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I find it kind of ironic that Apple/Apple supporters say "don't copy, innovate", yet their whole notification system is basically a rip-off of an existing system that's very efficient/effective (regardless if it's open-source or not patented). They basically knew their intrusive pop-up notification system was garbage and integrated the same thing into iOS as their competitor. What happened to: "there's more than one way to do something" when it comes to notifications? Where's the innovation? |
The innovation is the black cloth texture in the notification centre. |
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Every major companies out there will try to protect their inventions, product, ideas becasue THEY spend millions into it so why should the average joe copy it for free? Let's put it in simple terms. You did all the research, spend hours working on a project and I just copy the exact same thing project you did. Will you be happy that I did it? Will you not say something? Please say you are 100% ok with it so I can tell your co-workers that it is ok for them to copy your ideas. |
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And that you feel you haven't been adequately rewarded yet. |
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Other companies have clamshell patents just as many other companies have patents for rectangles with rounded corners. If Motorola could have patented a general form factor, they would have had a field day. |
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Apple has bought 38 companies over 24 years for a rate of 1.6 companies/year. Google has bought 116 companies in 11 years for a rate of 10.5/year. Apple has spent around $2.5 billion for those 38 acquisitions. Google has spent around $22 billion for its 116 companies. These are only reported purchase prices. Apple has 21 companies where no purchase price is listed. Google has 79 companies where no purchase price is listed. In terms of R&D spending, the entire R&D budget of Google since it was formed is still far below what they've spent of acquisitions. In the last 5 years only, Apple has spent 3 times as much on R&D as they have spent on acquisitions in their entire history. You want to continue further down this road? Quote:
Edit: Just realized I wasted time responding to a new account. :rolleyes: Quote:
They admitted they were going to sue all the other Android OEM's to generate revenue. This is one of the main reasons Google bought them. If an outsider (Apple or Microsoft) sues Android then it's easy to put some spin on what's happening. Having an Android OEM sue another Android OEM would not look good for "the family business". And then there's the licensing issue. This sums it up: Apple: We're building a cell phone and we need base band chips. Moto/Sams: OK, we can license it to you. Apple: What do you think is reasonable? Moto/Sams: How about $0.50 per phone? Apple: Sure, that's fine. **shakes hands and walks away** Sams: Don't you think that's a little cheap? Moto: **snickers** They're going to fail anyway. At least we'll make enough back to cover the costs to have the lawyers write up the license. And we look like the good guys for giving them a good deal. Sams: Haha. Good point. years later..... Sams: Damn, Apple is selling gazillions of phones and we're only making $0.50 per phone. Moto: Agreed. We need to be getting more of that gravy train. Sams: OK. I'll try to double-dip Apple by going around Qualcomm and getting money from Apple directly. Moto: Good idea. I'll revoke licenses from companies selling baseband chips to Apple and then turn around and sue them directly for more money. And so it goes..... |
TLDR long winded post from Apple developer / fanboy / troll. What app you develop by the way, I'm really curious. |
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Since you said Apple copied from someone else but who patent the idea? The company/person apple is copying is from which country are they from? That that company/person sue apple for it? Do you have actual prof that this company/person have the patent before Apple did? The patent apple have is for United states so it only applies to USA. It is perfectly legal in another country. This is how the business world works. Who patent/claim copyright first gets the first dip. |
Tokyo court gives win to Samsung after US loss and Apple versus Samsung: Jury foreman justifies $1bn verdict Quote:
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Also, that part about selling micro chips to Apple, yes that is totally fair. It's business. But I'm not sure why you are bringing that up in this discussion? |
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Those two are very tightly intertwined and will hopefully interact in some meaningful way in the future... But nothing major is going to change at all until after the American Election. |
Apple adds Samsung's Galaxy S III, Galaxy Note and Galaxy Note 10.1 to ongoing patent lawsuit: Apple adds Samsung's Galaxy S III, Galaxy Note and Galaxy Note 10.1 to ongoing patent lawsuit -- Engadget Lol. this is getting childish. |
