Apple vs Samsung

Written By: - Date published: 2:38 pm, August 30th, 2012 - 93 comments
Categories: business - Tags: , ,

When businesses like Apple patent hand waving, obvious design, round corners, or software (which in a way is like patenting maths), we all lose.  I’m not pleased with Craig Foss’s “minor amendment” to our block on software patents.

Expect to be paying over the odds for Apple products into the future, and innovation to be stifled.

SMBC today covers the point nicely:

93 comments on “Apple vs Samsung ”

  1. Carol 1

    Yes, I wasn’t impressed by Apple’s extension of their monopolistic behaviour.

    I also wondered how the US company was aided by the US court system in scoring a blow against a Sth Korean company?

    • Colonial Viper 1.1

      I also wondered how the US company was aided by the US court system in scoring a blow against a Sth Korean company?

      And according to wikileaks materials, it would be no surprise if US Government agencies and the US State Department were also actively involved in supporting Apple.

      Apple by the way has more cash reserves in its corporate accounts than most medium and large countries do (US$110B and climbing).

    • Matt 1.2

      Are we using “court system” and ‘jury’ interchangeably now?

      • Colonial Viper 1.2.1

        the latter is a component of the former. Consider also that the judge gave the jury extremely lengthy and detailed instructions on how they were to consider their verdict. And although deliberations were expected to take a couple of weeks, the jury took only 2.5hrs. It was as if they all wanted to fuck off back to their lives and not worry about going through the material which had been presented in court.

        • Matt 1.2.1.1

          “Court system” smacks of some institutional bias that could explain the verdict, but juries are juries. Whether you like the outcome or anything else about the deliberations, like in NZ you draw from the public and you take your chances.

          The next big fight will be between Apple and Google, which as you know is based in S. Korea.

        • insider 1.2.1.2

          The jury chair said they were swung by emails by Samsung officials saying in effect “hey make it more like the iphone cos people won’t like it if it’s not” and the google/android people to samsung “saying don’t make it too much like the iphone”

          Remember the same Jury also halved apples damages claim, threw out the tablet claim and found in favour of samsung in a range of other claims.

          But we should all be happy because, on the bright side, the lawyers are getting paid 🙂

      • mike e 1.2.2

        it won’t be long before apple’s mantle will be undone.
        technology is moving at a very rapid pace.
        jobs has gone.

    • SHG 1.3

      I wasn’t impressed by Apple’s extension of their monopolistic behaviour.

      And in just what market does Apple have a monopoly, exactly?

      • Carol 1.3.1

        I said monopolistic not that it is a total monopoly. It aims to dominate the market as much as possible by limiting use of other aps and technologies on its basic hardware. eg ITunes can only be played on Ipods etc, I can’t play them on my MP3 player.

        • SHG 1.3.1.1

          Point the first: iTunes is an application that runs on OS X and Windows and is a free download.

          Point the second: If you have audio files that your mp3 player can’t play, that means you have a shit player. That’s not Apple’s fault now is it?

        • SHG 1.3.1.2

          Oops ran out of edit time. And point the zeroth:

          From what I can see, Apple has no intention of dominating any markets. Apple doesn’t care about market share. I don’t even think Apple cares about money. It cares about making great products.

          • Colonial Viper 1.3.1.2.1

            What a fucking joke. The dogma of the Steve Jobs faithful.

            Here’s a clue: a US$600B company outsourced all its manufacturing from its own US soil to poorly paid subcontractor peasants in China for no reason other than profit.

            Get a grip on reality man

            • SHG 1.3.1.2.1.1

              What Foxconn offers is turnaround time more than cheapness. If Apple decides “nup, this plastic cover is rubbish, cancel that production run and re-do it with a glass cover instead” Foxconn can turn that around faster than any North American manufacturer, because (yes) Foxconn is a Chinese comp

              Apple could certainly get parts cheaper if it wanted to maximise its margins. What it wants is parts FASTER and EARLIER and GUARANTEED years in advance.

            • infused 1.3.1.2.1.2

              They talked to the US. It would cost 2x more and had a far greater turn around time…

  2. captain hook 2

    pssssssst….
    hey meesta,
    wanna buy a sell fone?

  3. RedLogix 3

    On the other hand if you had spent $500m developing a product (as with one platform I regularly use) … would you continue to invest in developing it if anyone else with cheap slave labour and resources could simply rip it off?

    • Carol 3.1

      I thought Apple also used cheap slave labour to produce its devices….?

      • RedLogix 3.1.1

        So we should all stop buying anything made in China, or any other low wage country ….?

        • Carol 3.1.1.1

          That wasn’t my original point. It was questioning the US court system’s objectivity.

          • RedLogix 3.1.1.1.1

            Which is fair enough …that was my reaction too. America has seen so much of it’s manufacturing base exported to Asia that of course no jury was going to vote for more of it. (Yes I know where the devices are actually made, but Apple is a US corporate and Samsung is not … and that appearance is what probably counts here.)

            So while there is precious little moral high ground for Apple to posture from in this case; neither does this extend the idea that intellectual property rights are nothing more than ‘monopolistic behaviour’.

            • Colonial Viper 3.1.1.1.1.1

              (Responding to RL primarily)

              Quite right, patents should act to encourage innovation, not stifle it.

              Apple should be able to patent protect any innovative and unique technologies it developed. But to copyright a shape and a button placement? That’s just anti-competitive. Samsung showed in court that Apple was not the first to come up with a similar shape or button placement.

