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Circuit Breaker

HP earnings rise 25 percent to $2.3 billion

Hewlett-Packard has beaten expectations for its first fiscal quarter of 2010.

The company reported on Wednesday net revenue of $31.2 billion and earnings of $2.32 billion, or 96 cents per share. That's an 8 percent boost from revenue of $28.8 billion and a 25 percent boost from earnings of $1.86 billion, or 75 cents per share, in the same quarter a year ago.

Wall Street was expecting earnings of $1.06 per share and revenue of $30.01 billion. Analysts who track HP had been anticipating strong gains in the PC and server businesses, which … Read more

Samsung gobbling up TV market share

Samsung Electronics' grip on the flat-panel TV market is tightening.

Almost one in five televisions shipped during the third quarter of 2009 had a Samsung label on it. That's according to DisplaySearch, a market research company that tracks sales of TVs. As The Wall Street Journal noted on Wednesday, Samsung's 17.2 percent--and growing--share of the worldwide TV market is a big deal. No company has had a 20 percent share of televisions since TVs were first sold.

The speed with which Samsung has overtaken its competitors is fairly remarkable as well. Just four years ago, the company … Read more

A new peek at what makes Jobs tick

The famously private Steve Jobs is apparently ready to tell the world what it's like being Steve Jobs.

According to a report in The New York Times Monday, Jobs is cooperating with a book to be written about his life and career. It will be penned by Walter Isaacson, former managing editor of Time magazine, who currently runs a nonprofit. The report says Isaacson has, in the course of collecting material for the biography, been invited for a tour of the house where Jobs grew up.

While public interest has certainly been piqued by the prospect of getting an … Read more

How to succeed at marketing the iPad

Steve Jobs insists on calling the iPad "magical" and "revolutionary," but it's a device whose purpose has mystified many so far.

So how will Apple explain the touch-screen e-reader/Web tablet that's being described, and in some cases derided, as "an iPod Touch on steroids," albeit one that will cost between $499 and $829? Experts who've made their careers teaching and working in high-tech marketing say it will come down to the very basics of marketing: Focus on how a product will make the proud new owner of this device happier, … Read more

Report: Apple to test $1 TV downloads

A new report Wednesday evening says cheaper iTunes TV show downloads could be in the offing.

Apple will be offering U.S. TV shows for $1 each, according to the Financial Times. The offer will coincide with the release of the iPad--expected sometime in April--and is described by "people familiar with the discussions" as a "test" to see whether cheaper downloads will result in increased sales.

TV episodes are normally $1.99 for standard-definition and $2.99 for high-definition through iTunes. The Financial Times says that "some" television networks acceded to Apple's push … Read more

Report: Apple paying 15 percent refund on broken 27-inch iMacs

For those who've had repeated problems with their 27-inch iMac, it appears Apple is ready to make it up to you, somewhat.

Gizmodo is reporting several readers who've been given a 15 percent cash refund for having to return a broken 27-inch iMac. It's been widely reported that customers have complained of receiving 27-inch iMacs with cracked, flickering, or yellow-tinted screens. But Apple has yet to comment on the record about the problem, so roughly $300 (assuming it's a $2,000 model) given to customers certainly comes across like an acknowledgment or even an apology for … Read more

Remember when Sony was the innovator?

Despite finally breaking a year's streak of quarterly losses, Sony's press conference Thursday will likely be remembered mostly for a quote that's already being mocked by tech blogs.

During a press conference to announce its earnings, Sony Chief Financial Officer Nobuyuki Oneda expressed his company's interest in competing in the touch-screen tablet market with Apple. According to ComputerWorld, he said:

"That is a market we are also very interested in. We are confident we have the skills to create a product...Time-wise we are a little behind the iPad but it's a space we would like to be an active player in."

Seems reasonable enough, right? Lots of companies would--and will--follow Apple's lead. It's just the nature of business, and we expect it. But it's important to point out why Sony is being mildly ridiculed for this quote: because in most observers' eyes, this is exactly what's wrong with the company. The gadget maker that used to be at the forefront of innovation is rarely first at anything anymore--with the exception, it should be noted, of the Sony Reader, the first modern e-book reader. But over the past decade they've gotten beat at their own game in several major categories: music players (Apple), televisions (Samsung), and video games consoles (Microsoft and Nintendo). … Read more

Who will buy the iPad?

