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On Mon, 21 Oct, 4:03 PM UTC
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[1]
Apple CEO Tim Cook Says Apple Intelligence Will Make Products 'Profoundly Different': New AI Technology Will Get Consumers 'On A Different Technology Curve' - Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL)
Apple CEO Tim Cook is proud of Apple Intelligence and Vision Pro, brushing off skeptics in a recent interview. Apple Intelligence is one of the most highly anticipated product releases from Apple Inc AAPL in years and has already changed the life of its CEO Tim Cook for the better. Cook believes the release of Apple Intelligence will go down as one of the biggest technology releases in Apple history. The Apple CEO recalled in a recent interview that he still gets nervous on big days like the Worldwide Developers Conference, where Apple unveiled the Apple Intelligence artificial intelligence technology earlier this year. Cook told the Wall Street Journal that Apple Intelligence will make using the company's products "profoundly different." "I think we'll look back and it will be one of these air pockets that happened to get you on a different technology curve," Cook said. Cook's strong belief in the Apple Intelligence technology could put the feature on the same level of other technology features well-known to Apple fans over the years like the iPod's click wheel and the iPhone's touch interface, the Wall Street Journal reported. The Apple CEO said the technology advancements and use cases from Apple Intelligence could take time for some people to realize and experience. "But it will happen. It will happen for all of us." For Apple, communicating the importance and use cases of Apple Intelligence could be paramount for future growth. iPhone users are no longer buying new phones every year and may have to be persuaded to buy the newest iPhone 16 models, which is where Apple Intelligence will live. Apple Intelligence can summarize your notifications and emails, a feature that Cook admitted in the interview to using daily. Are you buying when the CEOs of the Magnificent 7 are selling? Stay in the know with our Insider Trades page -- see when leaders like Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and Jensen Huang are offloading their own shares. While some consumers may not be overly excited about Apple Intelligence or the price to upgrade to a new phone for the AI features, it might serve as a good reminder that the technology giant was previously laughed at for having a smartphone without a physical keyboard and the $399 cost of the iPod. "It's predictable in some ways," Cook added. Cook said the same will be realized by the skeptics of Apple Intelligence. "It's not that people are wrong and we're right. We have enough faith that if we love the product, there will be enough other people out there that love it too." Apple doesn't release products that are just good, instead focusing on great ideas, which could be why the company has abandoned working on electric vehicles. "Saying no to really, really good ideas so you can make room for the great ones," Cook added. While the Vision Pro hasn't captured the same mass demand as other Apple products, Cook remains proud of the technology and sees the future of the device. "At $3,500, it's not a mass-market product. Right now, it's an early-adopter product. People who want to have tomorrow's technology today." Similar to the skeptics who brushed off the success of the iPod, iPhone and AirPods and perhaps the same people doubting Apple Intelligence, Cook has a warning on success. "It doesn't occur overnight." Read Next: Apple Vision Pro Is 'Mind-Blowing,' Says CEO Tim Cook: 'We Live In A 3D World, But The Content That We Enjoy Is Flat' Photo: Tim Cook, Courtesy Apple Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
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Apple Intelligence 'Changed My Life,' Says CEO Tim Cook. Here's How.
AI isn't just an upgrade or a possible selling point for Apple CEO Tim Cook. It is, instead, revolutionary. In a Sunday interview with the Wall Street Journal, Cook praised Apple Intelligence, Apple's AI features that do everything from summarizing breakup texts to generating custom emojis. Cook said he used Apple Intelligence for tasks like generating overviews of long emails; he said it saved him time throughout the day. "It's changed my life," he told the Wall Street Journal. Apple Intelligence is rolling out later this month to eligible iPhones, and last week, Apple released a new iPad Mini designed with AI in mind. Related: 'Unreal and Dystopian': Apple Intelligence Is Summarizing Breakup Texts So You Don't Have to Read Them Apple wasn't the first to explore AI's use cases. Google, OpenAI, and Microsoft beat it to the punch, with Google releasing an AI smartphone a month before Apple did, OpenAI coming out with ChatGPT in November 2022, and Microsoft introducing Copilot in March 2023. In the WSJ interview, Cook acknowledged that Apple was late to the AI game, but "we've done [AI] in a way that we think is best for the customer." The company has tremendous reach, with nearly half of all smartphone users in the U.S. opting for an iPhone as of 2022. Apple is going for staying power; the slogan under Apple Intelligence reads "AI for the rest of us." That means that Apple Intelligence will roll out gradually. According to Bloomberg, eligible iPhones will get features like notification summaries and smart reply texts through the iOS 18.1 update on October 28. Later, Apple plans to integrate OpenAI's ChatGPT into the iPhone, to answer questions that Siri can't. The AI upgrades apply to the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max, iPhone 16 lineup, and iPads and Macs that are running an M1 chip and up.
