Author: Serkadis

  • Apple CEO Apologizes To Chinese Consumers

    Apple CEO Tim Cook apologized to China this week in a letter posted to the company’s Chinese site. The apology is for the company’s lack of communication with regards to its warranty policies for the iPhone 4 and 4S.

    The apology comes after customers in the country complained of not getting the same treatment as those in the U.S. who get full replacements from the company when they get a defective device. Chinese customers were only getting their devices repaired with replacement parts.

    This is the second apology Apple’s CEO has had to issue in recent memory. Cook also apologized for the lackluster Apple Maps product that accompanied iOS 6. This was the subject of numerous complaints from users who were used to Apple’s previous Google Maps-based offering.

    Here’s the full text of the new letter as translated by Google Translate (obviously it’s not perfect):

    To our Chinese consumers:

    In the past two weeks, we have received a lot of feedback about Apple in China repair and warranty policy. We are not only a profound reflection on these views, together with relevant departments to carefully study the “Three Guarantees”, and also look at our maintenance policy communication and combing our management specifications of Apple Authorized Service Provider. We are aware that, due to the lack of external communication in this process and lead to the speculation that Apple arrogance, do not care or do not attach importance to consumer feedback. We express our sincere apologies for any concerns or misunderstandings this gives consumers.

    In order to further improve the level of service, we are implementing the following four major adjustment:

    Improved iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S repair policy
    Provide a concise and clear on the website of the official Apple repair and warranty policy statement
    Increase the intensity of the supervision and training of Apple Authorized Service Provider
    Related issues to ensure that consumers can easily contact Apple Feedback Service
    At the same time, we also realize that operating in China, and communicate much we need to learn the place. Here, we assure you, Apple for the commitment and enthusiasm indistinguishable from other countries. Bring the best user experience for consumers and satisfactory service is our ideals, our commitment, and it has been deeply rooted in Apple’s corporate culture. We will make unremitting efforts to achieve this goal.

    iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S repair policy improvements are as follows:
    So far, iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S repair this in one of three ways: as from the purchase date of 15 days found the problem, we will be entitled to a refund or replacement for consumers recalculated 1 year warranty period iPhone; 15 days after discovery problem, Apple will replace the part depending, such as camera modules or batteries; replacement parts also can not quickly repaired the iPhone, Apple will provide consumers with a part reassembled new parts, retaining only the consumers existing iPhone 4 or iPhone 4S back cover.

    Nearly 90% of customers expressed satisfaction with our repair services, and consumer satisfaction is the most important criterion for Apple to measure its own success.

    But others suggested that part of the re-assembly of repair almost replace the machine, so the direct replacement of a device will be more beneficial to consumers. Therefore, since April 2013, Apple iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S service pack upgrade for all 1-year warranty on new equipment replacement parts and replacement date recalculated.

    Consumer iPhone 4 or iPhone 4S Apple or an Apple Authorized Service Provider has been part of the re-assembly kit maintenance, we will replace them as whole and for maintenance after the iPhone recalculated from the date of repair year warranty. Apple’s warranty system has been updated for the information and, therefore, affected consumers do not need to take any additional action.

    Now, all consumers can see on our site clear and comprehensive maintenance and warranty policy terms and conditions.
    We are pleased to provide consumers with information who wish to learn more about the after-sales service. For example, we have been to provide 2 year warranty for the MacBook Air and Mac computer motherboards and other major components. Likewise, the the iPad main components has been entitled to a 2-year warranty period, and other components for 1 year warranty.

    We realize that our site before this is not clearly stated policy. Hope the following will answer all the questions about Apple provides services.

    Apple is to make greater efforts to ensure that Apple Authorized Service Provider to follow our policies, and make every effort to provide consumers with the highest quality service.
    Week since March 18, 2013, we made a new training materials for all Apple Authorized Service Provider to ensure that each staff provide services for Apple products is not only familiar with our policies, but also to grasp three guarantees “provisions and related policies. The same time, we have taken the initiative through face-to-face meetings and other forms of verification and to ensure that each Apple Authorized Service Provider have opened training courses to update the knowledge of the staff for the maintenance and warranty policies. We will make unremitting efforts and continuous monitoring of the performance of the Apple Authorized Service Provider to ensure that consumers can get the highest quality service.

    Now, the feedback service-related issues is also very convenient.
    As the consumers of the services provided by any Apple Store retail store or an Apple authorized service provider doubt, to Welcome www.apple.com.cn/support/service/feedback/ directly get in touch with us. Our goal is to consumers where to buy Apple products or receive services, users can enjoy world-class experience.

