Thursday, July 29, 2010

Singapore’s ‘Over-the-top’ Iphone 4 Launch

Long queues at launch of iPhone 4 in Singapore

Apple’s new iPhone 4 went on sale in Singapore Friday, and its debut in this city state may have been more over-the-top than its U.S. debut last month.

Wayne Ma
SingTel customers who waited in line, now with their new iPhone 4s.
Singapore Telecommunications, known as SingTel, Southeast Asia’s biggest phone company by revenue, held its midnight launch party at the Marina Bay Sands Expo & Convention Center. The venue, with its almost concert-like atmosphere, was blasting with loud music, colored lights, fog and even a VIP lounge, where waitresses served hors d’oeuvres such as sea scallops with green olive tapenade.

At the stroke of midnight, SingTel revealed a giant rotating model of the iPhone on stage, along with a flashy pyrotechnics display.

Jacky Heng, 18 years old, was one of the first customers to collect his phone on stage. Heng had been waiting in line since 4:30 p.m. Thursday.

“I already sold off my Nexus One, which had reception problems,” he said. “I’m very determined to get this phone.”

SingTel expected to draw at least 500 people to its midnight launch, according to Cheam Tze Hui, a spokeswoman for the company. About 200 staff members were present to manage the crowds, she added.

Many customers agreed that this year’s release was better organized than in previous years, when demand for the iPhone caught SingTel by surprise. And concerns about problems with iPhone 4’s antenna didn’t deter any customers from waiting in line.

“Singapore is so small that there are a lot of overlapping (coverage areas),” said Jason Siah, who had been in line since 9:30 p.m. “Even with two bars, I can still get reception.”

Yuen Kuan Moon, executive vice president of SingTel’s consumer group, said that while the company was only able to sell iPhones to “a few thousand” customers in the first two days of launch, more than 10 times that amount registered their interest on the company’s website.

SingTel took appointments online to buy the phone, but had to stop registration after just a few hours because of strong demand.

“The main difference between this year’s launch is that we did it online, which allowed us to see the real demand for the phone,” he said.

Samsung Electronics Profit Jumps to Record on Chips


July 30 (Bloomberg) -- Samsung Electronics Co., Asia's biggest maker of semiconductors, flat screens and mobile phones, said second-quarter profit jumped 83 percent to a record, fueled by a recovery in demand for computer-memory chips.

Net income climbed to 4.28 trillion won ($3.6 billion) from 2.33 trillion won a year earlier, the Suwon, South Korea-based company said in a statement today. Profit exceeded the 4.15 trillion won average of 11 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales rose 17 percent.

Samsung joined Intel Corp., Apple Inc. and Hynix Semiconductor Inc. in posting higher earnings for the latest quarter after prices increased. The electronics maker said it will be a "challenge" to sustain current profitability as competition increases in televisions and mobile phones.

"Concern about demand in overall tech products has increased greatly recently," said Lee Jin Woo, a fund manager with KTB Asset Management Co., which manages $9.3 billion in assets in Seoul. "Although it needs to be seen whether actual demand for tech products will cool off fast, such uncertainty will affect sentiment in the short term."

Samsung fell 1.3 percent to 816,000 won at 11:06 a.m. in Seoul trading, while the benchmark Kospi index lost 0.7 percent.

Operating profit, or sales minus the cost of goods sold and administrative expenses, surged 88 percent to a record 5 trillion won, in line with the preliminary estimate the company gave on July 7.

'Difficult Market Conditions'

"With intensified competition throughout the digital media and mobile industries going forward, it may become a challenge to maintain current profitability levels," Robert Yi, vice president of investor relations at Samsung, said in an e-mail.

Strong seasonal demand for components will drive Samsung's performance in the third quarter amid increased market supply, Samsung said in the statement. Falling TV prices may erode profit margins in the third quarter, it said.

Profit at Samsung's semiconductor division jumped to 2.94 trillion won from 340 billion won a year earlier. Micron Technology Inc. and Hynix, which compete against Samsung in computer memory, both reported quarterly profit compared with losses a year earlier.

