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Friday, January 17, 2014
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india-iphone4

Executives at Apple in India are preparing to celebrate passing $1 billion in annual revenue in the country for the first time this financial year.


But Apple today remains a small player in India, accounting for less than 2% of all mobile sales in 2013 according to one estimate. In a market where more than 90% of the 224 million phones sold in 2014 will be bought by first-time users, Samsung, Nokia and Micromax phones are expected to take the lion’s share, leaving Apple a bit-player.


According to several estimates, including some sources at Apple India, the company shipped 1 million iPhones in 2013. As a point of comparison, newly minted iPhone carrier China Mobile has clocked up 1 million in pre-orders alone.


There have been reports that Apple is now considering a drastic strategy: according to the Economic Times, Apple plans to push a legacy model, the 8GB iPhone 4, at a price of about $250 to get more aggressive in India. We have heard from reliable sources that nothing like this is on the cards because there is “no way Apple would sell phones that cheap.”


But it is correct that it wants to use an older model to target new, aspirational consumers who are ready to pay an extra $100-$150 to own an iPhone.


Our source tells us that Apple is planning to sell 8GB iPhone 4 models in India at around RS 22,000 (about $358). That’s about $70 less than the previous retail price of around RS 26,500 (about $431) when it was launched, if not quite $250.


The pricing dilemma


India will account for nearly a quarter of the 1.03 billion smartphones that will be sold in 2014 globally according to Mediacells. But iPhones will only be a small proportion of that. Even the most aggressive estimates do not expect iPhone sales to cross 1.5 million units this year.


So far, Apple has attempted to make up for its premium pricing by throwing in extra offers such as buyback offers and option to pay in monthly installments.


Part of the problem has been that India’s average phone pricing runs almost at complete odds with Apple’s bigger pricing strategy. In the last launch of new models, the “cheaper” 5C variant works out as more expensive ($525) to many top end smartphone models from Samsung (around $400) and Nokia (about $300), and that contrast is even greater in India.


Now, Apple wants to target the sub-$350 smartphone category to woo aspirational users who are ready to pay an extra $100-$150 for owning an iPhone.


According to a source who knows Apple’s India plans, this deal could be sweetened further by offering buybacks and monthly installment options to lower the upfront cost for buyers.


Billion-Dollar baby


Breaking $1 billion in revenues — a milestone for any company in India — could be an indication that Apple is turning over a new leaf in India. In 2006, and then couple of years later, Apple shelved plans to open a technical support centre in Bangalore and even fired dozens of engineers within few months of hiring them. India was also among the last countries to get any Apple products until 2010.


Things started changing for Apple in India after November 2011 when it began shipping the iPhone 4S in the country. In 2013, Apple more than doubled its iPhone shipments to India to around 1 million iPhones, according to several estimates.


Apple’s share of the Indian smartphone market has grown from around 0.8% in 2012 to just under 2% in 2013, according to Mediacells, which tracks the mobile market. This growth was fuelled by some schemes that Apple allowed its team to offer in the Indian market.


“The buyback scheme for the iPhone 4 in India was very effective in contributing to the 2% milestone,” said Brad Rees, CEO of research company Mediacells.


Apart from offering buybacks, Apple India also sweetened the deal by tying up with banks who allowed consumers to pay in monthly installments.


“From a purely macro-economic standpoint, Apple cannot and will not keep their eyes off the prize in India, China and Brazil but – guess what – neither will Samsung and Google, Nokia and Microsoft – it’s brutal out there,” Rees added.


While China and India will together account for more than half of all smartphones sold in 2014, the two countries cannot be compared.


“I don’t think one should compare India and China in the same breath; for one thing, they are both at radically different stages of smartphone development,” said Rees. Mediacells predicts that by the end of 2014, 30% of Indians will be smartphone-enabled, compared to 63% Chinese smartphone owners in same time period.


Despite Apple’s new-found love for India, it’s unlikely that it will get the attention China is getting anytime soon. But with over 800 million active phone users currently and another 224 million smartphones set to be added in 2014 alone, and growing competition in other emerging markets like China, Apple may have found its India moment.







11:24 AM

Executives at Apple in India are preparing to celebrate passing $1 billion in annual revenue in the country for the first time this financia...

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A Pittsburgh-based tech company approached us on the CES 2014 show floor last week and asked for a bit of time to talk about their product, a small ball that can take panoramic video and is rugged enough to be strapped to a helmet or surf board. The product, called the 360fly, is still in beta but the company wanted to show it to us – complete with male surfer model – so we could get an idea of how the device worked.


The company’s previous products, the GoPano line, sold very well. The products connected to your iPhone and allowed you to take panoramic video anywhere using the iPhone’s own camera. This idea isn’t particularly new but I think the 360fly is a fascinating refinement of the product.


We’ll update you when these guys, Voxx, have more to show. Until then, enjoy seeing a poor man in board shorts and a t-shirt smile uncomfortably as I talk to the founder.







