Recent Comments

  • Gregg Thurman on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - '“In the year 2525…” If I’m still alive.'
  • Steven Philips on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'Answer: DT – but he’s not very rationale! (He’s got the DT’s.)'
  • Steven Philips on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - '“In the year 2525…”. 🙂'
  • Rodney Avilla on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'I would be very interested in the rationale for Apple being less than what it is now, come next April 2027. If Smart Siri had come sooner, my estimate for 2026 would have been a lot closer. In light of what the stock price has done lately, $381 is probably too high. However, if 1. smart Siri blows people away, 2. Apple continues to monetize AI beyond expectation (& capEx expenditures) 3. Mac mini is truly the Mac for AI (edge) and 4. Neo makes great headway into developing countries and education, then $381 may not be that far off.'
  • Kenny Kruger on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - '344! Whiteclaw on the mini and neo gonna drive Mac rev$$$'
  • Bill Fouche on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'Put me down at $312.'
  • Kenny Kruger on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'What’s the official email/subject to enter next years?'
  • Joseph Bland on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'I’ve had $300/share for three years now, and I’d do it again but Steven beat me to it, so $301…. Sacto Joe'
  • Paul Lane on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'Put me down at $332'
  • David Emery on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'My take-away from the last couple of contests is “I’m no better than the professional ANALysts, so don’t bet on my numbers.” 🙂 p.s. PED, I think you mean “2027” at the top of the first column. If not, none of us will be around to see who won.'
  • Gregg Thurman on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'If I’m not going to win, I’ll be rooting for John Konopka and Daniel Epstein, followed by anybody with a higher estimate.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is red - 'Apple closed out the week down $0.97 on the day at $247.99. The shares gained $1.81 in the AH session to $249.80. Apple closed a week prior on Friday, March 13th at $250.12. This is against a backdrop of reported high demand for the company’s updated line of Mac laptops, including the introduction of the new MacBook Neo. Apple’s current all-time high of $288.62 was set on December 3rd.'
  • Neal Guttenberg on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - 'I will guess 310'
  • Steven Philips on 7th Apple 3.0 price target contest: Where we stand - '@PED: That’s Steven – with a “V.” 🙂'
  • Gregg Thurman on Saturday Apple video: Waiting in the wings (1996) - 'Hart’s campaign strategy was pretty simple, and was proving effective. Carter was thought of as a nice guy, but didn’t know what to do. Hart campaigned almost exclusively on the understanding that he “had a plan”. That resonated very well with Democrats looking for leadership. If Hart had been able to keep his pants on (at a time when that meant something) I think he could have got the Democrats nomination. The Presidency? Nobody was going to beat Reagan. He was decisive in his demeanor, and after Johnson, Nixon and Carter that meant more to the electorate than anything else.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Saturday Apple video: Waiting in the wings (1996) - 'David: IIRC, Eventual 1984 Democratic presidential nominee Walter Mondale used the “Where’s the Beef?” line effectively during the primary season in reference to confusion about what exactly Gary Hart, another contender, actually stood for on issues of the day. It was my understanding when his campaign team came up with the idea of referencing the humorous and popular “Where’s the Beef?” commercials from Wendy’s, it had to explain to him what the commercials were and then had to encourage him to use the line in reference to Mr. Hart’s sometimes seemingly vague positions. The commercials featured Clara Peller. She passed away in 1987.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Has Apple forgotten its most important lesson? - '”Has Apple forgotten its most important lesson?“ What does this headline have to do with the story that followed it?'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple dragged into Lux Optics co-founders fight - 'It could be that Lux had some interesting IP, but Apple’s interest was more in the nature of a acquihire. Certainly Apple sensed a rift between the two before they started recruiting de With. Apple most likely determined that de With was the more valuable of the two, and that it didn’t need to buy the Company to get the person they wanted. As for the IP, all Apple needed was the architect in order the replicate it, without copying it.'