    Heartfelt thank you to give us valuable feedback, we always harbor immense respect to China, the Chinese consumer is always the top priority of our hearts.

    Tim Cook
    Apple CEO

    [Hat tip: AppleInsider]

  • Apple’s ‘iTV’ said to launch this year with ‘major innovation that will revolutionize the TV experience’

    Apple iTV Release Date
    Apple’s (AAPL) own-brand HDTV has reportedly been in the works for years now, and it will finally debut later this year according to a new report. Topeka Capital Markets analyst Brian White, who has reported accurate details about unannounced Apple products in the past, is currently meeting with supply chain sources in China and Taiwan. During his travels, the analyst gleaned information from unnamed sources that has him convinced that Apple will finally launch its “iTV” in the second half of 2013. And beyond the inevitable excitement among Apple fans as the company enters a new market, White says Apple’s HDTV will include some innovative new features that will make it a game-changer.

    Continue reading…

  • Applied Micro’s cloud chip is an ARM-based, switch-killing machine

    Applied Micro Circuits, a chip firm that designs silicon parts for the computing and networking world, has spent the last three years making a big bet on the cloud computing market and the ARM architecture. The results began shipping last week, and the product essentially takes networking and computing and crams it all onto one system on a chip.

    Dubbed the X-Gene server on a chip, the product has been touted by Applied as the first 64-bit-capable ARM-based server in existence, the ideal part for webscale users (check out the pic of Facebook’s Frank Frankovsky holding one up) and also the future of Applied Micro. It’s the first chip to contain a software-defined network (SDN) controller on the die that will offer network services such as load balancing and ensuring service-level agreements on the chip. It’s like shoving the networking and computing vision of the Cisco Unified Computing System on a chip.

    This is a big deal. Although the first generation won’t have enough bandwidth to eliminate the need for a switch at the top of a rack, the following generation will.

    Paramesh Gopi, president and CEO of Applied Micro, said that these new chips have now made it past the prototype stage (the board in the picture uses an FPGA instead of a production silicon) AND are now in the hands of several customers, including Dell and Red Hat. Gopi expects physical servers containing the X-Gene to hit the market by the end of this year.

    Gopi’s big bet

    The chip is manufactured at 40 nanometers and contains eight 2.4 GHz ARM cores that Applied has designed, four smaller ARM Cortex A5 cores running the SDN controller software (the pink bit on the block diagram below), four 10-gigabit ethernet ports, and various ports that can support more Ethernet, SSDs, accelerator cards such as those from Fusion-io or SATA drives. In short, this a chip that combines networking and computing in one package.

    When about asked about the power consumption of the chip, Gopi said it will run at 50 percent of the total cost of ownership of a comparable x86 product, but wouldn’t discuss actual power consumption.

    “We’ll be able to run your LAMP stack and SQL jobs on Xeon-class ARM cores, and the routing protocols and such will be running on the Atom-class ARMs,” Gopi said. “It’s the fundamentals of a rack on a single chip.”

    xgeneblock

    Building this chip has taken four years. It required Gopi to visit ARM at its U.K. headquarters to convince them to give him an architecture license to build a chip for servers. In an interview with me at the Open Compute Summit in January, Gopi explained that he saw the flexibility and the architecture that ARM offered could become an asset for webscale computing, so he embarked on turning Applied Micro, a public company with a few hundred million in revenue, into a startup.

    Like others, such as Barry Evans of Calxeda or Andrew Feldman of Sea Micro, he saw that power issues were raising the cost of operating data centers — and cutting into the bottom line at web businesses — and he thought he had a solution. His solution was to get an architectural license from ARM, so he could make a 64-bit-capable chip ahead of ARM’s plans to introduce that powerful a core. ARM introduced that core last year, and vendors of ARM-based server chips such as AMD and Calxeda expect to have 64-bit-capable chips next year. But Applied is shipping those machines today.

    “We’ll end this wimpy core vs. brawny core debate once and for all,” Gopi said.

    The new hardware mindset

    Applied Micro CEO Paramesh Gopi.

    Applied Micro CEO Paramesh Gopi.

    Gopi has taken advantage of several different trends that are finally coming to fruition. The first trend is the use of the ARM core — ubiquitous in cell phones and tablets — for the enterprise and cloud computing market. But he’s also taking advantage of a more subtle shift happening in the chip world as it pertains to the data center — namely the opening up of the ecosystem.

    The mobile industry has relied upon the common ARM architecture to build a wide variety of chips that give each vendor a slightly different set of features. Both Nvidia and Qualcomm start with ARM cores (hell, even Apple has an ARM architectural license) to build their application processors. This lowers the cost of designing chips, because engineers can start from a higher level when solving problems.

