Recent Comments

  • Gregg Thurman on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'Several months of negative macro energy. I suspect this may continue until this Administration has effective shackles affixed to its leader.'
  • Fred Stein on WSJ: Apple is using memory chip costs like a scalpel to slice up its competitors - 'On yesterday’s debrief, Horace compared AI today to the early days of Apps. No one imagined all that came along. Apple is poised to own agentic Edge AI running on its cross platform Magic Carpet. “You don’t know, what we can find. Why don’t you come with me little girl on a Magic Carpet Ride.” Steppenwolf.'
  • Greg Lippert on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'What is dragging/holding the AAPL beachball down?'
  • Rick Povich on WSJ: Apple is using memory chip costs like a scalpel to slice up its competitors - 'Seems like a good strategy: control pricing, control supply, continue to offer compelling, competitive products, enhance market share, reassure the markets, win.'
  • Fred Stein on WSJ: Apple is using memory chip costs like a scalpel to slice up its competitors - 'Meme scream, “new to”; And much more such as AI. Apple moves to own Edge AI, including Agentic AI, supported by one architecture across all user devices. It’s the magic carpet ride. The carpet gets bigger bringing in more youth and more emerging market users. Over time, Apple’s AI gets more useful, while entry buyers get richer and more sophisticated. Call it “Edge Agentic AI”. Apple wins.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'Index futures are red heading into today’s opening bell. But what does that matter these days? Apple is off $0.51 pre-market at $262.01. NVIDIA is in the red before the bell $1.26 at $181.78. Chip maker and Apple supplier Broadcom is holding most of its overnight gains following the release of earnings on Wednesday. The shares are up $15.18 at $332.71. Apple supplier Corning, which has recently set a string of new all-time highs, is off $7.15 pre-market at $137.69. Let’s see what happens today after the opening bell…'
  • Les Surdykowski on WSJ: Apple is using memory chip costs like a scalpel to slice up its competitors - 'Apple using its levers to manage through rough seas to position itself for long-term gains?!?!?! Unheard of!!!! Decades of Apple history would not have suggested such a thing!!! I am gobsmacked!!!!'
  • Greg Lippert on WSJ: Apple is using memory chip costs like a scalpel to slice up its competitors - 'Apple is going to use Neo to go after the Education Chromebook Market.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Index futures are in the red (again!) at about 3am in New York. Apple is off $0.48 overnight at $262.04 after falling $1.23 in Wednesday trading. Broadcom, which released results after the market’s close, is now up over $20 or 6.35% overnight at $337.69. The shares closed up $3.60 to $317.53 before the earnings release. In early Thursday trading in Asia, the major indexes finished in the green. Let’s see if conditions continue to improve as European markets open for trading…'
  • Alessandro Luethi on Apple's big week: The sixth and final shoe drops - 'Robert, that’s what I feel too. Neo is used in cultural contexts, like in “neorealism”. It can mean the update or adaption of a style, concept, object to contemporary taste or conditions. Horace seems to have caught that same spirit we did! The voice in the video sounds young fresh and new. He repeatedly pronounces things like “unlock your Neo!”'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple's 'big week' winds down: What the analysts are saying - 'Hi, Fred. I missed most of Horace’s Zoom meeting today. What did you consider the high points? (I chirped up on the major ergonomic benefits of the Vision Pro, which I consider very overlooked. Horace appeared to agree with me….'
  • David Wilson on Apple's big week: The sixth and final shoe drops - 'That’s good news, thanks Ron! I had looked at Adobe‘s system requirements, and it wasn’t on there yet.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Broadcom just reported earnings and the shares are up overnight just over 5% at $333.63. The shares closed Wednesday’s session up $3.69 or 1.18% at $317.53.The all-time high of $414.61 was set on December 10th. The company announced a new $10 billion share repurchase program along with strong financial results.'
  • Robert Stack on Apple's 'big week' winds down: What the analysts are saying - 'And if a qualified student upgrades to the $699 model with added memory and the fingerprint sensor, the $100 discount he/she gets will put the price right back to $599. That’s a fabulous price!'
  • John Konopka on Apple's 'big week' winds down: What the analysts are saying - '@David, RE: No fingerprint sensor It’s probably fine for this entry level device. I can see this being used in a lot of places where such a sensor isn’t needed like schools, small businesses, libraries. Anywhere the device will be shared. For an extra $100 they can get the sensor.'
  • Fred Stein on Apple's 'big week' winds down: What the analysts are saying - 'Rhetorical question, I assume. No they can’t keep up, especially low-end suppliers who can’t get Apple’s memory pricing.'
