Recent Comments

  • David Emery on Why Apple's MacBook Neo makes Steven Sinofsky sad - 'No acceptance for the non-stop reliability/security problems with Windows, eh?'
  • Roger Schutte on Mark Gurman: Foldable iPhone opens into an iPad mini running iOS - 'The past year’s price action in LiquidMetal’s stock price may indicate a sturdy hinge mechanism.'
  • Ben Gepp on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'US misadventures in the Middle East… Has it ever panned out as expected? This time there are no adults in charge.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple not on Iran's hit list - '”This President’s “friends”, the hydrocarbon oligarchs of the world, are quite pleased to see their profits increase out of this badly-managed “war”. ” And how would you know this is being badly managed? Is it because oil prices have increased? The stock market doesn’t think so. Starting in early September (long before the start of this war) through today’s print, all three US Indices have traded in a very constant channel. Is it the number of civilian deaths? As regrettable as they are, the number pales in comparison to the number of civilian deaths attributable to Khamenei, or even during the action that forced Syria’s Bashar al-Assad to flee to Russia, or the number of civilian deaths caused by Putin (using Iranian drones) in Ukraine. Or is it because this action was commenced by Trump? That could be a legitimate response, except that Iran’s proxies are responsible for far more in the recent past. Iran IS striking back. Thinking they wouldn’t is just stupid. But having destroyed vast stockpiles of Iranian missiles and nearly all of the launchers needed to fire what is left, and destroyed its ability to replace them, not to mention what has been done to Iran’s civil and military leadership and its ability to sell oil on the world market, I think this war is moving in the right direction and rapidly. Iran’s blocking of the Hormuz Straight hurts Iran far more than it does us. With the Straight closed Iran can’t sell 90% of what it used to, while an increase in oil exports from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the UAE, North Sea and Indonesia and others could make up what is lost from curtailing Iranian shipments. There is no oil shortage, only profiteers taking advantage of the war to raise prices. The oil producers welcome the US and EU’s draw down of strategic reserves because they were created when oil sold for much less than it did just a month ago (before this war started), and will be replenished with more expensive oil when this war is over. Without a sufficient inflow of cash the Iranian economy will completely collapse in short order. Russia can’t help Iran. Its own economy, about the size of Italy or Spain, can’t do it without oil revenue. Ukraine’s attacks on Russia’s shadow fleet, coupled with EU tanker seizures are doing more to stop the flow of Russian oil than our sanctions. China can’t help because their financial interests are tied irrevocably to the West, its own economy is struggling from mass mismanagement from 20 years ago, and it has recently lost two valuable providers of oil (Venezuela and Iran). China is headed to energy self sufficiency with nuclear power they just aren’t there yet, and won’t be for at least 25 years. Venezuela would have liked to help, but alas Maduro is in a US jail, and no longer in control of Venezuelan oil revenue. Who’s left to help Iran? Not its traditional Muslim neighbors, who now feel betrayed by Iran’s missile strikes against them. Hamas, Hezbollah and Houthis are struggling after Israeli kicked the stuffing out of them in the past few months (Hezbollah continues to feel Israel’s wrath). So where is the “mis-management” of this war coming from, other than your own dislike of all things Trump? BTW, I share those feelings with you, just not to the extent that I’m prepared to criticize an action that should have occurred long ago.'
  • Ben Gepp on Mark Gurman: Foldable iPhone opens into an iPad mini running iOS - 'that is indeed one of the complications I am thinking of. I have no doubt Apple is capable of coming up with a very convincing hinge/screen but this is a ‘just say no’ to me (I hope I am wrong).'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'This President’s “friends”, the hydrocarbon oligarchs of the world, are quite pleased to see their profits increase out of this badly-mannaged “war”. Heck, even his buddy Putin is getting fed at the trough: “The US is temporarily lifting sanctions on Russian oil, a key pressure point for the Kremlin’s war chest By Matthew Loh  and  Huileng Tan The US is lifting its sanctions on Russian oil for about four weeks to relieve surging prices.
” Excerpt From “The US is temporarily lifting sanctions on Russian oil, a key pressure point for the Kremlin’s war chest” Matthew Loh, Huileng Tan Business Insider https://apple.news/AQmPqii3US2WFzghtmcNLGg This material may be protected by copyright. Anyone thinking this wasn’t part of the plan – I have a very nice bridge in Brooklyn that I’m selling cheap…. And then there’s the military/industrial complex: Money on the hoof!'
  • Stephen Gordon on Mark Gurman: Foldable iPhone opens into an iPad mini running iOS - 'If I had a foldable phone, I might break it like the Transformer toys I used to own as a kid.'
  • Ben Gepp on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'I live 43° South, which is a long way away and yet we are all eating shit sandwich served up by Captain Bonespurs. The very real chance of fuel shortages is imminent. Logistics and supply chains will be affected unless the Stable Genius is made to capitulate. Discretionary goods, that address the leaner end of the market, such as Neo’s, and the premium end of the market, iPhones, M5’s, etc will undoubtedly be affected as caution sets in. …Just as Apple and Sentiment seemed to have turn a corner. All of this is just egregiously unnecessary. Please let there be a bus… (a distasteful, but honest sentiment).'
