David Drinkwater on Ternus as Apple CEO: What the analysts are saying - 'I’m a little late to this, but I am curious (and hopeful that I get an answer). Do architects use iPhones or AVP to do 3D renderings of houses that alrady exist to do modeling for new houses or significant renovations to houses that already exist?'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'It was a very good day for chip makers. On Friday NVIDIA rocketed through the $5 trillion market share barrier and gained $8.63 on the day. Intel blasted off and rose $15.76 or 23.60% to close at $82.54. Friday’s performance set a new all-time high for the shares, eclipsing a record set before the dotcom bust. TSM raced higher by $19.80 or 5.17% to $402.46. Broadcom added $2.82 to end the week at $422.76. On Thursday the share price reached a new all-time high of $429.31 before falling back to close at $419.94. I’m looking forward to some really good market action as we move further into earnings season.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'On Friday the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.63% and set new all-time and closing highs. The S&P 500 added 0.80% and also set new all-time and closing highs. On Friday Apple dropped $2.37 to finish at $271.06 as the share price remains below the all-time high of $288.62 set way back on December 3rd.'
on The Verge: 95 minutes on Apple's CEO transition (video) - '”I wonder if he’ll consider a vertical that involves a device on wheels?’” If it’s an electric Ford GT I’ll buy it. At one time I owned a 2005 Red Ford GT and a 2006 Silver Ford GT. I toured the US during the Summer of 2009, eschewing the freeways as much as possible, in the ‘05. What a trip that was. Lots of wide open US Highways west of the Mississippi. Speeds up to 130 were not uncommon. Had a few traffic stops, but only one ticket ( a DC camera).'
on The Verge: 95 minutes on Apple's CEO transition (video) - 'Might that be my tick tock reference between operations and technology? https://www.ped30.com/2026/04/21/apple-thompson-cook-tenure/'
on Premarket: Apple is red - '”the Party of Lincoln could have fallen so low, and dragged the Republic with it” As a former Republican (first registered in 1968) I can attest that today’s “Republicans” are not the Party of Lincoln, they are the party of Jefferson Davis.'
on Patrick McGee blames Apple's Tim Cook for empowering China - '30 million employees would be about ten percent of the US population (30/340, so 9% — whatever). 30 million employees would be about 2% of the Chinese (and also 2% of the Indian) population. NYC and LA have 8.5 and 3.9 million residents, as the largest US cities by population. Building a sufficient manufacturing facility around these cities would be a challenge, to say the least. At # 11 and # 12 by population (no, not #1 and #2), Hangzhou and Foshan have 9.2 and 9.0 million residents. Shanghai and Beijing (#1 and #2) have 21.9 and 19.0 million residents. These are not comparable statistics. The author is a solution in search of a problem. And given the relative equality in populations, I am sure that Apple will grow in India real soon and a lot.'
on The Verge: 95 minutes on Apple's CEO transition (video) - 'THE Apple Tricycle! TAT. Get them started early.'
on Saturday Apple video: Introducing the Apple //e (1983) - 'Great story! Thanks for the positive side! 🙂'
on The Verge: 95 minutes on Apple's CEO transition (video) - 'Given Ternus’ hardware pedigree and penchant for fast racing vehicles, I wonder if he’ll consider a vertical that involves a device on wheels?'
on John Ternus' turnaround - 'And a rebirth of Time Capsule and WiFi base. My old Time Capsule has been struggling mightily of late. Possibly because it is ten years old???'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Final volume: 38.0. Average volume per Yahoo Finance/Apple Stocks: 46.0, or 17.4% under average. I’d say that qualifies as a low volume Friday, so i get points for short term predictions. Since Max Pain, per PED above, was predicting $265 and the actual close was $271, we can say options was a decided handicap on the stock, suggesting that the average investor, versus the average speculator, is decidedly more bullish on AAPL/Apple. That, plus the fact that, at $271/share, we are only about a 0.7% rise away from a new ATH, is pretty darned good news for Apple longs on many fronts, not the least of which is that Apple is still significantly undervalued, barring an even larger black swan than we are presently operating, aka the Republican Regime. The shame of it, that the Party of Lincoln could have fallen so low, and dragged the Republic with it into the gutter! But that’s what happens when you give money and power a miserably low flat tax: They end up owning everything and everyone.'
on The tragedy of Tim Cook - 'Sometimes, when these relationships break, you are not given a choice. Or (I can say I have a case of this), you are confronted with a choice you do not want to take, so you end the relationship.'
on The Verge: 95 minutes on Apple's CEO transition (video) - 'I can’t remember who said it (likely someone here 😉 but… Steve’s job when he came back was to make Apple wide. Tim made it tall. John’s job is to make it wide again. Sounds about right.'
on Ternus as Apple CEO: What the talking heads are saying - 'Had to get to the weekend to catch up on stuff: I watched the Gurman, which was OK. I like Munster’s thoughts and presentation. I think one of the commentaries I saw stated that Ternus was relatively “junior” at Apple. Ternus has been at Apple for 25 years. If that is “junior”, Apple has some serious problems. *sarcasm* Overall, I think Apple will be fine.'