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Apple Intelligence 'changed my life': Tim Cook says Apple's AI is as innovative as the iPod's click wheel or the iPhone's touch screen
Apple Intelligence is set to launch before the end of October - and Apple's CEO Tim Cook believes the AI tools have already changed his life. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Cook emphasized just how much he believes in Apple Intelligence, despite the messy launch of the technology, which sees new features rolled out to users in phases over the next year. "We weren't the first to do intelligence," Cook told the WSJ. "But we've done it in a way that we think is the best for the customer." At Apple's WWDC keynote in June, the company claimed Apple Intelligence was "AI for the rest of us", and in the interview Cook said that while Apple isn't the first company to introduce AI tools to a smartphone, the company's approach is "Profoundly different." He added that he believes the addition of Apple Intelligence will completely change the way people use the iPhone, iPad, and Mac in the same way the iPod's click wheel or iPhone's touch screen once did. "I think we'll look back and it will be one of these air pockets that happened to get you on a different technology curve," he said. Cook said one of his favorite Apple Intelligence features is the ability to summarize emails and notifications, which had, he told WSJ, "changed my life." He added, "If I can save time here and there it adds up to something significant across a day, a week, a month." Apple Intelligence is expected to release on October 28, and while users who get to use Apple AI for the first time might find the limited features underwhelming at first, Apple is banking on small quality-of-life improvements like email summaries making a huge difference to the way we use our devices. Initially, Apple Intelligence will launch with Writing Tools, Notification Summaries, Clean Up, and a redesign of Siri which emanates from the edges of your device. These features are similar to other generative AI tools we've seen on the best Android phones, including the Google Pixel 9, although this is with Apple's polish and design. It's an incredibly exciting time to be an iPhone, iPad, or Mac user with Apple Intelligence's arrival upon us. While we can't fully predict the impact of Apple's entrance into the AI industry, we anticipate that it's going to be significant. The first few months of Apple Intelligence might prove to be frustrating at times, with some of the best features held back until 2025, but if these features prove as life-changing as Tim Cook suggests, we might in time be able to forgive Apple for the less-than-seamless launch.
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Tim Cook is confident in Apple's AI future | Digital Trends
If you own an iPhone 16 series, you likely purchased it to be among the first to use Apple Intelligence. However, a month after the latest iPhones were released, this highly anticipated AI suite from the largest company in the world has not yet been released to the public. Tim Cook thinks the wait will be worth it. In a long-ranging interview with The Wall Street Journal, the Apple CEO defends his company's speed at which it is introducing AI into its products. He also sees a bright future for Apple Vision, even though the first product in a likely series of alternate reality devices, the very expensive Apple Vision Pro, has largely failed to catch on with most users. Recommended Videos Of AI, Cook says: "We weren't the first to do intelligence. But we've done it in a way that we think is the best for the customer." To stress this point further, he highlighted Apple Intelligence's new email summaries tool and how it has changed his productivity and daily habits. "It's changed my life," he explains. He's also bold enough to explain that Apple Intelligence will ultimately change how we use his company's products. "Profoundly different," he said. Of the first-generation $3,500 Apple Vision Pro, Cook explains that it was never intended as a mass-market product. Instead, "it's an early-adopter product. People who want to have tomorrow's technology today -- that's who it's for." He also noted that products like iPods, iPhones, and AirPods didn't necessarily find success overnight. Of the Vision Pro, he contends: "Over time, everything gets better, and it too will have its course of getting better and better. Apple Intelligence was announced at the June Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). Soon after, Apple admitted that the product wouldn't launch with the iPhone 16 series, which it announced last month. Instead, parts of Apple Intelligence will begin rolling out to supported devices before the end of this month, with other features perhaps not arriving until 2025. The new AI tools, which focus on improving user productivity and efficiency, as well as making the overall experience more personal, will eventually be available in each of Apple's product lines. At the start, the tools will be available on late-model iPhones, iPads, and Macs. The Vision Pro arrived in February with mostly good reviews. However, it has almost certainly been held back by its high price, limited battery life, and slow adoption by software developers. We've heard that a lower-priced option could be released as early as next year.
