Announcing its fiscal 2007 fourth quarter results, Apple reported today that it had posted revenue of $6.22 billion and net quarterly profit of $904 million, or $1.01 per diluted share. These results compare to revenue of $4.84 billion and net quarterly profit of $542 million, or $.62 per diluted share, in the year-ago quarter. Gross margin was 33.6 percent, up from 29.2 percent in the year-ago quarter. In the fourth quarter, Apple shipped 2,164,000 Macs, representing 34% growth over the year-ago quarter and exceeding the previous quarterly record for Mac shipments by 400,000. Apple also sold 10,200,000 iPods (representing 17% growth over the year-ago quarter) and 1,119,000 iPhones, bringing cumulative fiscal 2007 iPhone sales to 1,389,000.
“First-time filmmaker Jesus Beltran,” reports Joe Garofoli (San Francisco Chronicle), “has made a couple of thousand dollars in the few months that his 19-minute ‘The Grass Grows Green’ has been sold on iTunes.” But for Beltran, Jon Bloom (“Overnight Sensation”), Tiffany Shlain (“The Tribe”), and many other short-filmmakers, the fact that people can actually find and see their films is even more rewarding.
Tight integration between Address Book and iWork ’08 means that you can add addressing information to personal or business correspondence simply by dragging a contact’s name from Address Book into a Pages ’08 template. Need to send the same letter to one—or twenty—contacts? We’ll show you how in the most recent Quick Tip of the Week.
“iTunes U, the education portal within Apple’s iTunes,” reports Campus Technology, “has expanded its content to include educational materials from sources beyond colleges and universities,” Called “Beyond Campus,” the area provides programming from Smithsonian Global Sound, KQED, Little Kids Rock, the Museum of Modern Art, and, most recently, “American Public Media, which is making its radio programming available free for educational purposes.”
Wikipedia recognizes him as “one of the most important figures in the development of modern electric musical instruments and recording techniques.” Indeed, Les Paul, invented reverb, sound-on-sound and multi-track recording. On a mission to create “a radical new sound,” the multi-talented guitarist developed not only new ways of—and new equipment for—recording music but also new instruments. Most notably: the solid-body electric guitar that would bear his name and that legions of jazz, blues, country, and rock musicians would zealously adopt. Now Paul and his technical team have tapped the Mac, Final Cut Pro, and Soundtrack to help tell the story about how he brought his radical new sound to life.
Citing research from ChangeWave Research, Jonny Evans (Macworld) reports that “the iPhone now leads the pack in terms of customer satisfaction among its US customer base. An unprecedented 82 per cent of iPhone owners reported being Very Satisfied with their purchase, up five points since the previous survey in July and by far the highest rating of any mobile manufacturer.” Evans notes that “the research found 16 per cent of respondents who plan to purchase a phone in the next six months saying they’ll buy an iPhone - placing Apple up at the top among all manufacturers.”
As reported by DigiTimes, ” ‘the iPhone has become AT&T’s top selling device, commanding some 13% of AT&T’s overall handset sales, and the fourth top selling handset in the US market,’ according to Barry Gilbert, VP of the Strategy Analytics BuyerTRAX programs.” What’s more, DigiTimes also quotes Gilbert as indicating that “ ‘ the sales trajectory we are observing with the iPhone could make it the top selling device in the US over the next 1-2 quarters.’ “
At the PhotoPlus Expo in New York, the developers at Automator.us released “Publish for Approval.” Designed for photographers who’d like to offer their customers the opportunity to review and approve photographs over the Internet, the system offers one-button publishing of selected images from an Aperture library. Tightly integrated with Aperture, Publish for Approval even displays client choices automatically upon approval, collecting them in a newly created Smart Folder in the Aperture library.
At PhotoPlus Expo in New York, Industrial Color, the leader in digital photo capture and online workflow software, announced the GLOBALedit Export Plug-in for Aperture. The plug-in, available as a free download, lets photographers “securely upload image collections from Aperture version 1.5 into GLOBALedit, Industrial Color’s online digital workflow solution. Once uploaded to GLOBALedit, image collections are globally available for editing, talent approval, image distribution, contact sheet creation, image markups and retouching notes, FPO and layout creation, metadata services, fulfillment services, and long-term archiving.” GLOBALedit joins a growing list of export plug-ins available for Aperture.
“When we started to look at how to provide a quality education for our students, what became very clear was that the future is digital,” says Carl Rose, executive director of the Association of Alaska School Boards (AASB). “We needed to ensure that our kids not only had the skill-sets required by the state, but also had the digital literacy capability to use those skills. That’s when the concept of 1 to 1 learning began to make sense.” And today, the MacBook, iLife, iWork, and Apple Professional Development are helping the AASB bring its 1 to 1 learning initiative to fruition.