Apple is undergoing a major leadership change as current CEO Tim Cook is set to hand over his responsibilities after 15 years.
Tim Cook’s 15-year tenure as Apple CEO is set to end on September 1, 2026, and he will be replaced by Apple’s longtime hardware boss John Ternes, the company announced on Monday.
With a new position also comes new responsibilities. In the era of AI where every tech giant including Google, OpenAI and Microsoft are moving towards artificial intelligence by investing hundreds of billions of dollars per year to finance new data centers and expensive AI chips. In contrast, Apple has lagged behind in the AI ​​landscape.
So the biggest challenge for John Ternus is integrating AI into the company’s mission. During Tim Cook’s tenure, Apple’s AI strategy included drastic capital expenditure cuts.
The company was hesitant to even develop a basic AI model. Instead, it relied on Gemini and Sir facilities to upgrade its products.
Similarly, Apple’s launch of Apple Intelligence in 2024 introduced a suite of features including image generation, text rewriting, etc.
Notification Summary, and a partnership with OpenAI, which aims to modernize the iOS experience.
In January, Bloomberg also reported that the company plans to accelerate the development of three upcoming AI wearables powered by Siri, such as pendants, smart glasses, and AirPods with cameras.
But users are increasingly turning to third-party developers to get their AI fix on the platform.
Timothy Hubbard, assistant professor of management at the University of Notre Dame, said, “By choosing a hardware leader in John Turnus, Apple may signal that it still believes the future of AI will run through tightly integrated devices rather than just software.”
Apple’s AI gap: the first big test for John Turnus
John Ternes, 50, will face the challenge of integrating AI into Apple’s lucrative services because Apple already collects commissions when users subscribe to premium versions of ChatGate or the cloud through the App Store.
Secondly, Tetanus will look at the company’s approach to whether it wants to pursue its current privacy-first approach or whether it will embrace AI-powered personalization.
Forrester analyst Dipanjan Chatterjee said that in the coming years, “the seas will be turbulent for Apple as there is so much change in the way consumers interact with technology, especially with generative AI.”
