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Apple even stronger a year after Steve Jobs death
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 5, 2012


As Apple paid homage Friday to Steve Jobs a year after his death, the US technology giant appeared to be extending its leadership in the sector even without the visionary leader.

Visitors to the Apple website were greeted with a brief video showing snippets of Jobs and the various products he introduced, from the early Apple computers to the iPhone, and a message from chief executive Tim Cook.

"Steve's passing one year ago was a sad and difficult time for all of us," Cook wrote.

"I hope that today everyone will reflect on his extraordinary life and the many ways he made the world a better place."

Jobs died October 5, 2011 at the age of 56, after a long battle with cancer.

"One of the greatest gifts Steve gave to the world was Apple," Cook said. "No company has ever inspired such creativity or set such high standards for itself. Our values originated from Steve and his spirit will forever be the foundation of Apple. We share the great privilege and responsibility of carrying his legacy into the future."

Cook added: "I'm incredibly proud of the work we are doing, delivering products that our customers love and dreaming up new ones that will delight them down the road. It's a wonderful tribute to Steve's memory and everything he stood for."

Despite the loss of Jobs, Apple has maintained and even extended its leadership with a record-breaking introduction of the iPhone 5, helping lift its shares to record highs.

Apple is also widely expected to introduce a smaller version of its market-leading iPad later this month, which may be another huge success.

But analysts said this may not be an indication of Apple's long-term future.

"Apple can continue to fly along on the fumes of the Steve Jobs-era for quite a while," said Roger Kay, an analyst and consultant with Endpoint Technologies Associates.

Jobs and Apple had "a lot of things in the pipeline" before he died and these ideas can keep fueling Apple for some time, he added.

"What Steve could do was envision a product market that didn't exist at all," Kay said. "There aren't many people who can do that. Not at Apple, maybe not anywhere."

Over the long term, Kay said the outlook is less clear. Apple's success was not just the work of one person, said Kay, but Jobs was at the center of it.

"You can have an orchestra, and all the players are very fine, but the conductor is the guy who pulls it all together and makes it sounds like an orchestra," he said. "That's the way he ran Apple."

Trip Chowdhry at Global Equities Research said Apple may never be the same.

"Our research is indicating that probably this is the peak for Apple," Chowdhry said in a note to clients.

"The success of a consumer product is dictated by getting the last two percent right," Chowdhry explained.

"We think that skill has now left Apple, and Apple may be the new Microsoft, coming with good enough products like Microsoft does. Perfection may not be the hallmark of Apple as Steve Jobs is no more."

Jobs was just 21 when he founded Apple Computer in 1976 in his family garage with his 26-year-old friend Steve Wozniak.

From such humble beginnings, the company grew into the world's most valuable firm, with a market value of above $600 billion. Since Jobs' death, Apple stock is up some 70 percent.

Jobs led the drive for Apple to produce the iPod, iPhone and iPad. He also created iTunes, which became one of the world's biggest e-commerce platforms and a leading vendor of music, apps and other content.

Under Jobs, Apple introduced its first computers and then the Macintosh, which became wildly popular in the 1980s. But he left Apple in 1985 after an internal power struggle and started NeXT Computer company, aimed at businesses.

He then co-founded Pixar animated studios in 1986 from a former computer graphics unit he bought from movie industry titan George Lucas. The studio has produced acclaimed films like "Toy Story."

Jobs reconciled with Apple in 1996 with the company buying NeXT for $429 million and Jobs ascending once again to the Apple throne.

Jobs revamped the Macintosh line, as well as launching a "post-PC era" in which personal computers give way to smart mobile gadgets.

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Foxconn denies strike at China plant
Beijing (AFP) Oct 6, 2012 - Electronics parts giant Foxconn denied reports Saturday that thousands of workers went on strike at one of its plants in central China and halted production of components for Apple's iPhone 5.

The Taiwan-based company acknowledged in a statement that two isolated labour disputes erupted at its plant in Zhengzhou on October 1 and 2, but said they were immediately addressed and that production of the iconic phones continued.

Foxconn was responding to a report by the New York-based China Labour Watch that said between 3,000 and 4,000 workers went on strike on Friday over increased product quality levels and demands that workers work through a national holiday.

The disputes marked the latest unrest to hit Foxconn, whose factories in China have been beset by a string of worker suicides in recent years, and follows a massive brawl at one facility last month.

"Any reports that there has been an employee strike are inaccurate, there has been no workplace stoppage in that facility or any other Foxconn facility and production has continued on schedule," the Foxconn statement said.

"Employees who have worked during the China national holidays at all our operations in China have done so voluntarily and this is supported by written documentation and any reports to the contrary are inaccurate."

The China Labour Watch, citing workers at the plant, said the work stoppage resulted in "a state of paralysis" to multiple iPhone 5 production lines.

Officials at the factory were not available for comment on Saturday.

Foxconn is the world's largest maker of computer components and assembles products for Apple, Sony, Intel and Nokia, among others.

Its vast plants in China employ up to 1.2 million workers, with nearly half of them at a sprawling complex in Shenzhen, in the south of the country.

Last month, around 5,000 police were deployed to control a huge brawl among workers at a Foxconn plant in the northern city of Taiyuan, where 79,000 people make items including electronic components for automobiles and consumer products.

In 2010, at least 13 Foxconn employees in China died in apparent suicides, which activists blamed on tough working conditions, prompting calls for better treatment of staff.



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Google, publishers end long-running copyright case
Washington (AFP) Oct 4, 2012
Google and US publishing firms announced Thursday that they had reached a settlement in a long-running copyright case over books and journals digitized by the Internet giant. The deal "will provide access to publishers' in-copyright books and journals digitized by Google for its Google Library Project," ending seven years of litigation, Google and the Association of American Publishers said ... read more


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