              Further, patents need to expire soon after granting, most within 6 or 7 years, and the rest within 10 years. That pushes inventors to get on with doing something with their designs, not just sitting on them waiting to trap other businesses with law suits.

              Patents need to give those who invest in technology a head start, not a license to print money into perpetuity.

              The changes to the NZ software IP legislation are concerning too.

              • RedLogix

                patents should act to encourage innovation, not stifle it.

                Exactly. And I’d suggest that the lawyers are primarily responsible for taking a system that had a positive purpose, and twisting into something else .. as we see in this case.

                I’m not so sure that a fixed time-frame is going to be universally useful. Some ideas have a very short market life, while others might take decades to make a viable return. Compare for instance say the really hot, rapidly moving smartphone business with something quite different like earthquake base-isolators for large buildings.

                Moreover such a short time frame inherently advantages big players who have the resources to bring an idea to market very quickly. And other ideas might well take a decade to develop into an actual product… too many variables for one fixed period to cover effectively.

                • Colonial Viper

                  Moreover such a short time frame inherently advantages big players who have the resources to bring an idea to market very quickly. And other ideas might well take a decade to develop into an actual product.

                  Having had personal experience of this scenario I’m sympathetic, however large corporates are always going to have certain advantages in terms of resources and expertise. Start up entrepreneurs have to play the game smart and to their own strengths; and they have to find sufficient funding (from angel investors and VCs) as well as other partnerships to enable them to move forwards at pace.

                  Also, one might decide not to apply for a patent until closer to launch, or decide that keeping your technology a trade secret would be a better strategy than publishing it for the world to see.

    • Bunji 3.2

      I’m not advocating no patents at all, but software should be protected enough by copyright and code confidentiality. Patents for real inventions that cost money to develop are also quite different to patenting rounded corners, or any future computer user input system that might involve waving your hands around (in 3, 4 or 5 dimensions, without even naming what that 5th dimension might be…).

      The US copyright & patent system where everytime Mickey Mouse is about to lose his protection they extend the dates 10 years isn’t exactly something we want imposed via TPP either…

      • Carol 3.2.1

        Thanks, CV, RL & Bunji. That’s a very useful discussion and background.

      • SoSoo 3.2.2

        Would you accept that Samsung blatantly ripped off Apple, given that internal Samsung documents have them saying that they were blatantly ripping off Apple?

        It’s not hard to look at most Android smartphones and see a ripoff of the iPhone. It didn’t have to be that way – Microsoft has managed to make a decent, original smartphone OS. But of course that doesn’t matter, because what’s really going on here is Freetards whining because Android is the current great hope for Linux (even though it’s really just a play by another megacorp).

        If you want to complain about patents, why blame Apple? They don’t make the laws, and if you don’t defend your IP to the full extent of the law, you lose it.

        • Draco T Bastard 3.2.2.1

          It didn’t have to be that way – Microsoft has managed to make a decent, original smartphone OS.

          And so did Google – what was your point again?

          But of course that doesn’t matter, because what’s really going on here is Freetards whining because Android is the current great hope for Linux (even though it’s really just a play by another megacorp).

          Which really shows which side your on – the megacorps and their supposed right to determine everything and make a profit from it.

          They don’t make the laws, and if you don’t defend your IP to the full extent of the law, you lose it.

          The problem with that assumption is that a lot of people can’t afford to go to the courts to defend their IP and thus lose it by default.

          And then this video, this history and this device from 1994.

          And yet Apple won the patent for rectangular with rounded corners.

          The patent system is very, very sick and it’s being abused by unscrupulous corporations such as Apple.

  4. tc 4

    Job’s was such a hypocrite, much like Foss and his mates, wailed loudly when anyone wanted to patent and protect their creations yet had selective memory when it came to his practices.

    The original GUI interface for Mac him and Wozniak found at Xerox’s Palo Alto research centre, known as the Star OS then, so hardly their original idea.

    Apple shared code with Microsoft to keep office on the mac, then lost the copyright suit with them largely because MS showed they’d been allowed to use the code by Apple.

    Plenty of US business’s duplicate the iPod/iPhone look and feel (Oracle’s CRM is such a blatant copy even they smirk when presenting it) yet Samsung gets the suits.

    has that dotcom feel doesn’t it.

    • Bunji 4.1

      You mean Steve Jobs 1996: “Good artists copy, great artists steal. And we have always been shameless about stealing great ideas.”
      vs Steve Jobs after iPad: “I’m going to destroy Android, because it’s a stolen product. I’m willing to go thermonuclear war on this.” ?

      • Lanthanide 4.1.1

        Steve was a megalomaniac asshole. He used a loophole in California law to avoid having number plates on his car – he simply bought a new one every 6 months.

    • SoSoo 4.2

      “The original GUI interface for Mac him and Wozniak found at Xerox’s Palo Alto research centre, known as the Star OS then, so hardly their original idea.”

      Not this tired old rubbish again. You are wrong on several counts, not least that the Xerox Star post dates Apple’s visit to PARC by some years. IIRC what Apple saw was much earlier than the OS shipped with the Star, and they ended up hiring away many of the developers because Xerox wasn’t really going anywhere with the idea (one reason they let Apple see it). Anyway, the facts:

      http://obamapacman.com/2010/03/myth-copyright-theft-apple-stole-gui-from-xerox-parc-alto/

      The GUI you will find on most personal computers these days mimics the Macintosh interface in most respects (Windows is quite close, for example). Both look like the Xerox Star, but anyone who tried to use a Xerox Star would have a hard time getting it to work, because the interface works quite differently. There are demo videos of it on Youtube.

