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#10 - Apple’s Genius Tariff Solution: Why Assemble Your Own iPhone When You Can Pay More for the Privilege?

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Content provided by Simba the "TechKing". All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Simba the "TechKing" or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

It was the best of times for Apple shareholders, it was the worst of times for anyone who thought they understood how capitalism was supposed to work. In the gleaming towers of Cupertino, where executives in $700 hoodies contemplate the profound mysteries of profit margin optimization, a solution to the US-engineered tariff crisis emerged that was so audaciously cynical it could only have been conceived by minds unencumbered by shame or basic human decency.

The announcement came with the characteristic Apple fanfare: a carefully choreographed presentation where Chief Revenue Optimization Officer Miranda Sterling stood before a backdrop of minimalist white curves and declared that Apple had “reimagined the iPhone experience to empower users with unprecedented customization opportunities.” What she meant, in language comprehensible to those not fluent in corporate doublespeak, was that Apple had decided to make customers assemble their own phones while somehow charging them more for the privilege.

The genius of the plan lies not in its innovation—humans have been assembling electronics for decades—but in its breathtaking transformation of necessity into premium experience. Faced with tariffs that threatened to reduce their profit margins from “obscene” to merely “unconscionable,” Apple’s leadership team asked themselves a profound question: “How can we make our customers pay for our problems while convincing them they’re getting a deal?”

Source: TechOnion.org

Please donate via 'Buy Me a Coffee' or 'Patreon'

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14 episodes

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iconShare
 
Manage episode 485882095 series 3140604
Content provided by Simba the "TechKing". All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Simba the "TechKing" or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

It was the best of times for Apple shareholders, it was the worst of times for anyone who thought they understood how capitalism was supposed to work. In the gleaming towers of Cupertino, where executives in $700 hoodies contemplate the profound mysteries of profit margin optimization, a solution to the US-engineered tariff crisis emerged that was so audaciously cynical it could only have been conceived by minds unencumbered by shame or basic human decency.

The announcement came with the characteristic Apple fanfare: a carefully choreographed presentation where Chief Revenue Optimization Officer Miranda Sterling stood before a backdrop of minimalist white curves and declared that Apple had “reimagined the iPhone experience to empower users with unprecedented customization opportunities.” What she meant, in language comprehensible to those not fluent in corporate doublespeak, was that Apple had decided to make customers assemble their own phones while somehow charging them more for the privilege.

The genius of the plan lies not in its innovation—humans have been assembling electronics for decades—but in its breathtaking transformation of necessity into premium experience. Faced with tariffs that threatened to reduce their profit margins from “obscene” to merely “unconscionable,” Apple’s leadership team asked themselves a profound question: “How can we make our customers pay for our problems while convincing them they’re getting a deal?”

Source: TechOnion.org

Please donate via 'Buy Me a Coffee' or 'Patreon'

  continue reading

14 episodes

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