Dan Scropos on Apple bear Dan Niles turns bullish (video) - 'What do they usually say, Gregg, that the truth is probably somewhere in the middle? Watch it be $2.78! Ha.'
on Apple bear Dan Niles turns bullish (video) - '$2.82 is damn aggressive. I reviewed my own estimates and the best I can nudge them up to is $2.74. Wouldn’t mind it at all if I were wrong, but my gut is telling me it’s you.'
on Apple bear Dan Niles turns bullish (video) - 'Pretty good comments from Niles. Apple will produce its first true AI driven phone with Google’s Gemini this year. The collaboration will see Gemini as the powertrain and whatever Apple has developed as the exoskeleton. This should juice sales, as will the Foldable. I still see $2.82, roughly, on Thursday and $8.80 eps for FY 2026, both much higher than The Street.'
on Apple in India: Steady gains - 'A quick AI search says iPhone shipments grew 16% from 2024 to 2025.'
on Apple bear Dan Niles turns bullish (video) - 'This guy is dead to me … not interested in his opinion … I prefer this forum'
on Utah state symbols: Dutch oven, brine shrimp, porcini mushrooms and... Android OS? - 'Dear Above Commenters, Your remarks are TOO FUNNY! LMAO'
on Saturday Apple video: Steve Jobs shows his temper - 'I don’t feel this headline is fair. I don’t observe Steve losing his temper in any of these clips. Except for the App Store interview, I think he is showing his wit, playfulness, creativity, and unique insight into how to motivate human behavior. When his demo crashes because of all the WiFi users, he needs everyone to shut off their devices before he can finish his presentation. But he immediately realizes that if he asks anyone to log off, they are going to raise holy hell for him cutting off their blogging. So he reframes the situation as a democratic “choice” and gets playful about having everyone vote and then police their neighbors. He knows that this crowd is super ambitious and driven—and that many will likely go right back online even if they disconnect. The behavior-change strategy and delivery are uniquely Steve. He has great intuition into human behavior, a deep reverence for Apple’s products, and a playful fun way of motivating behavior. He gets hundreds of people to do something they seriously don’t want to do and making it a bit fun at the same time. He figures this all out spontaneously on his feet. In the App Store interview, Steve strikes me as very irritable. He is pissed off that developers are violating App Store privacy policies and then attacking Apple in the press. He sees the developers making themselves into martyrs of Apple’s unreasonable demands and heavy-handedness. In the past, I don’t think Steve would have gotten so combative in this kind of situation. But remember that he is really ill in this clip. He has been going through brutal chemotherapy, has lost a lot of weight, and may be in considerable physical pain. I think he could have handled the interview question more skillfully. If I were him, I would not have attacked the developers but rather talked about why Apple cares so much about users and has created the thoughtful App Store policies that it has. I would focus on the positive, noble motives of the developers rather than their deficiencies. Instead of seeing them as creeps, I would describe the developers as “learning” together with us all how to create the best possible, most impeccable experience for users. I also give Steve a lot of credit for what he did well here, given the brutal circumstances of his health.'
on Oscars: NYT's critic horrified by Best Picture nomination for Apple's 'F1' - 'In our family from 8 to 68 we all enjoyed it immensely – technically way ahead of anything else. Only watched a few minutes on Apple Vision Pro, but still impressive without spatial. And, variety is the spice of life: Apple’s ‘Tehran’ S2 and the BBC’s ‘Night Manager’ S2 and are making a big impact currently. Highly recommended.'
on Oscars: NYT's critic horrified by Best Picture nomination for Apple's 'F1' - 'Gregg Thurman said: “Ron, I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that F1 was filmed in visionOS, with plans to rerelease post WWDC. If TC announces that you’ll find me at the Apple Store an hour later (and anxiously awaiting 2027 Kansas basketball).” **Gregg, the only technology enthusiasts who might want to hold off buying an Apple Vision Pro are 20 or 30 years younger than we are…and, IMO, even those folks shouldn’t wait for a lighter, less expensive model because the current product is so absolutely mind-blowing. Whether or not F1 was filmed in visionOS, you’d never regret buying an AVP. I do hope Apple announces more sports available for the Vision Pro and that Kansas basketball is among the teams that are included.'
