
The biggest Apple story this week (and this month, and perhaps this year) was the announcement that Tim Cook is ending his 15 years as Apple CEO, with John Ternus to become the new CEO on September 1, 2026. Cook has had incredible success as Apple’s CEO. Under his leadership, Apple has introduced major new products such as the Apple Watch, AirPods, and Apple Vision Pro, and substantially improved existing products like the iPhone and the Mac. Apple’s services offerings—Apple Pay, Apple TV, etc.—have also substantially improved under Cook. His focus on the environment, employee gift matching, accessibility (“I don’t consider the bloody ROI“), LGBTQ rights, user privacy, diversity, and more has made Apple a better member of the community. And if you are an Apple shareholder, the 1,000% increase in market capitalization has been astounding. He is leaving the CEO position at the top of his game. So let’s dig deeper into this story as we discuss the news of note from this past week:
- I recommend that you read Tim Cook’s letter to the Apple community about his transition to a new role, which he posted on the Apple website.
- Reflecting on one of his proudest moments at Apple, Cook mentioned this week that it was the first time he received an email from an Apple Watch owner saying that the device had saved his life. And as noted by Marcus Mendes of 9to5Mac, Cook says that he now receives those kinds of messages every single day.
- John Gruber notes that the transition from Cook to Ternus is being handled with a lot of thought, and it is far less chaotic than the transition from Steve Jobs to Cook, when Jobs passed away sooner than many had expected. “It’s hard to imagine a more orderly, confidence-inspiring, exciting-but-not-at-all-surprising, this-feels-right way to do this.”
- Tim Cook won’t be leaving Apple. He will become executive chairman of the board and will be the primary person at Apple engaging with policymakers around the world. In other words, Cook will deal with Trump, China, the EU, etc. These are skills that Cook is very good at—diplomacy—and this approach also takes those difficult tasks off the plate of Ternus, allowing Ternus to focus on Apple itself. As Jason Snell of Six Colors remarks: “Not only does Cook have the personal connections there, but it’s a messy business that perhaps Ternus is best insulated from—for now.”
- Cook’s skill as a diplomat has not been without criticism. For example, so many of us cringed when Cook presented Trump with a gold plaque. But as Wesley Hilliard of HilliTech notes, the real blame here lies with an administration that forces a focus on adoration rather than what is best for the country. I agree with Hilliard that Cook did what he needed to do: “Trump gained one cheap plaque and some publicity while Apple saved itself and its customers countless billions in illegal tariffs. Also, the company still celebrates Pride month, utilizes DEI in its hiring, and leans into progressive opportunity and investment.”
- In an article for the New York Times, Patrick McGee—author of the excellent book Apple in China—argues that one of the problems with Tim Cook’s leadership of Apple is that he focused so much on manufacturing in China that he boosted the Chinese economy and therefore helped China’s authoritarian leaders. I think that McGee has a point, but what was the alternative? The iPhone would not be the excellent device that it is today without Chinese manufacturing. The issue is not that it is cheaper to make the iPhone in China; the iPhones that we know and love could not have been made in the United States because we don’t have the infrastructure. In an alternate universe where the iPhone was always made in America, it would be far more expensive and have far fewer features. We live in an interconnected world where it makes sense for different things to happen in different countries. That doesn’t mean I like China’s leadership. (To be fair, I’m not the biggest fan of the leadership in the United States right now, either.) My point is simply that Cook had many difficult choices to make, each with its upsides and downsides. Focusing on the downsides of the choices that Cook made is a little unfair if you don’t set forth and weigh the downsides that would have come from a different choice. Big decisions have big consequences, and I believe that Cook was earnest in doing what he thought was best for Apple and its users.
