go.

    30. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I watch Movies and TV shows all the time on my iPad, it's a great portable media player for the bedroom, kitchen, or on a plane.... at home with basically any format using AirVideo, or over an internet connection via Netflix, or (of course) iTunes. While flying Virgin America recently I could basically use the airplane's WiFi and watch any Netflix show I wanted instead of the crappy in-flight options.

      The recent update of Netflix also added support for the video out cable.

      It's a pretty good portable media player. A laptop is more versatile, but it's much bigger and heavier.

       

      --
      -Stu
    31. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Okay, gotcha. So you need *TWO* memory thingies whereas I only need the one of them in the camera that stays in the camera because I have a USB port and cable for use by the camera...

      iPad supports direct USB connections to digital cameras. Just FYI.

      Personally, I prefer removing my SD card to transfer photos. It's less of a hassle than carrying around a cable and connecting it to a computer (and now, iPad). It also means I can use a second SD card to take photos while the first card is transferring and that I'm not running down the camera's battery to transfer photos.

    32. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      but then you would have the unpaid support calls again. so what's the benefit of ipad again?

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    33. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by fullfactorial · · Score: 1

      I'll give you the printing--the iPad may not see printer support for awhile. On the other hand, if your top priority for the iPad is printing, then I think you're doing it wrong.

    34. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Jeremi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I work with a company that would dissolve themselves and the CEO would commit seppeku before we consider OSX.

      Er, why? I've used Linux for development, and I've used MacOS/X for development, and there really isn't that much difference between the two. (Granted, we're using Qt for our program's underlying API; is it Cocoa in particular that you dislike?)

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    35. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

      On which system do you play indie games?

      The iPad.

    36. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

      "completely proprietary" - which is why they have so many open source projects going, and use .mbox, documented xml, aac, h.264, .ics...

      uh.. hate to burst your bubble there but aac and h.264 aren't exactly open-source.

      OP didn't say they were. Apple have many open source projects going (such as Darwin, Clang, OpenCL), and they also use a list of standards that aren't "completely proprietary" (but weren't the examples of open source projects).

    37. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by zbaron · · Score: 1

      the AAC and H.264 codecs are openly documented well enough that there are open source implementations of both.

    38. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      x264 and ffmpeg are open source h.264 coder and decoder implementations. That's definitely near open source.
      ffmpeg also has a AAC codec, although the encoder part is very new.

      Your argument is something along the same lines as saying the Linux kernel isn't open source because it infringes Microsoft's patents.

    39. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Some+Bitch · · Score: 4, Informative

      On /. ???

      Compared to 4chan this place is a model of civilised behaviour.

    40. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by lennier1 · · Score: 1

      Only because this place doesn't have a /b/

    41. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Well um yeah, I am sure you are suprised how accurate your attempt at sarcasm turned out.

    42. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Failure as in over 91% of the $1000+ laptop market or Failure as in their profits from just computers were 2xDells as a company? (More than PCs)?

      It is really funny when someone posts so sure they know something they turn out to be completely wrong. It would help you to look into what you are talking about in the future.

    43. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      stop being stupid, please.

      Captcha was "Apology". Odd.

    44. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      "Sure they are a successful consumer electronics vendor. Beyond that they are pretty much a failure."

      Just in case you missed the article Title: Apple Surpasses Microsoft In Market Capitalization

      Could you clarify your definition of where Apple is a failure?

    45. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Hurricane78 · · Score: 2, Funny

      My sincere condolences.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    46. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Yes, because OF COURSE the iPad is not a replacement to your PC, but rather an addition to it. And OF COURSE it is proving to be a wildly popular item so far. And OF COURSE your myopic understanding of what the iPad is doesn't contribute to your misunderstanding of its target demographic too much, does it?

    47. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Because the iPad is meant to replace a full-blown PC, right? I mean, Apple still sells something called a Mac, right? Why would they do that if the iPad completely replaced it?

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    48. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Obviously not "absolutely no-one" needs more than an iPad, but I'd suspect that the median home user doesn't.

      Every watched how a lot of people work? They maximize their app, because they're only working on one thing at a time. For them, there's no difference between true multitasking and a fast context switch. (Well, there's some limited stuff they'd like to do, all of which will be covered by the next iPhone OS in the next few months.)

      Most people are not serious game players, and don't play the sorts of games that need 3D acceleration. There's plenty of simple little games for the iP* that will keep them happy.

      Most people don't use their computers as media servers, and don't rip movies. While people often upload photos from their camera, they don't need to do so, and they generally don't edit them, and a lot of people use only their phone cameras anyway. While people rip music from CDs, that's only if they get it on CD, and there's an increasing tendency to get the music from some sort of download store, without bothering with the CD.

      The iPad can be used to write documents (it's painful on the iPhone), and Apple does sell a keyboard.

      The only thing the iPad needs to do, then, for most people is print and do limited multitasking like that promised for iPhone OS 4. For many people, it's already the only computer they need, and for the majority of home users it'll be there with a few enhancements. There's millions of people who want or need more, of course, and they'll continue to have real computers.

      You vastly overestimate what the average home user does with his or her computer.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    49. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whew! Cut down on the Red Bull. First, you know that a user of the iPad can do much more than those three things, so don't be disingenuous. Second, and I agree this is nitpicky, but you went there first: very few computers are capable of multitasking. What you meant to write is "And *OF COURSE* nobody ever has more than one application OPEN at once on a home PC, laptop or netbook." Third, you also meant to write that "an iPad is a *PERFECT* MOBILE replacement for them".

    50. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by MistrBlank · · Score: 1

      Print support for the iPad is moving forward, it plays portable games well and it is a good receiver for multimedia, not the server. The remainder of the stuff you mention isn't meant to be done with a portable device anyway.

      And as you point out, people use their home PC for a lot of things, well the iPad is NOT a replacement for the home workhorse computer. It has never meant to replace that. It's working quite well in my home with a Linux server dishing out the mass of my media to my iPad (and many other devices). And the iPad has freed me from my desk when I'm at home for the mundane tasks without making sacrifices in the laptop or desktop decision. Meanwhile simultaneously freeing me from all of the headaches that a full fledged laptop system has put on me with regard to backing up and keeping it running in top shape (backup is completely handled through iTunes). Moreover, I use it as a portal to a virtual machine on that server freeing me from all the ties to lesser power of such a device without sacrificing batter life. My iPad is great, it's done so much more for me than a new laptop could have and yet that I recognize it isn't a replacement for a laptop, desktop or portable music device. It is it's own niche that has enriched my life.

      The iPad is not a replacement device, it fills a new niche and you don't get that, so please move on and stop spreading FUD.

    51. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by MistrBlank · · Score: 1

      Um, that just proves the point, it's not a replacement device but you're trying to argue that it is.

    52. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by MistrBlank · · Score: 1

      The Xbox arcade and Wii are full of independent titles. How long have you been under that rock, I'm guessing about 2 years based on your comment.

    53. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by sbeckstead · · Score: 1

      I suppose I could get the picture frame (used to display my stunning photography) that uses WiFi to get the pictures from a server somewhere in the house but that would mean I have to have one running and using power. You obviously have never used 802.11N with a Windows XP PC. Falls off the network with alarming regularity (the Macs have never fallen off yet) Tried several different adapters but gave up. My Linux box can't seem to reconnect the WiFi network when it wakes up from sleep so I have to manually do it myself If you can give me insight into this Ubuntu behavior please do. It may be that hidden in the power usage stuff somewhere there is a switch to keep the adapter's power on instead of dropping it but I can't find it. I could go more into the short comings of Linux but I won't as that's just too much of a sacred cow around here to bother with. Mac OS X has it's own problems. My point was both that eliminating the PC element and the Windows element led to a more productive and calm environment. You really don't need a general purpose PC anymore running Mac OS X, Windows or Linux.

    54. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by sbeckstead · · Score: 1

      Well the iPad, and since I rarely play any games at all and my son only wants the majors it seems to work out nicely.

    55. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hurrrrr

    56. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by tepples · · Score: 1

      The Xbox arcade and Wii are full of independent titles.

      True, Xbox 360 has Xbox Live Indie Games powered by XNA. But the impression I get from Nintendo's site is that WiiWare is for medium or large businesses, not small businesses. You have to have an office, and you have to have released a commercially successful PC title first. To get World of Goo onto Wii, 2D Boy had to cheat Nintendo by sub-leasing office space from a local Starbucks franchise.

    57. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by damnfuct · · Score: 1

      I've used Linux for development, and I've used MacOS/X for development, and there really isn't that much difference between the two.

      Except a substantial price difference for the hardware

    58. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      read the other reply.

      There's 0 reason to pay extra for hardware or software. it's a hell of a lot cheaper when you can develop in house and have no legal issues. /we basically could laugh out of court any company that goes after us for software related stuff, even with patents.

    59. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by sarahtim · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up!

    60. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      Why would I recommend a linux/Windows, or even Apple computer to anyone, when the vast majority of them can surf the web/IM/email with an iPad.

      Because you have to have another computer to activate your iPad.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    61. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

      iPad supports direct USB connections to digital cameras. Just FYI.

      Yes, via some kind of USB adapter that you need to pay extra for. And that's assuming the software in the iPad recognises the camera of course.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    62. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1

      Totally agree...

      Maybe one day there will be a single OS that can do everything I need a computer to do but at the moment it's a combination of using Linux and Windows XP, and that's the second best option.

      And in about 30 years of messing about with computers, never once have I felt that anything was missing from my computing experience through not ever owning one single Apple-made computer.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    63. Re:ladies and gentlemen: by node+3 · · Score: 1

      Yes, via some kind of USB adapter that you need to pay extra for.

      I don't see how that's relevant to the matter at hand.

      And that's assuming the software in the iPad recognises the camera of course.

      Why wouldn't it?

  6. Watch out by MrEricSir · · Score: 5, Funny

    Please don't tell the Apple fanboys about this, or we'll never hear the end of it.

    --
    There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
    1. Re:Watch out by ColdWetDog · · Score: 0

      Please don't tell the Apple fanboys about this, or we'll never hear the end of it.

      Sorry, we're all over this now. Your only hope is to try and sidetrack the discussion by invoking either Xenu or Sarah Palin.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    2. Re:Watch out by coolgeek · · Score: 1

      Too late, Michael Dell.

      --

      cat /dev/null >sig
    3. Re:Watch out by MrEricSir · · Score: 2, Funny

      Now if Sarah Palin converts to Scientology and buys a Mac...

      --
      There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
    4. Re:Watch out by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 1

      Sorry, we're all over this now. Your only hope is to try and sidetrack the discussion by invoking either Xenu or Sarah Palin.

      Or interesting tales of Natalie Portman ... that usually sidetracks this crowd ;-)

    5. Re:Watch out by hawaiian717 · · Score: 1

      Every time Keith Olbermann shows a video of Rush Limbaugh doing his radio show saying something stupid and I catch a glimpse of what looks like the OS X desktop with a dock full of icons on the bottom on his monitor, I die inside a little.

      --
      End of Line.
    6. Re:Watch out by SEE · · Score: 5, Informative

      It doesn't just "look like" the OS X desktop. Limbaugh is a long-time Mac user and evangelist.

    7. Re:Watch out by twoears · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      It doesn't just "look like" the OS X desktop. Limbaugh is a long-time Mac user and evangelist.

      That's reason enough to avoid the Mac. And Limbaugh just "looks like" a human being, until he opens his pie hole.

    8. Re:Watch out by mattack2 · · Score: 2, Funny

      at least one of the things he's evangelizing actually exists.

    9. Re:Watch out by zioncat · · Score: 1

      You watch Keith Olbermann? Voluntary?

    10. Re:Watch out by jcr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Avoiding a product because you don't like one of the millions of people who've bought it? Who the hell modded that "insightful"?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    11. Re:Watch out by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Smooth, nice shot :)

    12. Re:Watch out by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Avoiding a product because you don't like one of the millions of people who've bought it? Who the hell modded that "insightful"?

      I wouldn't be surprised if he's a shareholder, and I already avoid Snapple on that basis, why not Apple? >:)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    13. Re:Watch out by twoears · · Score: 1

      Avoiding a product because you don't like one of the millions of people who've bought it? Who the hell modded that "insightful"?

      -jcr

      Spoken like a true fanboy. Funny, I was going to say the same thing about your post, jcr@mac.com

    14. Re:Watch out by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Why am I not a bit surprised by this? (Considering the whole belief-delusions thing...)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    15. Re:Watch out by lotho+brandybuck · · Score: 1

      How about interesting tails of Natalie Portman?

    16. Re:Watch out by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      Every time Keith Olbermann shows a video of Rush Limbaugh doing his radio show saying something stupid and I catch a glimpse of what looks like the OS X desktop with a dock full of icons on the bottom on his monitor, I die inside a little.

      I understand - Keith Olbermann has that effect on me, too.

    17. Re:Watch out by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

      Judging from the market cap, there are more Apple Fanboys out there than Microsoft fanboys.

      Maybe the fanboys in general should take a cue the market?

  7. Growth by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Microsoft hasn't really been growing for a decade, while Apple has. The market capitalisation often reflects this, because people are more willing to buy shares in a growing company, expecting that their value will increase over the next few years. People only buy shares in a stable company based on the expected dividends. This means that Apple's stock price is likely to be more volatile than Microsofts and, as long as the continue to be perceived as growing, greater than the current 'real' value of the company.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    1. Re:Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Exactly. What's the actual long-term (very long-term) value of stock when there are no dividends? Zero. You, or the person you sell your stocks to, or the person who buys from them, will lose all that money you made.

      Look at profit margins. Microsoft is still kicking Apple's trash, and gives stockholders good dividends.

    2. Re:Growth by Nadaka · · Score: 0, Troll

      Microsoft is sitting at market saturation, the only way to grow from here is to make a bigger market. Why do you think the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation is working to improve quality of life in Africa? The jaded cynical capitalist in me says that it is to open new markets for Microsoft products.

    3. Re:Growth by Gandalf_the_Beardy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Microsoft doesnt make anything... not real stuff. You can buy an Apple computer, but not a Microsoft one. Perhaps that has some bearing on the perceived value and owrht of the company - I'm just throwing the idea out there....

    4. Re:Growth by pantherace · · Score: 4, Informative

      Dell Computers, HP Computers, ipads, iphones, Gateways, all made by Foxconn and friends.

      Apple doesn't really make anything.

    5. Re:Growth by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Simply put, the market sees more growth in Apple than they do in Microsoft, in the near future. Microsoft has been trying to grow for a while now, which since they own such as large share of the OS/Office market, means expanding into new markets.

      They have had some success with xbox, but overall they are yet to be in the black there. There is still a chance to grow with the xbox's online services.

      Zune hasn't worked out for them.

      They lost there way with Windows Mobile, it seems they just forgot about it, just as they did with IE.

      IIS has started to falter, and .Net has seen some great growth, but looks like stagnating now as well.

      Whereas Apple have some exciting products coming out, that seem to do very well.

    6. Re:Growth by maxume · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Microsoft hasn't really been growing for a decade" is only true in the broader, "hahahahahaha" sense:

      http://www.microsoft.com/msft/download/Yearly%20Income%20Statements.xls

      Deciding just how much they grew is sort of a difficult exercise, as both 2000 and 2009 had 'interesting' business events, but the low end argument is that they increased earnings by $5 billion, which is about 50% of their 2000 income. It is also about 80% of Google's earnings (which is an interesting comparison, because Google is widely hailed as a success, whereas people often say that Microsoft hasn't don much).

      It wouldn't be insane to argue that they increased income by $7 billion, a 100% increase over their 1999 earnings, and it wouldn't be shocking to see them back near $18 billion for 2010 (they have already reported $14 billion of income), which is a $9 billion increase over 2000.

      Of course, none of those numbers account for inflation.

      So really, what happened is that Apple grew a whole bunch more.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    7. Re:Growth by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1, Informative

      The only thing Apple makes are designs. All of the manufacturing is outsourced. Microsoft also 'makes' the XBox, in the same way that Apple 'makes' the iPhone; by sending the designs to a company in China to mass produce them.

      For a counter example, look at ARM, a company that doesn't make anything. It now has a market cap of over $4bn, while the company that created it, which did make things (computers) went bust in 2000 and was never valued at much more than 20% of ARM's current value. At one point in the late '90s, the shares that Acorn held in ARM were actually worth more than the market capitalisation of Acorn.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    8. Re:Growth by MBGMorden · · Score: 3, Informative

      Xbox, Zune, Keyboard, Mice. Nah, Microsoft doesn't make anything real.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    9. Re:Growth by Low+Ranked+Craig · · Score: 1

      They've been trying and not doing well. They haven't been able to get traction in, well, anything else they've tried. Xbox has been moderately successful (financially speaking). Zune? no. Kin? no. Bing? very much no. Mobile? not really. (again, we're talking financially successful, not market share) Microsoft's stock hasn't done shit in 10 years.

      --
      I still cannot find the droids I am looking for...
    10. Re:Growth by Swampash · · Score: 1

      Microsoft hasn't really been growing for a decade

      You meant "has been shrinking". MS's market cap is about 20% DOWN on ten years ago. Or, as a recent analyst put it, "Steve Ballmer has presided over the greatest destruction of shareholder value in the history of the technology industry".

    11. Re:Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2000 Revenue 22B

      2009 Revenue 58B

      Say what?

    12. Re:Growth by AHuxley · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Bill Gates is linked to planned parenthood ideas via his father.
      At best they hope to improve quality of life in Africa by reducing the number of Africans.
      Africa will not get to trade its somewhat unique, expensive, raw materials at market rates, ever.
      MS in Africa is more a stalling, blocking motion to kill open efforts than to offer any real tech solutions.
      MS is lost in a world where XP is good for some and Apple has the 5% of desktops.
      Lunches and numbers on napkins are great for start ups but 10-20 years later the game is up.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    13. Re:Growth by Cryacin · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Exactly. You can make any company look bigger and better etc.

      It's called cooking the books. It's not profit or anything like that, it's how that people *think* profit is going.

      In other words, people collectively *believe* that Apple is *going* to be bigger than Microsoft. Well, we'll see. In the meantime, Film at 11.

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    14. Re:Growth by Kjella · · Score: 2, Interesting

      True, Apple's P/E is 20.69 versus Microsoft's 12.96 which means people are buying more into Apple's future than Microsoft. However, it's not that much either. Microsoft is about even with IBM (11.98), while Apple is about even with Oracle (19.58). If you want something that's more speculative you have for example Yahoo (27.74) or Red Hat (64.12).

      I think the market is fairly right too. Microsoft is feeling the pressure on their margins from cheap low-end computers that just can't have a OS doubling the price, while Apple keeps on hitting it big in consumer electronics. Just look at the market for smart phones pre-iPhone and post-iPhone, they only have about 16-17% market share but most others only managed to sell the phone. Apple is the only one who has gotten a real application store going and it's already the dominating web browsing phone with some 70% of the market. There are some rather serious barriers to entry and Apple just steamrolled them without price dumping and is already very profitable. Unlike Microsoft which fights hard and long but still loses money on xboxes. The jury is still out on iPads but it looks like that from the iPhones they've got the beachhead of applications to create that market. They're certainly by far the best offering ever attempted in that market.

