Tim Cook: What's Good For the US Dollar Is Bad For Apple
theodp writes: For years," Charles Erwin Wilson famously said back in the day, "I thought what was good for our country was good for General Motors, and vice versa." That was then. This is now. The Washington Post reports that a strong U.S. dollar is the biggest threat to Apple's business around the world. "The dollar has shot up about 22 percent against a trade-weighted basket of other currencies since the middle of 2014," explains Matt O'Brien. "And in Apple's case, that's meant what would have been $100 of foreign sales in September 2014 was just $85 by the end of 2015. That's not good when you get two-thirds of your revenue overseas." Apple blamed the strength of the dollar compared to other currencies for costing it $5 billion in revenue, "For perspective, that difference is the size of an average Fortune 500 company," quipped CEO Tim Cook.
Oh wait, you're serious, let me laugh even harder.
A strong dollar also reduces manufacturing costs, since manufacturing is overseas. This improves margins. I'm not seeing the issue.
W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
Apples have few calories, and I hear calories are broken, so that's why.
Or its because they offshored all their profits, and now are getting fucked by the exchange rate.
Having a strong currency is not always entirely in the national good. Sure, it's generally better than a weak currency (which is often a sign of political instability and a lack of international confidence in a country's prospects), but it does cause its own kind of problems. In particular, it can hurt exporters, as it costs overseas customers more to buy their goods.
The strength of the Deutsche Mark was often problematic for German industry. That's one of the reasons why Germany has been so enthusiastic about adopting the Euro, which gives it a significantly "weaker" currency than it would have otherwise, and locks it into currency parity with most of the rest of its regional bloc.
They will just increase the price of their stuff, like everyone else is doing.
They are already increasing the price of apps in their appstore in Canada, the price of their devices was already overpriced in Canada long before the CAD went down the drain compared to the USD as well, so really, they ain't losing much.
I'll be cautious and save my answer for the next time we discuss these same news in a couple of days.
Any second now I'll be able to dredge up some sympathy for them.
Any...
second...
now...
Ah crap.
*Pokes self in eye*
There! Is that close enough to tears?
Fuck Apple.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
Maybe businesses should keep an eye out for foreign governments that manipulate their currency so much that they get a false sense of reality.
Actually, Apple et al. have known about this all along. Now I'm trying to figure out what they are trying to extort by way of tax breaks to make up for their "losses".
The stronger US dollar also means that Apple's capital now has more purchasing power overseas.
Which means that Apple's production costs should be moving down, since most Apple devices are not made in America.
It's all too easy to look at flat numbers and come to erroneous conclusions.
Tim, iPhone sales are down for two reasons
1. The smart phone market is over-saturated.
2. Every bugger that wants an iPhone, has an iPhone.
Stop trying to claim that things like sotck market fluctuations, El Nino, IS or Zika are to blame.
Summation 2
They produce all their products overseas, they sell most of their products overseas, and they hide all their money overseas.
What part of this company is American anyway?
I think this is a calculated ploy by Apple to gander pity after all the bad press at the Billions of $$ that they have hiding from US tax collectors.
Apple's loss is my gain. I can buy a 1TB SSD drive for like $250! Perfect for my Windows and Linux PC's.
Somehow I don't have sympathy when the richest company in the world complains that they're not making as much money as before.
"What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
I suppose the symptom of this problem is the obvious loads of cash they're making. Interesting global economic discussion aside, these profits should help them weather this unfortunate storm.
Why do any of us give a shit what the faggot CEO of a failing company of overpriced Chinese plastic shit says anyway? He's probably deepthroating a nigger *right now*. This guy is a rich lying faggot and you Apple fanbois will gargle his nards, but vote this post down for what? Stating the truth? Fuck you.
Sheesh.... talk about first world problems.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
When steve jobs was alive, I am *sure* that apple stuff was cheaper. No, it never competed with the low end stuff, and maybe you paid a premium for Apple gear / OSX, fair enough.... BUT, now its just a rip off. http://www.apple.com/shop/buy-... $1,199 for 2.5 ghz, 8gb ram, 750gb HDD.... http://www.amazon.com/Toshiba-... $459.99 for Intel Core i5, 8 GB, 1TB HDD Now, I accept the apple premium should be like 50% more..... BUT, we're talking over twice as much for a similar hardware. For info, I just bought an apple from EBAY. I like apple. I just think they're way overpriced today.
