Recent Comments

  • Carl Sullivan on CNBC's Joe Kernen puts his MAGA bias on display (video) - '14 minutes of my life I’ll never get back'
  • Stephen Gordon on CNBC's Joe Kernen puts his MAGA bias on display (video) - 'It’s a great segment for television, which is probably why they invited Pete in the first place: they knew it would generate clicks. I stopped watching a couple minutes in, as I could feel the air getting thicker.'
  • Steven Philips on Apple accused of aiding Israeli attacks on Lebanon - 'Because Duh!'
  • Steven Philips on Someone (or some bot) made a big bet that Apple will fall to $220 by Friday - 'I think (IIRC) that it was steel supplies. But that’s just a very vague memory.'
  • Gary Morton on CNBC's Joe Kernen puts his MAGA bias on display (video) - 'Liked it better when 3.0 was a politics free zone. I know, nearly impossible in today’s polarized society and with the increased involvement of the government in Apple’s business over the past 16 years be it anti-trust, tariffs, privacy, or other subjects. Nonetheless, this post just adds fuel to the fire.'
  • Robert Stack on Someone (or some bot) made a big bet that Apple will fall to $220 by Friday - 'Here’s my take: Even while our “Dear Leader” has been loudly proclaiming that the Strait of Hormuz is closed, the reality is that it hasn’t been – Iran has been letting tankers bound for China to continue to pass through. (Besides the income, Iran is reportedly getting intel for targeting US bases and ships in exchange.) Now according to ChatGPT, about 40% of China’s oil imports flow through the Strait of Hormuz – that’s significant. Dear Leader’s latest plan to put a blockade on the Strait is likely to upset China greatly if actually implemented, and would cause severe damage to their economy. Since China doesn’t really have a Navy strong enough to challenge any US blockade you can bet they are thinking of ways on how best to reciprocally damage the US economy without directly going to war. Possible high profile target: Apple and other US tech cos, in ways that I don’t know and are above my pay grade. All just speculation on my part of course, and here I’ll speculate even more: China may even have conveyed this to Trump, which likely means that someone or some favored entity in his orbit knows this and has placed what appears to be a very foolish bet. Or as Rodney alluded, it could be that China decides to take action on Taiwan as a good chunk of their Navy is right there while a good chunk of the US Navy has been relocated to the Middle East. If I remember my WW2 history correctly, wasn’t one of the reasons Japan attacked Pearl Harbor is that the US crimped their energy supplies? If Trump’s Hormuz blockade effectively shuts down 100% of the oil destined for China, do people here really think China won’t do anything to retaliate?'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Apple accused of aiding Israeli attacks on Lebanon - 'Why would you trust any mapping software over the latest satellite photos of the region when planning any military actions?'
  • Neal Guttenberg on Apple's accidental AI moat - 'David, Upvoted. There are some that are acting like the Apple privacy stance was more a happy accident that is helping Apple now but this has been Apple’s stance all along(it is also probably the reason why Siri is so late to the aspired AI upgrade). That is why most are willing to trust Apple. That is not to say that there haven’t been blips with this policy along the way. But if you had to trust someone in big tech, my money would be on Apple.'
  • Miguel Ancira on CNBC's Joe Kernen puts his MAGA bias on display (video) - 'he is such a tool, so unlikeable, and so unable to get his point across without bias … it is incredible to see he is still on the air'
  • Rodney Avilla on Someone (or some bot) made a big bet that Apple will fall to $220 by Friday - 'I can only think of two things that could cause that. China and Taiwan, or China and major, major tariffs.'
  • Rodney Avilla on CNBC's Joe Kernen puts his MAGA bias on display (video) - 'What started as a political discussion, quickly degraded into both sides simply stating political talking points. At that point, the discussion has no value, because talking points are, by design, made to simply make the other side look bad, and never are used to promote understanding or further discussion.'
  • Joseph Bland on Apple accused of aiding Israeli attacks on Lebanon - 'Anti-Apple folks never miss a chance to throw mud, hoping it will stick, and nothing is beneath them. Glad to see Apple being proactive in denying this toxic crap.'
  • David Emery on Apple accused of aiding Israeli attacks on Lebanon - 'Google Earth is really popular with military planners.'
  • David Emery on Apple's accidental AI moat - 'My take: He’s right that to many — including regulators in the EU and UK — Apple’s privacy claims “always felt a bit abstract and, honestly, fake. I strongly suspect that’s in part due to lobbying from other Big Tech companies. Apple’s privacy stance was something that threatened their business model. Plus I’m sure there are big tech leaders and regulators who just don’t trust Apple when Apple says anything. (For regulators, that’s part of “all big tech is equally evil and must be destroyed.” )'
  • Rodney Avilla on CNBC's Joe Kernen puts his MAGA bias on display (video) - 'I agree, that was painful to listen to. In the end, it appears that a primary question that was raised, but I’m not sure it was answered would be, is higher inflation an acceptable cost of ridding Iran of nuclear weapons?'