Intel, the biggest chipmaker, this month reported record second-quarter sales and topped analysts' estimates with its forecast for the current period. Corporate spending is strengthening, it said, signaling that the economy isn't headed back into recession.

Chip Prices

The price of the benchmark 1-gigabit DRAM chip rose 31 percent in the 12 months to July 29, according to Taipei-based Dramexchange Technology Inc., operator of Asia's largest spot market for semiconductors.

Prices will decline "slightly" in the current quarter, while overall personal-computer demand will be stronger in the second half than in the first six months of the year, Kim Jeong Woo, a marketing executive at Hynix, said last week.

Samsung will maintain its "cost leadership and record strong earnings" for the second half, Jae H. Lee, an analyst with Daiwa Capital Markets, said in a July 26 report.

Samsung in May said it plans record capital spending of 18 trillion won for this year to widen its lead in the memory-chip and flat-screen industries. The company's capital expenditure reached 9.2 trillion won in the first half, representing 51 percent of the planned total for this year, it said today.

Liquid Crystal Display
At its liquid-crystal display business, profit more than tripled to 880 billion won, driven by higher TV demand. LG Display Co., the world's second-largest LCD maker after Samsung, last week said second-quarter operating profit doubled, while it missed its target for shipment growth in the quarter.

Panel prices may drop as concern a global economic recovery will slow prompted some clients to adjust inventories, LG Display said last week. The company may cut output in August to prevent panel prices from falling sharply, Chief Executive Officer Kwon Young Soo told reporters on July 23.

Profit at Samsung's digital media division, which makes televisions, tumbled 69 percent to 360 billion won.

Global shipments of liquid-crystal display TVs may rise 24 percent to more than 180 million units in 2010, Austin, Texas- based DisplaySearch said in March. Samsung, the world's largest TV maker, said in January it expects to sell 35 million LCD sets this year.

Mobile Phone

Samsung, also the world's second-largest maker of mobile phones, said profit from the telecommunications division fell 36 percent to 630 billion won as the company lagged behind Apple and BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion Ltd. in the smartphone market. Second-quarter handset shipments climbed 22 percent to 63.8 million, Samsung said.

Nokia Oyj, the world's biggest maker of mobile phones, last week posted a steeper-than-expected 40 percent drop in net income on competition from Apple's iPhone, while LG Electronics Inc. this week reported a record quarterly loss from its handset business. Apple last week said net income leaped 78 percent in the third quarter and forecast fourth-quarter sales that topped analysts' estimates.

Worldwide sales of smartphones will increase 36 percent to 247 million in 2010 and expand 30 percent next year, El Segundo, California-based research company Isuppli said in April.

Samsung aims to more than double its share of the smartphone market, helped by the introduction of the Galaxy S model, Lee Donjoo, senior vice president of the company's Mobile Communications Division, said on June 21.

--With assistance by Saeromi Shin, and Shinhye Kang in Seoul. Editors: Mark McCord, Garry Smith, Young-Sam Cho.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

The Apple Store is Down


A visit to the US online Apple Store this morning produced the familiar, taunting sticky note. Perhaps those rumors of new iMacs, Mac Pros and displays are about to come to fruition. UK readers are also reporting that their store is down.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Yahoo Japan Says It's Considering Using Google Internet-Search Technology


Yahoo Japan Corp. is considering using Google Inc.’s Internet-search technology to widen its lead in the world’s second-largest economy.

The company hasn’t made a decision, said Toru Nagano, a spokesman at Tokyo-based Yahoo Japan, declining to provide details. The former joint venture between Yahoo! Inc. and Japan’s Softbank Corp. may use Google’s search technology instead of Microsoft Corp.’s, the Wall Street Journal’s All Things Digital blog reported earlier.

The Japanese Internet company rose in Tokyo trading on optimism a tie-up may help it expand the mobile-search business through handsets equipped with Google’s Android operating system. A deal may be a blow for Microsoft, which last year agreed on a 10-year deal to combine its search business with that of Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo.

