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natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
But Apple's market share is falling and has been for a while. This bad PR Apple just bought itself with its ridiculous litigation is just another straw in the camel's back, so to speak.BigBallinStalin wrote:RE: viewership. If one is of the anti-apple persuasion, it won't matter if he/she is already going to buy a non-apple product. So the observation of "care" from views on whatever article does not reflect the attitudes of the relevant target markets for apple.
If one wishes to assert that since people care about this issue, then it'll hurt apple's profitability, it may be false because the observed data does includes more than apple's specific target markets (i.e. customer bases).

NPR has reported it.thegreekdog wrote:This thread is not about the harmful patent system; it's about Apple's abuses of the patent system. If other companies abused the patent system similarly, perhaps there would be more public outcry. I used the term "computer scientist" because people that seem to be interested in this appear to be people interested in computer products at something more than a consumer level.natty dread wrote:Well, you can concentrate on what you want. But you should know that you don't have to be a computer scientists to understand how harmful the patent system is. It's not just computers, it affects all areas of life and business.
Moreover, the labor issues aren't exclusive to apple, although I'm certainly not saying this excuses such practices.
(1) No mention of patent law or Apple in either national convention.natty dread wrote:Again: how do you know there is no interest in the general public? On what do you base this assertion?
(2) No mention of patent law or Apple by any prominent presidential candidate otherwise.
(3) I read one article on this from Forbes, hardly the bastion of public sentiment. That article recalled the decision favorably, by the way. I've read no other news articles on the subject.
(4) A quick google search reveals three articles: Nasdaq, Forbes, and Wired (a blog apparently). None of those are widely read by the general American public.
(5) All other google searches reveal articles with the word or phrase "tech" or "technology" or are located in techie parts of major newspapers.
Although I speak only for myself, I tend to determine whether the general public is interested in something based upon whether there is a headline article on cnn.com, Drudge report (he hates Apple by the way), or the WSJ.com. I have not seen this regarding Apple. Unless Fox, MSNBC, or the New York Times (other widely read publications/news, but not by me) are reporting on this, I don't think public sentiment is strong on this.
Did I ask you to stop posting? Did I indicate you should stop posting?john9blue wrote:hey greek, why should we stop posting about injustice just because people aren't aware of it or aren't motivated enough to want to correct it? nice ad populum fallacy bro
that moment when you realize... that we're trying to make YOU carethegreekdog wrote:Did I ask you to stop posting? Did I indicate you should stop posting?john9blue wrote:hey greek, why should we stop posting about injustice just because people aren't aware of it or aren't motivated enough to want to correct it? nice ad populum fallacy bro
Seriously though, you guys should spend less time railing against me for telling you that no one really cares and start trying to make people care. You can bring up all the "you made a strawman" and "nice ad populum fallacy" shit you want to bro, but until you get more people to have pain from this, ain't nothing going to happen.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Its also about having viable alternatives.thegreekdog wrote:Did I ask you to stop posting? Did I indicate you should stop posting?john9blue wrote:hey greek, why should we stop posting about injustice just because people aren't aware of it or aren't motivated enough to want to correct it? nice ad populum fallacy bro
Seriously though, you guys should spend less time railing against me for telling you that no one really cares and start trying to make people care. You can bring up all the "you made a strawman" and "nice ad populum fallacy" shit you want to bro, but until you get more people to have pain from this, ain't nothing going to happen.
Seriously, do you guys not read posts? Do you have a problem with the written English language?john9blue wrote:that moment when you realize... that we're trying to make YOU carethegreekdog wrote:Did I ask you to stop posting? Did I indicate you should stop posting?john9blue wrote:hey greek, why should we stop posting about injustice just because people aren't aware of it or aren't motivated enough to want to correct it? nice ad populum fallacy bro
Seriously though, you guys should spend less time railing against me for telling you that no one really cares and start trying to make people care. You can bring up all the "you made a strawman" and "nice ad populum fallacy" shit you want to bro, but until you get more people to have pain from this, ain't nothing going to happen.