      Judging from what I see now, I think Apple is building up the prerequisites for a real entertainment center. The iTunes store keeps on getting more and more TV series and movies, with the iPhone/iPad they're building a huge collection of minigames and such. Not just another software update the AppleTV, but a real hardware revamp and reboot as an "iCenter" or whatever with much more focus on applications and games as well. With a touch sensitive remote making it kinda like iPhone/iPad but you touch on the remote, look on the big screen. There's still plenty potential in Apple, Microsoft not so much.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    15. Re:Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only one Slashdot such an idiotic comment would be modded Insightful.

      If software doesn't count, then RedHat, Oracle, Siebel and SAP should be worthless. After all, according to you, these companies don't make anything!

    16. Re:Growth by hedwards · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You've more or less hit on it. MS has to find new markets in order to grow any larger, they've got something like 90% of the desktop OS market. Even if they were to grow and fill out more or less all of that, you're still talking about probably an 8 or 9% increase. The cost of doing that would almost certainly outweigh any actual revenue growth. Things like Zune, Bing and XBox are ways in which they're trying to grow into new markets. But at heart MS has always been a software company.

      Whereas Apple has pretty much always been a hardware company that sells software on the side. These days there's an awful lot of hardware left to invent and sell, hence why Apple is growing. But it's hardly a matter of them beating MS in any meaningful way. Apple still hasn't made much in the way of inroads into MS' domain of office and OS. And it could be a long time if they ever manage it.

    17. Re:Growth by pnevin · · Score: 1

      Jesus. I've read some cynical things here but wow.

    18. Re:Growth by samkass · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's called cooking the books. It's not profit or anything like that, it's how that people *think* profit is going.

      Apple really is an insanely profitable company. Their margins are sky-high and the volume is high enough to get the top-tier of economies of scale. They pull in billions of dollars of actual cash profit per quarter. The P/E is about 20, which isn't astronomical (less than twice Microsoft's). This isn't some dot-com speculation-- Apple really is performing phenomenally well financially.

      --
      E pluribus unum
    19. Re:Growth by Gandalf_the_Beardy · · Score: 1

      You mean in the eyes of the market, which in terms of evaluating what a company is "worth" is what counts. I never made such a claim at all - I proposed it as a theory... Software and IP etc while obviously valuable isn't something that you can get hold of.. it seems ephemeral, just ones and zeros. A company that is generally percevied to make "stuff" even if it is outsourced, is often held to be intrinsically more valuable than one that doesnt - the rights and wrongs of that are another entire debate. However I still think that people like Apple to some extent as they "make" things - there is a series of big shiny, well received boxes bought by high income people regularly. Against that Microsoft makes a few games consoles (that overheat) and a thing called the Zune that no-one really knows what it's for, apart from the fact it's a high priced failure. Now is that worth more than the deep penetration Microsoft has into the enterprise server market, the database market, the email and collaboration market, and lets not forget Office... well it's the markets... Reality is always playing second fiddle to peoples perception - that's why you get bank runs after all - not for any real reason but because herd mentality takes over.

    20. Re:Growth by John+Meacham · · Score: 2, Informative

      Um, no. When you own stock, you own a part of the company. As in, you own a part of a real company that is designing and building things and making money. That has intrinsic value independently of the dividends. To say stock that doesn't pay dividends doesn't have value is equivalent to saying this gold bar is worthless because it doesn't pay dividends. Both stock and the gold bar have value in the future because they represent actual wealth.

      Whether a company's profits go towards increasing the stock price or paying out dividends is not really relevant to the intrinsic value of owning a percentage of the company.

      --
      http://notanumber.net/
    21. Re:Growth by victorhooi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      heya,

      Hmm, even for me, I have to say that's a bit cynical, mate...seriously....

      It's also a completely ludicrous idea. Firstly, it'll take what, 20-30 years before African is up to American levels of consumption. If even then. And over those 20-30 years, you've have ploughed in more money than you could ever hope to possibly claim back.

      Yeah, I don't have any more love for Bill Gates than the next man, in terms of shonky business practices and dodgy make-money schemes, but if you read what's been said, and watch the interviews, I think he's fairly genuine with the foundation. Whatever you want to believe his reasons - rich man's guilt, true altruisim, whatever - the end result is he's doing a lot of good.

      Cheers,
      Victor

    22. Re:Growth by quickOnTheUptake · · Score: 1

      Investors can be an emotional lot, but they are not nearly that dumb.

      --
      Mod points: Guaranteed to remove your sense of humor.
      Side effects may include gullibility and temporary retardation
    23. Re:Growth by dilvish_the_damned · · Score: 4, Funny

      Not that I completely disagree, but I find detracting from actual good works a little distasteful, regardless of the possible motivations. I mean, I am convinced their work on finding a cure for AIDs is a ploy to get victims more expendable cash to bolster their Zune sales, but I don't go around saying it.

      --
      I think you underestimate just how much I just dont care.
    24. Re:Growth by Gandalf_the_Beardy · · Score: 1

      South sea bubble, the Dutch Tulip craze, Railway mania, the Posiden bubble, 2007 Uranium bubble, and of course the NASDAQ in March 2000.... Wanna bet on how dumb investors really can be sometimes?

    25. Re:Growth by maxume · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That analyst is an idiot. They have paid $54 billion in dividends during that period (which more than accounts for the 20% decline), and 10 years ago was the peak of the dot com bubble, hardly a period where the stock price of Microsoft reflected the actual value of the company.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    26. Re:Growth by seanadams.com · · Score: 5, Informative
      You either have no idea how equities actually work or you are being deliberately obtuse. Do you think huge companies just instantly vanish in some random event that nobody can predict? No. All that cash in the bank? It belongs to the shareholders. Likewise all the other assets of the company. You can take profits selling your AAPL any time you like - right now it's close to its all-time-high.

      The reason fast growing companies don't pay dividends is because shareholders don't want them. The reasons they don't want them are:

      1) Dividends are taxed as ordinary income, which by the time you figure typical state taxes is about double the rate for long term cap gains.
      2) If the company has a use for the money (eg mergers, or even just stockpiling for future downturns) then it's better for the shareholders to keep the cash in the corporation than to be forced to raise money through borrowing, or dilution at times when the stock is weaker.
      3) Shareholders want to choose when they take their profits/income.

      The shareholders literally, legally, OWN the company. It is more than simply a game of betting which way the share price will move although many people look at it that way.

      When you look at an established company with good profitability but shaky prospects for future growth - case in point, MSFT, that is when shareholders will demand a dividend. If the stock isn't going up and the company can't find efective ways to reinvest its profits, then the shareholders will want a periodic return. AAPL shareholders are expecting more from the company right now and you'd have been a fool to bet against them at any time in the last 12 years or so. That's not saying it goes up forever but AAPL has so much cash and such a broad product portfolio that it's not the kind of thing that can go out of business without a seriously protracted unwinding.

      And your notion that it's only a matter of having a sufficiently long time frame is patently false. Never mind that this only can happen if the entirety of the company's assets are liquidated to satisfy its debts... what if they are acquired in whole? I suppose you would argue that the acquiring entity eventually will fail, etc ad infinitum. Well that's entropy for ya - heat death of the universe. So what? Should nobody invest then? Should successful growing companies all pay dividends instead of using that money to expand operations?

      Why don't you invest in such companies while the rest of us hold our AAPL. Sounds like you've got an angle!

    27. Re:Growth by Calavar · · Score: 1

      That's not entirely true. In theory, stock has intrinsic value because it confers partial ownership of a company. This may have been more true one hundred or two hundred years ago, but nowadays, 90% of companies hold a majority of their own stock, so it is company executives and not external shareholders that call the shots.

      As a result stocks have very little intrinsic value. Stock prices are no longer determined by intrinsic value but by supply and demand. If there more people who want to buy a stock than sell it, price goes up, and if more people want to sell it than buy it, price goes down. Essentially, the stock market as a whole has become more like a futures market in this sense. Buying and selling stock is betting on the success of the company. Stock prices no longer have anything to do with the actual worth of the company, but how that worth it perceived. Judging from the fact that Apple's market capitalization is now higher than Microsoft's even though its annual profits are still lower, there is a lot of hype around the perception of Apple's worth.

    28. Re:Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lots of people buy Microsoft computers, they're just labeled as "Xbox 360". Also, I think the Zune team might claim they make something if anyone ever finds one in the wild.

      BTW. your idea is hilariously backwards since the MSFT days of huge growth were back when it made none of the hardware things it does today (just Windows, Excel, Word, etc.)

      Of course, then there's also those companies that made hardware and we don't see any more (Packard Bell, for instance, but we can look at Palm as arguably a recent example of a failure despite making 'real stuff')

    29. Re:Growth by maxume · · Score: 1

      Treasury stock (which is what the stock the company holds in itself is called) does not pay dividends and does not vote:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treasury_stock

      So in terms of shareholder votes, the executives only have as much control as they have shares in the company.

      It is likely that the supply and demand effect you speak of is still present, but it is probably due more to the ownership of the company being well spread out (I would back this speculation up with the rather spectacular success of companies that are run by the people that founded them vs companies that are run by people that were hired in).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    30. Re:Growth by shadowrat · · Score: 1

      true, but Apple makes the idea that you are getting a special Apple computer.

    31. Re:Growth by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      More importantly, their profit has been growing consistently, even during the recession, and routinely outperforms forecasts.

      The market cap reflects how much investors think the company is going to be worth in the future, not how much it's worth now.

    32. Re:Growth by jedidiah · · Score: 0, Troll

      > Judging from what I see now, I think Apple is building up the prerequisites for a real entertainment center.
      > The iTunes store keeps on getting more and more TV series and movies, with the iPhone/iPad they're building
      > a huge collection of minigames and such.

      The iPad is a TERRIBLE device to build a media center off of.

      The idea of a "media center tablet" sounds cool enough but the hardware just isn't up to it.
      It could be but it's not in Apple's interest to make a more flexible device. They want to
      shove stuff from iTunes down everyone's throat rather that support what's already out there.

      iTunes sounds less impressive when you've got tons of other devices that can tap into Amazon
      Netflix or both. Apple isn't going to take over the world by being yet another device that
      can access Netflix. Most people don't want pervasive pay per view either.

      This is an area where Apple is basically abdicating to Microsoft and everyone else.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    33. Re:Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and Microshaft uses slave labour to make those 'real' things, amongst other Great Evils...yeah, what a great all around American company...
      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/microsoft/7597344/Microsoft-accused-of-using-teenage-slave-labour-to-build-Xboxes-in-China.html

      The sooner M$ dies, the better the world will be.
      (Although I'm not much of an Apple fan, at least they are "Less Evil" (TM) than M$.)

      The True Way of the Force is the Freedom of Linux!
      (Go Android, go! World Domination, one cell phone at a time...:-))

    34. Re:Growth by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      i recall reading an interview of bill gates in which he said that his ambition/goal was to have each desk in the world have a computer running microsoft software. then he later realized that this goal was impossible because so many people were unable to get even basic amenities like drinking water, let alone a computer. so essentially, charity is only a part of selling more software, in the long run.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    35. Re:Growth by seanadams.com · · Score: 1

      Yes. During the "crash" a week or two ago, several stocks went to $.01.

      Not sure if serious. If you are, citation please and I will rebut.

    36. Re:Growth by Kristoph · · Score: 1

      In 2004 I bought 1000 shares of AAPL at around $17. I've never seen a dividend. I have, however, made over $450k in less then 6 years on a $17k investment.

      Explain to me again how the stock has no value?

      Oh and, Microsoft is a SOFTWARE company with a 29% profit margin. AAPL is a HARDWARE company with a 21.5% profit margin. If this comparison tells us anything it's that Microsoft is in a sad sad state as a software company and Apple is kicking butt as a hardware company. That's why the market is rewarding Apple with a higher market cap.

    37. Re:Growth by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      Microsoft hasn't really been growing for a decade, while Apple has. The market capitalisation often reflects this, because people are more willing to buy shares in a growing company, expecting that their value will increase over the next few years. People only buy shares in a stable company based on the expected dividends. This means that Apple's stock price is likely to be more volatile than Microsofts and, as long as the continue to be perceived as growing, greater than the current 'real' value of the company.

      When I worked at Microsoft, most people used their Employee Stock Purchase to put money away that purchased Microsoft stock at 90% of value. But since MSFT gains looked so poor, they then immediately sold said stock for an approximately 11% profit.

      I did one further, I sold my MSFT and purchased Apple stock with it. In some ways, I was really getting AAPL at 90% of market value. Served me well, and it made me good money. Not to mention the nicety of vesting stock offers that gave me free stock, to be sold and converted to AAPL as well.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    38. Re:Growth by blai · · Score: 1

      I'd be sad if I do something out of good will and someone accuses me for doing evil...

      I can't be sure, of course.

      --
      In soviet Russia, God creates you!
    39. Re:Growth by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      The jaded cynical capitalist in me says that it is to open new markets for Microsoft products.

      Africa is decades, if not a century, away from being that sort of market. Somehow I think Bill's not planning that far ahead.

    40. Re:Growth by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Microsoft doesnt make anything... not real stuff. You can buy an Apple computer, but not a Microsoft one.

      But there's nothing compelling about Apple's computers, other than the software they run.

    41. Re:Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft makes more hardware than Apple does. For 100% sure, there's a lot more Microsoft keyboards and mouses out there than all Apple's hardware combined :-)

    42. Re:Growth by The+Great+Pretender · · Score: 1

      But as you infer the Market Cap is the public PERCEIVED value of a company (a better measure is embedded value). Essentially, what people are willing to pay for the stock. People like what Apple are doing at the moment and are trying to buy Apple stock. This could potential lead to a bubble, as excited buyers incite excited buyers, it may not. If Apple starts to falter in it's output, or takes a wrong path, public confidence will go down (fickle people that we are) and so will stock prices. Personally, I'll happily stick with the shares I bought in 2003, but I'll not be buying anymore. It's a relative percentage game with Apple. They're going to have to have a huge multiple on stock prices to get anything decent out of them now. If the stock price gets too high then what's my percentage gain. I mean holding shares valued at $1000/share sounds great, unless you've bought the shares at $999. At a high trade price company's need to become aware that their share holders don't want to see risk as they could loose value. Then they are slow to innovate, it's too risky, and become targets for the young whippersnappers...victims of their own success. Hey but that's just my opinion.

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    43. Re:Growth by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      The only thing $(AMERICAN_COMPANY_A) makes are designs. All of the manufacturing is outsourced. $(AMERICAN_COMPANY_B) also 'makes' the $(PRODUCT_A), in the same way that $(AMERICAN_COMPANY_A) 'makes' the $(PRODUCT_B); by sending the designs to a company in China to mass produce them.

      There, I generalized that for you. Now you can re-use your post in lots of places!

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    44. Re:Growth by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      But there's nothing compelling about Apple's computers, other than the software they run.

      Well, the cases look nice, but yes, the software is the main thing. MacOS/X is the first mainstream (read: commercially well-supported) consumer OS that doesn't suck donkey balls.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    45. Re:Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "You either have no idea how equities actually work or you are being deliberately obtuse. Do you think huge companies just instantly vanish in some random event that nobody can predict? No."

      Yes. See Pan Am, aka Pan American Airlines. A terrorist blew up one of their 747s over Lockerbie, Scotland. *because it was over a tiny scrap of land* the maritime rules for liability limitation didn't apply, and Pan Am got sued out of existence (think US$200m *per passenger*. If they'd been over water, the maximum liability is in the thousands).

      Huge company? check.
      Instantly vanished? Well, given as it had been around for decades and disappeared in months, check.
      Some random event? Terrorism. Check.
      That nobody can predict? Check.

      It can and does happen. See also Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and for other reasons Enron, WorldCom, and LTCM...

      AC

    46. Re:Growth by dafing · · Score: 1

      And I suppose Foxconn mined and refined the elements used in my iMac? Oh, so then some other company TRULY makes everything for Apple then!

      Most of my non technical friends believe they have a "Dell" or "HP" computer, and "windows" is just "the thing" inside the screen, they have essentially no idea about other Operating Systems such as Linux, its just "windows" and "those Apple computers". They know that Apple computers are Apple inside and "out".

      Funnily enough, Steve Jobs considered the TOTAL vertical approach:

      "Remember Steve Jobs "sand" concept for the creation of personal computers? About the time he lent his star power to the creation of the original Macintosh back in the early 80s, Apples founder famously described his dream factory: an oceanfront site that would haul raw beach sand in one end, cook up its own silicon and deliver fully configured PCs out the other end. This vision of vertical integration and rugged self-sufficiency is a cornerstone of Apples culture that has informed the companys every move during Jobs two tenures there." http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Apple/Mac-Market-Built-on-Sand/

      --
      --- ...or a new slashdot signature. Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all
    47. Re:Growth by dafing · · Score: 1

      Agreed, but does anyone get excited about the Microsoft brand? Do normal people queue outside the critically acclaimed Microsoft Temple on day one for a "Bluetrack" mouse?

      Christ, I'd never been to Microsoft.com since getting service pack updates for my XP laptop...compare *THIS* http://www.microsoft.com/hardware/mouseandkeyboard/default.mspx monstrosity to Apple's page for their keyboard http://www.apple.com/keyboard/

      And we seriously wonder why Apple is doing so well?

      Xbox aside, I dont think anyone truly gets hyped over a Microsoft product? Perhaps there will be news coverage of the next OS release, but its ALWAYS seen as hyper-nerdy, and has mention of "Few can forget the fiasco of the previous Microsoft Windows release....". If all Apple has is "marketing", then why dont Dell, HP, Acer....bother making their websites and PR look GOOD?

      --
      --- ...or a new slashdot signature. Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all
    48. Re:Growth by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      Agreed. To me it's always looked like Gates had an epic vision for the digital future, and then at one point reality started to sink in with regards to people not having access to the basic stuff like food or shelter.

      No matter how much we like to bash him here on /. the guy is doing *something* to improve the lives of other people, people he doesn't know. And he's paying it out of his own pocket, instead of spending his time throwing fundraisers as a thinly disguised excuse for a bunch of well-dressed rich guys to have a fun evening at the expense of whoever is providing the entertainment.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    49. Re:Growth by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The iPad is a TERRIBLE device to build a media center off of.

      There's already slower ARM-based devices (mostly running Android these days, some running Ubuntu) around $200 that can handle 1080p out.

      Apple already tried a STB/game console and failed. I doubt they will try again soon. The barrier to entry in the games market is massive. But I suppose some people might pay Apple to play casual games on their TV.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    50. Re:Growth by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Xbox, Zune, Keyboard, Mice. Nah, Microsoft doesn't make anything real.

      Microsoft doesn't make any of those things, they only design them. They're all made by someone else. Microsoft doesn't make anything real. They don't have the expertise (though they could buy it, it's the only way they ever advance) and if you handed them the manufacturing facilities tomorrow they would fail.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    51. Re:Growth by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Yes. During the "crash" a week or two ago, several stocks went to $.01.

      Not sure if serious. If you are, citation please and I will rebut.

