设为首页 加入收藏
  • 首页
  • 反派在你身后
  • 求魔
  • 我的龙女老婆
  • 浅墨浓香
  • 谁在世界的尽头哭泣
  • 落在眼睛里的最后一滴雨
  • 当前位置:首页 > 决战古今 > Apple was never going to 'win' its WWDC keynote

    Apple was never going to 'win' its WWDC keynote

    发布时间:2025-06-13 00:12:17 来源:脚踏实地网 作者:焦点

    Apple is 关键字3increasingly caught between a rock and a hard place — and not just on Artificial Intelligence.

    Here's the problem, one that may have been stretched to breaking point during CEO Tim Cook's 2025 WWDC keynote. There are people in the market for Apple products, who want and have always wanted technology that just works. They want gadgets that are intuitive to use, not intrusive. According to multiple surveys, consumers continue to be distrustful of anything with an AI label. According to the nonprofit IAPP, 57 percent of us believe AI poses a threat to our privacy.

    Then there are investors who are in the market for Apple stock, who are always on the lookout for tech products that seem new. Overall, tech investors are still drinking the AI Kool-Aid despite abundant evidence — including a brand new paper from Apple researchers! — that AI's ability to reason, and to be useful in general, may have already hit a wall.


    You May Also Like

    SEE ALSO: 'The illusion of thinking': Apple research finds AI models collapse and give up with hard puzzles

    Apparently, Apple is trying to keep both of those groups happy. Result: a keynote that liberally sprinkles on mentions of "Apple Intelligence," a rebranding of many software services (including voice assistant Siri, which got just one shout-out compared to multiple mentions of ChatGPT), but failed to gin up any excitement about what Apple Intelligence can do for you.

    Given privacy is a major concern for consumers, it's cool that Apple Intelligence won't send any of your queries to the company. But we already knew that from Cook's 2024 keynote that introduced Apple Intelligence. Without getting tough on dangers posed by other companies who are more reckless with your data when it comes to AI — the same way Cook once dared to call Android a "toxic hellstew" — mentions of privacy just fly by like an F1 race car.

    More than anything else, Apple's updates were mere vibes. Apple Intelligence is a vibe. The "liquid glass" design refresh is a vibe. Craig Fedherigi is definitely a vibe. But tech stocks are coasting on a different vibe right now, the one OpenAI's Sam Altman has been nurturing for the last three years — including hiring Apple legend Jony Ive to create a screenless gadget. There are only so many F1 dad jokes Apple can make to compete with that alluring vision.

    The Apple analyst who called the event a "yawner" because Apple did not "monetize on the AI front" spoke for the market, which drove Apple stock down from the minute the keynote began.

    Mashable Light Speed Want more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories? Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter. By clicking Sign Me Up, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Thanks for signing up!

    How Apple is being a people-pleaser

    Tim Cook with a headset behind a computer"Yes. F1, baby." Credit: Apple keynote, Mashable screenshot

    You'd think the interests of Apple consumers and Apple investors would not diverge, and for most of the past two decades they haven't. Thanks to the roaring success of the iPhone, Apple got millions of new customers for all its well-designed, highly-rated, premium price products. Investors rewarded that runaway growth by making Apple the first company ever with a market capitalization of more than $3 trillion.

    But Apple is increasingly dealing with mature markets. Or in normal person-speak, its gadgets have solved most major problems and settled down into standard versions of themselves. The average user can buy an iPhone now and be reasonably confident that its superfast chipset and self-updating software will keep it future-proofed for the next five years or so. You can still rock an iPhone 11 from 2019 well into 2026; it's the oldest phone that officially supports the upcoming iOS 26.

    And that's as it should be! Apple would not have earned its current level of love from consumers if it had gone any further with the obnoxious business strategy known as planned obsolescence, or if it wasn't trying to rein in the environmental impact of its gadgets. A business model that has nothing to do with selling user data means the company can crow about privacy on billboards.

    But it also means Cook has to work extra hard to convince the market that incremental updates are something to be excited about — and risks looking extra in the process.


    Related Stories
    • Everything we learned during Apple's WWDC 2025 keynote
    • WWDC 2025: All the Apple Intelligence AI features coming to your devices
    • WWDC 2025: A new world for iMessage and phone calls
    • Whatever Trump decides on tariffs, Apple and Tim Cook lose
    • Trump to Tim Cook: I don't want you building iPhones in India

    "Liquid Glass" is a case in point. Fedherigi described it as a "material" that sits atop the user interface in Apple OSes, as if the company had literally injected liquid glass into all its screens. Spoiler alert: it hasn't. Liquid Glass is just a design language that makes menus a bit more "see-through-y", in Mashable senior editor Stan Schroeder's memorable summary. Such obvious overhyping makes Apple marketing a bit more see-through-y too.

    In search of a new look, Liquid Glass also adds a drop shadow to some icons — verbotenat Apple back when Jony Ive was there. Former Apple executive Scott Forstall was ousted in 2012 in part because he championed this kind of design, known as skeumorphism, whereas Ive favored a flat look. Apparently Apple has extended its recycling program to include design ideas.

    Apple's new call screening feature will positively affect more lives than Liquid Glass. But Android has taken the lead on that front, so Cook can't really claim credit for it; it's just listed as one of a grab bag of features in Apple Intelligence. Polls in group chats? That's also an Apple Intelligence feature. Order tracking in Apple Wallet? Sure, let's call that Apple Intelligence too.

    But whether you fear AI or love it, that grab-bag approach to what Apple Intelligence actually is ain't going to cut it. Investors, who have already sent the market cap of AI-leveraged companies like Microsoft and Nvidia soaring higher than Apple's, aren't going to be satisfied with what seems like a weak commitment to the coming AI era. And so long as he refuses to explain what the market and other companies get wrong about AI, Cook will stay stuck between the rock and the hard place.

    • 上一篇:2021重庆卓悦马会冬季会员马术精英赛圆满举办
    • 下一篇:第九章 解救两个女孩

      相关文章

      • 智能垃圾分类箱垃圾亭陆续投入使用 环保积分可兑换日用商品
      • 第88章 陈渊是奔着红鹊来的
      • 第44章 都是唐氏的嫁妆
      • 第117章 哪哪都透着建安侯府的影子
      • 第四十八章、两眼一翻
      • 第39章 你是真想害死我吗
      • 第59章 为朝廷立功的好机会
      • 第71章 下旨册封时成逸为世子
      • 第79章 都是淋过雨的人
      • 第128章 宫里第一滴污血

        随便看看

      • 我在修仙界开发新技术
      • 第76章 姑娘是大富大贵之人
      • 第111章 陈渊竟然是晋王的人
      • 第87章 陆公子心里其实有人了
      • Germany vs. France 2025 livestream: Watch UEFA Nations League for free
      • 第70章 真正做主的小姑娘
      • 第67章 输的是她的一生
      • 第37章 你心里在骂我们姑娘
      • 上海“区内直转”业务率先落地奉贤综保区
      • 第88章 陈渊是奔着红鹊来的
      • Copyright © 2025 Powered by Apple was never going to 'win' its WWDC keynote,脚踏实地网   sitemap