If I feel like wasting time today, I’ll find you his numerous prognostications of where he was wrong. In fact,if you go based on his BMG predictions, it was in the iPhone 6-7 years ago.
And Cult of Mac is about as reliable as a broken clock that, mostly, is always a few minutes ahead - or behind - whatever blows your hair back.
First you have to have something reliable before you have to worry about “reading and learning.” I’m waiving my fee for that advice. No charge, amigo. You just saved some bucks, lol.
Apple’s upcoming flagship smartphone iPhone 7 will bring some radical changes. According to KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, the new iPhone will have a curved glass casing made from liquid metal. In 2013, Apple had filed a patent for a curved “glass” case made from Bulk Amorphous Alloy. It is an intricate fusion of titanium, copper, nickel, and zirconium.
Hey, but he knows, no doubt. If he said it, it WILL happen!
Sometimes the best advice one can give is listening to one’s own advice:
Read and learn.
Hey, like any shareholder, I hope they pull their heads out of their asses and make it happen, but Kuo isn’t Tim Cook or Jeff Williams. If they say it, it’s got cred. Kuo? Nope.
Here’s one more from the “expert,” Kuo. From April 2014 -
In the midst of rumors and speculation, a research note from KGI analyst Ming-Chi Kuo obtained by AppleInsider offers the most comprehensive look at Apple's supposed "iWatch" yet. Kuo has a proven track record of predicting Apple's next hardware moves.
According to the analyst, iWatch will be able to operate independently of an iPhone or iPad, but is also expected to feature functions that are iOS-exclusive like health monitoring apps. Hardware backing up iOS device compatibility are near-field communication with a "secure element," biometric recognition and adoption of a system-in-package (SiP) design for slimness.
Other components include a 1.3- to 1.5-inch flexible AMOLED display with sapphire cover, suggesting the device's screen will be curved to fit a user's wrist. In addition, Apple is thought to be incorporating liquid metal for mechanical parts.