» Easy come, easy go
The Verge’s Bryan Bishop:
Judge Lucy Koh has just delivered a serious blow to Cupertino in the Apple v. Samsung legal saga, cutting the damages awarded to the company down to $598,908,892 — and ordering a new trial to determine the remaining balance.
…
While the amount Samsung owes Apple has been reduced, it’s important to note that Koh didn’t declare that the jury was incorrect in assessing whether Samsung had infringed upon Apple’s intellectual property; those decisions themselves still stand.
The latter will go unnoticed by the “Apple dealt another setback” crowd. As if it was about the money for Apple.
Reality distortion
John Gruber retweeted Carles Palanca who catches what is one of the weirder aspects of what people nay-saying Apple these days are saying:
Fanboy playtime! Who said “the nearly error-free performance of Jobs over the past twelve year”, @gruber or Tim Wu?
— Carles Palanca (@carlespal) March 1, 2013
The answer, of course, is Wu. It’s remarkable how “Apple fanbois” are the one who are now pointing out that Apple has always had flaws and made mistakes — albeit usually fewer than its competitors — and detractors who are saying it used to be perfect. For a while back in the early 2000s, it didn’t seem like we could get through a week without a PowerBook battery exploding. When the Maps issues came up last fall, pundits somehow magically forgot Antennagate, the overblown “scandal” of 2010, in their rush to show how Apple without Steve Jobs was doomed. As Ben Bajarin commented, it’s like the reality distortion field is now outside Apple instead of coming from within it.
Modern day analysis is surprisingly like that of the Middle Ages, full of the reading of obscure portents that can only be seen by an elite few who have been graced with grandiose titles of office, often by learning the wrong things. Consequently, it’s about as accurate, too.
» Henry Blodget Is A Dog
Dan Nosowitz provides categorical proof.
(via Richard Dunlop-Walters)
» Google stores your WiFi password
Ryan Bateman:
Google stores your wifi password if you have an Android phone and sign into it. It stores it in Google’s servers.
This is useful if, as I do fairly regularly, you need to factory-reset a device or to purchase a new one…
…
But what I can’t help wondering is whether anyone at Google has thought to use this power for evil, and how that would work.
I can see how this would be a small convenience, but typing in my WiFi password when I reconfigure an iPhone or iPad isn’t a huge deal. I’ve let Google do this without realizing it on my Nexus 7, but I don’t really have any plans to wipe the unit and change my WiFi password.
I’m not saying Apple hasn’t or would never do anything questionable, but I am more comfortable with Apple bending the boundaries of these things because I’m their customer, not an advertiser. Yes, I bought the Nexus from Google, but at the $200 I paid last summer it’s clear I’m a commodity rather than a customer.
[Edit: I first edited this entry based on a Tweet by @HeuristicMethod who pointed out that Apple backups also store your WiFi password. But then Darren Rogers pointed out that’s just for local backups. Apple does not store WiFi passwords for iCloud backups. I had thought Apple didn’t store it for either because when you reset an iPhone, the first thing it does when it restarts is asks you for a WiFi password. But then I realized that’s before you apply a backup.]
» UGH, THAT WAS MY SIG LINE
Dan Moren and Lex Friedman for Macworld (Dan wrote the vowels and Lex wrote the consonants):
Through our own rigorous testing, we’ve managed to confirm that emails containing the phrase “barely legal teen” are simply never delivered to iCloud inboxes.
Shouldn’t the headline be “iCloud actually delivers some email”? Way to bury the lede, guys.
Also, I’m confused. These teens are still legal, right?
» MVP
Ben Bajarin:
People say Apple is doomed, people say they have lost their “mojo” but those in the industry running actual fortune 500 companies disagree.
Apple is on the ropes, sliding down to irrelevancy because of lack of innovation. And yet any other company in the world would aspire to be Apple because it is incredibly well run and at the top of its game.
It’s complicated.
Or just stupid. Could be that.
» They’re fine for ladies, though
CNet’s Casey Newton:
Speaking at the TED Conference today in Long Beach, Calif., Brin told the audience that smartphones are “emasculating.” “You’re standing around and just rubbing this featureless piece of glass,” he said.
Is there some sort of competition going on between Google executives to see who can say the dumbest, most tone deaf thing?
Alternate title for this post: “Those phones we make? They suck.”
» ‘Apple Continues to Dominate the Enterprise’
You live long enough and you get to hear everything as Good Technologies reports:
This quarter’s report showed a clear preference for iOS devices, which accounted for 77 percent of all activations and captured eight of the top ten spots on the most popular device list this quarter.
I normally look askance at these things but Good is actually pretty widely used so it’s not a bad barometer.
And, because I’m a jerk, here’s some claim chowder from 2010 about how the Nexus One is “good” for the enterprise because it has Good (GET IT?) while the iPhone, which also has Good, is not because… er… Apple proprietary blahgiddy bloo blah.
I’m paraphrasing there but not by much.
» Right, because that makes sense
Horace Dediu:
Apple’s P/E is now below that of Dell.
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