Recent Comments

  • Gregg Thurman on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - '”PayPal’s share remains dominant and climbing across both desktop (available at 87% of merchants surveyed) and mobile (available at 85% of merchants surveyed)” Are they including AppleCard in mobile payments?'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on M.G. Siegler: Apple wins - 'Several of us have been saying the same thing now for months regarding what the conspicuously upgraded, AI-infused new version of Siri to be released this year. It will be a proverbial game changer for Apple and its device owners the world over. With privacy and security as a priority, Apple will deliver AI to most of the world in an intuitive and decidedly Apple kind of way. Apple might not be an “inexpensive stock” even following the recent sell-off. However, in my view it is trading in a value range considering what is about to get started with Apple and its customers over the next three years. I’m very long Apple. Go Apple! Go Apple 3.0! I’m looking forward to embracing AI in a uniquely Apple kind of way!'
  • Gregg Thurman on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'Thank you very much for that Charles. I’ll definitely look into them. The hearing aid I currently use is provided by the VA. The price is right, but the quality could be much better.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Barron's gives Apple Intelligence its blessing - 'Thank you Fred. Excellent summaries on Apple’s road less taken “AI” strategy. You’ve either got a short nose or longer vision, but you got it right.'
  • Gregg Thurman on M.G. Siegler: Apple wins - '”Geoffrey Moore” Now there’s a visionary. I’ve read his book a couple of times and can’t agree more with his description of a paradigm shift and the Tsunami that defines it.'
  • David Emery on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'For me, it’s replaced being badly nearsighted with astigmatism to badly farsighted (presbyopia). The most cool thing for me so far was walking the dogs and it started to rain. I didn’t have to worry about raindrops on my glasses!'
  • Gregg Thurman on M.G. Siegler: Apple wins - '”I like his style.” I do too. I would have liked to have seen WS react differently Monday, but I guess that’s to be expected. After all, WS can’t see beyond the end of its collective noses. It just sold off the “AI” winner, and are about make the least deserving person in the world the first trillionaire ever, with a company that can’t possibly live up to the hype.'
  • Ben Gepp on M.G. Siegler: Apple wins - 'I would go so far as to say it’s more like 99.9something %. I have a friend, who is enmeshed in all things AI, who poo-pooed Apple’s on-device approach as underwhelming compared to a data centre capability. At the same time he also questioned whether he could see the bigger picture because of the focus of his expertise. So there’s an anecdote that backs up Siegler’s ascertion.'
  • Fred Stein on M.G. Siegler: Apple wins - 'Apple just launched “The whole product”. AI summarizes Geoffrey Moore: The Chasm: The significant gap between the visionary early adopters (who buy into a new idea) and the pragmatic early majority (who need proven solutions and references). Technology Adoption Life Cycle: A model describing how different customer segments adopt new technology: Innovators, Early Adopters (Visionaries), Early Majority (Pragmatists), Late Majority (Conservatives), and Laggards. The “Whole Product”: The complete solution a customer needs, including the core product plus all the supporting products, services, and partnerships required to solve their problem.'
  • Dave Ryder on M.G. Siegler: Apple wins - 'I think he’s right'
  • Fred Stein on Barron's gives Apple Intelligence its blessing - 'This all takes time. Nvidia has the advantage now. From AI: Nvidia’s general-purpose GPUs remain unmatched for flexibility and certain specialized workloads, meaning many third-party developers still rely on Nvidia’s CUDA ecosystem. Cue the rolling stones, “Time is on my side.” Yes it is.'
  • Fred Stein on Barron's gives Apple Intelligence its blessing - 'More ‘AI for the rest of us’: There are many kinds of AI, AI applications, and AI users. It’s still in the ‘early adopter’ stage of chasm crossing with only 3% to 6% of consumers paying for premium services. Apple may have major cost advantage by use of the on-device compute. Plus, per another AI search, “Google’s vertical integration gives them a massive edge in power efficiency.” Beyond the consumer-grade AI, demoed at WWDC, there’s profession AI, recently validated by the Mac Mini rampage. Macs can run 10B parameter models, 100% private and secure. They can handle legal or life sciences work. For example Genome sequencing alignments, protein folding, and molecular structure viewing (e.g., PyMOL).'
