Paul Lane on Neo isn't the only Mac that Apple can't build fast enough - '@Gregg Thruman You are right. I bought a Cube and thought it was a delight. I still do. Mine is upstairs packed away safely in its original box along with the Cinema Display I bought to go with it. I cannot bring myself to part with either of them. Sad but true. For anyone who does not recall the Cube just take a look at the video of the unveiling by Steve Jobs. Turn it upside down and a handle pops out which allows you to lift the entire computer out of its case and give you 360 degree access to every component. Fanless, compact and gorgeous. The Cube was, and is, a masterpiece. But it’s reputation was ruined by bad press regarding trivial nit lines which only affected a proportion of them. My one has none.'
on Saturday Apple video: Steve Jobs' hula hoop (1999) - 'This makes me deeply sad that Apple gave up on making its own WiFi hubs and seems to have similarly abandoned Time Capsule. In the meantime, I have found that Time Machine is also becoming somewhat less reliable.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - '55 is working out OK for me. Thanks primarily to AAPL, I get to choose my retirement date. Current Plan is Christmas 2029, but that is primarily ego-driven, and we have a pretty cool top-down project going on at work. It is an amazingly wonderful problem to have. I look at options and trading as an interesting and potentially lucrative passtime to have in retirement.'
on Neo isn't the only Mac that Apple can't build fast enough - 'I have two Cubes, serving as bookends on my fireplace mantel. I ejected the hard drives years ago and got them responsibly chopped up, but I still own the chassis, warts and all. I used to have a complete audio “bass bulb” with Soundsticks and an age old Apple Cinema Display of the correct generation. Sadly, I think one of the Soundsticks was stolen out of a busted house window (along with a Mac Laptop of its generation, very sad). The display was broken during a cross-Texas move in the 2010s. I had the whole MOMA display, until I didn’t. But the Cubes stay on the mantelpiece, because AAPL has done very well for me.'
on Mark Gurman: About that glow on the number 26 - 'Here’s another way to look at the Neo: Excerpt From “AI has blocked out Windows laptops in the race against the MacBook” Digital Trends https://apple.news/AmHqleJeGTw6dieoAWg5Ztw This material may be protected by copyright. The AI PC push did not help Windows catch the MacBook. It made the gap look worse “That is the irony of the AI PC moment. AI is supposed to be the big upgrade cycle that gives Windows laptops fresh relevance. Instead, it is quietly making them harder to buy into, especially if you are shopping anywhere below the premium tier. And in the middle of all that confusion, Apple’s MacBook lineup suddenly looks like the cleanest, easiest laptop story in the market.”'
on Mark Gurman: About that glow on the number 26 - 'Not sure where this goes, so I’m dropping it here as the most recent story: Excerpt From “Judge: Trump Admin ‘Coerced’ Facebook, Apple Into Removing Anti-ICE Content” Will McCurdy PCMag https://apple.news/As6VbDkoDSgStazTKXeTsEg This material may be protected by copyright. “Facebook and Apple removed a group and app following ‘thinly veiled threats’ from Pam Bondi and Kristi Noem, which violates the content creators’ First Amendment rights, a judge finds…Apple, meanwhile, “had knowledge of the purpose of Eyes Up,” and still approved it. What changed was pressure from Washington. Bondi and Noem “reached out to Facebook and Apple and demanded, rather than requested, that Facebook and Apple censor Plaintiff’s speech.” They “also intimated that Facebook and Apple may be subject to prosecution for failing to comply with [their] demands.” “Although these statements may not be direct threats to prosecute Facebook and Apple, they are intimations of a threat,” the judge found. “And thinly veiled threats such as these constitute sufficient evidence on which Plaintiffs are likely to succeed on their claim…””'