      Google search for stocks drop to one cent result five Market Fragmentation May Get Review After Stock Drop (Update3)

      CBOE Stock Exchange canceled 18 trades of 100 shares that took place at 1 cent in Accenture over seven seconds starting at 2:47 p.m. The trades occurred against stub quotes, according to David Harris, the exchange's president. Trades were canceled on CBSX because the market is newer and its book of orders is "thinner," which led to transactions occurring away from reasonable prices, he said.

      Internets? You fail them.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    52. Re:Growth by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Microsoft doesn't make any of those things, they only design them. They're all made by someone else. Microsoft doesn't make anything real.

      By that logic, Apple doesn't make anything real either. Their designs are manufactured over in the same Taiwanese companies as the other tech firms use. And if Apple and Microsoft are in the same position there, then the original distinction has no meaning.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    53. Re:Growth by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The Gates foundation exists to spread Western IP law. I propose that it is part of the back-room deals surrounding Ashcroft letting Gates and Microsoft off the hook completely after Microsoft was found to be guilty of abusing their monopoly. If you want immunizations you have to provide IP law protection for pharmaceutical companies in your country. Further, The Gates Foundation makes for-profit investment in corporations literally killing the same people they are immunizing; when this article was published the foundation published a press release on their website saying they would review their investments for ethical content, but literally a day later they published another that essentially said that they were not going to do that because it would be difficult. This can safely be summarized as Bill Gates crying crocodile tears while saying "Saving the world is hard."

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    54. Re:Growth by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      I am not in any way accusing him of doing evil with the B&MG foundation. But behind every great philanthropic act there is a reason. Nobel, Carnegie, Dupont all had reasons for what they did.

    55. Re:Growth by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      By that logic, Apple doesn't make anything real either. Their designs are manufactured over in the same Taiwanese companies as the other tech firms use. And if Apple and Microsoft are in the same position there, then the original distinction has no meaning.

      Doesn't Apple still have their own assembly plants? Apple doesn't make PCBs, but AFAIK they do make machines and put them in boxes. So Apple makes PCs as much as Dell or anybody else does, and furthermore, more than Microsoft. Unless, of course, they closed all their assembly plants.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    56. Re:Growth by icebraining · · Score: 1

      And in Apple's factories, people commit suicide because of the bad work conditions.

      Companies like Apple and Microsoft don't have real factories, they simply outsource to Chinese factories and can't care less about the working conditions unless it generates bad press. Believing otherwise is just naive.

    57. Re:Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think huge companies just instantly vanish in some random event that nobody can predict?

      You've probably never heard of Long Term Capital Management. But well, that's a Black Swan event anyway.

    58. Re:Growth by quickOnTheUptake · · Score: 1

      I acknowledge that the market can be dumb and emotional; I deny that it is so emotional that it places any significant value on "makes stuff" as opposed to "does other stuff that makes money".
      You think they just realized over the last couple years that Apple make hardware?
      There is one simple reason that accounts for the majority of high PEs: perceived potential for growth.
      If you want a nice visual, follow each of these links, click annual, and compare the charts:
      Apple income statements
      MS income statements
      I'll sum it up for you, Apple's revenue has grown significantly every year for the last 3 (going from 19B to almost 43B in 3 years). Their EPS has grown even more extremely, from 2.27 to 9.08.
      MS on the other hand looks like it is treading water, the revenue has grown somewhat, but their profit margin is falling, leaving their net income fairly steady (from 12.6B to 14.6B), and their EPS during the same time frame has gone from 1.31 to 1.65.
      On top of this there is the intangible: Apple has grown a great deal of mind-share. They have a huge intangible asset insofar as they are viewed by the world as a trend-setting company. If anything it is this intangible, not the fact that they make stuff, that has them so highly valued (and the fact that the numbers show they know how to run a business and turn that mindshare into cash).

      --
      Mod points: Guaranteed to remove your sense of humor.
      Side effects may include gullibility and temporary retardation
    59. Re:Growth by seanadams.com · · Score: 1
      Yes. See Pan Am

      Fair enough, although I hardly think that having extracted a couple %/yr of dividends up to that time would bring much consolation to the shareholders who lost their principal entirely. For the other ones you mention I suppose I could have qualified my statement to exclude cases gross criminal fraud.

    60. Re:Growth by Gandalf_the_Beardy · · Score: 1

      BTW My "idea" is not hilariously backwards as I never claimed that Microsoft was valueless because it doesnt make stuff. I pointed out that however other people can perceive it like that which is the point of the argument. Many people will not invest in something that appears intangible and ephemeral, regardless of how good or useful a software house can be.

    61. Re:Growth by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      Was that value ever real though or was it just based on unrealistic expectations?

      Afaict market cap is only ever a rough approximation of a companies true value (which is virtually impossible to measure)

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    62. Re:Growth by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      At one point in the late '90s, the shares that Acorn held in ARM were actually worth more than the market capitalisation of Acorn.
      As I understand it this was what finally killed acorn. IIRC their arm holdings were worth more than the rest of the company combined but selling them would have left them with a massive capital gains tax bill whereas breaking up the company wouldn't or something like that (this is my memory of stuff I read at the time, it may be flawed).

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    63. Re:Growth by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Being able to display a 1080p picture and actually being able to decode
      video at that resolution are two things entirely. There are plenty of
      general purpose PCs that don't have what it takes. If you don't have a
      beefy CPU then you need good acceleration hardware and it needs to be
      able to decode common things like DVDs, ATSC broadcasts and Elgato EyeTV
      recordings.

      Your average n00b will not understand that they need to keep 3Ghz+ worth
      of CPU horsepower idle and in reserve waiting to help a device like the
      iPad get over it's inherent limitations.

      Grandma might have a good enough eye to notice the difference even if she
      doesn't understand any of the underlying technical issues.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    64. Re:Growth by nixbert · · Score: 1
      Wrong!!

      Please do not mod parent as informative! Apple's margin are roughly 5% lower than Microsoft and this is for the earning reported for last quarter. See for yourself

      http://www.google.com/finance?q=aapl (Net profit margin = 22.77%)

      http://www.google.com/finance?q=MSFT (Net profit margin = 27.62%)

      Sure, Apple does turn in billions of dollars of cash profit each quarter ($3074MM) but Microsoft rakes in even higher profit ($4006MM). Both are publicly traded companies so data is there for everyone to see. Please don't be taken in with sweeping generalities.

    65. Re:Growth by symbolset · · Score: 1

      The guy who wrote the parent comment is really smart. You should listen to what he has to say.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
  8. Bubble by HEbGb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Looks like an excellent bubble to take advantage of. Sell (or short) Apple, buy Microsoft.

    1. Re:Bubble by rsborg · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Looks like an excellent bubble to take advantage of. Sell (or short) Apple, buy Microsoft.
      [Citation Needed]

      This article may not be completely solid financial data, but makes more sense than the populist reactionary stance you take:

      So there you have it, Apple fans; your stock looks fairly priced. No debt on the balance and strong cash flows look good as well. By the numbers, Apple looks attractive as a growth story. Recent weakness may be enhancing the opportunity. Based on the thesis that earnings determine market price, Apple is currently trading at a PEG ratio of approximately one based on future earnings expectations.

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    2. Re:Bubble by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Looks like an excellent bubble to take advantage of. Sell (or short) Apple, buy Microsoft.

      Selling Apple probably makes sense if you've been holding for a while. But buying Microsoft? Where is the evidence that Microsoft is going anywhere?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    3. Re:Bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about very consistent roughly 2% yearly dividends? Beats most investments these days.

    4. Re:Bubble by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Also, you have the fact that Microsoft and Intel, seem to be more at the mercy of businesses and the problems they have, than the consumer. With the GFC, we see businesses have spent less in the past year or so, while consumers haven't been affected as much.

      This is why MS might go down, because there is global worry about the economy again, due to EU problems.

    5. Re:Bubble by alphaseven · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Looks like an excellent bubble to take advantage of. Sell (or short) Apple, buy Microsoft.

      The thing is, with near 10% unemployment and having just come out of the worst financial crisis since the great depression, Apple is doing well.

      If a company that specializes in expensive, high-end computer products is doing well in a weak economy... what happens when the economy improves?

    6. Re:Bubble by guspasho · · Score: 1

      I see what you did there.

    7. Re:Bubble by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And this kind of naive trading is why people lose money. The price/earning ratio is a simple measurement you can use to determine if a company is overvalued. Right now, Apple has a price/earning ratio of 20, which is really kind of low for a company that's been consistently increasing profits by 30% year over year, and has $30 billion in the bank. For comparison, Google has a p/e ratio of 21, and Amazon of 54. Amazon seems high, but because profits have been going up even more consistently than Apple, it is not a company I would bet against.

      You might be more right with Microsoft, since their p/e ratio is at 13, which is what you would expect from a consistent company with few chances at becoming more profitable in the future. If you feel Microsoft has good growth potential, you should invest in them, because their stock will probably go up. Personally I don't feel confident in their growth potential, and see some medium level downside risks (for example, the revenue from Office has dropped in the last few years, but they've managed to keep profits up by raising the price of Windows. But with netbooks, it may be hard to keep the price of Windows high).

      --
      Qxe4
    8. Re:Bubble by Ubergrendle · · Score: 1

      Being heavily consumer products driven now, Apple is very susceptible to a sudden shift in purchasing behavior. This year's hot commodity, is next years' rubick's cube or legwarmers -- 'that's so 2010!' or 'i already have one'. The iPad i interpret as a very dangerous product, from a lineup perspective... people are asking 'what does it do, that i can't already do'. 1 million units sold, great...what about next quarter? Also, as a company they're heavily invested in Steve Jobs as the head. If he moves on, for whatever reason, I doubt the investment community will have as much confidence in his successor (especially given previous experiences).

      Microsoft doesn't have much growth potential, but their customers are heavily invested in their products -- especially at the corporate and government level. Apple's role in the corporate space is virtually nil -- a market they have pretty much given up upon.

      If I were a betting man, I'd guess Microsoft will be here still as a Fortune 50 company in 10 years vs Apple.

      --
      John Maynard Keynes: "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?"
    9. Re:Bubble by lazy_nihilist · · Score: 1

      Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent --John Keynes

    10. Re:Bubble by dangitman · · Score: 1

      But how much longer will that last?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    11. Re:Bubble by feepness · · Score: 1

      what happens when the economy improves?

      What happens if it doesn't? 10% unemployment has recently been forecast to last for years.

    12. Re:Bubble by sbeckstead · · Score: 1

      I'm getting 1.36% from savings with no risk. How is 2% with the possibility of losing everything better?

    13. Re:Bubble by ElKry · · Score: 1

      If a company that specializes in expensive, high-end computer products is doing well in a weak economy... what happens when the economy improves?

      The cynic in me says they raise prices (probably by disproportionally overpricing small updates to current systems).

    14. Re:Bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sell (or short) Apple, buy Microsoft.

      Don't forget to set aside enough money for the cardboard box you'll be living in.

    15. Re:Bubble by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Being heavily consumer products driven now, Apple is very susceptible to a sudden shift in purchasing behavior. This year's hot commodity, is next years' rubick's cube or legwarmers -- 'that's so 2010!' or 'i already have one'.

      I'd agree with you completely on this if it weren't for one thing: since the return of Steve Jobs, Apple has consistently and repeatedly delivered products that people want and are willing to pay a premium for.

      Okay, okay, you're right--there was the G4 Cube but that was an exception to the overall rule and it proves that even if one product happens to tank, Apple can shrug it off and come up with something else.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    16. Re:Bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1.36% is probably less than inflation. Less tax, and you're probably losing money.

    17. Re:Bubble by Draek · · Score: 1

      Depends. How are the makers of other luxury items doing right now? IIRC its fairly typical during a crisis for luxury items to do relatively well, the ones hit the hardest are usually the middle and poor classes, and they aren't the biggest consumers of luxury items. Though IANAEconomist so dunno, you should ask one if you want a better answer.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    18. Re:Bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looks like an excellent bubble to take advantage of. Sell (or short) Apple, buy Microsoft.

      Basically they are saying Microsoft's stock is stable but flat. Translated a poor investment no matter what Apple stock does. I'd stay away from the stock market if I was you. Buying stock based on being a fanboy whether it's Apple or Microsoft is a poor investment strategy no matter what.

    19. Re:Bubble by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      stock buying is speculative you idiot, citations aren't needed.

      all your going to get is advice not facts, and frankly every analyst has been wrong for the last 18 months about everything, so the parents opinion is as valid as any.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    20. Re:Bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People have been saying this for a decade. Hey, it might actually work this time!

    21. Re:Bubble by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

      The iPad i interpret as a very dangerous product, from a lineup perspective... people are asking 'what does it do, that i can't already do'. 1 million units sold, great...what about next quarter?

      The interesting thing to read are reviews by owners on blogs of their "my 1st 2 weeks with the iPad". The tech reviewers are all "wow, it's amazing", but the reviews by owners feel quite subdued. There's lots of criticisms about stuff, a certain sense of "it's quite good", but there's no strong sense of people really loving it. And a friend of mine recently told me the he loved his on day 1 and 2, and hasn't touched it in 10 days.

      Personally I think that the large tablet is just a bad form factor far more than Apple not doing it right. I played with an HP tablet once and it worked fine, but they never sold.

      Add in that large SD cards are going to kill the iPod classic for most people, that Nano is dealing with commodity MP3 players all over from people like Sansa, that iPhone is facing Android and it looks like a less than rosy future.

      And we just don't know if Steve Jobs can pull another rabbit out of the hat like iPhone and iPod. Maybe we've been through one of those phases of revolution in computing and it's now going to be some years of refinement.

    22. Re:Bubble by oakgrove · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Apple sells to yuppies, hipsters and wanabe cool middle-aged moms.

      You think this description encapsulates the millions upon millions of iPhone and iPod buyers out there? I find that very hard to believe. As a matter of fact, of the people I know right off hand that are owners of these devices including a couple of Macs for good measure, none of them fit your description.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    23. Re:Bubble by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Sell (or short) Apple, buy Microsoft.

      Or you could buy something worthwhile instead.

    24. Re:Bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If a company that specializes in expensive, high-end computer products is doing well in a weak economy... what happens when the economy improves?"

      But they don't. How much is their ipod and itunes products contributing to their bottom line compared to their computer products?
      Is the majority of their revenue coming from the purchase of small numbers of high margin big ticket items, or is it coming from large numbers of sales of small ticket items (itunes music store and app store). You have a point if the former, but if it's the latter (which I suspect), not so much.

    25. Re:Bubble by SteeldrivingJon · · Score: 1

      " or is it coming from large numbers of sales of small ticket items (itunes music store and app store). You have a point if the former, but if it's the latter (which I suspect), not so much."

      The music store is break-even, or slightly profitable. The app store is probably similar, given the number of free apps.

      The profits come from the iPhone, iPod, iPad, and computers. Apple makes more profit from iPhone sales than Nokia makes, even though Nokia sells many, many more phones.

      --
      September 2011: Looking for Cocoa/iOS work in Boston area Cocoa Programmer Quincy, MA
    26. Re:Bubble by JimboFBX · · Score: 1

      His logic might be wrong but his actions might be right. Once everyone who would want an iPhone gets one then I think Apple's revenue is going to drop off. Apple looks like they are taking the Motorola route (remember the razor?). They had the great innovation and they are riding it but recent developments seem to indicate that they probably aren't going to be able to maintain that innovation. Apple continues to stubbornly demand money for everything while other companies are undercutting them with products that are catching up in terms of desirability. The iPad and the meager improvements to the iPhone seem to indicate that they've started to run out of must-have ideas.

      So yes, if you think Apple's success is going to begin waning, then their high P/E ratio would indicate that its time to sell since you know they aren't going to grow much further. The naive traders and the automated trading algorithms that draw lines of best fit think Apple will grow into infinity but the wiser trader will learn when they could make a killing taking the contrarian perspective. That said, Apple and MS are both large cap stocks so I pretty much avoid them since they don't move enough for my tastes. Mid-cap stocks as a rule generally perform much better with slightly more risk.

    27. Re:Bubble by Rob_Bryerton · · Score: 1

      You know what? You're just flat out wrong about Apple's target customer. They target individuals (as opposed to corporations), period.

      Speaking from personal experience with family, friends and co-workers, nearly none of them fit into your market of "yuppies, hipsters and wanabe cool middle-aged moms". You're just scared or jealous of using a platform that works elegantly, which is simply ridiculous. Again, in my experience, there is one type of person that will *never* be an Apple customer: the cheapskate who will sacrifice functionality and usability for a savings of a few percent...

    28. Re:Bubble by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      The danger of Apple stock is how closely it is tied to Steve Jobs health.

    29. Re:Bubble by soupforare · · Score: 1

      It's macabre but this is the truest statement of any kind you could make about Apple right now. I don't think anyone has the insight or the stones to take over after Jobs is gone.

      --
      --- Do you believe in the day?
    30. Re:Bubble by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you should buy tons of Microsoft. Considering the stock has went nowhere in 10 years I'm not sure what the advantage of it would be, but it's your money, buy away.

    31. Re:Bubble by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      If a company that specializes in expensive, high-end computer products is doing well in a weak economy... what happens when the economy improves?

      I suspect it falls, actually. What's doing good in the economy? Candy, alcohol, luxury goods. The rich are still rich, their buying power is doing fine. People want comfort when times are tough. They become more likely to make poor purchasing decisions. Welcome to the roots of the next Great Depression.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    32. Re:Bubble by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Once everyone who would want an iPhone gets one then I think Apple's revenue is going to drop off. Apple looks like they are taking the Motorola route (remember the razor?).

      This is a good point, Motorola failed to follow up their good product with another good one. Apple though, has consistently shown the ability to come up with one successful product after another. That could change, but I don't find it likely. They have a strong team and good processes. Furthermore, their core business (the macintosh) is also growing at a fast pace.

      That said, Apple and MS are both large cap stocks so I pretty much avoid them since they don't move enough for my tastes.

      Really? What stocks move reliably more than Apple? That's one reason I specifically like Apple. If you look over the past few years, the swings are quite dramatic. There was one profit report two years ago I sold right before it was announced and then bought the next morning and made 10% in a single day. It's definitely been a roller coaster stock, jumped 200% from last year (although every stock jumped a lot).

      --
      Qxe4
    33. Re:Bubble by sbeckstead · · Score: 1

      Your math skills intrigue me. Run that one by me again?

  9. Welcome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I for one welcome our new evil overlords. *fearfully hides behind a veil of anonymity*

  10. I feel a great disturbance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I feel a great disturbance in the Force... as though 226 billion dollars all cried out in terror, and were suddenly silenced.

  11. Oh damn! by fustakrakich · · Score: 1
    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  12. It's so sad by microbee · · Score: 0, Troll

    You know a company is going down when you no longer address their fanboys.

    -- an ex Windows fanboy

    1. Re:It's so sad by xZgf6xHx2uhoAj9D · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Serious question: Windows had fanboys? I always figured Windows was for people who didn't care (I mean that in the nicest possible way).

