Posts Tagged ‘aapl’

Apple’s iPad Enters Classrooms In Place Of Textbooks

Thursday, January 19th, 2012

Algebra 1

Apple has taken the World by surprise, first with the iPod, then the iMac, iPhone, and the iPad. Apple formerly announced today they will be revolutionizing the way the class is taught and read. Yes this is not a typo. They have disrupted an $8 billion market for non other than publishers of school textbooks. Truly aspiring and amazing. For the first time in America’s educational history, a technology company (other than ahhhmmm Microsoft and IBM) will make learning more interactive and less strenuous on the back. The iPad will carry 100′s of books by the palm of one’s hand!!! Introducing an entirely new kind of textbook that’s dynamic, current, engrossing, and truly interactive. A textbook created by publishers using a new authoring tool from Apple. A textbook brought to life by iPad. Currently 1.5 million iPads are in use in education. iBooks 2 will be available as a free app on the iPad, starting Thursday. iPads absolutely have a place in the classroom. It’s just a matter of finding a balance. Now how do we get a student to stop surfing for boobs on the iPad?

For hundreds of years, textbooks have put a world of knowledge in the hands of students. But while the way people learn has changed dramatically, the traditional textbook has stayed the same. Paper textbooks are expensive to produce and expensive for schools to buy. Which is why schools are forced to use a book for several years to make the finances work. But information changes so quickly that some textbooks are out of date almost before they’re published. And as books are passed along from one student to the next, they get more highlighted, dog-eared, tattered, and worn. It’s no secret that paper textbooks are heavy. But what you may not know is that backpack weight is an increasing problem among kids. Studies show that heavy backpacks can lead to both chronic back pain and poor posture — and many kids are carrying a quarter of their body weight in textbooks.

Created with iBooks Author, textbooks by top K-12 publishers McGraw-Hill and Pearson Education, as well as educational content from E.O. Wilson, are available today from the iBookstore on any iPad. And textbooks from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt are coming soon. Apple and the book publishers have reached an agreement to price most textbooks at $14.99 or less.

Features

Highlighting and Note-Taking

Use a finger as a highlighter when reading any textbook in iBooks. Just swipe over text and it’s highlighted. Tap a highlighted section and a palette appears. Change colors, switch to underlining, or add a note instantly. Then switch to the Notes view to see all your notes and highlights organized in one place, making it a cinch to search or go back to the highlighted sections of the book.

Study Cards

All your notes and highlights automatically appear on study cards. Flip them over and find the definition of a glossary term or the note attached to the highlighted passage. Choose which highlight colors to review, and include chapter vocabulary from the glossary — automatically. To make sure you really know your stuff, you can shuffle your cards to study.

Textbooks and iTunes U

Educators can include iBooks textbooks in the complete courses they create for the new iTunes U. And the textbooks work seamlessly with the iTunes U app for iPad. For example, students can tap the name of the book in the assignment list to start reading it right away, and notes they take in iBooks will appear along with the other course notes in the iTunes U app.

Tribute To Steve Jobs

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

As you may all already know, a visionary was lost today. An innovator that shaped and changed the world we live in today. Steve Jobs passed this evening at a young 56 years of age. Wall Street Grand would like to dedicate this post to his passing as the world will mourn a father, a leader, and an inspirational individual that will always be remembered as the legacy of Apple. Steve Jobs made Apple the most valuable technology company in the world at $350 billion. Apple’s stock under Jobs: from $10 to $400.

Steve Jobs is known as both mercurial and visionary, part rock-star CEO and part master salesman, a meticulous micromanager who can drive his employees to distraction — and one of the most important figures in American industry in the past half-century. After pulling his own company back from the brink of bankruptcy before the decade started, he almost single-handedly went on to save the recording industry with the iPod and iTunes. He revolutionized handheld devices and touch-screen technology with the iPhone. And he may well usher in a post-PC era of computing with his latest gadget, the iPad. “The resurrection of Apple is just the most astounding story that’s probably happened in business in at least a decade — you might be able to go further and say it’s a half-century,” says Roger Kay, president of Endpoint Technologies, a technology-industry think tank. “It’s on par with Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell in terms of its total impact.”

Jobs’s legacy stretches back several decades and includes the development of a few more groundbreaking innovations from his first go-round at Apple in the 1970s and ’80s: the Apple II, the Mac and elaborate computer graphics, to name a few. he has driven Apple to the top of the heap in technology. The company ranks No. 1 in the sector in market cap at $285 billion. That’s greater than longtime rival Microsoft Corp., whose value today stands at around $220 billion. Investors who plunked down $1,000 on Apple stock at the end of 2000 would have seen it grow to nearly $43,000 by the end of the decade.

