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:
For Apple admins, the partnership delivers no-fuss identity management, device management, and security.
There's a way Apple can comply with regulations forcing it to open up and still stand up for the people who like its platforms just as they are.
IDC survey finds that just 35% of businesses are keen on using the augmented reality headset, though finance and healthcare sectors show greater interest.
The UK's competition regulator expects to pursue its cases against the tech giants' app stores under tough new rules.
Microsoft's use of permission overrides in some of its productivity apps can leave Mac users vulnerable to library injection attacks, researchers say.
Small businesses will see more Macs in their business across the next 12 months, a JumpCloud report claims.
Microsoft will need to become secure by design, but if you can't wait there's an alternative.
Jamf has removed another talking point used by Windows-centric IT folks to argue against accepting Macs in the enterprise.
Google's Apple-slanted criticisms open the debate about privacy in AI — and expose Gemini's limitations.
The company's decision to charge a 30% fee on Patreon subscriptions unfairly taxes creatives.
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