Episode BritishMac054
NEWS
Headlines
Quick News
Apple's MacBookPro 85W MagSafe adapter finally shrunk


It only took 'em a year and a half to do it, but the ginormous monstrosity that is Apple MacBookPro 85W MagSafe power adapters have finally seem to have been reduced to a more manageable size. (Scale comparison above.) The same $80 that before got you the rather large 1st gen A1172 brick will now bring you home a 2nd gen MA938LL/A model that's sized closer in size to a MacBook 60W adapter, but still manages to crank out enough juice for your sil
Apple store Fifth Avenue sells 5 Macs an hour
AppleInsider reports on Apple's five biggest US stores
Jonny Evans

Apple's five US flagship retail stores contributed 13 per cent of the company's total retail revenues in its current quarter, AppleInsider reports.
The report claims the five stores contributed over $105 million to the $810 million in total sales generated by the company's US retail arm.

The relatively new store on Fifth Avenue in New York City comes in for particular note. Apple has been selling five Macs an hour and an iPod every two minutes in that store alone, the report claims.
Apple's other outlet in downtown SoHo NYC and its shops in LA, San Francisco and Chicago also generated positive results, adding $63 million to Apple revenues, the report informs.
The five US stores sold 30,000 Macs and 127,000 iPods in the quarter, the report adds, with the Fifth Avenue store selling five times as many iPods as computers.
The report (penned by Gary Allen of ifoAppleStore) also claims Apple has plans for "at least four" more major shops, in Sydney (Australia), Glasgow (Scotland), Boston (Mass.), and one more in Manhattan (New York).
and finally...
AT&T iPhone shock dents Apple stock
AT&T activation report lops 6 per cent off Apple stock price
Gregg Keizer, Computerworld (US online)

Apple's stock price slipped yesterday after partner AT&T revealed that it had activated only 146,000 iPhones in the first two days the device was for sale.
Apple's share price took a hammering in response, falling $8.81 to $134.89, down 6.13 per cent at close of trade.

In its second fiscal quarter, which ended 30 June, AT&T said it had activated 146,000 iPhones. The Apple smart phone went on sale Friday, 29 June.
That number differs dramatically from estimates posted by financial analysts the week after the iPhone debut. Piper Jaffray & Co. analyst Gene Munster, for example, pegged sales at 500,000 units during the opening three-day weekend, more than triple what AT&T said had been activated. Other analysts have more recently said that Apple probably sold 450,000 to 500,000 iPhones in the quarter that ended 30 June.
AT&T characterized sales of the iPhone as "robust" and said that store traffic remained at historically high levels into July. More than 40 per cent of the first wave of iPhones were sold to new AT&T subscribers, the company added.
Frankenwidget
Uncle Mac's Siesta
St. British Mac
Skitch
Ye Olde Mac & Mouse
British IconDa
Ever Decreasing Circles