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Cook says Apple wasn't first with AI, but will be the best
Ahead of it rolling out to users, Tim Cook says that Apple Intelligence is already changing lives -- including his own. Apple has been reported to be as much as two years behind the rest of the artificial intelligence industry, and CEO Tim Cook does not care. On the one hand, Apple has actually been doing AI under the name Machine Learning for at least a decade, but on the other, Apple doesn't look to be first. "We weren't the first to do intelligence," Cook told the Wall Street Journal in a new interview. "But we've done it in a way that we think is the best for the customer." "We're perfectly fine with not being first," he continues, speaking not just of Apple Intelligence but all of the company's efforts. "As it turns out, it takes a while to get it really great." "It takes a lot of iteration. It takes worrying about every detail. Sometimes, it takes a little longer to do that," he continued. "We would rather come out with that kind of product and that kind of contribution to people versus running to get something out first." "If we can do both, that's fantastic," says Cook. "But if we can only do one, there's no doubt around here. If you talk to 100 people, 100 of them would tell you: It's about being the best." In the case of Apple Intelligence, Cook says that he is using its summaries extensively. He now relies on the Apple Intelligence summaries of his email inbox, and says that has changed his daily habits. "If I can save time here and there," says Cook, "it adds up to something significant across a day, a week, a month. It's changed my life. It really has." Cook is of course just one person, and he's also one person who gets a lot of email. But he maintains that the benefits he has seen already will be the same for everyone -- and that it will make life different. "Profoundly different," he said. "I think we'll look back [at Apple Intelligence] and it will be one of these air pockets that happened to get you on a different technology curve." Cook doesn't mean he expects everyone to have their lives changed right away. "But it will happen. It will happen for all of us," he concludes Apple has said that Apple Intelligence will be rolling out in stages, and in different territories, over the next few months. It's expected that the first major release will be on October 28, 2024.
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Apple CEO Tim Cook Uses iPhone, Apple Watch 'Every Day,' Talks Apple Intelligence Delay: 'We're Perfectly Fine With Not Being First' - Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL)
While testing Apple Intelligence, Cook saw a key feature that could save him time and increase productivity. All companies likely strive for products so good that the CEO uses them on a daily basis, and the world's most valuable company, Apple Inc. AAPL, is no different when it comes to its leader, Tim Cook. In a new interview, Cook says he uses multiple Apple products daily whether at home, at work or on the road. Apple CEO Tim Cook checks his iPhone first thing every morning, The Wall Street Journal reported in a new interview. Cook sorts through his email first thing in the morning, along with checking overnight sales reports and how Apple products are selling worldwide. The iPhone is also the last item Cook uses every night, setting his next day's morning alarm for 5 a.m. After the quick daily email and sales check routine, Cook works out, listening to classic rock music with his AirPods while recording the workout on his Apple Watch. Cook also uses his MacBook Air, MacBook Pro and iMac at the office daily. While on the road, Cook uses the iPad Pro. It is likely not a huge surprise to many Apple fans and investors that Cook is passionate about the company's products and one of its biggest daily users. "Every day, every product," Cook told the WSJ. Are you buying when the CEOs of the Magnificent 7 are selling? Stay in the know with our Insider Trades page -- see when leaders like Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and Jensen Huang are offloading their own shares. Along with using products that have already been released to the public, Cook also helps test new products like Apple Intelligence. Cook's test of Apple Intelligence might help explain a philosophy that the Apple CEO and company have: not first, but best. "We're perfectly fine with not being first. As it turns out, it takes a while to get it really great. It takes a lot of iteration. It takes worrying about every detail. Sometimes it takes a little longer to do that." Cook said it's great to be first to market, but if you have to pick between being first or best, the answer is clear: "it's about being the best." "We weren't the first to do intelligence. But we've done it in a way that we think is the best for the customer." Consumers have likely seen commercials or heard of a case of artificial intelligence being used to get summaries of long emails. Cook uses this Apple Intelligence feature for his own email inbox. "If I can save time here and there, it adds up to something significant across a day, a week, a month." Cook said using Apple Intelligence has had a big impact on his daily habits and productivity. "It's changed my life. It really has." Read Next: Tim Cook Once Worked For Apple Competitors: 5 Things You Might Not Know About The Apple CEO Photo: Shutterstock Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
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Tim Cook defends Apple coming late to AI with four words - 9to5Mac
But Apple CEO Tim Cook argues in a new interview that he doesn't see it that way, and says that the company has taken its time with AI for the same reason it has with every innovation ... Cook spoke with the WSJ's Ben Cohen. There is one idea that encapsulates the approach to innovation that makes all of it possible -- and it's maybe the closest thing to a grand unified theory of Apple. It's a philosophy of just four words that describe Apple's past, present and definitely its future. Four words that help explain why this was the year the company plowed into spatial computing and artificial intelligence. During one of those epochal years when it feels like everything is about to change again, I heard them over and over, in conversation with Apple executives and Cook himself: Not first, but best. Cook elaborated on those four words in a lengthy interview this summer at Caffè Macs on Apple's campus, where the steady and typically reserved CEO explained that his company's top priority is delivering great products that enrich people's lives. Cook says that sometimes you can be first and best, but any time you have to choose between the two, there's only one answer. If we can only do one, there's no doubt around here. If you talk to 100 people, 100 of them would tell you: It's about being the best. Cook famously makes a point of reading emails from customers, and told Jimmy Fallon last month that he now uses Apple Intelligence to summarize these. "It's changed my life," he says. "It really has." Asked how much it will change the lives of Apple customers, he has no doubt. "Profoundly different," he said. He puts Apple Intelligence in the same pantheon of innovative breakthroughs as the iPod's click wheel and the iPhone's touch interface. "I think we'll look back and it will be one of these air pockets that happened to get you on a different technology curve," he says. Cook believes the same is true of Apple Vision products. While even the CEO mostly uses it as a very expensive way to watch movies, and he admits it's currently a niche product, he says none of Apple's successful product lines took off overnight.
