Recent Comments

  • Greg Lippert on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Shocked AAPL dipped post Keynote.That never happens. 😉'
  • Philip Elmer-DeWitt on Apple's WWDC26: What the analysts are saying - 'For the record, notes from Needham, BofA, and J.P.Morgan came in overnight. Woodring at Morgan Stanley raised his target to $360 from $330, according to TipRanks. I’ve asked to see the note. Any others I’ve missed?'
  • Jonny T on KeyBanc: Apple Services is 'outgrowing sustainable growth' - 'I think ped30.com should not be promulgating the utter cluelessness of Brandon Nispel of Keybanc. We’ll be getting Rob Enderle back next.'
  • Ben Gepp on Apple's WWDC26: What the analysts are saying - 'KeyBanc: “We saw: no clear signs of monetization of AI” Ummm, what about the truck loads of hardware that it will move?'
  • grantbbunker on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'https://9to5mac.com/2026/06/08/craig-federighi-details-apples-collaboration-with-google-for-siri-ai-in-ios-27/'
  • Steven Philips on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'Excellent!'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Apple's WWDC26: What the analysts are saying - 'Greg, Upvoted. It would be silly for Apple to make the same mistake it made 2 years ago. My gut tells me to believe them this time. It also would be a bad way for Cook to leave and give Ternus a major headwind as he takes over the company. I would have to think that this thing works because I don’t think Cook would do this. JMO though. We will have to see. A couple of other thoughts. Maybe, some of the pessimism is related to being burned by Apple 2 years ago. So now maybe people are taking a more cautious approach since a consumer product isn’t ready to be released? Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me? With the share price action the past couple of weeks, it isn’t unusual that the share price fell at some point today. At least as of right now, I think the share price has held up ok. But there may be more downside to come.'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Apple's WWDC26: What the analysts are saying - 'Joe, It is an interesting excerpt, but a bit confusing if I am reading it correctly. Is the author saying that Apple is getting away with things that MSFT isn’t and really isn’t more private than its competitors? Or that Apple is doing it right and its competitors should have been able to come up with an answer? The thing that seems clear is that they were impressed by what Apple displayed. And MSFT would seem to have egg on its face.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on 'We call it Siri AI', said Mike Rockwell, as Apple hit $317.40, a new intraday high - 'Yes, David. I agree today’s keynote presentation was an excellent presentation of Apple Intelligence and I look forward to the debut of the enhanced AI-related services over the coming months. Today’s announcements surpassed my very high expectations and expect what was announced today to be more fully reflected in the share price over the next 3 months to 6 months. In my view today’s announcements heighten Apple’s barriers to competition and widens the company’s economic moat. Consumers the world over now know what to expect from Apple this fall. I’m quite expected for the next few fiscal quarters as Apple monetizes today’s announcements.'
  • grantbbunker on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'this blog from the post-keynote tech-talk adds more depth https://www.engadget.com/2189169/apple-wwdc-2026-live-blog-siri-ai-ios-27/'
  • Greg Lippert on Apple's WWDC26: What the analysts are saying - 'Do these analysts really think Apple doubled down on vaporware? This is the real deal and it’s coming soon. And the reason it’s not in EU or China is politics, not tech. EU locked themselves out with insane policies.'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple's WWDC26: What the analysts are saying - 'From the Senior Editor of no less than Pc World: Excerpt From “Apple’s new Siri just works. Why can’t Copilot?” Mark Hachman PCWorld https://apple.news/A5enAqWpFTOeW8ILU_zh2xQ This material may be protected by copyright. “Once again, Apple understands how to make it all come together…” “…One of Apple’s great strengths is its ability to frame the problem. Time and again, Apple showed how Siri could hunt down and discover the proper result to even a vague request, digging through messages and email. And Microsoft can do that! But instead of poring through stored messages, Microsoft’s Windows Recall used screenshots instead. Recall might have worked, but Microsoft fumbled the ball by not locking down the stored screenshots, which already had the smell of spyware from the beginning. In Apple’s ecosystem, slurping up that data is perceived as a positive. In the Windows world, however, people start grabbing torches and pitchforks. In Apple’s world, integrating Siri, which acknowledges a request and provides results, is seen as a good thing. But when Microsoft takes a user’s request for additional context and launches Copilot, it’s seen as an intrusion. Apple has one Siri; Microsoft has…many. Still, for all of the snark that Apple deserved for being late to the AI party, you have to give it credit for leaning heavily on what small, local, private AI models can do. The Windows world erupts when the operating system or Copilot flags a new feature or offers to help. But the new Siri, backed by Apple Intelligence, goes to show what Windows can and should look like—if Microsoft could ever pull it off.“'
  • Gregg Thurman on 'We call it Siri AI', said Mike Rockwell, as Apple hit $317.40, a new intraday high - 'And those that haven’t done their due diligence, haven’t done the research, haven’t done their homework, will interpret the selloff as a market rejection of Apple’s shiny new thing and fight over who gets to declare it a failure first. Let the count down begin: 10, 9, 8, 7, 6…..'
