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From: Lahcim Leinad5/8/2012 12:24:42 AM
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OT:

Anyone watch my favorite, the "Antiques Roadshow" tonite? My gal's uncle was on:

Sonja Henie Ice Show Costume, ca. 1941 | Roadshow Archive | PBS

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Roy Blakey of Minneapolis is the owner of the Henie dress, the crown jewel of his collection of theatrical skating memorabilia, which includes costumes, posters, souvenir programs and lapel pins. The dress was valued at $3,500.

"I knew it was going to be a good day when I found three pennies on the ground that morning," he said, adding that he got to meet his favorite Roadshow appraiser (Leila Dunbar) and be filmed for Monday's show. "I didn't go hoping [the dress] would be worth a lot of money. But it motivated me to start cataloging my collection."

From: So, how much was it worth? | StarTribune.com

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He also has a theatrical ice skating pinball machine. I kid you not. Works like the charm. I played it without tilting it, even once! :-)

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To: tcd who wrote (133153)5/8/2012 12:54:44 AM
From: Stock Puppy3 Recommendations   of 154282
 
OT totally

Om om.

OT totally

Om om.

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To: Sr K who wrote (133141)5/8/2012 3:40:07 AM
From: Road Walker   of 154282
 
In the cc didn't Tim say there were "no iPad sales in China" this quarter?

I heard it as "No iPads for any of you until" all the ProViews back off.




I sure there are iPad sales in China, black market if nothing else. But there could be lots more.

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From: Lahcim Leinad5/8/2012 7:24:56 AM
   of 154282
 
T-Mobile: iPhone network compatibility coming this year | CTIA 2012 - CNET Reviews

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To: Road Walker who wrote (133160)5/8/2012 8:00:32 AM
From: Sr K1 Recommendation   of 154282
 
Tim's comment was in a reply to Gene Munster in the Q&A 1/25:

We also have very strong demand for iPad 2. We have not shipped in mainland China yet the new iPad, although we are shipping in Hong Kong.

Longer excerpt:

Timothy D. Cook

Gene, it was an incredible quarter in China. We -- the revenue was record -- was a record at $7.9 billion in Greater China, which is up over 3x year-over-year and brings the first half revenue for Greater China to $12.4 billion. That compares to a full year last year of $13.3 billion. So it is mind-boggling that we can do this well. A part of this was the pent-up demand for iPhone 4S. As you know, we launched mainland China in January of this year, and so China was not able to get into the Q1 period. So all of that is in Q2. We also have very strong demand for iPad 2. We have not shipped in mainland China yet the new iPad, although we are shipping in Hong Kong. And so it's a combination of these things. And the halo that both of these products have produced for the Mac is also incredible. Mac was up over 60% year-over-year. And that compares to a market rate of growth of about 6%.

seekingalpha.com 

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From: Lahcim Leinad5/8/2012 8:08:14 AM
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RIM Launches The Most Boring Anti-Apple Campaign I’ve Ever Witnessed | TechCrunch

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From: Road Walker5/8/2012 8:09:29 AM
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Smartphones top computers for U.S. Facebook time
6:52 pm ET 05/07/2012 - Reuters
By Sarah McBride

May 7 (Reuters) - The average time spent accessing Facebook via smartphone in the United States was 441 minutes in March, compared with 391 minutes via computer, according to comScore, underscoring the increasingly high-profile role of mobile in social networking.

comScore's new Mobile Metrix 2.0 report showed U.S. smartphone users spent 441 minutes per month, or 7 hours and 21 minutes, on Facebook in March. That compares with 391 minutes, or 6 hours and 31 minutes, for people who tapped into Facebook via a computer.

In filing documents for its initial public offering, Facebook highlighted the importance of mobile while noting it does not generate meaningful revenue from mobile users.

"If users increasingly access mobile products as a substitute for access through personal computers and if we are unable to successfully implement monetization strategies for our mobile users," the company writes in its filing documents, "our financial performance and ability to grow revenue would be negatively affected."

Beefing up its mobile strategy was part of the reason Facebook in April agreed to spend $1 billion to buy Instagram, a photo-sharing mobile app, analysts say.

Historically, Facebook hasn't shown ads to mobile users, although in March 2012 it started including "sponsored stories" in users' mobile new feeds.

March marks the first month comScore measured mobile usage -- for Apple's iOS, Google's Android and RIM's Blackberry -- on sites like Facebook.

Facebook commands the lion's share of smartphone users' time, comScore data showed. The next-most popular services were check-in services Foursquare, with 146 minutes; microblogging service Twitter, with 114 minutes; and blogging-service Tumblr, with 68 minutes.

Facebook likely racked up more minutes because people like to stay on to craft updates, read friends' updates, and respond, said Michael Pachter of Wedbush Securities. By contrast, "it doesn't take that long to tweet," he said.

comScore previously reported that Facebook computer users spent 422.8 minutes on Facebook in December.

But it says the March figure of 391 minutes doesn't represent a drop because it is now calculating the data differently after learning it had been double-counting users in some limited instances due to certain sites alerting servers twice when users got on the sites and used Facebook plug-ins. It has now fixed the glitch, a spokesman said.

