The ‘Hobby’ Strikes Gold: Apple TV Sales Hit One Million

Apple has issued a press release saying that it expects to sell one million new Apple TVs by the end of the week. The second-gen set-top box has been on sale for three months. That puts it out of the league of Apple’s top-sellers, the iPad and the iPhone, but it’s still selling a lot faster than the first version.

Apple likes to brag about its sales numbers if they’re good enough. Otherwise, those numbers are never mentioned.

The timing of this announcement is rather odd. Apple is usually very clear with it’s messages, but here it is expecting us to report that it will probably sell one million units by the end of this week. This is because of the Christmas weekend, of course, but it’s still out of character.

The press release is also less clear than usual. When I read the headline “New Apple TV Sales to Top One Million This Week”, my first thought was that Apple was shifting one million units in this week alone.

Either way, it shows that Apple’s hobby has finally become a paying job.

New Apple TV Sales to Top One Million This Week [Apple PR]

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


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Consumers Fail to Take a Shine to 3-D TVs

3-D could just be a fad and consumers may be already losing interest. Sales of 3-D TVs have not been growing as fast as TV-makers expected this year, says research firm DisplaySearch.

High price of the devices and the unavailability of good 3-D content have contributed to the lack of consumer enthusiasm for 3-D TVs, says the company.

Just about 3.2 million 3-D TVs are expected to be shipped worldwide this year. Of these, just about 1.6 million will be in North America.

“While TV manufacturers have bold plans and a lot of new products, consumers remain cautious,” says Paul Gray, director of TV electronics research at DisplaySearch.

3-D TVs were billed as the breakthrough consumer electronics product of the year. Spurred by Hollywood’s success with 3-D movies such as Avatar and Alice in Wonderland, TV makers rushed into launching big-screen 3-D TVs. Almost every major TV manufacturer including Sony, LG, Panasonic and Mitsubishi showed 3-D TVs at the Consumer Electronics Show this year.

Earlier this week, LG introduced a 72-inch 3-D TV, claiming it is the biggest 3-D commerical TV available to consumers currently. In the U.S. big retail stores such as Best Buy and Costco have started selling 3-D TVs.

But so far, consumer reaction to 3-D TVs, has been muted. Consumers haven’t entirely bought into the value of having 3-D content in their living room. Eyestrain, fatigue and nausea in some people who watch 3-D content has also dampened enthusiasm for 3-D TVs. (See: Four things that could keep 3-D TVs out of your living room)

What TV makers haven’t also solved is the problem of special glasses required to view 3-D. Despite the introduction of the Nintendo 3DS, a 3.5-inch handheld 3-D game console that doesn’t require any special glasses, glass-free technology is years away for the big screen.

But even for those consumers who are ready to don a pair of glasses to watch the TV in their living room, it isn’t easy. 3-D glasses are engineered so they will work only with the brand of TV with which theyre shipped. That means glasses that work with Sony’s 3-D television wont work for watching Monday night football at a friends place on his Panasonic 3-D TV.

Meanwhile, 3-D content remains scarce. Channels such as ESPN, DirecTV and Discovery have promised 3-D channels that will begin broadcasting only in 2011.

DisplaySearch says it is hopeful some of the constraints around 3-D TV can be solved and 3-D TVs will catch on. Prices of 3-D TVs are likely to fall, says the firm, even as the technology gets better.

Sales of 3-D will TVs grow from 2 percent of all flat panel TVs shipped this year to 41 percent, according to DisplaySearch’s forecast.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

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Best Buy Chief: iPad Cannibalizes Laptop Sales by 50%

According to Best Buy Chief Executive Brian Dunn, the iPad has replaced around half of all laptop sales. Further, the little tablet is also slowing TV sales, despite the manufacturers’ desperate push to shift 3D sets.

Speaking to the Wall Street Journal, Dunn said that sales are slowing in general on bigger gadgets, and that the hot products are the iPad, e-readers like the Kindle, and digital cameras. Instead of upgrading televisions, many people are sticking with the ones they own and spending the cash on iPads and other things they don’t already have.