      Samsung got sued and lost because they copied the iPhone. There are internal Samsung documents stating they were copying the iPhone. It doesn’t get much more obvious than that.

      And let’s not cry for Samsung, a corporation that is regularly had up in its native country for bribery and other corrupt business practices. Apple is squeaky clean next to Samsung.

      • Draco T Bastard 4.2.1

        The GUI you will find on most personal computers these days mimics the Macintosh interface in most respects (Windows is quite close, for example).

        Actually, that would be wrong – most GUIs these days mimics the Amiga.

        The Amiga computer was a dream given form: an inexpensive, fast, flexible multimedia computer that could do virtually anything. It handled graphics, sound, and video as easily as other computers of its time manipulated plain text. It was easily ten years ahead of its time.

        Compared to the Amiga, the Apple stuff was a load of crap. Actually, so was the PC.

        Apple is squeaky clean next to Samsung.

        Does that include the suicides at it’s factories in China?

        • infused 4.2.1.1

          Are they Apple factories?

        • Bastables 4.2.1.2

          How does apples GUI innovations crib from Amiga’s GUI when Macintosh’s and it’s OS ( indevlopment since 79 and in market 84) predate the Amiga 1000 (85)?

          • Draco T Bastard 4.2.1.2.1

            Read what I said carefully. I didn’t say that MacOS cribbed from the Amiga OS but that today’s MacOS more closely resembled Amiga OS from 1985.

            There were a few things on the Amiga that was neither on the Lisa nor the Mac in 1985 but is today. One is the fact that Amiga OS was a multi-tasking OS which was not seen in the either MS or Apple until the 1990s (Win95 for MS and MacOS 9 for Apple).

      • Colonial Viper 4.2.2

        SoSoo you are a fucking corporate shill.

        Intent on hurting consumers to the benefit of a $600B US corporate.

        Samsung got sued and lost because they copied the iPhone. There are internal Samsung documents stating they were copying the iPhone. It doesn’t get much more obvious than that.

        Lies. Samsung copied a rectangle with rounded corners.

        Justify your defence of that, asshole.

        And lets not forget, Apple stole their Mac OS concepts from Xerox R&D in Palo Alto.

        Listen to this ZDnet interview about it.

        http://www.zdnet.com/blog/btl/parc-scientist-recalls-jobs-famous-xerox-visits-video/63203

        and they ended up hiring away many of the developers because Xerox wasn’t really going anywhere with the idea (one reason they let Apple see it).

        So that excuses the theft by Steve Jobs, does it?

        • SHG 4.2.2.1

          I hate to rain on your parade, but Apple purchased the rights to commercialise Xerox’s GUI concepts in a perfectly normal licensing deal. This is well documented by everyone including Xerox.

          Xerox developed some technologies which were technically cool but barely usable by modern standards (just watch the demos). A guy came along and said “why aren’t you doing anything with this technically cool stuff” and Xerox said “meh, we’re a research lab. Too hard, just give us some shares in your company and you do it”.

          So Xerox sold the rights for a million dollars of options on then-private Apple stock, which — if Xerox had retained it — would now be worth, well, let’s just say “a considerable amount of money”.

          Xerox sold its concepts to Apple knowing that the technology would be commercialised. That was the point of the deal.

          • Colonial Viper 4.2.2.1.1

            I hate to rain on your parade, but Apple purchased the rights to commercialise Xerox’s GUI concepts in a perfectly normal licensing deal. This is well documented by everyone including Xerox.

            You are telling the story very selectively.

            Actually, this was a legal settlement with Xerox which occurred AFTER Apple stole the designs, and only occurred because Apple was threatened by legal action.

            • SHG 4.2.2.1.1.1

              You are completely wrong. Seriously. The Apple-Xerox GUI deal is one of the most well-documented IP transactions in the history of business, and you are completely wrong about it.

    • mike e 4.3

      tc MS insisted that mac install MS os because they bailed out apple and still own shares in apple.

  5. shorts 5

    shouldn’t we, or at least the standard, be advocating the US govt nationalise Apple and share the wealth with all its citizens?

    and advocating the overthrow of all IP and patent styled laws – innovation should be free too all to enrich the species not a select choosen few…

    • Colonial Viper 5.1

      shouldn’t we, or at least the standard, be advocating the US govt nationalise Apple and share the wealth with all its citizens?

      Uh, the big corporates own the US Government, not the other way around, and they do so in order to take the wealth of the citizens of the USA for themselves.

      It’s a bit of a reverse to how it should probably work, but that’s kleptocracy for you.

      • shorts 5.1.1

        well apple should then privatise the US govt and share the wealth with its slave labourers in China…. um, er… 🙂

  6. captain hook 6

    +1 carol
    the US supreme court no longer represents the common man.

  7. Sanctuary 7

    The biggest loser from all this is going to be the U.S. consumer, who will probably as a result of this find they cannot buy a whole raft of “patent infringing” products. They’ll be limited to what a U.S. megacorp thinks they should be able to buy.

    Yet another reason to not be stupid enough to sign up to any agreement that locks us into US intellectual copyright laws.

    • Richard Christie 7.1

      I agree.
      The ruling will discourage legitimate development of competitive product.
      However demand for alternative will not diminish and I suspect pirating and fake product production will only be encouraged.