    And the modularity of the ARM cores combined with an architecture license also means firms can customize their designs for a certain market without spending a huge amount of time or dollars. Gopi will actually address some of this at our Structure event June 19 and 20, in a presentation on designing hardware at the speed of software.

    For Applied, this dynamic plays out in the existence of a new type of chip for the data center, but also in the fact that in nine or 12 months Applied plans to test the second-generation X-Gene chip, one that will support 100-Gigabit Ethernet and will obviate the need for a top-of-rack switch. Ironically, this architecture probably won’t be a welcome development for Applied’s existing networking clients like Cisco and Juniper.

    But it’s clearly the direction that large webscale customers want to go. And the second-generation architecture is also important for the first-generation X-Gene products, because without it, Applied may not have a chance at getting technically savvy and forward-looking potential customers that need not just a single interesting product, but a real understanding of the roadmap before they commit to a new architecture.

    So even as Applied ships these first products to customers for use in devices that hit the market at the end of this year, it’s already developing its production of the next generation 28-nanometer versions of the heavy-duty ARM cores and 100-Gigabit-capable networking while prepping for later versions that may include photonics and other elements that data center customers are already discussing as tomorrow’s technology.

    It took a bold vision — and that trip to ARM — for Gopi to get Applied Micro to the table as these discussions about the next generation data center are playing out. But with this design, it has earned a seat. Now all it has to do is earn the business.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Samsung reportedly sets lofty goal for 2013: Ship 500 million cell phones

    Samsung Shipment Estimates
    Samsung’s (005930) rise to the top of the cell phone industry in terms of shipment volume happened in the blink of an eye. And now that the South Korean company wears the crown, it seemingly has no intentions of slowing down. In a new report from Digitimes on Wednesday, the site points to data obtained from unnamed supply chain sources in stating that Samsung hopes to ship 500 million cell phones this year. The monstrous figure would represent huge growth over 2012, when Samsung shipped an estimated 396.5 million mobile phones according to market research firm Strategy Analytics. Desirable new handsets like the Galaxy S4 will undoubtedly help Samsung on its journey in 2013, but 500 million will still be a long way off once Galaxy S4 shipments are tallied at the end of the year.

  • Forget in-memory — SiSense raises $10M for in-chip analytics

    While the rest of the world is agog about big data and in-memory analytics, SiSense is taking a different tack. It’s rethinking business intelligence with higher-speed analysis on smaller (relatively speaking) data sets by taking advantage of multicore, 64-bit processors. The approach has been paying off with some impressive customer uptake, and on Wednesday SiSense announced a $10 million series B funding round from Battery Ventures along with Opus Capital and Genesis Partners.

    Technologically, SiSense is trying to split the difference between just about everyone else doing analytics — expensive full-stack business intelligence vendors such as Oracle, Microsoft, IBM and SAP; big data and data warehouse vendors pushing massive scale databases; and next-generation, visualization-centric vendors such as Tableau and QlikView. It’s fast, it’s has its own columnar database and HTML5 visualization technologies, can scale comfortably up about 100 terabytes, and is designed for business users rather than advanced data analysts.

    SiSense’s secret sauce is a processing architecture built for speed even on small machines such as laptops. According to CEO Amit Bendov, the company’s product, called Prism, can handle a terabyte of data on a machine with 8GB of RAM because it relies primarily on disk for storage. Data is only moved to RAM as necessary, and then Prism uses vectorization and optimized instructions (that do one thing only, but do it across all the data that fit the query) to handle as much work as possible in parallel on the processor.

    Source: SiSense

    Source: SiSense

    “We say in-memory is not the future, it’s the past,” said Bendov. ”We’re already two steps ahead.” Using Hadoop or Teradata for a handful of terabytes, he added, is overkill, “like driving a Humvee to the grocery store.”

    Eldad Farkash, SiSense’s co-founder and CTO, uses a different analogy — that of buying beer — to explain the technology’s underlying rationale. Latency to the CPU from the processor’s L1 cache is like grabbing a beer from the refrigerator, whereas using the L2 or L3 cache is like riding a bicycle to the corner store. RAM is the equivalent of driving a car to the grocery store, and accessing data from disk is like going to the brewery itself. Prism knows it will have to go to the grocery store, but it gets as much beer as possible from the fridge and corner store first.

    dashboard-imgOnce users are actually in the product and analyzing data, it’s a drag-and-drop experience to connect various data sources and points (although custom SQL is allowed, too). The actual analysis window features a canvas that can display numerous widgets (e.g. pivot tables, charts or dashboards) at once.