With Jobs’s mantras of putting the customer first and of desiring nothing more than to make great products ruling the day at Apple, consumers have been as delighted as investors. For the Apple faithful, the decade was a virtual orgy of technological wonderment, marked by marvel after marvel, alongside several inventions that rewrote the books. He also oversaw a big expansion of the company, hiring tens of thousands of workers as the company’s ranks swelled to more than 46,000 from about 8,500 at the start of the decade. Revenue skyrocketed. Today, more than 320 Apple Store locations span the globe, from the first stores in suburban Virginia and Southern California to Milan and Ginza.

During the first decade of the new millennium, Jobs and Apple managed to thrive even when the rest of the country didn’t. Apple’s shares blossomed, pausing only when Jobs’s health was in doubt. While the stock trades at roughly 43 times its level of a decade ago, the S&P 500 has lost about 7%. Sales are up twelvefold from the end of 2000, surging from $5.4 billion for fiscal 2001 to $65.2 billion for fiscal 2010, which ended in September. Cumulatively, Apple has racked up more than $229 billion in total sales during the decade.

Along the way, Jobs also ran another hugely successful company for much of the decade, Pixar Animation Studios. Pixar has had an uninterrupted string of blockbuster hits since its first release, “Toy Story,” in 1995, followed by such instant classics as “Monsters Inc.,” “Finding Nemo” and “Up.” Jobs sold Pixar to the Walt Disney Co. In 2006 and as a result became the entertainment giant’s largest shareholder and joined the Disney board.

Those successes come at a price. To many observers, Jobs wrote the book on micromanaging, and that’s not meant as a compliment. There have been numerous stories over the years of his roaming the Apple compound in Cupertino, Calif., uprooting workers and aborting careers. In technology circles, Jobs’s mood swings are the stuff of legend and, in fact, led to his initial ouster from the company in 1985, according to Endpoint’s Kay. “When he’s in his Mr. Hyde role, he’s just insane,” Kay says. “Dr. Jekyll is the guy who’s making it all happen.” Adds Enderle: “He is not somebody [who] any one of us would want watching our kids, but, in terms of running the company, he’s excellent.” Jobs jealously guards both Apple’s secrets and his own privacy, remaining largely inaccessible, and he demands the same of the vastly expanded Apple corps.

Steve Jobs Tribute Video

Bernanke Rallies US Markets Up 430 Points

Tuesday, August 9th, 2011

U.S. stocks spent the majority of the session comfortably north of breakeven, as optimism ahead of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) policy. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA – 11,239.77) traded in a range of more than 640 points today in the last 75 minutes trading, but eventually ended with a gain of nearly 430 points, or about 4%. As a result, the DJIA climbed back atop the 11,000 level. The Federal Reserve, acknowledging that the economy is much weaker than expected, hoped to reassure nervous markets Tuesday by saying it would keep interest rates exceptionally low “at least through mid-2013.” Stocks initially plunged following the Fed statement but then gyrated as investors tried to assess what such a long extension of low interest rates would mean. The market finally staged an explosive rally in the final 75 minutes. We were down as much of 205 points in DJIA while the S&P hit a new low at 11.01.54. Later this month, August 26th, at the Fed’s annual retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyo., Bernanke will likely address the weakening economy, the S&P downgrade and the market turmoil.

The Fed previously had said that it would keep rates low for “an extended period.” The more explicit time frame is aimed at calming investors by giving them a clearer picture of how long they will be able to obtain ultra-cheap credit. Rates have been near zero since December 2008. Fed policymakers used significantly more downbeat language to describe current economic conditions. They said so far this year the economy has grown “considerably slower” than the Fed had expected. They also said that temporary factors, such as high energy prices and the Japan crisis, only accounted for “some of the recent weakness” in economic activity.

“The committee currently anticipates that economic conditions—including low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run—are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through mid-2013,” the U.S. central bank said in a statement.

The baton is now passed onto Congress as the Fed played their part. There are several outstanding issues that will hinder the markets rally.

1. S&P’s downgrade of the US credit rating. Congress needs cut more into the budget as the S&P has requested $4trillion worth. Congress must enact both Fiscal and expansionary programs for the US.

2. Europe contagion

3. European bank failure as experienced in the US in 2008

Relief Rally or Head Fake

As stated yesterday and this morning, we were in an oversold area of the markets. Read this mornings post here and last night’s here. Where do we go from here. Are we out of the clear. Unfortunately, there’s a lot that needs to be cleared as listed above. Headwinds do remain. In my opinion, markets have been damaged severely. We will need at least 2 months to fix this damage. I think in the near term, if you can stomach the massive swings as dictated by the VIX. 1120 was my mark as a buy area. Where do we head now. Below are my predictions

SS&P 8-9-2011 – 1172 close

Initial Rally rebound to May 2010 high - 1225

2nd Area of Resistance to March & June low - 1250

3rd Area of Resistance 1293

After each area resistance is approached and secured next levels will be tested until bears regain trend and take markets lower. This is only a temporary bounce and not sustainable. Please tread carefully.