...
Maybe when Apple stops charging $200 for an extra 8 GB of RAM when everyone knows you can buy it for about $40 elsewhere, then sales will improve. Same goes with HDD or SSD upgrades or just about any kind of upgrade from Apple.
Maybe they need to be investigated for activities not in the best interest of the US. No way they can be working for a stronger dollar if it hurts their bottom line. Logic.
As an IT person, it is hard to have any sympathy for Apple. They have so much cash, and could step into so many markets... but they have all but abandoned the enterprise sector (no XSan, no XServe, no rack-friendly models [1].)
Apple has been a toy maker for so long, they think they can continue to do so. Sony had this attitude back in the late 1990s... but then just got steamrollered. If Apple is to have long-term stability, they need to use some of that large cash stash, and either spin off an enterprise company or make a division for this. Think desktops, servers, and applications that can replace Exchange, Active Directory, and other items. Apple would also need to work like other sane companies and give roadmaps out. (For example, I can go to IBM, Oracle, HP, sign a NDA, and see what is going to happen in the next 3-5 years, product-wise. With Apple, you can't do this.)
With people related to the Fed like Marc Faber saying that there will never be a bull market in his lifetime, Apple needs to start battening hatches for the oncoming storm. Regardless of the economy, enterprise sales are a solid income, and it is easier to convince one CFO to pay for 100,000 Macs than it is to convince 100,000 consumers to buy one Mac apiece in a bad economy.
I hate doomsaying, even as an AC, but winter is coming, and the handwriting is on the wall. Apple needs to shift from iPhones and consumer toys back to meat-and-potatoes products (not just Macs, but infrastructure) in order to stay relevant in 5-10 years.
Perhaps virtualization. Build ESXi into the BIOS, slam some DRAC/iLO functionality onto machines, and this might shake things up in that market. Especially if Apple added Infiniband or Thunderbolt connections between blades and chassis, and Isilon-like OneFS functionality, so each blade could use another's HDD, with redundancy by drive, blade, and chassis built in. This is what MS is doing with Storage Spaces Direct, but the difference between 10gigE and Infiniband or Thunderbolt for cross-connects is significant.
Apple is sitting on a lot of cool stuff. Not just for making toys, but actually being able to play in the adult world where regardless of the economy, businesses still will be upgrading.
[1] No, a Mac Mini is not an enterprise geared machine. A Mac Pro can be racked with a third party kit (and take up a ton of space)... but that is a lot of kludging compared to a 1U XServe, or a rack and blade system. Especially if Apple actually went balls-out and used some of that cash to turn OS X into a virtualization platform (The XSan filesystem is still present and usable for clustering), or made some applications that could compete where MS is only present.
"Because of Currency Exchange rates around the world we lost $5 billion. WAHHHHHHH!" - Tim Cook.
"Yeah, the world's exchange rates are different. You made a total record profit of $18.4 billion dollars. That's still pretty good, be happy with it." - The World.
Companies need to remember that they are NOT entitled to profits. They must EARN them. When they do, they must also remember that possible numbers are not REAL numbers. Just because in a perfect world, you might have made $5 Billion more dollars, does not mean you will get it in reality. It also does not mean that money was in any way promised to you. It was a mere possibility not a guaranteed thing. You should not be basing your companies performance on fictional numbers. Nor should you be whining about not receiving every last cent of a fictional profit amount. Be happy with what you made.
I've been a user of Apple products since the Apple II.
Tim Cook has fucked Apple up since he has been in charge and he needs to resign. Since Cook took the reins,
one Apple product after another has been degraded and in some cases rendered useless. Cook is a non-techie
and he doesn't know shit about things he needs to know about.
At some point, stockholders are not going to tolerate Cook's incompetence. The only question is, when ?
why does it matter? If they are taking the dollars, converting them into Euros to pass through Ireland for their tax scam, then sending it down to the Cayman Islands, a strong dollar just means it converts into more Euros, right?
