Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Dead Pool

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Dead Pool

    Ok Gang, what i am after here is a list of companys that are going to get stuffed BIG time or Die:-

    Apple?...........All those crappy pods & phones.
    Starbucks.........Sugar laced brown water hot crap.
    GM.............The People whom bought you the Pontaic Astzc.

    Your thoughs
    Mike

  • #2
    Re: The Dead Pool

    Originally posted by Mega View Post
    Ok Gang, what i am after here is a list of companys that are going to get stuffed BIG time or Die:-

    Apple?...........All those crappy pods & phones.
    Starbucks.........Sugar laced brown water hot crap.
    GM.............The People whom bought you the Pontaic Astzc.

    Your thoughs
    Mike
    My thoughts? How is this "News?" It's a vanity post and not a very good one.
    Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: The Dead Pool

      Ipod to save New York and Wall Street?


      New York faces 'iPod tax'

      New Yorkers may soon be paying more to download music, with the state's governor proposing an "iPod tax" to raise cash to tackle a budget crisis.


      The 4 percent tax proposed by the US state's governor will also apply to eBooks, videos and photographs bought and downloaded online, the Guardian reported.

      The collapse of Wall St has eroded the state's tax base, leaving it with a US$15.4 billion shortfall.

      Also on the cards is an 18 percent "obesity tax" on surgary soft drinks, which would raise US$400 million each year, the Guardian said.

      The neighbouring state of New Jersey already taxes digital downloads.


      http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/4798233a28.html

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: The Dead Pool

        Originally posted by Master Shake View Post
        My thoughts? How is this "News?" It's a vanity post and not a very good one.
        Didn't GM and Starbucks already get slammed? AAPL less so, but I do think that AAPL will get hit. I may be just about ready to short COF and TIF.
        Cowards die many times before their deaths; the valiant never taste of death but once.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: The Dead Pool

          The new American lifestyle will be centered on the village idea. Starbucks will adapt and join a crowded field of value oriented community shops. Apple will introduce some clever product to facilitate. GM will build Trucks, Busses, and electric cars.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: The Dead Pool

            Originally posted by sunskyfan View Post
            The new American lifestyle will be centered on the village idea. Starbucks will adapt and join a crowded field of value oriented community shops. Apple will introduce some clever product to facilitate. GM will build Trucks, Busses, and electric cars.
            Megaregions.


          • Arizona Sun Corridor
          • Cascadia
          • Florida
          • Front Range
          • Great Lakes
          • Gulf Coast
          • Northeast
          • Northern California
          • Piedmont Atlantic
          • Southern California
          • Texas Triangle


            http://www.america2050.org/megaregions.html

            Global Integration Zones Are the New Competitive Unit
            Our competitors in Asia and Europe are creating Global Integration Zones by linking specialized economic functions across vast geographic areas and national boundaries with high-speed rail and separated goods movement systems. The increased mobility of workers, business travelers, information, and goods between the networked cities of these megaregions enables greater collaboration, flexibility, and innovation. Efficient mobility is also a competitive advantage in the global playing field, where value is created by time savings.

            In the United States, the coupling and chaining of industrial activity to take advantage of "just in time" production and delivery is increasingly critical to the success of our economy. The limited capacity to move goods quickly and "on demand" is a serious obstacle that firms face in congested regions. Efficiently providing these services in a constrained and congested transportation system is among the greatest challenges for businesses trying to compete in the global economy. This challenge can be met with coordinated new investments in infrastructure development at the megaregional scale.

          Comment


          • #7
            Re: The Dead Pool

            Originally posted by Mega View Post
            Ok Gang, what i am after here is a list of companys that are going to get stuffed BIG time or Die:-

            Apple?...........All those crappy pods & phones.
            Starbucks.........Sugar laced brown water hot crap.
            GM.............The People whom bought you the Pontaic Astzc.

            Your thoughs
            Mike
            Apple? This is the company that single handed took over the portable music player market when they knocked Sony's Walkman into the dustbin of history. And being a "computer company" they weren't even considered a competitor of Sony. :eek:

            Sony is still trying to recover from that.

            I would be loathe to count Apple out of whatever economy eventually evolves in the USA and globally.

