How about Apple?
In the past two years, Apple’s share in the overall global high-tech industry has risen from about 14% to 20%. It is the world’s largest maker of PCs and laptops (with a market cap of about US$50 billion), and its Macs are the largest selling personal computer brand in the world. That includes computers sold in Apple retail stores, Apple stores, and online through the App Store — which has had a dramatic impact on the development of theHow about Apple? Well, in his first year, the iPhone sold 6 million handsets, at a cost of $500 million. In his second year, that number had grown to 1.5 million, at a cost of $1 billion.
So Apple sold 6.5 million iPhones, for $500 million in its first year—and in its second, it sold 1.5 million for $1 billion.
This kind of growth is impossible to argue against: If you’re Apple, youHow about Apple? Their iPad mini is not a laptop. They have to take back the terms tablet and laptop that Apple used to describe their mini.
The same way I had to take back the term small tablet to describe my Surface Pro 3.
Now I call the iPad mini a mini-laptop, not a tablet.
The mini is a laptop.
The mini is a laptop.
That doesn’t mean Apple should have to take back the iPad mini and iPad because it