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Tim Cook, Apple's CEO, emphasizes the transformative potential of Apple Intelligence, the company's new AI technology, comparing its significance to iconic Apple innovations like the iPod's click wheel and iPhone's touch interface.
In a series of recent interviews, Apple CEO Tim Cook has been vocal about the transformative potential of Apple Intelligence, the company's latest foray into artificial intelligence technology. Cook's enthusiasm for the new AI suite suggests it could be as revolutionary as some of Apple's most iconic innovations [1][2].
Cook believes that Apple Intelligence will fundamentally change how users interact with Apple products. "I think we'll look back and it will be one of these air pockets that happened to get you on a different technology curve," he stated [1]. The CEO compared the potential impact of Apple Intelligence to that of the iPod's click wheel and the iPhone's touch interface, suggesting a paradigm shift in user experience [3].
Cook shared his personal experience with Apple Intelligence, particularly praising its ability to summarize emails and notifications. "It's changed my life," he declared, emphasizing the cumulative time savings across days, weeks, and months [2][3]. This feature, among others, is designed to enhance productivity and streamline daily tasks for users.
Apple Intelligence is set to launch in phases, with the initial release expected on October 28, 2024. The AI suite will include features such as Writing Tools, Notification Summaries, Clean Up, and a redesigned Siri interface [3][4]. While some features may not be available until 2025, Apple is focusing on quality and user experience over being first to market [5].
Cook acknowledged that Apple wasn't the first to introduce AI in smartphones but emphasized the company's unique approach. "We've done it in a way that we think is the best for the customer," he stated [2]. This strategy aligns with Apple's history of refining technologies rather than rushing to be first, as seen with products like the iPod and iPhone [1].
While discussing AI, Cook also touched on the future of Apple Vision Pro, the company's $3,500 mixed-reality headset. Despite its current niche market, Cook remains confident in its potential, drawing parallels to the gradual adoption of other revolutionary Apple products [4].
The delayed rollout of Apple Intelligence, particularly its absence from the iPhone 16 series launch, has raised some eyebrows. However, Cook remains unfazed, stating, "We're perfectly fine with not being first," and emphasizing Apple's focus on getting products "really great" before release [5].
As Apple prepares to enter the AI arena more prominently, the tech world watches with anticipation. With Cook's bold claims and Apple's track record of innovation, Apple Intelligence could indeed reshape the landscape of consumer AI technology in the coming years.
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Apple CEO Tim Cook discusses the company's focus on AI and the potential of Vision Pro in enterprise applications, while addressing concerns about declining iPhone revenue.
2 Sources
Apple's upcoming AI features, known as Apple Intelligence, are reportedly two years behind competitors like OpenAI and Google. However, the company's ecosystem integration and partnership strategy may give it a unique advantage in the long run.
14 Sources
Apple's recent iPhone 16 launch event introduced 'Apple Intelligence', their approach to AI integration. While the tech giant aims to revolutionize user experience, questions and skepticism arise about its implementation and impact.
7 Sources
Apple's upcoming AI feature, 'Apple Intelligence,' is met with skepticism from analysts who doubt its ability to significantly boost iPhone 16 sales. The delayed rollout and limited initial capabilities are seen as potential hurdles in the competitive AI landscape.
4 Sources
Apple introduces on-device AI capabilities for iPhones, iPads, and Macs, promising enhanced user experiences while maintaining privacy. The move puts Apple in direct competition with other tech giants in the AI race.
6 Sources
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