            Comment


            • #8
              Re: The Dead Pool

              Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
              Apple? This is the company that single handed took over the portable music player market when they knocked Sony's Walkman into the dustbin of history. And being a "computer company" they weren't even considered a competitor of Sony. :eek:

              Sony is still trying to recover from that.

              I would be loathe to count Apple out of whatever economy eventually evolves in the USA and globally.
              We have been long fans of Apple. The company's key differentiating strength -- integrated OS and hardware for high reliability and quality user interface -- were a hazard during the corporate PC boom but a boon during the consumer electronics boom.

              That said, the consumer boom is over for a while. In what future markets will tight OS/hardware integration pay off?

              Military? :eek:


              Ed.

              Comment


              • #9
                Re: The Dead Pool

                Originally posted by FRED View Post
                We have been long fans of Apple. The company's key differentiating strength -- integrated OS and hardware for high reliability and quality user interface -- were a hazard during the corporate PC boom but a boon during the consumer electronics boom.

                That said, the consumer boom is over for a while. In what future markets will tight OS/hardware integration pay off?

                Military? :eek:


                I heard rumors that Apple was working on an electric car.

                And I'm not kidding, either.

                Comment


                • #10
                  Re: The Dead Pool

                  Also on the cards is an 18 percent "obesity tax" on surgary soft drinks, which would raise US$400 million each year, the Guardian said.

                  http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/4798233a28.html
                  Love the "obesity tax." Come to think of it, it provides double benefit: first as tax income to the state, and second, healthier population, which means lower health-care cost. Way to go! Should be made national with targeted products.

                  Comment


                  • #11
                    Re: The Dead Pool

                    Originally posted by Jam View Post
                    Love the "obesity tax." Come to think of it, it provides double benefit: first as tax income to the state, and second, healthier population, which means lower health-care cost. Way to go! Should be made national with targeted products.
                    Wouldn't it be easier to tax everything except for the three things in the average American diet that pose no direct health risk...the Starbucks paper cup, the wooden stir stick, and the cardboard heat sleeve?

                    Comment


                    • #12
                      Re: The Dead Pool

                      Originally posted by FRED View Post
                      We have been long fans of Apple...That said, the consumer boom is over for a while. In what future markets will tight OS/hardware integration pay off?
                      I agree, Apple will be fine. Their next profit center will be the creation of firmware and conduit controls for video download. If one is not familiar with this current offering, here's a link:

                      http://www.apple.com/appletv/

                      The dead pool will be populated by the current winners in the video transmission market; Direct TV and Dish Network. Between terrestrial competitor's ability to drop prices and improve performance and the average subscribers need to cut costs, they're both on life support.

                      Comment


                      • #13
                        Re: The Dead Pool

                        Originally posted by Mega View Post
                        Ok Gang, what i am after here is a list of companys that are going to get stuffed BIG time or Die:-

                        Apple?...........All those crappy pods & phones.
                        Starbucks.........Sugar laced brown water hot crap.
                        GM.............The People whom bought you the Pontaic Astzc.

                        Your thoughs
                        Mike
                        did you see this?
                        Sunday Times
                        UP to 15 national retail chains are predicted to go bust before the middle of January, forcing thousands more shopworkers onto the dole. The prediction came from insolvency expert Begbies Traynor as well-known retail chains clamour to sell enough goods to meet their quarterly rent payments on Christmas Day. Nick Hood, partner at Begbies Traynor, said: “I would not be surprised if between 10 and 15 national and regional chains collapsed before the middle of January.” Hood refused to name specific store groups, but this weekend it emerged that The Officers Club, a 150-strong national menswear chain, had been put up for distressed sale through KPMG, while the specialist tea retailer, Whittards, and music store Zavvi remained on the critical list. According to the accountancy firm Price Waterhouse Coopers, if only 10% of national retailers get into financial difficulty in the next 12 months, that would bring about 4,000 empty shop units onto the market.
                        In the U.S. I can't imagine Crocs, Inc. (CROX) or Radio Shack (RSH) surviving this downturn. How the heck did Radio Shack survive the Tandy brand? Crocs are the kind of thing that can only exist in a credit happy market. Ugly and useless. And Radio Shack sells in shopping Malls vastly overpriced audio, video and computer equipment that should be purchased online.