    2. Re:It's so sad by hedwards · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think DOS did, but I can't really remember there ever being any for Windows. Or at least those that were chose to be as a sort of geek machismo. Or something like that. Apple was sort of always that girl that you knew you could score with, but couldn't really bring yourself to settle for. Whereas Windows was pretty much always a cast iron bitch that was always throwing some sort of hissy fit over things not being completely correctly done.

    3. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're called "MVP's"

    4. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Honestly, Windows 7 is pretty nice, I think that the developer tools, from a get it done perspective are some of the best available. Beyond this, I don't see much real benefit to windows over other systems in this day and age (beyond the compatibility, and massive software base). Most of the applications I use daily outside of work have non-windows alternatives, and for those left, there's always Citrix or Terminal Services. I think a lot of the management tools are easier to use as well. I actually see better use of windows in large corporate networks than smaller ones, and most home users not playing newer (resource hungry) games.

      So, aside from the huge number of available applications, compatibility with older versions of applications, more polished system management tools for enterprise deployments, better support for newer hardware, for gaming, and the best security record in OSes for the past couple years, I couldn't possibly see why someone who's informed would choose windows.

    5. Re:It's so sad by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

      The only fanboys on Windows have a rational reason for their fanboyism. Either they're an MS evangelist (paid by MS), an MVP (title and perks dependant upon MS) or sales people (getting paid).

      But even amongst .net developers, you'll get some healthy discussion about Windows or features in .net and Visual Studio. No-one defends it with religious fervour.

    6. Re:It's so sad by AdmiralXyz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There are no Windows fanboys, but there are people who hate OS X and Linux more.

      --
      Dislike the Electoral College? Lobby your state to join the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.
    7. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It did had fanboys, I was one of them. Believe it or not there was a time when microsoft products were exciting. This days I know they are always devising new ways to charge me more money for a product that does less and less. It just stopped beign fun.

    8. Re:It's so sad by JohnRoss1968 · · Score: 0

      Not true.....
      Im a Windows Fanboy.
      Why am I a Windows Fanboy ??
      Do I get payed by MS....No
      Do I get Perks for using MS products....No
      Am I a salesperson that sells MS products or is forced to use MS products....No
      So what could have possibly turned me into a MS Fanboy ???
      Ive read so many Linux Fanboy posts on Slashdot Id prefer chewing off and then eating my own genitalia than use Linux and become like them.
      (And Im not about to spend the amount of money Apple is asking for to buy their products.)

    9. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to truly believe Microsoft made the best software on the planet. At that time I would seriously refuse to even touch a Mac unless I was wearing gloves. Even 7 or 8 years ago, I thought Windows XP was a better OS than Mac OS X. The thing is, Apple made steady and predictable improvements, while Microsoft took 6 years to ship Vista. I don't know whether that made me a fanboy though. These days, I'm pretty polytheistic when it comes to operating systems. Each one seems to have its own reasons to love it and hate it.

    10. Re:It's so sad by confused+one · · Score: 1

      Windows 7 is da BOMB! Office... It just works! And I can do sooo much using Excel and VBA macros! Who doesn't like PowerPoint? For devs, Visual Studio is the BEST tool chain on the market. There's nothing it can't do! Hey, and let's not forget the hardware! Microsoft makes the BEST keyboard and mouse on the planet. And the Zune! Oh man I LOVE that thing. WOW, I almost forgot the X-Box 360. I can't tell you the number of hours I've spent playing on my X-Box...

      *GAG* Was that fanboy enough?

    11. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What?! I don't know what Slashdot you've been reading all these years but the worst trolls on this entire site are the Windows nutters. They make the Linux and Apple fans look like amateurs. Go through the posting histories of some of the more notorious ones like Westlake, Soppsa, D'Aldredge, HarryPorter. The insane zealotry would be enough to make RMS shed a tear. As a matter of fact, I had to just give up on the site for about 6 months during the run up to the Zune HD. The absurd levels of fanboy zealotry was just embarrassing. You couldn't read one story that actually had anything resembling objective opinions of it. It was really ridiculous. And when Windows 7 was in the news, oh my god, it was sickening. I come here in the hopes of getting some honest on the ground tech insight and maybe some entertaining water cooler style banter from professionals in the field. But between the MS zealots, the Mac cult and the rest, I've actually found Digg to be a better source. And don't get me started on Engadget and Techcrunch. Pure MS fanboy circle jerk.

    12. Re:It's so sad by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Or they're people like me who do CAD, schematic capture, and other technical jobs with software that only runs on Windows, and runs very well. In other words, we make money with it, rather than "hipster marks" while updating our Facebook account at the local Starbucks with our Mac.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    13. Re:It's so sad by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Just as Windows copies Mac OS, the fanboys have done the same, and act just as bad as Apple fanboys.

    14. Re:It's so sad by shiftless · · Score: 1

      Windows had fanboys?

      yep.

    15. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Best OS analogy in /. EVAR!!!!1!

      Wheres ma betch?!

    16. Re:It's so sad by Jeremi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Serious question: Windows had fanboys? I always figured Windows was for people who didn't care (I mean that in the nicest possible way).

      Strangely enough, yes. They were people who had grown up knowing only MS-DOS, and therefore thought that Windows 95 was alien future technology. They'd heard of Macs but never used one, and of course they had no idea what an Amiga was.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    17. Re:It's so sad by jcr · · Score: 1

      It's also the people who are proud of memorizing volumes of minutia about how to cope with Windows' myriad failures. It's like the C++ weenies who are smug about mastering needless complexity.

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    18. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't call myself a fanboy, but when I bought a mac last year I couldn't get rid of it fast enough. It certainly had a lot nicer looking UI (once you hid the doc), but it was a lot more rigid and inflexible. Mac computers seem to bring you a canned user experience, which is fine if you just want to use your computer for simple word processing and internet. However, the Windows user experience is something you kind of grow with and develop. Its all about customization and flexibility.

    19. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft makes the BEST keyboard and mouse on the planet.

      Oddly, I find this is the one thing they do better than Apple.

    20. Re:It's so sad by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

      The scary thing is, a lot of those are true (or at least close).
      Windows 7 is a great OS. Not sure how it compares to MacOSX, never used that. Windows Media Center is pretty awesome.
      Office... OpenOffice is catching up, I could probably do without Office.
      Excel: Pivot Tables. If you've never used/heard of pivot tables, you don't know what you're missing. Everything else in excel could be replaced by OpenOffice Calc.
      Who doesn't like powerpoint? Not managers (gah double negative). Everyone else hates it purely because of their presentations.
      Visual Studio IS the best toolchain on the market. I just couldn't develop as quickly without "Intellisense" autocomplete, despite all the people who recommend alternate programs that only have syntax highlighting.
      I don't know about keyboard, but the 5-button wired MS mice are awesome. I bet there are others that are as good, if not better, but I already have this mouse.
      Zune? Haha.
      360? Best console out at the moment. And I'm saying that as a dev who's currently making a PS3 game. I don't know if that biases me or just reinforces the argument. Then there's the Wii, which isn't really in the argument. It's not Wii vs 360 vs PS3, but Wii+360 vs Wii+PS3. Everyone seems to own one these days.

    21. Re:It's so sad by Jugalator · · Score: 2

      Serious question: Windows had fanboys? I always figured Windows was for people who didn't care (I mean that in the nicest possible way).

      Yes, they're populating Neowin.net and other places, keeping to find arguments for the new Microsoft Kin, Zune and Zune Marketplace, etc. Lots of news about Bing too, but not anymore, now that it was shown that MS didn't succeed with that redesign either.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    22. Re:It's so sad by confused+one · · Score: 1

      I guess I forgot the disclosure statement... I am a Windows user with machines running XP, Vista and Windows 7. I work as an engineer who spends a lot of time doing software dev. on Visual Studio. I'm responsible for a number of data manipulating forms and spreadsheets, all done with Office, at the company I work for. I own a Windows mobile phone. I'm typing this on a Microsoft Natural keyboard sitting next to a Microsoft wireless mouse. I don't own a Zune, my WM phone does double duty. I don't own a 360 -- I'm just not a gamer.

    23. Re:It's so sad by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's not fanboyism. That's liking Windows because it's the best tool for you. That's a rational way to look at products; does the product meet my requirements in terms of features, aesthetics, service etc.

      Fanboyism is more about associating yourself with Apple. So if Apple produce a dud product, or Steve Jobs does a complete u-turn on how apps should be delivered, you don't say "hang on, didn't he say that web apps were the best way to do things?", you either just ignore it or come up with a ridiculous defence of Apple.

      And most Apple users aren't Fanboys. I've got 2 friends who just prefer OSX. They'll tell me about things on their Mac if I ask, or they'll write about something new that they like on their Mac, but they'll also point out things they don't like and don't harp on at Windows users about how they should get a Mac.

    24. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, it does. They don't frequent Slashdot, usually, but they're definitely there.

      Do you read User Friendly? Stef isn't just a comic relief character, he's a parody of this unfortunately very real type.

    25. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good god, yes it was fanboys. That's why it became so pervasive. Everyone weekend warrior was suddenly an IT expert thanks to Windows. You didn't have to know or understand anything. Just click a few buttons, boom! Web server. boom! email server! boom! file and print.

    26. Re:It's so sad by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Excel: Pivot Tables.

      Aren't the equivalent of those called Data Pilots in OOo? Or are they a weak alternative?

      (I don't really know, I rarely touch Office suites - generally I don't care about manual formatting so I use Lyx).

    27. Re:It's so sad by TheNinjaroach · · Score: 1

      Serious question: Windows had fanboys?

      Yes, they are generally PC gamers who think there is nothing better than Direct X and who may rightfully believe there is no better way to play games than on Windows.

      --
      I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
    28. Re:It's so sad by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

      Apparently. Of course, it would be nice if they'd named it after what it is...
      What the hell is "Data Pilot" supposed to even mean?

    29. Re:It's so sad by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      I don't understand why Parametric got out of the Unix business, especially with Linux the up-and-comer. Did Microsoft pay them to migrate from OpenGL to DirectX?

    30. Re:It's so sad by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      I've been thinking long and hard about taking the original Microsoft Natural keyboard (with the front riser) and slapping an Arduino and Bluetooth module on it to make it wireless.

      As far as I'm concerned, that keyboard is and was the pinnacle of Microsoft Hardware.

    31. Re:It's so sad by intheshelter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So, aside from . . .

      "the huge number of available applications" - OS X has that too

      "compatibility with older versions of applications" - OS X has that too

      "more polished system management tools for enterprise deployments" - I would tend to agree if you're only looking at it from a Windows enterprise environment. If you are looking at a Mac centric enterprise environment then OS X obviously has more polished system management tools.

      "better support for newer hardware" - true, but then again this is an obvious apples to oranges comparison because OS X is not intended to be installed on commodity hardware, but rather on a Mac. I could just as easily say that OS X has better support for Mac minis and be just as true and as misleading.

      "for gaming" - Don't game much, but from all I've heard there are a wider variety of titles on Windows. But is this the fault of OS X not being able to play games or just a lower number of third party developers are making games for the Mac?

      "the best security record in OSes for the past couple years" - you mean aside from the viruses, zero day exploits, etc., right? This last point is utter bullshit on your part. Win 7 may be better than XP, but it is still swiss cheese in comparison to the ZERO viruses affecting the Mac

      "I couldn't possibly see why someone who's informed would choose windows." - Apparently this last point is the only one we agree on. Why WOULD anyone choose Windows?

    32. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a friend who is a serious Windows and Microsoft fanboy. Got super excited about the Microsoft Store when it opened up in Arizona. Took pictures of what had to be the least exciting Grand Opening I've ever seen.

      He's a composer, has worked very hard to make it a career, is a huge fan of independent artists, and he's a very bright and creative guy. It's kind of hard to believe he's got so much love for Microsoft. I think he must have just grown up with Windows and attached to the teat quite young.

    33. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the top of the range only Windows has the power that many photographers need.

    34. Re:It's so sad by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Probably because supporting two platforms is expensive, and if 90% of your user base has a Windows OS on a desktop that has plenty of power, it makes sense to focus on one platform only. In the technical hardware world, Linux/Unix is a real bit player.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    35. Re:It's so sad by soupd · · Score: 1

      You've never heard of Paul Thurrrott ??

    36. Re:It's so sad by damnfuct · · Score: 1

      well put

    37. Re:It's so sad by damnfuct · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's so much "copying" as much as it is "supplying equal-intensity opposition when presented with unsubstantiated apple claims"

    38. Re:It's so sad by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Windows 7 is a great OS.

      It is much better. They fumbled a bit on the 64/32-bit thing, but it's an improvement over Vista.

      It is really annoying to have to keep both a 32-bit and 64-bit version of IE in the menubar/dock/quicklaunch thing for incompatible web sites. And worse, you have to paste your own icon in to differentiate them, since MS did not feel like they needed to put a little "32" or "64" on the two otherwise identical applications.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    39. Re:It's so sad by confused+one · · Score: 1

      The Microsoft Natural did help my typing and reduce the fatigue. I don't mind it being wired since it rarely moves.

    40. Re:It's so sad by TheKidWho · · Score: 1

      Siemens recently ported UGS NX to OS X, so there's that for CAD/CAM.

      Also, a lot of those hipsters you decry do make money too by the way.

    41. Re:It's so sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +5 Sarcasm

      Apple's keyboards and rodents are rubbish

  13. OK, let the flame wars begin... by wringles · · Score: 4, Funny

    Apple is now officialy THE ENEMY here at slashdot. M$ is just another bad guy now.

    1. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by pizzach · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The irony? Microsoft is big because it is a computer company. Apple grew this big because of all their non-computer stuff. Has Macintosh market share actually grown any more in the last few years? Does Apple even really care if it grows anymore?

      --
      Once you start despising the jerks, you become one.
    2. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by binarylarry · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's funny how this new status appeared at exactly the same time as Apple's newly found controlling and assholish nature.

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    3. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by MBGMorden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're just being short sighted if you don't consider smart-phones and tablet devices to be computer equipment. It's not even at that level of when your teacher would say 15 years ago "You know your wrist watch has a computer in it!" - no, these things have general purpose input capabilities, general purpose programs and installable 3rd party applications. They're computers. Just because they don't have a keyboard, mouse, and separate monitor that doesn't change.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    4. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by amorsen · · Score: 4, Informative

      newly found controlling and assholish nature.

      Newly found? The "look and feel" lawsuit started in 1988, and led to FSF's Apple boycott.

      Back then they lost. Today they would have patented everything and won. Or possibly even won without patents; copyright on computer software is much broader than it was in the 80's.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    5. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and yes. Due to the my position, I have access to the analytics data from numerous high traffic websites. Mac OS X is currently holding an impressive 21% of all visitors. That is up from 9.5% in 2003. Now, this proves absolutely nothing, as it could be the nature of the sites themselves, or a number of other unknown variables. But what it does definitely show, is that for this group of websites, they have seen their Mac traffic increase greatly over the past 7 years.

      As much as I might feel like apple has been ignoring their core OS for a while now, they can't be silly enough to let it stagnate.

      Keep in mind that I am no Apple fanboy, I have been purchasing Apple notebooks since the OS X public beta, I love OS X, but I am typing this post from a Windows 7 VM running in Fedora.

    6. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Think of MS as the Soviet Union and Apple as an East Germany, Amazon as Bulgaria.
      Adobe as Romania and Google as Yugoslavia.
      They all have their own style, secret police, lawyers and world wide reach.
      Cross a legal line and you, your code and rented books vansish.
      Best to stand in the digital stadium, hold up your glowing ipad, Zune ect and sing along at a product day with the sales officials.
      Youth day or developers conference. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ig6fuoDL_Lw

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    7. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      Has Macintosh market share actually grown any more in the last few years?

      Yes. http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2010/03/22/the-magic-of-285-apple-stores/

    8. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is big because it is a computer company.

      Microsoft makes computers??

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    9. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by walshy007 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're just being short sighted if you don't consider smart-phones and tablet devices to be computer equipment.

      Before the iphone, nobody would have considered a non-user-programmable phone a smart-phone, same thing with pda's, tablets etc

      no, these things have general purpose input capabilities, general purpose programs and installable 3rd party applications

      Without jailbreaking? or requiring cash for the apple development kit and abiding by their rules? apple has set back general purpose computing more than any other company, what they are great at, is making 'appliances'.

    10. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has Macintosh market share actually grown any more in the last few years?

      Actually yes. In the US, OS X usage is at roughly 12%. Worldwide its roughly 5%. It wasn't that long ago that those two figures were 4.1% and 1.2%.

    11. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "General Purpose" LOL. You mean the purpose that the real owner, Steve Jobs, says is.

    12. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is big because it is a evil computer company. Apple grew this big because of all their evil reality distortion.

      There, fixed that for you. (See the commonalities now?)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    13. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple doesn't care about market share in any of their business lines. It's all about profit margin and they have the highest profit margins of any technology company. That's what is fueling their growth. For instance, the iPhone accounts for just 8% of mobile industry revenue, but 32% of industry profit. The profit margins for Apple are somewhere near 40%.

      Android phones just surpassed the iPhone in market share, but they make almost no direct profit for Google. Dell is the third-largest computer maker but continues to missing earnings almost every quarter. When talking about the success and stability of a company, market share is a poor indicator.

    14. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by JWallyR · · Score: 1

      How, exactly, has Apple "set back general purpose computing" at all, outside of your personal preference for a phone that you can tinker with? Because it's not as though Android devices aren't available, should you choose to purchase one. By contrast, Microsoft has, in every market in which it has participated in, tried to squelch actual competition rather than actually, you know, competing.

      Just because many (most?) users prefer an appliance-style phone rather than a directly user-programmable phone doesn't mean Apple has done a damn thing to 'set back' anything other than the personal pride felt by many elitists on sites like this in having a 'better' device, measured in market penetration.

      Seriously. Just because you don't like the iPhone doesn't mean that Apple is doing anything bad for the computer market.

    15. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless things have changed, the iPhone dev kit is free. It only costs money if you want to put your apps on an actual device. And from what I've heard other platform makers charged much more than Apple did for their kits..

      Or did everyone else shrivel up, leaving just Android as the only available alternative platform?

    16. Re:OK, let the flame wars begin... by walshy007 · · Score: 1

      Seriously. Just because you don't like the iPhone doesn't mean that Apple is doing anything bad for the computer market.

      They have set back general purpose computing by promoting the appliance style phone. Appliance computing is not general purpose, it is vendor fixed functionality. Promoting appliance based computing means less general purpose computing items available, setting it back.

  14. Failures: Xbox,Zune,WinMo,Search,... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Just looking back at the past decade that Ballmer has been in charge is staggering:

    * 8 billion dollar Xbox fiasco and marketplace failure

    * Zune basically a non-entity

    * WinMo's nosedive to irrelevance

    * The Ballmer Google obsession and complete failure in the search market

    1. Re:Failures: Xbox,Zune,WinMo,Search,... by edivad · · Score: 1

      It struck me too, how Ballmer could still be in charge, after his "achievements". But this is Corporate America, where meritocracy is long time perished, unfortunately.

  15. You come a long way by oldhack · · Score: 2, Informative

    Meet the guys, the Justice Department's anti-trust section.