This is true for every international company. When the currency in their home country is strong, it drags their results down.
We paid a lot for these phones. There's a huge difference between the iPhone 5/5S and 6/6S. I don't plan on upgrading my 6S Plus anytime soon. I think for most people, the 6 generation is "good enough" for a while. That's why sales are lacking.
This is a great comment, I am going to copy/paste it tomorrow when this story gets duped.
"If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear." - Every fascist, ever
So far, Apple had conveniently pretended that $1 == €1 and became addicted to the free extra profit. Now this comes to bite them back. Not that they will go bankrupt or something. They'll just have to come down from their high mountain.
I just got off of the phone with the bank. Apple's cash balance
asof January 28, 2016 {praise be Jobs} is $27,654,343.117.35.
Why should I care?
CAP === 'babied'
this is rich.
What he said was, in other words, was that Apple didn't do well insulating themselves from the currency fluctuations they once were able to do so well at.
And in the process they devised a clever financial instrument that found great utility for other uses. Some not so glorious.
Too bad. That's the risk in global sales. Welcome to the real world.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
That's not good when you get two-thirds of your revenue overseas.
And we know Apple accounts for all revenue it receives and accurately reports it on its taxes. It doesn't hide any revenues overseas.
We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
Well, they could always take their money out of the safest place in the world (US Treasuries) and put it somewhere else where their money is declining. It's hard to believe an American CEO said something like that. Clearly Mr. Cook isn't.
/. It won't matter for long. All the kids think Apple stuff is for metrosexuals and only to be used by girls. Frankly, the stuff is sort of gay-ish.
Financially, it only makes their stock market numbers look bad. In terms of total wealth, I believce they have more since the $200 B in the bank is worth more now as is their stock. I'm not sure how it's affected their buyback or dividends, but I'd be happy were I holding Apple stock.
br
"I want to fundamentally transform America so that Apple is more successful!"
I stopped buying products from the US and moved to the UK instead because it became more economical to do so. In addition, I have purchased nearly $25,000,000 worth of product from European competitors to US companies because the gap was too big. The European products went from costing 70% compared to the American equivalent to 50%... Saving too many millions to justify buying American. Now some of Europes larger financial institutions are locked into European products with 10-15 year spending estimates of $100-$180 million instead of American.
Great job US!
Due to Digital Turnip Twaddling, it's required socially to have the latest iPhone.
All apple ever really gave a shit about.
Wanna buy a shirt?
https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
This affects all American businesses doing business overseas -- and that's a lot of businesses, not just Apple. American goods are selling at a considerable price premium versus competing goods in those markets. Long term, that's not a fantastic place to be as it acts like a export tariff on US goods and makes them less competitive. Also when you are selling overseas what sales you make take a cut due to exchange rates. It's demoralizing to see your sales force bust their ass to log a big YOY sales growth in their country but then have exchange rates eat that up and make it a 0% growth (or a loss) on the bottom line.
And I know we all like to throw barbs at Tim Cook sleeping on his mountain of cash, but this applies to all US business, not just Apple.
Yeah, businesses that stick to a small market and makes most of it's money from high end sales rarely last even as so-called industry talking heads speak crap... like Sennheiser or Moog.
We get it that you don't like Apple but you likely had the same thoughts and remarks about MS back in the day and were proven wrong there too.
I've been hearing Apple will be irrelevant in a couple of years from you schmucks for a couple decades now and yet Apple remains.
As an IT person, I have never seen this much salt outside of the Dead Sea.
Are you that butthurt that Apple killed XServe? Apple would be suicidal to get involved in servers. Referencing IBM in terms of hardware is a joke. Sun is a moldering corpse, kept alive merely because Oracle needs more places to sell licenses. HP is a pale imitation of what it once was. Even Dell is feeling the heat. Commodity hardware and the cloud is gutting Enterprise(tm) sales.