    • SoSoo 7.2

      Don’t be so melodramatic. Anyone can purchase a Windows Phone, which is an original and striking design that doesn’t rip off Apple’s design for the iPhone. Nothing is stopping any other company from creating a still different design.

      Android vendors like Samsung decided not to do this at their own risk.

      • Colonial Viper 7.2.1

        Windows for phone is shit

        Apple’s design for the iPhone was ripped off a bunch of other companies

        Nothing is stopping any other company from creating a still different design.

        You mean create a phone which isn’t a rectangle? And doesn’t have rounded corners?

        Android vendors like Samsung decided not to do this at their own risk.

        I reckon you’re a corporate hack defending hundred billion dollar Apple’s stifling, monopolistic practices.

        Don’t you believe in capitalism? Where risk is rewarded and anti-competitive behaviour like Apple’s is quashed?

  8. Rusty Hellback 8

    I <3 my galaxy S3!!!

    • Colonial Viper 8.1

      Yeah its nice heh

      • Sufi Safari 8.1.1

        And it’s full of cool non-infringing innovations. Turns out Samsung can make great devices without ripping off the iPhone. So why didn’t they do that to begin with?

        • Colonial Viper 8.1.1.1

          Because Apple’s design was generic and indefensible.

          If Apple was worth its chops it would compete with Samsung without resorting to lawyers.

          The fact that a US court has upheld Apple’s patents on a rectangle with rounded edges shows how stupid and gullible the US court system is in supporting Apple’s monopolistic behaviour.

          • Bastables 8.1.1.1.1

            This is a bit of a straw man as the Samsung emails presented in court show Samsung was copying Apples UI, even more damning is the Google emails to Samsung pointing out they need to differentiate their stuff as it is too similar to apples designs.

            Windows tiles system is quite different to Apples IOS app’s system for instance.

            Samsung on the other hand has design documents stating that they had in essence copied too closely Apples icon designs and to improve needed differentiate them more
            http://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/samsung-icon-concept-640×510.png

            Apple showed other manufactures icon designs that do not slavishly copy IOS’s icon design
            http://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/alternative-designs-640×399.png
            Which sort of shows even with android one is not restricted to aping Apples UI/Iconography.

            Historically Samsung have been caught out copying Sharp’s LCD technology as well. They’ve needed a good kick in the balls for a while.

            Apples argument is that the oblong with rounded corners is symptomatic to much deeper and comprehensiveness stealing of IOS’s look and feel.

            Conversely in differentiation Mac/os and Windows treat full screen quite differently where windows expands a window to fill the screen/desktop and Mac/os expands it into a “separate screen” off the desk top. Windows minimize maximize and close widows buttons are all in the top right as symbols and Mac os uses traffic lights in the top left.
            Using the two different OS’s is functionally different. Samsung did not bother to do this

          • SHG 8.1.1.1.2

            a US court has upheld Apple’s patents on a rectangle with rounded edges

            Which patent would that be, specifically? And exactly which of the jury’s findings upheld this patent?

            Come on. You’re just making stuff up.

            • Colonial Viper 8.1.1.1.2.1

              The patent on rectangles with rounded edges. And the jury took just 2.5 hours to consider thousands of pages of presented evidence and return a verdict.

              US justice system = a corporate rort.

              • Colonial Viper

                2.5 days actually 😎

              • SHG

                The patent on rectangles with rounded edges.

                Come on, which one was it? There were a number of patents being discussed in the Samsung case and they’re all clearly labelled – which is the one that you allege gave Apple ownership of rectangles with rounded edges, and what was the jury’s decision specifically in regard to that patent?

                You don’t know, do you?

                • Colonial Viper

                  There was also the scolling-bouncy patent. Super secret stuff that Apple got all jealous about. I mean, Apple is so out of ideas it has to turn to lawyers to protect its shitty over priced, under-reliable, non-user serviceable designs.

                • Colonial Viper

                  Come on, which one was it? There were a number of patents being discussed in the Samsung case and they’re all clearly labelled – which is the one that you allege gave Apple ownership of rectangles with rounded edges

                  http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=D618,677.PN.&OS=PN/D618,677&RS=PN/D618,677

                  http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=D593,087.PN.&OS=PN/D593,087&RS=PN/D593,087

                  • SHG

                    I don’t see the words “rounded” or “rectangles” in either of those documents. Do you think you might be, hmm, lacking some important info? Are you sure you have the right patents? Or did you just read something somewhere and take it as gospel?

                    For the sake of argument, because it’s not true, let’s assume that those two patents give Apple the rights to assert ownership of “rounded rectangles”. What did the jury decide?

                    • Colonial Viper

                      I’m not your research staffer. Do your own homework lazy boy.

                    • SHG

                      I don’t need to, because I know the answers, because I’ve read the patents, and I know what Apple has claimed, and I’ve read the jury’s decision.

                      If you have a point, porridge for brains, please make it.

                      My point is that you don’t know what you’re talking about. You’ve read an oligarchic megacorp’s calculated use of the intentionally-misleading phrase “rectangles with rounded corners” in a press release following a legal defeat and you’ve latched on to it as gospel because it reinforces a narrative to which you’ve already committed yourself. You WANT Apple to have claimed broad ownership of “rectangles with rounded corners” in portable electronic devices because that would be breathtakingly arrogant and you want to believe that Apple is breathtakingly arrogant. You WANT the jury to have found that Samsung wilfully infringed this supposed ownership of “rectangles with rounded corners” of that because that would be fucking ridiculous and you want to believe that the US patent and legal systems are fucking ridiculous.