    --
    Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    1. Re:You come a long way by dingen · · Score: 2, Informative

      The funny thing is that Apple has created their fortune without ever really having a large user share in any market. Therefore, anti-trust laws don't apply. Apple's profits are huge, but they're not monopolists.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    2. Re:You come a long way by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Not to me. Apple hasn't actually actively tried to destroy other companies yet.

      And they haven't held back the industry for years (ie6, windows, office).

      They don't have such an important tie in (music is movable now, iphone apps aren't so important).

      They are still not dominant where it counts (desktop/laptops).

      Apple haven't used dirty tactics to get what they want (threatening PC manufactures who included more than one OS).

      Apple haven't done any of the abuses that Microsoft was convicted and let off for.

      Apple are big on the consumer side, not on the business side (mores the shame).

    3. Re:You come a long way by oldhack · · Score: 1

      That's true, but if you get big enough, you just get the scrutiny no matter what, especially media heavy hitters like Apple, because you can always define the market segment arbitrarily to apply anti-trust concerns.

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    4. Re:You come a long way by jac89 · · Score: 1

      Well in the mp3 player market they have an effective monopoly. Not sure they could be accused of much antitrust with i-pods though. (except maybe the ipod touch and the app store problems)

    5. Re:You come a long way by oztiks · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Apple tries it on but they simply don't carry the industry clout that say MS had/has, but the same tactics are shown on a more micro perspective. Granted all IT vendors pull the same crap. Its only when MS does it the ground shakes.

      Not to me. Apple hasn't actually actively tried to destroy other companies yet.

      Adobe? Amazon? Google (indirectly)?

      And they haven't held back the industry for years (ie6, windows, office).

      Because they haven't been a position too, but if they were with the product range they have/had, they would of held it back more. Limiting technologies to simplify them to be easy-to-use is primarily what Apple does. This simplicity has a weltering weakness, simple means less flexible.

      They don't have such an important tie in (music is movable now, iphone apps aren't so important).

      No, but they'd like to, iPad's marks an attempt at print media world. Using connections to Murdoch to help sell it.

      They are still not dominant where it counts (desktop/laptops).

      They are one brand among many, this wont change any time soon.

      Apple haven't used dirty tactics to get what they want (threatening PC manufactures who included more than one OS).

      No, they create FUD instead. http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughts-on-flash/. Their price gouging stint on Amazon is another.

      Apple haven't done any of the abuses that Microsoft was convicted and let off for.

      Microsoft got ass raped by the EU, but if you think about the SUSE incident or the Netscape battles, Apple does just as bad or is doing just as bad to Adobe at present.

      Apple are big on the consumer side, not on the business side (mores the shame).

      Because they simplify and limit things too much, their attempts at introducing things into the business world have been a failure because of the lack of versatility. Not to say Microsoft is the most flexible (I'm a Linux person) but it's considerably better.

    6. Re:You come a long way by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Except Apple isn't making the same mistake Microsoft made 12 years ago. Apple actually 'contributes' to the campaigns of politicians, Microsoft didn't (at that time). Thus Microsoft set itself up to be an easy target. Notice that once Microsoft started contributing, the justice department complaints died down.

      --
      Qxe4
    7. Re:You come a long way by walshy007 · · Score: 1

      Apple pulled some shenanigans with purposefully breaking newer ipod syncing with third party programs like gtkpod etc, they set up some crypto to block out any other software, if that isn't a sign of not playing nice I don't know what is.

    8. Re:You come a long way by jac89 · · Score: 1

      Okay yeah the itunes lock in is kinda anti competitive. Mainly because it a terrible piece of software. Zune ftw!

    9. Re:You come a long way by damnfuct · · Score: 1

      This is why I despise Apple somewhat. If anyone hyped up a product and tried selling it to me with a monster markup, I'd be upset. Just because someone is telling me that something is the greatest thing since sliced bread does not mean I'm willing to pay extra because some smug peddler verbally masturbated some product on stage at a press release.

    10. Re:You come a long way by soupd · · Score: 1

      Not to me. Apple hasn't actually actively tried to destroy other companies yet.

      Adobe? Amazon? Google (indirectly)?

      Woah, hyperbole alert. Apple veto flash on one platform, which has a small market share and this is supposed to "destroy" Adobe? Or are you referring to Aperture? Amazon? You mean iTMS competing with Amazon on music. I'm fairly certain Amazon would do just fine if they stopped selling online music entirely. Google? Huh? Google's core business remains search, which Apple doesn't do.

    11. Re:You come a long way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Woah, hyperbole alert. Apple veto flash on one platform, which has a small market share and this is supposed to "destroy" Adobe? Or are you referring to Aperture? Amazon? You mean iTMS competing with Amazon on music. I'm fairly certain Amazon would do just fine if they stopped selling online music entirely. Google? Huh? Google's core business remains search, which Apple doesn't do.

      My words might seem controversial but its not intended as such. More so I'm implying that the attempts on these companies even though are not "life threatening" they still remain as unethical as say, threatening Novel with patient fees if they attempt to sell more than one OS.

      As i mentioned earlier, when MS does something it can sometimes upset the fundamental areas of the vendors operation, which is to say when Apples tries it on its just a rude slap in the face. Not "close the doors cause Apple did this".

      Apple vs Adobe, Apple vs Google, etc is not about IT in my POV, it's all about Anti-trust. Apple's attempt at blocking Adobe in their part of the market and their attempt at wanting to switch search preference from Google. Is no different than saying "Use our OS, or else".

      (truth be told, they can say they'll do it but Google's lawyers would tear them a new one if they didnt tread carefully and walk down a non preferential line)

      Apple vs Amazon, another "non IT" related debacle and I'm talking about eBook sales. At present Amazon has all the publishers (except for Macmillan) eating out of its hand, but Apple's trying to sweeten their position as far as they can in the hope that they can get the rest of the publishers to follow suit and form an allegiance with Apple over Amazon. I'd imagine in this case this issue would be life threatening for Amazon if say lost half of their publishers over to Apple.

      In defense Apple doesn't wage wars they know they cant win (like the moaning and groaning about search preference) they are much more happier to flood the world with FUD, see the fallout then action which fight is in their best interest. This has really go to do with the fact they still are not that important in the grand scheme of things (maybe music but that's about it) but simply the act of FUDing up the situation to see what "could / would / should" result is not only bad form but also shows intent.

  16. Yeah consumers! by Panaflex · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The only thing this tells me is that investors are very slightly more confident in Apple's future.

    Apple has a good business model for the current market, a vertically integrated company is well suited for fluctuation during violent market turns because investors worry less about shortages, missed financial targets and product competition. Microsoft is *hardly* moved by this in reality, though, and still makes most of their money on business licensing - and they are doing fine. MS employees are still having the private jet weddings to the caribbean with ice fountains flowing with rum.

    --
    I said no... but I missed and it came out yes.
    1. Re:Yeah consumers! by dangitman · · Score: 1

      MS employees are still having the private jet weddings to the caribbean with ice fountains flowing with rum.

      That might be the problem. Shouldn't they be making great software?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    2. Re:Yeah consumers! by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      They do not make great software. Those responsible for the mediocre software are H1-Bs or outsourced.

    3. Re:Yeah consumers! by dangitman · · Score: 1

      They do not make great software. Those responsible for the mediocre software are H1-Bs or outsourced.

      Isn't that the point? If they continue being so mediocre, then what future is there? Microsoft has competition now, it's not the 1990s anymore.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    4. Re:Yeah consumers! by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      I fell Apple has a poor business model for the current market.
      They are trying to keep a desktop, mobile and media empire running on an expanded desktop developers foundation.
      Code quality will slip again and again as a limited number of Apple's best and brightest get burned out, move around or offered better deals.
      As for parties, even Stalinist states could put them on until the very end for their upper 10%.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    5. Re:Yeah consumers! by AgentPhunk · · Score: 1

      They have competition, but not enough so in the enterprise market. Every year when it comes time to renew our support/licensing agreements, there is NO negotiation. They basically say "this year its $X." That's it, end of story. Pay up or else. They might as well be sticking a gun in our back. REAL competition might not get us to switch away from Microsoft, but it will at least bring them back to the table for actual discussions on price.

    6. Re:Yeah consumers! by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Its the marketing section, they make the impossible happen every year.
      They make the world buy outsourced code at quality software prices.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    7. Re:Yeah consumers! by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      MS employees are still having the private jet weddings to the caribbean with ice fountains flowing with rum.

      Wait, what? Which group did you work for?

      Microsoft actually pays a little under average pay, and have stopped given stock offers for the most part. (And when they do, people typically sell it out, rather than hold it.)

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    8. Re:Yeah consumers! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're not vertically integrated at all--they don't actually manufacture anything.

  17. if Apple gadgets are the future of computing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...we're all seriously fucked.

    1. Re:if Apple gadgets are the future of computing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. All the bitching about free, open standards and freedom from this kind of bullshit over the last decade appeared to be paying off. Now along comes Apple, and the mindless hoards are about to send us into a digital dark age. Apple products are a digital prison.

    2. Re:if Apple gadgets are the future of computing... by asylumx · · Score: 2, Funny

      I love that this is tagged "Informative". WTG Mods :)

    3. Re:if Apple gadgets are the future of computing... by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Right, because it's mindless hoards not the lack of viable phone options in 2007 that caused the iPhone boom.

      What options existed in 2007? Windows? Palm?

      If iPhone's a prison I really don't want to be free.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    4. Re:if Apple gadgets are the future of computing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And behold, then came the Android, showed us BETTER mobile OS, which is also open :-)

    5. Re:if Apple gadgets are the future of computing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, but if so then with one of those shiny metal dildos, instead of the cheap rubber ones ... *ducks*

    6. Re:if Apple gadgets are the future of computing... by soupd · · Score: 1

      Uhh.. OS X? Aperture. Final Cut Pro. iTMS. iWorks. iLife. Logic Studio. Logic Express.

      How are these Apple products digital prisons?

    7. Re:if Apple gadgets are the future of computing... by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Open != Better. :)

      Which android phone? The one from HTC that's nearly a year old with lousy software support or the locked down cheap Motorola Android phone or the pricey open Motorola phone? Which one comes with chipotle mayo and fries?

      Android isn't bad, it's quite good, but to flog it as if it had no faults is really disingenuous.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  18. Aww, that's nice... by epp_b · · Score: 4, Funny

    Apple's imaginary value is greater than Microsoft's imaginary value. Now I'll have to spend some of my imaginary money to buy an imaginary Apple to get some imaginary work done.

    1. Re:Aww, that's nice... by selven · · Score: 1

      Ok, that's a good strategy, but once you add some real money in it just gets way too complex for my tastes.

    2. Re:Aww, that's nice... by rsborg · · Score: 1

      Now I'll have to spend some of my imaginary money...

      So what do you have, REAL money? What is that? Money itself is an abstraction, and an improvement over a much less efficient barter system. How much do you think the paper is worth, that your money is printed on?

      Most of the things we deal with in our daily lives are abstractions, which have absolutely no real value outside our relatively small anthropic frame of reference.

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    3. Re:Aww, that's nice... by Cryacin · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm a mathematician, and my imaginary numbers are quite real you insensitive clod!

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    4. Re:Aww, that's nice... by couchslug · · Score: 1

      I get paid well for my imaginary work, you insensitive clod!

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    5. Re:Aww, that's nice... by ciaohound · · Score: 3, Funny

      Complex numbers? Imaginary numbers? You need to get an iLife.

      --
      Oh, yeah, it's not easy to pad these out to 120 characters.
    6. Re:Aww, that's nice... by VGPowerlord · · Score: 2, Funny

      There's an app for that.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    7. Re:Aww, that's nice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A TRUE mathematician will say "my imaginary numbers are never real"
      It's not that complex.

    8. Re:Aww, that's nice... by jonaskoelker · · Score: 3, Funny

      Mathematics is all fun and games until someone loses an i.

    9. Re:Aww, that's nice... by AlgorithMan · · Score: 2, Funny

      Your imaginary numbers are as real as rational numbers are integral...

      --
      The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
    10. Re:Aww, that's nice... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, your imaginary girlfriend... not so much. ;)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  19. So by blowdart · · Score: 1

    Are you going to drop Micro$oft now? Is it $teve Job$? O$ X? What?

    1. Re:So by thestudio_bob · · Score: 1

      I think they'll drop the $ when M$ is no longer run by a sales guy.

      --
      The real Sig captains the Northwestern. This one captains /.
    2. Re:So by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      The $ is for the wealth creating system of low grade code been shrink wrapped and sold year after year at top prices.
      Add to that the ability to distract any world wide market forces or entrepreneurs for decades and MS has earned the $. Respect.
      Jobs is just rich and OS X is for an SCO related court case to rule on.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  20. P/E Ratio by HockeyPuck · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple's PE ratio is also 2x of MSFT, Walmart, IBM, GE, XOM etc...

    1. Re:P/E Ratio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just a note (not everybody knows) that a high PE ratio is generally a bad thing.

      P=Price (per share)
      E=Earnings (per share)

      It means that Apple's price is supported less by it's earnings than it is by what the market believes about the company.

      The market can be fickle.

      P/E ratios during the .com bubble where crazy high

    2. Re:P/E Ratio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly.
      I remember the same thing happened to MS a while back, and the CEO or CFO or whoever actually said in an interview that the share price needs to fall.

      There's a big difference between value and price.

    3. Re:P/E Ratio by Rivalz · · Score: 1

      Now after years of hard work Steve Jobs can declare Mission Success!
      His stock is now just as overpriced as the goods he sells. Jobs well done.

    4. Re:P/E Ratio by rm999 · · Score: 1

      Well, that makes sense, you are listing large stable companies, and these companies always have modest P/E ratios. High P/E ratios indicate an expectation of growth, and your list are generally not companies that are capable of quick growth.

      I have been saying Apple is overvalued for a long time now, and I've been consistently proven wrong. How? Compare it's earnings (http://i.imgur.com/28gMg.png) with Microsoft's (http://i.imgur.com/TO9rG.png). It has continued to grow into its valuation from a year or so back, something Microsoft would not be capable of if it had a higher P/E.

      I still think Apple is overvalued, but Steve Jobs is known by investors for breaking expectations.

    5. Re:P/E Ratio by Hemogoblin · · Score: 1

      You can only compare PE ratios for companies that have similar growth prospects and are in similar industries. Comparing the PE of Walmart and Apple is meaningless.

  21. Give me a break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This is the biggest pile of horse-shit I've ever seen. All the fanbois should lose their shirts on this one. Apple is a BIT PLAYER that only accounts for a SINGLE-DIGIT percentage of the computer industry. Microsoft is pretty much everything else. Are you fucking kidding me?!?

    It's like saying that the Mom & Pop grocery store on the corner is as large (or larger) than General Electric. Give me a fucking break.

    1. Re:Give me a break by binarylarry · · Score: 3, Funny

      Steve calm down.

      I'm sure you guys'll release Windows 7+1 and bounce right back.

      *snicker*

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    2. Re:Give me a break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      a single digit of the computer industry but they're king of the medium-high end segment and rake in cash while everyone else scrounges at the margins. Oh and they dominate the mp3 player market. Oh and they're an important player in the smart phone market. Oh and they're top dog in the tablet market.

      Microsoft? Yes, they make serious bank on Windows and Office but they've got nowhere to grow, no vision, iPhone and android (in particular) destroyed their smart phone presence (and any chance of making any money short of extortion plays like HTC). Steve Jobs is better than Steve Balmer and the market cap reflects that.

    3. Re:Give me a break by Low+Ranked+Craig · · Score: 1

      You're sitting on a bunch of calls on MSFT, huh?

      --
      I still cannot find the droids I am looking for...
    4. Re:Give me a break by Cryacin · · Score: 1

      Which Steve?!?

      gah. I'm so confuse.d

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    5. Re:Give me a break by QuantumLeaper · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      At least Microsoft can program an OS, unlike Apple who had to get Unix, since there old OS sucked worse than Win3.0

    6. Re:Give me a break by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Only old people listen to mp3 players.
      Why do you think MS is so interested in robotics and the emerging biomedical markets.
      MS techs are going to squirt implants into your body and then rent you the gateway to the MS media empire.
      Just try switching after reading the post op medical fine print.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    7. Re:Give me a break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *snicker*

      ... That isn't funny at all ...
      *groan*

    8. Re:Give me a break by tftp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      At least Microsoft can program an OS, unlike Apple who had to get Unix, since there old OS sucked worse than Win3.0

      Ability to code an OS may be nice to brag about, but your customers can't care less. They appreciate only results, and if you build your product from best components users like that.

      There are thousands of computer manufacturers in the world and only ten or so OS kernel manufacturers (if you count all Linux flavors as one.) Years ago it was common for a manufacturer to build their own OS (and I worked for one such company) but eventually they saw the light and migrated to a supported commercial RTOS, just because it was so much better, and cheaper too.

    9. Re:Give me a break by iwannasexwithyourmom · · Score: 0

      Wow. I'm on Microsoft's side, but you're just being ignorant and making us look bad.

    10. Re:Give me a break by tool462 · · Score: 1

      I'm reminded of the saying, "Those who don't know Unix are doomed to reimplement it, badly."

      Quite simply, the decision Apple made to base OSX off of BSD was probably the smartest one they've made. Why reinvent the wheel when the solution you're looking for is already there, stable, and field tested for a good 30 or so years?

    11. Re:Give me a break by walshy007 · · Score: 1

      Why reinvent the wheel when the solution you're looking for is already there, stable, and field tested for a good 30 or so years?

      Apple do this all the time, example cocoa and nextstep vs X11. They want to take as much as possible that has already been made, and lock it down by adding something proprietary that only they can use. Smart business move, but not very nice.

    12. Re:Give me a break by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Quite simply, the decision Apple made to base OSX off of BSD was probably the smartest one they've made. Why reinvent the wheel when the solution you're looking for is already there, stable, and field tested for a good 30 or so years?

      And yet they took the Mach kernel and FreeBSD userland, rather than the FreeBSD kernel and FreeBSD userland which had been built from the ground up to work together..

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    13. Re:Give me a break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Steve is ambiguous.

    14. Re:Give me a break by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      The BSD crowd takes pride in the fact that their code is truly free and anyone can do whatever the hell they want with it, including turning a company on the verge of irrelevance into a technological monster.

      Hey, if the BSD guys are happy and Apple is happy, who the fuck are we to complain about it?

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    15. Re:Give me a break by tommituura · · Score: 1

      Who were the guys behind NEXTStep, again? And sure, they took stuff from BSD, but so what? The end result is, the system ended up being better that way. Please don't get me wrong, I hate Apple's shenanigans these days as much as anyone else, but saying that NEXTStep is nothing else but BSD is just dishonest or ignorant.

    16. Re:Give me a break by WhitePanther5000 · · Score: 1

      You do know that MS did not write their first OS, right? They bought DOS from some guy for a few thousand, and then licensed that to IBM. The GUI they later layered on top of DOS was based on Apple's design, which was based on Xerox's design. Companies steal from each other all the time... who cares?

      As far as Apple's move to base OS X on "Unix" (er, the mach kernel), I'd say it was pretty smart. They took a tried and true kernel, a few open source tools, and then did what they do best... made a great interface and marketed it.