Trading Ideas (Not Long Term until the above listed are resolved)

QQQQ

SPY

SSO

AAPL

5 Stocks That Returned 9 Figures

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

I came across an interesting article from last weeks USAToday written by Matt Krantz. Kudos to Matt on a motivating article for investors. It comes to show with a little bit of luck and knowledge, a $5,000-$10,000 investment can go a long way. I was astonished on the return each stock produced a year. Yet again NFLX returned a whopping 836% from 2008, AAPL in 7 years returned an incredible 3760%, and SIRI in 3 years returned 2,080%. Just imagine the possibilities that came in plentiful. It’s a poor man’s dream come true. Do you have what it takes? I know no one is a perfect stock picker, and if you are, you should be sitting very pretty right now. My personal best has been by far SIRI. I’m not going to lie, but I was extremely wretched by the 80% drop the day rumor on verge of declaring bankruptcy. By sheer stupidity and luck, I managed to reinvest a small portion of my previous winners in this strickened stock. What was my rational – Howard Stern. He’s fully vested with hundreds of millions of shares so why not. I wasn’t hurting more than he was. I know, dumb rational and before you know it, a white knight saved them from the brink of destruction. Share your stories /ideas with ACE@wallstreetgrand.com!!!

Here’s the link to the article here.

ACE’s long term picks from 2010 here.

Q: What’s the biggest financial haul I could have scored from stocks if I was the best stock picker over the last five years?

A: Wouldn’t it be great, especially as an investor, if you could know what was going to happen in the future? If you had the luck, foresight or skill to pick the best stock each year, you could score some massive gains. How massive? How rich could you be if you hit the best stock of every year the past five years? It’s a gain most likely beyond your wildest dreams. To find out just how profitable having uncanny stock-picking abilities could be, let’s put some numbers behind it. Investors can take a look at the Standard & Poor’s 1500 index, which includes stocks of all sizes, and locate what the best stock in the index was each year.

Had you had the amazing luck to pick the best stock each year, your total price appreciation and winning stock each year would have been (according to Standard & Poor’s Capital IQ and USA TODAY research):

• Best of 2006: CorVel (CRVL), 275.8% gain

• Best of 2007: First Solar (FSLR), 795.2% gain

• Best of 2008: Emergent BioSolutions (EBS), 416% gain

• Best of 2009: Select Comfort (SCSS), 2,508% gain

• Best of 2010: Entropic Communications (ENTR), 293.5% gain

Imagine investing $10,000 at the start of 2006 in that year’s best stock, CorVel, and then moving your money each year to the following year’s best stock. The value of the portfolio would have grown at the end of each year to:

• 2006: $37,580

• 2007: $336,529

• 2008: $1,736,490

• 2009: $45,287,659

• 2010: $178,206,938

Yes, you read that right. If you picked the best stock of each year, your $10,000 investment would be worth $178.2 million in just five years. That’s an average annual return of 608%. Not bad. Of course, it’s easy to do this kind of analysis looking backwards. We’re all stock-picking geniuses in hindsight. Yet, at the beginning of the year, it’s all but impossible to predict what the best stock will be. Even investors who stumble on a great stock make subsequent mistakes by selling at the wrong time. Nonetheless, considering how powerful the wealth generation of stocks can be, it’s easy to understand why so many investors want to try their luck.

Matt Krantz is a financial markets reporter at USA TODAY and author of Investing Online for Dummies and Fundamental Analysis for Dummies. He answers a different reader question every weekday in his Ask Matt column at money.usatoday.com.

WSG Large Cap Average Return 41.67% (AAPL,VLO,VMW,WMB,CSCO,EBAY)

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

On March 3, 2010, I selected 6 large cap stocks that have averaged 41.67%. I selected what I had anticipated would be the hottest industries -commodities & technology. 5 out of the 6 were huge winners, however I did have 1 loser that knocked 16% off my average. Batting 83.33% isn’t so bad. See the original post here. Summary of the gains below.

Stay tuned for my next picks through 2012

Best Performers

VMware Inc (NYSE:VMW) 98.98% gain        entry price $51.75 current $102.97

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) 70.91% gain        entry price $209 current $357.20

Valero Energy (NYSE:VLO) 40.37% gain        entry price $18.75 current $26.32

eBay Inc (NASDAQ:EBAY) 40.34% gain        entry price $23.75 current $33.33

Williams Comp. (NYSE:WMB) 34.53% gain        entry price $22.50 current $30.27

Worst Performer

Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO) -35.10% gain        entry price $24.50 current $15.90

Major Tech. Stocks To Watch (AAPL, YHOO, CSCO, FTR)

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) surged 0.39% to $349.57. The stock has a 52-week range of $199.25-$364.90.

