Top stories

Apple Devotes Entire Home Page To Jerome York Obituary

20100318-york.jpg

If ever you needed a sign that Apple was a different kind of technology company, this is it.
What other computer manufacturer would remove its top-selling, hype-inducing, industry-altering new product from the prime spot on its website home page, and replace it with an obituary to an investor?
This is one of those “Here’s to the [...]

Coming Soon: Steve Jobs, the Sitcom

Fake Steve creator Dan Lyons just signed a deal to bring Steve Jobs to another small screen near you.
The half-hour series called “iCon” is billed by the presser as “a savage satire centering on a fictional Silicon Valley CEO whose ego is a study in power and greed.”
Making sure the barbs prick will be the [...]

What’s Next For the iPad? A Tabletop iPad, According to Xerox PARC Circa 1991

Way back in 1991, just as Apple was transitioning from 68k to PowerPC chips, the braniacs at Xerox PARC were predicting it’s entire iPod, iPhone and iPad strategy. And next up for the iPad is a blackboard-sized device.
Nearly 20 years ago, just as personal desktop computers were taking off, researchers at Xerox started thinking about [...]

iPhone App Arms Users With Silent Panic Button

A new app called Silent Bodyguard features a panic button that sends an SOS distress signal with GPS coordinates to potential rescuers without alerting onlookers.
While the $3.99 app, available on iTunes, isn’t the first ICE (in case of emergency) app, this one is backed by Dr. Clint Van Zandt, former FBI chief hostage negotiator and criminal [...]

Moto Drops To 6.5 Percent of Cell Phone Market

Troubled cell phone maker Motorola Tuesday announced its shipments were cut in half during the fall, its marketshare falling to 6.5 percent.

The Schaumburg, Ill.-based company said it shipped 19.2 million phones during the December quarter, a 47 percent decline from nearly 41 million handsets sold during the same period in 2007.

As a result, the company posted a $3.6 billion quarterly loss highlighted by continued bleeding by its Mobile Devices group. Motorola said the group ended the December quarter down $595 million. The handset area lost $388 million during the same period a year ago.

The glum financial news was marked by naming its comptroller Edward J. Fitzpatrick as acting chief financial officer, replacing CFO Paul J. Liska.

Motorola head Greg Brown thanked Liska for his role in recent job cuts and other cost-saving measures.

Motorola’s slumping marketshare means the cell phone maker falls to fifth place behind Sony Ericsson and LG. In late 2008, Apple’s iPhone dethroned Motorola’s iconic RAZR as the most popular U.S. handset.

If you enjoyed this article:
Subscribe via RSS or email, or follow us on Facebook and Twitter

About the author

Ed Sutherland

Ed Sutherland is a veteran technology journalist who first heard of Apple when they grew on trees, Yahoo was run out of a Stanford dorm and Google was an unknown upstart. Since then, Sutherland has covered the whole technology landscape, concentrating on tracking the trends and figuring out the finances of large (and small) technology companies.

Email the author | Read more posts by Ed Sutherland.

One comment

    Perhaps if their products weren’t so clunky, they’d do better. The Razr was a great form factor, but the OS was simply horrible, unless, like me, you were prepared to spend a day reorganising it so you had shortcuts to minimise the amount of interaction you needed to do to achieve something basic. Even the shortest of texts was a trial compared to a Nokia contemporary. I still have my Razr, and I do still have a bit of a soft spot for it because it looked great and wasd a really well-built, tactile handset, but I was so glad to go back to a Nokia interface after about nine months. Now, I have an iPhone, and of course, that’s a whole new ballgame. Moto have a LOT of work to do.

Buy Inside Steve's Brain Buy from Amazon.com Buy from Barnes & Noble