As the zeitgeist has moved on from the furore created by "Something is Rotten in the State of Cupertino," there are some very interesting follow up posts that came through.

There was a great post by Mills Baker - "What Apple's LLM Fumbles Say About LLMs (Rather Than About Apple)". Mills is more optimistic than Ben because LLMs are likely overestimating their ability to solve the last mile problem. The summary of the argument goes:

This combination suggests there is a longer time horizon before a competitive platform might present itself. As a result, Apple was both right in removing claims that they have Apple Intelligence and what it could do and they can still win because they are still a super aggregator of personal context.

I think Apple will continue to be a super aggregator of personal information. However, the control surface of apps that the LLM needs to control feels like us thinking from the previous paradigm.

Ben Thompson's latest addition is a place that resonates most with me:

So no, Apple is not doomed, at least not for now. There is, however, real cause for concern: just as tech success is built years in advance, so is failure, and there are three historical examples of once-great companies losing the future that Apple and its board ought to consider carefully.

Ben's argument is that the future of these companies are written when they miss a generational event. The reason these groups of people often miss a generational event is because they might have been the architect of the current S-curve.

A summarized version goes: Apple reigned in the current smartphone era of computing. They have optimized themselves into a juggernaut of a business that has incredible margins by selling hardware running optimized, custom software that focuses on the whole widget + privacy. They charge a premium for this. However, this optimization of value generation might be the reason they miss the next generational leap around LLMs.

Specifically, Ben's article highlights how the container "app" itself is probably not the right paradigm for this world of LLMs.

The new bridge is a user interface that gives you exactly what you need when you need it, and disappears otherwise; it is based on AI, not apps. The danger for Apple is that trying to keep AI in a box in its current paradigm will one day be seen like Microsoft trying to keep the Internet locked to its devices: fruitless to start, and fatal in the end.

There is a very interesting commentary related to this in the latest notes from Alex Komoroske. There were three takeaways:

I don't question the existing aggregators if asked the question if they want to solve for this future, will say yes and even start projects to find an answer. I doubt if they will be the courageous ones that will do what's necessary to move us to this new world when they have the world's best money printer.