  • Fred Stein on Barron's gives Apple Intelligence its blessing - 'Apple did get it right, might say they’re the first to get it right. Might say AI for the rest of us. By leveraging personal data, keeping it safe, Apple Intelligence is stickier than LLM du jour. The on-device part of the AI is ‘free’. The costs for the back-end are beyond me, for now. But…. For Nvidia margin stacking, a Gemini search reveals: (grains of salt) Nvidia’s B200 cost them $6,400 and nets 84% GM when sold at $40,000. But their chip only costs them $900 of the $6,400, with memory consuming $2,900 (Micron’s GMs are 75% to 80%). Packaging, losses, and auxiliary cost $2,500. But wait, the rest of the data center, mechanical, power, etc. costs are 40% of the total. Nvidia’s chips, at their cost, represent 1.35% of the total data center cost. And, TSMC’s margins are 66.2%.'
  • Charles A. on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - '@Gregg I get excellent results, even with significant hearing loss, from ReSound aids. I’m on my 4th iteration of upgrades. Current model is the Vivia, but even last generation’s Nexias are great, too. Either of them restores nearly all my moderate-to-severe hearing deficits — easily. Best price anywhere is from Pure Hearing. They are out in Utah but give excellent remote service…including being able to give you a full hearing test remotely via the ReSound app. (Great app, which lets you create as many of your own custom presets as you desire.) And if you ever need any tweaks or adjustments, Pure Hearing does all that easily via remote, too…at no charge. Amazing service by the owner herself. Couldn’t praise them highly enough. Unless your hearing loss is so severe that you need cochlear implants, there is no reason you should not be able to hear very well in almost all environments and circumstances. Treat yourself to today’s high-tech advances in hearing devices. You’re worth it!'
  • David Emery on Marques Brownlee gives WWDC26 an intelligent once-over (video) - 'Another HyperCard fan. In the mid 90s, I did some prototyping to try to figure out data collection/data entry requirements for constructing simulations. I’ve tried AppleScript, but never got anything to work. I’m not quite sure what the problem was, I think the basics of how an entity was referenced was just not obvious to me. A couple of times when I needed to do wholesale manipulation of files, I’ve done it either with the Unix find() shell command, or on a few occasions, with EMACS key macros operating on a directory opened in the editor…. EMACS Lisp is Turing complete, but I didn’t need to go quite that far 🙂'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'Repeating: From Barron’s yesterday: ““We are collaborating with Google and NVIDIA to run new Apple Intelligence workloads on Google Cloud, extending our industry-leading PCC [private cloud compute] privacy commitments to third-party data centers for the first time,” Apple said in a statement on Monday.” grantbbunker recently supplied this link: https://9to5mac.com/2026/06/08/craig-federighi-details-apples-collaboration-with-google-for-siri-ai-in-ios-27/ Tying what Mr. Federighi says in the above link with the Apple quote above, gives me a thought on the “deal” Apple and Alphabet cooked up. There are zero hooks inside Apple for Google. What they got is a “tenant” for their server farms and the good press that made it look like they would get more. Yes, there’s now a direct link through those strictly cordoned off Google Cloud/iCloud farms and Nvidia graphics-processing units, and also some strictly iCloud to Nvidia links, but none of Apple user’s data will pass out of Apple’s control. That, IMO, is a huge Apple accomplishment.'
  • Gregg Thurman on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - '”I am still amazed, 20 years later, just how life-changing cataract surgery was for me!” As it was for me as well. The only thing that might be better is to give me my hearing back. Hearing aids help, but they aren’t the same.'
  • John Konopka on WSJ reporter's hands-on Siri AI demo was hands-off - 'I loved the Macalope’s take on the keynote. https://www.macworld.com/article/3159985/its-apples-ai-party-and-were-all-invited.html This triggered a debate in our house about how hard is it to plan a party? I pointed out that for guys it is rather easy. You call a friend and tell them to come over to watch the game and pick up some chips and drinks on the way. Done.'
