

Apple vaut 400 milliards de dollars
Tandis que Kodak est en faillite, Apple [AAPL 4.41+ 1.04%] atteint des sommets d'après le NASDAQ, qui indique la capitalisation boursière de la pomme à 400 milliards de dollars ($ 398,818,695,990), soit près du double de Google qui est à $204.45 B et 1,68x plus que Microsoft à $237.69 B.
De l'état de faillite quasi certaine en 1997, la firme de Cupertino s'est imposée comme l'entreprise numéro une en terme de capitalisation boursière en seulement 14 ans. Apple annoncera ses résultats financiers la semaine prochaine.
Mise à jour: Apple vient de dépasser les 400 Milliards de dollars de capitalisation bourisère
When I first strated hearing about ipads being used in elementary schools I was a little shocked. After reading this, maybe I'm just jealous that these kids get to play with ipads and I don't.It's similar to cell phones, minus the education; I didn't have a cell phone until my senior year in high school, but now kids have it in 4th grade. I get that it's a lifeline, and even though the generations before us did fine without them, doesn't mean we can't enjoy our technology at a younger age. So while I really dislike seeing young kids with cellphones, again, maybe I'm just jealous that I didn't have one at that age.Apple products are known for what? Innovation, and user interface. It's no mystery that it's so simple a very young boy or girl can use it. Think of how much smarter and adapted to the surrounding world the next generations will be at an earlier age. Basically, that means greater human accomplishments, more often.How can anyone be against that?As far as Apple creating life-long customers you can't really say they aren't. If Apple continues being who they are, then it'll be great to see where they stand in the global marketplace in 20-50 years. So good for them!