You reference the desktop, and that's hilarious. You can't swing a dead hipster around the valley without causing several thousand programmers to drop their Macbook Pros - to say nothing of the stranglehold on design and creative work. And the desktop market as some sort of "insurance" to "ride out the stom"? Growth is stagnant there. The real money is in what's supplanting it - mobile devices.
Guess what Apple's kind of sort of in to?
XServe died because it was useless and nobody was buying.
Let it go.
Oh cry me a river Tim Cook.
You'll not get any of my money anyway.
Have you ever fallen asleep at the keybhanusdiog?
For five billion dollars theres probably a propulsion system in there someone. It can takeoff and land in whatever country is most tax-advantaged at a given time.
Wish you had not posted this as Anon because I think you have some good ideas.
Personally, I think a good avenue is to get into the markets that smaller business's really require. As an example, provide some type of cloud based email/calendaring solution for smaller businesses (think Google for Business here). Most of which seem to like using their Macs so that would support their existing products. They could provide something like Google does for Outlook so the PC people could make use of as well. With that, there is a natural extension for storage needs which would fit well. I am not a fan of cloud solutions, but most smaller companies have moved that direction so why not leverage that direction.
Where Apple is the largest holding in every equity index fund (because its the largest company in every index). And growth funds have loaded up on it extra.
You think Apple used U.S.A.-based manufacturers before 2008? /laugh
... When every 3 months, they have been re-adjusting the cost of their products up here in Canada to match the change in currency. Haven't been following their pricing practices in other countries, but I imagine it's been pretty similar. Plus, all their overseas manufacturing and supply chain costs have become that much less expensive for them.
I'm not saying it hasn't had any effect on them, but they are managing it.
(no XSan, no XServe, no rack-friendly models [1].),
FYI, that whole market just isn't big enough for Apple anymore. When they stopped making the Xserve and Xserve RAID, they were already the #3 storage vendor, and they were about a year and a half away from becoming #1.
The scarce resource for Apple is engineering time. When the same guys could be developing an Xserve or another iMac, it's not a hard business decision to put them on the product that sells in million lots instead of the one that sells in the low thousands.
A lot of groups at Apple used the Xserves themselves, and they're sorely missed, but it's just not possible to justify diverting the people to make them now.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
The lesson here is that when American businesses decide to increase their presence in other parts of the world (typically to try to save money because of such advantages as cheaper labor or lower taxes), the downside is a growing reliance on the state of the global economy, vs. the U.S. economy.
I don't think the xServe and xSan sold very well. After all, had they been runaway successes, I doubt Apple would have discontinued them. No public corporation is going to throw away easy money "just because". If the server products were really thriving, and Apple *really* wanted to just be all about consumer hardware; they'd have just spun the business off into a subsidiary, like they have in the past with FileMaker and Claris.
And really, Mac OS X doesn't make much sense as a server anyway, Unix underpinnings and their token OS X Server development notwithstanding. The big advantage OS X has over other Unix/Linux OSs is a GUI that doesn't suck and the availability of a good number of commercial consumer software products. Neither is relevant to a server. And a GUI and most of the other OS X features are a liability for a server. A server should have exactly and only the packages it needs to perform its specific job, and nothing more. That's not Mac OS X.
Perhaps Apple could publish some RPMs to be installed on RHEL, CentOS, or Amazon Linux with customized services targeted at the "classroom full of Macs" they used to cite as the use case for OS X Server... CalDav, CardDav, Wiki Server, Open Directory with non-sucky directory templates, and so on. Combine this with an easy-to-use client that'd run on a Mac to manage these services and you have a server offering that makes sense for Apple. But dedicated Mac server hardware always was a really odd duck out and never made a whole lot of sense. And I say that as someone who likes Apple, owns many of their products, and practically grew up with their computers. All the way back to that first Apple ][+ I can hardly recall a time when I did *not* have Apple kit. But for a server in any kind of production environment? As much as I like Apple and hate, for example, Dell; I'd choose CentOS on a pair os R220s (for redundancy) over Apple's offerings... even the xServe when it was available... every time.
