Apple Has Bought Over 100 Companies Over the Past Six Years, Tim Cook Tells Investors (bloomberg.com) 44
Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook fielded questions on mergers and acquisitions, the impact of Covid-19, and the company's supply chain during a virtual shareholder meeting on Tuesday. From a report: Narrating a slide show, Cook summarized many of the company's new products and initiatives announced over the past year. He spoke about the latest iPhones and the growing potential of the Apple Watch, while noting that the AirPods Max headphones have quickly become "hugely popular" with users. He also discussed Apple's efforts to combat the pandemic, climate change, and the San Francisco Bay Area housing crisis. During a question and answer session, Cook said Apple is on track to meet its environment goals, including becoming carbon neutral by 2030 and transitioning its products to using recycled materials. He also reiterated Apple's recent privacy changes, including an imminent plan to limit ad targeting on its devices. Cook said the company bought almost 100 smaller companies over the past six years and makes a deal about every three to four weeks. Asked about gender pay equity, the CEO said Apple pays men and women equally across the world and has stopped asking applicants about their salary history to help ensure equity.
Tag options (Score:2)
Tag article "walledgarden" or "killzone"?
Re: Still support slave labor (Score:2)
Instead of starting trade wars, Trump should have pushed the notion of not trading with countries and entities that don't have labor standards. Make a focus on human rights instead of numbers. Our factories can't compete with de-facto slaves.
I agree, but I'm unsurprised that he didn't, because Trump doesn't give a shit about human rights or labor standards. He just wanted to score points and look tough and but is and always has been incompetent so it didn't work out.
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Our factories can't compete with de-facto slaves.
"Our" factories don't need to compete. The people who own "our" factories are making plenty of money off the slave labour thanks very much.
The huge multinational I work for makes literally billions from China, for example.
Re:Still support slave labor (Score:4, Insightful)
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"enhance ones status among their peers"
Apple products do this?
Uh, where? In what context?
Whenever I see the Apple logo I certainly associate a status to the user of it, but it's not an enhanced status, quite the reverse...
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The GP is referring to all the macs you see at physics conferences, live or virtual. The physicists are clearly using them to enhance their social standing and show how unenhanced is their status. Damn PhDs, doing all that mathematics just to make you (DethLok) look stupid.
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(BTW, suppose Apple does make the changes you think they should, when those jobs come back to the US with health insurance and all, and phones go to $2,700.00. How could people bitch? They're already bitching as much as is humanly possible, how could they do more? I get what you're saying; I lived in a time when you could work
Re: Still support slave labor (Score:2)
Partly that and also partly to 'buy' specific people who would be happy to get a job at Apple but who first want the buyout as a sort of big signing bonus.
It's hardly unusual for startups to have as their business plan getting bought up by someone bigger. Way easier than actually having to get to market.
What I don't think Apple is doing is trying to squash rivals (though there is some of that due to how the patent system works; mandatory licensing and abolishing software patents as unnecessary would be help
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I think that's the nefarious proposition of the "buyout" mindset. People stop doing really interesting innovation, they act more like an on-spec informal R&D department of their desired buyout parent, coming up with specifically "disruptive" stuff targeting that buyout parent's products.
There's some chance these end up as legitimate feature enhancements of the buyout parent, but often they seem to just get absorbed and shelved because the buyout parent has some other global dominance plan going and the
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Buying IP is exactly what Cook said they were doing in the article (as reported by theRegister), that and personnel. However, personnel have a tendency to go walkabout which I'm sure Cook realizes.
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There is reason to keep pressure on companies that trade human lives for profit. It might have resulted in better laws in the US to protects meatpackers, hundreds who died from COVID along with the dozens yearly due to improper safety. It has forced the apparel designers to significantly decrease its use of forced labor.
The possible genocide aspects ma
Re: Still support slave labor (Score:2)
Many of these jobs are considered high paying by Chinese standards. The issue you seem to be confused about is currency devaluation. When the USD trades 7 to 1 with the RMB, and many cities would have anything above 10k RMB as a decent wage, then you can quickly do the math and see that Chinese labor is very cheap. They often are more use to shitty dorms and 6 days a week of work. This is actually helpful to keep the party in power. poverty is being eliminated but it's extremely costly for Chinese to tra
They want to control all ad sales on the platform (Score:2)
He also reiterated Apple's recent privacy changes, including an imminent plan to limit ad targeting on its devices
Yeah, because they'd rather become the orifice [rmf.vc] through which they can control ad dollars on the platform, because "courage".