11:24 AM

A Pittsburgh-based tech company approached us on the CES 2014 show floor last week and asked for a bit of time to talk about their product...

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Ustream has recently made moves to de-emphasize its free, live broadcasting service. But those changes are just part of a larger focus on enterprise clients.


Last week, Ustream sent an email to members who had free accounts, telling them that it was making changes to the way videos were stored or archived. The email said that videos recorded by its free, ad-supported Ustream Basic accounts would only be stored for 30 days, and then automatically deleted.


The company offered up a new unlimited storage plan for users who wish to pay for them. For $19.99 a month, Ustream is allowing its users to archive videos that they’ve already shot beyond 30 days. But for those who didn’t want to upgrade to a pro version of Ustream, the company offered the ability to download copies of their videos to store them offline.


For Ustream, culling archived videos from free users is just one step in its continued focus on enterprise accounts. Over the past year, the company has been working to add features and win over more media and business clients to its service.


Co-founder and CEO Brad Hunstable told me in a phone conversation that most of the company’s growth has come from working with major media companies. Also, he said that a small portion of the views the company gets comes from archived videos — which is one of the reasons it’s fine with having them disappear.


“Our core competency is live broadcasting and that hasn’t changed,” Hunstable said. “There are plenty of places to store videos, but 80 percent of our viewership is live.”


In addition to media companies, Ustream has seen its live streaming services used by other enterprise clients. Some of that comes from brands turning to live streaming as a way to increase visibility, but video is also being used as a way to reach customers, partners, and employees in the enterprise.


“Over the last few years, we’ve seen companies like LinkedIn, Sony, and others using our products more like a media companies,” Hunstable said. “We’re seeing public companies doing their earnings announcements through video, and also internal broadcasting.”


Founded in 2007, Ustream isn’t the only live streaming video startup to move its focus away from consumers. Competitor Livestream historically has been focused on major events as its largest source of revenue, and Justin.tv pivoted to eSports and rebranded as Twitch more than two years ago.







11:24 AM

Ustream has recently made moves to de-emphasize its free, live broadcasting service. But those changes are just part of a larger focus on e...

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For the second time in less than a year, Apple has agreed to reimburse customers for purchases within applications made by children without their parents' consent. In a settlement with the FTC announced Wednesday, Apple agreed to pay at least $32.5 million in refunds to consumers who incurred charges on their iTunes accounts through dubious in-app purchases. In June, Apple agreed to pay $100 million to settle a class action lawsuit brought in California for similar billing practices relative to unauthorized in-app purchases by minors.


11:24 AM

For the second time in less than a year, Apple has agreed to reimburse customers for purchases within applications made by children withou...

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Syed Farhan Hussain, a 22-year-old from Luton, UK, was hit with additional jail time for refusing to divulge the password for a memory stick that police were eager to take a peek at. Police were unable to crack the password themselves and therefore sought Hussain's help; Hussain declined, prompting a guilty verdict under Britain's Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000. The four months Hussain received for the USB dustup will be tacked on to his existing five-plus-year sentence, which stems from conspiring to attack an army based in Luton.


10:39 AM

Syed Farhan Hussain, a 22-year-old from Luton, UK, was hit with additional jail time for refusing to divulge the password for a memory sti...

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I've been looking forward to trying out Microsoft's official email product for the Android platform. Device OS mismatches have, until now, prevented me from doing so. However, a totaled and smashed tablet and an arbitrarily rebooting smartphone have prompted me to get some new kit. I'm a power desktop Outlook user, and for about 10 years I have relied on the desktop version -- a subset of the Office suite -- to catalog and file emails on a project-by-project basis.


10:10 AM

I've been looking forward to trying out Microsoft's official email product for the Android platform. Device OS mismatches have, un...

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john dougery

Inventus Capital Partners, an early-stage investment firm based in Menlo Park, Calif. and Bangalore is announcing that it has raised second fund totaling $106 million.


In fact, Inventus says that it has already started investing from the fund, for example with its recent backing of data infrastructure company Espresso Logic.


In the funding release, co-founder and managing director John Dougery (pictured) said the firm was founded in 2007 “to continue our two decades of success partnering with Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and helping them access India’s natural advantages adding value to digital services businesses.”


The release also says the firm is focused on digital services companies, arguing that the industry is “in the midst of a transformation from product to service-led businesses,” and pointing to the success of past investments redBus (which was acquired by Naspers), ViVu (acquired by Polycom), and Sierra Atlantic (acquired by Hitachi Consulting) as evidence.


Inventus says it aims to lead a startup’s first institutional round and can invest up to $10 million over the life of a company. It backed 18 companies with its first fund and is planning to invest in 20 to 25 with the second.


The new fund was also revealed in a regulatory filing.







9:54 AM

Inventus Capital Partners , an early-stage investment firm based in Menlo Park, Calif. and Bangalore is announcing that it has raised second...

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