Showing posts with label Global Tech Industries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Global Tech Industries. Show all posts

The web giant has just over 3,000 employees in its three London offices, all of whom are being told to work from home.

Facebook is closing its three London offices and telling staff to work from home after an employee was diagnosed with COVID-19.
The number of coronavirus cases worldwide has now passed 100,000, according to Johns Hopkins University, as the outbreak intensifies.
There have been 47 new cases of coronavirus confirmed in the UK over the last 24 hours, taking the total number to 163, with two deaths.
A Facebook employee who was normally based in Singapore was diagnosed with the virus after visiting the company's London offices between 24-26 February, a spokesperson told TNT News.
Facebook has just over 3,000 employees in London. TNT News was unable to learn how many individuals had been in direct contact with the person who was diagnosed, but Facebook said that the company had been in contact with them all.
These individuals are being asked to self-isolate and be vigilant in monitoring whether they develop symptoms. COVID-19, the disease caused by coronavirus, is believed to gestate for up to two weeks before symptoms develop.
The company is now also reaching out to any employees and contingent workers based in other offices that visited London over the past few days to warn them.
In a statement, a spokesperson for Facebook told TNT News: "An employee based in our Singapore office who has been diagnosed with COVID-19 visited our London offices 24-26 February 2020.
"We are therefore closing our London offices until Monday for deep cleaning and employees are working from home until then."
It follows another diagnosis of a Facebook worker in Seattle, prompting the company to close its offices there in order to handle the risk posed to other staff.
On Thursday, a woman reported to be in her 70s became the first person in the UK to die after being diagnosed with coronavirus.
The Royal Berkshire Hospital in Reading said the woman had been "in and out of hospital" for other reasons but was admitted on Wednesday evening and tested positive.
Meanwhile, two British Airways staff tested positive for coronavirus on Friday and are recovering at home in isolation.
"Public Health England (PHE) has confirmed that two members of our staff have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus," it said in a statement.

Apple to Pay Up to $500M for Throttling iPhones:

After two years of litigation, Apple has agreed to pay up to US$500 million to settle a class action lawsuit alleging it slowed down older iPhones in order to push consumers into buying its later, more expensive models.
The devices covered in the agreement are iPhone 6, 6 Plus, 6s Plus, 7, 7 Plus, and iPhone SE models that ran iOS 10.2.1 or later, and iPhone 7 and 7 Plus models that ran iOS 11.2 or later before Dec. 21, 2017.
Consumers complained that their iPhones' performance suffered after they installed the Apple software updates. This misled them into believing their phones were near the end of their lifecycles, requiring replacements or new batteries.
Apple blamed the problems on temperature changes, high usage and other issues, and claimed its engineers worked quickly and successfully to address the problems.
In December 2017 it slashed the price of iPhone replacement batteries from $79 to $29. It had planned to make the new pricing applicable in January but apparently in response to customer outrage, it moved up the date to December. The program ended Dec. 31, 2018.

What the Settlement Entails:

The settlement, based upon a mediator's proposal, was reached after "extensive aggressive litigation and prolonged, well-informed and extensive arm's-length negotiations, including several in-person mediation sessions and additional negotiations -- between experienced and knowledgeable counsel facilitated by mediator Judge Layn R. Phillips (Ret.) of Philips ADR."
It provides for a non-reversionary minimum class settlement amount of $310 million in cash for the settlement class. "Non-reversionary" means excess funds will not revert back to Apple. The maximum class settlement amount is pegged at $500 million cash. The proposed settlement class consists of all former or current iPhone owners in the United States.
Settlement class members could receive $25 for each iPhone owned. The actual amount they receive will depend on the amount of any attorneys' fees and expenses, named plaintiff service awards, notice expenses, and the aggregate value of approved claims.
If the $25 payout plus the cost of the other fees, expenses and awards does not come up to $310 million, the excess will be allocated according to the stipulation, including pro rata increased payments to settlement class members up to $500.
If the payouts, expenses and costs exceed $500 million, however, the cash payment for each iPhone will be reduced on a pro rata basis.
Class counsel will seek up to 30 percent of the minimum settlement amount, or $93 million, for attorneys' fees, and up to $1.5 million for expenses. Named plaintiffs also will seek service awards ranging from $1,500 to $3,500 each.
The proposed settlement requires approval by Judge Edward Davila of the U.S. District Court in the Northern District of California in San Jose.
Apple has denied wrongdoing, and has agreed to settle to avoid the burdens and costs of litigation.

Views on the Proposed Settlement

"Good to see Apple correcting their wrong after denying it for a long time," said Holger Mueller, principal analyst at Constellation Research.
However, the settlement "comes cheap for Apple, as most customers bought new iPhones due to the throttling," he told TechNewsTechnologyz.
"Loyalty in the Apple user base remains high no matter what the issues, none of which Apple has dealt with in an honest fashion," Mueller said. "One can only hope Apple will be more upfront and honest with its customer base moving forward."
That adherence to Apple's products really is based on OS dependence, maintained Liz Miller, principal analyst at Constellation.
"Their households are connected through the OS from work to home to the sound bar someone's husband just installed," she told TechNewsTechnologyz. "So they overlook the B.S. caused by operating system dependence. The mere thought of switching off iMessage sends shockwaves through my family -- and we know better."
Loyalists are frustrated by the lack of transparency stemming from Apple's arrogance, Miller said. "It isn't the act of throttling that's the issue. It's the utter lack of authenticity and transparency that flies in the face of what people perceive to be the Apple brand."

Milking the Cash Cow

Apple "treats its base like an owned asset to be mined for money, and this behavior is consistent with that," said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.
"Recall they also throttled the Qualcomm-based versions of their phones to conceal the fact that the Intel-based versions were underperforming," he told TechNewsWorld.
"Apple's days of innovation appear to be over, along with their days of out-marketing everyone else, and their efforts appear to be mostly focused on driving down costs and finding ways to mine customers for more and more money," Enderle said. "This isn't indefinitely sustainable, as IBM discovered in the 1980s when they almost went under."

The Art of Control

Apple "has always taken a highly managed approach to contractors, customers and its supply chain," said Ray Wang, principal analyst at Constellation Research.
"Consumers choose Apple for its user interface, operating system and apps store ecosystem," he told TechNewsWorld.
On the corporate side, "most surveys show that existing companies are wary of switching," Wang said. "They have too much invested in the iOS ecosystem."
The ecosystem is at the root of Apple's difficulties, according to Larry Chiagouris, professor of marketing at Pace University.
"As Apple broadened its offerings from personal computers to smartphones to music content to tablets and now on to a wide variety of all kinds of content, the challenge to deliver to its loyal customer base has become more difficult," he told TechNewsTechnologyz.
"Its customer base has broadened considerably on the one hand, and its competitive set has also broadened as well," noted Chiagouris.

Clouds in the Future

Apple has been fined in France and Italy for throttling iPhones.
Meanwhile, Huawei, Xiaomi and Samsung are challenging its dominance fiercely in overseas markets.
Apple "remains king of the hill, but many others are now shooting at them from several vantage points, and its hold on its leadership is now threatened more than ever before," remarked Chiagouris.
Given that "Apple uses a lock-in model," Enderle said, "it will take a considerable effort by competitors or visible excess by Apple against its customers" to induce significant numbers of them to consider other vendors'
The global tech industry is being rattled by the virus as conferences are canceled and Apple and Microsoft warn investors.
The novel coronavirus  continues to wreak havoc in the global technology industry. Many companies have shut factories and banned business-related travel and major industry events like Facebook's F8, the Geneva Motor Show, Google I/O and Mobile World Congress continue to be called off because of the outbreak.
COVID-19 was discovered in the Wuhan region of China's Hubei province late last year and has symptoms similar to those of pneumonia. It was first reported to the World Health Organization on Dec. 31, with Chinese scientists linking the disease to a family of viruses that includes SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) and MERS (Middle East respiratory syndrome). The disease has killed more than 3,200 people, and more than 94,000 people have been infected in more than 60 countries.

Facebook

  • Canceled its F8 developer conference, the company's biggest event of the year at which CEO Mark Zuckerberg updates the world on Facebook's developments and challenges; will hold local gatherings for developers and online events instead.
  • Curtailed employee travel to China.
  • Canceled a marketing summit scheduled for early March, which was expected to draw 4,000 people.
  • Apple

    • Said it will miss its quarterly revenue guidance because of the effects of the coronavirus.
    • Temporarily shuttered all of its 42 stores in mainland China, one of its biggest and most important markets; closed its corporate offices and contact centers in China.
    • Has been forced to seek alternative sources for parts after suppliers in Wuhan closed because of the outbreak in that city.
    • Google

      • Temporarily closing all its offices in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
      • Restricted business travel to China and Hong Kong.
      • Told employees with immediate family members returning from China to work from home for at least 14 days.
      • Microsoft

        • Warned investors that revenue in the business segment that includes its Windows operating system and Surface devices would likely miss earlier forecasts.
        • Microsoft

          • Warned investors that revenue in the business segment that includes its Windows operating system and Surface devices would likely miss earlier forecasts.
          • Uber

            • Temporarily suspended roughly 240 user accounts in Mexico to prevent the spread of coronavirus after those users had come in contact with two drivers possibly exposed to the virus.