Search results for Apple tag - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

Browse by Tags

  • Dude, you're getting a dud

    Posted Dec 18 2007, 08:52 AM by Robert Walberg
    Rating:
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    Remember when it was cool to own/buy a Dell computer? Not that long ago it was Dell, not Apple, that had the laid back young kid starring in commercials that resonated with consumers.  "Dude, it's a Dell,"  was the stuff of genius. Dell's were cool, they were cheap and they were everywhere.  

    Yet in little less than five years Dell has gone from cool to ice cold. Its share of the PC market has eroded due to misguided retail practices, poor customer service and outdated design. The company has also lost its price advantage. Despite the cheap prices you see on the company's web site, or in the flyers that arrive in the mail, once you configure the computer to match even the most basic of needs, the price ends up being as high or higher as PCs from Toshiba, Hewlett Packard and Acer.  

    Quite simply there's nothing that sets the company apart anymore -- at least nothing positive.  Its abysmal technical service group certainly set it apart, as waiting on the Dell help desk was an exercise bordering on cruelty. To its credit, Dell's management team has begun to address this issue by adding staff, but once you get a bad reputation it can be very hard to change consumer perceptions.  Dell has a lot of making up to do and some blunt talk from its back-in-the-saddle CEO, Michael Dell, just might help remake its image. Let's face it, Apple was left for dead a few years back and look at what the return of Steve Jobs did for that company.    Read More...

    Discuss ( 1,724 comments) 350,366 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • Time Warner trial ends flat-rate Internet fees

    Posted Jan 17 2008, 12:32 PM by Kim Peterson
    Rating:
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    Talk about bad timing. Apple just announced it will offer downloaded movie rentals (including high-def) over the Internet. Netflix is working on a set-top box to do the same thing, and Microsoft has been ramping up its downloadable movie offerings over Xbox Live. 

    Now, one cable company is starting to push back at excessive bandwidth usage caused mainly by video downloading. After an internal memo was leaked, Time Warner Cable confirmed it's planning a trial in Beaumont, Tex., in which it will charge Internet subscribers based on usage. (Time Warner's shares closed down 22 cents to $22.35 Friday.)

    It's a tricky situation for Time Warner and other cable companies. Customers generally pay a flat rate for Internet (about $50 a month in my case), but a small minority are basically torrenting HD movies like crazy and sucking up a bunch of bandwidth. According to the leaked memo, 5% of subscribers were using up half of the total bandwidth.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 417 comments) 294,300 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • Goodbye Moto

    Posted Nov 20 2007, 11:32 AM by Robert Walberg
    Rating:
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    Like the song says, "some say love is a Razr that leaves your soul to bleed." Well, my soul has bled waiting for Motorola's stock to turn around.  I can't wait any longer -- I'm not Job, after all.

    Motorola has been screwing up for so long, it even gets it wrong when it gets it right. Last quarter the company delivered another lousy set of sales and earnings numbers, yet it guided fiscal fourth-quarter earnings to a range of 13 to 14 cents a share -- a few pennies above The Street's consensus.  Normally, guiding estimates higher would be perceived as a good thing, and it was at first as the stock edged higher on the news.  However, in offering up hope for the fourth quarter and the upcoming year, CEO Ed Zander might have won himself a new contract. And that's bad news.  

    You see one of the reasons I bought Motorola's stock down at its lows was in anticipation of a new management team.  Typically when a struggling company finally ousts its old CEO in favor of someone new and full of promise, the underlying stock tends to rally. Until recently, Zander's ouster was all but certain. But in light of the company's modest progress off a terrible set of numbers, Zander might just hang around.  Let's face it, he did take all the credit for the Razr so there might be a board member or two who thinks he's on the verge of another one-hit wonder.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 170 comments) 276,133 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • Apple on pace to become top music seller

    Posted Feb 27 2008, 06:53 AM by Kim Peterson
    Rating:
    Filed under: , , ,
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    Apple's iTunes store has surpassed Best Buy to become the #2 music retailer in the country, second only to Wal-Mart in sales. And an analyst from the NPD Group, which tracks these sorts of things, said that Apple is on track to catch Wal-Mart this year.

    Apple shares dipped less than a percentage point yesterday to close at $119.15. Best Buy shares rose 3% to $46.50, and Wal-Mart shares rose 2% to $51.40.

    This news says much about the way we consume music. NPD notes that 1 million people stopped buying CDs last year, a trend most apparent in young people. In 2007, 48% of teens didn't buy a single CD -- up from 38% in 2006. So retailers like Wal-Mart, Best Buy and Target -- who mainly sell physical CDs -- are going to see music sales slide.

    But what does the news say about Apple? Is the rise to No. 2 a result of its own sales savvy, or is iTunes the lucky beneficiary of the CD's decline? A closer look at the numbers sheds a little more light.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 239 comments) 264,502 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • Steve Jobs' demise greatly exaggerated

    Posted Aug 28 2008, 11:52 AM by Kim Peterson
    Rating:
    Filed under:
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    It's a well-known secret that news organizations write obituaries of famous people before they're dead. Better to have a well-written and thorough obituary ready to go instead of rushing something together at the last moment.

    But every so often, someone along the chain screws up and hits the "publish" button early. It happened with writeups about Mark Twain, Bob Hope and Pope John Paul II. And Wednesday, it happened to Apple CEO Steve Jobs.

