David Drinkwater on Who's coming to the July 11 Apple 3.0 meetup? - 'Boston is practically in PED’s back yard, so that, at least, would be an easy trip. As a kid and as a prep school and university alum, I’ve driven the southern New Hampshire / Vermont and northern Massachusetts east-west byways many, many times. There are some gorgeous views out there in the sticks.'
on Who's coming to the July 11 Apple 3.0 meetup? - 'July or June? Is it not associated with WWDC this week?'
on Who's coming to the July 11 Apple 3.0 meetup? - 'It’s at Cafe Pro Bono in Palo Alto on July 11. Joe has not set a time yet – maybe a cocktail hour before dinner would be a good idea? Sort of a meet and mingle before sitting down for dinner. Thanks to Joe for all his work setting this up!'
on Who's coming to the July 11 Apple 3.0 meetup? - 'If this is successful, I hope there’ll be a Boston meet. In the meantime, safe travels to PED and others attending.'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/8-6/12/26) - 'These are the year-to-date (YTD) share price performances of the Terrific Ten equities ranked by percentage gains in share prices over this time and the percentage gains in the major stock indexes over the same period. The equities are ranked following last week’s dramatic market sell-off. Four of the ten equities are in the red on share price performance so far this year. Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) up 38.58% Alphabet (GOOG) up 16.56% Russell 2000 – up 13.31% Apple (AAPL) – up13.05% Broadcom (AVGO) – up 11.45% NASDAQ Composite – up 10.62% NVIDIA (NVDA) up 9.97% S&P 500 – up 7.86% Amazon (AMZN) up 6.59% DJIA – up 5.83% Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) – down (2.82%) Meta Platforms (META) down (10.16%) Tesla (TSLA) down (13.06%) Microsoft (MSFT) down (13.84%)'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/8-6/12/26) - 'Entering this week’s trading, below is the market cap scoreboard of the Terrific Ten. These are the ten most valuable enterprises traded on US exchanges. This is a look at the numbers following last week’s dramatic sell-off and ahead of Apple’s much-anticipated WWDC 2026 keynote address scheduled for tomorrow. For this week’s scoreboard Apple returns (barely) to the #2 spot and Micron falls off the list. Say hello (again!) to Berkshire Hathaway in the #10 spot. NVIDIA (NVDA) $4.97 trillion Apple (AAPL) $4.51 trillion Alphabet (GOOG) $4.50 trillion Microsoft (MSFT) $3.10 trillion Amazon (AMZN) $2.65 trillion Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) $1.94trillion Broadcom (AVGO) $ 1.83 trillion Meta Platforms (META) $1.51 trillion Tesla (TSLA) $1.47 trillion Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) $1.05 trillion'
on Who's coming to the July 11 Apple 3.0 meetup? - 'Date? Time? And place? There is going to be a lot to talk about after this week'
on This week's Apple trading strategies (6/8-6/12/26) - 'I am excited for the events of this week. I will be traveling on a train on the East Coast Monday morning, so hopefully I will have reception. I do have some shares I need to sell, but I’m thinking that we will get a little boost this week or soon following. So I’m gonna wait a few weeks.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - 'Robert, I’ve been saying it for quite a while, disappointed that you had to ask. In my mind there are only two things of value for Apple to announce: a) anything that clarifies Apple’s “AI” vision (including SIRI) that will ship with iPhone 18, and b) Vision Pro II and its ecosystem of vision apps/Services that will ship during the December quarter. Everything else will be noise.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - 'Gregg: What do you expect to be announced on Monday?'
on CNBC: What to expect from Apple at WWDC 26 (video) - '”I think she did a pretty good job.” In other words, “The blind leading the blind”.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - 'I have to disagree with Alex Kantrowitz that Apple hasn’t released anything with AI yet. Apple uses a lot of AI, it just hasn’t been released as a chatbot. The tools for improving photos or touching up photos work well. In the messages app the suggestions for upcoming words have gotten a lot better. I see other places where little messages pop up about upcoming flights or other events. They are subtle, not in your face prompts. I haven’t used them but Apple also released a bunch of app updates (Pages, Numbers, Final Cut, …) with AI tools for images and writing.'
