Tim Cook: Apple TV did over $1B in ...
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At Apple's annual gathering of shareholders, CEO Tim Cook said ... So much for Apple TV being just a hobby, said Chief Executive Tim Cook.
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Tim Cook: Apple TV did over $1B in 2013 revenue
At Apple's annual gathering of shareholders, CEO Tim Cook said the product is more than a "hobby."
(Credit:
Apple)
CUPERTINO, Calif. -- While the iPhone and
iPad have come to dominate Apple's business, the television has often been relegated to an afterthought for the company. So much for
Apple TV being just a hobby, said Chief Executive Tim Cook.
"That hobby was over a billion dollars of revenue last year," Cook said
during the company's annual meeting with shareholders here. "It's a
little hard to call it a hobby anymore."The billion-dollar figure includes content sales conducted by Apple on the platform -- like movies and TV shows -- and not just hardware sales of its set-top box. At Friday's meeting, Cook did not specify the breakdown between the two revenue streams.
Still, the milestone means the product is getting attention from consumers. A little over a year ago, Cook announced that in the first quarter of the 2013 fiscal year, the company sold more than 2 million Apple TVs, up from 1.4 million a year before. (Although it's worth noting that Apple's first quarter includes results from the holiday shopping season.)
The company also is said to be refreshing the product during the first half of this year, but the update is reportedly to enhance its content experience -- possibly adding a game center and a version of the App Store.
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At the meeting, all of the motions proposed by Apple to shareholders were approved, while the motions proposed by individual investors were denied.
The gathering was originally billed as a showdown between activist investor Carl Icahn and Apple over the company's buyback program. Icahn has been vocal about Apple repurchasing more of its stock. In December, Icahn announced a nonbinding proposal for Apple shareholders to vote on a buyback at Friday's meeting.
But Icahn then announced earlier this month that he would pull the proposal, mainly because the Institutional Shareholder Services, a trade organization, urged shareholders to vote against it, and because Apple had increased the volume of its stock repurchasing. After investors were disappointed with first-quarter results, Cook announced that the company had bought back $14 billion worth of shares in two weeks. The company is said to be on course to repurchase $32 billion by year's end, just $18 billion off Icahn's $50 billion sum.
Still, Cook said on Friday that the company is still deliberating its buyback plan, and will issue an update of its plans in the next 60 days.
But even without the Icahn drama, the meeting was not without its excitement. A group of Silicon Valley security guards -- including Apple's own -- held a protest at Infinite Loop to coincide with the gathering of the company's shareholders. The protest was just another example of the culture clash engulfing the tech industry in Silicon Valley and the Bay Area.
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