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:
The GSM Association promises end-to-end encryption is coming to the Rich Communication Services messaging standard, which will better protect communications between mobile devices.
Apple has confirmed a series of under-the-hood platform updates that will be useful for Apple admins.
There are a lot of seemingly smaller tweaks and changes, but no talk of Apple Intelligence yet. Why?
Even without Apple Intelligence, Apple's new desktop OS offers real-world improvements for users.
Here's what Apple Intelligence is, what tools exist (and when they'll arrive) — and a look at the history of AI at Apple.
iPad users in the European Union can join their iPhone-owning counterparts and download apps from outside the App Store beginning Sept. 16.
It's packed with new tools for enterprise professionals and artificial intelligence developers.
Apple's iOS 18 ships next week and while it won't (yet) have Apple Intelligence, it will help you get more work done.
The company will now be forced to give Ireland a huge chunk of cash.
Apple's approach to AI isn't about buzzwords, it's about the benefits.
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