Recent Comments

  • Rodney Avilla on NYT: The ranks of genAI skeptics is growing - '“hallucinations are a feature.” Love it! Like the car salesman who said “that dent actually helps with aerodynamics”'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'Approaching 11am in the east and Apple is up $0.19 at $272.05. Broadcom is in the green $7.75 or 2.24% at $353.85. Goldman Sachs is ahead $15.33 at $894.33. Vertiv Holdings, a data center supplier, is higher by $13.60 or 8.40% at $175.61. Apple supplier Corning has advanced $1.83 or 2.09% and is currently trading at $89.39. At present 53% of S&P 500 components are trading above Wednesday’s closing prices.'
  • David Emery on NYT: The ranks of genAI skeptics is growing - 'An LLM trained with specific qualified content is substantially different from an LLM trained by sucking down the entire internet. I still think “learn to train” will be the critical skill that replaces “learn to code”. It’ll be figuring out how to use various kinds of AI to accomplish reasonably well-defined tasks, along with figuring out how to verify the results. A lot of “learn to train” should focus on ‘how to tell when the AI gets it wrong’, that’s both establishing global “shall not” conditions, and local “this kind of result is invalid.”'
  • Bart Yee on AppleInsider calls BS on the FT's Apple Vision Pro sales numbers - 'Rodney, the FT quoted AVP sales was 45,000 unit for the holiday quarter, not for just December month. I don’t know if there is any significant seasonality to AVP sales but let’s assume there is more sales in the December holiday quarter and the rest of the year averages out to 30,000/quarter or roughly 10,000/month Jan-September. That’s 90,000 + 45,000 =135,000 for 2025. Now I do not assume the ASP is $3500 since many will also buy more memory (512GB version is $3699), additional straps, batteries, wireless Magic keyboards, Zeiss optical inserts, etc. I put the ASP at $3750. So for those 45,000 buyers in q4 quarter, it’s $168,750,000 quarterly revenue and for the 135,000 for the year, $506M roughly.'
  • Romeo Esparrago on NYT: The ranks of genAI skeptics is growing - 'Part 2 Why I Like genAi I used Elephas Ai to create a mini-brain. For Elephas, this is basically an SLM (Small Language Model) very specific to only getting poured data that I feed it – it’s offline so it doesn’t reference the web, but does tap to an LLM of my choosing. Long story short, I poured examples of project plans & content I’ve done in the past 5 years and specific slides, reports, spreadsheets, webpages→PDFs, about a large project program I’m in, into this min-brain. I then asked Elephas to generate me a project plan giving it all the things a veteran PM should know, e.g. task durations, schedules, team names & their roles & responsibilities & % availability to the project, et al. And voila, it ultimately generated (with me vetting & iterating/finetuning the prompts) a 1,200-task project plan broken out in four large phases. I would say a week of prep & prompting & refining, a week of copying & pasting each task (and its detailed info) into a Wrike project task plan. This would have taken me months to do pre-genAi. My opinion is that the efficiency gain from genAi works best if you’re a seasoned subject matter expert in that particular field, educated enough in those relevant areas, long-experienced in both successful & unsuccessful aspects of what you’ve done, and expertly skilled in whatever it is that’s needed. If you’re clueless and aski Ai to help you, hopefully it’s not for a job you’re in, they’ll definitely find someone else better than you at that point. Cheers!'
  • Romeo Esparrago on NYT: The ranks of genAI skeptics is growing - ' Part 1 Why I Don’t Like genAI I’m purposely being vague about this true story. A member of a doctoral program’s cohort got booted off the program because that person (already known for suspecting its use for that person’s slides & posters with obviously inconsistent, web-pulled images & graphs) got plainly caught. There was a 4-question test given to them online so they can, as usual, take it at home. The last Q had a typo on an acronym. Everyone who read it and knew the subject knew the context and realized the mistake. They answered as correctly as they did. The person we’re talking about put that Q (and likely the other Q’s) into a GPT and it artificially successfully found an answer for that typo acronym. But very wrong for the test. Bottom line, investigated, the Q was thrown into various GPT’s to validate the wrong answer was from an Ai, and the individual was kicked off the program. Unfortunately for the good folks, all tests forward will be done in a classroom without access to any personal e-Devices. ‘Nuff Said’ (hats off to Stan Lee)'
  • Romeo Esparrago on NYT: The ranks of genAI skeptics is growing - 'This video has an  angle but off-topic from above unless you note that it’s made by a team of folks using mostly Blender, not genAi . Mayhaps Mr. Philip can pop this out as its own story if it’s a slow news day. “I shrunk down to an M5 chip” youtu.be/Jh9pFp1oM7E'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Premarket: Apple is green - 'It’s the first trading day of the new year and index futures are green! Apple is ahead $1.19 ahead of the bell at $273.05. Microsoft is up $2.45 at $486.07 and Alphabet has gained $3.15 at $316.95 pre-market. This is a good way to start the day, end the week and begin a new year!'