But the biggest surprise is that 50% figure. It’s an internal, Best Buy estimate, but proves what we at Gadget Lab thought all along: that Mom and Pop would switch from cheap, unreliable and hard-to-use laptops and buy the iPad instead, an intuitive device which covers 90% of their computing needs. When the iPad gets a FaceTime camera (and hopefully a video-capable version of Skype) then the only people buying laptops will be those who need the horsepower for work.

These crazy iPad sales are taking their bite out of Windows market-share, too, not the Mac’s. Mac sales, which are mostly notebook sales anyway, continue to grow every quarter. This means that people are dropping Windows for the iPad. With the lack of any viable Windows-based iPad competitor, Microsoft should be getting very worried indeed: after all, the bulk of its business comes from bundling its OS with commodity hardware — the exact hardware that Best Buy has seen drop in sales by half.

Retailers Turn to Gadgets [WSJ]

Photo: Yutaka Tsutano/Flickr

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Samsung Ships One Million Galaxy S Phones in 45 Days

Samsung’s bet on Android seems to have paid off big for the company. Samsung has shipped more than one million Galaxy S phones in the U.S. since the devices were launched in mid-July.

The news makes the Galaxy S devices one of the hottest Android phones available today, though the smartphones haven’t reached iPhone-like popularity yet. Apple sold 1.7 million iPhone 4 devices in just the first three days of sales in June.

So far, Samsung has two models of the Galaxy S phones, Samsung Vibrant and SamsungCapitvate, available on T-Mobile and AT&T respectively. But two more Galaxy S devices are expected to debut soon–Samsung Epic 4G on Sprint and Samsung Fascinate on Verizon Wireless.

Common to all these devices are features such as AMOLED display, a 1GHz processor called ‘Hummingbird’ and entertainment apps. Samsung says all Galaxy S devices will be upgraded to Android 2.2 Froyo operating system.

It will be interesting to see if the Galaxy S phones can topple Motorola Droid and the HTC Evo as the best-selling Android phones.Motorola recently launched Droid 2 on Verizon Wireless and the Evo has reigned on Sprint as the first 4G phone.

Samsung’s Epic 4G, which is scheduled to be available on Sprint starting August 31, could finally give the Evo some real competition.

Meanwhile, Samsung is gearing up to launch a 7-inch tablet in September called the ‘Galaxy Tab’. The tablet will run Android 2.2 Froyo OS, include video-calling capability and full web browsingwhich likely means support for Flash, according to a teaser video that Samsung posted last week.

Photo: Samsung Vibrant (Stefan Armijo/Wired.com)

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Nexus One Reaches Its End in Google Store

Seven months after Google launched its first phone, the HTC-designed Nexus One, it has stopped selling the devices through its online store.

“Sorry, folks…The Nexus One is no longer available for purchase directly from Google,” the company announced.

Google had warned users about this in May, saying it planned to wind down its web store.

Those who still want to buy a Nexus One will now have to go through Vodafone but that’s limited to some parts of Europe. Google promises it will make the device available to “registered developers” through a partner.

The Nexus One launched with what seemed like an innovative idea in the retailing of phones. Instead of being sold through stores, Google would directly sell it through the web to customers –something that worked for other consumer electronics products. However, the strategy didnt resonate with consumers.

Potential customers found they couldnt find a Nexus One in the real-world to play with, unless they knew a friend who already had the device. Google’s customer service support for the device also left many users unhappy.

Google has acknowledged that its retailing model with the Nexus One failed to catch on with consumers.

“While the global adoption of the Android platform has exceeded our expectations, the web store has not,” wrote Andy Rubin, vice-president of engineering and Android czar at Google in a blog post in May. “Its remained a niche channel for early adopters.”

At the same time, Google tried to put the devices into retail stores in U.S. I wireless, a T-mobile affiliate, got Nexus One at its 250 stores mostly in the Midwest. So far, it hasn’t announced any other retail partnerships.

So is the Nexus One dead or is the Nexus One web retail experiment over? The answer to that will depend on whether Google will take the risk to launch a successor to the phone or if it will be content to let other handset makers take Android forward.

