David Emery on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'The few times I go to WalMart (like today, to get cheapo reading glasses after cataract surgery, but before my next “new prescription” eye appointment), I make it a point to use my AMEX card. Let WalMart pay AMEX’s higher swipe fees!'
on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'This was surprising to me. I didn’t know PayPal was doing so well. Seems like a legacy hang over.'
on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'I use and patronize vendors and Apps that use Apple Pay checkout like Costco, Home Depot, Lowe’s, iHOP/Applebee’s, BJ’s Brewhouse, Olo checkout, etc. Although I have Sam’s Club membership and really like their Scan & Go feature with pretty good inventory and availability search (hey Costco, get with it!), I steadfastly refuse to join Walmart+, not interested in sharing even more of my shopping data with you. I need to use my local Walmart for pharmacy and other grocery items for convenience, but loathe the credit card checkout. At Costco, I can arrange a full cart’s barcodes upright, not unload a thing, have the cashier scan the entire cart in under 30 seconds, have already Apple Watch clicked Apple Pay payment (my contribution to Apple Pay revenues), and w/receipt in hand leave the cashier in under a minute, my consistent goal. I prefer to use and promote Apple Pay as a much more secure and convenient way to pay over anything else. I trust Apple and Apple Pay above all others because they have earned it.'
on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'Good morning Steven. How ya doing? Personally I’m great. I had a thought about Siri AI public beta and general release. What if Apple only demoed Siri AI capabilities that were ready for prime time today. Wouldn’t it behoove Apple to flesh out Siri AI as fast as reasonably possible? What if Apple increases Siri AI capabilities upon its public beta, and still more on Siri AI’s general release? What if Siri AI upgrades are released every 100 days for a year (WWDC 2027?), reverting to once a year thereafter?'
on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'But even with the energy, wit and outright craziness of “Good Morning! VIetnam!!”, and how well it still plays today, developers might like it but Analysts and pundits would say it’s just too vulgar, way over the top, and Cook just couldn’t pull it off, unbecoming of a CEO of his stature. But could John Ternus? Could, but wouldn’t. https://youtu.be/BIikfdNIHQE?si=Q8TEU5K26hu-JEV7'
on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'Opening WWDC with “Good Morning, Good Morning!” in a 40’s song and dance number is probably a bit much, and they’d likely criticize Cook’s tap dancing. An AI could probably put Cook in Kelly’s role, kinda like trying to make Cook replace Jobs. https://youtu.be/pyMU8O2B2Vs?si=8aep_ih1tBsXpZPe'
on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'Robert: Like you, I loved the keynote. What a huge step forward this will be compared to the current Siri. They still have two to three months to thoroughly test and fine-tune things. And if Apple delivers well across all its platforms and later across countries and multiple languages then iDevices will not just be aspirational but must-haves for all those not in the ecosystem yet. Imagine the revenues and income then!'
on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'So this is what Tim Cook has come to in retirement? Well bffffftttttt'
on Marques Brownlee gives WWDC26 an intelligent once-over (video) - ' So be real, both presenter and Apple are trying to sell something to make revenue. Well, DUH! (I’m back to the computer after 24 hour ‘quarantine’ from reading/screen usage after cataract surgery.)'
on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'Raj: Yes. What was announced on Monday will lead to a so-called iPhone super cycle beginning this fall. What I find surprising is the fact WWDC is a conference for developers, not analysts or consumers and it’s the developers that will “bring the goods” to the public. I was enthralled by what I saw in the keynote. Let’s all keep in mind following the sell-off Apple is trading back where it was trading in early May. By September we’ll see a much different story unfold.'
on J.P.Morgan: Apple Pay is moving up the fintech money stream - 'Lured in by the 5% cash back on purchases as a Walmart+ member with the OnePay card (first year’s Walmart+ membership is free under the promotion) and my fascination with Walmart’s integration of technology into all of it processes, including now AI, I acquired the card and appreciate how much Apple Pay has pushed innovation into the checkout process. From the time I identify myself at the Walmart checkout by inputting my mobile number, everything just follows, including using the QR code through the OnePay app to authorize payment. Still, there’s something to just pushing the side button on an iPhone or Apple Watch, gathering your newly bought stuff and gingerly leaving the store. Apple Pay makes it so easy and it’s just one motion!'
