Q 8 Blog Reviews » Posts for tag 'Steve Jobs'

Is Apple Booting iAd’s Competition from the iPhone?

At the most recent Apple keynote , Steve Jobs announced Apple's upcoming advertising platform called iAd . Included as a part of the OS 4.0 update, the mobile operating system upgrade due out for iPhone this summer and iPad later this fall, the iAd system aims, in its very Apple-ly way, to make mobile advertisements "delightful," meaning ads worth clicking on, engaging with and viewing. What Jobs didn't mention, though, is how Apple plans to give iAd its head start: by kicking out the competing analytics and advertising platforms now thriving in nearly every iPhone app today. Or so it seems. Sponsor Developer Reports App Store Rejection Due to Analytics Inclusion Last week, technology news blog VentureBeat caught wind of a story where Apple had rejected an iPhone application because it, according to the email sent to the developer, "is not appropriate for applications to gather user analytics." Not appropriate, you may ask? Since when? Apparently since Apple released their updated iPhone Developer Agreement. Alongside the SDK 4 beta , made available shortly after the announcement in early April, the developer contract was updated, too. Specifically, the clause in question, section 3.3.9, reads, in part (more here ): Notwithstanding anything else in this Agreement, Device Data may not be provided or disclosed to a third party without Apple's prior written consent. Accordingly, the use of third party software in Your Application to collect and send Device Data to a third party for processing or analysis is expressly prohibited. To date, the changes detailed in this clause have been overshadowed by the one preceding it - in Section 3.3.1, Apple banned the use of cross-compiler tools for building iPhone applications, like the one Adobe was just about to ship , for example. But in the long run, it's Section 3.3.9 that may have more impact on the industry as a whole. "FEAR" You may have not heard too much about this change because no one actually knows what's going on thanks to Apple's par-for-the-course policy of refusing to clarify its meaning. Plus, the companies who may be the most heavily affected by an analytics ban - services like Flurry , MediaLets , Motally , Localytics , and SimpleGeo , to name a few - don't want to talk about it. On record that is. But after a dozen or so phone calls and emails, we're starting to see a picture forming and it can be summed up in one word: FEAR . "Nobody wants to be the canary in the coal mine," one source told us, referring to the radio silence we're getting from these companies when you would have otherwise expected to hear outcry, or perhaps even anti-competitive claims. Some companies, off-record, say they are afraid to complain . If they do, they could be the next to be banned. Another source reported that a number of their company's clients weren't submitting updates to the iTunes Application Store because they were worried that the updates, with the analytics included of course, would be rejected. Instead, the clients are leaving their older applications in place since it doesn't appear that Apple is going back through all the current apps and booting out those that already include analytics within them. "Maybe the older apps are grandfathered in?" they wondered aloud. The fact that no one knows, not even the big name, big box retailer that sits at the top of the latter's client list, is a testament to how Apple likes to do business. Here's the agreement, read it, sign it...and that's the extent of the communication. As to those who did manage to get someone from Apple to talk about it? The answer was simply: "read the agreement." But if Apple holds true to what's written there, it sounds like it could spell doom for mobile analytics and ad firms, especially the small-time players beloved by independent developers. iAd, Anti-Competitive? What no one will say - again, on record, that is - is that the changes have a whiff of anti-competitive behavior to them. The issue at hand: Apple is preparing to launch iAd, an advertising platform based on the newly-acquired Quattro Wireless technology, a company that was the second choice for Apple after the Admob deal fell through. "We tried to buy AdMob, but Google snatched them up because they didn't want us to have them," Steve Jobs said during the April keynote. "So we bought another smaller company, Quattro. But we're babes in the woods." But these "babes" are toting means guns, some say. A couple companies see the language in section 3.3.9 as a direct shot at AdMob in the same way that the changes in 3.3.1 were a shot at Adobe. That is, instead of allowing Google to get its mobile advertisements onto the iPhone, Apple can keep them out via the new analytics/ad ban. Whether or not that's the case is certainly up for debate. But considering that the Google/AdMob deal is still being researched by U.S. antitrust enforcers, regulators aware of the issue. Word has it that Google even pointed it out to the FTC, just in case. Continue Reading: Next page, "A Second Opinion" A Second Opinion: Privacy Concerns Others, however, say these changes aren't really about analytics, ads and anti-competitive behavior as much as they are about privacy concerns. In speaking with Alan Chapell, chairman of the Mobile Marketing Association Privacy Committee and whose firm advises companies on privacy and data strategy, the changes to Apple's agreement have to do more with consumer privacy than anything else. With language that refers to "geo-location" and targeted advertising, a good bit of Section 3.3.9 is about how location-based applications should behave. With the rise of location-based services especially and location-based social tools like Loopt, Foursquare, Gowalla, and others, privacy is at the forefront of everyone's minds these days. ( Including ours ). There are no standards for location based data yet, Chapell explains. No rules about how such data should be used, retained, shared and so on. In addition, Apple is under heavy pressure from regulators to protect the privacy of its customers. And if the third-party analytics providers do something which comprises that privacy, it will be Apple that gets in trouble. "This debate is about privacy and innovation," Chapell notes, "and finding a balance between the two." Unfortunately, even if Apple chooses never to enforce the new rules, explains Chapell, the changes will have an indirect impact on innovation in this area. The next round of ad networks, analytics providers and other in-app data-sharing tools will be less likely to be funded. Not Just Funding at Risk... These changes won't just affect the funding of services like those noted above, though, they could affect how services are developed for the iPhone. Take for example, Xtify , a location-triggered geo-messaging system now available for Android ( previous coverage ). The company's VP of Business Development, Joshua Schmiffman, says they're still figuring out what this all means, but they will have some location-triggered functionality for the iPhone. "We are going to try," he says, "but it may not be exactly 'real time.'" That is, if it ever comes to the iPhone at all. Backup Plans: 1st-Party Analytics, "Trust in Apple" As for Localytics , a small-time analytics provider for mobile apps, the decision is to focus more on the company's soon-to-launch enterprise solution. The upcoming offering will allow application publishers to directly collect and process app analytics data, without going through a 3rd party. Ashish Chordia, CEO and Founder of AppDiscover , an iPhone application development and analytics company, is also generally unconcerned with the changes. "While the wording of the terms in section 3.3.9 is quite strict, Apple will not enforce this specific term," he writes in an email. "Enforcing this term would mean rejecting a huge number of apps. Moreover these analytic services are very important for a healthy market for free / ad-supported apps, so that there can be transparency behind the CPM / CPA pricing." On a call, he tells us that several of the company's analytics-enabled apps have made it into the App Store since the agreement was released. Essentially, Cordia believes that Apple will selectively enforce this restriction, but it won't affect applications like his. "Looking Forward to More Insights" Outside of public statements like those received from Flurry and Motally (the latter: "We've reached out to Apple for clarification and are looking forward for more insights into the policy."), the backchannel whispers are that this whole iAd thing is worrisome right now, but not deadly...at least, not yet. But when reading through the initial hands-on reviews of iAd, like the recent one from ad agency Hill Holiday which spoke of iAd's impressive granularity, there are concerns that Apple wants to now dominate where the third-party analytics providers once did. In the meantime, you can count us among those who are also "looking forward to more insights" from Apple. But we're not holding our breath. Image credits: Toy Story iAd, Hill Holiday ; Steve Jobs, gdgt Discuss

