Aug 13

Why Are Apple’s iPad Margins Half The iPhone ...

I thought this was an interesting little factoid from Reuters. the margins on Apple‘s US sales of iPads seem to be about half the same company’s margins on sales of iPhones. that different products have different margins is not unusual but that is a large difference and I think I’ve got an idea of why this is so in this case:

Apple Inc earned gross margins of 49 to 58 percent on its U.S. iPhone sales between April 2010 and the end of March 2012, while gross margins on the iPad were much lower during much of that period, according to a court filing.

The information was revealed on Thursday in a freshly unsealed statement from an Apple expert witness, filed in the company’s patent battle against Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.

An Apple representative declined to comment on the court filing.

Between October 2010 and the end of March 2012, Apple had gross margins of 23 to 32 percent on its U.S. iPad sales, which generated revenue of more than $13 billion for Apple, the filing said.

We know, absolutely, that everyone always speaks the truth and nothing but the truth in evidence in court proceedings so we’ll take those margins as gospel shall we?

Which leads us to the interesting question: why? My supposition is that it’s the way that the two products are sold.

I would emphasise that this is a supposition: also, that even I don’t think it counts for all of the margin difference, just that I think it’s likely to be a large contributor.

The iPhone, by and large, is sold with an airtime subscription. the airtime companies have always paid subsidies on such handsets. they pay the manufacturer a higher price for the kit than they charge the consumer upfront for it aiming to recoup that initial loss through airtime charges over the life of the contract. This is true of almost all markets and almost all handsets by the way.

The iPad is sold as is. Sure, you can get an airtime contract to go with it but that equipment subsidy is a lot rarer.

Which means that when buying an iPad the consumer sees, upfront, the full cost of the equipment. with an iPhone they don’t, some of that being buried in the monthly airtime charge they’re paying on their contract. And it’s hardly a surprise that you can make a larger margin on something where people don’t see the real price in quite the same manner now, is it?

It could be that the iPhone is just an even more desirable product that the iPad, it could be there’s less competition in phones than tablets. but I’d still go with my explanation: consumers see the full cost of the iPad upfront, they often or usually don’t on the iPhone. Thus margins are higher because of the obfuscation of the total price.

Why Are Apple’s iPad Margins Half The iPhone Ones?

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Aug 07

Samsung Announces Galaxy Event; Will a New Note ...

Apple and Samsung are currently arguing over tech and design patents in a San Jose courtroom, but lest we forget, where the rivalry between these two companies really matters is on store shelves. and, so far, the court case between Apple and Samsung hasn’t slowed down the ongoing fight for our consumer dollars.

Case in point: Apple and Samsung’s latest smartphone release plans reek of competition. While neither company has made official statements regarding the specific release dates of their next flagship products, all signs are pointing to August and September.

On Friday, Samsung emailed out a press invite to a Galaxy product event on August 15 in New York. Samsung officials declined to say just what would be shown off at the event, but an unnamed Samsung spokesman reportedly told Reuters that the company was planning on unveiling a new Galaxy Note smartphone in late August. If Samsung does indeed show off a new Note — maybe called a Galaxy Note II — in late August, it would arrive just ahead of Apple’s rumored debut for its next iPhone.

The latest rumors suggest that Apple is announcing its next-generation iPhone on Sept. 12. Whenever this new iPhone does show up, it’s widely expected to have a larger display than the 3.5-inch units seen on the last five generations of iPhones.

Large smartphone displays are something Samsung knows well. Samsung’s current three top smartphones all feature bigger-than-iPhone screens. Samsung’s Galaxy Nexus has a 4.65-inch screen, the Galaxy S III has a 4.8-inch display and then, of course, there’s the Galaxy Note and its massive 5.3-inch touchscreen, complete with stylus input.

While many critics slammed the Note in reviews for having a laughably large screen, Samsung has sold Notes by the millions. the oversized phone is a genuine hit. If Samsung’s history is any indication if it thinks there is room to grow, a follow-up to the Note could feature an even larger screen. the predecessor to the 4.65-inch display Galaxy Nexus was Samsung’s Nexus S, which featured a 4-inch screen. the Galaxy S II had a 4.3-inch display, while the first-generation Galaxy S phone packed a 4-inch touchscreen.

Yet while the Note has been a sales success, massive phones haven’t always worked out. the Dell Streak, a phone with a 5-inch display, was a significant enough sales flop and that Dell gave up on its smartphone efforts altogether.