    Jobs "helped make personal computers as easy to use as telephones, changed the way animated films are made, persuaded consumers to tune into digital music and refashioned the mobile phone," according to a premature obituary published by Bloomberg News.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 249 comments) 264,216 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • Would you pay for unlimited iTunes?

    Posted Mar 19 2008, 08:02 AM by Kim Peterson
    Rating:
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    After pooh-poohing music subscription services for years, Apple is talking to labels about that very idea, according to the Financial Times. It's about time. Apple could really energize iPod sales this way. But here's the twist: instead of the regular pay-every-month scenario, the fee would be bundled up front into the price of an iPod or iPhone.

    In other words, if you pay more when you buy the iPod, you could get free access to all the music on iTunes for the life of the device. Executives talking to the FT said research has shown that people will pay up to $100 for that, or they would be willing to pay a $7 to $8 monthly fee for a music subscription.

    Nokia has a similar deal in place for devices it's developing, and reportedly will pay music labels $80 for every device sold. Apple, in its typical drive-the-labels-nuts fashion, has only offered to pay about $20, according to the FT. Nokia is being hit hard with the news today; its shares have fallen nearly 8% this morning to $30.17. Apple shares are down less than 1% to $132.04, and shares in RealNetworks, which owns the competing Rhapsody music subscription service, are down nearly 2%. Napster shares are down 3%.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 189 comments) 232,039 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • Netflix lifts limits on streaming movies

    Posted Jan 14 2008, 03:24 AM by Kim Peterson
    Rating:
    Filed under: ,
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    Netflix does most of its business by mail, but the company is getting ready for the future by spending $40 million on a video streaming service for customers with high-speed Internet connections. Today, the company is lifting restrictions on that service so that customers can watch as many movies and television shows as they want from Netflix's library of 6,000 titles.

    Netflix previously set time limits on how much customers could watch per month, presumably to save money on bandwidth and the fees it must pay Hollywood when a movie is streamed. Today's move could be costly, because the company isn't raising its monthly rates to compensate for the added expenses.

    Why the sudden burst of generosity? We probably have Apple to thank. If the rumors are true, Apple is set to announce movie rentals over iTunes tomorrow at its Macworld Expo. Apple hasn't been much of a competitor to Netflix before, but with a movie rental service the company becomes a threat.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 565 comments) 194,668 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • Consumer electronics disaster ahead, analyst predicts

    Posted Mar 13 2008, 11:02 AM by Kim Peterson
    Rating:
    Filed under: , ,
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    Jonathan Goldberg seems like a glass-half-empty kinda guy. The Deutsche Bank analyst has been checking in with retailers for weeks about consumer electronics sales, and many companies told him they "have yet to see an impact" in earnings from any economic slowdown.

    Sounds great, right? Nope, Goldberg interprets that to mean the worst is yet to come. "The increase in gas prices and difficulties in home financing will have to reduce consumer spending, and as this becomes apparent to companies we will face a round of missed quarters and lowered guidance," he wrote in a note to investors.

    Goldberg cut price targets today on four companies: GPS device maker Garmin, wireless chipmaker Atheros, wireless networking hardware maker Netgear and mobile content maker Glu Mobile. Shares of all four companies are down today, and Glu Mobile seeing the worst drop of nearly 9%.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 206 comments) 191,255 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • Service flaws anger iPhone users

    Posted Sep 22 2009, 10:26 AM by Kim Peterson
    Rating:
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    Image credit: AppleMy sister wanted to get Apple's iPhone, but the service was so bad in Tucson, Ariz., that she decided against it. And Cnet's Elinor Mills writes that iPhone calls from her San Francisco apartment are dropping or are garbled.

    While the iPhone itself draws raves from adoring fans, AT&T's (T) wireless service leaves much to be desired for some. Mills says her iPhone service is so bad it's often easier to have a Web video conference than make a simple voice call.

    She called AT&T to ask why, and was told that maybe the thickness of her walls or the network demand were to blame. AT&T insisted the issue was not newsworthy. And presto: That's the fastest way to make sure a reporter treats something as newsworthy.

    Bing: How people deal with iPhone dropped calls

    Mills' story seems to be touching a nerve,   Read More...

    Discuss ( 1,347 comments) 162,771 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
  • My Kindle ate my homework?

    Posted Jul 31 2009, 12:36 PM by Minyanville
    Rating:
    Money Blog: Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money

    Image credit: Amazon.comThis article was written by Minyanville's Scott Reeves

    A Michigan teen has a novel excuse for not getting his homework in on time: Amazon's (AMZN) Kindle ate his book report.

    Justin Gawronski, 17, is a contemporary kid, so he got an attorney to press his claim against Amazon in federal court.

    Mixing high-tech and lawyers suggests the old ways are best: Pen, paper, and the family dog have served generations of slackers admirably.

    Gawronski, an advanced-placement student, said his notes lost all relevance when Amazon deleted electronic copies of George Orwell’s "Nineteen Eighty-Four" from his Kindle during a copyright dispute.

    Gawronski says he used the electronic book reader’s note function to make comments and annotations as he read the book, when -- zap! -- the text of the novel disappeared, thanks to the Thought Police at Amazon. This left him with comments referring only to empty disc space.   Read More...

    Discuss ( 369 comments) 148,596 Views Digg this | Email this | Link to this
More Posts Next page »