Future Apple products will just ‘blow you away’: Tim Cook | Tech News

Future Apple products will just ‘blow you away’: Tim Cook

Optimistic about Apple’s future, Cook said there’s a “long, great roadmap of fantastic” products related to the Apple Watch and AirPods.

By: MARK GURMAN
| Updated on: Aug 20 2022, 13:40 IST
Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks to members of the media at an Apple press event in San Francisco, California. (AFP Photo)
Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks to members of the media at an Apple press event in San Francisco, California. (AFP Photo) (AFP)
Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks to members of the media at an Apple press event in San Francisco, California. (AFP Photo)
Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks to members of the media at an Apple press event in San Francisco, California. (AFP Photo) (AFP)

Apple Inc. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook said he has 'never been more optimistic' about where the company is today and where it's heading. In a pep talk to investors, Cook said the iPhone maker is "planting seeds" and "rolling the dice" on future products that will just "blow you away."

Speaking at the company's annual general meeting in Cupertino, California, Cook reiterated that the iPhone maker is still on track to double revenue from services in 2020 from the nearly $25 billion in 2016. Referencing speaking notes on an iPad, Cook touched on several of the company's product categories.

He said eventually the goal is to lower the price on the $1,200 MacBook Air laptop with a higher-resolution screen and said there's a "long, great roadmap of fantastic" products related to the Apple Watch and AirPods. He indicated that more health features would come to the smartwatch.

Apple shares rose more than 1 percent in afternoon trading Friday in New York. The stock was down before Cook started speaking.

Investors are waiting for Apple to come up with a next big thing as demand for its best-selling product, the iPhone, slows, leading to the company's first holiday-quarter sales decline since 2001. Cook has often mentioned augmented reality as a game changing technology and Apple is working on a pair of AR glasses. In the meantime, the company is focusing on a growing services businesses and rising sales of other devices like the Watch and AirPods. Cook noted that Apple bought 18 companies in 2018 and is constantly on the lookout for more acquisitions.

The CEO also fielded questions from investors about privacy, diversity and politics. In an apparent jab at Facebook Inc. and Google, Cook criticized companies that build data profiles of their users, and reiterated that Apple is pushing for regulation against such practice. One shareholder noted that although Apple management's political opinion appears to differ from the Trump administration's, the company has still been able to successfully to work with the U.S. government.

At Apple's recommendation, shareholders rejected a proposal to disclose the ideology of board nominees. