Post by arfanho7 on Feb 27, 2024 6:59:45 GMT
Let s get one thing straight from the start Apple and Amazon are not friends. If they were high school students they d be mean girls glaring at each other from opposite sides of the cafeteria jealously forcing their friends to pick sides between Team Chloe and Team Madison. To put it into market terms both companies would like nothing better than to have customers to themselves wrapped up in their own seamless media universes iTunes iPad and Apple.
TV on the one hand and Kindle Amazon Prime and Fire TV on the other. “ AGGRESSIVELY WITH EACH OTHER ALONG CERTAIN DIMENSIONS THEY ARE COLLABORATING” So why would Amazon release a version of its Kindle Reader on Apple s iPad allowing users to access its library of exclusive digital books Doesn t that Hungary Phone Number diminish interest in the Kindle device asks Feng Zhu an assistant professor in the Technology and Operations Management unit at Harvard Business School. And why would Apple ever allow a Kindle app in its App Store in the first place We all know historically Apple often says no to apps that directly compete with Apple s own offerings says Zhu.
In this case Apple also sells e books through its own iBooks app so why would Apple ever say yes Such questions intrigued Zhu whose research covers competitive strategy and innovation in high tech industries. Along with Ron Adner of Dartmouth and Jianqing Chen of The University of Texas at Dallas he appropriated a familiar term for these strange bedfellows. Even though these platforms are competing aggressively with each other along certain dimensions they are collaborating says Zhu. We call them frenemies.
TV on the one hand and Kindle Amazon Prime and Fire TV on the other. “ AGGRESSIVELY WITH EACH OTHER ALONG CERTAIN DIMENSIONS THEY ARE COLLABORATING” So why would Amazon release a version of its Kindle Reader on Apple s iPad allowing users to access its library of exclusive digital books Doesn t that Hungary Phone Number diminish interest in the Kindle device asks Feng Zhu an assistant professor in the Technology and Operations Management unit at Harvard Business School. And why would Apple ever allow a Kindle app in its App Store in the first place We all know historically Apple often says no to apps that directly compete with Apple s own offerings says Zhu.
In this case Apple also sells e books through its own iBooks app so why would Apple ever say yes Such questions intrigued Zhu whose research covers competitive strategy and innovation in high tech industries. Along with Ron Adner of Dartmouth and Jianqing Chen of The University of Texas at Dallas he appropriated a familiar term for these strange bedfellows. Even though these platforms are competing aggressively with each other along certain dimensions they are collaborating says Zhu. We call them frenemies.