Saturday, September 4, 2021

GOOGLE VS APPLE

     


                       GOOGLE VS APPLE                       

 The meteoric rise of computer technology might not trouble the average millennial, but for

those of you who remember the days before we were all hyper-connected, our reliance
on modern technology might seem somewhat problematic at times.
Where will we be in another 50 years?
Iconoclastic entrepreneur Elon Musk has said if we don’t get a handle on artificial intelligence,
we may create something we’ll sorely regret.
Perhaps the most frightening depiction of tech dystopia is in the television series
Black Mirror, which exposes a world lacking in empathy, where what once were dreams have
turned into living nightmares.

Even now the media argues over automation.
Will it mean a laid back life for the masses, or mass unemployment under a technocracy?
Innovation is unstoppable, and there are a handful of tech companies at the forefront
of this innovation.
We’ll look at two of them today, in this episode of the Infographics Show, Google vs.
Apple.

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Notification Squad.
If you’ve seen our other shows on Apple, you’ll already know something about the
company.
It was started by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in 1976, with both men pushing to create the
ideal personal computer.
Jobs was forced out of Apple after what has been called a “failed boardroom coup.”
The company, however, lacked a great leader and Jobs was brought back to eventually become
CEO.

It was shortly after this that Apple grew into the innovative tech giant it is today.
Job’s vision of the ideal personal computer became manifested when he introduced the first
iMac in 1998.
The world was equally impressed when Apple came out with the easy to use and beautifully
made iPod three years later.
Two years after that came the iTunes Music Store, but what really shook things up was
the release of Apple’s flagship product, the iPhone.
That was in 2007.

The iPad came in 2010, and since these products came onto the market, Apple has arguably ruled
the roost of consumer gadgets.
As for Steve Jobs, he’s now treated like a technology demigod.
But, where would we be without Google, the company behind the search engine that most
folks can’t live without?
Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Bring met at Stanford University in 1995.
It’s said the two did not agree on many matters, but one thing they did agree on was
the creation of a search engine that ranked pages by their importance on the World Wide
Web.

This search engine was actually first called Back Rub, but then fortunately for the pair
they saw the light and made the change to Google.
Google Incorporated was born in 1998, and soon venture capitalists were poised to invest
in this small outfit.
Google just kept growing and soon billions of searches would be made every day on its
search engine.

The company created its headquarters the “Google plex”, which would soon become synonymous with the
avant-garde kind of tech workplace we see all over today.
The company has since ventured into all kinds of markets, including the smartphone business,
renewable energy, self-driving cars, enterprise services, artificial intelligence and machine learning, and all manner of smart devices.

Forbes puts Alphabet’s sales at $89.9 billion, profits at $19.5 billion, assets at $167.5

billion and net worth at $579.5 billion.
But 2017 has passed now, and so we must wait until Forbes creates its new list.
As Fortune writes in 2017, while Apple generates bigger profits, it is only slightly ahead
of Google in regards to which company will become the world’s first company with a
valuation of over one trillion dollars.

Fortune puts Amazon as the third company in the running, with Microsoft also a contender
and Facebook not far behind.
Tesla, it says, is a “dark horse”, but CEO Elon Musk seems to think his company is
on a similar trajectory to one of SpaceX’s rockets.
Back to Google and Apple.

It’s thought that Apple has around 123,000 employees, but to the chagrin of President
Donald Trump, Apple outsources much of its manufacturing to countries such as China and
Taiwan.
Apple’s biggest partner in the assembling business is Foxconn, and it has factories
in a number of countries around the world.
Google has 73,992 employees as of 2017.
It outsources such things as IT functions to India, while it’s also been building
its servers in Asia.

Where is a better place to work?
Well, that’s not easy to say.
According to one engineer that has worked at both companies, Google is better if you
want to solve big technological problems, as Apple is more concerned with design and
Google with technology.
If you are a female engineer where would be better?
Google is currently being sued for pay discrimination based on gender, whereas Apple has been shouting
from the rooftops that it has solved the gender pay gap.

Which is the better company in general?
When it comes to controversy both these world leaders have been tainted more than a few
times.
Apple has come under the gun for human rights abuses in its assembly factories in China,
and we all remember the news about those suicide nets at its assembly plants.
But more recently Apple has been skewered in the press for its offshore business in
Ireland, and late last year the billions it has saved from offshoring in the tax haven
of the Channel Island of Jersey.

CEO Tim Cook fired back stating that Apple was the USA’s biggest tax payer.
Alas, Google is no stranger to tax avoidance, so much so that in the UK a Google Tax has
been mulled over to get something back from companies that funnel their profits through
low-tax countries.

It seems there is no angel in this department.
What about their products, which company could you just not live without?
While it may be some time before we are being driven around in one of Google’s autonomous
vehicles, and even though we enjoyed our 30-minute dalliance with its machine learning doodle
bot, Google has a few things that we might take for granted.
That is arguably its search engine, the Chrome browser; its Android operating system, Gmail,
and to a lesser extent its productivity suite, or Google Suite.
We might also mention that Google owns YouTube.

To give you an idea on Google-Power, its Chrome browser alone has an almost 60 percent share
of the browser market.
The Google search engine has a 75 percent share of the search engine market and Android
has a whopping 87 percent share of the mobile operating system market.
But then we have those innovative and sleek Apple products, and also the Apple operating
system, iOS, that Apple aficionados will tell you they cannot live without.
“I’d never go back,” you hear many an Apple user saying.

The question is, which company has really done the most for mankind, and looking into
the future, who will be at the forefront of tech innovation?
Both companies are making hay in the augmented and virtual reality space, and both are very
serious about artificial intelligence.

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