Recent Comments

  • Ben Gepp on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'Whilst no one here is an international war crimes expert it is clear serious mistakes have been made; 175+ innocents bombed because they didn’t bother to check a recent maps, Congress and the UN were not consulted, and no one has any idea why accompanying Israel on an *excursion* into Iran was necessary. So there is certainly a legality issue that needs to be prosecuted. Your own government has taken to indiscriminately knocking off your own in public so not sure who is left holding the moral compass. Irrespective, what is clear is that this war is having global consequences that will affect, amongst other things, Apple/AAPL: Supply chains are being severely disrupted, scepticism in the US as a reliable partner/leader is growing, and China, the centre of manufacturing universe is probably more sympathetic to Iran not to its traditional trading partner, the US. This is all happening when Apple is on firing on all cylinders. AAPL should be heading way north, instead it’s tanking. I just don’t think your government has any clue as to what it is doing or cares about the unintended consequences of its actions. This is a real problem if you’re an investor as there is very little certainty that they are regulating the economy for the greater good. All appearances suggest self aggrandisement is their mission.'
  • Ben Gepp on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'antipodean loconic Ron 🙂'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is green - 'This President agrees with me: A few days ago, I said: “This President’s “friends”, the hydrocarbon oligarchs of the world, are quite pleased to see their profits increase out of this badly-mannaged “war”. From Reuters on Apple News today: “Trump touts oil price gains, saying ‘we make a lot of money,’ angering lawmakers” Excerpt From “Trump touts oil price gains, saying ‘we make a lot of money,’ angering lawmakers” Timothy Gardner, Susan Heavey Reuters https://apple.news/AmTO5Kv_sSQyN2CUzbthyeA This material may be protected by copyright. “Trump, a Republican, wrote on social media: “The United States is the largest Oil Producer in the World, by far, so when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money.” But stopping Iran from having nuclear weapons was far more important, he said. U.S. Senator Mark Kelly, an Arizona Democrat, responded that working Americans were being hurt by ​the war Trump started. “The only ones benefiting from gas prices skyrocketing are the big oil companies,” Kelly, a potential presidential candidate in 2028, wrote on X. “But it makes sense why ​Trump is happy about it because he’s only ever cared about rich people.””'
  • Ron Fredrick on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'Rick Povich said: “…we are all eating shit sandwich served up by Captain Bonespurs” That’s pretty enlightening **Yeah, I was also surprised by Ben’s comment. I would have expected Ben to either say, “…we are all eating “a” shit sandwich served up by Captain Bonespurs” or “…we are all eating shit sandwich”es” served up by Captain Bonespurs” Shame on you, Ben!'
  • Ben Gepp on Apple's easy-to-fix Neo - 'The others wouldn’t understand Robert.. but I feel ya! I foolishly gave mine away at EOL.'
  • Digant Jariwala on Why Apple's MacBook Neo makes Steven Sinofsky sad - 'Quote: “being early is the same as being wrong” Like in smart phones, portable music players, wireless headphones, VR devices? And …… maybe AI?'
  • Robert Stack on Apple's easy-to-fix Neo - 'I had one of those Ben – and loved it!'
  • Ben Gepp on Apple's easy-to-fix Neo - 'Pismo (Powerbook G3)… access to the guts with a latch removable keyboard. The teardown of Neo are impressive. Repairability will surely appeal to the education market.'
  • Ron Fredrick on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'Gregg Thurman said: “Iran’s blocking of the Hormuz Straight hurts Iran far more than it does us. With the Straight closed Iran can’t sell 90% of what it used to, while an increase in oil exports from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the UAE, North Sea and Indonesia and others could make up what is lost from curtailing Iranian shipments.” **That doesn’t seem to be the case: www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/irans-control-of-hormuz-means-its-exporting-more-oil-today-than-before-the-war-ede3cd91?mod=e2tw “Iran’s Control of Hormuz Means It’s Exporting More Oil Today Than Before the War (Tehran is letting ships carrying its crude go through the strait, while it scares off others) Iran is exporting more oil through the Strait of Hormuz than before the war, showing it is in control of a strategic waterway that it has closed off to the rest of the region’s oil producers.'