Samsung Announces Galaxy Event; Will a New Note Launch Before iPhone?

Jul 19

China’s Lenovo inches closer to a global ...

HONG KONG | Mon Jul 16, 2012 4:07am IST

HONG KONG (Reuters) – Lenovo Group ltd is on track to overtake Hewlett-Packard Co as the world’s biggest PC maker by sales as soon as this year, making it the first Chinese company to grab the top spot globally in a technology sector.

The ThinkPad maker’s rise highlights the advance of China’s technology firms on the world stage in recent years thanks to a combination of aggressive pricing, overseas acquisitions and their taking advantage of a fast-growing home market.

Analysts, however, also warn that Lenovo’s rapid gains in market share have come at the expense of profit margins, while the company faces slowing growth in the market for personal computers and tough rivals in the tablet PC space.

“It’s just a matter of time before Lenovo becomes No. 1 and it won’t be surprising at all if it happens later this year,” said Frederick Wong, executive director at Avant Capital Management (Hong Kong) ltd, which owns shares in Lenovo.

He added, however, that competition in the tablet sector and a weak PC market outlook could put pressure on Lenovo.

Lenovo, which became the world’s No. 2 PC vendor in the third quarter of 2011, had a 14.9 percent global market share in the April-June quarter this year, a mere 0.6 percentage point away from HP’s 15.5 percent, according to research firm IDC’s latest data. Figures from industry tracker Gartner show an even narrower gap, with Lenovo just 0.2 percentage point from HP.

In another technology sector, China’s Huawei Technologies Co ltd, the world’s No.2 maker of telecom equipment, had been expected to surpass Sweden’s Ericsson in 2011 sales. But slow telecom spending, stiff competition in the handset market and difficulties in tapping the massive U.S. market held it back.

Lenovo’s rise has been helped by its purchase of Germany’s Medion and a joint venture with Japan’s NEC Corp last year, as well as its acquisition of IBM Corp’s PC business in 2005.

Investors have rewarded Lenovo for its market share gains, sending its stock up by around 16 percent this year and outpacing rivals HP, third-ranked Dell inc and No. 4 Acer inc, whose stocks have dropped over the same period.

Lenovo currently trades at a multiple of 12.5 times forward earnings, the second-highest among the top-five PC makers and well above the 4.6 times multiple for HP, Thomson Reuters Starmine data showed.

But profit margins have suffered. Lenovo had a 1.4 percent operating margin in the latest quarter, lower than HP’s 7.4 percent and Dell’s 6.2 percent, the data showed.

“HP, Dell and Acer have switched lanes in the PC race and passed the baton to Lenovo in terms of focusing on sales rather than margins,” said Dickie Chang, an analyst at IDC in Hong Kong.

Another risk is slowing growth in the PC market as the global economy, including Lenovo’s home turf and stronghold China, eases.

China accounts for about 42 percent of Lenovo’s total revenue, with the bulk of that coming from PC sales.

Global PC shipment growth was largely flat in the second quarter, marking the seventh straight quarter of low 0 to 5 percent growth for the industry.

“We remain positive on Lenovo’s market share expansion, but the absolute growth is nevertheless being negatively impacted by a slower market,” Jefferies said in a report. Jefferies has an “underperform” rating on Lenovo with a price target of HK$5.70.

Overall PC demand could pick up this year with the launch of Windows 8, though the catch is that competition in the sector for tablet PCs — not Lenovo’s strongest area — will heat up because the operating system is designed to run on laptops and tablets.

Mizuho analyst Charles Park forecasts the PC market will grow by just 3 percent this year.

Lenovo’s tablets, its LePads, will also face competition from new products, including the next versions of Amazon.com Inc’s Kindle Fire and Apple Inc’s iPad, as well as Google Inc’s Nexus 7 and Microsoft Corp’s Surface.

(Additional reporting by Vikram Subhedar; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree and Chris Gallagher)

China’s Lenovo inches closer to a global tech title

Jul 17

Lenovo poised to surpass HP as top PC maker, say ...

Lenovo's ThinkPad Edge.

Lenovo’s ThinkPad Edge.

(Credit: Lenovo)

The PC market may see a new leader by the end of the year, says at least one analyst quoted by Reuters.

Currently in second place, Lenovo is set to overtake HP as the top seller, making it the first Chinese vendor to grab the No. 1 spot in a key technology sector.

