Apple News
Apple investors barely blinked after Tim Cook was nudged out – and many seem positively thrilled
Apple dropped the news after market close on April 20, 2026: After 15 years as CEO, Tim Cook would step down effective September 1st, transitioning to executive chairman while hardware engineering chief John Ternus takes the reins as the new CEO. The news raised immediate questions about whether this was truly voluntary — especially given Cook’s recent firm denial of any plans to leave.
The market’s reaction spoke volumes: AAPL investors barely cared. If anything, many appeared quietly enthusiastic about fresh leadership.
Before the announcement, Apple shares closed at approximately $270–$273 in the days leading up to April 20. On announcement day, the stock prior to the news showed only a modest move, closing slightly higher around $273. The following trading day (April 21), shares experienced a minor blip, dipping roughly 1–2.5% amid initial digestion of the news. By April 22, however, the stock had recovered smartly — climbing back above pre-announcement levels and trading firmly in the $273–$275 range, with some sessions showing further gains.
This quick rebound to new near-term highs sent a clear signal: Wall Street wasn’t panicked about the end of the Cook era. Continuity under a respected internal successor like Ternus, combined with optimism for a potential strategic reset, kept selling pressure light and buying interest intact.
A Sudden Shift After a Recent Denial
The timing strongly suggests Cook may have been nudged — or outright pushed — by the board. As recently as mid-March 2026, during interviews tied to Apple’s 50th anniversary celebrations, Cook pushed back hard against retirement speculation. He expressed deep affection for the company, stating he “can’t imagine life without Apple” and dismissing any notion of stepping aside in the near term.
Just four weeks prior to Apple’s announcement of the CEO transition, when asked about his future at Apple by Michael Strahan during an interview on ABC’s Good Morning America, Cook dismissed the speculation:
No, I didn’t say that. I haven’t said that. I love what I do deeply. Twenty-eight years ago, I walked into Apple and I’ve loved every day of it since. We’ve had ups and downs, but the people I work with are so amazing. They bring out the best in me. And hopefully, I can bring out the best in them. And Michael, I can’t imagine life without Apple. – Tim Cook, March 17, 2026
Yet, just weeks later, Apple’s board announced a smooth but accelerated transition. Cook will stay on through the summer to oversee handover before moving to the executive chairman role. The rapid pivot from public denial to exit fuels speculation that this wasn’t entirely Cook’s preferred timeline — the board likely encouraged or required the change now.
The Generative AI Miss That Likely Sealed Cook’s Fate
The most plausible catalyst for any board pressure: Tim Cook’s glaring miss of the generative AI revolution.
While Cook’s tenure delivered extraordinary operational excellence — scaling Apple into a $4+ trillion powerhouse, growing services, expanding margins, and delivering massive shareholder returns — the company looked uncharacteristically flat-footed as OpenAI, xAI, Google, Microsoft, and others raced ahead in generative AI.
Apple’s “Apple Intelligence” features arrived late and have been widely viewed as underwhelming compared to the transformative leaps elsewhere. Insiders and analysts increasingly point to this strategic shortfall as the key vulnerability that may have prompted the board to accelerate succession. In tech’s brutal innovation cycle, even legendary execution can’t indefinitely mask a miss on the defining technology shift of the era.
With Ternus — a longtime Apple veteran deeply credited with breakthroughs in custom silicon, Mac and iPad hardware innovation, and supply chain mastery — stepping up, investors appear to sense an opportunity for sharper focus on AI integration, edge computing, and next-generation hardware-software synergy. The muted downside and swift recovery in AAPL reflect confidence that new leadership could finally close the AI gap and reignite Apple’s innovative edge.
Cook departs with one of the most successful corporate legacies in history: turning Steve Jobs’ vision into an unmatched global empire while rewarding shareholders handsomely. But functional boards don’t hesitate when a seismic shift like generative AI exposes competitive vulnerabilities.
For AAPL investors, the tape’s message is unambiguous — Tim Cook’s exit wasn’t feared. In many corners of the market, it was welcomed as the well-timed reset Apple needed. The minor blip and rapid rebound to higher prices suggest Wall Street is already looking past the transition and betting on what comes next.
SteveJack is a long-time Macintosh user, web designer, multimedia producer, and contributor to the MacDailyNews Opinion section.
MacDailyNews Take: In true Tim Cook fashion, the end arrived without fireworks, drama, or even a noticeable ripple in the market. Apple’s second beige era is blessedly drawing to a close.
Cook’s time at Apple will be remembered as a long stretch of competent, incremental refinement rather than the bold, reality-distorting innovation that once defined the company. Cook’s 15 years were the corporate equivalent of plain oatmeal: highly nutritious for the balance sheet, but about as exciting as watching paint dry. The canned-video Cook era was so gloriously nondescript that future historians might describe it as “the period when Apple perfected the art of not surprising anyone.”
With John Ternus, a respected hardware veteran deeply immersed in Apple silicon and product engineering, now taking the reins, the market reaction proves that there’s genuine optimism for a sharper focus on AI, edge intelligence, and the kind of tightly integrated innovation that once made Apple the most exciting company in technology.
Cook leaves behind a legacy of extraordinary scale and shareholder value that deserves genuine respect. He turned a $350 billion company into a $4+ trillion powerhouse through disciplined execution and operational mastery. But in technology’s unforgiving arena, even the greatest operators eventually make way for fresh vision.
The tape has spoken clearly: Apple investors don’t mourn the end of the Cook era. Many seem quietly enthusiastic that the company may soon trade its beige predictability for something far more vibrant once again.
A more dynamic, charismatic, and visionary leader — the kind who instinctively senses seismic platform shifts and bets the company on them — almost certainly would not have let Apple fall behind in the defining technology wave of this decade. Under such leadership, the company would very likely be even more valuable today, with a bolder, more aggressive AI strategy already deeply integrated across its hardware, software, and services.
Cook’s steady-hand approach delivered impressive compounding excellence, but it came at the cost of that rare, Jobs-like instinct for the next leap forward. The board, it appears, has finally recognized this reality.
Here’s to the next chapter and to Apple rediscovering what it once did best!
See also: Tim Cook could be Apple’s CEO for at least another half-decade – July 14, 2025
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Tim Cook regrets 2012 Apple Maps launch, hails Apple Watch as proudest achievement
In an internal Apple town hall meeting held shortly after the announcement of his planned departure as CEO, Tim Cook addressed employees on his tenure, candidly discussing both missteps and triumphs. Bloomberg News‘ Mark Gurman reported on the session [paywalled], highlighting Cook’s reflections as he transitions to executive chairman, with John Ternus set to become CEO on September 1, 2026.
Cook identified the troubled 2012 launch of Apple Maps as his “first really big mistake” as CEO. The app, which replaced Google Maps on the iPhone, suffered from inaccurate directions, mislabeled landmarks, and poor performance in many regions, drawing widespread criticism and forcing Apple to issue a public apology from Cook at the time. He noted that the experience ultimately proved valuable, teaching important lessons about product readiness and execution.
On the positive side, Cook pointed to the Apple Watch — and particularly its life-saving health features — as one of his proudest accomplishments. He recalled being deeply moved by the first email from a user whose life was saved by the device, an impact that continues with similar messages arriving daily. Cook described the Watch and its health innovations as standing out among “so many moments” of pride during his leadership.
Regarding the Apple Watch’s origins, Steve Jobs was aware of early work on what became the Apple Watch before his passing in 2011. Tim Bajarin, a longtime Apple analyst with a decades-long relationship with Jobs, stated in 2015: “Steve was aware of the Watch. He didn’t nix it as a product.” Bajarin noted this during a conference shortly after the Watch’s announcement.