                      NONE OF THOSE THINGS HAPPENED. No matter how much you want to believe all that stuff NONE OF IT HAPPENED.

                      You’re imagining it. You are literally making it all up in your head. You’re a guy sitting there saying “two plus two is five, what’s your point?”

                    • Colonial Viper

                      Sorry mate of course it happened. You’ve provided no links, I provided links to the actual patents just as you asked.

                      Apple, a US$600B company, is deliberately limiting technological progress and customer choice – and you are supporting them.

                      and you want to believe that the US patent and legal systems are fucking ridiculous.

                      They are ridiculous. They’re designed to disenfranchise the rights of people around the world. They’ve declared that corporations have the same rights as people, and they’ve declared that Monsanto can patent breeds of rice which Indians have been developing and growing for centuries.

                    • SHG

                      Once again, it’s plainly evident that you haven’t read the patents and you haven’t read the jury’s ruling. You don’t have the foggiest idea what the court actually ruled, and you don’t want to because the facts might conflict with the narrative that you’ve already bought into.

                      NONE OF THE THINGS THAT YOU’RE UPSET ABOUT ACTUALLY HAPPENED.

          • rosy 8.1.1.1.3

            If Apple was worth its chops it would compete with Samsung without resorting to lawyers.

            Absolutely. On the one hand the corporatist apologists support a company that sues on ‘look and feel’ of a product rather than technical innovation, and on the other hand those same apologists support the ‘invisible hand’ of the ‘free’, i.e. competitive, market.

            • freedom 8.1.1.1.3.1

              you are not wrong rosy, it is a laugh. Albeit a sad rather pathetic whimper of a laugh bravely escaping the strangulated throat of invention.

              Often, when this mishegoss pops up and an Apple devotee is slavering over some sensory wonder of the i-phone, it is always fun to lay down the S2 plug in a portable flash drive and demonstrate the most basic of data operations that apple still cannot do …
              … use a usb and share files without needing any other computer.

  9. xtasy 9

    Again, I state, these are to some degree maybe “important”, but to most of us “petty” arguments. Yet when it would come down to Jobs here and there, we would feel differently, but that is no the case.

    Like the US NZ companies have and are outsourcing. They make more money to have oprations in China and so on. We get told all this patriotic stuff by NZ First and the Greens, where is your alternative, please. I am totally in favour of yours, but you must present the alternative, otherwise Key and liars will take you to the cleaners. I hope you can deliver. Regards H

  10. freedom 10

    Here is Apple bending over to protect political interests
    http://rt.com/usa/news/app-begley-drone-strikes-967/

  11. freedom 11

    Here is Apple bending over to protect political interests

    http://rt.com/usa/news/app-begley-drone-strikes-967/

    • freedom 11.1

      Excuse post duplication. phone said it failed to publish. ( editor is also scrolling back to middle of page when you try to type which makes text entry fun as you cannot see what you are doing)

    • Draco T Bastard 11.2

      Developer develops an iPhone app that aggregates news about drone killings, Apple bans it because they think it’s objectionable.

      Not surprised to hear that in the least. The biggest issue I have with Apple is that it’s controlling the apps that are available for the iPhone and iPad through iTunes.

  12. Tiger Mountain 12

    Apple is never going to be universally popular, when tiny and failing in the 90s PC fans and corporates put the slipper in, and now it is huge and mega everyone from Greenpeace down are doing likewise (and justifiably so when it is workers rights in China).

    BUT it’s products have made life easier for this freelancer which is why I buy them. Accurate colour for pre-press and a whole bunch of technical stuff I need not bore readers with. Patent disputes go with the territory in a capitalist system.

    • Carol 12.1

      I has always seemed to me that Macs are usually the best computers for people creating stuff with graphics (video-makers, designers etc) and for programmers. But for most users, like me the cheaper IBM/MS computers do the things we want just fine. There seems to be an added (usually quite middle-class) snobbery that has been built around this central advantage of Apple computers – a corporate-driven status-symbol that goes beyond the main capabilities of the technology/ies.

      Over the last few decades I’ve got a bit fed up with the sneering and put-downs of us PC users from Mac users. They used to characterise MS as the evil capitalist empire, and Apple as the friend to the left. But it turns out Apple is every bit the exorbitant profit-seeking capitalist corporation.

      • rosy 12.1.1

        I has always seemed to me that Macs are usually the best computers for people creating stuff with graphics (video-makers, designers etc) and for programmers.

        Yes, my child the designer agrees with this, my other children, the gameplayer and IT, geek don’t. You could say that Apple lost the graphics kudos as soon as geographic information systems were developed for PCs, imo of course.

  13. brybry 13

    I don’t understand how the shape of a general use item can be patentable. Is this not the same as patenting the shape and key placement on a keyboard? Or the aerodynamic tube shape of an aircraft? To be useful, a phone has to be held in your hand, the microphone must be near your mouth when the speaker is close to your ear, and it needs to fit in your pocket – what other shape can it be?

  14. Fortran 14

    Anything which the American’s do not like – like competition, is UnAmerican, and you can guarantee the American courts will support anything which is UnAmerican whatever it is.
    Remember is only about Money – because that is the American God.
    I once worked for an American Financial Group and am fully aware how agressive they are in everything – because it is only they who are right, and the rest of the World must accept that role.