“It’s just a matter of time before Lenovo becomes No. 1 and it won’t be surprising at all if it happens later this year,” Frederick Wong, executive director at Avant Capital Management (Hong Kong) Ltd, told Reuters.

Lenovo stole the No. 2 spot from Dell during last year’s third quarter, according to Gartner and other researchers. Since then the company has continued climbing the charts and is now hot on HP’s tail.

A July 11 report from IDC pegged Lenovo’s worldwide second-quarter market share at 14.9 percent, compared with HP at 15.5 percent. Gartner found an even tighter race, giving Lenovo 14.7 percent of the market and HP 14.9 percent.

But sometimes being No. 1 isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.

Like other computer vendors, Lenovo is stuck in a sector that’s seen better times. PC shipments continue to decline, with Apple the only vendor still experiencing some growth.

And despite gains in market share, Lenovo’s PC profit margins have narrowed. the company achieved only a 1.4 percent operating margin last quarter, compared with HP at 7.4 percent and Dell at 6.2 percent, Reuters noted.

Lenovo also faces challenges in the booming tablet market where it’s up against Apple and a host of Android vendors, now including Google itself with the new Nexus 7.

PC demand could bounce back this year if Windows 8 spurs more sales, thereby benefiting Lenovo. But the upcoming new OS is designed for tablets as well as computers. So Lenovo may be in the same boat as other Android vendors in facing more competition from Windows tablets, Reuters added.

Lenovo poised to surpass HP as top PC maker, say analysts

Jul 08

Apple wins preliminary injunction on ...

June 26, 2012 at 7:14 pm

A bit of legal news this evening: U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh issued a preliminary injunction on the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 in the United States late this evening, according to Reuters. Apple has fought worldwide for close to a year to get an injunction against a slew of Samsung products, claiming Samsung “slavishly” copies its products. the folks in Cupertino are most likely celebrating this evening, after working hard to protect the hot-selling iPad. when asked to give comment on the case, Judge Koh said Samsung is “competing unfairly” by “flooding the market with infringing products.”

“Although Samsung has a right to compete, it does not have a right to compete unfairly, by flooding the market with infringing products. while Samsung will certainly suffer lost sales from the issuance of an injunction, the hardship to Apple of having to directly compete with Samsung’s infringing products outweighs Samsung’s harm in light of the previous findings by the Court.”

According to AllThingsD, the injunction will begin once Apple posts a $2.6 million bond to protect Samsung if the injunction is later determined to be wrongly issued. An Apple spokeswoman commented, “This kind of blatant copying is wrong and, as we’ve said many times before, we need to protect Apple’s intellectual property when companies steal our ideas.”

To be clear, this has been issued for the original Galaxy Tab—not the newer version Samsung just released.

Oh, and Happy Google I/O everyone (which begins tomorrow)! Check out the court documents below:

Documents via AllThingsD

Top image via Gizmodo

Apple wins preliminary injunction on Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1, ahead of Google I/O kicking off tomorrow

Jul 04

Google Nexus 7 vs. Asus Transformer Pad Infinity ...

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Early on Wednesday, an Asustek executive told Reuters the Nexus 7 would be a rival to Amazon's Kindle Fire. 

“It's targeting Amazon. The Kindle is based on Google's platform but with its own service, so Google has to launch its own service, too,” he told Reuters.

One thing he didn't tell Reuters is that the tablet is set to ship in mid-July, which is a week prior to the Asus Transformer Pad Infinity Tf700.

Asus unveiled its all-new powerful 700 series in January at the Consumer Electronics show in Las Vegas. The new tablet blew fans away with its 1920×1200 HD resolution that beats most laptops and doubles the brilliance of its predecessor, which comes with 1,280×800 pixels.

While both the Tf700 and Nexus 7 come with a Tegra 3 processor, the Tf700 is clocked at 1.6 GHz and the Nexus 7 comes in at 1.3 GHz. 

The Tf700 is also an improvement on the Eee Pad Transformer Prime Tf201, which was released in December. The Eee Pad was criticized for its poor GPS performance, which Asus said stemmed from a metallic unibody design that affects the performance of GPS when receiving signals from satellites. most of the tablet's glitches have been addressed, changing its back-panel design to increase the performance of GPS, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, it said.