(P.S. iAd was a total failure)
Competition, my ass (Score:5, Insightful)
I wonder how things would be different if anti-trust was enforced and we didn't have big oligopolies. Oligopolies are often on the bottom of customer satisfaction surveys in different industries. Airlines, cable, telephone, cars, you name it: the fewer competitors the bigger their suckage.
Those who talk about the "efficiency of the free market" often use the power of competition to explain why the "free market" is so great, but oligopolies have too few competitors, and usually slip and coast in both innovation and customer service. So, which is it?
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Oligopolies are often on the bottom of customer satisfaction surveys in different industries.
It's become a bit of a running gag in the Apple-adjacent blogs and podcasts that while Steve Jobs loved to talk about human-centric product design, Tim Cook loves bragging about "customer sat".
While I agree that oligopolies generally lead to worse outcomes, the fact is that Apple remains at or near the top of nearly every "customer sat" poll in the markets in which they compete. There are some notable exceptions—I'm looking at you, Siri—but they're notable because they're exceptions to the gener
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Early on they may focus on customer satisfaction, but if the pressure goes away, they'll slack off. Maybe Apple will always have the niche of "Cadillac of smart phones", but it's hard to say. If for example, something replaces smart phones (implants?) and they feel they're doomed, they could turn into sue-happy jerks like Oracle who don't seem to care about the long term anymore.
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Those who talk about the "efficiency of the free market" often use the power of competition to explain why the "free market" is so great, but oligopolies have too few competitors, and usually slip and coast in both innovation and customer service. So, which is it?
It's a misuse and misunderstanding of the term (or general poor English), that is all. Take highschool economics or any first year economics classes at university and one of the first things you learn is that "free market" has nothing to do with competition (it's about regulation, or rather the absence of) and that the what you thought was called "free market" is actually called a "perfect market" or "perfect competition". The true level playing field. [1]
A "free market" describes only a market devoid of re
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"...the "free market" is so great..."
Yep, just ask any Texan!
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Some things require huge capital investment. Would you risk $10 billion building an electric car or 5 nanometere CPU manufacturing factory if someone can just take the company from you? Most people won't buy a lottery ticket unless they had a chance of making 100 million dollars from it. That's a 1 to 100,000,000 ratio. Do you think anyone would put millions into a semiconductor factory if there were a near guarantee to make big money from it? If you inject volatility into the market big capital investment
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This. Above a certain size, companies should no longer be able to acquire or merge with other companies. Above a somewhat larger size, they should be forced to divest.
Economy of scale is great, and all. However, past a certain point, it become poisonous to the larger society. Rule of thumb: "too big to fail" should not exist. If a company-shattering event would motivate the government to step in, then the company is too big. Apple has long since passed that point.
Layoffs (Score:4, Insightful)
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Buyouts are the new innovation? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Apple is courageously buying innovation wholesale.
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It's cheaper to buy companies than license patents.
Having an idea is one thing.. (Score:2)
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Is this so bad?
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For the same reason a company hires new people. Or do you think innovative companies shouldn't hire anyone since they are "already innovative" ?
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A new neighbor a few years back said that Apple had purchase his database technology company. They were scheduled to live/work near Apple HQ for a few years to get the maximum payout. Presumably it was a necessary non-open source technology that Apple wanted to control to assist with their scaling.
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When I see the term "equity" (Score:4, Insightful)
I ignore everything following it.
It's like reading "running dog capitalist" in an essay.
neee (Score:1)
Carbon neutral and recycled inputs are bullshit .. (Score:2)
Carbon neutral just means they massively overprovision and sell what they don't need. A high margin company doing that for PR is almost useless in getting a nation to 100% renewables ... raising the value of green energy a tiny bit does not help create a market for the TWh scale storage we need to go 100% renewable as a nation.
Similarly recycled inputs will only raise the value of recycled materials a tiny bit, not nearly enough to get the massive investments we need to get better recycling of complex waste
The New Fast Track (Score:2)
Asked about gender pay equity, the CEO said Apple pays men and women equally across the world and has stopped asking applicants about their salary history to help ensure equity.
Shortly before I retired from an F500 company a couple years ago, we were instructed that we should no longer ask about salary history. This still hurts my brain, but I understand the reasoning. Now, as a 20-something, if you're any good at faking your way through interview questions, you should ask for huge numbers...whatever you think they can afford and then some (as a starting negotiating position).
Some of the "rules" about interviews crack me up. We had a consultant tell us that we could also not gi