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These lawsuits have been going on forever. And everytime a new one comes up there's always someone whining with the same 3 excuses Samsung gave (maybe there's a "loser's playbook" where they all get their official statements from). Consumers lose with fewer choices, higher prices and less innovation. Here we are 30+ years after the first PC's came out (and umpteen lawsuits later) and where do we stand? - If I want a smaller (4GB) USB flash drive, after all the patent holders are finished with their grubby fingers getting royalties I'm forced to pay a whopping $2.99-$3.99. - Hard drives have barely increased in capacity and if I want a 1TB drive I might have to pay close to $100 (gasp). - HD TV's that used to cost $10,000 can be had for $499. The $499 TV will have a better picture and more options than the $10K one did. - I bought a "high-end" point and shoot camera for $1,200 when I moved to Vancouver that's not even as good as the camera in my iPhone. - I once paid $9,000 for a fully-loaded 80386 PC in the late 80's. A processor with 300,000 transistors that ran at 33 MHz. Today Intel has processors with over a billion transistors (for the math challenged, that's 3,000 times as many as my 80386 had) and are 1,000-3,000 times faster than the 80386. That's a remarkable achievement in only 20 years. I could go on but you should get the point. There has been an incredible amount of innovation in the tech sector over the years resulting in consumer products that are vastly superior (and much cheaper) than products from only a few years ago. And there's no signs of it ever slowing down. And all this "innovation" took place with the "crappy" patent system we have and all the lawsuits that were supposed to stop it. So you'll have to excuse me if I don't fall for the "boy who cried wolf" when I've heard it countless times over the years. |
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You thought no one would call you out on it, that's why you didn't include it. You're taking lifetime stats to include times when Apple wasn't even relevant. That's a little skewed isn't it? If you take the timeline of when Apple has relevant in technology, that's when the bought NeXT, before that they were on their death bed only to be rescue by Microsoft. That was in 1997 for both events. Counting from 1997 to now (15 years), that's 33 companies that's 2.2 companies a year. The main thing, how many of those purchases are the core of their enterprise? Mac OS X, iTunes, multitouch, iCloud, physical processors, Maps, Final Cut, Siri, and so on and so on. [B]They don't invent shit, they buy companies with ready products and market the shit out of them. ie Siri [B] Now to the Google argument, if you look at the list it's an aggregate of companies to create their vision of a technology. ie Google+. If you round up all the purchases and the resulting Google product, it would be equivalent to Apple's purchases and their resulting product. I know you're brand loyal (Apple, VW, Audi, etc), but it's good to take off those blinders sometimes. Not all the companies you're loyal to are doing the right/best things, be less of a homer. disclaimer: I have an iPad 3, iTouch, iPhone 4S(work), Nexus S. I have more Apple products than Google. I hate working on my 4S, OS feels dated compared to the Android but the battery life is awesome. |
FYI Apple launched a second lawsuit today targeting the S3, GNEX and Note just to name a few |
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- In the last 5 years Apple has spent 3 times as much on R&D as acquisitions. After checking my numbers I should have said: - In the last 4.5 years Apple has spent 3.2 times as much on R&D as acquisitions. Now see what happens when you call someone out? Things actually look better for my argument and worse for yours. Here is my source for R&D spending for Apple over the years. The most recent 2 quarters aren't on the list, but they are available. Apple spent $758 million Q1-2012 and appx $660 millions Q4-2011. You Can't Buy Innovation And hear are Google's numbers: Google R&D Spending by Quarter How is taking lifetime stats skewed when I compared Apple's last 5 years of R&D to their entire history of acquisitions? But I'll concede defeat. 10.5 per year for Google vs 2.2 for Apple (instead of my original 1.6 lifetime) makes such a huge difference. :rolleyes: As for Google, sometime next year their R&D spending should finally catch up with acquisitions (if they don't buy any more companies). This is because Google has had massive R&D increases in recent years. In 2005 they spent $600 million. Last year it was around $5.2 billion and this year should top $6 billion. As a percentage of revenue spent on R&D Google is 12-13% whereas Apple is somewhere around 2.5%. For a comparison Microsoft will spend around $9 billion this year and leads all tech companies with 146 acquisitions. However, MS also spends huge $$$ on R&D so they are kind of a mix. Now where are your numbers that back up your claim Apple spends 5 times as much on lawyers? Oh yeah, you don't have any. Quote:
My original point still stands. Google spends more on acquisitions than R&D, Apple spends more on R&D than acquisitions. Google will soon be even in that regard. Apple would have to go on major buying spree to catch up. Quote:
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not like it would hurt apple. actually im starting to loose respect for apple. |
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Does anyone know if Samsung makes more money selling their own phones or selling parts to Apple? |
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edit: this link says about 11billion this year http://www.slashgear.com/apple-to-sp...exec-13218118/ |
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