The Apple Watch’s development is therefore connected to Apple’s fruitful Steve Jobs era, even as it emerged as a signature achievement under Cook’s watch. Cook has long emphasized building on Jobs’ vision without trying to replicate his predecessor’s style, focusing instead on operational excellence, services growth, and incremental, but highly profitable product iterations and expansions.
The town hall occurred amid Apple’s leadership transition, with Cook affirming he remains healthy and intends to stay involved as chairman for a long time, including engaging with global policymakers.
MacDailyNews Take: As we wrote regarding both the Apple Maps launch and the Apple Watch:
Here’s a little hint for the future: Everything that requires widespread customer use to develop a rich database before the product becomes fully usable should be clearly labelled “beta” upon release. Apple did it with Siri, but they forgot to do it with Maps. Had Apple been smart enough to simply place a “beta” tag on Maps, all of this rigamarole would never have occurred. – MacDailyNews, September 28, 2012
The Apple Watch certainly found its way – we, the users, were the Apple Watch alpha and beta testers, collectively standing in for Steve Jobs, doing much of what the singular genius would have done before release by brute force and sheer numbers after release. It took four generations of Apple Watch, but we’re here now and we wouldn’t trade the experience for anything! — MacDailyNews, January 31, 2020
The glaring lack of a visionary who is immersed and invested in product design who is a single point of approval – Steve Jobs – means that early adopters have to take Jobs’ place en masse to perform similar functions – albeit over a significantly longer period of time – à la Apple Watch. – MacDailyNews, March 28, 2023
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Apple investors have muted reaction to Tim Cook’s CEO exit; shares quickly rebound
Apple shares initially dipped following the announcement that longtime CEO Tim Cook will step down from the role on September 1, 2026, and transition to executive chairman, with hardware engineering chief John Ternus named as his successor.
The succession news, revealed after market close on Monday, April 20, triggered a modest sell-off on Tuesday. Shares fell approximately 2.52% to close at $266.17, as some digested the end of Cook’s 15-year tenure amid upcoming quarterly earnings and ongoing questions about Apple’s direction in the AI era.
The stock quickly staged a solid recovery today, rising $7.00 (+2.63%) to close at $273.17. AAPL is back to where it was before the CEO announcement in a single trading day.
Analysts and market observers widely described the initial reaction as “muted,” “a minor blip,” or “restrained.” Many noted that the move had been long anticipated, with Ternus long viewed as the frontrunner for the job.
Today’s bounce suggests investors are quickly moving past the CEO succession news and focusing on continuity. The internal promotion of Ternus — a 25-year Apple veteran who has overseen key hardware initiatives, including the development of custom silicon like the M-series and A-series chips — appears to reassure many that the company’s engineering DNA remains strong.
Early signs point to cautious optimism over Ternus. Wall Street analysts from firms such as Wedbush, Morgan Stanley, and JPMorgan have largely welcomed the choice, highlighting Ternus’s deep hardware expertise as potentially advantageous for accelerating product innovation and on-device AI capabilities. Some bulls argue that a hardware-first leader could help Apple deliver more exciting devices and better integrate AI features into its ecosystem.
Others remain measured. Questions persist about how Ternus will navigate Apple’s AI strategy, services growth, and global challenges — areas where Cook excelled as a steady operator and diplomat. Cook will stay on as executive chairman, providing continuity during the transition.
The handoff looks like a model succession — planned, orderly, and internal — rather than a disruptive change. After Tuesday’s dip, today’s +2.63% gain reflects bargain hunting and confidence that Apple’s fundamentals and execution machine remain intact heading into earnings on April 30th.
With Cook’s legacy of operational excellence and massive value creation firmly established, attention now shifts to whether Ternus can spark a return to innovation and a new wave of growth. For now, investors seem content to give the new guard the benefit of the doubt while watching closely for signals on product roadmaps and AI execution.
MacDailyNews Take: It was way past time for Tim Cook to go — and the smooth handoff to John Ternus couldn’t come soon enough.
For several years now, it has been increasingly obvious that Cook’s strengths — logistics, efficiency, diplomacy, and incremental refinement — were no longer sufficient for what Apple needs next. The company has felt stagnant in the face of the AI revolution. While competitors raced ahead with generative AI features, Apple played catch-up with “Apple Intelligence” — largely vaporware — a marketing exercise that many users continue to view as sadly underwhelming. Siri remains a punchline. Vision Pro was a flop.
Cook’s cautious, operations-first approach served Apple extraordinarily well in the post-Jobs era of scaling and optimization. But in an industry now defined by rapid technological disruption and bold product bets, that style started to look more like risk aversion than prudent stewardship. The stock has underperformed relative to the broader Magnificent Seven in recent periods precisely because growth expectations have cooled and innovation feels incremental rather than revolutionary.
Apple’s machine is still incredibly strong, but it was clearly past time for new leadership to drive the next chapter. Investors should be optimistic — not because Cook failed, but because his iterative success created the platform for someone else to push Apple forward again. The real test for Ternus begins: it’s time for Apple to finally deliver meaningful AI innovation, exciting new hardware, and – dare we dream? – the return of LIVE KEYNOTE ADDRESSES!
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TSMC plans to open chip packaging plant in Arizona by 2029
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) plans to open a chip packaging plant in Arizona by 2029, an executive told Reuters.
Modern artificial intelligence chips, such as those made by Apple and Nvidia, are not single chips but several chips glued together using advanced packaging technologies. This step has become a major supply bottleneck for Nvidia and other companies. In a January earnings call, TSMC said it was applying for permits to begin construction of its first advanced packaging plant in an existing Arizona facility, but did not provide a timeline for when it would come online.
Stephen Nellis and Max Cherney for Reuters:
At a conference in Santa Clara, California, on Wednesday, TSMC executives said construction has begun.
“We are aggressively expanding our own capability within the Arizona facility,” Kevin Zhang, deputy co-chief operations officer and senior vice president, said on Tuesday ahead of the conference. “We are going to build a CoWoS capability and 3D-IC capability there before 2029, so that’s still our goal,” Zhang said, referring to two of TSMC’s packaging technologies that are in high demand.
Companies such as Apple and Nvidia already source chips from TSMC’s Arizona factory, but many of those chips must go back to Taiwan for packaging.
Amkor Technology last year said it was working with Apple and Nvidia to build a packaging factory in Arizona by mid-2027 and start production by early 2028, earlier than TSMC’s timeline. Amkor and TSMC in 2024 said they would work together to bring several of TSMC’s advanced packaging technologies to Arizona, but the two companies have not disclosed details.
Zhang said Amkor and TSMC’s technology discussions remain ongoing.
MacDailyNews Take: This is a step in the right direction for supply chain diversification, especially welcome amid ongoing geopolitical tensions around Taiwan. Apple and Nvidia already source some leading-edge chips from TSMC’s Arizona fabs; bringing advanced packaging locally would create a more complete U.S. footprint and reduce unnecessary trans-Pacific shipping.
That said, 2029 remains a long way off. Amkor aims to start its own Arizona packaging production earlier (targeting early 2028), and broader rumors suggest TSMC could eventually scale to multiple packaging facilities as part of a massive Arizona “gigafab” cluster. Taiwan will continue to dominate CoWoS (Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate) packaging capacity in the near term, with aggressive expansions already ramping there.
TSMC is responding to customer demands (and likely U.S. incentives/political pressure) by slowly localizing more of the supply chain. It’s smart risk management and good news for American tech sovereignty in the long run — but the timeline highlights how difficult it is to replicate Taiwan’s ecosystem quickly. For AI leaders hungry for more capacity now, the packaging crunch isn’t going away anytime soon. Patience (and continued heavy investment) will be required.
