Recent Comments

  • 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'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/13-4/17/26) - 'Index futures are in the red with Russell 2000 Futures off 1.46% and Nasdaq Composite futures off 1.05% on news of the end of talks between the US and Iran and the developing US naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Overnight Apple is in the red $2.66 at $257.82.'
  • Bart Yee on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - '“Could Apple reverse-engineer a Celeron and steal Intel’s CPU business without tarnishing the Apple brand?“ Apple already has a better than Celeron chip in last year’s A18 Pro level chips. If Apple, as some have asserted, has boxed itself into a corner with more demand than it has planned for or in hand binned A18 Pro chips, oh well, Apple can then use regular A18 Pro chips and disable one GPU core or let it run, the cost differential isn’t going to be a deal breaker. If it was true that the A18 Pro line has already been shut down or shifted to other products and could prove “too costly” to restart, either Apple would eat the margin hit and restart it, or introduce a new model with either the A19 Pro and be perfectly justified in increasing the price say $50, or find binned A19 Pro chips to use at similar costs. Of course, with more expensive iPhone 17 Pro models selling briskly, Apple would be giving away margin by shifting A19 Pro chips to a lesser priced Mac Neo. But with current production of A19 chips, it could increase production with TSMC and not be in danger of coming up short for now.'
  • John Konopka on Mark Gurman: Apple glasses to ship in early 2027 - 'Just like the game Trump is playing with the markets. Talk up war and markets go down. Talk up a cease fire and the markets go up. Meanwhile family and friends place their bets just before each announcement.'
  • Joseph Bland on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - 'Sure you can, Gregg. But my gripe is less with the upgrade from one Mac to a newer one (although that has been a LOT smoother in the past), but with the upgrade to the older one’s system, which created havoc and forced my hand on upgrading to a newer Mac at the worst possible moment.'
  • Joseph Bland on Mark Gurman: Apple glasses to ship in early 2027 - 'More advance tech, PED, is always “just around the corner”. That old Orson Welles ad said it best: “We will serve no wine before it’s time.” The high end market is Apple’s to lose if it doesn’t keep playing it both close to its vest and keep their nose to the grindstone. So far, though, so good.'
  • Bill Fouche on Mark Gurman: Apple glasses to ship in early 2027 - 'Looking forward to Gurman’s article 8-10 months hence, in which he will “break the news” that Apple will miss its internal “deadline” for offering smart glasses to the public and is now hopelessly behind Meta due to gross mismanagement by Cook and others. A few weeks or months after that, he will cite his prior “market-moving” article on the subject and essentially retract it without ever admitting that he was being played by sources inside other companies or by Apple insiders who are looking to leave, or that he simply made it up to improve his Bloomberg bonus. The monkeys on CNBC will nod and drool.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/13-4/17/26) - 'The five-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. NVIDIA (NVDA) – up 1,209.93% Broadcom (AVGO) – up 665.94% Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) – up 201.79% Alphabet (GOOG) – up 176.23% Meta Platforms (META) – up 101.58% Apple (AAPL) – up 95.85% Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) – up 80.00% S&P 500 – up 65.11% NASDAQ Composite – up 64.77% Tesla (TSLA) – up 54.63% Microsoft (MSFT) – up 44.96% DJIA – up 41.76% Amazon (AMZN) – up 41.38% Russell 2000 – up 17.26% I’m surprised over the most recent 5-year period how closely the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ Composite tracked with one another. Apple is in the 6th spot on the performance list out of the 10 equities. The company’s share price performance outpaced all four major indexes over the 5-year period.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/13-4/17/26) - '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. Walmart is next on the list with a market cap of $1.01 trillion. NVIDIA (NVDA) $4.58 trillion Alphabet (GOOG) $3.84 trillion Apple (AAPL) $3.82 trillion Microsoft (MSFT) $2.75 trillion Amazon (AMZN) $2.56 trillion Broadcom (AVGO) $ 1.76 trillion Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) $1.63 trillion Meta Platforms (META) $1.59 trillion Tesla (TSLA) $1.31 trillion Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) $1.04 trillion'
  • Steven Philips on Mark Gurman: Apple glasses to ship in early 2027 - 'Could Eddy be the camera equipped pedant? Pendant? Oh! Never mind. 🙂'
  • Gregg Thurman 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. Does it seem like the good anything is always just a few years away, and when Apple fails to meet Eddie’s vapor wear time lines it’s always a failure on Apple’s part?'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Microsoft, start your engines - 'Ben: I also use Apple’s productivity products throughout my workday. My employer has over 500 locations spread across four counties in Southern California. The Microsoft 365 platform is available to all locations and we migrated to it for greater email security and services, and enhanced productivity tools. The platform allows me to engage more effectively with thousands of employees across our organization and there’s no additional cost to our location for the expanded and more secure services. This is among the reasons I don’t think strong sales of the MacBook Neo is a concern to Microsoft. Microsoft derives over 80% of its revenue from productivity solutions and cloud-based computing. Windows OEM licensing is only a small fraction of the company’s revenue mix today. When I joined the organization nearly 20 years ago I began transitioning my location to Macs. We’re now acquiring M4-based iMacs for the staff.'
