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:
Early reports indicate these processors will deploy tech similar to what's being used by other AI chip makers.
The robust but small computer Steve Jobs introduced in 2005 has truly grown up into a hardware beast.
AI-optimized PCs are being announced by virtually every system maker and chip producer, but the functions they offer will vary depending on the hardware. And users face a learning curve trying to figure out the new features.
Soon, it might even be able to open the cabin door for you.
Apple Pay will now be regulated like a bank— so why not actually become one?
Two actively used zero-day attacks affecting Apple products have been identified by a government-focused security group.
iPhone manufacturing will become increasingly automated with production facilities making extensive use of artificial intelligence, robotics, and ‘digital twin’ technologies.
This is the laptop everyone wants, but not everyone needs.
It's a game of Clash of the AI titans — and your mobile device is the battleground.
Foxconn, Pegatron, and Quanta Computer are ready to rapidly ramp up US manufacturing investment in response to any changes in national policy.
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