Add to all that the fact that many businesses these days... especially the startups that are open to Apple products in general (It's not like you'll see many Macs in an SAP building or on a Lockheed Martin campus.)... don't even want to own their own rack mounts or datacenter space in the first place; but would prefer to to just spin up infrastructure in AWS and avoid the headaches of owning and maintaining hardware. Why would Apple... or anyone, really... want to jump into the 19" pizza box market now?
Imagine all the people...
First, Apple needs to retire HFS and adopt a modern filesystem. Second, their network filesystems are trash. The reality is that OSX needs an enormous amount of work before it is ready for the enterprise; losing files as a matter of course is not acceptable. No one with any sense would have bought their server hardware, so discontinuing it and focusing on shiny things makes perfect sense. It has been eons since Apple has reflected on usability or quality. They are certainly capable of producing quality hardware, but they focus on making it inflexible, unrepairable, and disposable.
I hear you about diverting resources IF you are working under the premise that you must keep your costs fixed (aka not add to the resource pool). However, 99% of the time, you need to increase your resources to be able generate new products.
Great for savers
Terrible for debtors
Tim Cook: What's Good For the Goose is Good for the Gander.
No word on whose goose or gander we're talking about.
I _might_ feel a little more sorry for Apple, you know, if they actually paid any decent percentage of US taxes.
Seriously: "strong" != "good" in the context of a currency, depending on how you define good.
-Styopa
Not very many people at all USA manufacture, and have not for 20 years. Apple is the richest of the lot currently, but they're not alone in their suffering. Having a strong dollar is great if we actually manufactured things here, or had a plan to do so in the short term.
Corporate customers are absolutely horrible, margin destroying machines. Can you blame them? Two of my employers derived the majority of their revenue from enterprise sales, and both of those companies are shadows of their former self. Unless you have a monopoly (or near to it), you will be nickled and dimed into obsolescence, which is a good market for China where tehy can compete with each other on equal footing, but US based companies get run out quickly.
On the other hand, individuals still have an eye for a good product, and will pay a lot of money for a good product. We don't have to report out quarterly earnings, nor do we even have to necessarily make the financially optimal solution. That's a much better market for American (or European) companies to be in. Unfortunately, because of our other economic woes, very few people can often afford to pay for the good product over the cheap shit, so the best one can hope for is to have a small but significant market share.
Toys are a good market for Apple, Enterprise is a good market for China.
The thing is, Apple simply doesn't WANT this business sector.
They have no real understanding of it, and no real desire to become a real, enterprise-grade support organization. It's too important to them to be these foofy, artistic, independent "fuck the man" mavens.
Plus, enterprise, while a lot of money flows around, is EXTREMELY cutthroat. So the margins tend to be smaller than you'd think.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
Shut up Apple.
Amazon, Google,Facebook, etc all buy their x86 pizza box hardware straight from the Chinese OEM now anyway...
It's not so much that the US dollar is "strong", it's that European governments are screwing up even worse than the US government.
XServes and XSans were decent entry-level products.
And they actually sold moderately well.
However, there were some valid criticisms of the platforms. And Apple didn't want to invest the time and effort into addressing them, nor scale their offerings.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
I don't think the xServe and xSan sold very well.
Apple should have called them iServe and iSan. Then they'd have sold well.
In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
and either spin off an enterprise company or make a division for this.
Enterprises buy based on performance, not on shiny. Apple can't win in that market.
Spoken like someone who has no idea how much effort Apple puts into recruiting.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
No public corporation is going to throw away easy money "just because".
Yes they will. For some reason there are these useless twats called MBAs who think that they are god's gift to management. They tend to run companies and I have seen cases where they wouldn't do something not because it didn't make money, but instead because it didn't make enough money. The company I am at had an opportunity a couple of years ago to make 5% on something with 0 effort and expense (things would be drop shipped from the actual manufacturer or something like that) but didn't do it because they didn't want their average profit to drop below 10%. So because the average profit margin would have dropped, even though total profit and revenue would have been higher, they didn't do it.
Time to offend someone
Is Cook wishing the US was suffering the same economic turmoil (from China) the rest of the world is suffering through?
I don't see how that would be good for Apple.
If there is less wealth overseas (and there isn't because of China) people have less margin for fancy phones.