                        Any company that depends solely on selling cell phones should be looked at. I don't know how it is anywhere else, but in the U.S. in many places you can't travel 100 yards without passing two stores that only provide cell phones and accessories. Only half jokingly, I think cell retailers were the third biggest job creators between 2003 and 2007, behind governments and real estate.
                        Last edited by Slimprofits; December 25, 2008, 01:10 AM.

                        Comment


                        • #14
                          Re: The Dead Pool

                          Originally posted by GRG55
                          Apple? This is the company that single handed took over the portable music player market when they knocked Sony's Walkman into the dustbin of history. And being a "computer company" they weren't even considered a competitor of Sony. :eek:

                          Sony is still trying to recover from that.

                          I would be loathe to count Apple out of whatever economy eventually evolves in the USA and globally.
                          Apple did outdo Sony in its normal home turf - consumer electronics.

                          But the way it was done was not very original: take Sony's original winner, the Walkman, and build into a next generation digital offering.

                          Oh, and most importantly sucker the entire music industry into accepting iTunes.

                          Apple is the single greatest accelerator for the decline in CD sales in the past few years.

                          A simple mathematic analysis of the number of iTunes sold vs. number of iPods sold yields something like 93% of all music on iPods is technically illegal.

                          http://www.viewfromsiliconvalley.com/id227.html

                          One RIAA-related site suggested January 3, 2006, iTunes is, "hurdling towards one billion a-la-carte downloads." They estimated 980M paid downloads as of February 6, 2006. Ignoring the 30-day mis-match in duration, let's take 42M iPOD units sold vs. 980M downloads sold and cipher out 23.3 downloads per iPOD. Just to make the numbers easier to work with, let's round it up to 25 iTunes per iPOD user.

                          In turn, Apple claims 1Gigabyte is enough capacity for 240 songs. A full-up 20GByte hard-disk-based iPOD therefore holds 4,800 songs.

                          Let's make an arbitrary assumption the "average" iPOD in the hand of a consumer today holds 2GByte (matching the new Nano introduced 4Q05). The result is our "average" iPOD user has capacity for 480 songs of which only ~25 are from iTunes.

                          This works out to 5.2% of the capacity occupied by content acquired via RIAA-approved processes. If the "average" iPOD is 80% full, our "average" iPOD user then has 360(!) songs from non-iTunes sources. Said differently, ~93% of the contents of the "average" iPOD are ripped CDs and/or pirated content. (Even if you cut down to a 1GByte device and double to 50 iTunes per user and you still get 74% non-iTunes content.)
                          So, where else is there a sucker industry willing to accelerate its own decline for Apple's benefit?

                          Clearly the video content owners aren't going for it.

                          I also strongly believe that the downturn in both the world economy and the FIRE economy is going to adversely impact those industries paying the high salaries of the iXXX groups: tech, FIRE, digital artists/advertising

                          Comment


                          • #15
                            Re: The Dead Pool

                            Originally posted by c1ue View Post
                            Apple did outdo Sony in its normal home turf - consumer electronics.

                            But the way it was done was not very original: take Sony's original winner, the Walkman, and build into a next generation digital offering.

                            Oh, and most importantly sucker the entire music industry into accepting iTunes.

                            Apple is the single greatest accelerator for the decline in CD sales in the past few years.

                            A simple mathematic analysis of the number of iTunes sold vs. number of iPods sold yields something like 93% of all music on iPods is technically illegal.

                            http://www.viewfromsiliconvalley.com/id227.html



                            So, where else is there a sucker industry willing to accelerate its own decline for Apple's benefit?

                            Clearly the video content owners aren't going for it.

                            I also strongly believe that the downturn in both the world economy and the FIRE economy is going to adversely impact those industries paying the high salaries of the iXXX groups: tech, FIRE, digital artists/advertising

                            I have an ipod and I hate itunes, I have severel free codes to download music / audiobooks and will probably never use them.


                            I imagine it's easy to buy something from itunes and a lot of computer illiterate people buy apple products, who like things to be easy. So you get a lot of people who will buy one track online instead of buying a CD with all tracks.

                            I bought it because it had so much hd space for great money. Thanks to Designed in Cupertino Made in China

                            I listen mostly to all kinds of radio shows offline, 1 year of shows takes maybe 8 GB.

                            Comment

                            • Working...
                              X