Recent Comments

  • Joseph Bland on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - 'Hi, Rodney, Tell AI I agree that it was common but disagree that, especially in his later years, it was accurate.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - 'According to AI- Yes, calling Steve Jobs a “dictator”—particularly a “design or product dictator”—is a very common and accurate description of his management style. He ran Apple with an iron hand, rejecting the traditional corporate structure of consensus, committees, and focus groups.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - '“ Before Steve Jobs passed away, he advised his successor Tim Cook never to ask “what I would do” or try to imitate him, but rather to lead with his own judgment and do the right thing”- Fortune I did not mean for Ternus to run solo, but to bring his own individual skills and ideas to his leadership role, not make decisions thinking he had to imitate Cook. I believe Ternus has a lot to offer as CEO.'
  • Fred Stein on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - 'Upvoted for highlighting one, of many, assets that Apple has; And one that rarely gets attention. Apple’s decision process gives us investors confidence for the long term.'
  • Joseph Bland on Saturday Apple video: Apple’s Secret iPhone launch team - 'At the final credits, Tripp Mickle is at the top of the credits as “Reporter”. Talk about a seeming discord….'
  • Joseph Bland on Ice Universe: The difference between Samsung and Apple is profound - 'I agree, Bill. Like Samsung, Huawei is a close follower and general copier of Apple, apparently to the point of trying to emulate Apple’s ability to “shape perception”. That last is not a bad thing, and to the degree they are successful at it, they will thrive. The biggest problem Huawei has is its ties to the massive bureaucracy that is communist Chins. By definition, that stifles true creativity, which is Apple’s life’s blood.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - '”I do hope that Ternus feels free to be able to run with his own ideas.” I’m not sure running “with his own ideas” is how we should put it. Apple is a team, a diverse team with a multitude of different ways of looking at things. Steve wasn’t a dictator, nor was Tim. Their strength was managing the team, keeping them focused, holding everybody accountable and pushing for ever higher results. Ternus is respected by his peers for doing the same things.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Saturday Apple video: Apple’s Secret iPhone launch team - '”I didn’t even ask them if they wanted one.” I gave iPhones to my daughter and ex-wife as Christmas gifts that year (2007). They haven’t used anything else since then. Since then I’ve given one to my sister, brother and partner. None have returned to flip or Android.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - '“ What a benefit that will be for him as he transitions into the CEO role” I do hope that Ternus feels free to be able to run with his own ideas. But I agree that to have Tim Cook close is a great benefit.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - 'More importantly is that while Tim Cook is stepping down as the CEO, he is not stepping away from Apple. This will be IMO a far different schematic than what Tim Cook faced when he was handed the reins after the passing of Steve Jobs. For Tim it was probably like drinking from a firehouse for a period of time after he was put into the CEO chair. It ‘s the best of both worlds and having your cake and eating it too. John Ternus will have Tim Cook available for any questions or concerns. What a benefit that will be for him as he transitions into the CEO role. In sharp contrast to what Tim had to face when he was appointed to the position.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on Saturday Apple video: Apple’s Secret iPhone launch team - 'Apple knows what consumers need even though the consumer doesn’t.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Joanna Stern: 'I spent a week with new Siri' (video) - 'Darren: Thank you. Thant’s an excellent summation of Apple’s competitive position in the marketplace today. Device prices are moving higher and Apple is creating an opportunity to increase the value proposition of Apple devices by crafting never-seen-before functionality with on device security and privacy. IIRC, during the keynote at WWDC customers will get a set amount of AI computing power for free. Additional services can be purchased through iCloud+. Apple One will take on even more relevance for today’s Apple customer. I know I’m likely to increase my annual spend with Apple.'
  • Steven Philips on Ice Universe: The difference between Samsung and Apple is profound - 'Not sure. But I think they have a really broad portfolio of products beyond their phones. Which I agree seem like iPhone copies.'