  • ben luna on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'We know that he had a lot of help from a very few people who stood to gain from his election. Putin, Manafort, etc. The real problem is that the propaganda served to certain vulnerable DTS (Deranged Trump Supporters) is that they will eat the shit sandwich of lies if served with a generous topping of salted chopped liver. The democrats seem to be generally fine with this because they are politicians first and Americans second. I get the former because they are selfish and want to win, but the latter is caca pretending to be in opposition with the Caca Real served by traitors.'
  • Steven Philips on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'By vote of the people? 🙁'
  • Ben Gepp on Mark Gurman: Foldable iPhone opens into an iPad mini running iOS - 'I can’t see the point of a foldable apart from it being a gimmick . If Jobs were still here would he approve? I don’t think so. Ives would also surely disapprove and I’m pretty sure Dietre Rams wouldn’t agree with a fold. I suspect that Jobs would have allowed the Pencil because by the time it was released Apple have proved that you could operate an iPhone or iPad with your finger. It’s the same with Apple’s philosophy on the mouse, everything could be done with one button. I’m sure the last time I bought an Apple mouse it was configured to a single click. A fold is a complication on so many levels.'
  • Ben Gepp on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'Apple might not be on Iran’s hit list but AAPL is collateral damage. And as the ‘Cost of Living’ cohort makes difficult choices between buying an egg or buying fuel to be able to buy the egg, some Neos will gather dust on shelves. All in all, he is consistent. Everything he touches turns to sh*t. How did a nation like yours, that was capable of giving the world Apple, get to this?'
  • Hap Allen on Mark Gurman: Foldable iPhone opens into an iPad mini running iOS - 'Apple is “under pressure.” Spare us the hyperbole…'
  • David Emery on PC makers shocked, shocked by Apple's MacBook Neo - 'Since this settlement, I can’t think of anything significant that Apple doesn’t control in its products. Well, they did drop their home networking lne of products, which is a key part of connecting i-Everything to the I-nternet…. I still think that was a significant mistake on the part of Apple. Ubiquiti tries to be “The Apple of Networking,” and they’re getting a lot better at achieving ‘it just works’. But their focus is not home networking, but commercial settings. I’m not sure there’s any other reasonable alternative that has the expected level of quality, user friendliness, and security. (I do have Ubiquiti stuff at home, replacing my old Airport Extreme.)'
  • Digant Jariwala on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'You assume this administration is capable of analysis and foresight- neither exhibited thus far'
  • Hap Allen on Tim Cook's letter to Apple's 2.5 billion 'crazy ones' - 'Once again, this letter highlights to me what is at the heart of Apple, i.e. what matters is not technology, it is people. On this subject Yuval Harari says it beautifully and clearly: If our species is to endure, then it must be organized by what is organic, not by an inorganic algorithm, however “intelligent.” “The Collapse of Truth”: https://youtu.be/I4l1fr-t3ZE?si=HRWdtmuQRJ0bsFIe'
  • David Emery on Tim Cook's letter to Apple's 2.5 billion 'crazy ones' - 'On links in posts, I’ve learned a couple of things: 1. You cannot edit a post with a link in it. 2. Only 1 link per post. Even obeying those 2 rules, occasionally I’ll post a comment with a link and it gets caught in the ‘awaiting moderation’ purgatory. A private email to PED usually shakes it loose (be sure to identify the name of the page you commented on.)'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'More proof that the present US leadership wrongly assumed that this would be another Venezuela.'
  • Joseph Bland on Mark Gurman: Foldable iPhone opens into an iPad mini running iOS - 'Not interested in a foldable iPhone. I MAY be interested in a foldable iPad, assuming it reverted to the old dustcover/keyboard type system (the existing iPad/keyboard system is fricking a boat anchor – I’ll never buy another one). But it needs to be lightweight and still “convert” into a “laptop” to be useful when traveling about. IMO. Otherwise my next iPad will be a portable Mac.'
  • John Konopka on Why Apple hasn't released a glucose monitor - 'Quantitative analysis of glucose in the blood is really, really difficult using some sort of non-invasive technique with lasers. It is possible to detect glucose with Raman spectrometers, quantitation is much harder. Normal glucose levels are only around 0.1%. This measurement is not performed in distilled water, this is in blood which contains all sorts of other molecules which can skew results. I did see some interesting research on blood pressure. As I recall they correlated the arrival time of increased blood pressure in the capillaries after measuring a heart beat electrically. This is a promising way to non-invasively measuring BP. I imagine long before we see devices like these in the Apple Watch we’ll see some sort of armband to measure things and transmit them the results to either the Watch or iPhone.'
  • Rodney Avilla on Why Apple hasn't released a glucose monitor - 'Heart attacks are usually not related to high blood sugar levels. The worse case scenario is a diabetic coma, whereas a coma actually puts less stress on the heart than a body up and walking around. But if a heart attack accurs in close proximity to high blood sugar levels, it does create a correlation. And a correlation is all the lawyers want, even if the correlation is not related to any cause and effect.'
