Archive for April 2014
» Excuses, excuses
Electronista details Tim Cook’s explanations for why iPad sales were down.
Cook, however, said that at the time Apple was fulfilling a backlog of iPad orders and thus sold a lot of units to “the channel” — resellers and distributors — which pumped up sales figures. This year, sell-in inventory (to partners) went way down, while sales remained basically the same, making it look like Apple had sold far fewer iPads than it did.
Sell-through to end users — a figure that Apple is alone in the industry in reporting — was actually 17.5 million units, down about three percent from the year-ago quarter. The difference means that iPad sales were actually at the high end of what Apple was expecting, rather than “a miss” as some analysts had expected.
Cook has reasonable explanations for why it’s not as bad as it looks and I believe the iPad business is still solid. But it’s something to keep an eye on for upcoming quarters.
Like we weren’t going to watch iPad sales in upcoming quarters.
» Microsoft OneDrive for Business appears to modify files
Seán Byrne found a strange behavior with some html files he was storing on OneDrive: it was injecting Office tags into them.
(Via TJ Luoma and Jordan T-H)
» ‘The internet is fucked… but we can fix it’
Nilay Patel at The Verge:
Massive companies like AT&T and Comcast have spent the first two months of 2014 boldly announcing plans to close and control the internet through additional fees, pay-to-play schemes, and sheer brutal size — all while the legal rules designed to protect against these kinds of abuses were struck down in court for basically making too much sense.
I’m fortunate enough to live in one of the small pockets of the country where there is a choice (Tacoma has its own broadband) but what a depressing situation.
John Gruber rightly notes what a disappointment the Obama administration has been on net neutrality.
» Apple posts strong quarterly results despite decline in iPad sales
Some quick take-aways based on Apple’s press release and numbers from Macworld:
- Record 2nd quarter revenue
- Profit up
- Margin up
- Strong iPhone sales, up 17 percent
- Weak iPad sales, down about 18 percent
- Mac sales up 4 percent
The company will also be conducting a 7-for-1 stock split along with further share repurchases.
» Unscroogled
Mary Jo Foley:
Derrick Connell, a Microsoft Corporate Vice President in charge of the Bing Experiences team, said over the weekend in a hosted Q&A session that Microsoft is “now done with the (Scroogled) campaign.”
Great news everyone! Those mugs are now collectors items.
Hopefully another smart move by Satya Nadella and another sign that Mark Penn’s influence is waning.
» OS X Beta Seed Program
Pretty interesting. No longer do you have to have a developer account. I hope this is restricted to later more stable builds. Personally, I don’t install anything but final releases on what I laughingly call my production systems. My wife, of course, is still on Mountain Lion because she likes to murder me in my sleep when I change her MacBook too much.
Hopefully this will be a positive change and even make final releases more solid and not just an opportunity to grouse about things people don’t like or how an early release deleted all their kitty gifs #applefail.
» An oral history of MST3k
Writing for Wired,
» Oh, my god
These HBO Go ads with young adults watching sex scenes with their parents are deviously brilliant.
My wife saw Boogie Nights in the theater with her mother. I can’t even imagine.
(Via Michael T. Rose)
Sponsor: Tapes for Mac
My thanks to Tapes for Mac for sponsoring the Very Nice Web Site RSS feed this week.
Tapes for Mac is the quickest and easiest way to share screencasts on the web. Record up to three minutes and Tapes automatically uploads it to a unique URL that you can share with whoever you want.
Show your parents how to set up FaceTime. Share project information with your colleagues. Record and post all your unstoppable Minecraft techniques. Use tapes to teach, review or just show off.
You get 60 minutes of Tapes time a month to make your statement — that’s 20 3-minute screencasts, 60 1-minutes screencasts, or however you want to use it. Here’s a Tapes screencast I created and it could not have been easier.
Tapes for Mac is simple and fast and it’s available now on the Mac App Store. If you’ve ever wanted to share short screencasts with you family, friends or coworkers, you should check it out.
» Nike fires entire wearables division
Electronista:
In an unexpected move,
Huh. Wonder who that might be?
UPDATE: Nike denies it has shut down the division, only confirming it laid off “a small number” of people.