on CNBC: What to expect from Apple at WWDC 26 (video) - 'I’m not going to be as harsh on her as the rest of you. I think we all need to appreciate that by definition, everyone here has pretty deep knowledge of all things Apple. We are like at a graduate school/Ph.D. level and of course she is speaking at a High School/Undergraduate level. E.g. people who watch CNBC, but don’t follow Apple anywhere near as deeply as anyone here. Viewed from that perspective, I think she did a pretty good job.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - 'Robert, I think I can answer that. For all the hype surrounding “AI”, even though the majority of potential users want to use it, they have no idea how. By embedding “AI” in OSX (MacOS 27, iOS 27, et al) Apple has solved that issue. I think showing how “AI” improves searches, photography and such, would excite and encourage “AI” adoption, but only on Apple devices capable of running xxOS27.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - 'Another anecdote about being told is Paul Anka. When being interviewed by Dick Clark on American Bandstand, Paul responded to a question about how he knew any of his songs were going to be hits. Paul said, “I always asked my daughter before releasing a new song”.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - '”Still wondering why no one talks about developer tools or Edge Agentic.” That news isn’t anchored in the past yet. When I was in the Navy we used to say, “flush hard, it’s a long was to the mess deck”. It’s kind of like that among analysts, they don’t know anything until they hear it from someone else (usually happy consumers). Warren Buffet is a good example of that. When asked why he hadn’t bought technology stocks he’d always respond, “I don’t understand that industry”. But then his most profitable purchase ever was AAPL. When asked why AAPL, he related how on his weekly trips to a favorite ice cream shop he noticed they weren’t talking among themselves anymore. They were all engaged with their iPhones. He had to see it to understand how profound the iPhone was. Analysts should take their grandchildren out for ice cream more often.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - '@PED: Thank you for this clip. I did get to listen to Fast Money yesterday but not Closing Bell. Thank you for filling in the blanks so-to-speak. With the billions (literally) of Apple-branded devices in use today, what announcement on Monday might be “good enough” for consumers to keep them wedded to the Apple eco-system and hardware platforms?'
on CNBC: What to expect from Apple at WWDC 26 (video) - 'Worse, Gregg: They’re Luddites, obsessed with freezing future progress….'
on Saturday Apple video: Steve Jobs says 'jump' (1999) - 'You’re gonna need a MUCH bigger air mattress, Michael….'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - 'Still wondering why no one talks about developer tools or Edge Agentic. All three see Apple as the gateway to cloud LLMs. No one mentioned the rampage to get the Mac Mini for edge AI; Nor Jensen’s rush to announce RTX Spark to compete with M-series; Nor Apple’s LMX to run LLMs on Apple devices and easily migrate to CUDA if massive scale is needed for LMX authored applications.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - 'Dan’s wardrobe is his way of dismissing the group think of WS.'
on CNBC: What to expect from Apple at WWDC 26 (video) - 'They shouldn’t be called analysts. They are historians, attempting to make hay from the past.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - 'Dan Ives is the financial world’s fashion equivalent of what Chi Chi Rodriguez was to the golfing community back in the day.'
on CNBC: What to expect from Apple at WWDC 26 (video) - 'Buy the rumor. Sell the news. Apple didn’t participate in the AI Capex race. Will Apple benefit by commoditizing AI? Tim Cook’s last opportunity to do something at the WWDC. Apple has no AI Strategy. Stock down 20% heading into WWDC in 2025 Stock up 16% heading into WWDC 2026. The only drivel she didn’t parrot was the proverbial: “The Law of Large Numbers.” She’s a genius.'
on Saturday Apple video: Steve Jobs says 'jump' (1999) - 'For those coming to the July 11, 2026 Apple 3.0 get together in Palo Alto, rumor has it that our very own Sacto Joe Bland will be recreating this feat on that date. This will only add to an insanely great event.'
on Ives and Kantrowitz on Apple's WWDC (video) - 'Better than the previous video. Loved the detail in Dan’s jacket! 🙂'
on Wedbush: AI will add $15 billion to Apple's services revenue - '” Quite possibly Apple would then exceed $500B in revenues for FY2027.” What I find most exciting about your work Bart, (good stuff by the way) is that your $500 Billion is based solely on Services growth. Right now, because of perceived need for more powerful computers (that don’t require portable nuclear power plants to keep them functioning into the night), Macs are now the computers of choice, and as a consequence are gaining share, as are iPads, Apple Watches, Air Pods, and iPhones. I believe that the time will come (5 years?) when $500 Billion will be considered chump change.'