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Apple’s greatest strengths may become its biggest AI weaknesses
As John Ternus prepares to take over as CEO, Apple faces a pivotal question: in the fast-moving AI era, can the same discipline, polish, and iron-fisted control that built its empire now hold it back?
The company’s legendary closed ecosystem and deliberate pace — once unmatched advantages — are clashing with an AI landscape that rewards openness, rapid iteration, and aggressive experimentation. With rivals racing ahead and the iPhone’s centrality potentially at stake, Ternus must find a way to weave powerful AI into Apple’s tightly integrated world without compromising what makes it special.
Apple, not unexpectedly, has been cautious. Cook, a loyal steward of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs’ vision, has emphasized privacy and quality that only come with tight control.
That restraint has earned it trust with users, but also left the company open to antitrust pressure in the U.S. and abroad, including a legal battle with “Fortnite” creator Epic Games and new European Union rules that force Apple to allow more competition on its devices.
That tension has intensified with AI, as the boom tends to reward speed and experimentation.
“By choosing a hardware leader in John Ternus, Apple may be signaling that it still believes the future of AI will run through tightly integrated devices, not just software,” said Timothy Hubbard, assistant professor of management at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business. “That could be smart, but it also raises a deeper risk: the very strengths that made Apple dominant — their discipline, polish, and control — could become constraints if the next era rewards openness and faster iteration. That rapid innovation is where Apple started, and maybe that’s where the company needs to return.”
Ternus’ biggest challenge will be weaving AI into Apple’s impenetrable ecosystem at a time when a more open approach is taking the world by storm.
MacDailyNews Take: We remain optimistic that Apple can and will deliver meaningful AI innovation without compromising its commitment to privacy and security.
Apple’s greatest strengths have always been its obsessive focus on user privacy, rock-solid security, and end-to-end control of the hardware-software experience. These aren’t outdated “constraints” in the AI era; they are the very foundation that makes Apple products uniquely trustworthy.
We have every confidence that Ternus, with his deep hardware engineering roots and long tenure at Apple, understands this better than anyone. The challenge isn’t to tear down the walls that protect users — it’s to intelligently extend powerful, on-device AI (and selective cloud capabilities) while keeping personal data firmly in the user’s hands.
We fully expect Ternus to deliver meaningful AI innovation that feels distinctly Apple: thoughtful, polished, private by design, and genuinely useful — without the creepy data-grabbing practices or rushed, half-baked features plaguing the competition.
Led by John Ternus, Apple will once again show the industry how it’s done right.
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Apple releases iOS 26.4.2 and iPadOS 26.4.2
Apple has just released iOS 26.4.2 and iPadOS 26.4.2, a pair of minor point updates focused on bug fixes and security improvements.
The updates became available on April 22, 2026, roughly two weeks after iOS 26.4.1. As is typical with these quick follow-ups, Apple’s official release notes are brief and simply state that the updates include “bug fixes and security updates” without listing specific issues addressed.
How to Update
Eligible iPhones and iPads can download the software over-the-air via Settings > General > Software Update. Most users should install it promptly, especially if they’ve noticed any lingering glitches from the previous 26.4.1 release.
Apple also pushed iOS 18.7.8 today for older iPhone models still running the iOS 18 branch.
What’s Next?
On the horizon, Apple is already beta testing iOS 26.5 and iPadOS 26.5, which are expected to arrive sometime in May and will likely bring more noticeable changes.
If you’re on iOS 26.4.1 (or earlier), this is a straightforward maintenance update worth applying for better stability and security.
MacDailyNews Note: Snappy and no issues here, but, as always, make sure you have a recent backup before updating.
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One of Tim Cook’s bigger mistakes: Overreacting to Charlottesville and handing $2+ million to the SPLC and ADL
As Tim Cook transitions out of the CEO role, it’s natural to look back at his long tenure at Apple — a period marked by extraordinary financial success, operational excellence, and the company’s rise to one of the world’s most valuable corporations. Yet one notable misstep stands out for its poor judgment and lasting reputational cost.
In August 2017, following the violent clashes in Charlottesville, Virginia, Apple CEO Tim Cook rushed to respond. He sent an internal memo condemning the events, criticized President Trump’s handling of the situation, and committed $2 million in corporate donations: $1 million each to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). Apple also matched employee contributions and enabled direct donations via iTunes. Cook declared that “hate is a cancer,” positioning the move as a stand for decency.
The murder of Heather Heyer, a counter-protester killed when a white supremacist drove his car into a crowd, was indefensible — a brutal and senseless act of violence that deserved universal condemnation regardless of politics. Few dispute the need to denounce neo-Nazis and actual white supremacists who marched with torches and committed such murder. But Cook’s decision to funnel significant funds to the SPLC and the ADL—both controversial organizations known for expansive and partisan “hate” labeling — was a profound error in judgment. The ADL, in particular, has faced growing criticism for conflating legitimate criticism of Israeli policies with antisemitism and for its overly broad influence on tech censorship and campus speech. It aligned one of the world’s most valuable and ostensibly neutral companies with outfits whose methods have long drawn criticism from across the ideological spectrum. Nine years later, that mistake looks even worse in light of Tuesday’s bombshell development: on April 21, 2026, a federal grand jury in Montgomery, Alabama, indicted the SPLC on 11 counts of wire fraud, false statements to a federally insured bank, and conspiracy to commit money laundering.
The SPLC’s Deepening Troubles
The SPLC began with creditable work suing violent Klan factions decades ago. But it evolved into a well-funded machine that brands mainstream conservative and Christian organizations (such as the Family Research Council or Alliance Defending Freedom) as equivalent to neo-Nazis, often with little regard for nuance or evidence. This tactic has chilled legitimate debate, influenced tech deplatforming decisions, and sustained a large endowment through fear-based fundraising.
Longstanding critiques from former employees, investigative journalists, and even some on the left highlighted inflated threats, internal dysfunction (including the 2019 ouster of co-founder Morris Dees amid misconduct allegations), and settlements paid after wrongful labeling. The organization’s “hate map” has been treated as authoritative by media and corporations despite these flaws.
Tuesday’s indictment, announced by Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel, adds a far more serious layer. Prosecutors allege that between 2014 and 2023, the SPLC secretly funneled more than $3 million in donated funds to paid informants deeply embedded in extremist groups — including the Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations, National Socialist Party of America, and others. The indictment claims these individuals not only received payments but actively promoted the very racist groups the SPLC publicly denounced on its website and in fundraising appeals. Funds were allegedly routed through multiple bank accounts and loaded onto prepaid cards, all while deceiving donors about how their money was being used.
The SPLC has defended the payments as standard informant work shared with law enforcement and vowed to fight the charges, calling them politically motivated. Yet the scale and secrecy alleged raise fundamental questions about whether the group was monitoring hate — or, as critics now charge, sustaining a revenue-generating cycle of manufactured threat. This alleged conduct overlaps with and extends well beyond 2017, when Tim Cook inexplicably chose the SPLC as a partner in Apple’s stand against “hate.”
A Partisan Overreaction Then, Even More Questionable Now
Charlottesville was a genuine tragedy marked by fringe extremism and street violence from multiple directions. Trump’s response was clumsy, but the elite consensus, including Cook’s memo, often ignored asymmetries in how media and institutions treated left- and right-wing violence. Even Snopes, hardly a right-wing outlet, rated as False the widespread claim that Trump had called neo-Nazis and white supremacists “very fine people.” In a June 2024 article titled “No, Trump Did Not Call Neo-Nazis and White Supremacists ‘Very Fine People'”, Snopes noted that Trump explicitly condemned those groups while referring to non-extremist participants on both sides of the statue debate. In that heated moment, Cook opted for knee-jerk corporate virtue signaling rather than measured condemnation of violence on all sides or support for neutral causes like local victim relief or genuine civil rights work.
