Recent Comments

  • Greg Lippert on Premarket: Apple is red - 'It’s almost as if this war scenarios were not thought out in advance. Imagine that…'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Index futures are deep in the red this morning as oil prices spike in response to transport challenges in the Persian Gulf and an expanding conflict in the Middle East. Pre-market Apple is trading down $2.32 at $255.14. Today’s trading session begins in about 40 minutes…'
  • Greg Lippert on John Gruber: '$599. Not a piece of junk' - 'As long as you call it like you see it. When something is bad, criticize, but when something is great, praise it. It’s called objectivity and sorely needed in this world.'
  • Greg Lippert on How to steal $9.5 million worth of Apple stuff - 'You would think valuable cargo like that would have even more sophisticated tracking than an AirTag, wouldn’t ya?'
  • David Emery on How to steal $9.5 million worth of Apple stuff - 'No AirTags in that shipment?'
  • Neal Guttenberg on CBS Sunday Morning celebrates 50 years of Apple (2 videos) - 'To Ben and Greg, Upvoted. Very interesting take on things, although I can’t tell how accurate all the things he talks about is but it seems to make sense to this Luddite. Even with that in mind, both videos probably speak to the reason why Apple was trying to solve its AI problem on its own and was finally forced to partner with someone else when it was taking too long. And, again, if accurate, means that Apple probably won’t be giving up on having its own totally owned solution. It may also be the reason why Apple seems to have been able to retain a large amount of its chip design teams, from memory and correct me if I am wrong about this. Apple would seem to be working on things that would be of interest to chip designers.'
  • Jonathan Rotenberg on CBS Sunday Morning celebrates 50 years of Apple (2 videos) - 'Thanks so much for the pro-Apple AI videos! To clarify, when I say Apple “failing at AI,” what I mean is the end-user experience of the personal device being an intimate, personal, trusted advisor (what Apple branded as “Siri” in 2011). This end-user experience is different from the back-end developer infrastructure for creating AI software applications. It goes to the essence of how Steve talked in the early 1980s about the evolution of the personal computer: As a trusted, lifelong friend, confidante & coach. I feel like Google and Perplexity keep moving this “trusted advisor” vision forward, and Apple keeps falling behind. Perhaps there will be a New World Order in the technology stack that will favor Apple going forward. But I remain troubled by why Apple seems to keep falling farther behind over the last 15 years in being the most trusted personal confidante to its own users.'
  • Greg Lippert on Premarket: Apple is red - 'How we doing now MAGA lovers? The Pedophile Pres has done just about everything to break every promise, torch the economy, enrich himself, and threaten American Citizens. Release the files, its in there that you forced yourself on a young girl and hit her when she resisted.'
  • Jonathan Rotenberg on CBS Sunday Morning celebrates 50 years of Apple (2 videos) - 'I thought it was a great interview. I would have liked to see a harder question for Tim, like: “Why has Apple been failing consistently at AI for 15 years? Why do you believe the future will be any different?” But I realize that CBS Sunday Morning would not be an appropriate venue for such a question… Did anyone find it odd that Tim said “we never look at the past [at Apple]” and “we had to build a new ‘muscle’” [for looking back with Apple@50]? Then he went on to repeat the exact same stories about the past that have been retold forever. It makes me curious if there is going to be something unique and substantive for Apple@50 between now and 4/1? Or if the Apple@50 “muscle” claim is just empty hype?'
  • Ben Gepp on CBS Sunday Morning celebrates 50 years of Apple (2 videos) - 'I saw this a week ago by the same Youtuber. It changed my perspective on Apple’s prospects in AI… for the positive. Apple Eats AI for Breakfast https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VZaI44odyg'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (3/9-3/13/26) - 'Fred: I don’t think Apple is “late” at all. For how many years has Apple been talking about “Machine Learning”? This has been in the plan for device level processing all along. It reduces latency and provides for greater security as well. In my view, the only thing holding investors back from embracing the Apple advantage is management’s apparent lack of ability to deliver on AI-related promises made 21 months ago at WWDC 2024. Deliver an impressive upgrade to Siri and investors may more readily embrace everything else Apple has to offer while also providing consumers with confidence in purchasing new Apple products.'
  • Steven Philips on CBS Sunday Morning celebrates 50 years of Apple (2 videos) - 'Steve Jobs was the Most Uniquest business leader of the century! 🙂 @PED. 🙂'
  • David Wilson on CBS Sunday Morning celebrates 50 years of Apple (2 videos) - 'Thanks for sharing that video, Gregg. It sounds like a very reasonable take.'
  • ben luna on Mark Gurman: Apple's coming Ultra product lines - 'Great observation. Which camp comes to mind when reading this: “Iran is a modern country ruled by Clerics aspiring to the 9th century.”, the former or the latter? I’m not as optimistic as you on the outcome in Iran, because wars have a way of generating unpredictable outcomes such as the burning through all of our irreplaceable Patriot missile stocks (actually that was predictable), Iran is an extremely complex and large country, and has no desire for the meddling from outsiders especially the U.S, but I hope that you are right.'
  • Stephen Gordon on CBS Sunday Morning celebrates 50 years of Apple (2 videos) - 'Tim Cook is the master of sticking to the script. He knows what’s at stake if he doesn’t.'
  • Stephen Gordon on Mark Gurman: Apple's coming Ultra product lines - 'Anytime I want to see what the ‘50s were really about, I just rewatch L.A. Confidential.'