on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'Thank you Tim for growing this company that I care deeply about and setting values that try to lift up everyone. That is extraordinary. And GOOOOD MOOOORNING!'
on Premarket: Apple is red - '**Bart, I’m so sorry to learn your daughter had to spend such a long period in the hospital…that’s terrible. I hope the minivan has made a real difference in her life and I’m sure you were pleased you were able to provide it for her. My yearly RMD sometime feels financially burdensome, but I can never complain about having to pay taxes on it, because, as for you, AAPL has done more for my wife and myself financially in our retirement than we ever could have hoped or expected. I also feel the same way about our estimated taxes. Can I really be upset that AAPL has done so well we need to pay higher taxes in retirement than during our work life? I don’t think so. As far as frenzied stock action, since my wife and I have been 100% invested in AAPL since 12/22/00, we’ve missed out on ALL of “the Go-Go Yo-Yo AI frenzied stock action” of any other stocks…and I’m very happy we have. 🙂 Bart Yee said:”On top of that, my 1970 914-6 is finally exiting the chassis , body and paint stage after 6 years of work and now is ready for re-assembly, so now more cubic money expenditure over the next 12-18 months. “Hope my bad knees will allow me to use the damn clutch!” **What’s a clutch? 🙂 Glad your vehicle is close to being ready to drive. Just from how you write about it, I can sense the excitement you must be feeling. We’ve been driving the same car since 2012 and I haven’t driven a car with a clutch for many years. Bart Yee said:”Anyway, this AAPL dip will pass, meanwhile Apple gets some discounted shares for buybacks IF they are buying some back this month, we’ll see at earnings. I’ll post a bit of good news that will buoy the stock, or at least your convictions, despite some people’s letdown with WWDC or regular “sell the news and move on to another shiny” reaction.” **I completely agree with you. Most of the folks who speak poorly of AAPL/Apple as an investment or a stock to trade, don’t realize how buy-and-hold with a great stock can work so well over the years. As you know, Apple stock was down -34.6% in 2002, -56.9% in 2008, -4.6% in 2015, -6.8% in 2018 and -26.8% in 2022. And yet, for long-term, buy-and-hold investors, like many on Apple 3.0, it’s given spectacular returns. If the analysts who continually badmouth AAPL as an investment were really that knowledgeable about investing, they’d be retired and living on their own private island instead of working as analysts. I’m wishing the best of health to you and your daughter…and good luck with that clutch! 🙂'
on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'What a colossal waste of time that was. Slow news day PED?'
on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'Really, who cares how dynamic (or, not dynamic) TC is? For my part, I’m grateful to Cook for being an outstanding steward of a great company when one of the most dynamic people in the modern era of business left as its CEO. His expertise and know-how created value for me and my family beyond our wildest dreams. Thanks Mr. Cook.'
on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'There will be five upgrades to the 18 Pro Max in my family; three of them are mainly to get the full AI experience.'
on Tim Cook gets coached on saying 'good morning' - 'My take: Tim Cook, the least dynamic of them all.“ I think our goal in life is to, not necessarily be dynamic, but to be ourselves. I’ve never gotten the impression that Tim Cook was trying to be someone else. But you’re right- I probably would not watch a movie starring TC.'
on WSJ reporter's hands-on Siri AI demo was hands-off - 'Yes, Markus Brownlee promised to do just that, download the dev release and report his experience.'
on WSJ reporter's hands-on Siri AI demo was hands-off - '“ My take: I’ve done a search. As near as I can tell, no journalist has yet to have a hands-on Siri AI experience with, you know, their own hands.” Hands-on has always referred to hardware releases, not software. Before 2014 there were a few instances of journalists having hands-on experience before beta release to developers, but not since then. By the way, since the beta version has been released, any journalists who is a registered developer can have hands-on as we speak. And I’m sure we will be hearing from them soon. Hiccups from Gemini or Claude is old news. But errors from SiriAI will generate a lot of new clicks.'
