Showing posts with label Tim Cook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tim Cook. Show all posts

Saturday, February 18, 2017

Apple WWDC 2017 is set to be hosted from 5-9 June in San Jose, California

Apple WWDC 2017 is set to be hosted from 5-9 June in San Jose, California

Image Credit: Apple
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Apple has announced the dates for WWDC 2017 to host and celebrate the developer community. WWDC 2017 is set to start at 5 June and will go on till 9 June 2017 at McEnery Convention Center in San Jose. WWDC or World Wide Developers conference 2017 is its 28th annual conference where Apple will announce future Apple devices and software updates powering Apple products.
The main aim of the conference is to celebrate and host developers while releasing new and updated tools for the community to take leverage from while inspiring them to unleash their creativity in code. One interesting thing to note is that the new Apple headquarters in Cupertino is located just minutes away from WWDC 2017 venue thereby enabling developers easier access to about 1000 Apple engineers to interact with, share ideas or better understand the nuances in programming for Apple products.
Image Credit: Apple
Image Credit: Apple
The company will hold keynote address, get-togethers, sessions and labs for developers. Another significant thing the company is doing is to work with local businesses in San Jose to celebrate the return of WWDC. People who want to attend the conference can apply for tickets in coming weeks around Spring.
The entire event will be live-streamed through Apple Developer website and the WWDC app for Apple TV, iPhone and iPad.
We can expect details around the next major iPhone launch, the iPhone 8 or iPhone X or whatever Apple will choose to call its 10-year anniversary device, next big update to iOS and something regarding the Apple streaming service.

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Trump immigration ban: “If we stand and say nothing, we become a part of it,” Apple CEO Tim Cook

Trump immigration ban: “If we stand and say nothing, we become a part of it,” Apple CEO Tim Cook

Image: Reuters
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Speaking at the University of Glasgow in Scotland, Apple CEO Tim Cook took a clear stance against Donald Trump’s immigration ban saying, “If we stand and say nothing, we become a part of it, our company thrives on diversity.”
Cook was at the university to receive an honorary degree.
Just a few weeks ago, US President Donald Trump issued an executive order banning the entry of refugees and that of citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries. The ban extends to US visa holders from those countries.
The order faced immediate backlash from Americans and Silicon Valley. Almost 100 tech companies, including Apple, Facebook and Google have signed an amicus curiae brief in support of a lawsuit fighting the order.
US Federal Courts have since halted the order.
Despite the statement, Cook assured everyone at the university that Apple wasn’t a “political company”, reports Cnet.
Cook adds that “I don’t believe Apple is an activist and I don’t view myself as an activist.”
Stating that Apple is not shy, he went on to state that Apple will continue to address issues that it feels very strongly about, but that these issues are based on Apple’s beliefs and nothing else.

Sunday, January 29, 2017

Silicon Valley isn’t happy: Here’s what top tech CEOs have to say about US President Trump’s immigration order

Silicon Valley isn’t happy: Here’s what top tech CEOs have to say about US President Trump’s immigration order

