Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC 2016) is well and truly underway now at Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco, California. Apple CEO Tim Cook has taken to stage now to kick off the event. He has started off first by talking about yesterday's tragic event in Orlando, followed by some of the stats and figures about both, WWDC attendees at the event, as well as the Apple as a company itself and its performance over the last few months.
Apple CEO Tim Cook has used the second part of an interview with CNBC's Mad Money host Jim Cramer to talk about things other than Apple's recent earnings call and financial results. Earlier, Cook hinted at some new innovative products that Apple has in the pipeline for the coming years, setting aside critique that Apple has reached its peak. Rather than carry on discussing the latest earnings report, and Wall Street's negative reaction to those results, Cook took the discussion onto a more personal level by talking about what personally motivates him to do the work that he does, as well as shedding some light on people that have inspired him to get this far into his career and become the person that he is today, from a personal and professional perspective.
Apple's new 4-inch iPhone SE and 9.7-inch iPad Pro hit store shelves today, and as per an ongoing trend, Apple CEO Tim Cook paid the Palo Alto Apple Store a surprise visit to mingle with customers on launch day.
At the Town Hall conference center inside Apple’s campus in Cupertino, CEO Tim Cook has taken to stage to kick off Apple's Spring 2016 media event titled 'Let us loop you in'.
It's being reported that Tim Cook, along with a number of technology company CEOs and established Republican representatives, have met at the American Enterprise Institute's World Forum to discuss one thing; how to stop Donald Trump from gaining the Presidential nomination from his party. It is being reported that Apple CEO Tim Cook is part of a fairly high profile coalition that has been looking at ways to try and prevent Donald Trump from getting the nod to run for President of the United States.
A new concern for Apple has come to light with experts suggesting the company could be looking at anything from heavy fines to jail time for CEO Tim Cook if it continues to deny the FBI's demands for backdoor access to the San Bernardino shooter's iPhone.
In an interview conducted today by ABC’s David Muir, Apple CEO Tim Cook explained his and Apple's stance in their ongoing fight with the FBI where the company is asked to create backdoor access to iPhone for the law enforcement agencies. You can watch the full interview here.
Google's CEO Sundar Pichai has joined a number of other high profile individuals in expressing his opinions on FBI's demand for Apple to provide backdoor access to an iPhone 5c that forms part of the San Bernardino shooting case. A federal judge has ruled that Apple must indeed assist law enforcement in granting access to a seized iPhone 5c that belonged to one of the shooters accused of killing 14 individuals in California. Commenting on the situation via the use of social media, Sundar Pichai called it a "troubling precedent".
Speaking at the Apple's earnings call, Tim Cook took the time to tell us what he thinks about Virtual Reality. Apple has so far chosen to sit out the bustling segment, but a change appears to be in the works, starting this year.
Apple's latest filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) provides us with a glimpse of information, showing that CEO Tim Cook took home $1 million more in 2015 than 2014, but that his top executives were better compensated during the same period.