Apple leads PC customer satisfaction
In a new study from The American Customer Satisfaction Index at the University of Michigan, Apple once again leads its PC counterparts in customer satisfaction. The Mac-maker had an 84 percent score this year, 12 percent ahead of its next-nearest competition, Dell.
However, Apple's score did drop 1 percent this year, while the rest of the PC industry has improved. The overall industry ranking increased 1 percent this year, to 75, following two straight years of decreases. But Apple's decrease didn't affect the Cupertino, Calif., company's stature.
"The decline has done little to hurt the large lead Apple has enjoyed for six straight years over the Windows-based manufacturers," the study states. "Apple maintains a 12 percent lead over Dell, one of the largest gaps between first and second place for any industry."
When compared with other companies in surveys, Apple consistently outperforms its competitors in customer satisfaction and service.
For the quarter, the overall ACSI index is at 76.1 on a 100-point scale, an improvement of 0.1 percent from last quarter and 1.3 percent from a year prior.
"The recession has shifted demand towards lower-priced PCs and Hewlett-Packard is taking advantage by rolling out more of its less expensive Compaq models," said Michigan Prof. Claes Fornell, head of the ACSI. âRecent sales are up and HPâs share value has more than doubled relative to market since the beginning of the year."
The Beatles on iTunes?
With this week's news of a likely Apple event on Sept. 9, speculation has grown that Apple will announce the availability of the artists' catalog for purchase on iTunes. Of course, this rumor has surfaced and resurfaced numerous times over the years.
This time, the assumptions are based on the date: 9-9-09 is when the band will re-release their entire discography, all digitally remastered. It is also the launch date of the upcoming Beatles rhythm game, Rock Band: The Beatles.
Rumors of The Beatles' songs coming to iTunes are nothing new, but it was far less likely to happen years ago, when Apple and the parent company of The Beatles, Apple Corps, were engaged in a trademark dispute. In 2007, those issues were resolved, leaving many to believe an appearance for digital downloads would soon follow, though it never did.
Whether the Sept. 9 date has to do with planning or mere coincidence remains to be seen.
47 Comments
give it to us.
give us: Beatles on iTunes, iPod touch 64GB, The Unicorn Tablet, iTunes 9 with Cocktail (nom nom) and Blu-ray all on 9/9/09. All on the same day with a live Stevenote while angels sing.
giveittomebaby (c) rick james rip.
I really honestly don't understand why they've waited so long. I am a huge Beatles fan and I'm a younger demographic ( well I'm 34 , but to my point, I'm not an "original" generation Beatles fan )
Anyway... I *have* every Beatles song already... maybe a few here and there that I don't want to buy the whole album for ( I never bothered to buy Rubber Soul for instance )
But really? Will there really be a huge demand?
I guess they also want the one off buys... some kid wants "Revolution" as his ring tone or what have you. Meh.
The interval between the present day and "I Want to Hold Your Hand" is the same as the interval between "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and "Five Foot Two, Eyes of Blue" and "I'm in the Mood for Love."
Releasing Beatles' music on iTunes is risky. It might sell wildly. Or they might find out that it is not 1964 any more.
( I never bothered to buy Rubber Soul for instance )
Surprising, Rubber Soul is considered The Beatles one of the top three albums by many critics. The record is the bands first ventures in to mixing musical styles, "Norwegian Wood" and its use of a sitar, "I'm looking through you" has a mild latin sound", "What goes on" is the first country western Beatles song. Give it another listen.
( I never bothered to buy Rubber Soul for instance )
But really? Will there really be a huge demand?
Whaaaat. Rubber Soul (the UK version) is one of their best albums, alongside Revolver and Let It Be.
(Obviously, I prefer the more natural-sounding Beatles, as opposed to the more heavily produced MMT/Sgt Pepper's stuff.)
Anyway, it's not about there necessarily being a huge demand; it's about having it available for teh kidz to buy a couple of tracks they heard on the radio and a fraction of those to freak out and buy everything. You don't need to sell a million albums to make a lot of money.