By directing funds and Apple’s platform to both the SPLC and the ADL, he lent the company’s immense prestige to organizations already viewed by many as partisan actors rather than neutral watchdogs. The April 21, 2026 indictment underscores how flawed that choice was. If even a fraction of the allegations hold — that donor money meant to fight extremism was instead quietly propping up elements within those groups — it reveals a level of institutional deception that makes the 2017 donation look not just naïve, but actively irresponsible.
In recent years, Cook has largely refrained from such high-profile political pronouncements, emphasizing instead that he focuses on “policy, not politics” and positioning himself as non-partisan in his dealings with administrations on both sides. This shift only highlights how unnecessary and damaging Cook’s 2017 overreaction has proven to be.
Apple’s customers span the political spectrum. Its products are tools for communication and creation, not ideological weapons. Associating the brand so explicitly with groups now facing serious questions about bias, overreach, and — in the SPLC’s case — federal fraud charges tied to the very “hate” they claim to combat erodes trust. It fuels perceptions that Silicon Valley elites apply selective outrage, partnering with flawed proxies while lecturing others on morality.
The Broader Lesson for Corporate Leadership
Tim Cook has been an effective steward of Apple’s operations, innovation pipeline, and financial performance. But episodes like this expose a recurring vulnerability: reflexive alignment with progressive institutional consensus during cultural flashpoints. True leadership demands discernment — condemning real hatred and violence without outsourcing judgment to self-interested arbiters with their own agendas.
Of course, hate is destructive, but so is the cynical inflation of “hate” labels, secretive funding schemes, and the erosion of public trust in once-respected nonprofits. In hindsight, Cook’s post-Charlottesville move stands as one of his bigger mistakes. Writing a $2 million check to the SPLC and ADL in 2017 wasn’t moral courage; it was panic-driven virtue signaling to the wrong partners. With Tuesday’s indictment, that error is now impossible to ignore.
Companies like Apple best serve their shareholders, employees, and global customers by focusing on exceptional products and staying above the fray, not by impulsively picking sides with organizations whose own credibility is collapsing under the weight of serious criminal allegations and longstanding accusations of bias.
SteveJack is a long-time Macintosh user, web designer, multimedia producer, and contributor to the MacDailyNews Opinion section.
MacDailyNews Take: As we wrote back in March 2019:
In a nutshell, Cook literally funded inequality and disrespect in the name of Apple Inc.
See also: Apple-backed Southern Poverty Law Center wracked in turmoil, called a ‘con’ for ‘bilking gullible liberals’ – March 24, 2019
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Apple gears up for a game-changing iPhone camera system overhaul
Apple is about to shake up the iPhone camera like never before. After years of incremental tweaks to the primary shooter, the company is launching a multi-year upgrade cycle that could finally close the hardware/specs gap with Android flagships boasting massive sensors and advanced optics.
According to reliable leaks from Chinese sources, including Digital Chat Station via Weibo, the transformation is set to begin with the iPhone 18 Pro and flagship iPhone 18 Pro Max expected in fall 2026. Suppliers have already started mass production of a variable aperture lens for the main camera — a feature long common in professional DSLRs, but new to iPhones.
What Variable Aperture Means for Your Photos
Current iPhone 17 Pro models use a fixed f/1.78 aperture on the primary camera. A variable aperture system would let the lens physically adjust the opening, controlling exactly how much light reaches the sensor depending on conditions. This promises:
• Better low-light performance without overexposure
• More natural background blur (bokeh) for portrait shots
• Greater creative control similar to what pros get with dedicated cameras
While the exact benefits depend on sensor size improvements, the move signals Apple’s serious intent to elevate computational photography with more traditional optical smarts.
Bigger Upgrades on the Horizon
If development stays on track without technical hurdles, Apple has even more ambitious plans for subsequent models:
• A significantly larger 1/1.12-inch primary sensor (widely believed to be Sony’s LYT901, already powering 2026 Ultra phones from Oppo and Vivo)
• Optical Image Stabilization (OIS) added to the ultra-wide camera for steadier shots and video
• A high-resolution 200MP periscope telephoto camera for vastly superior zoomed-in image quality
For context, Chinese brands like Xiaomi and Vivo already deploy 200MP telephoto lenses on their flagships, delivering detail and clarity that outpaces the iPhone 17 Pro’s upgraded 48MP telephoto. A 200MP module on iPhone would bring Apple in line with — or ahead of — the competition in raw resolution and cropping flexibility.
Why Now? Apple’s Camera Hardware Catch-Up Strategy
The iPhone’s camera system has led in video and computational features for years, but hardware on the stills side has lagged behind some Android rivals pushing ever-larger sensors. This new roadmap marks a clear shift: Apple is investing heavily in both optical hardware and the integration with its powerful image signal processor and AI tools.
The variable aperture debut on the iPhone 18 Pro serves as the starting point, with the larger sensor, stabilized ultra-wide, and 200MP telephoto rolling out in phases over the following years.
What This Means for iPhone Users
If these rumors hold, future iPhones could deliver:
• More DSLR-like control over depth of field and exposure
• Dramatically improved zoom quality and detail retention
• Better handheld low-light and ultra-wide photography
• Enhanced overall image quality that feels like a true generational leap
Apple has a history of perfecting rumored features before launch, so expect refinements and tight software-hardware integration that make these upgrades shine in real-world use.
MacDailyNews Take: The iPhone camera is evolving from a computational powerhouse into a more versatile optical beast. For photography enthusiasts and casual shooters alike, the next few iPhone generations look set to be the most exciting in years!
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Incoming CEO John Ternus has an opportunity to supercharge Apple – Gene Munster
Apple investors anticipated this CEO transition, as reflected in AAPL shares declining just 0.5% following the news that Tim Cook will move into the chairman role. This change opens the door for a fresh investor narrative centered on Apple and AI. Fifteen years ago, Cook successfully engineered a major re-rating of AAPL’s valuation around the Services business by shifting the company’s story. Longtime Apple analyst Gene Munster expects incoming CEO John Ternus to follow a similar playbook — this time repositioning the stock narrative around Apple’s ability to win in AI.
Munster will be closely watching three key indicators of success: the performance of the new Siri later this year, the addition of leadership talent from AI-first companies, and Apple’s continued commitment to its gold-standard product quality and culture.
Gene Munster via GeneMunster.com:
Ternus is in a great spot. He is taking over with two advantages. First, he has been seen for some time as a credible successor, which lowers the risk of organizational disruption. Second, he is inheriting one of Apple’s greatest assets: its culture.
Steve Jobs’ most enduring contribution was not a product, but rather the creation of an organization capable of scaling dramatically while preserving its focus on building the best consumer tech products in the world. Cook sustained that culture while growing the company by 4x; and Ternus, after 25 years at Apple, is in a great spot to carry that forward. Staying true to Apple’s culture should allow Apple to pursue AI more aggressively without compromising on quality.
As an Apple user, I’m excited at the prospect that Ternus will inject new life into AI-first product development, creating AI-first products that we can’t live without.
As an AAPL investor, I’m happy that the current business is in a good place, and eagerly await Ternus adding AI-first talent that brings new products, wins consumers, and allows Apple investors to rest well at night knowing Apple will thrive in an AI-first world. If that happens, I believe the multiple on AAPL can only go up.
MacDailyNews Take: The central question for Apple Inc. is how tightly Tim Cook will hold the reins as Executive Chairman and whether that influence will constrain new CEO John Ternus’ ability to take bold, high-risk swings for the fences, the kind Steve Jobs famously took on myriad occasions. This dynamic will prove to be one of the most important to watch in Apple’s post-September 2026 era.