The Nexus 7 does, however, come with the latest Android 4.1 Jelly Bean software, while the Tf700 runs Android's previous Ice Cream Sandwich. 

The Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, set to be released next month, was unveiled at the Google I/O 2012 conference on Wednesday.

Its performance is significantly faster than Ice Cream Sandwich. Jelly Bean is built to harness the power of mobile processors better, and improve CPU utilization, according to Google. 

The company calls the new software its “butter project”, touting its newly improved silky and smooth graphics. Jelly Bean will also feature widgets that can be re-sized and organized by the user manually. 

Easier photo sharing, better predictive keyboard, voice typing and voice search are also some of the highlights of Jelly Bean.

Google Nexus 7 vs. Asus Transformer Pad Infinity TF700: How Do The Tablets Measure Up?

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Jul 02

Apple pays $60 million to settle China iPad ...

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – Apple inc has paid $60 million to Proview Technology (Shenzhen) to end a dispute over the iPad trademark in China that saw the world’s most valuable technology company engaged in a protracted legal tussle with a near-bankrupt Chinese firm.

The lawsuit had hampered some sales and delayed the launch of the new iPad in China. Prior to the launch, Proview requested Chinese authorities in scores of Chinese cities to order re-sellers to take all iPads off their shelves.

The court-mediated settlement, announced on the website of the Higher People’s Court of Guangdong province, will allow Apple to get on with selling its popular tablet PC in one of its most important markets, analysts said.

“The settlement is great news for Apple. It just allows them to get on with business and stop being distracted. The new iPad has been so late to the China market that if they drag it any longer, Apple will stand to lose quite a bit more,” said Teck-Zhung Wong, a Beijing-based analyst with technology research firm IDC.

Apple and Proview Technology (Shenzhen), a unit of Hong Kong-listed Proview International Holdings ltd, have been negotiating to reach a settlement since the court conducted an initial hearing in February, after Apple appealed a lower court ruling against it.

Apple had said it bought ownership of the iPad trademark in various countries from Proview, once a global monitor maker, but the Chinese company argued the U.S. firm dealt with only one unit of Proview. a Chinese court ruled that Proview Technology (Shenzhen) owned the name in China. Proview, which registered the iPad trademark in China in 2001, tried in may to sue Apple in the United States, but that case was thrown out.

An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment on Monday.

The iPad dominates China’s tablet PC market with more than 70 percent market share, though Lenovo Group Ltd’s Lepads and Samsung Electronics co Ltd’s Galaxy Tabs have been gaining traction.  Continued…

Apple pays $60 million to settle China iPad trademark dispute

Jul 01

Samsung Galaxy Nexus Smartphone Banned

Keerthi Chandrashekar first Posted: June 30, 2012 12:43 PM EDT

Consumers in the U.S. will not be able to buy this Samsung Galaxy Nexus smartphone once Apple posts the $96 million bond. REUTERS/Bobby Yip

On Friday United States California Judge Lucy Koh ordered a temporary sales ban on the Samsung Galaxy Nexus smartphones in the U.S., giving Apple its second victory in the same week.

Earlier in the week, Judge Koh also ruled in Apple’s favor banning the sales of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet computer.

Apple has been contesting that Samsung’s products infringe upon Apple patents.

“Apple has clearly shown that it is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary injunctive relief,” Judge Lucy Koh wrote in the ruling available online

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The U.S. District Court of Northern California said on Friday that the Samsung Galaxy Nexus smartphone “likely” infringes on four patents held by Apple, including one that is part of Siri, Apple’s voice assistant used on the new iPhone 4S.

Apple needs to post a $96 million bond to cover the estimated loss of sales Samsung will suffer in case Apple loses the lawsuit down the road. Once the bond is posted, the sales ban will go into effect.

“We are currently working closely with Google to resolve this matter, as the patent in question concerns Google’s unified search function,” said Nam Ki-yung, a spokesman for Samsung.

This isn’t the first time the two companies have tangled. Apple and Samsung have been tangled up in lawsuits in North America, Asia, and Europe since April 2011. Apple accuses Samsung of basically copying the iPhone and the iPad while Samsung says that Apple uses its mobile technology without permission from them. 

© 2012 Latinos Post. All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

Samsung Galaxy Nexus Smartphone Banned

Jun 28

Google’s tablet expected to take on Apple ...

Google is expected to move into the tablet market, following Apple, Amazon and Microsoft, with an own-brand product aimed at pushing its own Android software into an increasingly crowded and fast-growing market.