  • grantbbunker on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'Wesley Hilliard has much to say on this: https://appleinsider.com/articles/26/06/08/apples-new-foundation-models-dont-contain-a-drop-of-gemini-as-we-said-they-wouldnt'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's WWDC26: What the analysts are saying - '” Apple likely has two-plus years to get it right.” Munster almost got it right. In 2 years Apple will be leading the LLMs by 4 years.'
  • Dan Scropos on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'I don’t own any Google products.'
  • Dan Scropos on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'Fair points, for sure, but Apple started Apple Maps in about 2009 and was barely in the Fortune 100 at the beginning of that year. They now have unlimited resources and seemingly started the AI race on equal footing with everyone, including Google. Car, Vision Pro and now AI show a decade plus of absolutely no ability to bring a product to market. Couple that with Gemini being the soul of Apple Intelligence and I’m left semi-nauseous. Federighi needs to follow Giannadrea out the door. That should be the first thing John Ternus does when he becomes CEO.'
  • Steven Philips on Apple's WWDC26: What the analysts are saying - 'Dear Brandon, SIRI is not an LLM! So it doesn’t compare to “others”. Gene, you’re moving onto shaky ground.'
  • Steven Philips on Gene Munster: 'Everything they showed at the keynote is effectively vaporware' - 'Careful, Gerber also makes knives – which I’d rather they not get hold of!'
  • Steven Philips on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'Gregg, without reflecting on who developed it, I see a lot of potential. It does seem a bit (!) Gemini like, but who cares if it fits within Apple’s edge structure and delivers. However as I previously noted, I’ll hold off judgement until it’s on my devices.'
  • Robert McDonald on Gene Munster: 'Everything they showed at the keynote is effectively vaporware' - 'Very helpful discussion by all.Thanks. This keeps things in perspective. Still a fanboy of this website since before the Apple PED hosted LA conference. Must have been well over 10 years ago.'
  • Steven Philips on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'Salute the fruit! 🙂 My favorite part was the raccoon! I named him “Google” because he was a fruit stealer! 🙂'
  • Steven Philips on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'Have you tried that spelling test on Android Google/Gemini? Just curious.'
  • David Emery on 'We call it Siri AI', said Mike Rockwell, as Apple hit $317.40, a new intraday high - 'Thats OK. I haven’t looked closely, but so far I haven’t seen anything in Siri AI that I would want to run on my M1 Max laptop. I’m still not interested in talking to computers, and I have no clue what I’d “talk” to Siri about.'
  • Steven Philips on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'Thanks, Joe! 🙂'
  • Steven Philips on Virtually live from Apple's WWWDC 2026 - 'Without me looking back at the timing, do the drops in the stock price align with the reorientation from the public to developers and to Tim’s ending caveats about the EU and China? Does that mean that the market was maybe expecting some product announcements or something?'
  • David Thall on 'We call it Siri AI', said Mike Rockwell, as Apple hit $317.40, a new intraday high - 'An old friend and very long-term fellow Apple shareholder texted me… just as AAPL’s share price went over a cliff… after hitting a new ATH. They asked, “why oh why does it always go down after these presentations?” They thought the presentation was excellent. MY RESPONSE: It was excellent. This “sell on the news” drop is just typical dark money stock manipulation driven by HFT A.I. algos. I will add, their playbook has nothing to do with Apple the company, and everything to do with Apple the trading opportunity. A tried and true strategy… by very short-term trading algorithms triggering other very short-term trading algorithms – manipulating the stock market with impunity. I will lay anyone odds that once it hits the so-called low-end of the new “trading range” – like clockwork, CNBC will invite talking heads that will say it is oversold. One thing is guaranteed. Apple will introduce new iPhones – and other products – this fall, with OS 27 running an all new A.I. driven SIRI. And it will be significant.'
  • Fred Stein on Horace Dediu sees Apple Intelligence as a tool to lift people up - 'Upvoted. Most analysts miss the impact of long term support. Support and product quality increase the value of used iPhones (or just the value of keeping an iPhone). That has several benefits; 1) Less losses to Android. Indeed switching is net positive to iPhone. 2) Lower TCO 3) Robust new iPhone sales because selling an older one reduces the net price. 4) And now, with memory prices impacting Android, used iPhones become very price competitive in the mid to low-end.'
  • Fred Stein on Gene Munster: 'Everything they showed at the keynote is effectively vaporware' - 'The primary audience is developers who will get their hands on stuff right away. Since investors, analysts, and consumers also listen, Apple wisely avoided over promising. As Apple’s AI consumer releases roll out, we can expect new iPhones perhaps foldable, M5 Ultra systems, new Apple TV, and other catalysts. Meanwhile I’ll reduce some OOM options exposure. Perfect for the “out dumb” the market strategy.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Gene Munster: 'Everything they showed at the keynote is effectively vaporware' - '” This seems like every other year. We need to see the price in a month or so.” You mean like July? I think we’re going to see a major reversal of today’s selloff in under three weeks. Applying the average of the lowest post WWDC reversals of the past 5 years (not exactly AAPL’s best years) to today’s Close you get a print of $317 by July expiry. That’s the average of the LOWEST reversals.'