on UBS: Apple's long-term DRAM contracts may expire in June - ' imagine when the AI market correction hits Been calling that for a while now. Sooner than later. No matter your backing, you can’t spend like a drunken sailor, without revenue for very long. OpenAI demonstrated that money CAN be made, just not enough to pay for all the capex. Altman’s AI device is a Hail Mary to keep the donor (long since passed the point of being investors) money flowing. OpenAI is going to be the mother of all bankruptcies.'
on Apple postcards from Davos - ' here’s team U.S.A.’s second string. PED, I think you give them too much credit.'
on UBS: Apple's long-term DRAM contracts may expire in June - 'How many times have we heard Apple is doomed because component X is in short supply and price is surging. Ignoring that the price rises will hurt more apple’s competitors who probably don’t have the long term deals and buying power of Apple and certainly don’t have Apple’s margins to absorb the increase. Plus even though memory is significant we don’t know if other components have been falling in price lately. Perhaps they have as Apple has been reporting higher GM. Finally, anyone else surprised that base iPhone pricing has hardly changed during this long run of inflation? Maybe Sept this year if indeed memory becomes a cost concern for Apple?'
on He shares his Apple family plan with two people wrongly convicted of murder - 'Apple “Family” plans (U.S.) aren’t really about legal family at all. They’re a small sharing group — up to six people — set up on trust. Apple doesn’t ask whether people are related, married, or living together. Each person has their own account, and one person agrees to take responsibility for the group. That leaves the hard part to us. Rules can tell you what’s allowed, but they don’t tell you what’s right. If someone uses that flexibility to help people who’ve already lost decades of their lives to a broken justice system, it may sit outside a narrow idea of “family,” but it sits squarely inside the idea of basic human decency. It’s not gaming the system; it’s choosing to act, quietly and concretely, instead of stopping at sympathy. (Apple’s family-sharing rules are largely the same everywhere, even though prices and availability differ by country.)'
on Apple postcards from Davos - 'Yeah, and Pissant looks very puffed up and full of himself. But in the opening pic it sure looks like TC is giving a real side-eye to Ms. La Garde. 🙂'
on Oscars: NYT's critic horrified by Best Picture nomination for Apple's 'F1' - 'Gregg, Watching some of the extras it doesn’t appear that was the case. Unfortunately. Also, the interview with JB noted what HE wanted the movie to be and from his standpoint I guess he succeeded. He sort of compared it with Top Gun 2. And I can see parallels. But TG2 sucked and I don’t think F1 does. It may actually deserve an Oscar (Muppet? 🙂 ) for its technical achievements, but not Best Picture imho.'
on Apple postcards from Davos - 'In your pic, Stephen Miller looks creepy as f and a straight up serial killer. Or unhappy as hell. He’s dead behind those eyes.'
on Oscars: NYT's critic horrified by Best Picture nomination for Apple's 'F1' - 'I took my 12 yr old son and his friend to see it at IMAX. They are F1 obsessed and loved it. I thought it was good entertainment and cinematography following a proven crowd pleasing formula. My son then took his 9 yr old sister a week later. I’m just happy the kids had a fun day out with the old man 😉 Well done to apple and the production team – I think they got exactly what they wanted with this.'
on He shares his Apple family plan with two people wrongly convicted of murder - 'I’m not sure if this is a proper or wise use of a family plan. But his empathy towards their situations is definitely commendable. And what’s even more admirable, Is his willingness to actually do something about it. That’s a story worth repeating.'
on Apple postcards from Davos - 'Hmmm. PED you might like to check your sources. Bolsanaro is in prison with hiccups. Arden was dumped as PM about 2 years ago and Maurer hasn’t been president since 2019. I thought Tim was looking younger '
on Apple to expand App Store advertising in March - ' the Big Lie about the alleged value of ‘targeted advertising’ I think that if 65% of search ADs results In purchases, then the searcher found what was looked for, and that makes those ads valuable. I believe the difference between Apple App Store Ads and Android’s ads are that personal data collected aren’t collected for any purpose other than to offer up products the searcher has specifically expressed an interest in. On the Android/Google platform personal data is collected for the purpose of creating a profile, which is sold to anyone the advertiser believes you may have an interest without regard to a specific stated interest. The former is targeted to a specific stated interest by an individual, the latter is a shotgun approach covering everyone that fits a demographic profile with or without a search query. That’s a massive distinction between the two. If I’m looking for something, I appreciation the assistance. I’m not going to wade through 2,000,000+ listings on my own to find what I want.'
