The yearly developer showcase that is Apple's (AAPL)
Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) kicked off with a keynote, once
again sans-Jobs, but was packed with several software and hardware
announcements.
Consider Palm's (PALM)
highly touted Pre smart phone sold well in its first weekend the
landscape for telecom mind share had shifted away from Apple for at
least a short while. Analysts early estimates point to sales of about
50,000 Pre devices in the first weekend for Palm, which compares to
about 270,000 devices when the original iPhone went on sale and
1,000,000 units for the iPhone 3G. While it may be unfair to compare
launches since Sprint is a much smaller carrier compared to AT&T,
and the iPhone 3G launched in a multitude of countries, its the media
that counts. Palm made a good sized dent during the Pre's announcement,
sales will have to continue to deliver if it hopes to turn that dent
into a crack.
But when Apple takes the stage for any event,
competitors in each line of business must be anxcious, hoping to be
able to breathe a sigh of relief as the rumors come and go with little
to no surprises. At today's event, it seems every business Apple is in,
it made headaches for its competitors.
The Computer Hardware
business: Apple reduced pricing on virtually all of its machines,
turning the well designed aluminum laptops into a family of MacBook Pro
machines starting at $1199 for the 13 inch computer formally known as
simply a MacBook. The slim MacBook Air also got a price cut and Apple
kept the $999 price point on the previous generation white plastic
MacBook. The only model in the line to keep only the MacBook name.
The
Computer Software business: Mac OS X Snow Leopard, branded and
versioned like a full OS upgrade, was priced like a going out of
business sale. $29 for the next version of Apple's Operating System due
in September, has got to make the folks at Microsoft (MSFT), who are rolling out Windows 7 a month later, a little bit edgy.
The
Phone business: Apple, having repeatedly said, didn't want to leave a
price umbrella for competitors has finally publicly brandished an
iPhone on the world for $99. While unveiling a 'newer, better, faster,
stronger' iPhone 3GS, sounds like a Porsche doesn't it, the company
kept its $199/$299 pricing for the new models, setting the existing
iPhone at the magic 99 figure. This puts tremendous pressure on the
makers of Blackberries, and Androids, and especially the Pre, which is
$199 after a $100 rebate.
Many hoped, Steve Jobs would make at
least a minor show-stopping appearance, the rumor mill still has
Apple's iconic CEO returning to work at the end of the month, which
will put several analysts and many potential investors at ease. Apple's
year-to-date run up of 69% has showed that Investors feel the company
can survive without Steve or they are already sure he will return.
However, the company still stands $60/share away from those gaudy 2007
highs, with a business models that combined are selling more devices
than ever.