Apple's Achilles' Heel: Samsung Has An Arrow Pointed Straight At It [View article]
I believe AAPL's earnings will be the greatest, particularly that they have aggressively crossed the borders of at least 100 new markets and are already successful there. The 2011 results in this report are precise, but the 2012 do not include all of December 2012 and the Holidays.
But, aside from China's Telecoms, Apple is actively opening about 100 new markets, which will definitely bear fruit. The technology grand theft that occured with AAPL, is nothing new when U.S. and European companies use cheaper labor. Go back and look at the Datsun (Nissan) a copy of the french Renault in the 1950s and the Toyota, another example that began as a "look-alike" of Peugeot. Check the Leica and Zeiss Icon lenses and cameras that were copied in Asia. What kind of a contract did Apple have with Samsung and others? Does an employee rush to build on the side, a competition to attack the employer. They were also delaying the deliveries to Apple. Amazing!
Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOG) have teamed up for the reported $500M-plus bid for bankrupt Kodak's (EKDKQ.PK) patents, Bloomberg reports. The two companies - part of rival consortia this summer in an auction for the patents - are likely working together with a goal of neutralizing infringement lawsuits. [View news story]
I thought I was publishing about AAPL. I'll be glad to accommodate you after that.
Apple's Achilles' Heel: Samsung Has An Arrow Pointed Straight At It [View article]
Apple Chart Flashes Bubble Crash Warning [View article]
Apple: From Growth To Value [View article]
a copy of the french Renault in the 1950s and the Toyota, another example that began as a "look-alike" of Peugeot. Check the Leica and Zeiss Icon lenses and cameras that were copied in Asia. What kind of a contract did Apple have with Samsung and others? Does an employee rush to build on the side, a competition to attack the employer. They were also delaying the deliveries to Apple. Amazing!
Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOG) have teamed up for the reported $500M-plus bid for bankrupt Kodak's (EKDKQ.PK) patents, Bloomberg reports. The two companies - part of rival consortia this summer in an auction for the patents - are likely working together with a goal of neutralizing infringement lawsuits. [View news story]