Apple's response to a high-profile gaffe involving its iPhone software may be more important than the glitch itself. As the giant tech company scrambled to fix a software glitch that
left some of its new iPhones unable to make calls, some analysts said
Thursday that Apple is doing the right thing by quickly acknowledging
and apologizing for the problem — which it was slower to do with earlier
iPhone problems. Apple released a new update late Thursday that the company said would
repair the problems caused by software it released Wednesday morning.
And it repeated an earlier apology to owners of its newest iPhones who
were affected by that buggy release. "There's a certain perception that Apple has to get things right, and
when they don't, the whole company gets questioned," said Carolina
Milanesi, chief of research at Kantar Worldpanel. "But they came out and
said 'We apologize; we're working 24/7 to fix it.' I think that's what
matters." Apple's stock fell nearly 4 percent Thursday, leading a broader
decline in technology shares, a day after the company was forced to
withdraw an update to its new iOS 8 mobile software because of glitches
that primarily affected customers who had purchased its new iPhone 6 and
6 Plus models. The 6 Plus phone has also been the subject of social
media reports that its extra-large shell is vulnerable to bending.
As for the bending issue, Rubin said the iPhone 6 Plus is "a large,
thin device. That's not to say customers should treat it gingerly, but
it's still an electronic product and it's an investment, and it should
be treated as such." Apple is held to a higher standard by many consumers, analysts said.
But Milanesi said she thought the company suffered more harm a few years
ago, when it was slow to acknowledge complaints about poor reception
and dropped calls that affected new iPhone 4 models when they were
released in 2010. The company eventually offered a fix for the problem,
after then-CEO Steve Jobs initially suggested users just needed to hold
the phone differently.
"There wasn't any of that this time," Milanesi said. She noted that
Jobs' successor, CEO Tim Cook, had also taken responsibility and
apologized for initial problems with Apple's Maps software when it was
first released. Meanwhile, one analyst said Thursday's stock sell-off was more likely
related to broader market concerns than investor unease about the new
iPhones. "Earnings is what drives the stock the most," said Walter Piecyk of
BTIG Research. "It's too early to say what the impact's going to be, but
it does not appear to be something that would impact the company's
ability to deliver on earnings" in the next two quarters. Apple said users affected by the software glitch can connect their
phone to a Mac or Windows computer and download a file to restore an
earlier version of the iOS 8 software.
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