Wednesday, March 23, 2016

APPLE I THINGS UPDATE

Apple's small iPhone still a big deal Among other noteworthy stats, the tech giant says it sold 30 million 4-inch iPhones last year. by Terry Collins @terryscollins / March 21, 2016.  

Apple's Greg Joswiak talks about customers' lingering love for their 4-inch phones.  Apple is getting bigger by going smaller. The tech behemoth unveiled its iPhone SE, a new 4-inch version of its popular phone line, during an event Monday at its corporate headquarters in Cupertino, California. The reason for the break from its big-screen iPhone 6 and 6S: Apple sold 30 million 4-inch iPhones last year. "Some people simply love smaller phones," said Greg Joswiak, Apple's vice president for product marketing. "We found for a lot of these customers, it's their first iPhone. Some people asked us, some people even pleaded with us, please keep the 4-inch products in our lineup. Big sales of little phones wasn't the only data Apple dished. Here are some other noteworthy numbers to come out of the event: Apple has sold more than 200 million iPads with 9.7-inch displays, said Phil Schiller, Apple's vice president of marketing, when introducing a new iPad Pro of the same size. "It's Apple's most popular tablet size," he said about the 9.7 size, even though the company just released a 12.9 inch iPad Pro in November and also offers a smaller iPad Mini. Apple CEO Tim Cook said more than 1 billion Apple devices have been used over the past 90 days around the world, similar to what the company announced in January . This includes iPhones, iPads, Macs, iPods, Apple TVs and Apple Watches.  Like the iPhone 6S, only smaller and cheaper (hands-on) Apple hopes smaller iPad Pro will get you excited about tablets again There are now 5,000 apps available in Apple TV, Cook said. About 80 percent of all active Apple devices are running on the iOS 9 mobile software, said Joswiak. Those devices can now be updated to iOS 9.3, the company's latest operating system. He compared that to Android, which has a little more than 2 percent of devices running on its latest Marshmallow version. . By comparison, another 16 percent run iOS 8, and 5 percent of devices run an older version of iOS, according to the company's developer dashboard. .

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