The reaction to the iPad has been far less positive than what we've become used to when new Apple products debut.

Many took to Twitter, Facebook, and tech blogs, including here at CNET, to voice dissatisfaction with everything from the size, the price, the specs, and the content available, to the usage model--what do we use this for and what does it replace?

Here at CNET, we saw something similar in the reader response to a poll we ran immediately after Apple's event Wednesday. Though it's far from being scientific, it does illustrate a consensus among our … Read more

iPad unites Apple's media and mobile ambitions

While it's still too soon to tell if it can live up to the insane amount of hype that preceded its introduction, the iPad is, more than any other product the company has made, the quintessential Apple device.

From the almost entirely homegrown technology, to the addition of the books counterpart to its iTunes media hub, to taking a risk on the middle category between smartphones and laptops, the iPad completes the picture for Apple in a lot of ways.

Steve Jobs used "revolutionary" to describe his company's newest device Wednesday, and while that's more … Read more

Apple iPad tablet makes debut (live blog)

After months of rumors and speculation about a slate-like device, Apple had its say on Wednesday. This is our live coverage from the high-profile press event, which kicked off in San Francisco at 10 a.m. PST. This page contains our up-to-the-minute updates as the announcement was made. Click here for our summary of everything you need to know about the new tablet, dubbed the iPad.

You can also see a collection of videos from Steve Jobs' introduction of the iPad here. In addition, Tom Merritt, Molly Wood, and Rafe Needleman hosted a special edition of Buzz Out Loud. Click here for the show to hear their ongoing commentary throughout today's announcement.

9:53 a.m. PST: OK, we're all settled inside Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, where the event should get going in just under 10 minutes. I'm with CNET reviewer Donald Bell, who will be providing some occasional commentary today. The place is packed already, and Bob Dylan is on the speakers. The stage is a bit of a different setup than we've seen at these events before, with a comfortable-looking leather chair and table set up on the left.

10:01 a.m.: Lights are lowering, and music is getting turned down. Here we go.

10:01 a.m.: Steve Jobs takes the stage to a standing ovation.

10:02 a.m.: He says he wants to kick off 2010 by introducing a truly magical and revolutionary product today. But first a few updates to other products.

iPods are up first. Steve says the 250 millionth iPod was sold last week.

10:03 a.m.: Now he's talking about retail stores.

And another store, the App Store, is an "incredible phenomenon" he says. With 140,000 apps in the App Store, there have been 3 billion downloads over the past 18 months

10:04 a.m.: Finally, he shows an old photo of himself and Woz and says since they started the company in 1976, and now they have a company making $15.6 billion in revenue. "Apple is an over-$50 billion company now," he says.

10:05 a.m.: He is going to explain where the revenue comes from: iPods, iPhones, and Macs. "What's interesting," he says, is that iPods, iPhones, and Macs are mobile devices. Apple is a mobile device company. "That's what we do."

10:06 a.m.: Apple is the largest mobile devices company in the world now, by revenue, according to Jobs. He says this includes Sony, Samsung, and Nokia's mobile devices units.

10:06 a.m.: That's the end of the updates. Now to the main event.

He shows a photo of Moses holding a tablet. "I chuckled when I saw this."

10:07 a.m.: Quick history lesson: The 1991 PowerBook is on the screen now. It's the first modern laptop, he tells us.

He shows the 2007 original iPhone, too.

"All of us use laptops and smartphones now," he says. "The question has arisen lately, is there room for a third category of device in the middle?"

10:09 a.m.: In order to create a new category of devices, they have to be really good at doing some important things, he says. That includes Web browsing, e-mail, photos, watching video, listening to music, playing games, and reading e-books.

10:09 a.m.: Some people have thought that's a Netbook, he says. "The problem is Netbooks aren't better at anything," he says to loud laughter and applause.

"They're just cheap laptops. We think we have something better."

10:10 a.m.: iPad is the name.… Read more

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