Source:wired.com

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Motorola Droid Rules Android

Motorola’s Droid is the most popular phone among Android users, followed by HTC Hero, while Google’s Nexus One ranks tenth on the list, according to a monthly metrics report from mobile advertising firm AdMob. AdMob has ranked the top ten Android smartphones by market share.

The data is based on 12.7 million Android phones in the AdMob network in May. It’s also why the HTC Evo, released in the first week of June, is missing from the mix.

About 21 percent Android users have the Droid, while 16 percent users own the HTC Hero. Just 2 percent of Android phone users have Google’s Nexus One phone, says AdMob.

Motorola launched the Droid in November 2009 and made it available exclusively on Verizon Wireless. And despite the gaggle of Android phones launched every month, the Droid has been holding strong.

The only Android phone that could challenge the Droid’s position is the HTC Evo, which is available exclusively on Sprint. It will be interesting to see if the Evo can beat the Droid, though Sprint has a smaller marketing budget and fewer subscribers than Verizon.

Here’s a chart that shows the popularity of different Android smarpthones.

About 67 percent of Android users are in North America while China is the second largest market for Android with 13 percent of Android users coming from the country, says AdMob.

Combined HTC and Motorola have 83 percent share among Android devices. Since the Android OS debuted in 2008, the two companies have been on a roll, churning out phones faster than consumers can keep up with.

Last week, Motorola introduced its eleventh Android phone, the Droid X. It was also a big month for HTC, whose Evo phone is the first and only 4G device available currently.

Data: AdMob

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Apple Sells 1.7 Million iPhone 4 Handsets in Opening Weekend

Apple has sold an almost ridiculous 1.7 million iPhone 4 handsets in its opening weekend, running Thursday through Saturday. This breaks every prediction we saw last week, and almost triples the 600,000 pre-orders reported by Apple just a week before the new iPhone went on sale.

“This is the most successful product launch in Apples history,” said Steve Jobs in an Apple press release. Even so, pre-ordering glitches and flat-out supply shortages kept Apple from selling even more. Jobs again: “Even so, we apologize to those customers who were turned away because we did not have enough supply.”

The customer pays $200 (16GB) or $300 (32GB) for an iPhone 4, but Apple gets more than that from AT&T. To find out how much, lets take the prices from the few countries where the handsets are sold unlocked – France, Canada and the the UK. Converted into US dollars, we get the following:

Taking into account that all Apple products get more expensive as they cross the Atlantic, we’ll be conservative and use the Canadian prices. Taking the mean of the two prices (and rounding them) we get US$670. Let’s multiply that by 1.7 million to get Apple’s total sales for the weekend (not counting the newly discounted iPhone 3G or the still-hot iPad). The number? $1,139,000,000, or well over a billion dollars. Not a bad start.

iPhone 4 Sales Top 1.7 Million [Apple]

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Apple’s iPad Sales Accelerate: Three Million Sold in 80 Days

Apple's iPad Sales Accelerate Three Million Sold in 80 Days

Far from slowing down, sales of Apple’s iPad are increasing, with three million units sold since the tablet’s launch 80 days ago. That’s the same amount of time it took Phileas Fogg to travel around the world. The first million was reached in 28 days, the second million was sold in “less than 60 days”. That means that the third million has been shifted ten days ahead of “schedule”.

The cynical might argue that this is more of a drop in speed, and that by opening up the iPad to the worldwide market a couple weeks back Apple should have sold a lot more. The cynic would probably be right, but the problem for Apple is that people don’t want them: it’s that it can’t make enough of the things to satisfy demand.

This comes just days behind the announcement that Apple managed to pre-sell an astonishing 600,000 iPhone 4s in a day, again amidst problems of supply shortage, and also computer system meltdowns. One thing is for sure: regular, non-geek people like Apple’s mobile machines, and they’re voting with their pocketbooks.

Apple Sells Three Million iPads in 80 Days [Apple]

Photo: John Snyder / Wired.com

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