Apple, the iconic Cupertino, CA-based company that produces the popular iPhone, MacBook Air, iPad and a slew of other devices, computers and services, was long thought of as a consumer-centric firm. But the enterprise uptake of its hardware and popular operating systems (macOS, iOS, and iPadOS to name a few) has given Apple a real place in the business world. Most recently, it has begun to tout (and roll out) "Apple Intelligence," its take on the generative AI revolution. Here's our latest round-up of news, analysis, features and authoritative opinion about what the company is doing:
Apple's Messages via Satellite is saving lives in the wake of last week's hurricane in the US. It might also save your business.
Arm’s interest in buying part of Intel’s chip business shows how much the tech industry has been transformed by the mobile productivity philosophy articulated in the early days by the Apple Newton.
Open-source MDM company Fleet has introduced support for Apple devices.
Given that Apple hasn't signed a new EU AI pact, don't expect Apple Intelligence to launch in Europe any time soon.
The Apple device management vendor is rolling out an AI-driven, natural-language query interface for Apple IT admins.
Why didn't endpoint security vendors warn customers that macOS Sequoia support might be delayed before it was released?
Apple's former designer is teaming up with OpenAI on smart hardware.
Citrix now provides high-performance remote access to Mac desktops via Citrix DaaS.
As the iPhone ages, let's look at how the now-iconic device has matured since its arrival in 2007.
European bureaucrats have suddenly been elevated to the status of product designers, it appears.
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