Link please. I need to listen to this now so I can find out if NPR reported on the story or indicated that Apple was engaged in bad juju. I suspect the former, which, again shows that no one cares.PLAYER57832 wrote:NPR has reported it.
so let me get this straight:thegreekdog wrote:Seriously, do you guys not read posts? Do you have a problem with the written English language?john9blue wrote: that moment when you realize... that we're trying to make YOU care
I indicated multiple times that I do care. For f*ck's sake. I'm not arguing with Natty or anyone else about whether I care or should care. For the fucking fifteenth time, people do not care.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
They did a bunch on several aspects of the story. What is your specific interest?thegreekdog wrote:
Link please. I need to listen to this now so I can find out if NPR reported on the story or indicated that Apple was engaged in bad juju. I suspect the former, which, again shows that no one cares.PLAYER57832 wrote:NPR has reported it.
Please show me where I typed the following: "You should stop spreading the word about this injustice." You show me where I typed that and I'll do whatever you want me to do.john9blue wrote:so let me get this straight:thegreekdog wrote:Seriously, do you guys not read posts? Do you have a problem with the written English language?john9blue wrote: that moment when you realize... that we're trying to make YOU care
I indicated multiple times that I do care. For f*ck's sake. I'm not arguing with Natty or anyone else about whether I care or should care. For the fucking fifteenth time, people do not care.
you agree with our stance, yet you come in this thread and tell us that we should stop spreading the word about this injustice because nobody cares, despite the fact that we are spreading the word in an effort to get more people to care?
you're trying to stop our efforts to raise awareness about your own views, by telling us that not enough people are aware of our views?
what a dumb idea. are you being completely honest in this thread? i was wondering when your inner lawyer would make an appearance on this forum.
Nevertheless, the citing of general viewership on the lawsuit would not lead to accurate conclusions about future apple revenues.natty dread wrote:But Apple's market share is falling and has been for a while. This bad PR Apple just bought itself with its ridiculous litigation is just another straw in the camel's back, so to speak.BigBallinStalin wrote:RE: viewership. If one is of the anti-apple persuasion, it won't matter if he/she is already going to buy a non-apple product. So the observation of "care" from views on whatever article does not reflect the attitudes of the relevant target markets for apple.
If one wishes to assert that since people care about this issue, then it'll hurt apple's profitability, it may be false because the observed data does includes more than apple's specific target markets (i.e. customer bases).

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/ ... story.htmliOS (Apple Inc.’s iPad) — 40 million units, 66.6 percent share in 2011; projected 73 million units, 61.4 percent share in 2012
Android (Google Inc.) — 17.3 million units, 28.8 percent share in 2011; projected 37.9 million units, 31.9 percent share in 2012
Windows (Microsoft Corp.) — none in 2011; projected 4.9 million units, 4.1 percent share in 2012.
QNX/BlackBerry (Research in Motion Ltd.) — 807,000 units, 1.3 percent share in 2011; projected 2.6 million units, 2.2 percent share in 2012.
Other — 1.9 million units, 3.2 percent share in 2011; projected 510,000 units, 0.4 percent share in 2012.
well, you've doubted that natty's crusade against apple will have any luck, you've asserted that nobody cares about apple's patent trolling, you've implied that apple's practices will keep consumers happy in the end because their products are at a "price they can afford" (lol), and you've shown extreme pessimism about the willingness of customers to stop buying apple's products if the need arises.thegreekdog wrote: Please show me where I typed the following: "You should stop spreading the word about this injustice." You show me where I typed that and I'll do whatever you want me to do.