  • Bill Donahue on Has Apple forgotten its most important lesson? - 'Well, Apple did make a PDA: the Newton. And then cancelled it when it flopped. John Sculley was even the first person on record to use the term “personal digital assistant”, in the early days of the development of what would become the Newton. Here’s the pretty interesting but not so pretty story about the Newton’s development, and all of the dead-ends, road blocks, direction changes, decisions, and competing interests and egos at play in the development and release of a new product, at least under Sculley’s watch. https://lowendmac.com/2013/the-story-behind-apples-newton/'
  • David Emery on Apple dragged into Lux Optics co-founders fight - 'Employee expenses have -no relationship- to Apple, so I wouldn’t expect them to be an issue. The IP issues are significant, and if this goes to trial, could go badly for Apple (that’s because you -never know- how a jury will vote.) I’d expect Apple to settle with a licensing deal lump-sum payment, without admitting liability. But to me the more interesting question is whether de With continues as an Apple employee. Apple doesn’t like executives who drag them into the mud. It’ll be up to de With to convince Tim, et.al. that he did nothing wrong, independent of any settlement Apple makes with Lux.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on Mac virgins - ' a cheaper alternative will appreciate the build quality Build Quality is exactly . You don’t even have to say High Quality because that is the true & only meaning of the singular word Quality for . Cheap to others is Value for the Money. Same, one doesn’t even have to preface High for the word Value when talking  .'
  • Greg Lippert on Has Apple forgotten its most important lesson? - 'They are also how many fold bigger? With how many more customers?'
  • David Drinkwater on Apple dragged into Lux Optics co-founders fight - 'I certainly don’t know the inside details of this affair, but I am 99.99% confident that it will not affect Apple, except potentially to repay the $150k of “improper expenses” to Lux for de With. That’s piss in a bucket. The IP issues, however, could be more legitimate: I am sure de With is not authorized to take code *verbatim* from Lux on his way out the door, but provenence, ownership, etc., these are complicated issues between Lux, Sandofsky, and de With. *That* might be worth some popcorn to watch. (But I won’t, because IANAL, and it won’t be intelligible without painful research of law.)'
  • David Drinkwater on Saturday Apple video: Waiting in the wings (1996) - 'Great interview. Very enjoyable for content. (It does, however, strain my eyes to see just how much video content has improved since 1997. Just think: nearly 30 years ago …)'
  • David Drinkwater on Has Apple forgotten its most important lesson? - '“By not making a PDA, Apple had the resources to make the iPod, then the iPhone.” This is sorta correct, but also not. What really happened (at least IMNSHO) is that Apple did not make the wrong PDA at the right (read wrong) time and instead made something smaller in scope (the iPod) and then shortly after something smaller in size (the iPhone – definitely a PDA) and then after that, the “full-sized PDA” in the iPad. So I think here is another example of Apple being diligent in saying “no (not now)” somewhat in order not to be first, but to be the best when they do it. I know this is a nitpick on one line of an article, but it really rankled me.'
  • David Drinkwater on Saturday Apple video: Waiting in the wings (1996) - 'Where’s the Beef? Er, video link. (I was shocked to learn that the commercial series ran in 1984. Way older than I imagined.)'
  • Roger Schutte on Apple's Mac and iPad saw record sales in India last year - 'Gregg, open one of your existing Excel files in Numbers and then double click on a formula cell to see the formatting.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's Mac and iPad saw record sales in India last year - 'Don’t bother with suggestions. I couldn’t Open my Microsoft 365 account either. It wants to set up a Passkey, then says it can’t. Online Help was a waste of time. I’ve deleted both Apps from my iPad and will reluctantly fire up my iMac to access my 365 account.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's Mac and iPad saw record sales in India last year - 'I must be the dumbest SOB on the planet. I’ve been build multi-layer, multi-page spreadsheets using Excel for about forever. Today I thought I’d give Numbers a try. What a piece of shit. Is there a formatting secret I should be aware of? It’s certainly not obvious from the icons (I’ve been through them all). Cutting, pasting, constructing formulas, aligning text, formatting numbers. I’m at a point that I’m going to buy Excel 360. I’ve never worked so hard to get an Apple software to work and get no results. Where is the intuitive part?'
  • David Drinkwater on Mac virgins - 'I feel that the PED 3.0 crowd already saw this coming. And it’s just the first week. Let’s see if this trend has legs!'