Recent Comments

  • Bill Donahue on M.G. Siegler: Apple wins - 'The funniest part of this is that AI is in absolutely no way new. So really what we’re calling early adopters is just the front edge of mass adoption of consumer-grade products. It’s like calling the first people who bought PCs “early adopters” or even “innovators” in computing.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'AAPL has recovered ~$9.00 since Monday.Close (average $3.xx per day). With 26 sessions remaining until July expiry all I require to achieve max value on my $305/$310 Call Spreads is ~55 cents per day. With July earnings around the corner from options expiry, I’m expecting an earnings run up to put me over the top. Fingers crossed.'
  • Ron Fredrick on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'Romeo Esparrago said: “could be the reason AAPL has recovered to 315+.” **Not $315+ yet…but soon! 🙂'
  • Romeo Esparrago on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'Yes! Assuming the realization of how Apple Intelligence will really pay off as honest reviewers see it now and then actual users (including normal ones LOL) will discover when it rolls out post-Developers period could be the reason AAPL has recovered to 315+. Up up & away, my beautiful balloon, so we can fly into the Fifth Dimension!'
  • Bart Yee on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Well, after closing at the dip low of $290.55 onJune 9th, pretty much $25 down from the closing high of $315.20 on June 2, AAPL has recovered $5, 1/5th or 20% of the way back over the past 2 days to close at $295.63. Volume was a decent 40.5M shares, representing ~$11.87B worth of share trading hands. TTM PE is 35.4, FPE is 30.7, which is still quite reasonable IMO. As more reports of hands on experience with Siri AI and Apple Intelligence filter in, there will be some rethinking about where Apple and AAPL are headed. Any continued strength in iPhone and Mac sales should inspire monetary confidence for earnings.'
  • Raj Pandey on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'This is going to be HUGE! Only Siri will have direct access to the user’s private info and from the “real world” demos we saw above, it looks like Siri is seamlessly cross-referencing across apps and providing accurate results. Plus the UI/UX looks very Apple-like. For normal users — which is most of them — there will be no need for any other AI app. OpenAI and Anthropic must be getting a little nervous.'
  • Greg Lippert on Premarket: Apple is green - 'It’s a great way to make a living 🙂 And how its easier to make money when you have money.'
  • Steven Philips on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - 'Germany appreciates quality construction.'
  • Alessandro Luethi on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Brent – thanks for that link!'
  • Steven Philips on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Maybe if more teams would become AVP involved they could sell “special” team units with insignias and colors. (Or – for the more pragmatic – white or black with interchangeable insignias! 🙂 )'
  • Bart Yee on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'To add context, here’s additional info from Gemini, soon to be Siri: “Out of your list, Jessica Williams, Brett Goldstein, Harrison Ford, Matthew Rhys, and Jane Krakowski are featured in shows or movies on Apple TV+. • Jessica Williams: Stars as Gaby in the hit comedy series Shrinking. • Brett Goldstein: Co-created and starred as Roy Kent in Ted Lasso and co-created Shrinking. He also stars in the Apple Original Film All of You. • Harrison Ford: Stars alongside Jason Segel in the comedy series Shrinking. • Matthew Rhys: Stars as Mayor Tom Loftis in the comedy-horror series Widow’s Bay. • Jane Krakowski: Starred as Mrs. Dickinson in the comedy series Dickinson. • The other individuals on your list (Lainey Wilson, Druski, Jimmy Fallon, Zedd, Whoopi Goldberg, Ryan Tedder, Michael B. Jordan, Rhea Seehorn, and Diplo) do not currently have prominent acting or starring credits within the Apple TV+ library.“'
  • Greg Lippert on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'No AI agents have access to your personal info, keeping it private and tying it all together. That’s the game changer, all while guarding your privacy.'
  • Greg Lippert on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - 'And in Germany they can’t even get the latest features due to the crazy EU regulations'
  • Ron Fredrick on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Joseph Bland said: “Maybe there IS something to this buy and hold AAPL approach after all….” **My AAPL spreadsheet shows our 100% AAPL portfolio increased by 986.3% since 12/31/16…and that’s with us paying taxes on my yearly RMD. So far, so good, Joseph! 🙂'
  • Brent Maynard on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Another good video from Nate B Jones. A “busy” video, but I think he distills Apple’s plan/opportunity well. AI is the device in your hand, not a chatbot in the cloud. At the 9:40 minute mark of the video covers moving inference to the device from the cloud. https://youtu.be/t7L6-fMpxFc?si=t7Ph7TEFPzWfVekj'
  • Gregg Thurman on Hands on with Siri AI (videos) - 'Impressive. Yeah, I understand that other “AIs” have been doing these things for a while, but as one reviewer stated!, Siri AI is going to bring this to a lot more people, not just the adventurous early adopters., and of those people how many are going to testdrive anything else?'