I'm surprised my inner lawyer has not made multiple previous appearances in this forum.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Excuse me but that's total bs. Android has the majority, ie. over 50% market share by now and has had it for a while.Here's data on market share:
iOS (Apple Inc.’s iPad) — 40 million units, 66.6 percent share in 2011; projected 73 million units, 61.4 percent share in 2012
Android (Google Inc.) — 17.3 million units, 28.8 percent share in 2011; projected 37.9 million units, 31.9 percent share in 2012




Apple is profitable because its profit margins are huge. Its market share is falling, but it makes good money out of it by charging ridiculous profit margins for its phones. This is something that may work for Apple in the short term, but history shows it will not be sustainable in the long term. When the market share falls so low that apple's platform becomes as irrelevant as windows phone, the developers are all going to jump ship over to android, and it won't take long for users to follow. I predict apple will have the same position in mobile as it has on the desktop side: only the diehard, religiously loyal apple-fanatics are going to stay as their customers.BigBallinStalin wrote:Is it falling? And what proportion of total market share matters?
It's not like having a huge market share is the primary cause of increased profits. (marginal costs could increase exponentially, thus overcoming marginal revenue).
Besides, the market for tablets and whatever has been expanding, so even if apple's proportion is shrinking, its quantity produced and revenues could still be expanding.

I can't criticize your evidence because there's no direct link for me to understand how they got those numbers...natty dread wrote:Excuse me but that's total bs. Android has the majority, ie. over 50% market share by now and has had it for a while.Here's data on market share:
iOS (Apple Inc.’s iPad) — 40 million units, 66.6 percent share in 2011; projected 73 million units, 61.4 percent share in 2012
Android (Google Inc.) — 17.3 million units, 28.8 percent share in 2011; projected 37.9 million units, 31.9 percent share in 2012
Even in the US:
So I really have no idea where your source has pulled those numbers, but I do know it's dark and gets wiped with soft paper regularly.
Gartner, Inc. (NYSE: IT) is the world's leading information technology research and advisory company. We deliver the technology-related insight necessary for our clients to make the right decisions, every day. From CIOs and senior IT leaders in corporations and government agencies, to business leaders in high-tech and telecom enterprises and professional services firms, to technology investors, we are the valuable partner to clients in 12,000 distinct organizations. Through the resources of Gartner Research, Gartner Executive Programs, Gartner Consulting and Gartner Events, we work with every client to research, analyze and interpret the business of IT within the context of their individual role. Founded in 1979, Gartner is headquartered in Stamford, Connecticut, U.S.A., and has 5,200 associates, including 1,280 research analysts and consultants, and clients in 85 countries.
2011 Revenue: $1.469 Billion USD
Stock price (IPO): ~$14 (2007)
Last price: $50 (2012)
Who knows what the market may have in store for us, which is why predictions made with actual money add strength to one's assertions.natty dread wrote:Apple is profitable because its profit margins are huge. Its market share is falling, but it makes good money out of it by charging ridiculous profit margins for its phones. This is something that may work for Apple in the short term, but history shows it will not be sustainable in the long term. When the market share falls so low that apple's platform becomes as irrelevant as windows phone, the developers are all going to jump ship over to android, and it won't take long for users to follow. I predict apple will have the same position in mobile as it has on the desktop side: only the diehard, religiously loyal apple-fanatics are going to stay as their customers.BigBallinStalin wrote:Is it falling? And what proportion of total market share matters?
It's not like having a huge market share is the primary cause of increased profits. (marginal costs could increase exponentially, thus overcoming marginal revenue).
Besides, the market for tablets and whatever has been expanding, so even if apple's proportion is shrinking, its quantity produced and revenues could still be expanding.
According to its stock prices, it isn't--so far! Nevertheless, the recent ruling could enable Apple to restrict the sales of its competitors, so the "camel" may become even stronger. And TGD still makes a good point which I'll refashion: if enough people don't care, then Apple's activities in the legal system may not affect its future target markets and their profits.This bad PR Apple just bought itself with its ridiculous litigation is just another straw in the camel's back, so to speak.
The sources are shown on the images themselves. It doesn't matter what sites those particular images are hosted on, you can check the sources themselves to find out how they got their numbers.BigBallinStalin wrote:I can't criticize your evidence because there's no direct link for me to understand how they got those numbers...
Sure, I can agree with those.BigBallinStalin wrote:Here's Gartner Inc. again:
Android - 64%
iOS - 19%
Sure, go ahead. I haven't posted any stats made by those sites.BigBallinStalin wrote:I'd take them more seriously than talkandriod.com, gadgetoz.com, and winbeta.org for market analysis.