Expected to be called the Nexus 7, it is forecast to be have a seven-inch diagonal screen and run a new version of Google’s tablet software.

But some analysts are sceptical that it will be able to make substantial inroads into Apple’s dominant share.

The announcement, expected at its I/O developer conference in California, will pitch Google into battle with Apple, whose iPad dominates sales of tablets – with almost 70% of the worldwide market in the first quarter of 2012 according to researchers IDC – and with online retailer Amazon, which sells its Kindle fire tablet in the US and is expected to bring it to Europe later this year.

Rather than tackling the 10in iPad head-on, Google is expected instead to attack the Kindle fire, which also has a 7in screen. “It’s targeting Amazon,” an executive at Taiwan’s Asus, which is believed to be making the device, told Reuters. “The Kindle is based on Google’s platform but with its own service, so Google has to launch its own service, too.”

Online rumours suggest it will be called the Nexus 7 – which would follow the pattern it has followed with its own-brand smartphones, which have all used the Nexus naming convention, even while being made by other companies such as Samsung and HTC.

Industry rumours say the Nexus 7 has been made for Google by Taiwan’s Asus – a surprising move given that Google last August bid for Motorola Mobility, which made the Xoom tablet. that takeover was completed in May.

Google has made repeated efforts to break into the tablet market defined by Apple with the launch of the iPad in January 2010. Its first tablet-only software, Android 3.0 – known as Honeycomb – introduced in January 2011 was expected to create challengers to Apple’s product, but fewer than 10m sold in the first year, while the iPad sold more than 38m in 2011.

The software giant Microsoft has also indicated that it thinks tablets are of growing importance. last week it announced that it would be offering its own tablet, called Surface, which will run its next Windows 8 operating system – though it offered no dates or prices for the release. Windows 8 is expected in the autumn, probably in October.

And speaking in Amsterdam on Wednesday, Microsoft corporate vice-president Antoine Leblond forecast that “next year, tablets will outsell desktop [PCs]“. according to the researchers IDC, total tablet sales will be almost 105 this year, and will hit 143m in 2013 – compared to total PC sales of about 400m, of which more than 60% will be laptops.

The Nexus 7 is expected to go on sale later this year, and possibly running an as-yet unreleased version 5.0 of Android, called Jelly Bean, rather than the current 4.0 version, Ice Cream Sandwich.

Salman Chaudhry, analyst at the research company Context, said the tablet “must run Jelly Bean rather than Ice Cream Sandwich if Google is looking at creating interest and support from the developer community. Google mobile platforms have already suffered from fragmented operating systems as Google continues to work on standardising both operating system and user interface”.

He expects pricing to be “in line” with the Kindle fire, which sells for $199 in the US – at which price analysts claim Amazon loses money, which it recoups in profit on books, films and other items bought through it. the Kindle fire was a hit in the US last Christmas, selling an estimated 2m, but sales since have slowed substantially, according to analyst calculations. Amazon has not given any figures for sales.

But Chaudhry said: “I wouldn’t expect it to eat into Kindle fire share either for a number of reasons. Overall, we shouldn’t expect this particular tablet to take on the iPad despite Google’s efforts to differentiate it. Lessons haven’t been learnt from previous Tablet failures. the 7in tablets – RIM Playbook, HTC Flyer – have been by and large unsuccessful, and are only really suitable for content consumption.

“Against this backdrop, strategy needs to be more aligned towards the Kindle Fire’s purely ‘content consumption’ orientated device. However, if Google is looking to take a bite out of Amazon’s share, it will find that it’s competing against a much more well-developed entertainment orientated platform with a huge, well organised catalogues of books and media content.”

Pricing it close to the Kindle Fire’s $199 in the US would suggest that it was not cutting edge, Chaudhry added: “This might make the iPad even more desirable in the consumer’s eyes. by appealing to a demographic which is already price-conscious, average user spend per device will also be lower than on more high-end tablets such as the iPad.”

Google’s tablet expected to take on Apple iPad

Jun 18

Apple CEO sees TV as area of “intense ...

Apple CEO Tim Cook is pictured at the All Things Digital conference in Los Angeles in this may 29, 2012 handout photo.

