Showing posts with label iMac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iMac. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The curious case of Tim Cook, operations genius, and the missing iMacs


Bloomberg Contributing Editor Paul Kedrosky discusses the Apple iMac shipping delays on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.”



Paul Kedrosky: This [iMac situation] is, at best puzzling, and, at worst, a condemnation of what’s happening inside the company because it speaks you both managing the supply chain, sure, but also just the straight up manufacturablity of their products. If you’re unable to manufacture products that you’re speccing, at the volumes that you anticipate selling, that suggests that your selling products that you haven’t gone though the right manufacturing validation for – and that goes directly to Tim Cook’s feet.



I think what’s happening is that the company is losing sight of manufacturability when builds product and you can say what;s probably happening is that Jony Ives [sic] is increasingly, you know, running the show; we’re getting some lovely, aesthetically-designed products, but there’s no tension on the other side saying, “Hey, wait a minute, Jony, this product; we’re going to have problems here, here, here, and here in terms of getting enough units of flat panels or memory or whatever else and so, as a result, the manufacture of these products is probably going to be poor and we’re going to have problems satisfying our customers which means that, they’re not just going to wait around for us, they’re going to go somewhere else.



MacDailyNews Take: Kedrosky doesn’t understand Mac users, that much is sure.



Paul Kedrosky: What I think you’re really seeing under the hood here, is sort of the , you know, usurping a great deal of the executive control at Apple by the design staff led by Jony Ives [sic] and, as a result, what Apple used to be good at, which was this tension between design and manufacturability, with manufacturability led by Cook, that’s gone. Now it’s: “Let’s build pretty stuff and maybe one day we can figure out how to ship it in volume” and it’s shareholders who are finding out the consequences of that.



Direct link to video here.



MacDailyNews Take: Does Kedrosky offer proof to back up his claims? Nope. Until we see some actual proof, this remains just a little fiction spun entirely in Kedrosky’s head. Apple screwed up with the iMac supply. Everyone knows it. Nobody knows why. This is because Apple insists on sitting there mum and, as they will hopefully someday finally figure out, in the absence of information, information will be created to fill the void.



Kedrosky is offering his explanation. He doesn’t understand the level of Mac users’ loyalty and he confuses iPhone users with Mac users, to boot. He doesn’t even know Jony Ive’s name; it’s “Ive,” not “Ives.” (Burl Ives, Jony Ive, m’kay, Paul?) Plus Kedrosky offers no proof that iPhone users went elsewhere during initial product shortages. In fact, all of the verifiable proof we have says otherwise:



Apple tops Samsung, becomes largest mobile phone vendor in U.S. in Q4 2012 – February 1, 2013
Almost half of Verizon's record iPhone sales were Apple iPhone 5 units – January 22, 2013
Apple iPhone continues lead with 51.2% U.S. market share as Android users increasingly switch to iPhone – January 22, 2013
Apple iPhone takes 53.3% of U.S. smartphone sales, Android falls to 41.9% – January 7, 2013



In the end, however, Kedrosky cannot be blamed for weaving whatever fairy tale he wants to weave; it’s Apple’s institutionalized cone of silence that’s to blame for creating the information vacuum in the first place. In other words, just tell us that the friction-stir welding process (or whatever) ran into an unforeseen snag and that you’re working on the issue and hope to have iMacs in customers’ hands ASAP, Apple. It’s okay to simply admit and explain the issues to customers, Apple. We’ll understand. Really, we will.



With such a simple statement, none of this soap opera bovine excrement would be floating around out there.



Related article:
Paul Kedrosky on what's gone wrong at Apple: Power balance has been altered – February 2, 2013


Monday, December 3, 2012

Apple’s new iMac: Assembled in USA


“Your next Mac could be assembled in America. Apple is assembling at least some of the new, ultra-thin iMacs in the U.S.,” Matt Burns reports for TechCrunch.



“The backside stamp containing the serial code and FCC logo generally says ‘Designed by Apple in California. Assembled in China,’” Burns reports. “But several owners of the new model quickly discovered their machines were made in the good ol' US of A.”



Burns reports, “Apple has long made its products in the U.S. Its Elk Grove, Calif., complex opened in 1992 and retrofitted from a distribution center into a manufacturing plant in 1995. During the iMac's heyday, it employed more than 1,500 people and pumped out computers seven days a week. The plant made its last computer in 2004 when then SVP of Worldwide Operations, Tim Cook, consolidated Apple's manufacturing in what would be a successful move to maximize efficiency and margins. The Sacramento Business Journal noticed in September that Elk Grove's workforce had grown 50 percent on the year. This could be the location of the iMac's secret manufacturing base.”



iMac. Designed by Apple in California. Assembled in USA.



Read more in the full article here.


Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Thank British eggheads for Apple’s new iMac’s sexy seamless knife-edge


“A little-known British company is the brains behind technology in the new super-slim iMacs that Apple CEO Tim Cook raved about on stage,” Anna Leach reports for The Register. “That admired tech is the tapered aluminium edge at the 5mm-wide end of Apple’s latest thin desktops, which were revealed at an event in October.”



“The welding technique that has made the new iMac so thin is the intellectual property of Cambridge-based company TWI,” Leach reports. “The Apple iMac is just 5mm thick around the edges of the display on the all-in-one computer, and the aluminium join is made possible by friction-stir welding.”



Advertisement: The New iMac starts at $1,154.99 with Free Mac Products after rebate and & FREE Shipping



Leach reports, “Invented in 1991 by Wayne Thomas at TWI, friction-stir welding is a solid-state process, meaning that it doesn’t require the materials to be melted for them to be joined. Instead it softens and merges the edges by mixing the two materials under frictional heat... Apple licensed the tech earlier this year and has been testing it since then. Iain Smith, associate director and intellectual property manager of TWI, would not reveal the commercial details of the deal with Apple.”



Apple's all-new iMac (8th gen)



Apple’s all-new iMac (8th gen)



 



Read more in the full article here.


Thursday, November 15, 2012

How Apple could build the dominant computing platform


“Computer processors keep on shrinking, which improves their power and reduces their energy needs and costs. In the not too distant future, this means full PC power in your mobile phone, which could be seamless from your tablet/PC experience,” Shareholders Unite write for Seeking Alpha. “However, we’re not there yet, and there are awkward trade-offs and compromises involving different types of processors and operating systems in the meantime.... Apple (AAPL) is best positioned to eliminate these trade-offs and compromises and arrive first at a unified computing platform.”



“Apple ould have a serious headstart here. Take not of the fact that according to Bloomberg, Apple is seriously considering ditching Intel processors in favor of ARM based ones even for its iMacs,” Shareholders Unite write. “With the coming 64-bit architecture for the ARM based platform, memory limits (the 32-bit chips limit RAM to 4GB) will be a thing of the past. Apple has a long-standing relation with ARM going back to the 1980s and at one stage owned over 40% of the company. Moving to ARM based chips would give Apple, which has heavily invested in chip design capabilities lately, more freedom to design chips according to its own specifications, giving it a leg up versus the competition... Apple pays under $20 for its A6 processor, compare that to Intel processors, a low end Core i3 starts at $117.”



Shareholders Unite write, “Apple could be moving to a single operating system, combined with its own designed chips that go into every Apple device. This would not only give the company a unified space for mobile, tablets, and PC’s, it would create a seamless consumer experience, and doing so at a significant cost advantage... Apple’s lead could be difficult to overcome, at least in the consumer space.”



Read more in the full article here.



MacDailyNews Take: Apple already has built the dominant computing platform. Apple is, by far, the #1 computer maker on earth.