On the other hand, you could say that people who don't "have a horse in the race" are more likely to make unbiased assessments. Idiots can waste away their money by betting on the wrong horse, and convince themselves due to sunk cost fallacy and commitment bias that they made the right decision.BigBallinStalin wrote:Who knows what the market may have in store for us, which is why predictions made with actual money add strength to one's assertions.
And like I said, market share does matter in the long run. I also gave you reasons why it matters which you've failed to address. Sure, Apple might survive on a diminishing market share, as a producer of niche applications with a small but loyal customer base, but it's days as a major player on the mobile market are numbered.Like I said, focusing strictly on market share doesn't matter after recognizing that the total share grows. If your market share is decreasing, yet your quantity and revenues are increasing (and profits), then the concern over market share may not matter at all.
Stock prices are not really a good indicator of long-term profitability. Everyone thought back in 2009 that Nokia shat pure gold and pissed diamonds. And now look at it, disemboweled by Microsoft's trojan horse Steven Fuckface Elop.BigBallinStalin wrote:Besides, the following is a bold assertion:
This bad PR Apple just bought itself with its ridiculous litigation is just another straw in the camel's back, so to speak.
According to its stock prices, it isn't--so far! Nevertheless, the recent ruling could enable Apple to restrict the sales of its competitors, so the "camel" may become even stronger. And TGD still makes a good point which I'll refashion: if enough people don't care, then Apple's activities in the legal system may not affect its future target markets and their profits.
It might be, it might not - I'm just saying, if I had any Apple stock I'd sell now.BigBallinStalin wrote:Google and Apple are roughly equal in terms of prices on shares. There's a lot of money riding on this, but I'm not bold enough to assert that this lawsuit and its ruling was the "straw that broke Apple's back."
I agree. Why do you think Android is so much more popular? People love open platforms that allow them the freedom they deserve. Apple tries to dictate how people should use their products, but that never works in the long term. Apple has the whole "innovation" thing arse-backwards. Real innovation is always born out of necessity - an answer or solution to an existing need. Apple tries to force its "vision" on its customers, tries to tell them "this is what you need and we're here to give it to you". But the thing is, people love freedom; if you look at the trend accross the history of mankind, we've always been striving towards more free paradigms.BigBallinStalin wrote:What is problematic for Apple is poor customer service--in the long-run, i.e. after people realize what Apple does to them (not in lawsuits) but in service, e.g. charging unnecessarily high prices and locking in the market with Contractual Agreements on insurance policies.

US is only a part of the global market. If Apple succeeds in getting an injuction against Samsung on US, it doesn't kill Samsung - they still have the rest of the world, only one who loses in that game is consumers.PLAYER57832 wrote:The real issue here is that since so much of apple's components, all computer components are made overseas, how much does US patent law really apply or matter....
How much does our "worry" about worker conditions even matter. China knows there is a serious limit to our power... it seems that many in the US have yet to recognize that fact.

Is it ethical to not support sweatshops, if these workers face the choice between a job that pays two to three times as much in a sweatshop compared to working all day in the fields?natty dread wrote:US is only a part of the global market. If Apple succeeds in getting an injuction against Samsung on US, it doesn't kill Samsung - they still have the rest of the world, only one who loses in that game is consumers.PLAYER57832 wrote:The real issue here is that since so much of apple's components, all computer components are made overseas, how much does US patent law really apply or matter....
How much does our "worry" about worker conditions even matter. China knows there is a serious limit to our power... it seems that many in the US have yet to recognize that fact.
As for worker conditions - that's something that consumers can affect. If consumers refuse to buy products made in sweatshops, that sends a clear message to corporations that people want more ethical products.