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Tim Cook reassures Apple employees: ‘I’m healthy’ and plans to serve as Executive Chairman for a long time
Apple CEO Tim Cook addressed concerns about his health and future role during an all-hands meeting with employees on Tuesday.
Cook, who is set to step down as chief executive on September 1, 2026, and hand the reins to hardware engineering chief John Ternus, told staff he is “healthy,” that his “energy is high,” and that he intends to remain actively involved as executive chairman for the long term.
The comments came during a gathering held in the Steve Jobs Theater at Apple Park, where both Cook and Ternus fielded questions on topics ranging from artificial intelligence and upcoming product plans to design philosophy. The meeting followed Apple’s formal announcement of the leadership transition earlier this week.
A Smooth, Planned Transition
Cook has led Apple for 15 years since succeeding Steve Jobs in 2011, overseeing extraordinary growth that transformed the company into a multi-trillion-dollar powerhouse. The decision to step aside as CEO while staying on as executive chairman reflects a carefully orchestrated succession plan that Apple has described as “thoughtful” and long-term.
John Ternus, a longtime Apple insider with deep experience in hardware, is widely viewed internally as a strong choice to lead the company into its next chapter — particularly as Apple ramps up its efforts in AI.
Reassuring Apple employees
Cook’s direct reassurance about his health and commitment appears designed to calm any internal anxiety surrounding the leadership change. By emphasizing that he will continue in a guiding role for years to come, Cook is signaling continuity at the board level even as day-to-day operations shift to Ternus.
The timing of the all-hands meeting — shortly after the public announcement — allowed Cook and Ternus to present a united front and address employee questions head-on.
What’s Next for Apple
With Ternus taking over as CEO just in time for the traditional September product event cycle, attention will quickly turn to how the new leader executes on Apple’s ambitious roadmap. The meeting reportedly touched on AI initiatives, suggesting that product development in that area remains a top priority under the incoming regime.
MacDailyNews Take: For investors and Apple products and services fans alike, Cook’s message is clear: this is not an abrupt exit, but a deliberate evolution of leadership with Cook moving into a senior advisory and oversight position while ensuring the company remains in capable hands.
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Can Apple hardware engineering veteran John Ternus restore Jobs-era decisiveness?
In a move that signals both continuity and a subtle shift in leadership style, Apple announced on April 20, 2026, that John Ternus, its longtime Senior Vice President of Hardware Engineering, will become the company’s next CEO effective September 1, 2026. Tim Cook, who has led Apple since 2011, will transition to the role of Executive Chairman of the board.
The news, reported across major outlets including Bloomberg News, Reuters, and Apple’s own newsroom, marks the end of an era for one of the world’s most valuable companies. Cook, 65, steered Apple through explosive growth—turning it into a multitrillion-dollar powerhouse with the iPhone at its core — while emphasizing operational excellence, iterative product updates, services expansion, and generally steady execution. Now, the board is placing its faith in Ternus, a mechanical engineer who has spent 25 years deeply embedded in Apple’s product development.
Who is John Ternus?
Ternus joined Apple in 2001 on the product design team, initially working on the Apple Cinema Display. He rose steadily through the ranks:
• In 2013, he was appointed Vice President of Hardware Engineering under Dan Riccio, overseeing Mac, iPad, and later AirPods.
• By 2020, he took responsibility for iPhone hardware.
• In 2021, he was promoted to Senior Vice President of Hardware Engineering, replacing Riccio and leading engineering for iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, AirPods, Vision Pro, and more.
• He played a central role in the ambitious transition of the Mac to Apple Silicon, one of the most successful architecture shifts in tech history.
Before Apple, Ternus worked as a mechanical engineer at Virtual Research Systems and holds a bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. Described in some reports as a former swimming champion, he brings a technical, hands-on background that contrasts with Cook’s legendary supply-chain and operations expertise.
The Bloomberg Angle: Bringing Back “Jobs-Era Decisiveness”
According to Bloomberg News’ reporting, Apple’s leadership sees Ternus as the leader who can inject more decisive, product-focused leadership reminiscent of the Steve Jobs era. Under Cook, major decisions were often debated and refined by a broader group of executives. The bet is that Ternus will streamline that process, making bolder, faster calls on product direction — especially as Apple grapples with slowing iPhone growth and the urgent need to reinvent its lineup in the age of artificial intelligence.
Insiders and analysts suggest Ternus is expected not just to maintain Apple’s hardware excellence but to “reinvent” aspects of the product portfolio. His deep engineering roots position him well to drive innovation in hardware, where Apple has historically differentiated itself through tight integration of silicon, software, and design.
Challenges Ahead for the New CEO
Ternus steps into the role at a pivotal moment. Apple faces:
• Maturing smartphone markets and pressure to find the “next big thing” beyond the iPhone.
• Intensifying competition in AI, where rivals like Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI have moved aggressively.
• The need to capitalize on emerging categories such as spatial computing (Apple Vision Pro) while navigating regulatory scrutiny and supply-chain complexities.
Cook’s transition to Executive Chairman provides a safety net—his experience and relationships will remain available, much like the structured handoffs seen in other mature tech giants. Johny Srouji is reportedly moving into a chief hardware officer role, ensuring continuity in silicon development.
What This Means for Apple Fans and Investors
For many longtime observers, the appointment feels like a return to Apple’s product-centric DNA. While Cook delivered remarkable financial results and shareholder value, some critics have argued the company became more cautious and less willing to bet boldly on disruptive new categories.
Ternus’ track record on flagship hardware — the devices that still generate the majority of Apple’s revenue — gives him credibility with engineers and designers. If Bloomberg’s reporting holds, his leadership could mean quicker pivots, fewer committee-driven compromises, and a renewed focus on creating “insanely great” products.
Of course, execution will matter more than rhetoric. Ternus will need to balance hardware innovation with software and services growth, while proving he can lead a company of over 160,000 employees and navigate global geopolitical and regulatory challenges.
The Bottom Line
Apple’s choice of John Ternus reflects confidence in its internal talent and a calculated desire to sharpen decision-making without abandoning the operational discipline that defined the Cook years. Whether Ternus can truly channel some of Steve Jobs’ famous decisiveness while adapting to today’s vastly larger and more complex Apple remains to be seen.
One thing is certain: Starting September 1, 2026, the spotlight will be on the hardware engineer who helped build so many of the products we use every day. The question now is whether he can guide Apple to build the next ones that define the future.
MacDailyNews Take: Of course, this is a fascinating inflection point. Ternus knows Apple’s products inside and out. If he can combine that product intuition with decisive leadership, Apple could be poised for another golden era. You know that we’ll be watching closely.
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U.S. President Trump lauds outgoing Apple CEO Tim Cook
President Donald Trump via Truth Social:
I have always been a big fan of Tim Cook, and likewise, Steve Jobs, but if Steve was not taken from the Planet Earth so young, and ran the company instead of Tim, the company would have done well, but nowhere near as well as it has under Tim. For me it began with a phone call from Tim at the beginning of my First Term. He had a fairly large problem that only I, as President, could fix. Most people would have paid millions of dollars to a consultant, who I probably would not have known, but who would say that he knew me well. The fees would be paid but the job would not have gotten done. When I got the call I said, wow, it’s Tim Apple (Cook!) calling, how big is that? I was very impressed with myself to have the head of Apple calling to “kiss my ass.” Anyway, he explained his problem, a tough one it was, I felt he was right and got it taken care of, quickly and effectively. That was the beginning of a long and very nice relationship. During my five years as President, Tim would call me, but never too much, and I would help him where I could. Years latter, after 3 or 4 BIG HELPS, I started to say to people, anyone who would listen, that this guy is an amazing manager and leader. He makes these calls to me, I help him out (but not always, because he will, on occasion, be too aggressive in his ask!), and he gets the job done, QUICKLY, without a dime being given to those very expensive (millions of dollars!) consultants around town who sometimes get it done, and sometimes don’t. Anyway, Tim Cook had an AMAZING career, almost incomparable, and will go on and continue to do great work for Apple, and whatever else he chooses to work on. Quite simply, Tim Cook is an incredible guy!!! President DONALD J. TRUMP
MacDailyNews Take: A nice tribute, but the statement, “if Steve was not taken from the Planet Earth so young, and ran the company instead of Tim, the company would have done well, but nowhere near as well as it has under Tim,” is a wild overstatement and also just plain wrong.
