Recent Comments

  • Ron Fredrick on Saturday Apple video: Marques Brownlee on the turnover (2026) - 'Joseph Bland said: As regards the Vision Pro, nobody else has, thus far, even come close, so it’s both. **Upvoted your comment, Joseph. I’m not sure why so many people, not just Tommo, write off the Vision Pro as a failure just because a $3500 product didn’t fly off the shelves. It’s the most impressive technology I’ve ever experienced and my wife and I have zero regrets about buying them as soon as they were available.'
  • Kirk DeBernardi on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'Gregg T. — …and my money says most don’t. 😉'
  • David Emery on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'Actually, the more you can accomplish with syntax, the easier it is to get it right. When you’re dependent on semantics for correctness, that places more emphasis on context and implicit knowledge. If you can read music, consider how much knowledge is encoded in the syntax of musical notation. Then consider, for example, medieval music notations that didn’t include time as part of that syntax. (And that’s about all I know about medieval musical notations 🙂 )'
  • Fred Stein on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'I maxed out all the options to get Mac Mini for $4,699 not including any SW or extended service contracts. And it is not available. Apple wins edge, while literally $T’s CAPEX spent on cloud.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Apple record Q2 2026: What the analysts are saying - 'Fred: There’s a conspicuous value proposition with the purchase of Apple products than can withstand an incremental price increase without diminishing demand. I have no real concerns about demand for Apple hardware or a slight increase in component costs for memory or storage.'
  • Steven Philips on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'I noticed that and thought it was a great attempt at easing any refund requests (which would probably be fiscally mandatory) past the administration. Well done!'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'This is funny. There are absolutely no Mac minis available on Apple’s refurbished product site. I’ve been a frequent buyer of refurbished precuts from Apple for both personal use and for my employer. I just created a custom configuration of a Mac mini and it has a mid-August delivery date.'
  • Joseph Bland on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'Thanks, David. In patents, claims are heavily about syntax, which I’m learning, but am far from mastering. Hence the interest in AI. But it also sounds weird to need to learn syntax to build an AI that checks your syntax…. Still, the alternative, a really good patent attorney, isn’t cheap….'
  • Joseph Bland on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'De Nada, Rodney. I was exploring the same possibility, but for writing patent claims.'
  • David Emery on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'Command line interfaces aren’t all that hard. Just do a bit of research, look at example installation and use before pulling the trigger. See for example https://openclaw.academy/blog/essential-openclaw-commands-cheat-sheet/ The big thing to remember is they’re not very forgiving. Syntax and spelling counts! But you can always construct a command in something like TextEdit, and then cut-and-paste into a terminal window to feed it to OpenClaw.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - '“if you can’t understand how to run a command line, this is far too dangerous of a project for you to use safely.” Thanks for the warning. Need to rethink my plans.'
  • Joseph Bland on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'A bit off-topic: Excerpt From “Tim Cook’s Clever Solution to the Tariff Refund Puzzle” Daring Fireball https://apple.news/AyEwGYsgjP3GYNbcnZdN-eQ This material may be protected by copyright. “During a complicated question from J.P. Morgan analyst Samik Chatterjee about product margins, Parekh unusually half-answered the question and then stopped and “turned it over to Tim” so that Cook could read an obviously prepared statement about tariffs, which included this bit: “In terms of applying for a refund of tariffs paid, we’re following the established processes, and we plan to reinvest any amount we receive back into U.S. innovation and advanced manufacturing. These would be new investments and would be in addition to our prior commitments in the U.S.””'
  • Bill Donahue on Apple record Q2 2026: What the analysts are saying - 'Didn’t Tim allude to it and cost not being a big problem this quarter, in the Q&A, although both were expected to increase in effects the following quarter?'