  • Rick Povich on Apple's easy-to-fix Neo - 'The Neo seems on its way to becoming a hit! As for most-repairable Macs, I’d include my Mid 2012 13‑inch MacBook Pro, I replaced the fan, swapped the optical drive for an SSD drive, and replaced the HDD with an SSD. And also replaced the battery. All thanks to iFixit and their great tools and guides. I still use that MBP occasionally to access Adobe CS3 which I’ve refused to update to their usurious fees. FWIW, Affinity makes superb, free alternatives to Adobe’s products. And I received no compensation for this review of iFixit Unrelated – I’ve been playing around with my beautiful 12″ MacBook (with the clackety keyboard), which, when introduced, I believe Steve pulled it from a manila folder.'
  • Steven Philips on Why Apple's MacBook Neo makes Steven Sinofsky sad - 'Well they DO! 🙂'
  • Ben Gepp on Apple not on Iran's hit list - 'It’s reality.'
  • David Emery on Why Apple's MacBook Neo makes Steven Sinofsky sad - 'Microsoft clearly HAD TO DO what Jobs did at Apple, abandon the old codebase and start from scratch. There’s no way Apple could have succeeded by trying to take the old Mac OS 7-8-9 codebase into the 21st century. Obviously Ballmer didn’t see that legacy technical debt as a liability; rather it was a strength because it ran (often poorly!) on so many different hardware platforms. It -still- bothers me how so many people, including those who should know better, accept Windows chronic security and reliability problems as “just the way it is” and say “all software has bugs.” Would you accept “all cars have accidents”?'
  • Richard Gayle on Greg Bates: Is Apple building an iPhonebook? Or maybe a MacPhone? - 'Thinking Apple will not make one device with multiple chips. But multiple devices that could simulate one chip. I’ve got an iPhone, a laptop and a Mac mini right in front of me. How many cores is that? A huge amount of computing power. Could Apple find something really cool to do with all that power? (I am already expecting that the upcoming AVP and/or glasses will offload computing power to an iPhone, etc to lower costs.) They can if anyone can.'
  • Kirk DeBernardi on Greg Bates: Is Apple building an iPhonebook? Or maybe a MacPhone? - 'Horace D. — Interesting that you point this out as I long thought it strange that telephony has not, by now, become standard in laptops. Strange.'
  • Greg Lippert on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Crazy, all the + from Apple and the stock is back to trading like a steel mill going outta business.'
  • Kirk DeBernardi on How to settle into Apple's walled garden for less than $1,900 - 'Even cheaper (as you go), consider this — a combo of any two of those is itself highly likely to hook people into the ecosystem. Then have fun adding the rest along the way — 😉'
  • Richard Gayle on Why Apple's MacBook Neo makes Steven Sinofsky sad - 'IMHO, Sinofsky may have been the closest thing to Jobs at MS — his influence was everywhere. He was the first to get the web and got Gates on board. He was the first project manager on the Office suite. He was instrumental in Windows and was behind the move to ARM and Windows 8 with the Surface. He was pushing MS to move on the same efficient and mobile path Apple was on. MS balked. Ballmer forced him out because the Surface pushed back too hard on MS’s need to be everywhere all at once. It was a threat to many working there. Internal competition to kill innovation is MS’s worst trait. I’ve followed him for years because I always felt he was the one who could have led MS into the current era. What he discusses (being early is the same as being wrong) reveals a fundamental reason why Apple succeeds and MS/Intel will not — Apple constantly reinvents itself. Apple has fundamentally changed OS over the years, changed chips, changed leadership, changed everything. A true Ship of Theseus. While Wintel is mostly duct tape and bailing wire. Sinofsky saw the path but could not get MS to take it.'