  • Steven Philips on Apple accused of aiding Israeli attacks on Lebanon - 'Google just adds more detail in order to help Israel targeting! 🙂'
  • Gregg Thurman on CNBC's Joe Kernen puts his MAGA bias on display (video) - 'That Kieran continues on CNBC is all you need to know about the quality and intelligence of the network.'
  • Greg Lippert on CNBC's Joe Kernen puts his MAGA bias on display (video) - 'Thank you Pete for thoughtful responses and keeping your cool. Joe, you should be ashamed of yourself, you buffoon.'
  • Stephen Gordon on Someone (or some bot) made a big bet that Apple will fall to $220 by Friday - 'If that happens I’m buying. Bigly!'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's accidental AI moat - 'After decades of being denigrated as a toy, it’s nice to see the other side spending 100’s of billions to benefit Apple.'
  • Les Surdykowski on Apple's accidental AI moat - 'I don’t have enough digits and appendages to use to keep track of how often Apple has been counted out. Some all-time favorites are: Michael Dell (1997): “I’d shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.” Steve Ballmer (2007): “There’s no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share. No chance.” David Pogue on the first iPod: “‘Breakthrough digital device’ might be pushing it.” I’m not saying Apple always fires on all cylinders and doesn’t make unforced errors, but the commentariat class has a less than nuanced understanding of these dynamics that makes listening to them less than productive.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Someone (or some bot) made a big bet that Apple will fall to $220 by Friday - 'I hope it was a Trump, and they lose big time.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'The market’s definitely not in a good mood. Goldman Sachs reports a 19% jump in quarterly earnings and the shares fall over 3% in pre-market activity. The share price will recover as will the market in general. But maybe not today. Pre-market index futures remain in the red as we approach today’s opening bell.'
  • Greg Lippert on Apple accused of aiding Israeli attacks on Lebanon - 'Whenever I travel to Lebanon, I always trust GoogleMaps over Apple Maps. 😉'
  • Greg Lippert on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Good times 🙁'
  • Kirk DeBernardi on Apple's laptops win both market and revenue share - 'This is one of those charts that makes me smile the broadest. 😉'
  • Kirk DeBernardi on Mark Gurman: Apple glasses to ship in early 2027 - 'To Gregg’s point, I’ve often wondered why Gurman’s sources haven’t been smoked out yet. He’s had deep-level reporting for far too long . Odd that no one’s been nabbed yet. Maybe it IS a matter of Apple-placed ‘sleight-of-hand’ misdirection.'
  • ben luna on Microsoft, start your engines - 'Thank you for pulling up those numbers and your experience using the platforms. I thought Steven Sinofsky’s take was insightful and should be in-line with MSFT’s: https://hardcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/239-mac-neo-and-my-afternoon-of-reflection. Windows and the hardware on which it runs still needs evolve, or that 1/5 of their revenue could soften and shrink down to more micro levels.'
  • Daniel Albaugh on Mark Gurman: Apple glasses to ship in early 2027 - ' Oh yeah, a pendent, hanging from around your neck. Now that will be a super stable platform. I don’t see it either. Most men don’t even wear jewelry. I wear a wedding ring and a mechanical watch. No piercings, ear rings, etc. Plus, as a pendant, how many are going to get stolen by someone grabbing it and yanking it off as they run by?'
  • Gregg Thurman on Mark Gurman: Apple glasses to ship in early 2027 - 'I’m beginning to believe that Gurman is an Apple planted stooge. A stooge in a magician’s sleight of hand misdirection play. He is given just enough legitimate (albeit low level) info to gain credibility, by his handlers (legitimate Apple employees), that the weak of mind follow, and fail to see what Apple really wants kept secret. Apple is pulling the strings, “watch my left hand (with the tantalizing rumor), and ignore my right hand (holding the important secrets)”. One way then, to determine what Apple may be really working on, is by looking at what Gurman isn’t reporting on (until it’s too late for the competition to act on). The big thing that Gurman isn’t reporting is the progress on the Apple Vision Pro. How Apple has replaced Sony with BYD (an exceptional manufacturing problem solver) for the Vision Pro screens, or design changes to enable lighter headsets, etc. That’s a couple years of R&D that hasn’t been reported on by Gurman, yet we know Apple is improving the Vision Pro through the upgrade announcement for Vision Pro v.2. What we do know is what Apple covertly reports in vendor lists and indirect communiques from unannounced Spatial partners, or Press Releases with very little color and no follow-ups, on actions that can’t be hidden (Laker’s Vision Pro broadcasts, F1 broadcast rights, Vision Store, etc). What isn’t being disclosed can be more informative than what Gurman is reporting. I believe Apple Glasses are one such misdirection play. It’s easy for the media, WS and consumers can envision and debate, while Apple is working on something else entirely n'