    • Matt 14.1

      Yeah those bad American guys, They’re not altruistic like NZ companies. The ones who have done nothing but mercilessly extort every last cent from a captive NZ audience. If a German company can import fiberglass insulation and retail it for HALF what Fletcher has been extorting people for, you know the jig is almost up. And none of the typical excuses for high costs in a remote country hold up; NZ can produce radiata pine faster than anywhere else, yet timber prices here are obscenely expensive. The country is overflowing with dairy but milk is ridiculously expensive, because rather than be ‘nice’ to their fellow Kiwis, they charge you as much as they can. Same goes for lamb, etc. Thanks NZ business!

      The same piece of crap Chinese made 1″ PVC plumbing elbow that would cost 23 cents at Home Depot in the US is $11 at Placemakers, where also a packet of fifty deck screws (maybe it was 25) was something like $24. Are you fucking kidding me? Don’t tell me simple volume explains the difference, because I can cruise Alibaba just like anyone else and know what the landed cost is for 10K units. It’s pure exploitation of customers which, they hope, either don’t know any better or are too compliant/lazy to revolt.

      Buy a Coke at the petrol station here, where they want $3.60 for the smallest bottle. Conversely, go to a gas station in the US and pick up a Super Mega Gulp for a little over a buck. The business model is completely flipped; Here the goal is to gouge you for convenience purchases since you’re already there buying fuel. In the US, the model is to offer deals to attract you to this gas station instead of a different one.

      So tell me how nice NZ companies are again? Even Hugo Chavez makes sure his people get cheap petrol, as do many (otherwise horribly repressive) Gulf states, yet NZ companies systematically screw you on stuff which is locally produced in massive quantities. 

      NZ companies are, by and large, monopolistic dinosaurs whose business plan has been to exploit a captive customer base mercilessly. They are among the worst anywhere.

      • Colonial Viper 14.1.1

        Welcome to the capitalist free market. What you talk about is also the reason that big Oz chains like Bunnings and JB Hi Fi have just waltzed into the NZ market and become quick successes. While typically, NZ retailers always do badly when they try and set foot in Australia.

        BTW in the US all that stuff has to be really cheap because 66M of their population live within a stones throw (25%) of the Federal poverty line.

        In other words, the US imported product price deflation from China, and have simply accepted the employment, wage and living standard deflation which came along with it.

        • Matt 14.1.1.1

          What I have described in the US is how it’s been for decades, in the fat years as well as the lean ones. I’m sorry if that doesn’t quite mesh with your peak oil/fading empire themes.

  15. He he this is funny.

    Samsung paid it in 5c pieces … 

  16. Draco T Bastard 16

    And Japan throws Apple’s case out.

    Two men say they’re Jesus,
    one of them must be wrong

    • Carol 16.1

      Yes, on Al Jazeera, I just saw a report on the current score line in the ongoing Apple vs Samsung battle.

      http://www.aljazeera.com/news/asia-pacific/2012/08/20128315959128736.html

      The Tokyo court’s three-judge panel awarded legal costs to Samsung on Friday and refused Apple’s claim that Samsung’s Galaxy smartphones and tablets had infringed its patent.

      “The defendant’s products do not seem like they used the same technology as the plaintiff’s products so we turn down the complaints made by [Apple],” Presiding Judge Tamotsu Shoji told the court.

      Al Jazeera’s conclusion was that Apple are ahead on cases won, including cases in Aussie and other countries.

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    2 weeks ago
  • Geoffrey Miller: China’s message to New Zealand – don’t put it all at risk
    Don’t put it all at risk. That’s likely to be the take-home message for New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon in his meetings with Li Qiang, the Chinese Premier. Li’s visit to Wellington this week is the highest-ranking visit by a Chinese official since 2017. The trip down under – ...
    Democracy ProjectBy Geoffrey Miller
    2 weeks ago
  • The Real Thing
    I know the feelingIt is the real thingThe essence of the soulThe perfect momentThat golden momentI know you feel it tooI know the feelingIt is the real thingYou can't refuse the embraceNo?Sometimes we face the things we most dislike. A phobia or fear that must be confronted so it doesn’t ...
    Nick’s KōreroBy Nick Rockel
    2 weeks ago

