China’s smartphone market may have contracted four percent year on year in the first three months of 2015, according to tech data firm IDC, but Apple isn’t feeling the pain. During that same period, the California tech giant’s revenues in greater China expanded by seventy-one percent to seventeen billion dollars, outpacing Apple’s overall global growth of twenty-seven percent. Apple is now the largest smartphone vendor in China, the position that Samsung held a year ago, with the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus driving local sales.Rico says that WWF is the World Wildlife Fund, not the World Wrestling Federation (now called World Wrestling Entertainment).
Apple’s CEO Tim Cook (photo) traveled to China to celebrate Chinese consumers who have snapped up more iPhones this year than their American counterparts. Cook joined Weibo, the Twitter-like social-media service that has succeeded in part because Twitter is banned from China. While Weibo is battling other popular domestic social-media networks like WeChat, the arrival of an Apple CEO still commanded plenty of attention. Within three hours of joining Weibo, Cook had attracted three hundred thousand followers. (By the next morning, he had around four hundred thousand followers.)
Cook’s inaugural Weibo message? “Hello China! Happy to be back in Beijing, announcing innovative environmental programs.” Apple has endured criticism for the way some of its China-based suppliers have treated their workers, as well as for the high price of its handsets in China. But Cook was in town to promote Apple’s efforts to manage forests in partnership with WWF.
12 May 2015
Apple for the day
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