Today’s Macworld column asks “Is Dan Lyons learning?” And then sighs.
Willfully myopic
Dan Lyons goes overboard. Again.
Full of sound and furry
Dan Lyons goes overboard. Again.
Today’s Macworld column asks “Is Dan Lyons learning?” And then sighs.
What the heck company named Apple are pundits looking at?
In this week’s Macworld column the Macalope wonders what Apple pundits are looking at, because it’s not the one in this reality.
Apple — are you sitting down? — is a religion.
The “Apple is a religion” trop rides again in the face of good taste and making any sense at all!
Never hurts to ask a question, right?
This week’s Macworld column looks at people who are just askin’ questions, about the Surface Pro and Apple’s share price. Nothing wrong with that, right?
Also, if you don’t think it’s possible to spend a week recovering from Macworld Expo, well, baby, then you haven’t been to Macworld Expo. The Macalope was remiss this week, so here’s a link to last Saturday’s column as well as Tuesday’s and Thursday’s. If you missed them, you’ve got some catch-up reading for the weekend.
A backlash against the stupid?
Yesterday’s Macworld column asks if we might be seeing a backlash against the stupid. Anything’s possible.
How Apple can fix itself. Because, you know, so broken.
Whoops! The Macalope was remiss in posting a link to this weekend’s column which contains some grade-Z chuck about how Apple can “fix” itself. Because, you know, it’s so broken.
From the good to the bad.
This week’s Macworld column looks some more at the iPhone 5 demand  question and hands out some praise to former targets! Who would have thought?
Why would anyone question anonymous sources?!
Today’s Macworld column looks again at the “news” that iPhone 5 shipments were weak, which some seem to accept without question.
Cut in half? You serious?
Today’s Macworld column explores the rumor that iPhone 5 component orders were cut in half. And, oh, how we’ll laugh.
Sample sizes so small they may not even exist!
This week’s Macworld column asks the musical question “How small can a sample size get?” How’s less than one strike you?