Image: Reuters
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US President Donald Trump has passed an executive order which halts immigration from seven Islamic nations including Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen, and Syria, for at least 90 days. For Syrian refugees, the ban is indefinite. Trump said that the order was to keep away radical Islamic terrorists.
This has caused a lot of furore not just among the general population, but also among technology companies.
Most of the top technology firms in the US are filled with staff who aren’t native US citizens. And logically enough, most leaders from across the technology industry spectrum have criticised this new temporary ban that Trump has issued.
Microsoft Corp, Alphabet Inc, Apple Inc, Facebook Inc and Uber Technologies and many other companies have expressed concern about the immigration order’s effects on their employees, according to the Wall Street Journal
Here is what the heads of top US tech companies have to say about this order.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, himself an immigrant told the Wall Street Journal that he had experienced and seen the positive impact that immigration has had on Microsoft as well as for the US and the world. He said that Microsoft Corp would continue being an advocate on the issue.
Apple CEO Tim Cook has sent an email to his employees assuring them that Apple has contacted the White House to explain the negative effects of such restrictions. Cook had also spoken about the importance of immigration, both to Apple and the US’s future, when he had visited Washington last week.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai said that the order affected close to 187 current Googlers. “We’re upset about the impact of this order and any proposals that could impose restrictions on Googlers and their families, or that could create barriers to bringing great talent to the US. It is painful to see the personal cost of this executive order on our colleagues,” he said.
Facebook CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg put out a status on his Facebook pagestating that both his and his wife’s parents were immigrants to the US. “We need to keep this country safe, but we should do that by focusing on people who actually pose a threat. Expanding the focus of law enforcement beyond people who are real threats would make all Americans less safe by diverting resources, while millions of undocumented folks who don’t pose a threat will live in fear of deportation,” said Zuckerberg.
Digital storage firm Box’s CEO Aaron Levie said that the move was quite infuriating and morally wrong. He said that he was looking at ways to get personally involved and fight the order.
Amazon’s vice president for HR, Beth Galetti, said that a diverse workforce helps Amazon make better products for its customers. It has sent out an email to its staffers, recommending US based employees from countries in the ban-list, from travelling outside the US. It has also asked such employees to get in touch with the company if they are already outside the borders for travel or work.
Netflix CEO, Reed Hastings, in a personal post on his Facebook page said, “Trump’s actions are hurting Netflix employees around the world, and are so un-American it pains us all. Worse, these actions will make America less safe (through hatred and loss of allies) rather than more safe. A very sad week, and more to come with the lives of over 600,000 Dreamers here in a America under imminent threat. It is time to link arms together to protect American values of freedom and opportunity.”
Uber CEO Travis Kalanick has sent out an email to his employees titled, ‘Standing up for what’s right.’ Kalanick goes on to talk about the executive order issued by Trump and how it affects Uber drivers. He said that Uber will be reaching out to all its drivers who work in the US but go home for long breaks to be with family. These drivers affected by the order will be compensated for three months, pro bono, said Kalanick.
“While every government has their own immigration controls, allowing people from all around the world to come here and make America their home has largely been the U.S.’s policy since its founding. That means this ban will impact many innocent people—an issue that I will raise this coming Friday when I go to Washington for President Trump’s first business advisory group meeting,” he said.

Monday, January 9, 2017

Apple iPhone: 10 years down, CEO says the “best is yet to come”

Apple iPhone: 10 years down, CEO says the “best is yet to come”

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Today marks the 10th anniversary of Apple’s iPhone, a device that many consider to be a game changer in the smartphone space. While the iPhone has changed a lot in the past ten years, Apple CEO Tim Cook on the occassion of the iPhone’s 10th anniversary, said that “The best is yet to come.”
Apple commemorated the 10 anniversary of its hero product, by reminiscing about how Steve Jobs introduced the first iPhone to the world, “a widescreen iPod with touch controls, a revolutionary mobile phone and a breakthrough internet communications device.” The company has sold billions of iPhone units since then turning the iPhone into a platform of with its own unique hardware and software services along with integration of other Apple exclusive features.
Apple Steve Jobs iPhone
The company in a presser also mentioned that its iPhone inspired new products like the iPad and the Apple Watch and of course all of those apps that come from a unified iOS App Store.
“iPhone is an essential part of our customers’ lives, and today more than ever it is redefining the way we communicate, entertain, work and live,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “iPhone set the standard for mobile computing in its first decade and we are just getting started. The best is yet to come.”
“It is amazing that from the very first iPhone through to today’s newest iPhone 7 Plus, it has remained the gold standard by which all other smartphones are judged. For many of us, iPhone has become the most essential device in our lives and we love it,” said Philip Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Marketing.
Apple iPhone iPhone 7
“iPhone is how we make voice and FaceTime calls, how we shoot and share Live Photos and 4K videos, how we listen to streaming music, how we use social media, how we play games, how we get directions and find new places, how we pay for things, how we surf the web, do email, manage our contacts and calendars, how we listen to podcasts, watch TV, movies and sports, and how we manage our fitness and health. iPhone has become all of these things and more. And I believe we are just getting started.”
While it may sound like a pretty picture, the iPhone, Apple’s hero product after the iPod is indeed losing steam. Sales have been slowing down and CEO Tim Cook recently took a pay cut following what was the first sales slump in 15 years. Indeed all eyes are on the special 10 anniversary iPhone (codenamed ‘Ferrari’)that is expected to showcase exotic technologies, which should help Apple keep the sales momentum going till the next year’s iPhone that is expected to be a complete redesign.

Friday, December 30, 2016

Apple CEO Tim Cook terms AirPods as ‘runaway success’ without any figures

Apple CEO Tim Cook terms AirPods as ‘runaway success’ without any figures

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Apple CEO, Tim Cook raised some interesting questions by terming ‘Apple AirPods’ as ‘a runaway success’. The statement was in response to the interview given to CNBC Now during yesterday as Cook walked into the New York Stock Exchange. He detailed that the company is “making them just as fast as we can” citing tremendous demand from consumers.
As reported by The Verge, the interesting thing to note here is that Cook did not give away any hard factual data to back up his claim and for now we will have to take his word. However, on digging further, we were greeted with a ‘6 weeks’ estimate time for shippment on the AirPods product page.
According to reports by MacRumors the AirPods are showing the same shipping estimate since the first day. The product will not be available till mid-February in the Apple Pickup stores.
This comes right after the reports that some customers are finding the charging case of AirPods malfunctioning after some usage. According to previous reports, the delay in the launch of AirPods was caused because of Technical issues and difficulty in manufacturing.
According to the details, one of the issues was an audio sync problem between the individual pods and the iPhone. But the shipping delay is not an important parameter because we don’t know the number of initial AirPods shipped and the manufacturing capacity of the production facilities that are making the AirPods.