  • Gregg Thurman on CBS Sunday Morning celebrates 50 years of Apple (2 videos) - 'An excellent explanation of why Apple will prevail the world of AI, and why the massive investments in data centers going to go for naught. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QgQ3s8AqAac Thinking different, debating everything really does make a difference.'
  • Gregg Thurman on CBS Sunday Morning celebrates 50 years of Apple (2 videos) - 'Steve, wherever he is, is going to be extremely proud of 2026 and what follows.'
  • Hap Allen on This week's Apple trading strategies (3/9-3/13/26) - 'More from Errol Brandt: “Apple didn’t set out to beat Nvidia at their own game. They decided to play a different game entirely.” Brandt highlights the ease of use for developers. With the recent product introductions, the decks have been cleared. WWDC, anyone? https://youtu.be/QgQ3s8AqAac'
  • Gregg Thurman on War fallout: Iranian drones damage AI data centers - '” I’ve seen anything that suggests that there’s any plan that will result in long-term stability and reduction of conflict.” Plans of that nature are never for public consumption. Why tell your adversary what you plan to do? That would be very counter productive.'
  • Gregg Thurman on War fallout: Iranian drones damage AI data centers - '” Do you believe relative or friends of those who have been killed should take comfort that the killing of Iranians was “minimal”?” No, I emphatically do not. I was injecting context into the discussion that Khamenei is responsible, directly or indirectly, for the killing of hundreds of thousands over the course of the last 25 years. Everyone agrees he was a horrible, despicable man willing to kill to achieve his perverted goal. This war, meant to eliminate the man and the machine that supports him, has cost a couple thousand (maybe double or even triple that by now) lives. As regrettable as that is (and it is truly regrettable) it pales in comparison to the lives Khamenei has taken (7,000-10,000 of his own people in just the last month or so). The bright side is that with he and his henchmen neutralized, the killing by Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah, Houthis will be greatly, I mean GREATLY, diminished. That is a very good thing. Will the killing ever stop? Will school shootings in the US ever stop? Unfortunately no. But by paying the price of eliminating the person responsible for those killings we may save lives in the future. I think this action was a long time in coming, and I’m glad it has. But instead of lamenting those who are dying today, we should be thankful that killing on the scale of the past is going to diminish, and hopefully become background noise (like the school shootings in the US).'
  • Bill Donahue on Mark Gurman: Apple's coming Ultra product lines - 'I prefer Warren Buffet’s distinction: “Price is what you pay; value is what you get.” So, in that regard, the seller almost always overhypes the value the buyer receives. That duality is why Wintel computers once upon a time became dominant: cheap entry price “for a computer” and the highly convenient ignorance of most buyers in regards to the colossal difference in value, when compared to an Apple.'
  • Bill Donahue on War fallout: Iranian drones damage AI data centers - 'While I don’t disagree with you, Gregg, on Khomeini, I can’t say I’ve seen anything that suggests that there’s any plan that will result in long-term stability and reduction of conflict. My response this week is identical to what it was immediately after the invasion of Iraq in the US’s second Gulf War: “A US President, for obvious ulterior motives, expending vast financial resources and engaging in the national distraction – including of his political opposition – via an unjustified Middle East invasion that will absolutely not be as “easy” and clean as the initial aerial bombardment, while the real and growing threat to the USA is on the other side of the Pacific Ocean.” Meanwhile, China is brokering major deals in all of the countries that the US has abandoned or alienated diplomatically, and pushing full-steam ahead on science and tech development in ways that will play out two decades from now.'
  • Joseph Bland on War fallout: Iranian drones damage AI data centers - 'Trumpism MAY be no better? Really, Johnny? I stopped reading right after those weasel words. “For too long we’ve been ruled by progressives who have forgotten to defend the West, but Trumpism may be no better” Excerpt From “Enemies like Iran will exploit liberal naivety until we’re destroyed” The Times of London https://apple.news/AQbx34Dr-TKmUjVouwZ-jDA This material may be protected by copyright.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: Apple's coming Ultra product lines - '”As a Liberal” I watched a really interesting interview the other day. The interviewee defined a liberal as one willing to embrace change. A conservative was one that wasn’t. In the context of today’s MAGA movement that makes sense. MAGA adherents want a return to the 1950s and all that entails. Liberals don’t.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on This week's Apple trading strategies (3/9-3/13/26) - 'Phenomenal! Can’t innovate my ass!'
  • Jonny T on War fallout: Iranian drones damage AI data centers - 'As I said, I do not laud him, I think he is a despicable man. By way coincidence, this man destroying the Iranian regime happens to be a very good thing for all human beings. Only improved once Putin has gone the same way of course. Interesting that there seems to be only enthusiasm from military quarter. No resistance to the plan. This sums things up pretty tidily for me: https://apple.news/AQbx34Dr-TKmUjVouwZ-jDA'
  • Joseph Bland on War fallout: Iranian drones damage AI data centers - 'Losing our democracy is losing the war that countless people have fought and died over for a very, very long time. The real war. It behooves us to think everything through before we act. For once.'
  • Joseph Bland on War fallout: Iranian drones damage AI data centers - 'Again, Jonny, as Gregg put it, I have no beef. But the same character you laud is in reality just a loose cannon. He is NOT acting for some greater good., and painting him as doing so is dangerous. Remember Afghanistan, and the real reasons we failed there. A clear-eyed look at who this President has put in charge of our armed forces should make the danger starkly obvious.'
  • Hap Allen on This week's Apple trading strategies (3/9-3/13/26) - 'Years ago, the race for “the enterprise”” was declared over. Is that still true?'