- Cook stepping down means that John Ternus is stepping up. Ternus is an Apple executive who has spent 25 years—half of his life—working at Apple. Apple is unlike any other company, and Ternus has a deep understanding of the Apple Way. He is also an engineer, and as the Senior Vice President of Hardware Engineering, he has been responsible for the incredible hardware that has come out of Apple for so long now. With a hardware guy in charge at Apple, many speculate that this could pave the way for even better hardware from Apple in the future. For example, Jennifer Pattison Tuohy of the Verge predicts that smart home hardware could be some of the first new products that we see under Ternus.
- In a presentation to Apple employees this week, Ternus stated that Apple is “about to change the world once again” thanks to an “incredible road map ahead, and I’m not exaggerating when I say this is the most exciting time to be building products and services at Apple in my entire career,” as noted by Ryan Christoffel of 9to5Mac. I suspect that many of the Apple employees he was addressing knew exactly what he was referring to, but for the rest of us, this is a big tease.
- William Gallagher of AppleInsider notes that when Ternus spoke at his alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania, in 2024, Ternus joked that “I really appreciate you inviting me back to campus after I nearly destroyed Penn’s first and, at the time, only CNC milling machine my senior year.” But Ternus noted that every new challenge taught him to “approach problems from different angles.”
- Kalley Huang and Tripp Mickle of the New York Times updated a story they published a few months ago about Ternus and his background. He was born in California, was a member of his college swim team, and, in the 1990s, one of his first jobs after college was working for a company developing an early VR headset.
- David Sparks of MacSparky says that choosing for the next CEO the person responsible for the part of the business that is working best is a tried and true approach.
- Max Eddy of Wirecutter explains why he believes the Authy app is the best app to use for two-factor authentication. I prefer to store my 2FA in 1Password, my password manager. Eddy says that it is slightly safer to use a 2FA app that is different from your password manager app. I agree that there is a slight theoretical increase in security, but I’m not aware of any circumstance in which that slight increase, achieved by using two different apps (a password manager and a 2FA app) on the same device, has ever made a difference to anyone in the real world. Moreover, Eddy acknowledges that to maximize security, you should use a 2FA method on a device separate from your iPhone, such as a YubiKey. But of course, that is inconvenient. Security is incredibly important, especially for lawyers, so whether you use only a very strong password manager such as 1Password or you use both a password manager and an authentication app, the key is to use something that is really good.
- Zac Hall of 9to5Mac recommends adjusting the settings for the Apple Watch sleep score feature to make that feature more valuable.
- Where do baby iPhones come from? No, not a high-tech stork. Marko Zivkovic of AppleInsider explains where Apple products are assembled and where the parts come from.
- Ed Hardy of Cult of Mac reports that Apple released iOS 26.4.2 this week to fix bugs and provide security updates, including a bug that could allow a deleted message to remain on the iPhone. (I discussed that bug last week when I noted that the FBI discovered and exploited it.)
- If you like getting sports scores on your iPhone, Philip Michaels compares the Apple Sports app and the ESPN app in an article for Six Colors.
- Christoffel also notes that you can now use an Apple Sports widget in CarPlay to keep tabs on the current score of a game while you are driving.
- Here is a video taken using an iPhone 17 Pro Max on Artemis II that shows the Earth setting behind the moon. Wow. I often enjoy watching the sunset when I am on vacation at the beach. Watching the Earth set is a new one for me.
- I recently wrote a very favorable review of the Anker Prime Wireless Charging Station (on sale for $119.99 on Amazon). This week, Ed Hardy of Cult of Mac reviewed it and liked it as well; his only negative was the MSRP of $149.99, which is a good reason to get it while it is on sale.
- At the end of last year, Apple abruptly pulled the Apple TV series The Savant just days before the first episode was scheduled to air because the series explores extremism, and Charlie Kirk was assassinated just before the series was to begin. Marc Malkin of Variety reports that the series will finally air in July. After all of that commotion, hopefully it is a good show.
- And finally, here is a fun video from Paul McCartney showing his recent appearance at Apple’s campus to perform for Apple’s 50th anniversary. People who were lucky enough to be there in person have reported that it was an amazing show:












