More Samsung Smartphone Owners Are Switching To iPhones
Twenty percent more Samsung smartphone owners have switched to Apple's iPhone than the other way around.
Twenty percent more Samsung smartphone owners have switched to Apple's iPhone than the other way around.
More people are buying smartphones than ever before according to a new Gartner survey.
Now we know why Samsung continues to bash Apple in ads. It works.
This week, we received a potential launch date for the iPhone 5S, Apple released iOS 7 beta 5, and Apple's performance during Q2 2013 was revealed.
The International Trade Commission has recently sided with Apple in a patent dispute, in a move that could see certain Samsung devices receive a U.S. import ban.
The "Samsung Galaxy Gear" could soon compete with the "iWatch."
Google's Android continues to dominate the smartphone operating system market, according to recent data.
Apple and Samsung are continuing their customer/supplier relationship whether Cupertino likes it or not.
Apple is continuing to dominate the PC market, despite the market itself appearing to have leveled out in the second fiscal quarter of 2013.
The move means that Apple can continue selling the iPhone 4 in the U.S.
Apple has received some very bad news from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Though the smartphone market as a whole grew during Q2 2013, Apple's iPhone didn't do so well.
One of the reasons Apple is likely to launch a budget iPhone is due to slowing high-end smartphone growth.
With Apple, Samsung, Google, and more set to launch their own smart watch-style products in the near future, the market is set to boom, according to a recent report.
Apple is said to have signed an Apple A9 processor deal with Samsung.
The fight between Samsung and Apple is just getting started.
Samsung's Galaxy S IV probably won't catch up to the iPhone in terms of sales.
South Koreans love their iPhones and the support they receive from Apple.
Apple's divorce from Samsung has hit a number of obstacles.
Apple is indeed planning on moving a percentage of its chip production away from Samsung and towards TSMC, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Apple's share of the smartphone market drops by 5 percent in Europe to 25 percent.
Apple and TSMC are said to have recently signed a three-year manufacturing deal.
Samsung wins a major ruling against Apple.