on Saturday Apple video: Introducing the Apple //e (1983) - 'So sorry to hear. I had the other track. I convinced my parents to help me buy a Mac 128K when it first came out (having seen a demo in graduate school in late 1983). I loved it so much that I convinced my mom to get a Mac LC when it came out. She had been leery of personal computers, mainly from the problems others had with them. All Wintel. Like me, the Mac GUI was made for her. She loved keeping her recipes on it (remember Mangia!). And her genealogy using Reunion. (When she died, I inherited her files and have spent some of my retirement updating it. I will make sure my son gets the file when I die 😉 She communicated with others on genealogy via email and used many of the sites when they arose. She even enjoyed playing Marathon. She wrote Jobs a few times and got actual replies 😉 She was still using Macs when she died. At least once a day, she would go up to her ‘office’ and check emails, etc.'
on Counterpoint: Entry-level smartphone shipments won't grow again for two years - 'Certainly Apple should market that way. But they also need to fully live up to the promises. As we know, there’s a whole blogosphere of ANALysts ready to pounce on any Apple mis-steps, and losing trust of the user is difficult to overcome.'
on Counterpoint: Entry-level smartphone shipments won't grow again for two years - '”Now if edge AI takes off as predicted, and particularly if Android devices become noticeably slower than iPhones, that could change. The Privacy Factor is currently not a strong influence, but if AI continues down its current “all your data belongs to us” path, that could change.” David, I think in the unknown world of consumer “AI” these two issues are joined at the hip, and can be exploited to Apple’s benefit.'
on Counterpoint: Entry-level smartphone shipments won't grow again for two years - 'It’s a price/performance equation that rests in consumers minds. I’m not sure how much ‘performance’ really counts for today’s consumers. Rather, I think it’s price/quality_of_ecosystem that is the current discriminator. Now if edge AI takes off as predicted, and particularly if Android devices become noticeably slower than iPhones, that could change. The Privacy Factor is currently not a strong influence, but if AI continues down its current “all your data belongs to us” path, that could change. (And That’s A Good Thing…) The thing to watch here is “what factors cause a user to switch between Android and iPhone.”'
on Counterpoint: Entry-level smartphone shipments won't grow again for two years - 'Chipsets are a proxy for Android vs iPhone. Users are conditioned, rightfully so, to believe that iPhone is the superior performer. The emergence of massive “AI” data centers reinforces that “AI” requires enormous power. Android does not possess that reputation because of manufacturers focus on the bottom tiers. It’s a price/performance equation that rests in consumers minds. Apple’s focus on “Apple Intelligence” and on device operations that protects individual privacy, will enhance iPhone’s performance reputation, and by extension its aspirational quotient in an “AI” world. Using that line of thought I don’t see the bottom tier growing again for a lot longer than 2 years.'
on The Verge: 95 minutes on Apple's CEO transition (video) - 'I watch very few video podcasts. Try as the caster might, they are poorly orchestrated and illustrate how little the caster really knows about the subject. This one was different if you were looking for a history lesson. They did touch on the separation of duties, but only in a perfunctory way, whereas I think the CEO job has evolved to the point where it’s a two person job, each with a different set of skills and priorities. As a unified position today, having both responsibilities dilutes the effectiveness of the other. In my opinion not enough was said about the evolution of CEO’s growing responsibilities in a worldwide economy, segmented by geopolitical agendas. You could almost label Tim’s new role as Senior Vice President of Global Negotiations. This is another case where Apple leads all industries, especially those operating on a global scale. I do agree that Apple is headed in a direction that requires a focused product person. Without taking away from Tim’s past performance, he isn’t a product guy.'
on Saturday Apple video: Introducing the Apple //e (1983) - 'My mom in her retirement did quite a bit of library and family genealogy work on her IIe. Then my little brother – a Windows programmer – convinced her to “modernize” and get a PC. She was totally lost in the system and all its features/flaws. Where she was previously engaged in her retirement and age she became listless and gave up. I still feel guilty for having encouraged the change. I knew nothing of Windows system at the time. 🙁'
on Saturday Apple video: Introducing the Apple //e (1983) - 'From the largest installed base in the world, to a pimple on a gnats ass. And still the second largest company (by market cap) in the world. Adapt or die.'
on Patrick McGee blames Apple's Tim Cook for empowering China - 'Well, at least NYT has a reporter hanging around the gates of the White House asking about working conditions! A Pulitzer in the offing?'
on Patrick McGee blames Apple's Tim Cook for empowering China - 'typo, I think – mitigate, not migrate'
on Patrick McGee blames Apple's Tim Cook for empowering China - 'IMO, John, the way they treated the workers there had a lot to do with that. What goes around comes around. Sadly, it’s for that very reason we’re going to be paying for the stinkers presently in control of our country for a long time to come….'
on Patrick McGee blames Apple's Tim Cook for empowering China - 'Gah, Neal. That site made me nauseous, at least on my iPhone . No way I was going to wade through the muck to read the article, interesting though it may be….'
on Patrick McGee blames Apple's Tim Cook for empowering China - 'BTW, Donna pointed out that Apple didn’t just go to China and make a buck. They insisted on good working conditions and higher than average wages. Contrary to what that clown Mike Daisy was peddling, Apple was and remains a major force for good in the lives of folks working on their products. They truly walk the walk. Their competitors, OTOH….'