  • David Emery on NYT: The ranks of genAI skeptics is growing - 'Even the NYT gets it right sometimes 🙂 🙂 And on this topic, I’ll claim to be a trendsetter. I’ve always been a big skeptic of LLM AI because of its lack of trust, and the industry thinks “hallucinations are a feature.”'
  • Greg Lippert on NYT: The ranks of genAI skeptics is growing - 'imagine dat…'
  • Bart Yee on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'Just checked again on Jan. 2, 2026. Woot have original Tensor G2 chipped 512GB models of the original 2023 Google Pixel Fold left in open box form from Verizon, selling for $425, so price has dropped, IMO, being blown out at a huge 78% discount to its original price of $1920 for the 512GB model. Apparently brand new 2023 Tensor G2 Folds w/256GB, unlocked, are now at $519, again a huge discount of 71% off its original $1799 price. I doubt these prices cover even 1/2 of the BOM costs, so IMO Google is selling or blowing out remaining inventory at a huge loss, probably at even lower costs to these websites to liquidate. That’s the classic problem for Android makers, even Google Pixels, little to no pricing power or stability. If an Android buyer was willing to wait long enough, prices will drop heavily as demand drops, people lose interest, and newer generations of the same model appear. Former “premium” models lose selling value even faster than their residual value, essentially creating a giant vacuum sucking sound to margins and revenues, or become just so much of a write off for Google. And even then, trouble selling them, here now 2.5 years later. No wonder some of the comments mention that it doesn’t matter if support is less than 5 years, they’ll be upgrading again within a few years. This doesn’t breed brand loyalty nor confidence in long term reliability like for Apple products.'
  • Gregg Thurman on AppleInsider calls BS on the FT's Apple Vision Pro sales numbers - 'Rodney, 900,000 screen units is consistent with Sony’s stated total annual production capacity. Each Vision Pro requires 2 Vision Pro screens, reducing the total number of Vision Pro’s produced annually to 450,000 units, AND SELLING THEM ALL AT $3,500 EACH. Until production exceeds 900,000 individual units annually there is no need to lower Vision Pro pricing. Sony’s inability to increase production capacity has led to Apple contracting with Chinese firms BOE and Seeya for Vision Pro screens.'
  • Ron Fredrick on AppleInsider calls BS on the FT's Apple Vision Pro sales numbers - 'For those on Apple 3.0 who don’t have experience with a Vision Pro, it may be helpful to take a brief look at a page on Reddit where users post their responses to some of the immersive videos and other apps that are available for the Vision Pro. It’s difficult to read some of the comments and not get a good sense of the great enthusiasm so many people have about Apple’s “flop” product. https(colon)//www.reddit(dot)com/r/VisionPro/'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'In just over eight hours the opening bell rings on the first trading day of 2026! Index futures are green heading into the overnight hours. With the US markets closed for the holiday Apple is up overnight $1.18 at $273.04. Conditions are looking good as we commence 2026 trading!'
  • Gregg Thurman on FT: Apple has sharply cut Vision Pro production and promotion - 'Correctomundo Greg'
  • Gregg Thurman on FT: Apple has sharply cut Vision Pro production and promotion - ' they just needed to drop the (mostly) pointless outward facing eyeballs Just as Apple drops some features from lesser models of iPad and iPhone why should they? Just as I’ve said many times, quoting Cook when he said, supply of Vision Pro screens were limited to ~500,000 Vision Pro units per year. It would be an absolutely wonderful if the naysayers would fact check my WWDC23 quote, instead of regurgitating the same nonsense every time a rumor monger spouts the same nonsense. But I guess that would be too much to expect. Until supply is readily available there is no reason to lower prices. Even if the orders increased Apple can’t produce them because annual supple hasn’t increased since WWDC23’s 500,000 level.'
