I had the opportunity to try one for a couple of minutes. It has some qualities such as a great screen and an intuitive UI once you got used to it - pinching is not what my fingers are used to after a decade of iPhone. But right now, it’s far to heavy, no way I‘d sit on the couch and watch the latest Scorsese or do my emails. Maybe a Simpsons episode. Having to carry a cable bound separate battery also doesn’t feel apple-ish. So for me, right now, it’s a pretty expensive Version 1 gadget which I probably won’t buy. I guess it will come down finding the killer use case (reading emails or watching Dinos are not) and whether Apple finds ways to optimize weight.
Sorry for the confusion - the graph shows operating income. The run-rate is annualised revenues for Q4. Andy Jassy mentions it in Amazon's earnings call: https://events.q4inc.com/attendee/790745385
I had the opportunity to try one for a couple of minutes. It has some qualities such as a great screen and an intuitive UI once you got used to it - pinching is not what my fingers are used to after a decade of iPhone. But right now, it’s far to heavy, no way I‘d sit on the couch and watch the latest Scorsese or do my emails. Maybe a Simpsons episode. Having to carry a cable bound separate battery also doesn’t feel apple-ish. So for me, right now, it’s a pretty expensive Version 1 gadget which I probably won’t buy. I guess it will come down finding the killer use case (reading emails or watching Dinos are not) and whether Apple finds ways to optimize weight.
What does "AWS is now at a $100bn run rate" mean? The graph shows $25bn.
Sorry for the confusion - the graph shows operating income. The run-rate is annualised revenues for Q4. Andy Jassy mentions it in Amazon's earnings call: https://events.q4inc.com/attendee/790745385