'powerful'에 해당되는 글 3건

  1. 2009.03.10 Apple's Next Blockbuster by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2009.01.29 Wall Street's Most Powerful Law Firm by CEOinIRVINE 1
  3. 2008.11.17 In Va., a Powerful and Polarizing Pastor by CEOinIRVINE

Apple's Next Blockbuster

IT 2009. 3. 10. 08:22


BURLINGAME, Calif.--If you're in the PC business, life is pretty bleak right now. Sales of computers are plummeting. Prices are falling, fast. Outlets selling your wares, such as Circuit City, are folding. Oh, and just about the only thing that's selling right now are low-cost netbooks, lower-cost iPods and canned food.

It could be about to get worse. Much worse. According to a report in the Chinese-language Commercial Times, Taiwanese manufacturer Wintek will supply the touch panels for an Apple (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) device of some kind, possibly a netbook, that will launch by the third quarter.

It's unclear, as always, what the computer and gadget maker is doing. An Apple spokesman declined to comment on "rumors and speculation," and the Cupertino, Calif.-based company is known for working hard to keep upcoming products secret. These guys just aren't big talkers, period, saying little about the health of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, who remains out on medical leave through June.

Apple, however, has continued to publicly resist the idea of competing in the market for low-cost netbooks. Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook criticized them as "inferior" during a call with investors in January, saying only that Apple will "watch" the space.

Apple can do that, in part, because its powerful, high-end notebooks have remained steady sellers, despite the downturn. Yet it remains a little baffling, considering that Gartner predicts sales of low-cost netbooks will double to 21 million units in 2009 from 11.7 million units last year. It's also possible that Apple is working on a better idea, something that could move its iPod line up market, rather than its notebook computers down market.

Here's what we know: Apple purchased PA Semi, a chip designer that builds powerful, power-sipping processors for the U.S. military, for $278 million in cash last year. Then Apple slugged it out in court with IBM (nyse: IBM - news - people ) to grab IBM chip designer turned blade-server honcho Mark Papermaster. It then put Papermaster in charge of its iPod and iPhone hardware. And now it looks as if Apple has placed orders for a whole bunch of touch screens.

Oh, and those chips Papermaster designed? Based on the same PowerPC architecture as PA Semi's. You connect the dots.


So when does the bomb drop? We can't be sure. But Jobs is due back by the end of June, and Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference is usually slated for June as well. If Jobs strides onto the stage with his coat glossy and his eyes shiny, chances are good he'll be there to rip the lid off an economy-sized box of pain for the rest of the PC business. He could unveil a powerful, media-friendly tablet based on the iPod Touch, or some other form of multi-core, touch-screen monster.





'IT' 카테고리의 다른 글

New iPod speaks names of artists and songs  (0) 2009.03.12
Palm Confident About Pre Phone  (0) 2009.03.11
Apple, Qualcomm Skip Layoffs Brian Caulfield, 03.05.09  (0) 2009.03.08
Midday Glance: Internet companie  (0) 2009.03.07
Google Disrupts--Again  (0) 2009.03.06
Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

In good times and bad, Skadden's lawyers make money on upheavals in global capitalism.

image

From left, Joe Flom, Eric Friedman and Robert Sheenan

Skadden. The name, terse and uncompromising, symbolizes the most rarefied levels of corporate law, where clients throw platoons of attorneys at a problem and barely blink at the resulting $50,000-an-hour bills.

With 1,700 attorneys and $2.2 billion in fees last year, New York's Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom is the biggest U.S. law firm by revenue and the third biggest worldwide. The partnership's $693 million profit in 2007 exceeded the net income of much larger companies, including Yahoo! (nasdaq: YHOO - news - people ), Southwest Airlines (nyse: LUV - news - people ) and Avon Products (nyse: AVP - news - people ). By revenues, Skadden ranks No. 213 on our list of the Largest Private Companies in America.


All that money flows from a simple business model: Skadden specializes in advising companies when they are merging, being taken apart or face a mortal threat from regulators, competitors or other lawyers.

