MacSurfer's Headline News
 
Home | Apple Stock | Tracked Sites | TechNN | | E-Mail | Sherlock Plugin
Login | Subscribe to MacSurfer's Headline News
Poll | Most Popular | Talking Heads | A Year Ago Today |

MacSurfer's Archive: Thursday, February 14, 2019
 

 

Apple/Macintosh
  • "Apple Acquires U.K.-Based Digital Marketing Startup DataTiger: Apple Inc. acquired startup DataTiger in a move that could boost the company's digital marketing and make it more relevant to customers."  Bloomberg [Free/Paid Registration Required] 4:04 PM
  • "Apple Buys DataTiger, a UK Digital Marketing Startup" MacRumors 4:04 PM
  • "Apple reportedly acquires digital marketing firm DataTiger: According to recent regulatory filings, Apple has acquired U.K.-based digital marketing firm DataTiger in a move that could bolster the tech giant's already prodigious marketing apparatus." AppleInsider 5:23 PM
  • "Apple to ship iPhones with only Qualcomm chips to German stores" ["Apple said it had 'no choice' but to stop using some chips from Intel Corp in iPhones headed to Germany in order to comply with a patent infringement lawsuit Qualcomm won against Apple there in December."]  Reuters 7:44 AM
  • "Apple to Sell Older iPhone Models Again in Germany Amid Patent Dispute With Qualcomm: Apple had withdrawn sales of the iPhone 7, 7+, 8, and 8+ in December" WSJ.com [Paid Membership Required] 8:13 AM
  • "Apple's workaround for German fake injunction—Qualcomm-based variants of iPhone 7 and iPhone 8—exacerbates Qualcomm's antitrust woes" Foss Patents 8:33 AM
  • "Apple is selling the iPhone 7 and iPhone 8 in Germany again" TechCrunch 8:12 AM
  • "Apple to Sell Modified iPhone 7 and iPhone 8 in Germany to Skirt Sales Ban" MacRumors 8:12 AM
  • "After Its Battery Replacement Debacle, Apple Changes Strategies For Its Current iOS Problems" ["Apple's iPhone battery replacement cost the company an estimated $11 billion in lost replacement iPhone sales."]  Seeking Alpha 7:43 AM
  • "The logic behind Apple's give-us-half-your-revenue pitch to news publishers: Magazine publishers are on board with Apple's new subscription news service. Newspapers aren't." ["And some publishers are happy to do it, because they think Apple will sign up many millions of people to the new service. And they'd rather have a smaller percentage of a bigger number than a bigger chunk of a smaller number. In the words of a publishing executive who is optimistic about Apple's plans: 'It's the absolute dollars paid out that matters, not the percentage.'"]  Recode 8:10 AM