The only reason to be concerned is the trade war going on between the U.S and 
China. China is banning several iphones on the premise that it violates several 
patents submitted by a chinese company for instance. 

Apple has built its business model on production being done outside, with 80% 
of the workforce being small hands assembling the phones, and about 250k 
employees in marketing/design/sales. The verticality of Apple products is its 
strongest as well as its weakest point, the latter because it relies on an 
economic situation within which we are distancing ourselves gradually. 
Outsourcing.

So the word gradual is essential here. Saying things like the end of Apple is 
simply click bate and total BS. A lot of media outlets really use wording to 
get sales, as its their only way of generating income. For instance, the new 
scientist keeps putting sensationalist titles for very little substance, and a 
lot of research made by arts bachelors who have no idea about science but rely 
on their investigative skills to proove a point, not statistical truths or 
correct empirical studies.

So Forbes telling me that Apple is dead is stretching it, though I am concerned 
about the overt political orientation some are taking.

I just want a great screen reader and platform that allows me to do what I need 
to, with the least path of resistance. Apple gives me that right now, compared 
to other platforms, so I fully support this great company.



> On 24 Jan 2019, at 5:54 am, John Panarese <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>    Well, all I can say is that people have been declaring the end of Apple 
> since 1997, and it seems their demise has been highly exaggerated. When you 
> have a company that is almost at a trillion dollars in overall value, I 
> suspect its end isn't quite upon us. Their focus has shifted over the years 
> and it seems every direction they go harbingers the usual declaration of 
> business mistakes and how this will be the "death-nail" for the company. This 
> all came up again when Apple announced they would not report iPhone sales 
> numbers with each quarterly report and, instead, will focus on services. 
> However, as I said, there hasn't been a need for the pallbearers quite yet.
> 
> Take Care
> 
> John D. Panarese
> Director
> Mac for the Blind
> Tel, (631) 724-4479
> Email, [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
> Website, http://www.macfortheblind.com <http://www.macfortheblind.com/>
> 
> APPLE CERTIFIED SUPPORT PROFESSIONAL and Trainer
> 
> AUTHORIZED APPLE STORE BUSINESS AFFILIATE
> 
> MAC and iOS VOICEOVER TRAINING AND SUPPORT
> 
> 
> 
>> On Jan 23, 2019, at 2:45 PM, Anders Holmberg <[email protected] 
>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi!
>> Well, i did understood that.
>> I have seen more of these end of apple in the last month though.
>> So i am still wondering where apple’s at.
>> /A
>> 
>>> 22 jan. 2019 kl. 19:07 skrev Karen Lewellen <[email protected] 
>>> <mailto:[email protected]>>:
>>> 
>>> Just a quick comment.
>>> This is an opinion piece, not well standard journalism.  I was concerned by 
>>> the lack of balance, i. e. talking with someone from Apple about the 
>>> assumptions here, lack of specifics about the number sources, so I followed 
>>> the  link to the actual article.
>>> Author is credited as a contributor with the usual disclaimer stating his 
>>> opinions are his own.
>>> Kare
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On Mon, 21 Jan 2019, M. Taylor wrote:
>>> 
>>>> The End Of Apple
>>>> By Stephen McBride
>>>> 
>>>> "Oh man, that's almost a month's rent for me."
>>>> Here I am sitting in a cab in New York City.
>>>> I'm headed uptown to Columbia University where we'll hold the first-ever
>>>> American Disruption Summit. (You can register to watch for free here.)
>>>> The driver and I are talking about the absurd price tag of the latest Apple
>>>> (AAPL) iPhone.
>>>> He's shocked when I tell him the cheapest model is $1,149.
>>>> "Who can afford that?" he asks.
>>>> 
>>>> Apple's Imminent Crash Has Begun
>>>> Apple has had an incredible decade.
>>>> Since the iPhone debuted in 2007, the company's sales have jumped tenfold.
>>>> The stock has soared over 700%.
>>>> And up until last November, it was the world's largest publicly traded
>>>> company.
>>>> But two weeks ago, Apple issued a rare warning that shocked investors.