90453a54adapr10.jpg Is Apple Booting iAds Competition from the iPhone?

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Is Apple Booting iAd's Competition from the iPhone?

Tags:analytics, apple, Business, communication, companies, developer, developer agreement, iAd, industry, iphone, marketing, mobile, source, sponsor developer, Steve Jobs, summer, third party software, U.S.

Apple Announces Second-Quarter Earnings

Apple announced second-quarter revenue of $13.50 billion today for the quarter ended March 27, 2010. Net quarterly profit was $3.07 billion, or $3.33 per diluted share. Q2 2009 showed revenue of $9.08 billion and net quarterly profit of $1.62 billion, or $1.79 per diluted share. International sales accounted for 58 percent of the quarter's revenue. 2.94 million Macs were sold, a 33% increase, along with 8.75 million iPhones and 10.89 million iPods. Sponsor "Looking ahead to the third fiscal quarter of 2010, we expect revenue in the range of about $13.0 billion to $13.4 billion and we expect diluted earnings per share in the range of about $2.28 to $2.39," said Peter Oppenheimer, Apple's CFO, in an official statement . Apple CEO Steve Jobs stated it was the company's "best non-holiday quarter ever, with revenues up 49 percent and profits up 90 percent." Apple has a reputation on Wall Street for estimating low on its upcoming revenue, which has an influence on analyst expectations. Apple currently anticipates a gross margin of 36 percent, a significant decline. Apple beat analyst expectations this quarter. Although attention on the iPad was enormous, and sales were good , insufficient time has passed to tell what effect that new product will have on earnings. It will need to sell a great many to be a contender against any of its other products. Bottom photo by Sonny Hung Discuss

apple logo1 Apple Announces Second Quarter Earnings

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Apple Announces Second-Quarter Earnings

Tags:13-50-billion, apple, Business, estimating-low, expect-diluted, expect-revenue, products, quarter, range, sales-accounted, sonny-hung, Steve Jobs, street, the-quarter

Top 10 YouTube Videos About Bill Gates vs. Steve Jobs

Over the past 20 years the two people most prominent in the world of personal computing have been Steve Jobs and Bill Gates. Sometimes they've worked as partners, mostly as the opposite. So in the end who wins? ReadWriteWeb wants you to be the judge. After viewing these 10 videos, it's up to you to decide who gives a better graduation speech, who makes the best cartoon character, and who is better at being funny. Who's the bigger alpha in the dating game, who's better at saying nice things about their opponent, and finally, who is better at leaving their business? Sponsor Tell us in the comments who wins! SuperNews!: Gates vs. Jobs 2,640,083 views Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together: Part 1 1,498,231 views Bill Gates Speech at Harvard (part 1) 1,044,381 views Steve Jobs' 2005 Stanford Commencement Address 1,789,794 views Bill Gates' Last Day at Microsoft - CES 2008 625,730 views 1983 Apple Event Bill Gates and Steve Jobs 278,333 views All-time favorites - all about Steve Jobs.com 402,058 views Jerry Seinfeld and Bill Gates Buy Discount Shoes 117,490 views Prizefight: Bill Gates vs. Steve Jobs 60,212 views Bill Gates - Biography (Part1 of 6) 35,374 views Discuss