on Apple to expand App Store advertising in March - 'Apple moves to further Enshittification for the App Store, and in particular the Big Lie about the alleged value of ‘targeted advertising’ (to both consumers and advertisers.) One reason why I don’t use Apple iOS services (Stocks.app, News.app, etc.) is because I can’t block the blankety blank ads, the same way I can in Safari. When the walled garden is full of advertising, it will lose significant value. Unlike Google and Meta, Apple does NOT NEED advertising to be profitable. Let me assure every advertiser out there: Putting ads in front of me in on-line services generates a SIGNIFICANT NEGATIVE RESPONSE. Do you want to tar your brand with obnoxious, intrusive on-line advertising?'
on Oscars: NYT's critic horrified by Best Picture nomination for Apple's 'F1' - 'My, but we have a lot of movie curmudgeons here! I’ve enjoyed this movie twice, and I’ll probably enjoy it again. I’ll never watch it as many times as I’ve watched Casablanca, Maltese falcon, any Hitchcock movie, the Manchurian candidate, etc., etc. But it’s a worthy movie. And don’t we want Apple to succeed with these movies? Doesn’t every movie that they succeed with help the share price, which is good, right? I don’t know why there are so many downers. This movie did what it needed to do for us. My own personal list of favorite movies (my “desert island movie list”) includes multiple movies from every decade since the 30s. I’m certainly not stuck on the “modern movie look.” Frankly, I’m a little bit tired of the modern movie look. That includes everything from plot devices to a special effects, and dialogue. But F1 was enjoyable, and it kicked ass in the box office. Those are good things. I want Apple kicking ass there.'
on He shares his Apple family plan with two people wrongly convicted of murder - 'In 2023, I hired a lawyer to get Alla out of jail in Ohio. The US government had decided she was a dangerous Russian hacker, but never had a case. In 2021, Alla was living with her then husband in Suriname in South America. An FBI agent went there, and got the Suriname government to revoke her visa and deport her. She was to be put on a plane to Amsterdam, but she ended up on a different plane. The plane landed in Miami, where the US government arrested her. When I heard about her, she had been in jail for almost two years “awaiting trial “. The constitution guarantees a speedy trial, which is supposed to be seven weeks. The prosecution had no case, so they worked on getting her to plead guilty and accept 80 years in prison. She was not guilty, so she did not agree to this. I hired a lawyer who got her out for time served, but she was deported home to Latvia. Of course, I got her an iPhone and other Apple devices.'
on 219 patients at risk of stroke wore an Apple Watch 12 hours a day for 6 months - 'Gregg–hope you are well. Good to get this info. I assume this was not an ultra?'
on 219 patients at risk of stroke wore an Apple Watch 12 hours a day for 6 months - 'Last week, while being treated for blockage of my femoral arteries, several of the physicians treating me observed that I was wearing an Apple Watch. They all asked for permission to access my Watch data (don’t know how they did it). They were able to look back at my heart function. Except for the time I do my morning routine I’ve always got my AppleWatch on. During this time my watch is being recharged. It should be noted that the battery lasts about 2 days between charges.'
on Utah state symbols: Dutch oven, brine shrimp, porcini mushrooms and... Android OS? - 'Based on his proposal for SB-138, the logical dining extension for this political genius is that when his entire family wants to go eat at In-N-Out Burger, he insists on ordering from McDonald’s and eating his “Happy Meal” in the car all by himself.'
on Oscars: NYT's critic horrified by Best Picture nomination for Apple's 'F1' - ' I enjoyed F1, feeling it is the best racing movie since Grand Prix even with the plot devices I loved the opening credits, looking down the throats of all those carburetors, with their butterflies opening and closing in sync with the roar of the exhaust I remember, after the movie leaving the parking lot, everyone thought they were an F1 driver. Of course, they were just driving Ford and Chevy passenger cars with hopped up engines, big tires with loud exhausts. But that didn’t dampen the fantasy. My appreciation of finely tuned engines soared after that movie. THAT’S what was missing from F1. The story about the engineering and the power 6 cylinders it could generate, and the tension of racing (until the ending sequence). Ron, I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that F1 was filmed in visionOS, with plans to rerelease post WWDC. If TC announces that you’ll find me at the Apple Store an hour later (and anxiously awaiting 2027 Kansas basketball).'