  • Steven Philips on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - 'Broad awards like that are sooo annoying! Like getting an award for being in the top ten runners in your age group when you were number two. 🙁'
  • Steven Philips on Saturday Apple video: Apple’s Secret iPhone launch team - '“I didn’t even ask them if they wanted one.” That’s the Apple way! 🙂'
  • Rodney Avilla on Saturday Apple video: Apple’s Secret iPhone launch team - 'I remember right after I had bought the iPhone within days of it being released , I was riding in the backseat of our car, using my phone, and realizing that I could access anywhere [there’s a cell signal], at any time [The phone was with me] anything on the WWW. “This is a game changer” is the thought that came to my mind. I immediately went out and bought one for my wife and three kids. I didn’t even ask them if they wanted one.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - 'Someday Barron‘s list will be called the Tim Cook Award.'
  • Bill Fouche on Ice Universe: The difference between Samsung and Apple is profound - 'Huawei? I don’t follow them closely, but they seem to shamelessly imitate Apple and follow its lead. What am I missing here?'
  • David Emery on Ice Universe: The difference between Samsung and Apple is profound - 'The model I would use for this is John Boyd’s OODA Loop (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OODA_loop ) When you control perceptions, you operate inside (more rapidly) the other guy’s decision cycle. The comment from today’s video about “what would cannibalize the iPod?” is a great example of trying to get inside the decision loop that produces products. Now there is money to be made as the follower. A lot of both Clayton Christensen and Carliss Baldwin (“The Power of Modularity”) work show the usual trajectory for a product, where followers can optimize their productions eventually leading to commoditization. But if you’re turning faster than that cycle, you’ll always be on the rising curve (and that’s where the best ROI sits.) I’m sure Horace will correct me if I got anything wrong here, I’m not a business analyst/strategist.'
  • David Drinkwater on Saturday Apple video: Apple’s Secret iPhone launch team - 'What I thought was so cool about this video (apart from the fact that the iPhone has been with me since iPhone 3G and has turned AAPL into about 33% of my portfolio) was the body language. These are people physically communicating in a way that is natural to them. There’s probably some neurodivergency in there, as for most technological wizards, but it is REAL, not the scripted, controlling crap that we are seeing at Apple’s most recent performances. Hopefully John Ternus can release those scripted behaviors to the trash bin. Also, however, it is interesting to note the comment near the end that, if you went “off script” in your OG demonstration, you were at risk of seeing something explode on stage. Reminds me of the ED2000 in Robocop.'
  • David Drinkwater on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - 'Upvoted and agree 100%. Managing seamless succession is almost more important than managing seamless ecosystem operation.'
  • Fred Stein on Tim Cook makes Barron's list of 25 top CEO for 2026 - 'One of Steve’s greatest accomplishments was getting Tim to run Apple. It started when Steve hired Tim. Likewise one of Tim’s greatest is getting Ternus to take over. Of course both Steve and Tim has a long list of other great accomplishments.'
  • David Emery on Joanna Stern: 'I spent a week with new Siri' (video) - 'Do you suppose someone in Apple is thinking about a commercial on AI and privacy that hearkens back to the “Hammer through Big Brother” Mac commercial?'
  • David Emery on Saturday Apple video: Apple’s Secret iPhone launch team - 'Normally, I don’t watch videos (both personal choice and a reflection of ADD, I think.) But I enjoyed this one. It’s interesting they didn’t mention the name of the guy who came up with the miraculous keyboard, even though he wrote a book about it later on… Ken Kocienda, “Creative Selection”'
  • Greg Lippert on Joanna Stern: 'I spent a week with new Siri' (video) - '“If you get tons of spam mail and texts, I hope Siri can block out that stuff almost in its entirety.“ I hadn’t thought of that use case but if true, me likee!'