8710d3e6b9e logo.jpg Top 10 YouTube Videos About Bill Gates vs. Steve Jobs

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Top 10 YouTube Videos About Bill Gates vs. Steve Jobs

Tags:apple, Apple Event, Business, discount-shoes, gates, gates-together, Jerry Seinfeld, Microsoft, most-prominent, over-the-past, Steve, Steve Jobs, steve-jobs-com, web culture, years-the-two

Apple To End iPhone 2G Support? Jobs Says So

Apparently Steve Jobs has gone and answered another customer email, this time sending shockwaves through the tech world with two words - "Sorry, no." According to a Mac rumors blog , a German user emailed Jobs asking if Apple was planning on "supporting/updating the iPhone 2G in the Future" and that was Jobs' answer. We know it's only been a couple of years since the iPhone was originally released, but is this all that surprising? Sponsor It has been nearly two years since the iPhone 2G was available for sale, though you can still find plenty of them on Ebay , but the same can be said for other old beasts . Should we really expect Apple to continue releasing updates for outdated hardware? As it is, the iPhone OS 4.0 isn't going to support the iPhone 3G for half of its functionality - what are we looking for with iPhone 2G support then? After all, with Apple's infamously closed platform, are we looking for much in the way of bug fixes and security holes? Now, if only Microsoft would do the same for Internet Explorer 6, we could all move on with our lives. Discuss

iphone logo dec08 Apple To End iPhone 2G Support? Jobs Says So

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Apple To End iPhone 2G Support? Jobs Says So

Tags:apple, asking-if-apple, iphone, Microsoft, really-expect, Steve Jobs, tech

Cartoon: iPad: Content Reader Or Creative Platform?

You're looking at what might be the first published cartoon created on an iPad. (Certainly the first one published on ReadWriteWeb.) From the moment rumours about an Apple tablet got serious, I was eager to learn whether it could be a vehicle for actual cartooning. Much of the buzz wasn't promising, suggesting the device would be geared more to consumers than content creators. Sponsor Yet even a device as small as the iPhone has shown remarkable potential with the advent of software like Brushes , which produced artwork good enough - admittedly, thanks to a very talented artist - to become a New Yorker cover . So when Steve Jobs made his Jan. 27 announcement, I was hoping against hope to hear that the device might be a worthy competitor to my beloved (but heavy and unwieldy) Cintiq . In retrospect, that was wildly unrealistic, but I was still disappointed not to hear words like "pressure-sensitive" or "stylus". Yesterday, thanks to the heroic early-morning efforts of my wife , I got my hands on an iPad of my own. And after seeing what my daughter did with Doodle Buddy, I quickly installed Brushes and Autodesk's SketchBook Pro - two drawing apps for nominal grown-ups. After a little experimentation, I landed on SketchBook as my tool of choice for my first experimental cartoon. Still, I had a problem: my big ol' meaty index finger, which is not only a terribly imprecise drawing tool but also a very effective obstacle to seeing just what it is I'm drawing. I quickly found myself hankering for the fine-grained control of my Cintiq's stylus. That was when I remembered the Pogo Sketch ... and discovered it was sold at the same Apple store that sold us our iPads. The Sketch is a slender stylus ending, not in a thin nylon tip like a Wacom stylus, but a soft kind-of-rubbery material that does the same capacitive magic as your finger. And in conjunction with SketchBook Pro, it seemed to mimic pressure-sensitivity. (That's important to many cartoonists, who like the dynamic feel of a line that changes width as they draw.) Most important, it allowed a degree of precision and control I just can't get with my finger, and it allowed me to draw the cartoon you see here. I can't say it's the same quality as cartoons I draw on the Cintiq or with pen and ink... but it's infinitely better than anything I'd achieved on the iPhone. And to me, at least, it holds the promise - as I get a little more practice - of becoming a truly portable sketching, inking and coloring solution. I can see it coming in handy for liveblogging, rough sketches or, on the road, an alternative to more desperate measures . How about you - if you're planning on getting an iPad, will you be using it mainly to read, view and hear content, or will it be a creative outlet, too? And if so, what are you going to make? More Noise to Signal. Discuss

2010.04.03.christen thumbnail Cartoon: iPad: Content Reader Or Creative Platform?

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Cartoon: iPad: Content Reader Or Creative Platform?

Tags:apple, apple tablet, cartoon, cartoons, cintiq, content creators, daughter, device, finger, from-the-moment, iPad, iphone, Read, sketch, Steve Jobs, tool, wife, worthy competitor
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