    Bendov said SiSense’s revenue grew 520 percent in 2012 and its notable customers include Target, Merck, Samsung and Cisco. The new investment will be used primarily to bolster the company’s sales and marketing efforts — which thus far have been largely relegated to in-bound inquiries — and to support customers in different geographies (the company is based in Redwood Shores, Calif.). “Now’s the time to add oil to the fire,” he explained.

    As impressive as it all sounds, though, SiSense’s biggest challenge might well be getting noticed above the fray that is the analytics space right now — especially among more well-known and arguably future-proof vendors and technologies. That said, being a low-cost option that users like and that actually works has proven remarkably effective in an era of cloud computing and bring-your-own-device, and SiSense appears to racking up users at a pretty rapid clip.

    Any product that can prove its worth initially with the people who have to use it stands a good chance of sticking around and becoming a permanent part of IT budgets for years.

    Feature image courtesy of Shutterstock user Iscatel.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Call in podcast: Chromebook screenshot tips and the Facebook phone

    Ready for another edition of the weekly call-in show where we answer your tech questions? We kick things off with expectations of Facebooks’s new phone and software and then get right into your questions. Several Chromebook topics come up as well as a tough choice between two new flagship phones.

    To be a part of the show, just call in and leave a voicemail at 262-KCTOFEL. If you do, we’ll play back the question on the show and answer it. Or you can tweet me at @kevinctofel on Twitter. Each week, I’ll answer as many questions as I can while keeping the podcast to a manageable amount of time: 20 to 30 minutes at most.

    Show notes:
    Hosts: Chris Albrecht and Kevin C. Tofel

    • How much do all of the software customizations from Amazon, Samsung and others hurt Android share as a whole?
    • Is there a way to capture just part of the screen on a Chromebook?
    • Which would you buy: a Pixel or Google Glass?
    • Can you use Office 365 on a Chromebook?
    • Tough question: HTC One or Samsung Galaxy S 4?

    (download this episode)

    Subscribe to RSS

    iTunes

    Stitcher Radio

    SELECT PREVIOUS EPISODES:

    Why the digital age needs an effective content licensing strategy

    T-Mo’s no plan, SummlYahoo and everyone’s a paparazzi

    IoT: Why the Hue internet lightbulb is a bright idea

    Podcast: Facebook’s feedin’; Lean In’s meanin’; and everyone’s Hadoop-in

    IoT: When devices can talk, will they conspire against you?

    Call-in show: Why the “I’m leaving iPhone” trend?

    Internet of things Podcast – Almond+’s nutty idea: Making sensor connectivity a snap

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • For energy tech, the boring stuff (business model innovation) will be key

    Tesla fan boys might be left scratching their heads after the electric car maker’s “big announcement” on Tuesday afternoon.

    It wasn’t a new electric car model, new sparkly paint colors for its Model S or more planned locations for its Super Chargers. Instead, Tesla announced a new financing option for its Model S electric car that includes a sort-of lease/ownership hybrid, where customers can pay a monthly fee, get 10 percent off the car with funding from a couple banks, and then have the option to sell back the car after three years.

    In essence, Tesla is attempting to innovate around its business model. The financing option could make the car more available to potential customers that don’t want to pay anywhere between $62,000 and $100,000 upfront for a luxury car. Tesla said the monthly payment could be as low as between $500 to $600, though many were quick to point out that the monthly payments could be much higher.

    Tesla logo on the Model X

    Tesla logo on the Model X

    Traditional car companies offer these types of car lease deals all the time, but the problem is that because the market for electric cars is so new, it’s hard to know how to value an electric car as it ages. Electric car batteries — which make up the bulk of the value of the car — typically have a warranty for about ten years and degrade substantially over time. Picture how long your laptop battery lasts — Tesla uses the exact same type of batteries in its cars.

    Given the battery uncertainties, it’s still unclear how much a five or 10 year old electric car would be worth after its batteries have degraded substantially. But with the three-year buy-back guarantee, Tesla is betting that it can determine the value of the car after three years, and that the value will remain high — around the price of a Mercedes S Class — at year three. Tesla’s CEO Elon Musk said both he (personally) and Tesla will guarantee the value of the car.

    walmart_solarcity2

    Another company that counts Musk as an adviser has also been trying new approaches to energy financing with significant success: SolarCity. SolarCity helped pioneer leases for solar panels for rooftops. The company gets a bank to cover the costs of the upfront solar system and then the customer pays a monthly bill (usually less than a utility bill) over a set time period, like 15 or 20 years.

    The third party-owned solar panel business model has proved to be so successful that three fourths of the solar panels installed in 2012 were owned by third parties, rather than the home owner themselves. Solar financing companies are also one of the areas of the solar market that are becoming quite successful, in contrast to the solar cell makers that are increasingly being squeezed.