Imagine where Siri would be today if Steve Jobs had lived longer, staying laser-focused on it while also recognizing the paradigm shift of generative AI far earlier. That’s just one case. Just imagine Steve Jobs making the decisions regarding electric vehicles, VR/AR goggles, future iPhones, Macs, iPads, Apple TVs, Apple Watches, home automation, and products that we – without Steve – have not yet even imagined!
The deep shift of Apple’s manufacturing and supply chain to China — which enabled the massive scaling of iPhone production, tight inventory control, and high margins — was already well underway under Steve Jobs. Cook, as head of operations, executed it brilliantly, but Jobs himself recognized the necessity.
In a 2011 dinner with President Obama, Jobs bluntly explained why iPhones couldn’t realistically be made in the U.S.: America lacked the scale, speed, flexibility, and dense ecosystem of skilled suppliers and engineers that China offered. He stated, “Those jobs aren’t coming back.”
Any competent operations leader in that era, facing the same global realities, would have leaned heavily on China’s manufacturing advantages — just as competitors did. Cook’s excellence in optimizing that system deserves credit for execution and efficiency, but crediting him alone for Apple’s post-Jobs growth ignores that the foundational supply-chain decisions were made with Jobs’ approval and understanding. Apple’s iterative success under Cook was built on the product vision and momentum that Steve Jobs created.
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Apple’s future hinges on whether new CEO John Ternus can ignite AI growth, analysts say
Apple’s leadership transition headed by new CEO John Ternus marks the beginning of a new era for the company, as Wall Street analysts say Apple’s future success will hinge on whether it can effectively fuse its deep hardware expertise with artificial intelligence to drive sustained growth in a rapidly changing tech landscape.”
Apple faces mounting AI‑driven competition and pressure from the Trump administration to bring more manufacturing back home… The company recently lost its place as the world’s most valuable company to AI chip leader Nvidia amid concerns about the slower pace of its generative AI rollout. Despite introducing Siri in 2011, Apple has yet to turn that early lead into a dominant AI platform.
“Investors want to know if Ternus will engage in the AI race, or if he will follow Cook’s lead. There is anticipation of new Apple products to boost their offering, and there is some expectation that Ternus could move fast to put his own stamp on the company,” said Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB. “The external environment will be challenging for the new CEO – tariffs, war and supply chain concerns need to be factored into his growth plans.”
“Ternus now faces the challenge of turning Apple’s improving AI software, including its partnership with Google’s Gemini, into a genuinely AI-led device experience compelling enough to drive the next major hardware upgrade cycle,” [Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown], said.
MacDailyNews Note: Ternus, currently Apple’s senior vice president of Hardware Engineering, will become the company’s next chief executive officer effective September 1, 2026. Cook will remain as CEO through the summer to ensure a smooth transition, working closely with Ternus. Cook will then serve as executive chairman, where he will continue to assist with key aspects of the company, including engagement with global policymakers.
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Johny Srouji named Apple’s Chief Hardware Officer
Apple today announced that, effective immediately, Apple executive Johny Srouji will become chief hardware officer. Srouji, who most recently served as Senior Vice President of Hardware Technologies, will assume an expanded role leading Hardware Engineering, which John Ternus most recently oversaw, as well as the hardware technologies organization.
“Johny is one of the most talented people I have ever had the privilege to work with,” said outgoing Apple CEO Tim Cook in a statement. “He has played a singular role in driving Apple’s silicon strategy, and his influence has been felt deeply not just inside the company, but across the industry. He has always led his organization with remarkable deftness and judgment, and time and again, his team has delivered breakthrough innovations that have transformed our products. We are incredibly fortunate to have him as Apple’s chief hardware officer.”
“Johny has been an incredible partner on the executive team, and is going to be an extraordinary chief hardware officer,” said incoming Apple CEO John Ternus in a statement. “I look forward to continuing to work closely with him in our new roles.”
Srouji has built one of the world’s strongest and most innovative teams of silicon and technology engineers, driving leading breakthroughs in custom chips and hardware technologies including Apple silicon, batteries, cameras, storage controllers, sensors, displays, cellular modems, and other critical areas across Apple’s entire product line.
Apple’s world-class hardware engineering team turns bold ideas into beautifully integrated products people rely on every day. They create and build all of Apple’s hardware products, leading everything from product design to system engineering to reliability and durability testing. The team works closely with industrial design, hardware technologies, software engineering, and operations to deliver the world’s most innovative products.
Srouji joined Apple in 2008 to lead development of A4, the first Apple-designed system-on-a-chip. Prior to Apple, Srouji held senior positions at Intel and IBM in the area of processor development and design. He earned both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in Computer Science from Technion, Israel’s Institute of Technology.
MacDailyNews Take: Congrats, Johny Srouji!
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Tim Cook to become Apple Executive Chairman; John Ternus to become Apple CEO
Apple announced that Tim Cook will become executive chairman of Apple’s board of directors and John Ternus, senior vice president of Hardware Engineering, will become Apple’s next chief executive officer effective on September 1, 2026. The transition, which was approved unanimously by the Board of Directors, follows a thoughtful, long-term succession planning process.
Cook will continue in his role as CEO through the summer as he works closely with Ternus on a smooth transition. As executive chairman, Cook will assist with certain aspects of the company, including engaging with policymakers around the world.
“It has been the greatest privilege of my life to be the CEO of Apple and to have been trusted to lead such an extraordinary company. I love Apple with all of my being, and I am so grateful to have had the opportunity to work with a team of such ingenious, innovative, creative, and deeply caring people who have been unwavering in their dedication to enriching the lives of our customers and creating the best products and services in the world,” said Cook in a statement. “John Ternus has the mind of an engineer, the soul of an innovator, and the heart to lead with integrity and with honor. He is a visionary whose contributions to Apple over 25 years are already too numerous to count, and he is without question the right person to lead Apple into the future. I could not be more confident in his abilities and his character, and I look forward to working closely with him on this transition and in my new role as executive chairman.”
“I am profoundly grateful for this opportunity to carry Apple’s mission forward,” said Ternus in a statement . “Having spent almost my entire career at Apple, I have been lucky to have worked under Steve Jobs and to have had Tim Cook as my mentor. It has been a privilege to help shape the products and experiences that have changed so much of how we interact with the world and with one another. I am filled with optimism about what we can achieve in the years to come, and I am so happy to know that the most talented people on earth are here at Apple, determined to be part of something bigger than any one of us. I am humbled to step into this role, and I promise to lead with the values and vision that have come to define this special place for half a century.”
Arthur Levinson, who has been Apple’s non-executive chairman for the past 15 years, will become its lead independent director on September 1, 2026. Ternus will join the board of directors, also effective September 1, 2026.