  • Transformative investment in cancer treatments and more new medicines
    The coalition Government is delivering up to 26 cancer treatments as part of an overall package of up to 54 more new medicines, Health Minister Dr Shane Reti and Associate Health Minister David Seymour announced today. “Pharmac estimates that around 175,000 people will benefit from the additional treatments in just ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    10 hours ago
  • More support for drought-affected communities
    The coalition Government is providing more financial support to drought-stricken farmers and growers in many parts of the country to help with essential living costs. “Rural Assistance Payments have been made available in 38 districts affected by dry conditions to help eligible farmers and growers whose income has taken a ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    15 hours ago
  • Job seekers to report on progress after six months from today
    A new requirement for people on Jobseeker Support benefits to meet with MSD after six months to assess how their job search is going gets underway today. About 20,000 Jobseeker beneficiaries with full-time work obligations are expected to attend MSD’s new ‘Work check-in’ seminars over the next 12 months, Social ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    16 hours ago
  • New cops means more Police on the beat
    The decision to deploy more Police on the beat in Auckland CBD has been welcomed by Police Minister Mark Mitchell and Associate Police Minister Casey Costello. Starting from 1 July, an additional 21 police officers will be redeployed in Auckland City, bringing the total number of beat police in the ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    1 day ago
  • Government takes action to address youth crime
    The Government is introducing a new declaration for young offenders to ensure they face tougher consequences and are better supported to turn their lives around, Children’s Minister Karen Chhour announced today. The establishment of a Young Serious Offender declaration delivers on a coalition Government commitment and supports the Government’s target ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 days ago
  • Reserve Bank chair reappointed
    Professor Neil Quigley has been reappointed as Chair of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand Board for a further term of two years, until 30 June 2026.  “Professor Quigley has played a key role in establishing the new Board after the commencement of the new RBNZ Act on 1 July ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    4 days ago
  • School attendance increases
    School attendance data released today shows an increase in the number of students regularly attending school to 61.7 per cent in term one. This compares to 59.5 per cent in term one last year and 53.6 per cent in term four. “It is encouraging to see more children getting to ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago
  • Record investment in public transport services
    The Government has announced a record 41 per cent increase in indicative funding for public transport services and operations, and confirmed the rollout of the National Ticketing Solution (NTS) that will enable contactless debit and credit card payments starting this year in Auckland, Transport Minister Simeon Brown says.“This Government is ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago
  • GDP data shows need to strengthen and grow the economy
    GDP figures for the March quarter reinforce the importance of restoring fiscal discipline to public spending and driving more economic growth, Finance Minister Nicola Willis says.  Data released today by Stats NZ shows GDP has risen 0.2 per cent for the quarter to March.   “While today’s data is technically in ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago
  • Women continue to make up over 50 per cent on public sector boards
    Women’s representation on public sector boards and committees has reached 50 per cent or above for the fourth consecutive year, with women holding 53.9 per cent of public sector board roles, Acting Minister for Women Louise Upston says. “This is a fantastic achievement, but the work is not done. To ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago
  • Government supporting Māori business success
    The Coalition Government is supporting Māori to boost development and the Māori economy through investment in projects that benefit the regions, Regional Development Minister Shane Jones and Māori Development Minister Tama Potaka say. “As the Regional Development Minister, I am focused on supporting Māori to succeed. The Provincial Growth Fund ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago
  • Better solutions for earthquake-prone buildings
    Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk has announced that the review into better managing the risks of earthquake-prone buildings has commenced. “The terms of reference published today demonstrate the Government’s commitment to ensuring we get the balance right between public safety and costs to building owners,” Mr Penk says.  “The Government ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago
  • Prime Minister wraps up visit to Japan
    Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has just finished a successful three-day visit to Japan, where he strengthened political relationships and boosted business links. Mr Luxon’s visit culminated in a bilateral meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio followed by a state dinner. “It was important for me to meet Prime Minister Kishida in person ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago
  • Major business deals signed on PM’s Japan trip
    Significant business deals have been closed during the visit of Prime Minister Christopher Luxon to Japan this week, including in the areas of space, renewable energy and investment.  “Commercial deals like this demonstrate that we don’t just export high-quality agricultural products to Japan, but also our world-class technology, expertise, and ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago
  • Strategic Security speech, Tokyo
    Minasan, konnichiwa, kia ora and good afternoon everyone. Thank you for the invitation to speak to you today and thank you to our friends at the Institute for International Socio-Economic Studies and NEC for making this event possible today.  It gives me great pleasure to be here today, speaking with ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    5 days ago
  • National Infrastructure Pipeline worth over $120 billion
    The National Infrastructure Pipeline, which provides a national view of current or planned infrastructure projects, from roads, to water infrastructure, to schools, and more, has climbed above $120 billion, Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop says. “Our Government is investing a record amount in modern infrastructure that Kiwis can rely on as ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    6 days ago
  • Making it easier to build infrastructure
    The Government is modernising the Public Works Act to make it easier to build infrastructure, Minister for Land Information Chris Penk announced today. An independent panel will undertake an eight-week review of the Act and advise on common sense changes to enable large scale public works to be built faster and ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    6 days ago
  • NZ enhances North Korea sanctions monitoring
    New Zealand will enhance its defence contributions to monitoring violations of sanctions against North Korea, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon announced today.  The enhancement will see the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) increase its contributions to North Korea sanctions monitoring, operating out of Japan. “This increase reflects the importance New Zealand ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    6 days ago
  • Speech to Safeguard National Health and Safety Conference
    Good afternoon everyone. It’s great to be with you all today before we wrap up Day One of the annual Safeguard National Health and Safety Conference. Thank you to the organisers and sponsors of this conference, for the chance to talk to you about the upcoming health and safety consultation. ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    6 days ago
  • Ōtaki to north of Levin alliance agreements signed
    Transport Minister Simeon Brown has welcomed an important milestone for the Ōtaki to north of Levin Road of National Significance (RoNS), following the NZ Transport Agency (NZTA) signing interim alliance agreements with two design and construction teams who will develop and ultimately build the new expressway.“The Government’s priority for transport ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    6 days ago
