wmeredith a day ago

Wall Street will go wild.

Meanwhile, Apple's customers have just been handed the buggiest, jankiest set of operating systems that Apple has ever released. (In my estimation, as an Apple user of 30 years.)

  • hkpack a day ago

    As Apple customer I strongly disagree. Both iOS and macOS 26 look refreshing. Few visual bugs have almost zero impact on day to day life and TBH I love liquid glass effects.

    There were much more disastrous releases in the past, it is just everyone have an opinion about UI these days.

    • kylehotchkiss 13 hours ago

      Plus one! I love the visual refresh. The minor version bump with options to reduce the glass effect a little shows Apple is willing to iterate on the nits people have with it.

    • frosting1337 20 hours ago

      Also as an Apple customer, iOS and macOS' latest releases _look_ nice, but they're unpolished and iOS still has some bugs. They were correct in their assessment. New releases used to have actual quality to them, now they feel rushed out.

      • hkpack 8 hours ago

        I mean previous serious bugs included damaged file system, broken photo library, failing time machine backups, or when half of your files on iCloud drive disappears.

        I consider few glitching UI animations or misplaced transitions to be tolerable.

alsetmusic 19 hours ago

Chasing services revenue has been the worst decision of the Tim Cook era:

Ads for services I don't want or need, hassling me to finish "setting up" my phone by turning on features I don't want (like AppleIntelligence and Siri), notification badges on my Settings app trying to tell me about the crap Apple wants me to know about.

There's a rumor that Apple will start allowing ads in their Maps app next year. I couldn't have imagined they'd debase themselves this much a decade ago.

jack_tripper a day ago

And it's gonna be $200B+ when they put ads in everything like Google. Shareholders will love it even more.

I remember articles discussing how Steve Jobs was hated by Wall Street since he prioritized consumer experience above cost cutting and shareholder returns, while Tim Cook is loved by Wall Street since he prioritizes cost cutting and shareholder returns above consumer experience.

  • mandeepj a day ago

    > he prioritizes cost cutting

    I don't think Cook is into cost cutting.

    1. Almost no layoffs.

    2. Burnt money on Apple car

    3. Burnt money on Wireless charger

    4. Burnt $5B on Apple Park; Original budget was $1B

    5. And, so many other research areas.

    • jack_tripper a day ago

      >I don't think Cook is into cost cutting.

      Check the box contents of the first iPhone versus the latest iPhone.

      >4. Burnt $5B on Apple Park; Original budget was $1B

      Apple Park started under Steve Jobs.

      >5. And, so many other research areas.

      Their research is also mostly to cut costs. Develop a modem, not to sell modems and beat Qualcomm on the market, but to stop giving Qualcomm money and keep it for themselves as extra margins. Etc.

    • brailsafe a day ago

      Idk that I'd call building a headquarters for your super huge company burning money in the same way an experimental car project might be, or the Vision Pro.

  • jdlshore a day ago

    Do you have evidence that they’re going to put ads in everything, or are you just catastrophizing?

    (Yes, I know there are already some ads. That’s not evidence that they’re going to put $100bb more in.)

    • wmeredith a day ago

      Ads are coming to Apple Maps next year according to Mark Gurman at Bloomberg: https://www.engadget.com/apps/apple-is-reportedly-getting-re...

      • jdlshore 17 hours ago

        That’s pretty disappointing. I pay a premium for Apple devices because I perceive them as customer-first. Highlighting businesses because they pay more, and not because they’re better for my needs, is decidedly not customer-first. It’s absolutely something that could push me out of the Apple ecosystem.

      • mgh2 18 hours ago

        Only in maps…

moscoe a day ago

Tim Cook’s legacy… the enshittification of Apple Computer.

  • emchammer a day ago

    It's sad, because the issues at stake, which used to be considered highly-technical and the domain of experts or hackers, are now things that everybody understands.

quaddoggy a day ago

A quote by Charlie Munger comes to mind: "Invest in a business any fool can run, because someday a fool will".

He was, of course, speaking of Eddy Cue.