“If Yahoo Japan started using Google’s search engine and if its services were then used on Android smartphones, an agreement may have big implications,” said Atsuo Takahashi, an analyst at Mizuho Securities Co. in Tokyo. “For Yahoo Japan, this deal could be quite positive.”

The Japanese Internet company, 35 percent-owned by Yahoo in the U.S. and about 40 percent by Softbank, had more than 52 million users as of March and its service accounted for more than 50 percent of the Japanese market, according to a Nomura Holdings Inc. report this month that cited a Nielsen Online survey. Google has about 31 percent market share, according to the report.

Yahoo-Microsoft Deal

Yoshito Funabashi, a Tokyo-based Google spokeswoman, was not immediately available for comment.

Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo and Microsoft won regulatory approvals in the U.S. and Europe in February to integrate their web search businesses and challenge Google. Yahoo plans to use Microsoft’s Bing search engine on its sites and complete the integration in the U.S. by the end of the year.

Yahoo Japan rose as much as 3.6 percent to 36,000 yen on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The shares have risen 26 percent this year, compared with a 6.6 percent drop in the Topix index.

To contact the reporter on this story: Adam Le in Tokyo at ale14@bloomberg.net

Monday, July 26, 2010

What New DMCA Copyright Loopholes Mean to You

The Library of Congress added five new exemptions to its Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) Monday, a copyright law that criminalizes attempts to bypass digital copyrights. Originally passed in 1998, the act is revisited every three years, with new exceptions added based on changing technology.

While the legalization of jailbreaking mobile phones is certainly getting the most press, exemptions were also added to the DMCA that allow people to legally break through the copyright protections on video games, e-books, and DVDs as well as bypass external security measures on some computers.

Mobile Phones

The biggest news today was the legalization of jailbreaking. Users can now legally break through copyright protection on their mobile phones in order to "execute software applications, where circumvention is accomplished for the sole purpose of enabling interoperability of such applications." Users are also now able to unlock firmware that ties a mobile phone to a particular wireless network. Both exemptions are big news for iPhone owners, who have battled for some time over the ability to add non-Apple approved software to their phones, as well as take those phones to different carriers.





DVDs: No Ripping/Copying.. But..

College professors and students, documentary filmmakers, and those making noncommercial videos, are now able to circumvent the copyright protection on DVDs in order to use short clips from those DVDs in new works "for the purpose of criticism or comment." The exemption was previously in place for professors, but has now been expanded to include students and filmmakers. The exception does not allow for users to copy whole works, or for individuals to create backups of DVDs they personally own, an issue brought up last year in the RealDVD case.

E-Books

A new exception to the DMCA allows users to break through copyright protection on e-books in order to enable text-to-speech functionality. You may remember the text-to-speech functionality of the Kindle was a huge issue between Amazon and the Authors Guild last year, the Authors Guild feeling that it took away from potential audio book sales. With that in mind, today's exception is only legal when "all existing ebook editions of the work (including digital text editions made available by authorized entities) contain access controls that prevent the enabling either of the book's read-aloud function or of screen readers that render the text into a specialized format." Bottom Line: If a publisher offers an option for an audio version, even if it is twice the price, you can't legally bypass the book's DRM.





Video Games

Users can now break through the copyright protection on video games "when circumvention is accomplished solely for the purpose of good faith testing, for investigating or correcting security flaws or vulnerabilities." Information obtained from the security testing has to be used "used primarily to promote the security of the owner or operator of a computer, computer system, or computer network; and...used or maintained in a manner that does not facilitate copyright infringement or a violation of applicable law." This addition was added specifically for research in the area of SecuROM and SafeDisc.


Computers

Computer programs that are protected by dongles that are now broken or malfunctioning are now "considered obsolete if it is no longer manufactured or if a replacement or repair is no longer reasonably available in the commercial marketplace."

Do you see yourself using any of the new exceptions? What would you have liked to see added to this list?