  • Will Grover on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'I am still amazed, 20 years later, just how life-changing cataract surgery was for me!'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'Raj: Privacy, security, advanced technologies. Apple provides it all and more. What isn’t widely appreciated is the dollar volume of revenue earned by developers on a global basis through Apple’s App Stores. There isn’t a competitor on the near horizon that offers anything close to what Apple offers for developers and consumers the world over. In addition, the company is releasing a conspicuously more advanced version of Siri. These are powerful resources resources that will enthuse, excite and motivate consumers to upgrade their iPhones, Macs and iPads over the next three years. “If you build it, they will come.” That’s the way I see it. Apple products help people fulfill their dreams… I’m proud to be a shareholder today.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'It’s a good day (comparatively!) to own Apple. The Mac maker is up $1.83 or 0.63% at $292.38 as we enter the last half-hour of today’s trading session. All four major indexes are deep in the red. Nearly 65% of S&P 500 components are lower on the day. In my view, pullbacks provide moments to look for new opportunities. I’d rather see a market self-correct over time than to be beset with a prolonged pullback to recover from episodes of steep advances in share prices without pause. Go Apple! Go Apple 3.0!'
  • David Emery on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'The few times I go to WalMart (like today, to get cheapo reading glasses after cataract surgery, but before my next “new prescription” eye appointment), I make it a point to use my AMEX card. Let WalMart pay AMEX’s higher swipe fees!'
  • John Konopka on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'This was surprising to me. I didn’t know PayPal was doing so well. Seems like a legacy hang over.'
  • Bart Yee on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'I use and patronize vendors and Apps that use Apple Pay checkout like Costco, Home Depot, Lowe’s, iHOP/Applebee’s, BJ’s Brewhouse, Olo checkout, etc. Although I have Sam’s Club membership and really like their Scan & Go feature with pretty good inventory and availability search (hey Costco, get with it!), I steadfastly refuse to join Walmart+, not interested in sharing even more of my shopping data with you. I need to use my local Walmart for pharmacy and other grocery items for convenience, but loathe the credit card checkout. At Costco, I can arrange a full cart’s barcodes upright, not unload a thing, have the cashier scan the entire cart in under 30 seconds, have already Apple Watch clicked Apple Pay payment (my contribution to Apple Pay revenues), and w/receipt in hand leave the cashier in under a minute, my consistent goal. I prefer to use and promote Apple Pay as a much more secure and convenient way to pay over anything else. I trust Apple and Apple Pay above all others because they have earned it.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'Good morning Steven. How ya doing? Personally I’m great. I had a thought about Siri AI public beta and general release. What if Apple only demoed Siri AI capabilities that were ready for prime time today. Wouldn’t it behoove Apple to flesh out Siri AI as fast as reasonably possible? What if Apple increases Siri AI capabilities upon its public beta, and still more on Siri AI’s general release? What if Siri AI upgrades are released every 100 days for a year (WWDC 2027?), reverting to once a year thereafter?'
  • Bart Yee on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'But even with the energy, wit and outright craziness of “Good Morning! VIetnam!!”, and how well it still plays today, developers might like it but Analysts and pundits would say it’s just too vulgar, way over the top, and Cook just couldn’t pull it off, unbecoming of a CEO of his stature. But could John Ternus? Could, but wouldn’t. https://youtu.be/BIikfdNIHQE?si=Q8TEU5K26hu-JEV7'
  • Bart Yee on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'Opening WWDC with “Good Morning, Good Morning!” in a 40’s song and dance number is probably a bit much, and they’d likely criticize Cook’s tap dancing. An AI could probably put Cook in Kelly’s role, kinda like trying to make Cook replace Jobs. https://youtu.be/pyMU8O2B2Vs?si=8aep_ih1tBsXpZPe'
  • Raj Pandey on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'Robert: Like you, I loved the keynote. What a huge step forward this will be compared to the current Siri. They still have two to three months to thoroughly test and fine-tune things. And if Apple delivers well across all its platforms and later across countries and multiple languages then iDevices will not just be aspirational but must-haves for all those not in the ecosystem yet. Imagine the revenues and income then!'
  • David Emery on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'So this is what Tim Cook has come to in retirement? Well bffffftttttt'
  • David Emery on Marques Brownlee gives WWDC26 an intelligent once-over (video) - ' So be real, both presenter and Apple are trying to sell something to make revenue. Well, DUH! (I’m back to the computer after 24 hour ‘quarantine’ from reading/screen usage after cataract surgery.)'