  • David Drinkwater on AppleInsider calls BS on the FT's Apple Vision Pro sales numbers - 'I realize here that I torqued up my math (mostly a dyslexic transliteration) from $157 million (correct) to $175 million (fat fingers or something). Still, as suggested in this article, not a dismal failure.'
  • David Drinkwater on FT: Apple has sharply cut Vision Pro production and promotion - 'The mention of sports is an interesting thing. In the last 24 hours (can’t remember the specific context) a friend of mine was sharing a phone video (a panorama, I think) of a football game. I didn’t get invited into the conversation, so I stayed moot. The distant view of his phone screen was pretty impressive, but then I thought: “what about all this talk on PED 3.0 about an immersive sports experience using an Apple Vision Pr?” If what Vinnie had in his hand looked “good” or “cool”, imagine what the AVP sports offering is going to look like. I think it will be stellar. And one way or another, I think it will sell a lot of devices. I don’t care which ones. Just a lot, please. Thankyouverymuch!'
  • David Drinkwater on FT: Apple has sharply cut Vision Pro production and promotion - '45000*$3500 (rounding error) = $175,000,000 That $175 million, y’all. That’ll pay for a lot of research and development work, and that’s only one fiscal quarter of anticipated sales! Even if the current headset and it’s older/younger brother are only research projects to develop a new world device concept, that’s a pretty good commercial return to boost further “research” efforts.'
  • Rodney Avilla on AppleInsider calls BS on the FT's Apple Vision Pro sales numbers - '“ My take: I wonder about Hilliard’s (unsourced) 1 million active users. That’s twice as many users as units sold.” It was reported that Apple sold 450k units in 2024. If they sold 45k in December 2025, he’s probably assuming that Apple sold about the same number in 2025 as in 2024, maybe slightly more. 900k-950k total for 2 years would be around 1M'
  • David Drinkwater on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'I typed a reply, but I will submit it to /dev/null.'
  • John Konopka on FT: Apple has sharply cut Vision Pro production and promotion - '@Rodney According to the AppleInsider article Apple moved production to Vietnam, they didn’t cease production. Lazy reporting.'
  • Steven Philips on The trillions spent on new computing infrastructure suddenly makes sense to me - 'I thought protein folding was doubling over the ham slices in my sandwich.'
  • Greg Lippert on FT: Apple has sharply cut Vision Pro production and promotion - 'Tommo says I told ya so… lol! Nothing to see here folks!'
  • Steven Philips on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'And hopefully Apple will lead the pack.'
  • Steven Philips on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'And a few other world “leaders” – some closer to home. 🙁'
  • Steven Philips on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'I’ll settle for a little artificial joy if I can find real intelligence (aside from 3.0. 🙂 )'
  • Steven Philips on FT: Apple has sharply cut Vision Pro production and promotion - 'Woodring seems to be implying that glasses would be a better form factor. Not so IMHO. Both forms are limited. But MOST of what people seem to suggest glasses can do I can pretty easily do on my iPhone. The same can’t be said about AVP. But Apple has really pissed me off with how they’ve handled it. I’ve said before that they just needed to drop the (mostly) pointless outward facing eyeballs and associated cameras to drop significant weight, size and cost. It would have been an easy change. I question the thinking of whoever was/is in charge of this.'
  • Robert Paul Leitao on Markets are closed. Enjoy the day off. - 'David: Our good friend Mike Wilson at Morgan Stanley is forecasting 7,800 for the S&P 500 by the end of this year. That’s a nearly 14% gain from yesterday’s closing level of 6,845.50. I’m optimistic 2026 will be a strong year for the economy, for corporate profit growth and consequently share price appreciation. May 2026 be a year of peace and prosperity for everyone in the Apple 3.0 community.'
  • David Emery on Apple 3.0 New Year's eve predictions and purchases - 'Woot has had a large number of Google Folds for less than $600 for the past week. Seems like they’re not hot sellers, even at that price.'