  • Rick Povich on How to settle into Apple's walled garden for less than $1,900 - 'I’ve been helping a friend, on a budget, who wants to update his old ipad and beat-up keyboard. I’d given him a list of iPad/keyboard options from which to choose, but he’s still undecided as of yesterday. I’d been to a Best Buy yesterday to check out the Neo as a possible solution, but the tech guy was updating it, so I couldn’t do anything except look at the form factor. Despite it being a really nice product, I realized that, if you are invested in the iPad form factor, then you may be disinclined to go with the Neo-touchscreen iPad vs trackpad/keyboard Neo. I mentioned that to my friend, and he quickly agreed that was the case for him. So he’s back to deciding on an iPad Air and Magic Keyboard as final candidates. We’ll see'
  • Rick Povich on Apple not on Iran's hit list - '“…we are all eating shit sandwich served up by Captain Bonespurs” That’s pretty enlightening'
  • Joseph Bland on Why Apple's MacBook Neo makes Steven Sinofsky sad - 'He’s talking about lock-in. The biggest locked-in difference between Apple and Microsoft isn’t Microsoft’s “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” OS attitude; it’s Apple owning both the OS and the hardware. And note that Apple has done that across several OSs (Mac, Watch, iOS, Vision Pro, etcetera). Microsoft’s problem is, they should have committed to it 15 years ago, because building a highest quality hardware side takes a long time and costs a bundle. Trying to match Apple, which is also not resting on its laurels, is probably no longer possible, even with years of effort and tons of treasure. Plus, they have the albatross of having to shell out enormous sums by way of dividends, where Apple can, at any time, turn down the buyback tap with zero shareholder repercussions (because most folks have no clue how good they are fir long term investors). The hope was, of course, that AI would, like a caution flag in F1, allow Microsoft to catch up. The reality is, however, that AI is quickly commoditizing, and needs to partner with a high end, secure compute device to create real ROI. Advantage, Apple….'
  • Gregg Thurman on Greg Bates: Is Apple building an iPhonebook? Or maybe a MacPhone? - 'Upvoted Horace. The iPhone IS a computer. Putting voice communications into a desktop, laptop or mainframe is a piece of cake. All you need to add is connectivity to the Public Telephone Switched Network (PTSN). That connection was exclusively via a cable supporting a single pair of wires. Motorola introduced cellular (cellphones) capability in the ‘80s and changed voice communications forever. In 2007 Apple forever changed cell phones. They were now handheld computers.'
  • Joseph Bland on How to settle into Apple's walled garden for less than $1,900 - 'If you buy secondhand, you can get in a lot lower than that….'
  • Horace Dediu on Greg Bates: Is Apple building an iPhonebook? Or maybe a MacPhone? - '“The M series does compute for laptops like nothing else. The A series handles touch and other iOS abilities in a way the M series can’t.” This is not correct. The two processors are identical in their core architecture. The configurations differ in compromises on power consumption, size, memory bandwidth, graphics, neural engines, etc. Putting a phone in a computer is trivial and frankly it should shock everyone that there isn’t such a configuration. Especially since phones are put in not just iPhone but iPad, Watch and even cars. It’s not a technical reason there are not.'
  • David Emery on How to settle into Apple's walled garden for less than $1,900 - 'AK, DE, MT, NH, and OR have no state sales tax. Just sayin’…'
  • Stephen Gordon on How to settle into Apple's walled garden for less than $1,900 - 'Not bad, but if you get a Neo then you probably don’t need an iPad, so you can buy AirPods instead of wired EarPods.'
  • Fred Stein on Greg Bates: Is Apple building an iPhonebook? Or maybe a MacPhone? - 'Neo’s positioning is genius, priced to dramatically expand the Mac base. And despite being a high quality product, it doesn’t cannibalize the higher priced Macs. The feature gap is that large. Over time, A-series chips will get more powerful while eventually memory prices will come down, giving Neo headroom to move up in price and capability, as in Horace’s stairway to heaven.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is green - '“Max pain moves down $2.50…” Since Max Pain yesterday was $257.50, that puts it right at $255/share. “Who will buy this beautiful morning?” – From the stage production of “Oliver! IMO: People are continuing to raid their piggy banks. Tighten your safety belts.'
  • Fred Stein on Greg Bates: Is Apple building an iPhonebook? Or maybe a MacPhone? - 'Take the Neo at face value, or rather a value-priced MacBook, to dramatically increase the Mac addressable market. At 45% below the Air, Apple opens up a large segment of the world’s population.'
  • Joseph Bland on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Tech has had it rough for the YTD, with a few exceptions (INTC, although it was pretty beaten down, up 16.7%). AAPL, down 5.2% YTD, is pretty average, but IBM is down 15.3% abd MSFT is down 15.2%, and appear to be leveling out. TSLA is down an even 10.0%, but iMO is way overpriced even so. Bottom line: AAPL has had a haircut, but is far from alone in that. Are there better investments out there? Maybe, but the’ve had a fantastic week of good press, and for good reason.'