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Search resuls for: "Apple wouldn't"


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Steve Jobs had apparently had mixed feelings about Apple entering the TV market before his death. Apple cofounder Steve Jobs reportedly made it clear before he died that Apple wouldn't pursue its own television set, but the company may now be revisiting the idea over a decade later. Jobs reportedly told biographer Walter Isaacson that he'd "finally cracked" how to make TVs simpler to use. In 2014, writer and former Apple beat reporter Yukari Iwatani Kane wrote in her book, "Haunted Empire: Apple After Steve Jobs," that Jobs told top Apple employees in 2010 that the company wouldn't be making a TV set. Apple's services business, which includes Apple TV+ subscriptions, has boomed in recent quarters.
Persons: Steve Jobs, Apple hasn't, Jobs, Walter Isaacson, he'd, Isaacson, Apple, it's, Yukari Iwatani Kane, Ted Lasso Organizations: Apple, Bloomberg, Apple Intelligence
Apple is interested in the exclusive global rights for Formula 1 races, Business F1 reported. The iPhone maker could offer up to $2 billion a year for the rights, per the report. AdvertisementAdvertisementApple is reportedly considering making a bid of up to $2 billion a year for the rights to show Formula 1 races, according to a report by Business F1. Formula 1 Group declined to comment to Business F1 and didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Insider. CHANDAN KHANNA/Getty ImagesAn MLS Season Pass costs $14.99 a month or $29 a season, while Apple TV+ subscribers pay $12.99 a month or $25 a season.
Persons: , Tim Cook, JIM WATSON, Lionel Messi, CHANDAN KHANNA, Apple wouldn't Organizations: Apple, Business, Major League Soccer, Service, Prix, Liberty Media, Sirius XM, MLS, Inter Miami, Wall Street, ESPN, ABC, Forbes, Sky, Revenue, Parks Associates, Amazon, Football, Sports Media Watch Locations: Austin , Texas
The companies now have six months to start complying with the Digital Markets Act's requirements, which are spurring changes in how Big Tech companies operate. “So that’s the endgame.”For example, under the DMA tech companies can't stop consumers from connecting with businesses outside their platforms. That means Telegram or Signal users could exchange texts or video files with WhatsApp users. That means Meta can't mix together a user's data from Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp services without clear consent. Google noted that it's already doing this and said it would remind European users of their choices.
Persons: Thierry Breton, who's, , Alexandre de Streel, ” de Streel, it's Organizations: Apple, Microsoft, Google, Meta, Big Tech, Digital Services, EU, Digital, University of Namur, Epic, Spotify, Facebook Locations: Europe, Brussels, EU
Apple's $3,499 Vision Pro headset was the main focus of its Monday event. The Apple Vision Pro headset was the biggest announcement at its Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday, but there's nothing beyond official ads that show people actually using the $3,499 device. If you want to see the Vision Pro in use, you'll have to wait a bit longer to see anything that isn't curated by the people selling it. Apple execs also declined to speak on the record about the headset, Wired reported. Despite this, the Vision Pro is getting pretty good reviews, and you'd hope so given its huge price tag.
Persons: Tim Cook, Mark Gurman, Cook hadn't, Mark Zuckerberg, Zoe Kleinman, Joanna Stern, Marques Brownlee —, Apple execs Organizations: Apple, Worldwide, Bloomberg, Twitter, Vision, Wall Street Journal, Wired, Vision Pro
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