  • Michael Goldfeder on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/13-4/17/26) - 'Big dip to scare folks with stop limit orders who wind up losing their stock and it climbs back up to $260 to end the week. Stay long my friends. Neo is here.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - 'Joe, I may be wrong but I don’t think you can upgrade a G3 to an M1 : ^)'
  • Joseph Bland on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - 'Once again, the focus of this data is market share, but Apple’s focus is installed base. Or at least it was: I’ve encountered a horror story when upgrading my old iMac to the newest system, which forced me to uograde right in the middle of a major personal project due to huge slowdowns and numerous reboots on my old iMac. That has cost me many, many wasted hours, to the point that I have now been forced to put the two Macs side by side on my desk. Not a happy camper.'
  • Chris De Armond on Apple's laptops win both market and revenue share - 'Microsoft makes laptops? Who knew?'
  • David Drinkwater on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - 'I think I took the same bait as Gregg, perhaps harder. As a semiconductor manufacturing guy, if I see “reverse engineer”, I take it quite literally, but my thought process, akin to David’s reply was “Why would Apple want to do that? It already has a pretty kick-ass set of A-series and M-series chips!” So I do think there is some room for confusion, and that, eventually, the market will sort itself out. I feel confident that Apple will come out winning. Perhaps not *the winner*, but definitely winning.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - 'Let me put it this way: Intel is a competent CPU designer, they could reverse engineer an A-Series CPU for Windows, why haven’t they? I think Microsoft’s Windows architecture is such that it prevents Intel from developing an A-Series equivalent CPU. The same is true for AMD, Qualcomm, and MediaTek. Is that a rational assumption?'
  • Gregg Thurman on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - 'Thanks for your observation David. My thought wasn’t about stealing Intel’s CPU business but, rather, why would Apple want to improve Windows or Android products. Why sell just the CPU when you can sell the entire product that uses Celeron CPUs. As to selling more A-Series powered laptops, I think that is going to happen over time.'
  • David Emery on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - 'Gregg, I think you misunderstood PED’s question. It’s about whether laptops equipped with Apple A-series processors will eventually outsell laptops equipped with Intel Celeron processors.'
  • Gregg Thurman on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - '”Here’s my question: Could Apple reverse-engineer a Celeron and steal Intel’s CPU business without tarnishing the Apple brand?” Why would Apple want any of that market? As a user, if you want Apple silicon buy a NEO or 17e.'
  • Gregg Thurman on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/13-4/17/26) - 'Buy an Apple Vision Pro and get 6 months of AppleTV with Spatial Vision free (Spatial Vision being a $10/month add on to AppleTV). Would I pay it?…in a heart beat when the content is there.'
  • Gregg Thurman on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/13-4/17/26) - 'All this positivity with no mention of Apple silicon, “AI” or Apple Vision Pro with all of Apple’s sports initiatives and movies. I’ve been thinking a lot about Apple’s move to put AppleTV on Amazon’s Prime streaming service. Apple produced content has reached critical mass in library size and as the best streaming content. Imagine a Wintel/Android viewer getting a short little notice every time they select an Apple production that the title is also available in Apple’s 3D Vision Pro. How many times would that viewer need to see that notice before they checked out the Vision Pro DEMO at an Apple Store? I think we are going to learn of more cross marketing initiatives at, or soon after WWDC.'
  • David Drinkwater on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/13-4/17/26) - 'Ya beat me to it! And I think Josh Brown was right with the paraphrased comment “Nikkei news is saying …!” I think that, if a person can sort misinformation, disinformation, and straight-out lies from the truth, there is a lot of money to be made without saying a word – just simply minding your own business and doing the trades you deem appropriate. And I think this is particularly true if you can read Trump, because he is a great, big Discordian Apple. The market swings hard on his misbehavior. *shrugs*'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's laptops win both market and revenue share - 'Google’s Search and AI partnerships is going to figure highly in Apple’s future with its recently announced memory compression software. If it’s as good as the PR says it is it could hurt memory venders, in addition to low cost labels of desktops, laptops, tablets and handsets. I see a major shift in technology market shares on the horizon.'
  • Fred Stein on This week's Apple trading strategies (4/13-4/17/26) - 'Beachball. How about that. Joseph Bland said it first, right here, years ago.'
  • Fred Stein on Architecture wars: Intel sells the most CPUs, Apple sells the best - 'Maybe Asymco can track these data over time. Thanks David for suggesting the long-term trend. MacMan plays PacMan eating up Wintel’s franchise. Neo nudges that growth percentage up a notch. As Einstein said, “Compounding is the 8th wonder of the world.”'
  • Gregg Thurman on Apple's laptops win both market and revenue share - '”HP sells lots of cheap laptops, it’s the US bargain brand.” I think of HP and DELL as enterprise products. They are purchased with support packages for both hardware and software. IBM has been offering Apple computers packaged with custom software developed specifically for Apple hardware. IBM has grown an impressive library of Apple specific software for the enterprise. Last I read (over a year ago) IBM had over 100 titles. With the NEO and 17e I can see IBM being more successful. When IBM took on the Apple product they changed out all their Wintel machines. At the end of their first year IBM found that productivity had increased and calls for tech support had declined substantially. I forget the percentage but greater than 50% rings a bell. From units market share I’d venture that DELL is in danger of slipping further and out of the Top 5. Maybe Mr. Dell should sell it to a ACER, ASUS or Microsoft. Microsoft has a history of buying failing manufacturers (Nokia).'
  • Fred Stein on Apple's laptops win both market and revenue share - 'The data says Neo now addresses the remaining 57% (subtracting Alienware, MSFT, etc.). HP, with an ASP, faces a memory cost brick wall.'