on WSJ reporter's hands-on Siri AI demo was hands-off - 'WWDC26 State of the Union Recap – to whom it may interest: https://youtu.be/NM8krtCkEmQ?is=1K_mUytXsTwhXX2C'
on Premarket: Apple was green, turned red - 'It’s funny how no analyst is focusing on this (future-positive) thing that will favor AAPL: All the fancy AI will only work on iPhone 17 Pro/Air or later. This will lead to a frenzy of upgrades in the next few years.'
on Premarket: Apple is red - 'After finishing off $10.99 on Tuesday at $290.55, Apple’s share price is off just $0.04 at $290.51 overnight. Index futures are definitely in the red as we move toward Wednesday’s opening bell.'
on Marques Brownlee gives WWDC26 an intelligent once-over (video) - 'grantbbunker recently supplied this link: https://9to5mac.com/2026/06/08/craig-federighi-details-apples-collaboration-with-google-for-siri-ai-in-ios-27/ Tying what Mr. Federighi says in the above link with the post above Apple statement, gives me a thought on the “deal” Apple and Alphabet cooked up. There are zero hooks inside Apple for Google. What they got is a “tenant” for their server farms and the good press that made it look like they would get more. Yes, there’s now a direct link through those strictly cordoned off Google Cloud/iCloud farms and Nvidia graphics-processing units, and also some strictly iCloud to Nvidia links, but none of Apple user’s data will pass out of Apple’s control. That, IMO, is a huge Apple accomplishment.'
on Marques Brownlee gives WWDC26 an intelligent once-over (video) - 'I, too, loved HyperCard. To see me create my own (albeit primitive ugly) apps back in the day was totally fun! I used it then to create storybooks or what I would call my music videos or photo albums now using Final Cut Pro but with much more interactiveness because of its hyperlink buttons & hotspots. Sigh …'
on Marques Brownlee gives WWDC26 an intelligent once-over (video) - 'From Barron’s today: ““We are collaborating with Google and NVIDIA to run new Apple Intelligence workloads on Google Cloud, extending our industry-leading PCC [private cloud compute] privacy commitments to third-party data centers for the first time,” Apple said in a statement on Monday.”'
on Marques Brownlee gives WWDC26 an intelligent once-over (video) - 'So how exactly has Apple’s iPhone done WITHOUT a conversant smart Siri and long delayed Apple Intelligence? Well, here’s one data point from Omdia, published May 27, 2026, emphasis and Italics mine: https://omdia.tech.informa.com/pr/2026/may/us-smartphone-market-declined-3percent-in-1q26-amid-pricing-pressure-and-carrier-subsidy-shifts Omdia: US smartphone market declined 3% in 1Q26 amid pricing pressure and carrier subsidy shifts “LONDON, May 27, 2026: The US smartphone market declined 3% year over year to 33.4 million units in 1Q26, according to Omdia’s latest research. The comparison was against an elevated 1Q25 base when vendors and carriers accelerated inventory build-up ahead of potential US tariff actions. Beyond this comparison effect, US smartphone shipments were pressured by a more restrained carrier upgrade environment, rising memory and storage costs, and delayed device launches that compressed sell-through for key premium models. However, anticipated price increases also drove channel pull-forward for some budget models ahead of 2Q26. • Apple maintained its leading position in Q1 2026 despite a 3% year YoY decline. Apple benefited from Samsung’s delayed Galaxy S26 launch, limiting direct premium Android competition. The iPhone 17 series accounted for 70% of Apple’s shipments, while aggressive iPhone 15 prepaid promotions continued supporting demand in lower price tiers. • Samsung ranked second in Q1 2026, with shipments declining 5% year over year as the delayed Galaxy S26 launch. Despite the later timing, the S26 series showed strong early traction, with pre-orders up nearly 25% versus the S25 series. Samsung relied heavily on prepaid-driven A-series demand during Q1, led by the Galaxy A17. Motorola was the only major vendor to grow in Q126, with shipments rising 18% year over year. Growth was driven