    17. Re:Give me a break by jbengt · · Score: 1

      At least Microsoft can program an OS . . .

      Learn some history.
      MS bought DOS, it took them 4 years to write the unusable Windows 1.0 on top of DOS, took another 5 years to get a more-or-less usable Windows 3.0, hired away DEC guys to come up with NT (DEC sued and won), and threw away 3 years of Longhorn development because it sucked so bad (must've been really bad because the replacement project, Vista, didn't turn out so great).

  22. So there it is... by Flector · · Score: 1, Troll

    Apple is Evil.

    1. Re:So there it is... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Not that Apple doesn't do its share of downright evil business practices, but making money is not evil in and of itself, so this is kinda misdirected.

  23. It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks... by Simonetta · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks blew away,
    they've been going in and out of style, but you're guaranteed to lose a pile"

    apologies to Sir Paul...

    But seriously, folks, this is a bubble price. Like the $656,565 valuation on that crappy three-room clapboard box-house that you almost bought in Fresno three years ago. *I hope that you passed that one by*.

    Bubbles exist in markets. When they burst, the people who believed that the price was a realistic valuation lose most if not all of their money.

    Now is the time to sell your Apple stock. EXXON owns the world's energy supply: Apple owns some coolness. Is Apple the second most valuable company in the world behind Exxon?

    No f***ing way.

    A lot of people lost a lot of money believing in tech stocks ten years ago. Heed their lesson.

  24. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple is the second most valuable company in the world behind Exxon. Look it up.

  25. Can we finally admit... by Rix · · Score: 1

    That they're the current Evil Empire(TM) now?

    1. Re:Can we finally admit... by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      OK, but they're such a shiny and lickable empire. :)

  26. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by forceman130 · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Exxon-Mobil generates billions of dollars in profits every quarter, and likely owns 100s of billions of infrastructure, while Apple has some cool toys and a couple of retail stores.

    --
    Wow, a 7 digit ID - let that be a lesson in the perils of procrastination.
  27. oh, to know the future by oddTodd123 · · Score: 1

    Had I not dumped my 100 shares of Apple after the dot com crash, I'd be about $22,000 wealthier right now. Of course, I also owned Oracle, Microsoft, EMC... ah, who the hell knows. That's why I only buy index funds now. Of course, those haven't done anything in ten years either. Real estate? Ha! Time to start stuffing cash under my bed. But not dollars!

    1. Re:oh, to know the future by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Silver dude, silver.
      This is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any financial instrument.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  28. Only for VERY foolish investors by rahvin112 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Only foolish (lowercase f) investors believe market capitalization (or number of shares times share price) is meaningfull as any real metric of the value of a company or it's stock. It can be a valuable indicator of a company that's price is way to high though (usually because of stupid investors).

    Let me give in you an example, it's a test I call the Walmart Test. Walmart does billions in revenue a year and make billions in profit, they are a highly successful business with solid growth in earnings every quarter, reliable profits and has a massive book value (the total value of assets). At the peak of the Dotcom era Cisco had a market capitalization that was the highest on the stock market, close to 500B IIRC. This exceeded the Walmart Market cap by more than 5 times (~76Billion IIRC) and edged GE by several dozen Billion. Even if every dollar of revenue for Cisco was profit and that profit was passed directly to shareholders they weren't even a 1/5th of the earnings per share Walmart was making. In the ideal world all profit from the enterprise passes onto the stockholder, in fact that's the basis of the worth, the promise of future dividends for companies that are reinvesting capital rather than paying a dividend (but that's another lecture all together)

    Because Cisco was valued so much higher than Walmart with significantly less earnings it was apparent that the stock was highly overvalued. Later at the dot-boom correction Cisco lost nearly 90% of their market capitalization (falling to less than 10Billion from 500Billion). That translated into a decline in price of the stock by about 90%. The same can be said for Apple, compared against real (boring) companies making solid profits they are extremely overvalued. Even if Apple were to grow sales 100% a year for 5 years they still couldn't match Microsofts actual profits. If you are looking for a long time short Apple is your game boys and girls. It's going to correct some day and it's going to be a brutal correction.

    This over-valuation is quite common in tech stocks, people invest in companies whose products they like (terrible investment strategy BTW). Stocks of this nature are almost 100% over valued and when they correct due to bad news it's a very vivid correction. Beta on these stocks can be 3-5 because of the casual investor who panics at the bad news, that and the stocks usually have high short percentages that will exacerbate a drop.

    The lesson of this post People is don't invest based on meaningless metrics and in tech stocks with rabid fan-bases that invest in the company. They are almost always over priced, and react much faster to negative news with the potential for much larger declines in the price. Put simply the market cap of Apple should scare you away from investing in it easily.

    1. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by kdubb1 · · Score: 1, Informative

      This over-valuation is quite common in tech stocks, people invest in companies whose products they like (terrible investment strategy BTW)

      I know what you mean... Warren Buffet preaches this method (buy and hold things you like and use). We see how well that has worked out for him.

    2. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by masmullin · · Score: 1

      mod parent up please.

    3. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by cartman · · Score: 5, Interesting

      At the peak of the Dotcom era Cisco had a market capitalization that was the highest on the stock market, close to 500B IIRC. This exceeded the Walmart Market cap by more than 5 times (~76Billion IIRC) and edged GE by several dozen Billion.

      I see your point, but I'm not sure the current situation is analogous to the dot-com bubble.

      Apple's stock has little momentum. It's not in a bubble in the classical sense. Apple's earnings ratio (20.6) is reasonable given their earnings growth of the last few years. Although Apple's stock has a higher earnings ratio than Microsoft's, that's because of anticipated future earnings and not fanboys driving up the price.

      Even if Apple were to grow sales 100% a year for 5 years they still couldn't match Microsofts actual profits.

      Here are their actual profits, from finance.yahoo.com, as of today:

      MSFT:
          Net Income Avl to Common (ttm): 17.29B

      AAPL:
          Net Income Avl to Common (ttm): 10.81B

      If Apple grew their profits by 100% for even a single year, they would surpass Microsoft.

      If you are looking for a long time short Apple is your game boys and girls. It's going to correct some day and it's going to be a brutal correction.

      I don't entirely agree.

      Don't get me wrong, Apple could easily collapse in value. Not because they're in a bubble, but because they make profits from having cool/aesthetic/etc products. But cool is fleeting. As a result, Apple's profits are less certain than Microsoft's. If Apple puts out a few crappy products, their stock will drop like a rock. On the other hand, if Microsoft puts out a few crappy products, people will buy them anyway, and Microsoft will just release a new version in a few years.

    4. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      On the other hand, if Microsoft puts out a few crappy products, people will buy them anyway,

      What do you mean "if"???

    5. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

      Very sound advice.

      I'm quite amazed that their stock is rising.

      There's a huge amount of competition for iPhone now, the iPods are competing with a range of generic products and I remain to be convinced about the iPad. A price like this says that someone is convinced that Apple is going to come out with the next amazing device a couple of times in the next decade. Which is asking a lot.

    6. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your numbers are quite off. According to their posted results for the latest quarter, Microsoft's revenue was $14.50 billion and Apple's was $13.50 Billion. Hardly off by 5 years of 100% compounded growth. Net income for Microsoft was $4.01 Billion and Apple's was $3.33 Billion. In terms of both revenue and profit, the two are quite comparable in size. (www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/04/20results.html www.microsoft.com/msft/earnings/fy10/earn_rel_q3_10.mspx)

    7. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by QuantumLeaper · · Score: 3, Informative

      True, he is only 3rd richest behind Bill and Carlos.

    8. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by Funk_dat69 · · Score: 1

      I've been saying the same thing about Apple over the last 6 years. It keeps proving me wrong and my Apple fan-boy friends always laugh at me.

      It's a good thing I don't buy individual stocks, because I know as soon as I bought Apple it would tank.

      --
      FUNK!
    9. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by grimJester · · Score: 1

      Only foolish (lowercase f) investors believe market capitalization (or number of shares times share price) is meaningfull as any real metric of the value of a company or it's stock. It can be a valuable indicator of a company that's price is way to high though (usually because of stupid investors).

      Do note that market cap is a far better indicator of what people think the company is worth than stock price. If you own x% of the company and you can sell your shares for y$, it's completely irrelevant if the number of shares is one or a million. It is the value of the company in the sense that it's what you can sell your shares of the company for. You can argue that it's not a real value since the buyers are foolish, but it doesn't change the fact that you can convert your shares to money at that price.

      What you are really saying is that looking at the market cap can tell you that the market cap, therefore stock price, is unrealistically high. Cisco with a market cap of 500B would have to make 30+B profit / year for the stock to be correctly valued. There's no way the market for their products can become large enough. Some years ago, I realized many telecom companies is Europe had a market cap of around 50k euros per customer. There's no way the average customer would pay them 3k a year, much less give them that much profit. That bubble burst too.

    10. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha.. a "long term short" against Apple? You betray your ignorance.

      Have fun finding any market maker that will allow you to take such a short position, and if you do somehow get it done be prepared to put up 150% of the current value of the stock beforehand. And of course look forward to panicked margin calls as Apple continues to rise in price in the future, before this "brutal correction" that you predict occurs.

      Your fundamental mistake is that you are betting that Apple will experience a correction in the future because the stock is overvalued. In reality, no stock undergoes such a correction because its overvalued; rather, stocks undergo a correction because _something happens that scares investors_. This could be lower than predicted earnings, a major scandal or other corporate debacle.

      Case in point is Google; from an operational and financial standpoint Google is the bumbling giant. Not one of their 50+ new products released over the last several years have established a new revenue stream worth speaking of and they've almost taken over the entire online advertising market already; limiting their future growth opportunities. If any security should be going down in price it's Google. But, Google stock has been doing just fine because they are currently the Internet darling of Wall Street and _they haven't done anything significant to scare or shock investors_.

      On the other hand Apple has established several significant new PRODUCT CATEGORIES (much less revenue streams) and have been steadily increasing their margins and net profit. Furthermore, they haven't had a significant product launch fail in many years. Essentially, they can't seem to do anything wrong.

    11. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by jcr · · Score: 1

      Apple's earnings ratio (20.6) is reasonable given their earnings growth of the last few years. ...Especially when you consider the additional revenue on the way from iAds, which is announced but not yet released.

      Since the Apple/NeXT merger, Apple has 1) pulled back from the brink of oblivion with the iMac product line, 2) taken over the music player market with the iPod, 3) become the largest music retailer in the world, 4) set a new standard for smart phones that has everyone else playing catch-up, and 5) launched the fastest-growing application platform ever.

      I'm expecting Apple to pull ahead of Exxon/Mobil by the end of this year. In this economy, there's only two things I'll buy to protect my net worth: AAPL and bullion coins.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    12. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      If Apple puts out a few crappy products, their stock will drop like a rock.

      While I do think that Apple is extremely good at giving their target market what it wants(after careful instruction from Apple on why they want it), it seems that Apple doing so well depends in a very large part on mister Jobs, so if anything, I expect the stock to take a nosedive next time there's news, whether it be true or not, that he might be unhealthy/hit by bus/retiring/moving on/whatever.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    13. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by Some+Bitch · · Score: 1

      I know what you mean... Warren Buffet preaches this method (buy and hold things you like and use). We see how well that has worked out for him.

      He doesn't own any Apple stock though.

    14. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by dayznfuz · · Score: 1

      Microsoft basically owns the desktop market and the office productivity market. While there may not be a whole lot of growth left, it's a steady stream of revenue. Huge volume, low revenue per individual sale. Nice steady stock with low volatility and steady dividends. Apple's revenue is essentially entirely due to 2 or 3 products. Namely the iphone and the ipad. While wildly popular, neither completely dominates it's niche market -- and competition is growing every day. Apple has high revenue per sale, but "relatively" low volume. Fantastic growth due to a few wildly popular products. Lots of rapid growth. So, it depends on who do you think is a more viable company for teh long term. I think in the short term, Apple is a great company. Long term? I'm not so sure. MS obviously can recover from multiple major missteps (and has). I'm not sure if Apple can. To have so much of your revenue from so few products means that each iteration of those products has to be a slam dunk. Apple can't really afford any major mistakes with any of it's products. Also, a large part of Apple's success lies in it's marketing and Jobs' cult of personality. The quality of Apple's products can be argued, but, personally, I don't think that any one Apple product is significantly better than any other product on the market -- and in terms of actual product features, Apple lags (ie cut and paste, etc on iPhone). But, Apple is "perceived" to be better by the majority of customers, and Jobs is "perceived" to be a technological visionary. Jobs has been through some major illnesses. I think if something should happen to him, Apple's stock could take a dive. Damn. I can't get paragraphs to work right. Sorry.

    15. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      No difference from Apple then... ;)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    16. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      4) set a new standard for smart phones that has everyone else playing catch-up,

      -jcr

      Except that Apple has not set the standard for smartphones

    17. Re:Only for VERY foolish investors by tabdelgawad · · Score: 1

      Only foolish (lowercase f) investors believe market capitalization (or number of shares times share price) is meaningfull as any real metric of the value of a company or it's stock.

      Why is this 'insightful'? Market cap is, by definition, the value of a company. And one of the most basic theories about market valuations is that they reflect all relevant information about the future of the company valued. Anyone who predicts the future direction of a particular stock is doing no better than flipping a coin.

      --
      Imposing Libertarian views on everyone online since 1992.
  29. Can you say TROLL? by Xyrus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This "story" is either an intentional troll or it was posted by someone who has no clue.

    Market capitalization means dick in the overall scheme of things, especially since it can change at the drop of a hat. Changing of the guard? What the hell does market capitalization have to do with that? It might mean something if you had two companies who compete in exactly the same market segments, but Apple and MS only compete in a couple.

    You can't compare Apple to Microsoft unless you specify what market segment your talking about. Going strictly by market capitalization alone is idiotic. You might as well compare Boeing to Walmart and then claim there is a changing of the guard.

    --
    ~X~
    1. Re:Can you say TROLL? by mschuyler · · Score: 3, Informative

      Mod parent up. Market capitalization is nothing more than perceived value by those who play the stock market gambling game. It's driven by a combination of factors, including the falling Euro, the Greek disaster, and the Gulf oil spill, all which have nothing to do with Apple. I suppose it gives Apple some bragging rights for awhile, but it doesn't have much to do with the real world. Microsoft isn't selling iPhones or marketing music. Apple isn't marketing Microsoft Office.

      --
      How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
    2. Re:Can you say TROLL? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      How's the market cap not relevant? It is roughly the amount of money you'd need to buy it out, go private and live off the real world growth/dividends. "Nothing to do with Apple" does not mean "nothing to do with Apple's market", if the world economy goes to shit so does Apple's sales so naturally it impacts their value. Not to mention that such effects should hit both Apple and Microsoft equally and doesn't explain why the market now think Apple is more worth.

      Yes, sometimes the market is wrong - sometimes horribly wrong like in the dotcom bubble. But you don't hear about all the time when the market is right or at least approximately right which is most of the time for most of the companies.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    3. Re:Can you say TROLL? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said. Market cap is definitely relevant except to those who don't understand how companies are valued.

    4. Re:Can you say TROLL? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft isn't selling iPhones or marketing music.

      They're not selling Zunes or Kin, either.

  30. For historical comparison... by Anonymous+Freak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wolfram|Alpha is great.

    According to that excellent tool, Apple was valued higher than Microsoft through the '80s, as high as 3.2x as much as Microsoft. Then, right around the turn of the decade to 1990, Microsoft pulled ahead.

    By 1998, Microsoft was worth 100x Apple.

    Now, they're back up to even.

    --
    Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com."
    The purpose of that site was not known.
    1. Re:For historical comparison... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice reference

      (mod parent up)

  31. Wow... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...imagine a whole Beowulf cluster of Apple companies!

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  32. All this means by Dunbal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is that AAPL is grossly overvalued. Especially when you consider price to earnings and return on equity. Microsoft sells 8 billion more per year than Apple (59 bn vs 51 bn), and keeps a larger percentage of it as profit. Sales growth has also been greater for MSFT than for AAPL. And Microsoft pays a dividend to boot, Apple doesn't.

    But I guess like everything else Apple, it's no surprise that their stock is overpriced as well. Feel free to buy it.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    1. Re:All this means by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Is that AAPL is grossly overvalued.

      It's always great when some random guy on Slashdot who probably knows nothing about the topic espouses exactly the opposite of what all the experts say. Apple has a price to earnings ratio over 20. Microsoft's is 13, and Exxon's is 13.5.

    2. Re:All this means by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

      Is that AAPL is grossly overvalued.

      It's always great when some random guy on Slashdot who probably knows nothing about the topic espouses exactly the opposite of what all the experts say.

      I agree, but I hadn't expected someone to prove it so quickly!

      Apple has a price to earnings ratio over 20. Microsoft's is 13, and Exxon's is 13.5.

      A high PE ratio suggests bad value. A company that has more earnings, ie a bigger value in the denominator in the P/E ratio is obviously more valuable than a company with low earning (all other things being equal).

      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    3. Re:All this means by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      A high PE ratio suggests bad value.

      No, the P/E suggest how investors believe a company will grow. It's how the market represents companies that have steady and predictable growth, as Apple has for quite some time. Low P/E generally means the company is not expected to grow, or the chances of growth are low.

      Clearly they have to be regarded in context, but in this context of tech stocks, I think it's fairly clear. Apple is gaining in value because they are growing consistently in all different economic climates. Middle of the road analysts have target prices 20% above the current price, with some going a lot further than that.

    4. Re:All this means by walshy007 · · Score: 1

      And redhat has a PE of 64 or so, but it doesn't mean much besides investors have extreme faith.

      All things change, none faster than human perspectives on value. Low pe values tend to equate to stability, high not so much, the potential is there for great or poor things.

    5. Re:All this means by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

      Well, I guess there's the rub.

      The OP suggested that AAPL are overvalued by the market. You can't use the P/E as evidence they aren't because the P is the very valuation the OP argued is too high! The OPs point that current earnings don't justify the price is reasonable but as you say is only part of the story.

      You can of course make the case that earnings are likely to increase, so that while the current earnings don't justify the current price the likely future earnings will. I agree that Apple have had some fairly consistant revenue growth however I do wonder how long that growth can be sustained. Growth doesn't magically continue because it happened last year and the substantial sort of growth that seems to be factored into the Apple price seems (to me) to require significant successful new products.

      The iPod and iPhone have been radically successful but I'm not convinced Apple have other new business directions lined up to continue such growth.

      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    6. Re:All this means by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      It's always great when some random guy on Slashdot who probably knows nothing about the topic espouses exactly the opposite of what all the experts say. Apple has a price to earnings ratio over 20. Microsoft's is 13, and Exxon's is 13.5.

      Yes and if you knew what P/E actually meant, you would understand that you want a LOW P/E, not a high one. PRICE to EARNINGS. High Price divided by Low Earnings = high ratio. Low Price divided by High Earnings = low ratio. It's arithmetic, idiot.

      PS: This "random guy on Slashdot" makes thousands of dollars a week trading stocks and stuff.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    7. Re:All this means by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Low pe values tend to equate to stability, high not so much...