  • Improvements to stopping Digital Child Exploitation
    The Department of Internal Affairs [Department] is making a significant upgrade to their Digital Child Exploitation Filtering System, which blocks access to websites known to host child sexual abuse material, says Minister of Internal Affairs Brooke van Velden.  “The Department will incorporate the up-to-date lists of websites hosting child sexual ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    7 days ago
  • New vaccine research aims to combat prevalent bovine disease
    A vaccine to prevent an infectious disease that costs New Zealand cattle farmers more than $190 million each year could radically improve the health of our cows and boost on-farm productivity, Associate Agriculture Minister Andrew Hoggard says. The Ministry for Primary Industries is backing a project that aims to develop ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    7 days ago
  • Making it easier to build granny flats
    The Government has today announced that it is making it easier for people to build granny flats, Acting Prime Minister Winston Peters and RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop say. “Making it easier to build granny flats will make it more affordable for families to live the way that suits them ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    1 week ago
  • High Court Judge appointed
    Attorney-General Judith Collins today announced the appointment of Auckland King’s Counsel Gregory Peter Blanchard as a High Court Judge. Justice Blanchard attended the University of Auckland from 1991 to 1995, graduating with an LLB (Honours) and Bachelor of Arts (English). He was a solicitor with the firm that is now Dentons ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    1 week ago
  • Health workforce numbers rise
    Health Minister Dr Shane Reti says new data released today shows encouraging growth in the health workforce, with a continued increase in the numbers of doctors, nurses and midwives joining Health New Zealand. “Frontline healthcare workers are the beating heart of the healthcare system. Increasing and retaining our health workforce ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    1 week ago
  • Government to overhaul firearms laws
    Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee has today announced a comprehensive programme to reform New Zealand's outdated and complicated firearms laws. “The Arms Act has been in place for over 40 years. It has been amended several times – in a piecemeal, and sometimes rushed way. This has resulted in outdated ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Government delivers landmark specialist schools investment
    The coalition Government is delivering record levels of targeted investment in specialist schools so children with additional needs can thrive. As part of Budget 24, $89 million has been ringfenced to redevelop specialist facilities and increase satellite classrooms for students with high needs. This includes: $63 million in depreciation funding ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Major health and safety consultation begins
    A substantial consultation on work health and safety will begin today with a roadshow across the regions over the coming months, says Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Brooke van Velden.  This the first step to deliver on the commitment to reforming health and safety law and regulations, set out in ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Growing the potential of New Zealand’s forestry sector in partnership
    Forestry Minister Todd McClay, today announced the start of the Government’s plan to restore certainty and confidence in the forestry and wood processing sector. “This government will drive investment to unlock the industry’s economic potential for growth,” Mr McClay says. “Forestry’s success is critical to rebuilding New Zealand’s economy, boosting ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Government cancels forestry ETS annual service charges for 2023-24
    Annual service charges in the forestry Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) will be cancelled for 2023/24, Forestry Minister Todd McClay says. “The sector has told me the costs imposed on forestry owners by the previous government were excessive and unreasonable and I agree,” Mr McClay says. “They have said that there ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Speech to the LGNZ Infrastructure Symposium
    Introduction Thank you for having me here today and welcome to Wellington, the home of the Hurricanes, the next Super Rugby champions. Infrastructure – the challenge This government has inherited a series of big challenges in infrastructure. I don’t need to tell an audience as smart as this one that ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Government boosts Agriculture and food trade with China
    Trade and Agriculture Minister Todd McClay and Food Safety Minister Andrew Hoggard welcomed outcomes to boost agricultural and food trade between New Zealand and China. A number of documents were signed today at Government House that will improve the business environment between New Zealand and China, and help reduce barriers, including on infant formula ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • NZ and China launch Services Trade Negotiations
    Trade Minister Todd McClay, and China’s Commerce Minister Wang Wentao, today announced the official launch of Negotiations on Services Trade between the two countries.  “The Government is focused on opening doors for services exporters to grow the New Zealand’s economy,” Mr McClay says.  As part of the 2022 New Zealand-China Free Trade Agreement Upgrade ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Prime Minister Luxon meets with Premier Li
    Prime Minister Christopher Luxon met with Chinese Premier Li Qiang at Government House in Wellington today.  “I was pleased to welcome Premier Li to Wellington for his first official visit, which marks 10 years since New Zealand and China established a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership,” Mr Luxon says. “The Premier and ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Government and business tackling gender pay gap
    The coalition Government is taking action to reduce the gender pay gap in New Zealand through the development of a voluntary calculation tool. “Gender pay gaps have impacted women for decades, which is why we need to continue to drive change in New Zealand,” Acting Minister for Women Louise Upston ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Funding Boost for Rural Support Trusts
    The coalition Government is boosting funding for Rural Support Trusts to provide more help to farmers and growers under pressure, Rural Communities Minister Mark Patterson announced today. “A strong and thriving agricultural sector is crucial to the New Zealand economy and one of the ways to support it is to ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Latest data shows size of public service decreasing
    Spending on contractors and consultants continues to fall and the size of the Public Service workforce has started to decrease after years of growth, according to the latest data released today by the Public Service Commission. Workforce data for the quarter from 31 December 23 to 31 March 24 shows ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Speech to the Law Association
    Thank you to the Law Association for inviting me to speak this morning. As a former president under its previous name — the Auckland District Law Society — I take particular satisfaction in seeing this organisation, and its members, in such good heart. As Attorney-General, I am grateful for these ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • 25 years on, NZ reaffirms enduring friendship with Timor Leste
    New Zealand is committed to working closely with Timor-Leste to support its prosperity and resilience, Foreign Minister Winston Peters says.   “This year is the 25th anniversary of New Zealand sending peacekeepers to Timor-Leste, who contributed to the country’s stabilisation and ultimately its independence,” Mr Peters says.    “A quarter ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago
  • Inquiry requested into rural banking
    Promoting robust competition in the banking sector is vital to rebuilding the economy, Finance Minister Nicola Willis says.  “New Zealanders deserve a banking sector that is as competitive as possible. Banking services play an important role in our communities and in the economy. Kiwis rely on access to lending when ...
    BeehiveBy beehive.govt.nz
    2 weeks ago

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