SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Steve Jobs' vendetta against Google remains alive, eight months after the Apple co-founder died feeling betrayed by a company he once embraced as an ally.
Apple is escalating the feud between two of the world's most influential companies by dumping Google's
mapping service as a built-in feature on most iPhones and iPads. Apple
is also making it easier for users of those devices to share their lives
on Facebook instead of Google's competing social network.
The
snubs are part of an upgraded mobile operating system that Apple
previewed Monday to kick off its 23rd annual developers conference in
San Francisco.
Google's
mapping service will be replaced by an Apple-designed alternative when
the new software for mobile devices, iOS 6, is released this fall. Those
who want to continue using Google Maps will have to go through
additional hurdle, such as finding and installing its app.
It represents a major blow for Google
Inc., which stands to lose mobile advertising revenue and valuable
insights about people's whereabouts if users of the popular iPhone and
iPad devices switch to Apple's mapping service.
Apple and Google are locked in a fight for the attention of hundreds of millions of mobile device users. The battle has been building since Google's 2008 release of its Android operating system to compete against the iPhone.
Android smartphones from companies such as Samsung Electronics Co. and Google's
own Motorola division are the chief alternatives to the iPhone. Apple
has sued those manufacturers, accusing them of ripping off the iPhone's
ground-breaking features.
Google's
Maps application has resided on the iPhone since the device's 2007
debut. At that time, the companies were so close that Eric Schmidt, then
Google's CEO, appeared on stage with Jobs to hail their kinship.
Android
destroyed the relationship. Before he died last October, Jobs told his
biographer, Walter Isaacson, that he viewed Android as a form of "grand
theft" from Apple and declared "thermonuclear war" against his former
ally.
"This is a slap in Google's
face," said Tim Bajarin, a Creative Strategies analyst who got to know
Jobs well during his 32 years following the company. "I don't think
Apple is ever going to be able to bury Android, but this is making it
clear that they aren't going to send any more ad revenue Google's way,
if at all possible."
Apple updates its iOS software every year, to
coincide with the launch of a new iPhone. Google is scheduled to show
off the latest developments in Android at a conference that will be held
at the same San Francisco venue beginning June 27.
In a statement
Monday, Google said it is "looking forward to continuing to build the
perfect map for our users in the months and years ahead." In
anticipation of Apple's announcement, Google last week previewed a
series of upgrades to its mapping service in an effort to make it more
convenient and compelling.
In another jab at Google, Apple also
said it's building Facebook into iOS 6. That threatens to make it more
difficult for Google to drive traffic to its Google Plus social network,
a high priority for the company. As it is, Google has more than 170
million users while Facebook has more than 900 million users.
Among
other things, users of Apple's new software will be able to update
their Facebook status by talking to their phones and declare that they
"like" movies and apps in Apple's iTunes store.
The tie-in with
Apple's mobile devices could be a boon for Facebook Inc., based on the
usage of Twitter since that online messaging service became part of the
current mobile system, iOS 5. Apple says more than 10 billion tweets
have been sent from its mobile devices since last year's upgrade to iOS
5.
Facebook, though, has warned investors that it still hasn't
figured out how to make a lot of money from mobile devices, where so far
it has proven more difficult to bring in as much ad revenue as on
traditional computers.
The iOS 6 also will highlight more features
from online business review service Yelp Inc. and online restaurant
reservation service OpenTable Inc. Both of those companies are competing
against Zagat, a review service that Google bought last year for $151
million.
Besides the upcoming iOS, Apple also showed off updated laptops and new features in its software for Mac computers.
Investors
appeared to be expecting something more revolutionary, such as more
hints about Apple's ambition to expand into making TVs. Analysts had
speculated that Apple would at least update the software on the Apple
TV, a small box that connects a TV set to iTunes for movie downloads, as
a prelude to perhaps launching a fully integrated TV set.
Apple
Inc. shares closed down $9.15, or 1.6 percent, at $571.17. Google shares
shed $11.95, or more than 2 percent, to close at $568.50.
Apple
CEO Tim Cook delivered the keynote Monday at an event that last year
turned out to be Jobs' farewell appearance. In a contrast to Jobs'
showmanship, Cook spoke only briefly during a nearly two-hour
presentation orchestrated by his top lieutenants.
Among other
updates in iOS 6, Apple's voice-command application Siri will add a host
of languages, including Spanish, Korean and Mandarin Chinese. "She"
will also be able to launch applications and movies and will run on
iPads for the first time.
Apple's new version of its Mac operating
system, Mountain Lion, will go on sale next month for $20. The update
brings features from Apple's phone and tablet software to the Mac. That
includes the iMessage texting application, which will replace iChat.
Microsoft
Corp., Apple's competitor when it comes to computer software, is also
making Windows more like its phone software, with the release of Windows
8 later this year. A key difference is that Microsoft is betting that
PCs will have touch screens, while Apple is betting they won't.
Mountain
Lion will also bring dictation to Macs. Users will be able to input
text by talking to the computer, in any program. This is already a
feature in Windows.
Apple showed off a laptop with a super-high resolution "Retina" display, setting a new standard for screen sharpness.
The
new MacBook Pro will have a 15-inch screen and four times the
resolution of previous models, Apple executive Phil Schiller said.
Apple
already uses "Retina" displays — with individual pixels too small to be
distinguished by the naked eye — in its latest iPhones and iPads.
On
the phones and tablets, the Retina display is a standard feature. On
the MacBook, it's an expensive upgrade. The new MacBook will cost $2,199
and up, $400 more than the non-Retina MacBook with the same-sized
screen.
Despite the high price, Forrester Research analyst Charles
Golvin predicted the souped-up MacBook will be a hit. "It's a sexy
machine," he said. "Any self-respecting gadget lover is going to be
drooling over this thing."
The new MacBook borrows features from
the ultra-slim MacBook Air. It's only slightly thicker, and like the
Air, lacks a DVD drive. Instead of a spinning hard drive, it uses flash
memory for storage. In the most radical departure from past PC designs,
it lacks an Ethernet port. Those who don't want to use Wi-Fi to connect
to the Internet will have to buy an adapter that goes into the MacBook's
"Thunderbolt" port.
Apple's other MacBooks are being updated with
the latest processors from Intel Corp. Apple will still sell a more
traditional 15-inch MacBook Pro, with a standard display.
Resource : Yahoo News
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