      Actually, low P/E values usually correlate with companies that aren't growing or where growth is erratic. Many companies with low P/E values aren't even close to what you would call stable, with large growth one quarter and a drop off the next, or with negative growth.

      High P/E values tend to correspond to companies that the market believes are a sure thing, or are constantly growing.

    8. Re:All this means by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      The OP suggested that AAPL are overvalued by the market. You can't use the P/E as evidence they aren't because the P is the very valuation the OP argued is too high!

      No, you can't use it in isolation, only in conjunction with estimates by analysts and growth history.

      Growth doesn't magically continue because it happened last year and the substantial sort of growth that seems to be factored into the Apple price seems (to me) to require significant successful new products. The iPod and iPhone have been radically successful but I'm not convinced Apple have other new business directions lined up to continue such growth

      Before the iPod it was the iMac, then iBook, then mini. But the thing is, Apple's growth is fueled by more than future successes. All their major products are still growing in the market. Mac sales are up 30% year over year. The saturated iPod market, up 12%. iPhone, still increasing. Last quarter Apple managed a 90% increase in profit over the previous year, while the stock price went up 7%. The street is being very conservative considering how consistent Apple has been. Most analysts have price targets way higher than the current selling price. This trend is what 8-10 years now? I'm not a big fan of most of Apple's products (I do use a Mac) but to not recognize that they are a very, very consistently growing company with a plan to continue verges on irrational.

    9. Re:All this means by Some+Bitch · · Score: 1

      A high PE ratio suggests bad value.

      P/E and value are not related.

  33. How about it's debt too? i.e. "Enterprise Value" by Bourdain · · Score: 1

    Market capitalization is only the value of a company's equity and not its debt and is accordingly a function of its capital structure (debt to equity ratio).

    Enterprise value is a combination of the market value of the debt and equity of a company. As such, it is not distorted by the capital structure of the company.

    Using this less biased measure, Apple has an enterprise value of $200B whereas Microsoft's is $197B

  34. Insight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    insightful commentary in the article: The fact that taste has overcome business value is a sign that the price is likely overvalued, though who knows for sure. When fair value isn't in play, I'd say it's cause for a second look.

    Good luck, Apple investors!

  35. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by mgblst · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    You are ignorant, and an idiot.

    Apple has strong growth, where MS does not. This is all it means.

    While MS might not deserve to have such a low valuation, Apple does deserve its high value. The fact is, Apple has taken big risks, and changed the industry because of it.

  36. Not surprised by such a story by ciaohound · · Score: 1

    Those Harvard profs are paid for their research and consulting, not their teaching.

    --
    Oh, yeah, it's not easy to pad these out to 120 characters.
  37. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by whisper_jeff · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/01/25results.html

    Um, Apple generates billions of dollars in profits each quarter as well. Sorry, what was your point?

  38. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by zerocool^ · · Score: 1

    Not that I disagree with what you're saying in principle, but national oil companies (I.e. Aramco, the Saudi Government oil company) produce 52% of the world's oil and hold 88% of the proven reserves of oil. XOM is a huge, ginormous, supermajor company, but they don't hold nearly the resources of the NOC's.

    --
    sig?
  39. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

    Quite. Price/earning ratios over 20 are very high. I'm not saying Apple won't have good growth, but at 24, it's almost like betting that they'll bring out another iPhone or iPod, and we just don't know that.

  40. Another Slashdot editing failure: Greek not greek by pz · · Score: 2, Informative

    Greek. Mod me troll, offtopic, whatever. Getting something like this wrong is a big deal. It is not a greek crisis, but a Greek crisis. It is a crisis of the national government of Greece. Moreover, since "greek" is rarely used as an adjective on Slashdot, it reads too easily as "geek" which is a common adjective here, so the submitter and editor would need to be extra careful to avoid confusion.

    Yet another instance where an editor worth their salt would perform their appointed duties and correct submitted text, but a Slashdot editor fails to do so.

    --

    Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
  41. Microsoft lost its vision by TheNarrator · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I think the high point in the history of Microsoft was when they released Windows 2000. Here was an operating system that multi-tasked well, had perfected integrated networking and didn't blue screen. I remember a lot of people who had been using Redhat 9, which was crap, switched back to Microsoft and noticed that it didn't crash that much and they were pretty happy using it.

    Then came WindowsXP and IE6, which gave everybody pretty much everything they wanted in an OS. It was easily pirateable and spread all over the world.

    Then came malware, botnets, and the ensuing security disaster of science fiction proportions and Microsoft spent the next 10 years plugging security holes. Those were the big feature with Vista and Windows 7 remember-- more secure. This was all the fault of Microsoft demanding that unmanaged x86 code with full access to the win32 api run everywhere. It's an enormous, outlandish security hole just waiting to happen.

    Meanwhile, I went to visit a relative in the hospital and all the computers are running Win2k. If you look at OS share online, WinXP still dominates. Nobody really knows what's new in Office 2010, except you can read Office 2010 files and that ribbon thing. China was a total disaster for Microsoft too. They even shared their source code and it's only 1 percent of their revenue.

    Meanwhile Apple and Linux really got their act together and improved massively. Then the 3g and portable device boom happened and Microsoft was caught with Windows Mobile, in the face of Android and Iphone. They couldn't leverage their massive x86 code base and had to start over with a new OS from scratch. That's their problem, they have to start over on a new chipset and they just can't get anywhere meaningful without relying on the enormous barrier to entry that is the win32 api legacy.

  42. It DOES represent a sea change by cjonslashdot · · Score: 1

    The posts here that claim that Apple and/or Microsoft are over-valued might be right. I don't know.

    But: there is indeed a change taking place. As the article in the NY Times says, "Consumer tastes have overtaken the needs of business as the leading force shaping [endpoint information] technology".

    I think that the PC approach (which is also exemplified by the Mac) is unsustainable. Those operating systems (Mac OS, Windows, etc.) are too complex for the average user and too insecure and flaky to be used as the foundation of a base platform for truly ubiquitous computing. We need OS that are simpler, more robust, and more mobile from the ground up: OSs that don't require a user to be a system administrator.

    The OS used by the iPad is not yet full featured enough to serve the needs of most users. Indeed, people do write documents, edit images, do more than one thing at a time. However, I expect that the iPad and other mobile OSs will fill out in the coming years. They are a fresh start, and a chance for the industry to do better.

    1. Re:It DOES represent a sea change by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      But: there is indeed a change taking place. As the article in the NY Times says, "Consumer tastes have overtaken the needs of business as the leading force shaping [endpoint information] technology".

            Except, the consumer is broke, can't pay the mortgage on his house, and is getting deeper in debt again this year. The Dow and S&P are trading now under their 200 day moving averages. That puts us roughly in the same spot we were in Oct 2007. We're headed down again economy-wise, and it's about time - there wasn't enough blood 2 years ago. But the day of the $600 PDA is coming to a close.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:It DOES represent a sea change by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      But: there is indeed a change taking place. As the article in the NY Times says, "Consumer tastes have overtaken the needs of business as the leading force shaping [endpoint information] technology".

            Except, the consumer is broke, can't pay the mortgage on his house, and is getting deeper in debt again this year. The Dow and S&P are trading now under their 200 day moving averages. That puts us roughly in the same spot we were in Oct 2007. We're headed down again economy-wise, and it's about time - there wasn't enough blood 2 years ago. But the day of the $600 PDA is coming to a close.

      Interesting, maybe Apple's taking the flag because rich people buy Apple and poor people buy something else.

      Apple isn't outnumbered, they just have more targets to shoot.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
  43. Sell Dell? by cmholm · · Score: 1

    It seems only yesterday (1997):

    "What would I do?" Mr. Dell said to an audience of several thousand information technology managers. "I'd shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders."

    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/16/technology/16apple.html

    --
    Luke, help me take this mask off ... Just for once, let me butterfly kiss you with my own eyes.
  44. As an Apple Fan Boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I promise not to gloat about Apple surpassing Microsoft's market capitalization if the Microsoft Fan Boys stop bragging about Windows' %90+ market share.

  45. In related news by twoears · · Score: 1

    Office furniture makers are enjoying a banner year selling to Redmond, especially chairs.

    1. Re:In related news by as400master · · Score: 1

      Unconfirmed reports are coming in from eyewitnesses in Seattle claiming they have seen office chairs being launched into low earth orbit.

  46. Not a good metric is all by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    This is the biggest pile of horse-shit I've ever seen. All the fanbois should lose their shirts on this one. Apple is a BIT PLAYER that only accounts for a SINGLE-DIGIT percentage of the computer industry. Microsoft is pretty much everything else. Are you fucking kidding me?!?

    It's like saying that the Mom & Pop grocery store on the corner is as large (or larger) than General Electric. Give me a fucking break.

    This particular metric - which might not really be well described by its name in this case - is concerned with the total consumer investment in each. It really doesn't reflect at all how "large" the companies are, and certainly has almost nothing to do with the number of customers they each have or how they penetrate their markets.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  47. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by fatwilbur · · Score: 1

    I think the point is that owning the world's energy source is a stable, lasting source of earnings. Do you know how fast all the teenagers out there can find something different 'cool'?

  48. Mod Parent UP! by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

    Mod this AC up

  49. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by AHuxley · · Score: 1

    Yes. Apple is selling media it does not own down telco pipes to devices it does not make to people who can change interests in the matter of months.
    Apple physically is the desktop, a few servers and ?
    The only way they make it work is to get a % with every transfer.
    That % chase down is the property of a Finnish tyre company and its toxic Asian production lines.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  50. But Rob Enderle said Apple is going out o business by Nova+Express · · Score: 1
    --
    Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)

    http://www.lawrenceperson.com/

  51. Who do we like now? by AbbyNormal · · Score: 1

    Okay, so do we now hate Apple and like Microsoft? I'm really confused.

    --
    Sig it.
  52. ownership by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't Microsoft still own part of Apple? I seem to remember back around 2000, Microsoft bought a chunk of Apple to avoid being a monopoly ....

  53. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    Apple is the second most valuable company in the world behind Exxon. Look it up.

    Actually, it's the second most valuable American company in the world, not second overall.

  54. 10 LET M$ = "Microsoft" by tepples · · Score: 1

    It'll continue to be M$ as long as Microsoft still makes Visual Basic. And App£€ has even more currency signs.

  55. Only VERY foolish investors....would listen to YOU by jamrock · · Score: 5, Informative

    Even if Apple were to grow sales 100% a year for 5 years they still couldn't match Microsofts actual profits.

    Really? Let's see:

    Microsoft - Year ending December 31, 2009, Net Income $16.26 Billion on Revenues of $58.69 Billion

    Apple Inc. - Year ending December 31, 2009, Net Income $7.477 Billion on Revenues of $42.05 Billion

    According to you, if Apple grew sales 100% per year for 5 years, over that period they'd earn $16.26 billion in net income on revenues of more than $1.3 Trillion. Let's assume Apple's net income remains 17.78% of revenue. On sales of $1.303 Trillion, they'd show net income of $231 billion, not $16.26 billion as you assert.

    We're supposed to take any part of your post seriously? You're spouting bullshit in such an authoritative manner you'd be right at home behind the anchor desk of Fox News.

  56. How Sweet... by macintard · · Score: 1

    Apple's imaginary value skyrockets, until Steve Jobs has another medical problem.

    1. Re:How Sweet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wondered how long it would take for someone to comment on this. If Steve jobs died tomorrow Apple's stock price drop..hard. Bill Gates is just a figure head now. He does a show or keynote here and there and gives away a ton of money. If he died tomorrow it would be sad but investors are not likely to percieve an impact on Microsoft's busness. Steve Jobs seems to be the hand on the rudder at Apple.

    2. Re:How Sweet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the Steve Jobs that was kicked out of Apple and sold his stock for $100 million only to see it go to $800 million. Yes they will not survive without him.

  57. It's like I've been saying by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 0, Troll

    Apple is the new Microsoft.

    Go ahead and mod me down, but you fanboys can't deny it any longer.

  58. I for one welcome our new iVerlord by MikShapi · · Score: 1

    We hear and obey, Oh Other Steve who does not give us root on our own hardware either.

    --
    -
  59. Not trying to lay flame bait but... by Bad+Mamba+Jamba · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ...am I the only one who perceives a very subtle shift in MS being the good guy and Apple becoming the bad?

    Not that I'd argue MS has done anything different than they always have, just seen a lot more press on Apple and rather dubious strong-arm moves. For example

    http://www.sevensidedcube.net/business/2010/apple-investigated-for-abuse-of-power-in-the-online-music-market/

    1. Re:Not trying to lay flame bait but... by Kevin+Stevens · · Score: 1

      I feel this too, and it is for good reason. Apple is acting far worse than MS ever did (IMHO). MS never, ever, ever prevented software from running on their platform. They may have tried some strong arm business tactics, and giving away products for free so that their product could become a de-facto standard, but they never said "Netscape, you just aren't approved to run on Windows. End of story." I love my Iphone, but Apple telling me what I can and can't run on it is infuriating. The amount of crappy software in the app store is already annoying to deal with, but then to have apple tell Adobe and other quality app makers that they can't play because of some rules they won't even publish? MS never tried to pull that crap.

      Apple has always been a control freak about its platform, and it nearly killed the company in the 90's, and IMHO it is likely to kill it again. Take the Iphone- its main competition is the Android. Fragmentation issues aside, I can now buy an Android phone in several different models according to my taste, and to run the software I have become accustomed to using, I don't have to wait around for a conference that occurs once a year where I will hold my breath to see if I will finally get the blatantly obvious feature that every other phone and platform has had for years (IE multitasking, camera flash, adobe flash, a way to freaking organize my apps in a reasonable away, etc). I got hooked on apple when the G1 was still new and still way too green for my liking, but I regret going with apple now. I can also develop for the android from any platform, with reasonable emulators, and not have to worry if my hundreds of hours of hard work will just be given a denied stamp with no explanation.

      Everyone used to have their arms up in a rage over MS giving IE away for free, but no one seems to be that angry that you can't run a browser other than safari on the iphone/ipad.

    2. Re:Not trying to lay flame bait but... by fred+fleenblat · · Score: 1

      >> MS never, ever, ever prevented software from running on their platform.

      but pls note that they have been accused of the reverse: preventing their software from running on someone else's platform:

      http://www.theregister.co.uk/1999/11/05/special_caldera_case_report_microsofts/
      http://www.theregister.co.uk/1999/11/05/how_ms_played_the_incompatibility/

    3. Re:Not trying to lay flame bait but... by damnfuct · · Score: 1

      maybe not so much "the good guy" but "the better guy." It's mostly from people who don't like to be told what to think...

    4. Re:Not trying to lay flame bait but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...am I the only one who perceives a very subtle shift in MS being the good guy and Apple becoming the bad?

      Yes.

      Microsoft is a convicted monopolist that has worked tirelessly to extinguish other platforms in their market. Apple just wants control over their own platform.

      It'd be pretty easy to argue they're both going about it by being dicks, and I probably wouldn't disagree. But yeah, the business press definitely follows Microsoft PR's lead.

      It probably also doesn't hurt that lately MS has tried to keep their activities to shooting themselves in the foot rather than others. Unfortunately the reality is that with such tremendous market share, when Microsoft shoots itself in the foot it affects a tremendous segment of the market.

  60. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, but as soon as apple becomes "uncool" watch that bubble pop. Its going to be interesting to see what happens with this iphone "4g" since alot of the hardware out for the past 6 months by companies like HTC already trumps what apple may be releasing in the coming months. and remember apple's life cycle, this already underwhelming hardware will be with them for about a year, by this coming holiday season apple's "4g" hardware will probably be a joke compared to what HTC has in the pipeline

  61. Future PE not current PE by xswl0931 · · Score: 1

    You're looking at the wrong thing. If you compare AAPL and IBM, AAPL has much more growth in revenue and income. You need to compare forward looking PE for a fair comparison of whether the stock price is justified.

    1. Re:Future PE not current PE by xQx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So your counter-argument is that you expect apple's future earnings to grow from $5.7B to a number that exceeds IBM's current $13.4B in the next few years?

      While I agree with your point that P:E is a lagging indicator that does not accurately reflect the future growth of the company, some may argue that past earnings are a pretty good predictor of future earnings....

      (Hell, if hedge funds_really_ agreed with the statement that 'past performance is no indication of future returns' they would identify their most useless employee and promote him(/her), and their highest performing salesperson and fire them... because odds are they'll both trend towards mean performance.)

    2. Re:Future PE not current PE by yankeessuck · · Score: 1

      Well if we're gonna talk about current and future PE then we need to look at PEG. IBM's PEG is 1.01 and AAPL's is 1.11. That's about a 10% difference but it's hard to argue that either is outrageously mispriced.

    3. Re:Future PE not current PE by Me!+Me!+42 · · Score: 1

      To Forward P/E, I would add PEG Ratio.
      PEG Ratio indicates AAPL is undervalued for its growth, while MSFT is overvalued.

      And SETIguy, MSFT pays dividends because their stock has bee flat for 10 years! Its become a stodgy utility and is no longer a growing tech stock.
      But by all means, ride it down!

      --
      -- My apologies if the above facts contain any opinions, or vice versa! --
    4. Re:Future PE not current PE by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      Another person who doesn't seem to get that IBM and Microsoft are different companies. If I was given MSFT, I'd sell it immediately.

    5. Re:Future PE not current PE by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      You're blindly assuming that the forward projections of Apple's income is correct. That's based as much on hype as the stock price is.

  62. stock by confused+one · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Cool! that stock I bought in 1996 should be worth... DAMN I didn't buy it! I'm such an idiot.

  63. lololol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how they penetrate their markets.

    I'm pretty sure both M$ and Appl€ like to penetrate via the back door.

  64. Horserace by Angst+Badger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So we have the latest news on the competition between a nefarious closed-source near monopoly on the one hand, and a nefarious closed-source and closed-platform wannabe monopoly on the other hand.

    As Henry Kissinger said during the Iran-Iraq war, "Too bad they can't both lose."

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  65. Equating stocks to a gold bar? by symbolset · · Score: 1

    Look, while I agree with some of the basic feeling you've put in here, I can't let this go.

    Somewhere up the comment tree is someone with an exceptionally long view: all companies go out of business eventually. Thus, unless a company gives back to investors some profits investors eventually get nothing for their investment. It's true in theory but fortunately capitalism doesn't work that way in practice. Companies can persist for a very long time, change their mode from growth to utility and back again. They can pay dividends, investors can reap benefit from their voting rights or increased access to timely information that being a shareholder provides. They can, through their investment participate in the great things that a corporation can do through pooled capital. Ultimately a well-run company can pay out far more than is paid in adjusted for inflation in addition to the socially useful things they do like build dams, railroads and asteroid mines. Most don't.

    You are correct that a "share" is a fraction of ownership of the corportation and so at any point in time is a nominal ownership of this vast pooled capital thing that is the corporation - so it does have point-in-time real value as well as a perceived value in the market. And so you're correct in a way, from a point of view.