  • Ron Fredrick on Apple's big week: The sixth and final shoe drops - 'David Wilson said: “Except we don’t yet know whether one has to get the MacBook Air or MacBook Pro for Lightroom Classic or Photoshop. I’m waiting/looking for that information.” **Hi David! Upon reading your comment, I did a quick search for “Lightroom Classic”, “Photoshop” and MacBook Neo and got these results: “Performance on MacBook Neo Lightroom Classic: Runs efficiently on MacBook Neo, especially for hobbyists or moderate editing workloads. Handles AI Denoise, masking, and raw rendering well. Ideal for users who edit fewer photos at a time. Photoshop: Best for detailed edits and complex projects. Requires more processing power, especially for large files or extensive edits. Performance can be impacted by the lack of active cooling in the MacBook Air models. Recommendations For Light Editing: If your work involves light to moderate photo editing, Lightroom Classic is a great choice on the MacBook Neo. For Heavy Editing: If you plan to do extensive editing or work with large files, consider using Photoshop, but be aware of potential performance limitations on MacBook Air models without active cooling. In summary, choose Lightroom Classic for efficient photo management and editing, and Photoshop for more complex image manipulation tasks.” **I don’t know if the lack of a fan on the MacBook Neo would be a problem for Photoshop but it may work fine with Lightroom Classic. Hope you’ve found a more definitive answer to your concerns.'
  • Robert Stack on Apple's big week: The sixth and final shoe drops - 'Hi Alessandro. IMO, the naming of this new Mac as the Neo is “Apple-clever.” For according to the Britannica dictionary, Neo is defined as: “a new and different form of something that existed in the past (such as a theory, style, language, or philosophy)” That definition seems to position this new product exactly where it should be!'
  • Greg Lippert on Apple's 'big week' winds down: What the analysts are saying - 'Interesting but that was bad AI.'
  • Michael Stur on Apple's big week: The sixth and final shoe drops - 'Thank you. We met online in an Apple users group. And sometimes these connections last for 30 years ore more!'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Another AAPL below average volume day (39.3 vs 48.2). AAPL’s still up 9.5% over 6 months and about the same over the year. And what a year it’s been!'
  • Joseph Bland on Ex-Apple Jimmy Iovine: Spotify is toast - '“Apple, Google, Amazon, and Spotify own…most importantly, the customer data.” Not true for Apple. They just own their user’s trust.'
  • Digant Jariwala on Apple's 'big week' winds down: What the analysts are saying - 'Also to add on – the 8gig memory on the base model also allows Apple to do chip binning on their high end chip – something they have always done on their M-series chips on Macs and iPad Pro models. Previously their iPhone Pro chips were all the same – differentiated only by storage and screen size. Now ‘faulty’ chips manufactured with lower working memory available can be used for the Neo laptops instead of being scrapped – another way Apple can improve margins since these chips use the latest (or close to latest) semiconductor nodes'
  • Alessandro Luethi on Apple's big week: The sixth and final shoe drops - '“Unlock your Neo!” I know it’s a kind of Mac, but it can be “Your Neo”'
  • Greg Lippert on Apple's big week: The sixth and final shoe drops - 'Competing in price with Chromebooks for Education and Neo blows ’em away.'
  • Bart Yee on Apple's 'big week' winds down: What the analysts are saying - 'A MacRumors comment had a photoshopped Morpheus standing behind two colorful MacBooks asking: “Do you want the blue one or the red one?” forums.macrumors com/threads/apple-accidentally-leaks-macbook-neo.2478466/post-34457502'
  • Charles A. on Apple's 'big week' winds down: What the analysts are saying - '“With only 8GB of RAM…” 8GB of Apple’s “integrated RAM” is not the same as ordinary RAM. “I read that the cheapest model does not include a fingerprint sensor. That’s unfortunate.” I see it as a nice incentive for buyers to upgrade to the $699 model. Smart move on Apple’s part!'
  • David Wilson on Apple's big week: The sixth and final shoe drops - 'They do call it the MacBook Neo on the website. It’s a kind of Mac.'
  • Digant Jariwala on Ex-Apple Jimmy Iovine: Spotify is toast - 'The Beats acquisition – at the time – was applauded in the press because it allowed Apple to enter the streaming business when music labels were weary of letting Apple take control of yet another distribution channel for their product as they were actively working to precent Apple from entering that business. But where Apple really benefited from was the headphones division of Beats. Apple today is probably the world’s largest manufacturer and seller of wireless headphones. They probably enjoy as much annual revenue from AirPods and Beats headphones sales as the $3b Beats acquisition. Up until Beats purchase, Apple only ‘sold’ pack-in wired headphones with their iPhone and iPods sales. Beats product portfolio and tech birthed the AirPods and Beats headphones lines we see on sale today.'
  • Daniel Epstein on Gene Munster: How Apple keeps margins steady as memory prices soar - 'If you look at the price difference between Neo’s base model vs the upgraded version you can see Apple has confidence in its margins. The 100 dollar difference get’s the purchaser a lot of bang for the buck in the Apple world. A doubling of internal hard drive and the fingerprint sensor keyboard are well worth considering by most buyers. If SSD Memory was the issue that some think it would be Then Apple would likely have made an adjustment more than the fairly standard for them $100.'