Diluting the dollar isn't going to make overseas customers more enabled to buy iPhones.
I would agree that I am speaking without knowing all of the facts. I do find it interesting that Apple has a hard time finding talent to work for them though. I just wonder if they thought about opening an engineering center somewhere else than Cupertino since that is obviously an area where good talent is at a premium due to so many tech businesses.
That's funny considering Apple is one of the players to blame for the weakness of the dollar. Kek
A strong dollar also reduces manufacturing costs, since manufacturing is overseas. This improves margins. I'm not seeing the issue.
Foreign exchange is often counter intuitive. In crude terms a strong currency helps importers but hurts exporters. If Apple in this case is the exporter. The stronger the currency gets the less units per dollar Apple's customers can buy. Since 2/3 of iphone sales are international Apple customers are unable to buy as many iPhones for the same amount of money.
It doesn't have anything really to do with manufacturing costs. Apple's manufacturing costs are mostly contracted well in advance for large volumes. This means their costs are close to fixed. So if the exchange rates move significantly after the contract is signed and Apple isn't hedged against currency movement then Apple will sell less product or have to accept worse margins.
Software development and engineering are not marginal expenses (they don't vary with the number of items sold).
Software development and engineering account for a tiny fraction of Apple's costs. Something like 10-15%. Look at any software company's financial statements. You'll find that their development costs are always somewhere between 10-20% of total cost. It's true for Microsoft, Oracle and any other software company. You are correct that they are fixed costs but their effect on the bottom line in this case is relatively minor.
Apple's manufacturing is done in Asia (where costs have fallen in dollar terms) but Apple's development is mostly done in America.
Look at Apple's financial statements. You'll find that Apple's Cost of Goods Sold is almost 10X their SG&A and 15X their R&D costs. Cost of Good Sold is the direct cost attributable to making the physical products Apple sells - direct labor and materials. Engineering falls under SG&A and/or R&D. The costs aren't even close.
What you are missing is that even though Apple's manufacturing is done in Asia, what is important is that at the end of the day Apple's revenues and costs are in dollars. Since 2/3 of their sales are outside the US, a strong dollar hurts Apple on a net basis because it makes Apple's products more expensive outside the US.
Disclosure: I'm a certified accountant.
No actually people don't. Many people aren't in fact sociopaths and are happy to simply earn a normal living and pay taxes in the normal way without attempting to jump through vast hoops with offshore accounts and etc to avoid contributing to society.
Most people don't do that because they can't, not because they wouldn't. Some because they don't know how, others because they lack the resources to pull it off. If you think for a moment that most people are "happy" to pay a dime more in tax than they can get away with then you are delusional.
Many people actually understand that civilsation is built on taxes and can think beyond MINE ...
Evidently none of these people you refer to are republicans.
as well as all of that money they've been refusing to bring into the US because they don't want to pay taxes on it. They're really taken it in the poo over that, with exchange rates taking such a dive. Guess they should have brought it home and paid those taxes, eh?
You are conflating two issues. Yes Apple has been incentivized to keep their currency reserves in other countries to a substantial degree. That has little to do with this problem. 2/3 of Apple's sales come from outside the US and their base currency is the dollar. When the dollar gets strong people in other countries can afford to buy fewer Apple products for the same money because their currency buys fewer dollars. Apple is effectively a net exporter of their goods and a strong dollar hurts exporters whose base currency is dollars. Whether or not they repatriate that money is irrelevant. They are getting fewer dollars per unit of goods sold whether or not they bring that cash back to the US. Exchange rates affect companies regardless of where the currency is actually held.
What part of this company is American anyway?
Their money is and that's the bit that matters. Apple does it's business substantially in dollars so exchange rate risk is a big deal for them like most multi-nationals.
Is there a reason that Apple doesn't do currency hedging, despite all the transactions/holdings in foreign currencies?
I went to Germany in 1986. My host father taught me a lesson. When I got there the Mark traded 3 to 1 with the $. As the year went, it dropped to less than 2 to 1. German companies liked when the Mark was 3 to 1. That meant it was easier to sell product to America.
This is not new news. It has been know for REALLY long time.