    But then your metaphor breaks down. Take, for example, Adaptec. Here's a company that has great products that, beset by poor management squandered huge opportunities until it's now being scuttled by an vulture fund. Novell is a future example. Then there's companies that really go off the rails, like SCO, which has taken half a billion dollars in paid-in capital and in their long history only turned a profit in one quarter, and a court later found they stole much of that. Then there are even worse examples, but you get the idea.

    Now, that would be a fair comparison to an investment in a bar of gold if your investment were some certificate of shared ownership of a bar of gold in someone else's care. They could steal it. They could lose it. They could hire some fool to mind it. They could throw huge parties with the money you paid for your certificates of ownership (paper or digital) and laugh at what a fool you are and never buy any gold at all. If your investment were on the other hand an actual physical gold bar (or more commonly a stack of well-known gold coins) that was physically in your possession then to lose the actual intrinsic value of your gold they would have to come to where you kept it, overcome your security measures and probably risk some physical harm to their persons without the protection of either lawyers or distance. Now that's not the same thing.

    So no, ownership of equities is not similar to ownership of a gold bar - but has some similarity to ownership of shares in one theoretically held by someone else.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
    1. Re:Equating stocks to a gold bar? by TheSunborn · · Score: 1

      Except that many businesses goes "out of business" by being bought by an other business. Just look at the Oracle which just bought Sun. Sun went out of business but the shareholders were paid the value of Sun by Oracle, so they did not really lose anything. (Well except maybe that Oracle may have paid with Oracle stocks instead of cash).

  66. I said it all along... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And *that* is with only 8% of the market. Imagine if Apple were only to raise their 8% of the desktop to 12%... I said it all along: Apple's hardware margin are much more sustainable than Windows' software only ones. Just look at what Google did to MS: they drove them out of the mobile market. One the biggest fish in the mobile industry recently said that anyone at MS is foolish is they think they can still sell Windows Mobile license.

    Both Apple and Google can cut the grass under MS' feet. Can MS cut the margin Apple is making on its hardware? No way Jose.

  67. Need a car analogy.... by mevets · · Score: 1

    How is Porsche doing in market share? Market share only makes sense within some boundaries, and 'computer' isn't any better than 'vehicle'; each of those is stratified. What market is apple competing in? The only-computers-that-aren't-shit market? I think their doing very well...

    Thriller had market share in 'albums', selling far more than, say Dark Side of the Moon or Abbey Road.

    Dennis Miller quipped that 2 for 1 was not a bargain, because 2 of shit is just more shit. If they really wanted to fuck you, they'd make you take 3.

    But, they would gain market share....

  68. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Last year, Exxon made about 2.5 times the profit of Apple, and had about 8 times the revenue. They also pay a nice dividend on their stock. How Apple is valued so close to Exxon really is a mystery. You need energy to live; mp3 players and iPhones? Not so much.

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  69. Their profit margin is LOWER than Microsoft's by melted · · Score: 1

    Their profit margin is LOWER than Microsoft's. Just sayin'.

    1. Re:Their profit margin is LOWER than Microsoft's by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

      That's understandable - they're mostly a hardware company, which historically have lower margins than software companies.

      Having said that, compare:
      http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=AAPL
      http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=MSFT

      21.15% vs 29%

      --
      -Stu
    2. Re:Their profit margin is LOWER than Microsoft's by TheRaven64 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Their profit margin is around 20%, which is insanely high for a hardware company. For comparison, Dell's profit margin is under 3%. Microsoft's may be around 30%, but Adobe's is over 10%, so Microsoft's margins are only a bit higher (factor of two or three) than is normal for a software company, while Apple's are around ten times those of the rest of their industry.

      --
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  70. Does this mean we no longer like Apple? by Tweezer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do we now prefer Microsoft to Apple now? Last I knew Slashdot likes the underdog.

  71. Dividends NOT taxed as ordinary income by neomorph · · Score: 2, Informative

    Since 2003, qualified dividends are taxed at 15% (0% if you're in the 15% tax bracket). This will end at the end of this year.

  72. To transitory. by cenobyte40k · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Call me when that market share is based on something a little less transitory. Ipads are going to end up being a bust for all the same reasons all other tablets are a bust. The iphone will continue to make money and do well, but it's market over dominance is coming to an end with Android and the like. Once the novelty of these devices wanes and the 'hippness' of Apple beings to fall people will realize they are overpriced and under perform. Apple has done great before, and they always fail in the follow up.

    1. Re:To transitory. by yyxx · · Score: 1

      I think tablets are going to be a successful, but most of them won't come from Apple.

      Apple is great at pushing out up-and-coming technologies quickly, but they are really just a little ahead of mainstream trends that are coming anyway.

      Look at the Macbook Air; it was basically a very overpriced netbook, but it was just too expensive and too late relative to the mainstream netbooks, which arrived shortly thereafter.

    2. Re:To transitory. by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Call me when you pull your head out and start to see reality. "iPads are going to end up being a bust for all the same reasons all other tablets are a bust"? Yeah, good luck with that prediction. Care to tell me how it's going to be a bust for all the same reasons, when it's very different than all the other tablets? I can't wait for your expert analysis considering your ridiculous, head in the sand "hippness" rationale for Apple's success. If you don't understand their success, then fine, you don't understand it, but please don't make patently stupid excuses like "hippness".

  73. And by mahadiga · · Score: 1

    I think Govt should regulate the market capitalization of all listed companies to twice their quarterly revenue to inject real competition in the economy.
    For e.g. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fed regulates the reserve requirements & interest rates to promote sustainable economic growth.

    --
    I'd like to buy homeland for our 10 million people. http://twitter.com/mahadiga
  74. In hindsight, mobile is the biggest failure by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    The Xbox at least took significant market share from Sony, and is rumored to be approaching profitability. The Zune failed to grab any iPod share but we see now that MP3 players were only a passing, transitional market.

    But Windows Mobile, in its various incarnations, has been a major player in handheld computing since before any of its current competitors. They should have had such a head start that they'd be uncatchable, just like in desktop computing. Instead, they are getting their butt kicked by upstarts like Google and Apple, and their biggest customer (HP) just bought its own mobile OS in Palm. Microsoft is getting their butt kicked so bad in mobile that they have TWO start-from-scratch efforts, Kin and Windows 7. This after Ballmer basically laughed at the iPhone when it came out.

    Mobile computing has the potential to dwarf the PC market that Microsoft has dominated. Huge sections of the planet are jumping straight from mobile phones to mobile computing, skipping the desktop PC and MP3 market phases altogether. Just look at Apple--after only three years they now make more money from phones than they do from computers.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:In hindsight, mobile is the biggest failure by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      But Windows Mobile, in its various incarnations, has been a major player in handheld computing since before any of its current competitors

      You realise that Symbian, which still owns about 73% of the market, predates Wince by several years (over a decade if you count EPOC16 as Symbian)?

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  75. Blade Razor by symbolset · · Score: 1

    Wow, I didn't think I'd have to dig this deep into the thread to find the pointed comment to reply to.

    Apple sells servers, workstations, desktops, laptops, tablets, digital video recorders, cellular phones and media devices. In each of those fields they achieve far more margin per unit than any competitor... and yet that's only an introduction to what they sell because each of those things comes with access to a store that's open 24/7 no matter where you are that can add functionality or content to it, and they turn a profit on that as well - in fact, these "blades" constitute far more profit than the "razor" they sold to access and use it. Apple has come to the position of selling access to their razor for blade vendors. Microsoft was in this position once long ago, and worked it for all they could get.

    None of this has any bearing on the actual issue of the day, and I'm not going to tell you here. You'll have to either click my userid or scan that relevant coment in the regular course.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  76. hollywood is now heavily invested in apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    can't wait for the bubble to burst
    idiot products like ipads are just the beginning

  77. dangerous by yyxx · · Score: 0, Troll

    Apple is a threat to the software industry and software innovation. Even if they were innovating themselves (a doubtful proposition), their litigiousness and possessiveness mean that everybody else who wants to innovate is at risk from lawsuits by them.

  78. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by mjwx · · Score: 2

    Last year, Exxon made about 2.5 times the profit of Apple, and had about 8 times the revenue. They also pay a nice dividend on their stock. How Apple is valued so close to Exxon really is a mystery. You need energy to live; mp3 players and iPhones? Not so much.

    Perception.

    Exxon, MS, IBM et al. all have real products with real continuous revenue streams. Apple has a very carefully crafted image, Apple's perceived value is around Apples potential for growth, Exxon's perceived value is around Exxon having an asset and a market. So in order for Exxon to maintain it's position it simply needs to keep doing what it's doing, if Apple's insane level of growth does not continue the bottom will fall right out, this is why people think its a bubble. People forget when Steve bandies about the x hundred percent growth over Q1 2009 is that Q1 2009 was in the middle of the worst economic times in living memory, not even WWII saw this level of economic damage.

    I should be fair, it's not just Jobs touting this, HTC, Dell, HP are all reporting a bumper Q1 for 2010, all using the same flawed statistic I mentioned above but by far Apple has been the loudest.

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  79. Miss the point much? by mjwx · · Score: 1

    Apple's stock value is based on the perception of a phenomenal rate of growth. Microsofts stock value is based on steady sales.

    MSFT maintains its value by doing the same amount of business each year, if APPL does not maintain its phenomenal rate of growth its stock will drop. MS survived it's worst news in it's entire history, vista was a massive failure and businesses have been cutting back on Windows licenses like mad yet MSFT stocks are in a slow decline. If Apple posts just one quarter of loss, or one serious Mac/Iphone virus outbreak then stockholders will jump ship, when this happens the stock price will plummet. The GP said this but you got stuck on the details of an analogy, not the point.

    In case you haven't been paying attention for the last few years, this is exactly what happened to the economy in most of the western world. US and European governments gambled on an unrealistic rate of economic growth, when this reached a tipping point (the rate of growth slowed) economies collapsed. Now Apple is gambling on an unrealistic growth rate in sales, it's stock price is the wager as Apple has no real assets to back it up unlike MS (who went through a similar decline when Vista was rejected by business). We call it a bubble because when it bursts, there will be little of it left, it wont reduce by 10%, it will reduce by 50-90% like the .com bust. In the GFC, safe things like oil, iron and the USD lost 50% of their value overnight.

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  80. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by jcr · · Score: 1

    Apple's Price/Earnings ratio is 20.7. Adobe's is 46. I know which one I'd consider overpriced. ;-)

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  81. Most poignantly by symbolset · · Score: 1

    One of these things is not like the other one. Tracking back you can see that over the last decade Steve Ballmer has managed to retain almost half of the company's value over his reign. Steve Jobs on the other hand has built the abandoned-for-dead company he agreed to pilot into great wealth, more than 20x the value of the company he agreed to lead, with enough cash to buy that old company four times over.

    I think there was a parable about this.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  82. Or it could be by Chrisq · · Score: 0, Troll

    Or it could just be proof of the power of the gay dollar.

  83. but, tainted product by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Job Job must do deep penance for the suicide workers. So happy they want to kill themselves. Bad bad karma. Heap big bad karma. This consumer cannot with clear conscience support this by buying any product.

  84. oooh, Euro to the rescue! by dafing · · Score: 1

    I rather like Appl€ :)

    --
    --- ...or a new slashdot signature. Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all
  85. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    -1 clueless

  86. Anti-Competitive Behaviour by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it means that Apple is now big enough to be prosecuted for it's anti-competitive behaviour then hurray!

  87. Apple being evil: why or because ? by Alain+Williams · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Is Jobs' evil (closed system) approach the reason for Apple's high market cap ? or,
    Is Apple's high market cap the reason for Jobs' evil (closed system) approach ?

  88. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Russian presidient officially on national TV has announced the iPad the computer of the future.
    He told how he was a sceptic, and now is a convert.

    Everybody knows that oil reserves are running out, and everybody is looking for alternatives, so it can only go down for Exxon. And hopefully the BP incident will accelerate the move away from oil.

  89. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

    Considering that said energy source is running out (or pouring into the Gulf of Mexico) and there's extremely clever people working on competing products all over the planet...just how stable is it?

    There is an infinite, for all intents and purposes, source of energy conveniently positioned directly overhead(if you're in the right spot, at noon) and we're getting better at tapping it all the time.

    --

    People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
  90. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ladies & gentlemen I present to you the amazing whisper jeff, a man with a huuuuuge apple shaped hole in his heart!

    stare in wonder at this pitiful little creep, as he demonstrates his devotion to steve jobs by taking his member fully into his mouth once again, and going at it like there is no tomorrow.

    on second thoughts you'd probably rather not =(

  91. McDonalds Corp by niftydude · · Score: 1

    is the restaurant chain with the largest market cap, but it doesn't mean I'd eat there...

    --
    You can never know everything, and part of what you do know will always be wrong. Perhaps even the most important part.
  92. Or perhaps.. by kauttapiste · · Score: 1

    Just perhaps..Apple's stock price is overvalued? I mean (and this may come as a surprise to some) it has happened before that the stock price was not an absolute measure of a company's future income and dividends!

  93. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by Some+Bitch · · Score: 1

    Apple is the second most valuable company in the world behind Exxon. Look it up.

    Actually, it's the second most valuable American company in the world, not second overall.

    Not even that I'm afraid, it's the second most valuable publicly traded company on the NYSE. I suspect Cargill would have a higher market cap if it were not privately owned.

  94. Re:Another Slashdot editing failure: Greek not gre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    oh, come on. capital letters were deprecated almost two decades ago.

  95. Fall on your own sword by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    It is THE Greek crisis. Not just any Greek crisis but THE one.

    A Greek crisis would be a crisis of a certain type.

    The Greek crisis refers to the one most talked about at the moment.

    See: a confidence crisis vs the banking crisis. The banking crisis is the recent one, a banking crisis is just a crisis involving banks.

    Yet another instance where a poster worth their salt would perform their appointed duties and correct submitted text, but a Slashdot poster fails to do so.

    Note that my comment is funny. Anyone pointing out errors in my post is just sad. ;)

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  96. Re:The Facts of The Matter (It's About Time) by icebraining · · Score: 1

    I'm an black nerd patriot rebel artist punk emo raver gamer overweight homosexual disabled Asian Jew women, you insensitive clod!

  97. Huh? by edrobinson · · Score: 1

    WTF does the stock market have to do with the real world?

  98. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple's Price Earnings ratio is twice that of EXXON.

  99. Whatever by Greg_D · · Score: 1

    Apple makes the vast majority of its money, not on the strength of its own products, but the easy availability of product through its iTunes and App Store.

    The iPod and iPhone as platforms are nice, but as more and more people use their smartphone as their primary music device, this is going to shrink the market for devices like the iPod. Android phones are going to continue to make their presence felt in the mobile market, and it can't be long before Google decides to sell media for its devices as well, simply because Apple's profits can't be long ignored.

    So, Apple will continue to be profitable, but at these levels? Doubtful.

  100. But they aren't just a "hardware" company by melted · · Score: 1

    Unlike Dell, they're also quite successful at software and media distribution. And soon, they'll also be successful in mobile ads.

  101. Some of this is kinda beside the point by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    "for gaming" - Don't game much, but from all I've heard there are a wider variety of titles on Windows. But is this the fault of OS X not being able to play games or just a lower number of third party developers are making games for the Mac?

    Mac user here (and not much of a gamer either). And although I agree with a lot of what you're saying, the quoted bit... not so much. The point is that a gamers don't care whose FAULT it is that the game selection in the world of Mac isn't that great (not being a gamer, I'm taking it on faith that this assertion is true). They care that the games aren't available. So they rationally choose Windows. The fact that it's not Apple's fault that game developers gravitate to Windows is pretty much not even relevant here.

    "compatibility with older versions of applications" - OS X has that too

    Not so much. I own a late-model G4 Powerbook, which I ended up passing on to my wife. I'd still be using it today, but it can only run 10.5.x... and the latest versions of various bits of the iLife suite require 10.6.x. I suppose technically this is a problem of compatibility with older versions of operating systems, but still. I (am forced to) run Windows at work, and Win XP runs office 2007 just fine, and in fact, I'm not aware of any programs that won't run on XP but do run on Vista/Win 7 - if there are such programs, I haven't had any use for them.

    So, the bottom line: I love Macs myself, but it's not like there are no issues in the Mac world. There are some rational use cases for Windows.

    1. Re:Some of this is kinda beside the point by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      "I love Macs myself, but it's not like there are no issues in the Mac world. There are some rational use cases for Windows."

      - I totally agree. Macs are not perfect. There are a few areas where I like how Windows works much more, in fact I do run a Windows VM for the sole purpose of running Quickbooks for Windows because Intuit has neglected the Mac product and the Windows version is more mature. That being said, if I have to pick one or the other it's the Mac hands down. I was simply replying to a few things that I thought were patently false or were shell game comparisons.

  102. Poland by Princeofcups · · Score: 1

    With Balmer possibly appearing at the next Apple event, why does this remind me of 1939 Poland, when Hitler and Stalin split it right down the middle. Microsoft owns business, Apple owns the home, and they share the monopoly.

    --
    The only thing worse than a Democrat is a Republican.
  103. Re:It was ten years ago today, all my tech stocks. by damnfuct · · Score: 1

    My sense-o-matic meter just pinned out past 100%

  104. True story... by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    I was in grad school, taking some kind of moderately advanced math (PDE's? can't remember which course). The prof was working through some proof on the board, when it became apparent that he had made a mistake somewhere. I finally pointed at one of the steps and said "I think you lost an i back there. He was about to look at it when some wiseass in the back chimed in with "it's always funny until someone loses an i. Class had to stop for a few minutes until we all finished laughing.

  105. Enjoy! by crhylove · · Score: 1

    You'll be replaced by Google in 5...4....3....

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
  106. Its too bad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its too bad that Apple won based on what consumers think of as "pretty" rather than real values of quality. Its true that microsoft should have lost on quality years ago (and don't get me wrong, they should have died years ago based on the crappy quality of their products), but I am still happy that microsoft is being beaten. I will concede that Apple *does* have the best user experience in computing (and has had that basically since day 1). Somewhere, someone has memorized every page of "Human computer interface design" and is establishing the design criteria of all of their products. They are as walled a garden as microsoft, but at least they are trying to conform to at least some open standards and are recognizing that there are people out there with computers that aren't using their products, and are not abrasive and abusive to those users. microsoft never accepted "other" users, and abused their position (continues today) at every opportunity. microsoft also stole a lot of technology from other people, and broke many many laws (continues today). All in all, its a cautiously optomistic day.

    1. Re:Its too bad... by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      Its too bad that Apple won based on what consumers think of as "pretty" rather than real values of quality. [...]

      "Prettiness" is a fairly pervasive value these days, it is easy to say it's shallow or fake or anything, but I suspect prettiness wins regardless.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
  107. Only a matter of time... by Rallias+Ubernerd · · Score: 0

    Until the percieved net worth of Canocle is higher.

  108. Y'know, there's profits and then there's PROFITS by symbolset · · Score: 1

    If Microsoft were turning the net profits they've been bragging about this last decade - where are they? Were they lost in the accounting? They certainly weren't returned as dividends - the company's dividends have been trivial. So they have a hundred billion in cash they're not reporting to the SEC? That seems unlikely. It seems more likely that these profits were vapor from the beginning.

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    Help stamp out iliturcy.