The stock has average daily volume of 15.27 million shares. At current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $322.10 billion.

Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ:YHOO) gained 1.28% to $18.15. The stock has a 52-week range of $12.94-$18.64.

The stock opened at $17.99 and is trading within the range of $17.96-$18.38.

Cisco Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:CSCO) is up 0.21% to $17.45. The stock has a 52-week range of $16.52-$27.25.

The stock has average daily volume of 74.09 million shares. At current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $96.46 billion.

Frontier Communications Corp (NYSE:FTR) slid 0.84% to $8.29. Frontier Communications Corporation is a communications company providing services predominantly to rural areas and small and medium-sized towns and cities.

Top Tech. Stocks In Spotlight (AAPL, MU, CSCO, DELL)

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) surged 0.02% to $341.26. The stock has a 52-week range of $199.25-$364.90.

The stock has average daily volume of 18.75 million shares. At Current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $314.40 billion.

Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ:MU) fell 0.98% to $11.08. Micron Technology, Inc. is a manufacturer and marketer of semiconductor devices, principally dynamic random access memory (DRAM), Nandi Flash memory (NAND Flash and NOR Flash memory, as well as other innovative memory technologies, packaging solutions and semiconductor systems for use in leading-edge computing, consumer, networking, embedded and mobile products.

The stock opened at $11.29 and is trading within the range of $11.06-$11.35.

Cisco Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:CSCO) gained 2.37% to $17.47. The stock has a 52-week range of $16.97-$27.74.

The stock has average daily volume of 86.56 million shares. At Current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $96.55 billion.

Dell Inc. (NASDAQ:DELL) added 2.49% to $14.60. Dell Inc. is a holding company, which conducts its business globally, through its subsidiaries.

Technology Stocks To Watch (AAPL, ORCL, MSFT, Agilent)

Monday, April 4th, 2011

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) fell 1.02% to $341.05. The stock has a 52-week range of $199.25-$364.90.

The stock has average daily volume of 18.70 million shares. At Current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $314.20 billion.

Oracle Corporation (NASDAQ:ORCL) gained 0.79% to $34.29. Oracle Corporation is an enterprise software company.

The stock opened at $34.09 and is trading within the range of $34.05-$34.39.

Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) surged 0.55% to $25.62. The stock has a 52-week range of $22.73-$31.58.

The stock has average daily volume of 64.22 million shares. At Current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $215.27 billion.

Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE:A) lost 0.51% to $44.91. The stock has a 52-week range of $26.68-$46.81.

Major Tech. Stocks Trading Lower (AAPL, Sprint, CSCO, MU)

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) fell 4.37% to $1.75. The stock has a 52-week range of $1.38-$10.57.

The stock has average daily volume of 3.70 million shares. At Current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $2.32 billion.

Sprint Nextel Corporation (NYSE:S) lost 1.08% to $4.57. Sprint Nextel Corporation is a holding company, with its operations primarily conducted by its subsidiaries.

The stock opened at $4.60 and is trading within the range of $4.56-$4.64.

Cisco Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:CSCO) slid 0.23% to $17.40. The stock has a 52-week range of $16.97-$27.74.

The stock has average daily volume of 86.55 million shares. At Current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $96.16 billion.

Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ:MU) is down 1.28% to $11.61. Micron Technology, Inc. is a manufacturer and marketer of semiconductor devices, principally dynamic random access memory (DRAM), Nandi Flash memory (NAND Flash and NOR Flash memory, as well as other innovative memory technologies, packaging solutions and semiconductor systems for use in leading-edge computing, consumer, networking, embedded and mobile products.

Major Tech. Stocks In Spotlight (AAPL, QCOM, YHOO, NOK)

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) trading at $339.08, 2.75% higher. The stock has a 52-week range of $199.25-$364.90.

The stock has average daily volume of 86.14 million shares. At Current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $96.13 billion.

QUALCOMM, Inc. (NASDAQ:QCOM) gained 3.74% to $52.39. The stock has a 52-week range of $31.63-$59.84.

QUALCOMM Incorporated designs, manufactures and markets digital wireless telecommunications products and services based on its code division multiple access (CDMA) technology and other technologies.

Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ:YHOO) added 2.34% to $16.27. Yahoo! Inc. together with its subsidiaries, is an online media company.

The stock has average daily volume of 24.78 million shares. At Current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $21.32 billion.

Nokia Corporation (ADR) (NYSE:NOK) went up 2.53% to $8.09. Nokia Corporation is engaged in the manufacturing of mobile devices and in converging Internet and communications industries.