I just upgraded last October. it was last year's phone and I still had to pay 
it out. I wasn't planning to upgrade again for 4 or 5 years. in my opinion 
there's nothing like Apple for accessibility. I hope they change their business 
model in the coming years.

> On Jan 22, 2019, at 7:52 AM, Jessica Moss <junglebookfa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Same here.  I don’t plan on upgrading any time soon unless my 7+ conks 
> completely.
> 
>> On Jan 22, 2019, at 8:40 AM, 'Donna Goodin' via MacVisionaries 
>> <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com> wrote:
>> 
>> Well, I hope he's wrong about Apple's end being near, but what he describes 
>> is certainly true in our house.  I used to upgrade just about every year.  
>> But I did not upgrade this past year, and I'm thinking about sitting out 
>> next year, too.  If I'm going to pay $1000 for a phone, I definitely want 
>> more than one year's use out of it.  While I'm happy to spend a little more 
>> to support Apple because of all they've done for accessibility, my bank 
>> account isn't bottomless.  You'd think someone at Apple would be putting all 
>> this together.  It's one thing to charge top dollar because you can get it.  
>> But if products aren't selling, then they need to revise their business 
>> model.
>> Cheers,
>> Donna
>> 
>> 
>>> On Jan 21, 2019, at 11:17 PM, M. Taylor <mk...@ucla.edu> 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
>>> 6fdd936dc0
>>> 
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