Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I would say yes, but overall it would be a bad business decision on their part. Apple is expected to purchase $7.8 billion in Samsung components this year alone. They are currently Samsung's largest customer.
True, perhaps Samsung need to add a "if you sue us our prices will increase" type of clause to future contracts.These sort of supply agreements are almost certainly under strict contract control.
There's more to life than money: there's the principle of the issue as well.
There's more to life than business: there's the principle of the issue as well.
There's more to life than money: there's the principle of the issue as well.
This is business we're talking about here.
But Samsung has a business to run, and would not breach a contract.
Hypothetically - if it cost you X amount in penalties to breach that contract - but you could screw Apple and increase your demand in their place by creating a shortage of iProducts - and your projected win is X - would you?
I'm not sure how you would increase demand for your own product. Wouldn't demand increase dramatically for the iProducts since there's a shortage of them? I remember when the iPad 2 was released... demand was huge because there was a constant shortage. I don't know how many of those people decided to get an Android tablet instead because of an iPad 2 shortage. Those people just wanted iPad 2s even more and as a result, would pay a higher amount of Ebay for them.
The thing that I would be worried about for intentionally breaching a contract out of principle would be losing my job. I know my stockholders would not be happy with losing billions simply due to "principles" and I believe that I would become a liability because who knows when the next time will be when I breach another contract intentionally and lose more billions for the publicly traded company?
That would seem to be like a career limiting move because I would probably get fired and have to find a position at another job with them knowing that I intentionally breach contracts out of "principle". All hypothetical of course.
Deals in the tech industry are like quantum effects - they're not stranger than you imagine, they're stranger than you can imagine.
If anything, Apple has Samsung pinned. Motorola knows they are next which is why they ran to Google for protection. If anything, Samsung should have been more original in their designs so they didn't come off as copying.
Apple having Samsung pinned is a matter open to future historians.![]()
Unless the penalty is less than the losses they'll suffer otherwise.
Hypothetically - if it cost you X amount in penalties to breach that contract - but you could screw Apple and increase your demand in their place by creating a shortage of iProducts - and your projected win is X - would you?
No Samsung would be crazy to dump their biggest customer.
If anything, Apple has Samsung pinned. Motorola knows they are next which is why they ran to Google for protection. If anything, Samsung should have been more original in their designs so they didn't come off as copying.