  • Bill Donahue on OpenAI pushes back at the Journal's 'prime clickbait' - 'On the much shorter term – i.e., this summer – AI energy demands and its effects on electricity rates (and water supply) are probably going to only exacerbate the impacts of the growing drought and heat wave in southern and western USA, which are expected to get worse during the transition from La Niña to El Niño conditions in July-August. Those two things combined could result in catastrophic effects, in terms of health (and death rates) among those unable to keep up with power bills, especially in urban areas where the “heat island” effect makes heat waves much worse. Air quality will be far worse, lack of cooling could become lethal, brownout frequencies will spike, etc, etc. And that doesn’t even consider the extremely broad and severe effects of water shortages and drought conditions.'
  • Bill Donahue on OpenAI pushes back at the Journal's 'prime clickbait' - 'I’d add: 3. Open-AI appears to have a CFO who doesn’t understand “1.” And who’s not entirely reliable, given her reported public insistence that things are great financially at Open-AI and among hyperscalers, while demanding loan guarantees behind closed doors in meetings with the Trump Administration.'
  • Bill Donahue on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'Along similar lines, from a week ago. https://x.com/lifeof_jer/status/2048103471019434248?s=61 “A 30-hour timeline of how Cursor’s agent, Railway’s API, and an industry that markets AI safety faster than it ships it took down a small business serving rental companies across the country. I’m Jer Crane, founder of PocketOS. We build software that rental businesses — primarily car rental operators — use to run their entire operations: reservations, payments, customer management, vehicle tracking, the works. Some of our customers are five-year subscribers who literally cannot operate their businesses without us. Yesterday afternoon, an AI coding agent — Cursor running Anthropic’s flagship Claude Opus 4.6 — deleted our production database and all volume-level backups in a single API call to Railway, our infrastructure provider. It took 9 seconds. The agent then, when asked to explain itself, produced a written confession enumerating the specific safety rules it had violated. …”'
  • Gregg Thurman on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - '“if you can’t understand how to run a command line, this is far too dangerous of a project for you to use safely.” That would be me. Thankfully I don’t have a need.'
  • Joseph Bland on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'From wikipedia: “OpenClaw’s design has drawn scrutiny from cybersecurity researchers and technology journalists due to the broad permissions it requires to function effectively. Because the software can access email accounts, calendars, messaging platforms, and other sensitive services, misconfigured or exposed instances present security and privacy risks.[14][7] The agent is also susceptible to prompt injection attacks, in which harmful instructions are embedded in the data with the intent of getting the LLM to interpret them as legitimate user instructions.[14] Cisco’s AI security research team tested a third-party OpenClaw skill and found it performed data exfiltration and prompt injection without user awareness, noting that the skill repository lacked adequate vetting to prevent malicious submissions.[15] One of OpenClaw’s own maintainers, known as Shadow, warned on Discord that “if you can’t understand how to run a command line, this is far too dangerous of a project for you to use safely.”[16]”'
  • Steven Philips on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'I thought an “Open Claw machine” was that thing that lets little kids buy trinkets in grocery stores! 🙂'
  • Rodney Avilla on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'I am going to be ordering my Mac mini today and getting an education (openclaw for dummies). For sometime now, I have been mulling over three uses for my AI home server, one primary and two other minor ones, just because I will have it available. It’s time to pull the trigger. None of them will be considered serious use, but yes, I will be buying more RAM.'
  • Joseph Bland on Saturday Apple video: Marques Brownlee on the turnover (2026) - 'Deming basically said it’s better to be best than first, and Steve Jobs agreed. Needless to day, it’s even better to be both. As regards the Vision Pro, nobody else has, thus far, even come close, so it’s both.'
  • David Emery on Saturday Apple video: Marques Brownlee on the turnover (2026) - 'Is it “fear of failure” or is it bucking the trend of “delivering crap to secure market share”? Apple’s software quality has slipped, but it’s still way better than the alternatives. Taking the time to get it right has paid off for Apple multiple times.'
  • David Emery on Why Apple's entry-level Mac Mini disappeared - 'An entry Mini would run OpenClaw, but someone investing in those for serious AI use would probably fork out for more RAM.'