China pegged itself to the $ to maximize its ability to do what it did.
God: "I don't leave footprints!"
I also heard that the low price of oil is hurting the economy. I thought, "Wait, I remember about 8 years ago, everyone was saying that the price of oil (energy) was a drag on the economy, now oil is a driver for the economy? Make up your damn minds!"
You don't know how transfer costs are actually formulated.
I will give you a hint.... It's complicated and the only reason for the complexity is to lower their tax burden.
Would someone point me to where Tim Cook actually said "What's good for the US dollar is bad for Apple"?
I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
AFP isn't so bad. For a small setup (Synology NAS), it works well enough.
However, that is one thing I can agree on. HFS+ just needs to go. Apple has enough cash to pay Oracle for a clean license for ZFS, Microsoft for Storage Spaces + ReFS, or IBM for AIX's JFS2. The ideal would be ZFS just because it is so resilient... and Apple has dabbled in that arena before with various OS X seeds. Plus, it would solve the RAID issue without additional moving parts needed.
OS X is still gaining marketshare, but it would be nice if Apple could add some more enterprise-friendly features, just so that it is an acceptable alternative to Windows.
As for enterprise hardware, this wouldn't have to be Apple. They could spin off an enterprise company that licenses Apple IP, so Apple itself would not lose focus. Then make more enterprise-friendly desktops that have the option to be sans cameras or microphones.
Perhaps, but lots of upper-level decision-makers buy based on shiny.
If unemployment is high and other problems abound, having a strong dollar can be a millstone hindering the economy from getting back on its feet.
If Apple is not paying US taxes because they are parking revenue in Ireland, why should they care what the US dollar does? Or are they admitting that they are repatriating that money to the US? In that case, why aren't they paying tax on it?
Apple would be able to sue to have decisions regarding trade that hurt their business repealed. Just a reminder.
Yep then the procurement department goes to tender.
I'm Calling BS on #3 storage vendor without some pretty huge, point mooting footnotes. Specifically I suspect you are limiting that to the enterprise market which only has 2 or 3 competitors ALL of which are going belly up because their entire business models were never designed with 50 cent per GB of 300mbps throughput storage in mind. There isn't enough value-add they can offer to offset the 15k mechanical drives and thousand dollar HBAs no one wants to buy now.
XServe is awful, anyone that can actually administrate it properly and not just click around a Plesk GUI, can do it better faster and cheaper with Free or NetBSD.
...if they actually paid US taxes on the money they made everywhere
Maybe it is actually the other way around. Maybe Apple is not good for the United States.
They do whatever they can to avoid contributing to the Tax Base. They do not employ people to build the phones in the US. They bilk the sheeplefied consumers beyond what anyone would have ever dreamed was even possible. They encourage the wasting of rare earth minerals (mined by slave labor) with their insta-obsolete iPhone sales model. Just throw the $700 thing away and get a new one every year otherwise people might think you are behind the times. And now they state that the health of the US dollar is cutting into their coveted greed whore profits.
They really just went there and said their disgusting profits in multi Billions is more important than the financial health of the entire United States. Thanks Apple this will now be my goto argument to show how evil, insidious, and psychopathic your corporation really is. Unbelievable...
Say it with me now, "A strong dollar is a good for imports. A weak dollar is good for exports."
Mac Mini: 499USD -> 703AUD, apply sales tax (GST) of 10%, 773AUD. Oh look there, they're selling in the Australian store for $779.
Macbook: 1299USD -> 1830AUD, apply sales tax (GST) of 10%, 2013AUD. Oh look there, they're selling in the Australian store for $1999.
iPhone 6S: 649USD -> 915AUD, apply sales tax (GST) of 10%, 1005AUD. Oh look there, they're selling in the Australian store for $1079.
Cry more buddy.
So what?
Apple has development groups in Pittsburgh, Paris, Cork, and somewhere in China, I forget which city.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
I don't think the xServe and xSan sold very well. After all, had they been runaway successes, I doubt Apple would have discontinued them. No public corporation is going to throw away easy money "just because".