Having grown to the size where it's involved in practically every big transaction on Wall Street, Skadden has become a brand name--and a security blanket for nervous executives. "When something doesn't go right, the general counsel can say to the CEO, 'I had Skadden on it,' " says Eric Friedman, 44, who is slated to succeed Robert Sheehan, 61, this spring as executive partner in charge of the firm.

This isn't law firm puffery. In the 1950s, Skadden practically invented one of the most lucrative branches of corporate law, the art of mounting and defending against hostile takeovers. Inside its headquarters near Times Square are several floors of conference rooms where executives and lawyers huddle day and night, negotiating multibillion-dollar transactions or plotting strategy on how to keep raiders at bay.

"I've often thought they should set up an index based on the activity in those conference rooms," jokes Edward Knight, general counsel of Nasdaq OMX Group, which last year enlisted Skadden's help in the Nasdaq's complicated, $3.7 billion takeover of Sweden's OMX exchange.

The Skadden Index would be down a bit, as the carnage on Wall Street tamps down enthusiasm for its mainstay mergers and acquisitions work. Despite the turmoil in financial markets, those rooms are still busy: Skadden recently represented Nomura in the purchase of international operations from bankrupt Lehman Brothers (nyse: LEHMQ - news - people ), and helped Citigroup (nyse: C - news - people ) sell its outsourcing business to India's Tata Consultancy Services (other-otc: TACSF.PK - news - people ) for $505 million.


Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l
Star Scott Jr., daughter Skylar Autumn and son Star III play at home. Scott and his father, Calvary Temple's pastor, are estranged.



Star Scott Jr., daughter Skylar Autumn and son Star III play at home. Scott and his father, Calvary Temple's pastor, are estranged. (Nikki Kahn/Post)
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 16, 2008; Page A01

Rob Foster was 16 when his family unraveled.


He had told his parents that he wanted to leave Calvary Temple, the Pentecostal church in Sterling the family had attended for decades. But church leaders were blunt with his parents: Throw your son out of the house, or you will be excommunicated. And so that December two years ago, Gary and Marsha Foster told Rob that he had to leave. They would not see him or talk to him.

"I was devastated," he said.

For more than three decades, hundreds of families have been coming to Calvary Temple, a sprawling, beige stucco complex that sits unobtrusively behind the suburban strip malls and subdivisions of Leesburg Pike. As conservative Christianity flourished in Loudoun County and across the country in the 1980s, Calvary thrived.

Under the leadership of longtime pastor Star R. Scott, Calvary opened a school, television and radio ministries, and satellite churches around the globe. The local congregation at one point numbered 2,000.

Scott's followers see him as an inspiring interpreter of God's word. Members pack the church most nights, united in their desire to live as the Bible intended and reject what they view as society's moral ambivalence.

"Church isn't for everyone who wants to just show up," Scott said in an interview. "It's not a community club. We're not looking to build moral, successful children. We're looking to build Christians."

But for hundreds of members who have left the church during the past decade, Calvary is a place of spiritual warfare, where ministers urged them to divorce spouses and shun children who resisted the teachings. Scott is twisting the Bible's message, they say, and members who challenged the theology were accused of hating God.

They had joined eagerly, drawn to Scott's energy as a new religious broadcaster and his commitment to living by the literal word of the Bible. He defined the church. But just as he built Calvary, they say, Scott transformed it, taking it from a vibrant, open church to a rigidly insular community over which he has almost total control.

In 2002, three weeks after the death of his wife, Scott, who was then 55, stood before the congregation and announced that the Bible instructed him as a high priest to take a virgin bride from the faithful. A week later, he did -- a pretty 20-year-old who a couple of years earlier had been a star basketball player on the church high school team.

Scott said he has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars of church funds on a fleet of race cars and until last year devoted many weekends touring the circuit for his "racing ministry." The church Web site shows Scott and his wife, Greer, 26, posing in racing suits, helmets in hand, beside a red dragster.

Scott is Calvary's "apostle" and presiding elder, and in 1996, he named himself the sole trustee, putting him in charge of virtually all of the church's operations, its theology and finances.







Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l