  • Romeo Esparrago on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'Thanks, Peter! Good morning!'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'You know, Fred, trustable AI could really be useful. For example, I just posted a bit on another thread, but made a slight mistake because of a glitch in mentally converting from percentage increase to X times increase. AND I could only extrapolate off a small set. But doing a large extrapolation and conversion plus laying it all out in a list would be duck soup for AI, with far less of a chance of error. It’s like the differences between long-hand calculations, slide-rule calculations, and calculator calculations: AI is going to “disappear” everything except the answer you wanted – IF it can be trusted! That’s why it needs to be able to also show its work, but also not tread on your privacy. And Apple has just clearly demonstrated that they have the inside track both on privacy and jumping relatively quickly to the answer you’re looking for. And I’ll bet that, if asked to, “Apple I” (Apple Eye?) can also show you how it got there.'
  • Carl Sullivan on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Selling insurance to pessimists, I love it. Getting paid with the “risk” that I may be forced to buy more AAPL at $170! Yes please!'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Oops! Strike QCOM from that list….They’re only a 2.6-bagger….'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is green - 'I just looked over the collection of tech stocks I have on my Apple stocks app, and other than AVGO, QCOM, and complete outlier NVDA, Apple’s 11X over 10 years valuation increase is significantly better than the rest. And yes, to do as well over the next decade is unfathomable. But it was also unfathomable a decade ago, right? Maybe there IS something to this buy and hold AAPL approach after all….'
  • Fred Stein on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Great insights on what consumers pay for, but how does this apple to Apple, especially iPhone? And more so with AI? People buy iPhones for ALL the work they do. These jobs to be done vary widely amongst consumers. Because Apple, and it’s 3rd party Apps, do so many jobs, it doesn’t matter which ones make money for Apple or third parties. What matters is that the number of consumers buying into the Apple ecosystem keeps going up and the ARPU keeps going up? They spend more because Apple devices keep increasing the jobs that can be done. And yes, entertainment is a job of sorts. Still it is a long long road. Some family members still don’t now how to add a contact that I send via iMessage.'
  • Fred Stein on The iPhones of March: Top sellers in 7 of 8 countries - 'Crushing it, everywhere that counts, expect Samsung’s backyard. Doing OK there, anyway. And this is March, long after launch. Pro Max leads in China, but not elsewhere. Interesting.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Approaching the noon hour in New York and Apple is now up $1.10 at $292.68. The major indexes remain in the green with the Russell 2000 small cap index up 1.55% followed by the DJIA which is up 0.51%. On the S&P 500 over 63% of components are in the green in morning trading…'
  • Bart Yee on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Exactly right Bill, and the corollary to the two Ben’s argument is “you guys are not everyone else, and they are not you”, meaning just because you dislike something doesn’t mean others (or most) won’t like it or do it. That’s why Apple giving people AI in doses and use case average (and above average) Apple device users can understand, relate to, and utilize helps users to become / get comfortable with the idea of multitasking, multicommanding, multi requesting Siri and Apple Intelligence to do more and more. You know, play with it, try it out, give it some trials and tests. You saw it work, now try it yourself. If Apple feels confident Siri and Apple Intelligence can pass muster with developers to a quality and result level Apple demands for itself, then WE should and maybe will feel just as confident in using Siri AI, new iOS features, and more complex action requests than the simple ones we’ve used till now. Till then, we’ll have to see what developers and first beta adopters report on their experiences. I can see Cook, Ternus, Federighi, and Rockwell all thinking: “I’m taking an awful risk, Vader. This had better work.” And the reply hopefully will be: Aladdin: Do you trust me? Jasmine: (hesitates, then takes his hand) Yes.'
  • Bill Fouche on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'The two Bens are over-generalizing. People differ. And there are many things we need that it is very tedious to shop for. I do not enjoy shopping for insurance, for airline tickets, for household cleaning products, for pharmacy items. I will always want to choose my hotel the old-fashioned way. But I love the idea of having AI Siri provide me with a list of good candidates meeting my criteria regarding price, location, etc. So it depends!'
  • Stephen Gordon on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Steve Eisman’s Playbook costs $99 annually, which I also subscribe to. I think 3.0 is reasonably priced, based on the strength of the forum, though I’m sure curation involves sweat equity that may not be adequately priced, on top of expenses for hosting the site and posting excerpts from other paywall sources that help us stay informed on all things Apple. Subscriber content is all the rage these days, and I don’t know if the information being peddled is overvalued, but if you’re a retail investor or consumer, versus an industry insider, then a Ben Bajarin price makes no sense.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - '” That consumers will pay for entertainment but not for productivity is an important insight.” This is why, when Apple has solved its screen supple problem, I think Apple Vision Pro will be a major success. The enterprise, especially the medical profession, will buy it in droves. The consumer? There isn’t western TV nights at bars. Sports bars are a BIG deal. Multiple big screens, each playing a different game. It’s the new “Cheers” neighborhood bar. How popular are sports bars? Just look at the expense of installing a system that controls upwards of a dozen TVs, each playing a different sporting event, and it’s profitable doing so. I’m not excited about going to a sports bar to see a game. But watching it at home in 3D floats my boat. And if AppleTV and Apple’s Lakers/Vision Pro experiment is any indication I’m not alone.'
  • Kenny Kruger on Apple's WWDC26: Consumers don't care about agents, the two Bens agree - 'Great post, BT gets it. “Retail Therapy” is a real thing 🙂 KK'