“Tim’s unprecedented and outstanding leadership has transformed Apple into the world’s best company. He’s introduced groundbreaking products and services time and again, and his integrity and values are infused into everything Apple does,” said Levinson in a statement. “On behalf of the entire board of directors, we are incredibly grateful for his countless contributions to Apple and the world, and we are thrilled he will now be executive chairman. We believe John is the best possible leader to succeed Tim and as he transitions to CEO we know his love of Apple, his leadership, deep technical knowledge, and relentless focus on creating great products will help lead Apple to an extraordinary future.”
“I want to thank Art for the incredible work he has done leading the board of directors for the past 15 years,” added Cook. “I have always found his advice to be invaluable and I appreciate his thoughtfulness and his unwavering dedication to the company. I am grateful he will serve as our lead independent director, and I look forward to working with him in my new role.”
Tim Cook joined Apple in 1998. He became CEO in 2011 and has overseen the introduction of numerous products and services, including new categories like Apple Watch, AirPods, and Apple Vision Pro, and services ranging from iCloud and Apple Pay to Apple TV and Apple Music. He was also instrumental in expanding existing product lines. Under Cook’s leadership Apple has grown from a market capitalization of approximately $350 billion to $4 trillion, representing a more than 1,000% increase, and yearly revenue has nearly quadrupled, from $108 billion in fiscal year 2011 to more than $416 billion in fiscal year 2025. The company has expanded its global footprint substantially, particularly in emerging markets; it is now in more than 200 countries and territories. Apple operates over 500 retail stores and has more than doubled the number of countries in which its customers can visit an Apple Store. During his tenure, Apple has grown by more than 100,000 team members and increased its active installed base to more than 2.5 billion devices.
Apple Services has been a major focus area of Cook’s, and during his tenure the category has grown to become a more than $100 billion business, the equivalent of a Fortune 40 company. Cook was also instrumental in creating the wearables category at Apple, which now includes the world’s most popular watch and headphones, and which has served as the foundation for Apple’s remarkable impact on the health and safety of its users. Under Cook’s leadership, Apple also transitioned to Apple-designed silicon, enabling the company to own more of its primary technology and deliver industry-leading gains in power efficiency and performance that directly benefit users across its products.
Cook has made Apple’s core values even more central to the company’s decision making and product development. Under his leadership, the company reduced its carbon footprint by more than 60 percent below 2015 levels during a period in which revenue nearly doubled. Cook, who has long advocated for privacy as a fundamental human right, has made privacy and security imperative at Apple, setting a standard for user protection that continues to set the company apart from the rest of the technology industry. He has also pushed for continued innovation in the accessibility space, believing that Apple products should be made for everyone. And he has made central to his leadership the notion that Apple should be a place where everyone can feel they belong and where everyone is treated with dignity and respect.
Ternus joined Apple’s product design team in 2001 and became a vice president of Hardware Engineering in 2013. He joined the executive team in 2021 as senior vice president of Hardware Engineering. Throughout his tenure at Apple, Ternus has overseen hardware engineering work on a variety of groundbreaking products across every category. He was instrumental in the introduction of multiple new product lines, including iPad and AirPods, as well as many generations of products across iPhone, Mac, and Apple Watch.
Ternus’s work on Mac has helped the category become more powerful and more popular globally than at any time in its 40-year history. That includes the recent introduction of MacBook Neo, an all-new laptop that makes the Mac experience even more accessible to more people around the world. This past fall, his team’s efforts were on full display with the introduction of a redefined iPhone lineup, including the incredibly powerful iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max, the radically thin and durable iPhone Air, and the iPhone 17, which has been an incredible upgrade for users. Under his leadership, his team also drove advancements in AirPods to make them the world’s best in-ear headphones, with unprecedented active noise cancellation, as well as the capability to become an all-in-one hearing health system that can serve as over-the-counter hearing aids.
Ternus led much of the company’s focus in areas like reliability and durability, introducing new techniques that have made Apple products remarkably resilient. He has also driven much of Apple’s innovation in materials and hardware design that have reduced the carbon footprint of its products, including the creation of a new, recycled aluminum compound that has been introduced across multiple product lines, the use of 3-D printed titanium in Apple Watch Ultra 3, and innovations in repairability that have increased the lifespans of several Apple products.
Prior to Apple, Ternus worked as a mechanical engineer at Virtual Research Systems. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania.
MacDailyNews Take: The end of an era… and the start of a new one!
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Apple stock can hit $300 despite memory headwinds – Morgan Stanley
Apple has multiple catalysts for strong revenue growth, so investors shouldn’t be spooked by any margin pressure from rising memory costs, according to a Morgan Stanley analyst.
“We see a path to $300 for Apple shares by this September,” Morgan Stanley analyst Erik Woodring wrote in a research note on Monday. That target is above Apple’s all-time closing high of $286.19, set on December 2, 2025.
Angela Palumbo for Barron’s:
“Memory inflation will pressure margins, but this is well-known, and iPhone revenue upside sets up for a better than feared June quarter guide,” Woodring wrote.
He added that any announcements regarding an AI powered Siri at the company’s Worldwide Developers Conference in June, and the expected release of a foldable iPhone, would be positive tailwinds that can help push the stock higher after earnings.
Woodring, who rates the stock as Overweight with a $315 price target, also thinks Apple stands out against large tech peers as the company continues to report strong free cash flow while competitors continue to spend massive amounts of capex on building out AI infrastructure.
MacDailyNews Take: From Woodring’s lips to Mr. Market’s ears!
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New Apple TV 4K, M5 Mac Studio, and smart home devices imminent?
Apple fans are buzzing with speculation about a possible surprise April/may 2026 event — or at least a quiet wave of product launches — as fresh supply chain hints and YouTube-style leaks continue to dominate online discussions. While Apple has yet to confirm any official spring keynote, the chatter around refreshed Apple TV 4K, powerful M5-series Macs, and long-awaited HomePod and smart home upgrades has reached a fever pitch.
No formal invitations have gone out, and reliable reports suggest a traditional live-streamed event in April or May looks unlikely, with many eyes now turning toward WWDC in June. Still, “out of stock” signals, component leaks, and analyst whispers are keeping the rumor mill spinning at full speed.
The Long-Awaited Apple TV 4K Refresh Tops the List
One of the most talked-about rumored devices is the next-generation Apple TV 4K. Leaks point to a significant performance leap powered by the A17 Pro chip (the same silicon that debuted in the iPhone 15 Pro). This upgrade is expected to bring:
• Faster ray tracing and improved GPU performance for better gaming
• Deeper Apple Intelligence integration, including a smarter Siri
• Wi-Fi 7 support
Potential HomeKit enhancements
Some reports suggest the hardware is essentially ready, but Apple may be holding back the launch to ensure Apple Intelligence features (particularly advanced LLM Siri capabilities) are polished. A lower price point has also been floated in some leaks, which could make the new Apple TV more appealing as a true home entertainment and gaming hub.
Whether it drops quietly in the coming weeks or waits until later in the year, the 2026 Apple TV is shaping up to be the biggest update to the device in years.
M5 Mac Studio: A Desktop Powerhouse Incoming
On the Mac side, attention is firmly on the M5 Mac Studio. Supply of current models appears to be tightening, and leaks indicate Apple is preparing versions with both M5 Max and M5 Ultra chips.
Expect major gains:
• Up to 36-core CPU and 80-core GPU configurations
• Significantly higher memory bandwidth
• Up to 30% faster performance in pro workloads compared to M4-series chips
The M5 Ultra, in particular, is generating excitement among creative professionals and power users who see it as Apple’s answer to high-end desktop competition. While some earlier rumors pointed to a first-half 2026 launch, the current consensus leans toward a mid-2026 debut — possibly timed with WWDC.