Just because what? Because it has enough highly successful and profitable products and services, that dropping one slightly less profitable product that other companies would kill for, simply because putting the resources from that product into the even more profitable products actually makes sense?
People like you don't understand just how big and profitable Apple is.
Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
US dollar is a giant Pyramid scheme,
http://www.zerohedge.com/print...
Casteism
Cry me a fucking river apple with your offshore bullshit robbing the American people who are responsible for your success. Disgusting.
"the secretary at MalwareBytes took a look at his source code and said it looked all good to them" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015
My code went thru verification by Mr. Steven Burn of Malwarebytes' hpHosts
hpHosts Site Admin Mr. Steven Burn quoted:
"I've been asked to further clarify so for the record yes I've seen the code, and yes, it is safe."
FROM http://forum.hosts-file.net/vi...
(On my latest 9.0++ code engine above & from past versions -> http://slashdot.org/comments.p... )
A competent coder & BEST security researcher I know of FROM THE BEST ANTIMALWARE THERE IS http://www.av-test.org/en/news...
NOT a secretary!
I don't give away work to be stolen OR misused like GOOGLE CHROME http://it.slashdot.org/story/1...
---
"won't demonstrate security of his product be exposing the source" - by Coren22 (1625475) on Wednesday November 18, 2015
Bullshit: 62 reputable sources + /. users say different:
Safe by 57 antivirus programs in 64-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...
+
the 32-bit model https://www.virustotal.com/en/...
&
Per VirScan (installer too)-> http://f.virscan.org/APKHostsF...
MalwareBytes' hpHosts Admin (MalwareBytes employee) hosts & recommends it -> http://hosts-file.net/?s=Downl... & MalwareBytes = BEST antivirus per this VERY recent testing of them all http://www.av-test.org/en/news...
APK
P.S.=> Eat your words, scumbag:
Tell us about AD + DNS too while you're @ it & how you said I said not to run DNS when I use it myself & said to NOT use external to network DNS with AD http://slashdot.org/comments.p...
OR
About how my program NEEDS admin privelege to update too (& it doesn't http://slashdot.org/comments.p... )
LOL... fool - 'eat your words' on ALL those accounts chump!
... apk
"you are stealing other people's work in your code" - by Coren22 (1625475)
I don't steal (you project YOU do). I write my own code (you don't) & use public data to protect + speed up users.
---
"You have yet to submit to a code review from anyone but your friend. No, I don't trust that" - by Coren22 (1625475)
A seasoned security pro & competent coder reviewed my work as safe & IT'S WHAT HE DOES (unlike you). He can't "play friends": It's his site & reputation.
---
"You are terrified someone will steal your software if you publish the source code." - by Coren22 (1625475)
I don't give source away W/ GOOD REASON (Google's mistake w/ CHROME) -> http://it.slashdot.org/story/1...
---
"You have yet to address the issue of name resolution performance of anything not found in your hosts file. This is a serious issue when the hosts file is so large" - by Coren22 (1625475)
Placing users' FAVORITE SITES where they spend 95++% of their time online @ TOP of hosts files cached in LOCAL RAM gets them to sites FASTER & MORE RELIABLY than a more-than-potentially REDIRECT POISONED DNS SERVER (99.999% of ISP DNS aren't patched vs. the kaminsky flaw, or DNS amp attacks).
---
"DNS outperforms your hosts file solution several fold" - by Coren22 (1625475)
No it doesn't (see above) - & DNS outperforms hosts in GOING DOWN (does a lot) OR poisoning users via redirect poisonings (DNS amp attacks = another).
---
"so why not just run your own DNS server? Oh, resources eh?" - by Coren22 (1625475)
More resource consumption + moving parts complexity + POWER USE doesn't = a GOOD solution vs. hosts by using redirect poisoning/DNS amp attack exploitable DNS w/ only a few systems @ home.
---
"But you have no problem running 100k copies of the hosts file in a domain" - by Coren22 (1625475)
It works easily migrated by central admins via scripts or chronjobs/scheduled tasks w/ less moving parts complexity, room for exploit & breakdown, OR power usage.
APK
P.S.=> You FAIL menial... apk