    SolarCity held an IPO in December and is trading at double its IPO price. Sungevity has been growing steadily and raised a whopping $125 million in a combination of equity and project finance. Power giant NRG Energy is even considering getting back into the solar lease space.

    Bloom Energy

    And it’s not just Musk-associated companies that are delivering energy market innovation. Fuel cell maker Bloom Energy launched an electricity-as-a-service model for its fuel cells, enabling data center builders to pay for the fuel cell power over decades, rather than the upfront cost of the fuel cell farm.

    In the energy world, new technology takes a long time to develop. But once those innovations become commodities — like solar cells or traditional lithium ion batteries for electric cars — it takes a business model innovation to get those technologies to market.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • DHS excuse for buying billions of rounds of ammo exposed as yet another blatant lie

    Responding to a letter from Sen. Tom Coburn, the Department of Homeland Security — an agency that has no business being armed in the first place — says it’s buying billions of rounds of ammunition in order to “significantly lower costs.” It’s all about saving money…
  • Increased dietary fiber consumption dramatically lowers risk of first stroke event

    Incidence of stroke in the U.S. and western cultures continues to grow at a staggering rate as it takes the lives of nearly 150,000 Americans each year, making this debilitating illness the fourth leading cause of preventable death. Closely aligned with heart disease…
  • Organic rice farmer in India yields over 22 tons of crop on only two acres, proving the fraud of GMOs and Big Ag

    Despite all the claims made by industry-funded hacks that genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) and other industrial agricultural methods are necessary for the future of humanity, it is the traditional growing methods that continue to shine through as the real sustainers…
  • Trader Joe’s eliminated GMOs from its private-label products back in 2001 – what’s taking Whole Foods so long?

    In the wake of the recent announcement by Whole Foods Market that the retailer will require the labeling of all foods containing genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) in its stores by 2018, many in the natural health community are now wondering, why the long wait? Whole…
  • Taxpayers foot entire bill for 22-year-old’s boob job

    Breast augmentation is not a typical medical procedure covered under the U.K.’s socialist system of medicine, known officially as the National Health System (NHS). But it suddenly became one recently after 22-year-old Josie Cunningham convinced her doctor that being…
  • Garlic kills bubonic plague and other pathogen-based disease epidemics

    During the 14th and 15th century pandemic, the black death killed nearly half the world’s population, according to, Bubonic Plague: Yesterday’s Scourge–and Tomorrow’s? As present-day cases of bubonic plague reappear in parts of North America and Europe, people are seeking…
  • Even with record murder rate, Chicago prosecutes the fewest gun crimes in America

    The embattled city of Chicago is experiencing record firearms deaths, with more victims being shot and killed nightly. So far this year, in fact, month-to-month gun deaths are up from the record highs experienced in 2012, when 506 people were killed in the city. And…
  • Exposed: Standard medical pricing is a scam, unreasonably high health care costs are no accident

    The American people are barely putting up a fight as they relinquish what little health freedoms they have left in exchange for Obamacare, the multi-billion dollar sick care travesty that will eliminate freedom of choice in health care. But the existing insurance-based…
  • National internet tax mandate is in place to cripple the online marketplace

    The idea of a national internet tax mandate has been voted on in the United States Senate. Dubbed the “Marketplace Fairness Act,” this piece of legislation, if implemented, would stifle entrepreneurs from the online marketplace, enrich large companies, and bloat state…
  • Meditation decreases stress and weight gain hormone cortisol in the body, research shows

    The things you think about and dwell on throughout your day have a direct effect on your stress levels, which regulate how much cortisol, or stress hormone, is produced in your body. And new research published in the journal Health Psychology has found that meditation…
  • Robots to take over jobs in human service industry, increasing the percentage of unemployed Americans

    The so-called “service industry” – which includes restaurants, entertainment outlets, retail stores and hotels, among other businesses – has traditionally been one of the fastest-growing employment sectors in the country, even in a struggling U.S. economy. But its workforce…
  • How to eat GMO, use the Affordable Care Act, and die before you collect Social Security

    Millions of Americans are being forced to buy conventional health insurance that directly benefits the pharmaceutical industry, which in turn fuels the biotech food “modification” industry, and that is the simple but evil math calculation being done by the big three…
  • The five best belly-flattening cereals for breakfast

    A bulging belly is a common body issue and it affects everyone. However, it is also one of the most difficult to battle with. Cereals for breakfast are advertised for health but it also matters what kind of cereal an individual consumes. To get favorable results with…