Well, since I blogged about this topic before, I thought I'd add the following:
Interesting news and information about Apple, Macintosh and Macintosh computing.
"Macintosh...It just works."
Well, since I blogged about this topic before, I thought I'd add the following:
PC Connection announced solid results for the financial quarter that ended March 31 thanks in part to Apple product sales. Sales of accessories and other companion products increased 26 percent year over year, partly due to the high sales of iPods and related products, according to PC Connection Chairman/CEO Patricia Gallup.Net sales for the three months increased by $56.6 million, or 17.5 percent, to US$380.5 million from $323.9 million for the three months that ended March 31, 2005. Approximately $27.3 million of this growth, or 8.4 percent, was attributable to the October 2005 acquisition of key assets of Amherst Technologies. Net income for the quarter ended March 31, 2006 was $1.7 million, or $.07 per share, compared to $0.9 million, or $.04 per share for the three months ended March 31, 2005.Notebooks and PDAs continued to be the PC Connection's largest product category, accounting for 17 percent of net sales in the first quarter of 2006 compared to 18.8 percent for the corresponding period a year ago. Desktop computers and servers accounted for 14.9 percent of net sales in the first quarter of 2006 compared to 14.8 percent of net sales for the corresponding period a year ago. The average sales price for computer systems decreased 4.9 percent in the first quarter compared to the corresponding period a year ago, and decreased 1.1 percent compared to the fourth quarter of 2005. Software and video, imaging and sound product lines each increased 25 percent over the first quarter of 2005.
Macsimum News - iPod sales boost PC Connection's bottom line
I know this isn't Macintosh related, but I couldn't resist! -TG
Teac's Retro CD player doesn't just pay lip service to the days of yore, it actually plays artifacts from the original rock-and-roll era --; yep, we're talking about vinyl! In addition to CDs, it will also take your 33-, 45- and 78-rpm records, allowing you to hear your favorite music as God and the record industry intended. It also has a USB port, so you can play mp3s from a flash drive or portable hard drive, and an FM tuner. The 2.1 speaker system with subwoofer should give you solid desktop sound. Available in Japan for just over $200.[Via Akihabara News]
Catapult is the world's first device to allow capture of video footage from DV or HDV video cameras directly to iPods or virtually any USB drive, and begin editing immediately. A battery powered device not much larger than a Blackberry, the Catapult eliminates the time consuming and tedious task of digitizing video footage. Read more...
Apple Computer is investigating several unpatched and potentially serious security flaws in Mac OS X that have been publicly disclosed, the company said Friday.Tom Ferris, a security researcher in Mission Viejo, Calif., published late on Thursday information on seven flaws in Apple's operating system that potentially put Mac users at risk of a cyberattack. The most serious of the flaws could let attackers surreptitiously run malicious code on users' PCs, Ferris said in an interview via instant messaging.
Unpatched Mac flaws may put users at risk | CNET News.com
macTV Show #128 - Installing XP on a Mac (via Boot Camp) at macTV Videocast
Infinite Loop: Cocoa widgets in Firefox, Thunderbird progressing nicely.
Here's some rare footage of the "real" Steve Jobs meeting with the Cupertino, CA city council. Worth a look! -Tim
April 19 - 16:19 EDT Apple Computer is planning to build a new, 50-acre campus near its present headquarters in Cupertino, California, the company's CEO, Steve Jobs, said, reports Reuters. "What's happened at Apple is that our business has basically tripled in the last five or six years," Jobs said on Tuesday evening at a Cupertino city council meeting. "Apple has been rejuvenated since it introduced its market-leading iPod digital music player in 2001 and is in the process of moving its entire Macintosh computer line to Intel Corp. chips from those made by IBM," notes the report. The council meeting is also available via Webcast.Burst.com has counter-sued Apple in a San Francisco federal district court for patent-infringement, MacWorld reports.
Apple had sued Burst in January seeking a ruling that the latter company's patents were invalid and therefore were not infringed by the iTunes Music Store, Quicktime Streaming Server, iTunes and the iPod.
Microsoft, faced with similar pressure last year, paid Burst $60 million for a license to the patents. Robert X. Cringely has been writing about this for awhile, and his major contention was that Apple's preemptive lawsuit would legitimize Burst's claims.
Looks like Burst may have a very legitmate suit. What do you you think? -Tim
technorati tags: Photography, Apple, Aperture
This has gotten more than a little press lately. I thought this article was interesting. Tell me what you think Tim
Posted on Apr 10, 2006 at 1:15am by Dennis Sellers. Andrew Neff, an analyst with the Bear Sterns firm, thinks that Apple's eventual game plan is to have Windows as the main operating system on Macs. I can't imagine this happening, but if that day comes, then Apple will have, to use a religious paraphrase, lost its "soul." "Though the timing is uncertain, [Neff] thinks it may defy the conventional wisdom, and views Windows on Mac with full support as a natural extension of Apple's strategy"; reports Business Week Online. He's not the only one. I've heard others espouse the same theory.Apple: Windows on a Mac is here | Tech News on ZDNet
technorati tags: Apple, Macintosh, Windows, Macbook Pro