>>>> For the first time since 2002, the company slashed its earnings forecast.
>>>> The stock plunged 10% for its worst day in six years.
>>>> This capped off a horrible few months in which Apple stock crashed about 
>>>> 35%
>>>> from its November peak.
>>>> 
>>>> That erased $446 billion in shareholder value-the biggest wipeout of wealth
>>>> in a single stock ever.
>>>> And it's only the beginning.
>>>> Apple's Strong Revenue Growth Hides a Dirty Secret
>>>> If you looked at Apple's sales numbers, you wouldn't see anything wrong.
>>>> Since 2001, Apple has seen steady revenue growth:
>>>> 
>>>> By this measure, Apple's business seems perfectly healthy. But there's a
>>>> secret hidden behind these headline numbers.
>>>> Despite the revenue growth, Apple is selling fewer iPhones every year.
>>>> In fact, iPhone unit sales peaked way back in 2015. Last year, Apple sold 
>>>> 14
>>>> million fewer phones than it did three years ago.
>>>> Apple Kept Revenue Growth Only by Raising iPhone Prices
>>>> In 2010, you could buy a brand-new iPhone 4 for 199 bucks.
>>>> In 2014, the newly released iPhone 6 cost 299 bucks.
>>>> Today the cheapest model of the latest iPhone X costs $1,149!
>>>> It's a 500% hike from what Apple charged eight years ago.
>>>> But technology always gets cheaper over time.
>>>> Not so long ago, a flat-screen high-definition TV was a luxury. Even a 
>>>> small
>>>> one cost thousands of dollars. Today you can get a 55-inch one from Best 
>>>> Buy
>>>> for $500.
>>>> In 1984, Motorola sold the first cell phone for $4,000. The average price
>>>> for a smartphone today is $320, according to research firm IDC.
>>>> Cell phone prices have come down roughly 92%. And yet, Apple has hiked its
>>>> smartphone prices by 500%!
>>>> Frankly, it's remarkable that Apple has managed to pull this off.
>>>> But let me tell you this.
>>>> Apple Can't Raise Prices Anymore
>>>> It comes down to the lifecycle of disruptive businesses.
>>>> Twelve years ago, only 120 million people owned a cell phone. Today over
>>>> five billion people own a smartphone, according to IDC.
>>>> Apple was the driving force behind this explosion. As the dominant player 
>>>> in
>>>> a rapidly growing market, it become the most profitable publicly traded
>>>> company in history.
>>>> Then iPhone sales growth stalled in 2015. This would've been the end for
>>>> most businesses.
>>>> But Apple did a masterful job of extending its prime through price hikes.
>>>> Its prestigious brand and army of die-hard fans allowed it to charge prices
>>>> that seemed crazy just a few years ago.
>>>> But now iPhone price hikes have gone about as far as they can go.
>>>> After all, what's the most you would pay for a smartphone?
>>>> $1,500?
>>>> $2,000?
>>>> 
>>>> How bad is this? It's so bad that Apple now keeps it a secret.
>>>> In November, Apple announced it would stop disclosing iPhone unit sales.
>>>> This is a very important piece of information. Investors deserve to know 
>>>> it.
>>>> Yet Apple now keeps it secret.
>>>> Keep in Mind, the iPhone is Apple's Crown Jewel
>>>> iPhone generates two-thirds of Apple's overall sales.
>>>> Let that sink in.
>>>> A publicly traded company that makes most of its money from selling phones
>>>> is no longer telling investors how many phones it sells!
>>>> And its other business lines can't pick up the slack for falling iPhone
>>>> sales.
>>>> Twenty percent of Apple's revenue comes from iPads and computers. Those
>>>> segments are also stagnant.
>>>> Which means 86% of Apple's business is going nowhere.
>>>> Could Apple go the other way and slash iPhone prices?
>>>> I ran the numbers.
>>>> If Apple cut prices back to 2016 levels, it would have to sell 41 million
>>>> additional phones just to match 2018's revenue.
>>>> 
>>>> Will Apple Meet Nokia's Fate?
>>>> Before Apple, Nokia (NOK) was king of cell phones.
>>>> In 2007 the front-cover headline of a major business magazine read:
>>>> "Nokia: One billion customers-can anyone catch the cell phone king?"
>>>> The iPhone debuted in 2007. Here's Nokia's stock chart since then:
>>>> 
>>>> Original Article at:
>>>> https://www.forbes.com/sites/stephenmcbride1/2019/01/21/the-end-of-apple/#68
>>>>  
>>>> <https://www.forbes.com/sites/stephenmcbride1/2019/01/21/the-end-of-apple/#68>
>>>> 6fdd936dc0
>>>> 
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