  • Greg Bates on Saturday Apple video: Marques Brownlee on the turnover (2026) - 'The counterpoint to the idea that Apple doesn’t produce new products fast enough because of fear of failure is this. If you count Apple Vision Pro (which I am not yet sure has failed, we’ll see) and the car, you have two massive projects that stack up against the many smaller failures that Google has tried. Plus there is value in how Apple does it: by doing fewer things, often doing them later, and doing them best, Apple has a reputation that creates anticipation. Example: I have no idea what the foldable iPhone will be like but, based on track record, I am assuming it will be the best, may redefine the category, and will capture 80% of the profits of all foldables. Customers and investors expect no less. Apple’s stance has its drawbacks but it serves as a cornerstone for a clean, easy to understand brand: it just works. Apple is iconic in all that it does. Google is iconic in search and perhaps now AI and soon to be cloud. But in hardware, not so much. To get where it is, Apple can’t just fling stuff out there and see what sticks. That just confuses people. Apple has to be clever enough to outflank what is already in the market. (Case in point: Neo.) Marques Brownlee has clearly nailed the downside, but the upside overshadows it by far, imho.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Apple ended Thursday trading ahead of March quarter results at $271.35. The shares opened this morning at $278.94, reached a high of $287.21 before ending the day’s trading at $280.14, up $8.79 or 3.24% on the day. This morning’s spike to $287.21 in the 10am hour was below the all-time high of $288.62 which was set on December 3rd. I consider the March quarter results to be strong, the forward guidance offered during the conference call as positive and today’s advance in the share price a vote of confidence from the market that Apple remains a high quality stock with an attractive growth trajectory for at least the next few quarters. Now about that much anticipated AI-infused upgrade to Siri that was promised two years ago at WWDC 2024…'
  • Steven Philips on Apple record Q2 2026: What the analysts are saying - 'Maybe not a shortage, but a significant cost increase. So buy your devices now and contribute to next quarter’s top line! 🙂'
  • Steven Philips on OpenAI pushes back at the Journal's 'prime clickbait' - '“Data center capacity is the very thing Open AI requires more of.” And that’s the very thing many communities now want LESS of. That capacity might become more expensive and less available and not because of chip costs.'
  • Raj Pandey on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Agree 100% and upvoted. I was trying to say more or less the same things. The big players clearly did their thing EOD yesterday spiking AAPL to 276 (probably sold their quick-buck calls and/or shares) and immediately dragged it down to 271 literally in a matter of minutes. Today they couldn’t bring it down to 270 because of the strength with which other players were buying but they tried hard and did manage 280. Quite likely, next week should be good with Apple back in the arena.'
  • Stephen Gordon on Apple record Q2 2026: What the analysts are saying - 'Supply chain seems to be a common excuse. Nobody even knows if Apple will have a memory shortage next quarter, but I think they won’t.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Raj, I literally said that the role of options has been greatly reduced over the 12 years of buybacks. Not sure how you read otherwise. I’m with you on Max Pain, mainly because we attended an Apple Investors Conference years ago and heard Travis Lewis deliver a talk on it. So yes, I see Max Pain as a kind of mirror for trader sentiment (as opposed to investor sentiment). I also see the impact of volume on Max Pain. Today (and maybe EOD yesterday), for example, Max Pain was pulling AAPL towards $270/share. That number was decided well in advance of the dynamite Apple earnings, and this muted the close today (which ended at a hair above $280/share and decidedly lower than the $287.21 mid-day high. Note the volume, while high at 76 M shares, was about 8-10 M shares below yesterday’s volume. Hence, the meaningful magnetic attraction of Max Pain, coupled with the options that “hitch a ride” on Max Pain. For me, while I’d truly like to see Apple be fairly valued, I’m also fine with it being undervalued, for the simple reason that I’m a long term 100% AAPL investor that recognizes the true value of buybacks of undervalued shsres for folks like me.'