  • Daniel Epstein on Why Apple hasn't released a glucose monitor - 'This case of incorrect readings from a glucose monitor and the resulting lawsuit is an example of just one of the issues Apple has to consider when navigating the legal minefield of medical measurements on their devices I don’t think it is the only reason they have for slowly adopting these features. In general Apple is a deep pocket for someone to target for a lawsuit of almost any kind so they probably plan for a certain amount of this. Without knowing the “state of the art” of glucose monitoring in the technology Apple already has in the Watch it is hard to say if Apple is holding back or hasn’t satisfied itself that their solution is worth the potential hassle or just not good enough. Maybe the best technological solution is not an easy legal one. Same thing with Blood Pressure readings. I see Apps which promise blood pressure readings on an Iphone using an app and the camera but no similar Apple product. Maybe they like the shield of someone writing an independent app or they don’t see the value add of providing their own version yet. I think they are rightly gun-shy at releasing a new feature which makes them vulnerable to a whole host of legal and patent issues so they really have to nail down all of these things before they take the leap. Just look at how difficult the Blood oxygen measurement fight has been. Personally I blame the legal system. But at some point if it is worth it Apple will navigate these issues and provide a solution if they believe in it.'
  • Robert Stack on Mark Gurman: Foldable iPhone opens into an iPad mini running iOS - 'David: “I think a foldable iPad Mini that expands to the size of an open paperback makes more sense, specifically as an easy to carry book reading device.” The product you’d like will be introduced two years out from the iPhone Fold. It will be called the iPhone Fold Max. Don’t tell Gurman, OK?'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'I love seeing these low AAPL prices for two reasons: (1) I don’t have to sell into the teeth of it, having moved a big chunk (for us) of our retirement into cash just before this President’s term started, and (2) Apple, with it’s buybacks, essentially does our investing for us.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Premarket: Apple is red - '”I think we will look back on Iran and Venezuela as the start of WWIII” WWIII began in the ‘50s. The difference today is that the main protagonists (the Soviet Union, East Germany, Libya, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Russia, Cuba, on the State level, and the PLO, ISIS, al Qaeda, Hamas and Hezbollah on the non-State level) have been, or are being, neutralized. Even China walks softly so as to not upset its export economy'
  • David Wilson on Tim Cook's letter to Apple's 2.5 billion 'crazy ones' - 'AI on the edge is part of Apple’s “thinking differently” from the mainstream. An article I found on Macworld talks about Perplexity using Mac mini’s for local AI use. “Perplexity’s Personal Computer is a Mac mini running an AI OS Macs are quietly becoming the AI agent PC of choice.” From the story: “On Wednesday, Perplexity announced Personal Computer, an AI agent that “runs continuously, merging your local applications with Perplexity Computer.” The system runs on Perplexity’s “secure servers,” but what hardware does it all run on? An M4 Mac mini. Perplexity explains that its Personal Computer “works in a secure environment with clear safeguards. Sensitive actions require approval, and every session includes a full audit trail. A kill switch gives users immediate control.” The platform was built on Perplexity’s existing foundation and ensures that every query runs in its own “secure sandbox.” It’s not the first time Apple’s tiny PC made headlines as an AI tool. In January, social media was overrun with people running the free, open-source AI assistant Clawdbot on stacks of Mac minis before Anthropic killed the buzz. Perplexity calls Personal Computer “more powerful than any AI system ever launched.” We don’t know yet which Mac mini it will be running on, but we assume it has the maximum RAM (64GB on the M4 Pro) model and a giant hard drive. It’s also unclear whether Apple is supplying the company with Mac minis or whether Perplexity is simply using off-the-shelf units.” It’s a big Mac Mini they require, true, but it IS a Mac mini. Next year, it might not need the fully loaded model. ***I’d share a link, but I can’t seem to comment at all in a post in which I tried sharing a link earlier, so you’ll have to go find the article.'
  • Gregg Thurman on New export rules may get Apple to pull more of its supply chain to India - '”A coherent industrial policy. What a concept.” It would appear that India is learning the value of competitively priced quality and exports vs relying on low price alone and protectionist policies.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'You encapsulated it all in just one sentence Rodney.'
  • George Ewonus on Why Apple hasn't released a glucose monitor - 'Hi David. For serious riding I do the North Shore (called “the shore”) in North Van – then Whistler (think “Lord of the Squirrels”) and the bike park. On Vancouver Island it’s the mountains near Victoria and Sooke. Some of the riding is easier and some it downright scary.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: Foldable iPhone opens into an iPad mini running iOS - '”Apple is under pressure to show it can bring new life to this format. The arrival of the foldable iPhone this fall will come seven years after chief rival Samsung Electronics Co. launched its first model…” Those two sentences tell you all you need to know, to understand this is a hoax. Look at the reviews of the Mac NEO, and the estimates of how many will be sold. The NEO is going to sell more units in its first two full years, than Samsung has sold Folds in seven years (there is no life in Folds sales) and only scratched the surface of the market for a low cost Mac laptop. This isn’t a product or market that will interest Apple.'