Smart Home Devices: HomePod Updates and the Elusive Home Hub
Apple’s long-rumored smart home push is also part of the conversation. Leaks mention refreshed HomePod mini and a new full-size HomePod, along with a dedicated smart home hub (sometimes called “HomePad”) featuring a built-in display.
These devices are expected to bring tighter integration with Apple Intelligence, improved Siri, and better whole-home control. Some reports suggest a spring or early summer window for the speakers, while the full smart display hub might slip to later in 2026.
What to Watch Next
With no official confirmation of an April event, much of the current speculation is driven by YouTube videos dissecting supply chain reports and code leaks. Apple could opt for simple press releases and website updates instead of a big stage presentation — a strategy the company has used before for smaller refreshes.
In the meantime, the combination of a gaming-ready Apple TV, ultra-powerful M5 desktops, and long-overdue smart home hardware has Apple enthusiasts eagerly scanning for any sign of movement from Cupertino.
MacDailyNews Take: Stay tuned. Even without a flashy invite, April and May could still deliver some welcome surprises for the Apple ecosystem.
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Apple releases third betas of iOS 26.5, iPadOS 26.5, macOS Tahoe 26.5, watchOS 26.5, tvOS 26.5, and visionOS 26.5
Apple today seeded developers with the third betas of iOS 26.5, iPadOS 26.5, macOS Tahoe 26.5, watchOS 26.5, tvOS 26.5, and visionOS 26.5.
The updates arrived on Monday, April 20, 2026, roughly one week after Apple released the second betas of the same software.
Availability and Installation
Registered developers can download the new betas through the Apple Developer portal or over-the-air on enrolled devices:
• On iPhone and iPad: Go to Settings > General > Software Update.
• On Mac: Open System Settings > General > Software Update.
• Similar paths apply to Apple Watch, Apple TV, and Vision Pro.
A free or paid Apple Developer account is required for access. Public beta versions typically follow shortly after developer releases via the Apple Beta Software Program.
What to Expect
As with recent point releases in the iOS 26 / macOS Tahoe 26 family, iOS 26.5 and its companion updates appear focused on bug fixes, performance improvements, and minor refinements rather than major new user-facing features. No specific changes have been highlighted yet for beta 3, consistent with the steady, weekly cadence Apple often follows in the later stages of point-update testing.
Earlier betas in the 26.5 cycle introduced or tested items such as:
• A “Suggested Places” feature in Maps
• Continued work on end-to-end encryption for RCS messaging
• Preparatory messages about upcoming ads in Apple Maps (for the US and Canada)
The third betas continue polishing the software ahead of a likely public release in the coming weeks.
These updates follow the major iOS 26, iPadOS 26, and macOS Tahoe 26 releases that debuted in 2025 with the new Liquid Glass design language and expanded Apple Intelligence capabilities. The .5 releases typically serve as maintenance updates that improve stability and address issues reported after the initial major versions.
Developers are encouraged to test their apps thoroughly against the new SDKs included with Xcode 26.5 to ensure compatibility.
MacDailyNews Note: Beta software can contain bugs and is not recommended for daily-driver devices. Always back up your data before installing.Stay tuned for further details as developers and public beta testers dig into today’s builds and report any new findings.
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Apple defeats Masimo bid for new Apple Watch import ban at US ITC tribunal
A U.S. trade tribunal ruled in favor of Apple on Friday, rejecting medtech company Masimo’s bid to reinstate an import ban on the Apple Watch.
The U.S. International Trade Commission closed Masimo’s case after declining to review a preliminary ruling issued in March by an ITC judge. That ruling found that Apple’s redesigned watches do not infringe Masimo’s patents related to blood-oxygen sensing technology.
Reuters:
Danaher-owned Masimo can appeal the decision to the Washington-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
“We thank the ITC for its decision, which ensures we can continue to offer this important health feature to our users,” Apple said. “For more than six years, Masimo has waged a relentless legal campaign against Apple, and nearly all of its claims have been rejected.”
The two companies have been embroiled in a long-running legal dispute after Masimo accused Apple of hiring away its employees to steal pulse-oximetry technology for determining blood oxygen levels.
The ITC blocked imports of Apple’s Series 9 and Ultra 2 smartwatches in December 2023 after finding that they infringed Masimo’s patents. Apple removed blood-oxygen reading technology from its watches to avoid the ban, but reintroduced an updated version of the technology last August with approval from U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
Updated watches display health data from the blood-oxygen reader on associated Apple devices like the iPhone and not the watch itself. Apple’s original version displayed the data on its watches as well.
Masimo has separately sued Customs over its approval of the redesigned watches.
MacDailyNews Take: Apple Watch owners can breathe easy (and keep measuring their blood oxygen levels) for the foreseeable future.
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Apple faces final hearing in India antitrust case as regulator advances proceedings
India’s Competition Commission of India (CCI) has scheduled a final hearing for May 21, 2026, in its ongoing antitrust investigation into Apple’s App Store practices, after the company did not submit certain requested financial data and responses since October 2024, Reuters reports today.
The case, which dates back to 2021, stems from complaints by a non-profit organization, later joined by Match Group (owner of Tinder) and several Indian startups. A 2024 CCI investigation report alleged that Apple abused its dominant position in the iPhone apps market by requiring developers to use its proprietary in-app purchase system.
Apple has consistently denied any wrongdoing. The company maintains that it is a relatively small player in the Indian smartphone market, where Android-based devices hold the vast majority of share. iPhones currently account for about 9% of the market in India, up from around 7% in 2024, according to Counterpoint Research data.”
Apple has been challenging aspects of the proceedings, including a request in March 2026 to pause the CCI case while a separate matter is heard in the Delhi High Court. In that parallel case, Apple is contesting India’s antitrust penalty framework, particularly the potential use of global turnover in calculating fines—a approach that could theoretically expose the company to penalties as high as $38 billion in this matter.
The CCI rejected Apple’s request to halt proceedings, noting in an April 8, 2026 order that the company had been given sufficient opportunities to submit its objections, suggestions, and required financial information. The regulator has now granted Apple an additional two weeks to file its responses while setting the May 21 hearing date for the first time, signaling that the case is moving toward a resolution.
Antitrust experts have pointed out that Apple still has the opportunity to provide the requested financial details (supported by an auditor’s certificate) and present its arguments on any potential penalty during the upcoming hearing.
This development is part of broader global regulatory scrutiny faced by major tech companies, including Apple, over app store policies and competition issues. India represents a key growth market for Apple, where the company has been expanding its presence through new retail stores and increasing iPhone sales.
Apple has not publicly commented on the latest order, but the company has long argued that its App Store policies support a secure and high-quality user experience while enabling developers to build successful businesses. The CCI’s process continues, with both sides expected to present their positions at the May hearing.
MacDailyNews Take: India risks squandering a golden growth opportunity with Apple over a regulatory trifle in which the Cupertino company has done absolutely nothing wrong.
Apple in India isn’t a dominant behemoth crushing competition, it’s a company successfully earning its way in one of the world’s toughest, most price-sensitive markets by offering superior products that Indian consumers increasingly want.
Forcing changes to a proven, secure App Store model that benefits users with privacy, security, and a consistent high-quality experience — while enabling millions of developers worldwide to build thriving businesses — over complaints that largely echo global gripes from a few large players is yet another regulatory overreach. Apple has cooperated extensively is currently a small participant in India with no abusive dominance.
India has everything to gain by fostering an environment where innovative companies like Apple can continue investing, creating jobs, expanding retail presence, and driving premium economic activity. Alienating one of the world’s most successful tech firms over what amounts to standard platform policies that have fueled an entire ecosystem risks sending exactly the wrong signal to global investors and innovators.
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