The March numbers represent a rise of six minutes over February, when computer users spent 385 minutes on Facebook, comScore said.

Facebook's rich valuation -- approaching $100 billion at the high end -- is in part based on high levels of user engagement. Facebook cautioned in its filing documents that as growth in its numbers of users slows, its "business performance will become increasingly dependent on (its) ability to increase levels of user engagement in current and new markets."

comScore said Facebook has about 158.9 million unique U.S. visitors who access the site on computers and 78 million who access it via mobile phones, although there is overlap between the two groups.

Facebook declined to comment on the study.

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From: J.F. Sebastian5/8/2012 9:17:23 AM
2 Recommendations   of 154282
 
Apple retail stores 'bulging at the seams' at 8400 average square feet

By Neil Hughes

Published: 08:58 AM EST (05:58 AM PST)




Apple's original vision for its retail operations is proving too small, as the company's stores are continuously mobbed with crowds looking to buy iPhones, iPads and Macs.

When the company's retail operations began 11 years ago, Apple initially targeted 6,000-square-foot stores as the ideal size, according to analyst Charlie Wolf with Needham & Company. As of Apple's fiscal 2011 10-K report, Apple's retail stores are now slightly larger, at 8,400 square feet per store.

But even as they have grown, Apple's retail stores are still "bulging at the seams," according to Wolf. That's because the number of visitors on a per-store basis has grown at a 15.3 percent annual rate, making the initial vision of 6,000-square-foot store just too small.

Apple's initial plans also called for the company to open around 100 stores. But at the end of the March quarter, Apple had a total of 363 retail stores open, with a third of them overseas.

"The company has had to rethink this strategy as the crowds have grown," Wolf wrote in a note to investors on Tuesday. "Apple is moving some existing stores to larger locations."

For example, Apple is currently expanding its store in New York City's SoHo neighborhood in Lower Manhattan. The project has required Apple to build a $1.4 million temporary store to serve customers while construction is underway.

Apple is also building a new, larger retail store in Palo Alto, Calif., just steps away from the original location, in order to better serve customers. The 15,030-square-foot project has been referred to by Apple as a "prototype" store that will draw on the company's more than 10 years of experience in designing iconic and heavily trafficked retail outlets.

In addition to expanding some current stores, Apple is also building new stores that are even larger. Among the new megastores are a 30,000-square-foot space in London's, Covent Garden, a 16,000-square-foot store with a giant glass cylinder in the Pudong district of Shanghai, and a 20,000-square foot space in New York City's historic Grand Central Terminal.

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To: Lahcim Leinad who wrote (133163)5/8/2012 11:27:49 AM
From: tcd   of 154282
 
Everyone (on this board) sleeping today in a down market.

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To: Road Walker who wrote (133160)5/8/2012 11:31:11 AM
From: slacker7111 Recommendation   of 154282
 


Is Apple simply getting more aggressive on price for the iPhone?

appleinsider.com 

Two regional US carriers will gain Apple's iPhone 4S May 18

By AppleInsider Staff

Published: 11:05 AM EST (08:05 AM PST)


Apple continues to ink deals with smaller regional carriers in the U.S., as Kentucky's Bluegrass Cellular and California's Golden State Cellular will begin offering the iPhone 4S on May 18.

The iPhone 4S will be available starting at $149 for the 16-gigabyte model, $249 for the 32-gigabyte model, and $349 for the 64-gigabyte capacity. Those prices are $50 cheaper than with the three major carriers in the U.S.

In addition, both Bluegrass Cellular and Golden State Cellular will also offer Apple's previous-generation 8-gigabyte iPhone 4 for $49. Customers can pre-register for their purchase today.

Both carriers' networks are based on the same CDMA wireless standard used by major U.S. carriers Verizon and Sprint. Bluegrass Cellular is headquartered in Elizabethtown, Ken., while Golden State Cellular is based out of Jamestown, Calif.

"Bluegrass Cellular is pleased to offer iPhone 4S to our customers throughout the Bluegrass service area nationwide," said Ron Smith, President and CEO, Bluegrass Cellular. "We will give iPhone customers unparalleled service as they experience this amazing device and its unique features and applications on our network, wherever they go.”






"Golden State Cellular is thrilled to bring this amazing device to the network offering the most local coverage in California," said Lawrence Moore, General Manager. "iPhone 4S is in high demand and our customers are going to love using its innovative features on our network."

A month ago, a total of five carriers announced they had signed a deal with Apple. Alaska Communications, Appalachian Wireless, Cellcom, GCI and nTelos all began selling the iPhone 4S and iPhone 4 on April 20.

Apple began expanding availability of the iPhone to smaller, regional carriers last October when a deal with C Spire Wireless was announced. That carrier has about 900,000 customers.

Only one of the four major U.S. carriers — T-Mobile — does not currently offer the iPhone, because of technical limitations. But that could change as soon as the end of this year, as the carrier plans to modify its network to allow compatibility with the iPhone's HSPA+ wireless antenna for high-speed data.

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