I think you've confused my criticism of this debate not being successful. I'm not suggesting it shouldn't be made.john9blue wrote:well, you've doubted that natty's crusade against apple will have any luck, you've asserted that nobody cares about apple's patent trolling, you've implied that apple's practices will keep consumers happy in the end because their products are at a "price they can afford" (lol), and you've shown extreme pessimism about the willingness of customers to stop buying apple's products if the need arises.thegreekdog wrote: Please show me where I typed the following: "You should stop spreading the word about this injustice." You show me where I typed that and I'll do whatever you want me to do.
I'm surprised my inner lawyer has not made multiple previous appearances in this forum.
if that's not dissuasion, then i don't know what is.
Why are those the only two options?BigBallinStalin wrote:Is it ethical to not support sweatshops, if these workers face the choice between a job that pays two to three times as much in a sweatshop compared to working all day in the fields?natty dread wrote:US is only a part of the global market. If Apple succeeds in getting an injuction against Samsung on US, it doesn't kill Samsung - they still have the rest of the world, only one who loses in that game is consumers.PLAYER57832 wrote:The real issue here is that since so much of apple's components, all computer components are made overseas, how much does US patent law really apply or matter....
How much does our "worry" about worker conditions even matter. China knows there is a serious limit to our power... it seems that many in the US have yet to recognize that fact.
As for worker conditions - that's something that consumers can affect. If consumers refuse to buy products made in sweatshops, that sends a clear message to corporations that people want more ethical products.

Another strawman argument. You've been hitting them pretty hard, my friend. I'm talking about relative wages, and the unintended consequences of not supporting sweatshops (i.e. decreased demand for sweatshops leads to decreasing demand for labor, which means that laborers will have to go back to the farms. Maybe they'd go to the services sector, but it's not significant in size for developing countries).natty dread wrote:Why are those the only two options?BigBallinStalin wrote:Is it ethical to not support sweatshops, if these workers face the choice between a job that pays two to three times as much in a sweatshop compared to working all day in the fields?natty dread wrote:US is only a part of the global market. If Apple succeeds in getting an injuction against Samsung on US, it doesn't kill Samsung - they still have the rest of the world, only one who loses in that game is consumers.PLAYER57832 wrote:The real issue here is that since so much of apple's components, all computer components are made overseas, how much does US patent law really apply or matter....
How much does our "worry" about worker conditions even matter. China knows there is a serious limit to our power... it seems that many in the US have yet to recognize that fact.
As for worker conditions - that's something that consumers can affect. If consumers refuse to buy products made in sweatshops, that sends a clear message to corporations that people want more ethical products.
I debated about this with Dim way back when he was still unbanned. If the Chinese would be happy to work in those factories, then your argument might have some merit. However when Chinese Apple/Foxconn workers start suiciding because of poor working conditions, then obviously they are not being treated well.
So, the question remains:natty dread wrote:So, I would present the counter-argument: is it right to take advantage of people's poverty and force them to work in inhumane conditions, just because those people have no better alternative?
Oooh, such loaded words, natty!natty dread wrote:So, I would present the counter-argument: is it right to take advantage of people's poverty and force them to work in inhumane conditions, just because those people have no better alternative?
Ooh, talk more economy to me. You're making me all hot and sweating.BigBallinStalin wrote:Another strawman argument. You've been hitting them pretty hard, my friend. I'm talking about relative wages, and the unintended consequences of not supporting sweatshops (i.e. decreased demand for sweatshops leads to decreasing demand for labor, which means that laborers will have to go back to the farms. Maybe they'd go to the services sector, but it's not significant in size for developing countries).

If that's the only thing you can attack, then I'll consider my other positions against yours to render your overall position pointless.natty dread wrote:Ooh, talk more economy to me. You're making me all hot and sweating.BigBallinStalin wrote:Another strawman argument. You've been hitting them pretty hard, my friend. I'm talking about relative wages, and the unintended consequences of not supporting sweatshops (i.e. decreased demand for sweatshops leads to decreasing demand for labor, which means that laborers will have to go back to the farms. Maybe they'd go to the services sector, but it's not significant in size for developing countries).
No but seriously, are you saying that consumers should keep buying products of corporations that treat workers unethically, just so those workers would have some work to do? I think that's a bit fallacious.