primarily by the refreshed Moto G portfolio, which accounted for more than 70% of Motorola’s quarterly shipments. Carrier and prepaid channels also appeared to pull forward inventory ahead of Motorola’s April price increases. Google shipments fell 7% year over year in Q126, as the Pixel 10 series failed to replicate the momentum of the Pixel 9 lineup a year earlier. The earlier launch of the Pixel 10a helped offset some of the decline, while aggressive carrier promotions remained central to Google’s strategy to expand Pixel demand beyond its core premium user base. “The US smartphone market is becoming increasingly polarized, with premium and entry-tier devices proving far more resilient,” added Chen. “In 1Q26, the $800+ premium segment declined only 1% year over year, supported by Apple and carrier financing. The sub-$300 segment grew by 8%, helped by prepaid demand, plan-linked promotions, and channel pull-forward ahead of price increases on select value models. Meanwhile, pressure was concentrated in the middle of the market, with the $300–599 segment declining 19% and the $600–799 segment falling 6%. This suggests that rising device costs and more selective carrier subsidies put the most [SC1] pressure on Android mid-range and mid-to-high-end devices, while premium models and budget devices remained better supported by US channel structures.” My take, see shipments table at end of article: 33.4M total shipped Q1 2026 Apple 19.9M, 60% US share by vol., -3% YoY, smallest drop (Considering Americas revenue jumped 12% despite a -3% drop in iPhone sales, ASP must have increased as well as other hardware and Services revenues) Samsung 7.9M 24% share -5% YoY, 2nd smallest drop (incl small but useful amt. S26 sales, but much greater reliance on mid-low A series sales) overall -> less than half of Apple’s sales, and much lower ASP of <$350. Motorola (Lenovo) 3.6M 11% +18% YoY. An order of magnitude lower in sales from Samsung but they do have a US following Google 0.6M 3% vs 0.9M -7% YoY, a very, very distant 4th (Android & Pixel fans will say “see, we are 4th in the US!!” but w/just 600,000 sold in the quarter, that’s just 200,000/mo avg., less than Apple’s quarterly daily sales. (221K/day!). This performance supposedly in Google’s home and strongest market. TCL 0.5M 2% -17% YoY, mostly budget, prepaid models, a very small slice of the US market. Others makes up another 0.6M sales, 2% of market, down -28% YoY. Presumably, these are Chinese OEM imports like Xiaomi, OnePlus, Nothing, etc. sold on Amazon, all hit hard or became less available. Again, these iPhone sales were without the benefit of integrated working AI or Siri.'
on Marques Brownlee gives WWDC26 an intelligent once-over (video) - 'John Konopka said: “Btw, I love AppleScript and use it pretty much every day.” **I envy that, John. I’ve never used AppleScript but I was responsible for the Paperless Factory(based on Hypercard) at Lockheed-Martin in Sunnyvale before I retired. I loved working with Hypercard and felt I could create anything which needed to be presented on the assembly area computers that would help the assemblers, production control and engineers. The basic Paperless Factory module increased in size from 3.5K to 3.5M while I was responsible for it. 🙂'
on Marques Brownlee gives WWDC26 an intelligent once-over (video) - 'In the past when you’d meet someone who was a fast talker, we’d say they had a silver tongue or was a smooth talker. And when we knew they could make money from us, the red flags would go up, unless you were completely naive. While we’re listening, we’re asking ourselves what’s his angle, what’s he trying to get me to do, or better yet, how is he gonna make money off of me. And looking at Brownlee’s net worth, he’s very good at it. Looking thru wikipedia, I don’t find any credentials or training that would make his tech opinions of value; but I do find someone who communicates well. Very well. And I like it when I hear him say things I want to hear. Then I ask myself- do I want the truth, or just have my ears tickled? It is nice when both happen at the same time.'