  • Darren DMW on Joanna Stern: 'I spent a week with new Siri' (video) - 'The on-device AI vs data centre based AI is very interesting set up for Apple. For the next few years how much is the average consumer prepared to pay for Claude, GPT, etc? My guess is many will be happy with the free or ad supported tiers and those prepared to pay will pay $10 to $30 a month. The hyperscalers are spending hundreds of billions in capex and need to offset that with $120 to $360 per annum from just SOME of their consumer customers. On the flip side Apple users will get Siri AI free or mostly free with a newish device. Given so many Apple customers now have multiple Apple silicon devices it will be almost every other year an Apple customer is giving Apple at least $1000 a year on new hardware (before recurring services) and yet Apple doesn’t have the capex bill. As Robert said the potential here for a long super cycle is staring us in the face but too many analysts are still worried about near term monetisation of AI services. #longaapl'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Joanna Stern: 'I spent a week with new Siri' (video) - 'Steven: The fact that Apple can make functional and effective use of my private data in adequately fulfilling Sri queries without compromising my personal privacy or sharing the data with other parties has a conspicuous and essentially priceless value to me and likely many, many other people. This is a really tangible good and significant competitive advantage for Apple. I’m liking Wamsi Mohan’s $380 price target for Apple and the $400 price target fromDan Ives at Wedbush. I agree fast responses are desired by all. The fact that my data is kept secure and can be mined for processing as much as possible on device definitely has its merits. I would want the newest and fastest iPhones possible to assist in speeding up the response times on my queries. Of course I do buy a new iPhone every year. For those who don’t buy a new iPhone every year, the upgraded version of Siri makes an upgrade this year more desirable for hundreds of millions of iPhone owners all across the globe.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Joanna Stern: 'I spent a week with new Siri' (video) - '” For me, a lot will hinge on the processing speed. If Apple can get it down to two seconds it would be great.” The historical long term problem with Siri is that few people realized what “AI” actually was, and those that did were hampered by the lack of processor power. Almost everyone, the sole exception being Apple, saw processing power derived from unsustainable, power hungry data centers powered by Nvidia’s silicon and support software. Siri was held back by a decades old framework and the lack of on device processing power. Siri’s new framework opens the door for future, rapid improvement. iOS has been steadily chugging along, but with nothing to power. Apple silicon has been doing the same: M4 and M5 achieving ready for “AI” this year. The seeds for Apple AI planted decades ago, are just now showing viable sprouts, something looking like maturity will appear at next year’s WWDC (27). A year after that all will be forgiven and Apple will be declared the leader in “AI”. Although the hype that drove irrationally large investments in LLM’s and derivative models will disappear. That’s because the “AI” most people will actually use will be standard issue on their Apple devices. Even though Siri will get more powerful, and Apple Silicon will get more powerful, It won’t satisfy everyone, but it will satisfy more than enough to bankrupt a lot of data center powered operators. It’s the 80/20 rule powered by on device use cases that only Apple can provide. Only 80/20 will morph into 80/70. “AI” usage is going to be a kazillion small use cases, spread over billions of on device users, made possible by Siri, iOS, Apple silicon and hundreds (if not tens of thousands) of AI capable apps. Even a large chunk of non mobile AI (the 30%) will go to Apple, in the form of AI servers (Mac Mini, Mac Mini “Pro”, Mac Studio and Mac Studio ”Pro”). The issue will be OS privacy/security, the needs of SMBs, and proprietary need vs token costs. To take that leadership role away from Apple a firm would have to control desktop and mobile OSs, applicable silicon, AI applications (aka Apple Intelligence/Siri) and the devices consumers use and trust. I’m super bullish on Apple/AAPL for the next 10+ years.'
  • Steven Philips on Joanna Stern: 'I spent a week with new Siri' (video) - 'For me, a lot will hinge on the processing speed. If Apple can get it down to two seconds it would be great. Much slower and it will feel like a novelty – like current Siri – that I probably would rarely use. Joanna appears to be made of Sterner stuff! 🙂'