Samsung Terminates LCD Contract With Apple
An anonymous reader writes "Samsung has decided to terminate an ongoing contract with Apple to supply LCD panels for use in its growing range of devices. That means, come next year, there will be no Samsung panels used across the iPad, iPod, iPhone, and Mac range of devices. The reason seems to be two-fold. On the one hand, Apple has been working hard to secure supplies from other manufacturers and therefore decrease its reliance on Samsung. On the other, Apple is well-known for demanding and pushing lower pricing, meaning it just doesn't make business sense anymore for Samsung to keep supplying Apple with displays."
This clearly seems to be the result of patent disputes...
With the ongoing legal action between Samsung and Apple it’s no surprise that the relationship has cooled.
Curious this wasn't mentioned in the article.
love is just extroverted narcissism
Here's a link you can use:
http://www.alibaba.com/showroom/crt-monitor-manufacturers.html
Have gnu, will travel.
Uhm, Apple has been rapidly reducing their orders to Samsung. Samsung admits as much in the article.
In other words, this is a (lame) face-saving PR stunt by Samsung. "WE'RE CUTTING OFF APPLE'S SUPPLY OF DISPLAY PANELS (uhm, as soon as Apple stops ordering from us)."
On the one hand, Apple has been working hard to secure supplies from other manufacturers and therefore decrease its reliance on Samsung. On the other, Apple is well-known for demanding and pushing lower pricing, meaning it just doesn't make business sense anymore for Samsung to keep supplying Apple with displays."
On my third hand, Apple and Samsung have been suing the piss out of one another, and that is beginning to strain other business relationships.
It actually makes a lot of business sense. If you have to pay them money you may as well pay them with as much of there own as possible. This is more a case of Apple's reliance on them as a supplier being reduced to the point where the return on investment of each panel has dropped.
Demand from Apple went from 15 million to 1,5 million panels and they are in the process of eliminating Samsung as a supplier completely. They have invested in Toshiba plants for a reason. There is also an indication that the reason that Foxconn have invested in Sharp had something to do with Apple. Although I'm more convinced it has something to do with their IZGO panels then AppleTV.
That Samsung "terminated" the LCD contract has zero impact as Apple wanted to eliminate them from the process anyway and seeing how steadily demand dropped (1,5 million are peanuts if you take into account how many products have LCD panels) that process was already underway. The only thing here is that Samsung can save a little face.
So is this pure PR or even damage control. And it is understandable, if a big client like Apple announced it takes it business elsewhere as a company you gonna take a hit.
None of this has anything to do with patent disputes, Samsung tablets, Samsung smartphones, or anything else.
Because gullible American media people believe any lie they're fed by their Corporate Overlords.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Samsung displays were actually the only non-defective displays that shipped with the new retina macbooks. Other screens have had huge ghosting issues (I went through 4 laptops before getting a Sammy screen that actual worked right) pretty much fresh off the lot.
It would be nice if this brought these ridiculous issues out into the light so Apple has to face the fact they completely screwed up the retina launch... of course, we all know that would never happen.
That refers to the prices of its suppliers, not to the prices of its products.
Samsung delivery drivers can't find where to drop off the monitors when they use the GPS on their iPhones
1: Apple and Samsung get involved in lawsuits.
2: Apple decides to reduce orders from Samsung and order from competitors.
3: Apple demands lower prices for components.
4: Samsung decides to reduce the supply available to Apple.
It sounds like all of those have been gradually happening to a greater and greater degree over time. I don't know which particular item happened first, but once the cycle started it just kept on escalating. The smaller the size of the order by Apple (either in terms of number of components or price per component) the less valuable the contract becomes, and the more Samsung is going to focus on finding alternatives to sell to. The smaller the number of units Samsung makes available to Apple and the less they're willing to budge on price, the more Apple is going to focus on finding alternatives to buy from. The less dependent each of them get on each other, the more the gloves come off in the courtroom. The more lawsuits that get filled, the less comfortable both of them are going to feel about depending on the other to sell/buy components to/from.
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And the fact that Apple and Samsung have been at each others' throats in court for years has nothing to do with it.
To be honest, I'm surprised they still did any business with each other. Generally when one company gets the other's product banned from sale, it tends to put a strain on the relationship. But in the mobile market where everybody is suing everybody else, it's probably hard to keep track.
If "retina display" is used as a scientific rather than marketing term then it shouldn't be copyrightable by Apple. Any display of equivalent angular density should be freely called a "retina display".
http://www.tomshardware.com/news/Russia-Orthodox-Christians-Apple-Logo-Blasphemous,18567.html
Like the parent to your post said, the Nexus 10:
"Google has also been working with Samsung to launch a 10-inch tablet, confirming leaks which suggested Google had teamed up with the Korean manufacturer for another device. Our source tells us that internally the tablet goes under the name “Codename Manta”, runs Google’s new Android 4.2 operating system (previously referred to as Key Lime Pie, but is set to retain the Jelly Bean branding), and will offer a 2560×1600 pixel (16:10) resolution, which we believe will offer around 300 pixels per inch (PPI) compared to the new iPad’s 264 PPI."
http://thenextweb.com/google/2012/10/21/revealed-everything-that-google-will-announce-at-its-android-event-on-october-29/
Don't be silly. The only thing the iPhone had that competing phones didn't was a good web browser.
The iPhone was missing just about every other essential smartphone feature, and many basic features common to even the cheapest dumphones!
Let's not play-pretend that the launch phone even remotely resembled later models. It was a complete joke. You couldn't install apps, you could copy and paste, it couldn't handle MMS messages, you couldn't multitask, etc. It was absolutely awful.
It took Apple 4 years of free press and reviewers that excused every hick-up and problem (while bashing any fault, no matter how minor, in competing products) before they could even pass BlackBerry in market share. All while Android came from behind and passed them both before Apple even caught up to RIM! The love for Apple, it seems, was not even close to universal in the consumer space. It took a lot of convincing!
(It's a much better product now, obviously, though it's rapidly falling behind the competition on every front -- from tech specs to the nebulous UX. What happened to the last company that sat around producing minor updates to their market-leading product in a rapidly changing market?)
Had any other company released the iPhone, it would have been laughed out of the market.
Required reading for internet skeptics