This story is from May 25, 2016

Google's Eric Schmidt accepts he owns an iPhone

Tech industry titans Tim Cook and Eric Schmidt took their battle for corporate domination to the heart of Europe seeking to win over new startups and IT enthusiasts.
Google's Eric Schmidt accepts he owns an iPhone
AMSTERDAM: Tech industry titans Tim Cook and Eric Schmidt took their battle for corporate domination to the heart of Europe seeking to win over new startups and IT enthusiasts.
In a rare move, Apple chief executive Cook and his bitter rival, Alphabet boss Schmidt appeared at the opening day of a seminar organised in Amsterdam for the week-long Startup Europe Fest -- although they did not take the stage together.
And Schmidt, chief executive for Alphabet and former Google boss, triggered laughter when he revealed he had an iPhone -- made by his rival -- in his pocket as well as a Samsung.

When an audience show of hands revealed more people had an iPhone than an Android, Schmidt said ironically: "So much for the Android monopoly in Europe."

"The Samsung is better, has a better battery. Are we clear?" he insisted. "And to those of you who are iPhone users, I'm right!"
At the top of the corporate world, Apple and Google are in a back-and-forth battle to be number one.
It's not clear which of the two Silicon Valley giants will emerge on top in a contest which highlights the contrast of very different business models.
The two companies have a virtual duopoly on the smartphone market, but Apple makes its own hardware and software while Google provides only the free Android software for handsets, including many made by low-cost manufacturers.

"Part of our job is to seed the market with ideas," Schmidt said, as the two men lobbed a series of jabs at each other's companies in their separate appearances.

He also urged more European entrepreneurs to take a risk and get behind startups, saying Google was hiring thousands of Europeans every year because they had nowhere to go to on their home continent.
Apple was meanwhile on a mission "to bring the app economy to places where it's missed, because...we recognise it hasn't gone everywhere yet and we want it to very much," Cook told the Amsterdam forum.
"There is nothing like ... unlocking the creativity and innovation of millions of people," he said.
He also defended Apple from accusations that it was operating a kind of "closed" policy on its app store.
There were now two million apps on the Apple store, "that doesn't sound too closed. We do curate ... there's certain things we don't want to sell like pornography," he added.
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