I used to be a supporter of Cook but he’s moved the company away from all my needs. Now it’s not me that created this situation it’s Tim Cook. Then there’s the situation of my 32 bit apps which cannot be replaced and Apple has quite literally moved the company away from all my needs. So what does that leave me with…nothing!Īs for the rumours about an “iMac Pro” I can’t justify the extra cost as well. No go on that as well because I’m limited to 16gb of RAM for the Mini. The MacBook Pros don’t have a large enough screen for my needs so I thought I’d get a Mac Mini and an LG screen. I can’t justify the exorbitant cost of a Mac Pro. Yep, I totally agree with Cook the Mac is totally different but it’s so different that I’m now forced to put up with my ageing late 2015 iMac. MacDailyNews Take: A bit more on privacy, straight from the horse’s mouth: But the reason for our being is the same. And we try to carry on the mission that he set in place, to build the best products in the world that enrich people’s lives. We would exchange tidbits on the day and talk about the future. And there’s never been a replacement for that. He would always stop by my office on his way out. How often do you think about Steve Jobs when you’re looking at what Apple is doing? It should be their decision, not a company’s. They should decide who gets to see the data, to hold the data, to sell the data. passes a federal privacy law because people should own their data. I’m not keen on a lot of regulation because I worry about what it does to innovation, but this issue is so big that I think regulation is required. I think privacy is one of the most consequential issues of this century. We wanted to put the user back in control of that. That’s called application tracking transparency. You have to have a pop-up dialog box that asks the user if they want to be tracked across other apps. To be in the app store you have to have a privacy “nutrition label” that says what data you’re collecting and what you’re doing with it. And our philosophy is to put the decision to share information with the user. TC: We strongly believe that privacy is a basic, fundamental human right. PM: How do you view that responsibility that comes with delivering the device that delivers the app? And Mac is now a totally different product than it was before. We found ourselves with a similar issue for laptops: How do you put something in there that is the most powerful computer chip in the world? Out of that was born M1, and now we’ve taken it further with M2. It goes back to the genesis of the M chips, or the A chips, from iPhone and really getting in and figuring out, how do you put a powerful chip in something that small and not get it to heat up and burn up? We were just talking in the hallway about M2 and M1-the history there goes back well over a decade. I feel like that every day-like a kid in a candy store. PM: Can you think of an example of some functionality of one of Apple’s products that when you first heard about it, you said, “That’s cool!” Popular Mechanics‘ Ryan D’Agostino sat down with Apple CEO Tim Cook and discussed the Mac in the era of Apple Silicon, your right to privacy, the life-changing power of wearable health tech, and more.
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