Credit: Reuters/Asa Mathat/All Things Digital/Handout

RANCHOS PALOS VERDES, California (Reuters) – Apple inc Chief Executive Tim Cook said technology for televisions was of “intense interest” but stressed the company’s efforts would unfold gradually amid speculation the iPad and iPhone maker was on the brink of unveiling a revolutionary iTV.

In one of his more revealing interviews since assuming the helm of the world’s most valuable company, Cook also said he hoped someday to see Apple products manufactured in the United States and outlined his approach to managing an organization long-associated with its late founder Steve Jobs.

“Another thing that Steve taught us all is to not to be focused on the past,” Cook told this year’s All Things Digital conference, an annual gathering of A-list technology and media executives in the upscale California coastal resort town of Rancho Palos Verdes.

Industry insiders and executives say Apple may unveil a TV-based device in late 2012 or 2013 that has the potential to shake up the cozy television content and distribution industry the way the iPod and iPhone disrupted music and mobile content, but Cook has steered clear of commenting on that issue directly.

“This is an area of intense interest for us,” Cook said, referring to Apple’s existing television set-top box product. “We’re going to keep pulling this string and see where it takes us.”

When asked specifically if Apple was making a television set, Cook said he was not going to answer that question.

Apple already sells a $99 set top box called Apple TV that streams Netflix and other content. Cook, who has previously said the Apple TV product had a hobby status inside the company, noted the company was sticking with it despite not being known as a “hobby kind of company.”

“Here’s the way we would look at that, not just at this area but other areas, and ask can we control the key technology?” he said in response to a question about how Apple thinks about improving the television experience for consumers. “Can we make a significant contribution, far beyond what others have done in this area? Can we make a product that we would want?”

Apple has been in negotiations with content companies for its devices. It began talks earlier this year to stream films owned by EPIX, which is backed by three major movie studios.

The company has a good relationship with content owners and doesn’t see the need to own a content business, Cook said, adding he has met with several people in that business recently.

In wide-ranging remarks, Cook said he would like to see more of the company’s products assembled at home than in China and contain more U.S. components such as semiconductors.

Apple has been criticized for relying on low-cost Asian manufacturers to assemble its products and for contributing to the decline of the U.S. manufacturing sector.

Cook, who took the helm of the world’s most valuable technology company in August shortly before founder Steve Jobs died, said manufacturing in the United States was difficult because of declining tool-and-die manufacturing expertise, among other things, but he was working on it.

“There are things that can be done in the U.S., not just for the U.S. market but that can be exported for the world,” Cook said. “On the assembly piece, could that be done in the U.S.? I hope so, again, one day,” he added.

Apple’s final assembly is done through Asian contract manufacturers, particularly Taiwan’s Foxconn Technology Group and its listed entity Hon Hai Precision. Cook noted that Apple does some component manufacturing in the United States, including the main microchip that runs the iPhone and iPad.

Apple makes the A5 processor in a 1.6 million square-foot factory in Austin, Texas, owned by Korean electronics giant Samsung Electronics.

Cook also said some of the glass for the iPhone and iPad is made in a plant in Kentucky.

The CEO talked about how the iPad was just in the “first innings,” but declined to say what was in store for it next.

He reiterated his belief that many consumers will use the iPad more than computers. In response to a question about PC software-maker Microsoft Corp’s efforts to enter the tablet market, Cook brushed off the threat.

“The more you look at the tablet as a PC, the more the baggage from the past affects the product,” he said.

Apple released the iPad in 2010 and it has quickly defined the tablet computer market, selling more than 67 million units so far.

DOUBLING DOWN ON SECRECY

The 51-year old Cook said he spends less time focused on marketing and design as CEO than his predecessor, who Cook said spent “virtually all of his time on those two things.”

At a company the size of Apple, Cook said, having a strong team is critical.

“You could have an S on your chest and a cape on your back and not be able to do everything,” said Cook, who later cited Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr as well as Walt Disney co Chief Executive Bob Iger as figures that he looks up to.

Cook also discussed efforts to make the company more transparent on certain issues, such as supplier responsibility and environmental matters, but stressed he was committed to preserving Apple’s culture.

One Jobs legacy that Cook flagged is Apple’s well-known penchant for going to great lengths to keep details of new products under tight wraps, noting that he planned to “double down on secrecy” on products.

But he suggested Apple would not be constrained by its past.

“I love museums, but I don’t want to live in one,” he said.

(Editing by Matt Driskill and Mark Potter)

Apple CEO sees TV as area of “intense interest”