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Donald Trump meets tech leaders: Silicon Valley caught off guard by olive branch

Donald Trump meets tech leaders: Silicon Valley caught off guard by olive branch

Image: Reuters
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To say that Silicon Valley was caught off guard by Donald Trump’s election to the Presidential Office would be something of an understatement.
The months and weeks leading up to the election saw Silicon Valley actively do everything in its power to oppose Trump. Campaign contributions to Hillary Clinton numbered in the millions, media outlets went all out in a war against Trump and Silicon Valley’s elite were not reticent about their stance against him.
“Both sides made no secret of their disdain for each other during the election campaign,” reads a report in Reuters.
Immigration, trade, encryption, net-neutrality; Trump and the Valley never saw eye-to-eye on any of these during the election. Trump’s innate racism, talk of building walls, building an immigrants’ registry, make in America, opposition to net neutrality and more painted him as the most technology-hostile president that America had ever seen. Is it any wonder that Silicon Valley didn’t want him in power?
But Trump is in power, or will be, come 20 January. What’s the Valley going to do now?
In an unexpected twist, Trump invited Silicon Valley’s Elite to a meeting in Trump tower, Manhattan, where he planned to discuss Silicon Valley’s fears and better understand the situation there.
Given what happened during the election, Silicon Valley’s reaction to the invite would have been something to behold. Re/code’s Kara Swisher described my feelings best when she said, “Hoo boy, would I have liked to be in the room when Sheryl Sandberg/Tim Cook/Larry Page/fill-in-your-billionaire-tech-leader-here were reacting to the tech summit invite.”
Now this is awkward
How do you decline an invite from the soon-to-be most powerful man in the world, one who can directly influence the future of your company, nay, your industry, and the man who you deliberately and pointedly dissed in the past?
Awkward is hardly the word for it.
I’m still not entirely convinced that the likes of Elon Musk, Tim Cook, Satya Nadella and others weren’t just called to Trump’s castle to kiss the proverbial ring. Reports and statements made by Trump staff and various company spokespersons are quite positive, however.
Jeff Bezos claimed that the meeting was “very productive”, Elon Musk is joining one of Trump’s business advisory boards and Oracle’s Safra Catz gave reporters a thumbs-up after the meeting. The signs all seem good; but can we trust them?
Now that he’s president (or soon to be one), do any of these CEOs have the courage to speak against Trump? There’s more than money at stake, after all.
Trump still hasn’t clarified his stand on immigration, net neutrality’s fate still hangs in the balance and Trump’s belief in science and global warming is still a big question mark.
Analogue vs digital
Has the summit actually achieved anything? I honestly don’t know. Some, like Re/code and The Stranger believe that these Silicon Valley executives are just “legitimising a fascist”. Others, like Bill Gates, have compared Trump to JFK and gone on record to state that Trump will drive America with innovation.
Given Bill Gates’ response, I’m almost tempted to admit that Trump is actually doing the smart thing here. He is a businessman, he’s worth over $10 billion and he’ll soon be the president of the United States of America. That’s no small feat.
As a businessman, a traditional, brick and mortar businessman, so to speak, Trump is far removed from the cutting edge tech world that is Silicon Valley. As a businessman, Trump understands money and Silicon Valley is telling him, as, I’m sure, are his advisors, that interfering with Silicon Valley will cost the country a great deal in terms of jobs, revenue and technological edge.
Trump’s supporter and advisor, Peter Thiel, is an investor in Silicon Valley himself and he sits on Facebook’s board of directors. If nothing else, he’s sure to see the merit in ensuring that Silicon Valley functions smoothly and also the merit in ensuring that Trump sees it too.
Trump might be an opportunist, racist, fascist, bigot and anything else that comes to mind, but he seems to know which side of his bread is buttered and his olive branch to Silicon Valley is proof of that.
If this is indeed a façade, it’s in the cracks that we’ll see glimpses of the truth. If not, Trump actually might “Make America Great Again!” Either way, turbulent times lay ahead.

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