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iPhone extends gains in US market: survey
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 6, 2013


Apple offers iMac for school purchases
Cupertino, Calif. (UPI) Mar 6, 2013 - Apple has announced a new version of its iMac computer with scaled-down specifications and a lowered price, aimed at educational institutions.

It has the same 21.5-inch display as the consumer version but runs a less-expensive dual-core Intel i3 processor instead of a quad-core Intel Core i5, comes with 4 gigabytes of RAM instead of 8 gigabytes and features a 500 gigabyte hard drive instead of 1 terabyte unit, PC Magazine reported Wednesday.

The price of $1,099 is $200 less than that of the entry-level consumer iMac.

Apple first offered less expensive iMac models to budget-constrained schools a year ago, and the new version, like its predecessor, can only be purchased by learning institutions.

Apple said it would not be available to individual students or faculty through Apple's existing educational discount program.

Apple's iPhone gained ground in the US market over the holiday season and early 2013, outpacing Samsung and other smartphone makers using the Android operating system, a survey found Wednesday.

The comScore survey covering the three months ending in January showed Apple grabbed 37.8 percent of the smartphone market, an increase of 3.5 percentage points from the prior three-month period.

Samsung also boosted its market share, but at a slower pace. The South Korean electronics giant held 21.4 percent of the US smartphone market, up from 19.5 percent previously, comScore said.

The two leaders were well ahead of other rivals, including Taiwan's HTC, in third pace with 9.7 percent, Motorola (8.6 percent) and South Korean LG (7.0 percent.

The data showed Apple, which has been losing ground globally to the Google Android system, reversed some of that trend in the US market during the period.

Android's share slipped 1.3 points to 52.3 percent, while Apple's iOS gained 3.5 points to 37.8 percent, comScore said.

BlackBerry's platform fell to 5.9 percent from 7.8 percent and Microsoft's Windows Phone slipped a fraction to 3.1 percent.

Apple introduced its iPhone 5 in the United States in September, and also saw strong demand for its earlier versions that were discounted following the launch.

Microsoft released its Windows Phone 8 operating system in late October.

The comScore survey found 129.4 million people in the US owned smartphones in the period, a seven percent increase from October.

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News Corp shows, tell details of education tablet
New York (AFP) March 6, 2013
News Corp. took the wraps off its new tablet computer for the school market Wednesday, saying the device would use "digital innovation to transform teaching and learning." Rupert Murdoch's media conglomerate showed the Amplify device at the South by Southwest conference in Austin, Texas, after having announced plans in July. Amplify is a 10-inch (25-centimeter) screen tablet using the An ... read more


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