on Mark Gurman: About that glow on the number 26 - 'I’d double down on that and love a Siri that could find a person whose name I forgot. Then give Siri a bunch of vague clues about where we may have met, which companies (s)he worked at, or other snippets. It would used my Apple ‘contacts’ plus linkedin or other social media. The task is doable and extremely tedious.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'During the past 10 years Apple has had some less than stellar years That said a duplication of those years could put AAPL at ~$2,300 (8.5 X $270). Oh, to be 50 years old again.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - '” In other words, a strong WWDC and a share price that rises with the broad market would put Apple at and above $300 per share.’” From your lips…. If that were to happen (Guidance will be the key) I might be tempted to buy at the money Call Spreads for October and January expiry. ROI for each: slightly more than 60%. I say tempted, there is always Trump’s dementia and his mouth to deal with.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'Below are the ten-year share price performances of the Terrific Ten equities ranked by percentage gains over this time and the percentage gains in the major stock indexes over the same period. Over this 10-year period only Berkshire has not outperformed all four major market indexes. For share price performance Apple ranks #5 on the list. Walmart comes in at #10 on the expanded list of 11 equites. NVIDIA (NVDA) up 21,268.17% Broadcom (AVGO) up 2,462.67% Tesla (TSLA) up 2,192.06% Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) up 1,327.14% Apple (AAPL) up 859.13% Alphabet (GOOG) up 776.86% Amazon (AMZN) up 697.90% Microsoft (MSFT) up 655.18% Meta Platforms (META) up 517.36% Walmart (WMT) up 442.22% NASDAQ Composite – up 394.50% S&P 500 – up 238.95% Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) up 231.32% DJIA – up 173.25% Russell 2000 – up 143.10%'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'Entering this week’s trading, below is the market cap scoreboard of the Terrific Ten. These are the 10 largest enterprises ranked by this metric. For this week I’ve added Walmart to the list because it’s in a virtual tie with Berkshire for the #10 spot. Nvidia, which is up nearly 100% over the past year, is approaching a $5 trillion market cap. All eleven equities on today’s list have a market cap above $1 trillion. NVIDIA (NVDA) $4.90 trillion Alphabet (GOOG) $4.13 trillion Apple (AAPL) $3.97 trillion Microsoft (MSFT) $3.14 trillion Amazon (AMZN) $2.69 trillion Broadcom (AVGO) $ 1.92 trillion Meta Platforms (META) $1.75 trillion Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) $1.67 trillion Tesla (TSLA) $1.50 trillion Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) $1.02 trillion Walmart (WMT) $1.02 trillion'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'I’m expecting the S&P 500 to reach 7,800 this year. A similar percentage gain for Apple would put the shares at around $300. In other words, a strong WWDC and a share price that rises with the broad market would put Apple at and above $300 per share.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'AAPL went up when Trump and Iran’s hands let go of the beach ball. I anticipate a lower open since they’re back doing their hissy fits and holding it down again. Until their spat finally settles down clearly, AAPL won’t reach its full potential.'
on Mark Gurman: About that glow on the number 26 - 'Remembering people would be as helpful/necessary to me as Apple MAPS! NO sense of direction and no recall of faces. I’ve got a lot of generalized greetings that make people THINK that I remember! 🙁'
on Mark Gurman: About that glow on the number 26 - 'Watched the YouTube ad. Now that’s an “AI” I can relate to. I keep/maintain an Apple calendar, but at 79 I forget a lot of meetings (and people) after the fact. This would be very helpful.'
on Mark Gurman: About that glow on the number 26 - '“Ok, I’ll bite. What ‘lot more’ are you expecting?” Siri, what’s the name of that guy I had a meeting with a couple of months ago at Cafe Grenell? You met Zak Wingate at Cafe Grenell a couple of months ago. https://youtu.be/X3c916Mb02E?si=j_p0nSqnjPSSq9Ck'
on Mark Gurman: About that glow on the number 26 - 'Hi Rodney, Something on code generation, debugging, etc. ? Improvement to Photos image searching, labeling, “photoshopping”, etc. Wanna dream? 3D video generation, viewing in AVP, and sharing on YouTube for AVP? AI in biotech research? Or decrypt health providers’ “after visit’ summary'” loaded with acronyms. Just having fun, here.'
on Mark Gurman: About that glow on the number 26 - '“ My take: I’m expecting Apple Intelligence to do a lot more with our personal data and on-screen content than just fulfilling queries.” Ok, I’ll bite. What ‘lot more’ are you expecting?'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'David: Yes. Apple’s current all-time high of $288.62 was set on December 3rd. I also believe Apple has a compelling line-up of products that are gaining global share and increasing the installed base of product users and eco-system participants. I expect the share price to move significantly higher upon the release of a conspicuously improved and AI-infused version of Siri with greater AI integration woven into the operating systems. In my view that will widen the company’s economic moat and increase the barriers to competition. Apple first reached above $270 per share back in late October. I can see $300 being taken out in the time vicinity of WWDC 2026.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'Once Again, Gurman is mouthing off about “delays” for products that haven’t been announced. “The next Mac Studio and MacBook Pro releases could be postponed by several months” from a story on Engadget…. Apple’s product successes mean “doom due to supply constraints”… Apple is always damned regardless of what it does or does not do…'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'Those who own AAPL are twice fortunate in having a bit more wriggle room to sell during periods of higher valuation and to buy back during periods of lower valuation. And doing the buying and selling within a retirement plan allows for taking maximum advantage of that tax-deferred investment action. Pretty sweet.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'Great points David, thanks. Upvoted. Let’s remember the ‘analysts’ lag’ factor. Due to internal process and group think, the average of all analysts PTs lag the market, lag the data. The worst laggards are the most conservative. With earnings (and guidance) coming soon, the average PT creeps up steadily.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - 'Well written David, and mostly coincides with my assessment. Where we diverge is on the foldable. I think it’s a big mistake to be factoring in the revenue of an unannounced product. I think it’s wiser to accept the upside if it occurs, but to be safe I’m not counting on it. Also, behind the scenes (almost), Apple has announced these changes to Vision Pro’s supply chain with the inclusion of BYD two years ago (a major improvement over Sony), continued development of Vision Pro content, leaves me strongly believing there will be a major Vision Pro announcement at WWDC. Additionally, Trump’s disconnect brim brain (what’s left of it) and his mouth, has caused me to alter my options investment strategy wherein AAPL can decline significantly from Friday’s Close, and I still yield a deep in the money 30+% in 90 days. Truth in lending statement: I am strongly considering closing my position should AAPL print $275, then adjust my Call Spread Strike upwards with a focus on maintaining a 30% yield at the higher Strike. In the past my strategy relied on correctly forecasting a price target for AAPL, investing accordingly (with some cushion) and achieving ROI’s in excess of 80% per quarter. The last 3+ years has made that strategy unreliable.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/20-4/24/26) - '“The size of the moves is telling me it’s more than a dead cat bounce…” Had to wait until the very end to hear that. Well, as that sentiment may pertain to Apple, I happen to agree. Why? The consensus by Apple centric bull analysts still has their price targets over $300. The facts show that Apple’s doing relatively very well despite the overall market volatility – from the political insanity going on. iPhone: For the first time, the iPhone now has a worldwide marketshare over 50%. Though smart phone sales were down in China, Apple’s sales there were significantly up, I recall around 23%. The anticipated brand new foldable iPhone coming this September will no doubt be very newsworthy. Mac: The brand new Neo laptop has gotten very good reviews. It’s low price point may not contribute a lot of revenue quite yet, but it appears to be very well positioned – targeting students. Who will inevitably upgrade to more expensive Macs when they get older. Services continue to grow very nicely with Apple recently announcing it will make Apple TV available through Amazon Prime. This can only contribute to revenue, as well as marketshare. Anyone who’s watched the series “Slow Horses” or the film “F1” knows the quality of their original exclusive productions is still first rate. From what I’ve heard, consequently, the consensus is Apple’s fast approaching April 30th ER should be good, and though the higher cost for memory may be nibbling at its margins, at the very least in-line with positive forecasts. With the WWDC just five weeks after the ER, where new products and/or upgrades will no doubt be introduced, if not discussed, I can’t imagine why the stock price wouldn’t take a run at a new all-time high. Which I believe is around $288. Of course, Trump might suddenly decide to shakedown Greenland or Cuba, and start bombing Iran again, which would no doubt add to market volatility. However, it appears the market has digested all that – and shown that tech stocks like Apple are not very affected by war and the price of oil. And though it could be affected by a recession, if it happens, that seems to be down the road. So… I believe despite the endless tsunami of crappy news 24/7 – and the potential for more volatility, Apple is one of the best “safe” stocks to own. As it continues to expand its installed base. I bought new shares weeks ago and have decided to hold them through the next ER. I put a GTC to sell at $276. Good luck, and happy trading.'
on Neo isn't the only Mac that Apple can't build fast enough - 'The price/performance point was not very good. But I almost bought one, when I was considering a temporary foreign assignment. It was small enough to take in my carry-on bag, and for ‘at home’ use it was good enough. I figured I could bum a spare monitor and keyboard from work to connect to it.'
on Neo isn't the only Mac that Apple can't build fast enough - 'Wasn’t it also too expensive to be anything but niche?'
on AppleInsider: Something's rotten in the App Store - 'If Apple promises safety and privacy, it needs to standby that promise and reimburse the users who lost their $$$ on a scam app they let in the store. And Grok/X should have gotten the boot, too.'
on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Three straight days, three days of all-time highs and all-time closing highs for both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite. The DJIA, which rose 868.71 points to close at 49,447.43 on Friday, remains not far below its all-time high of 50,512.79 set on February 10th. Apple remains just 0.60% in the red year-to-date after rising $6.83 on Friday to close at $270.23.'
on In 2015 Apple became the No. 1 buyer on eBay of second-hand Nvidia cards - 'Just got mine. Looking forward to a LOT of late nights!'


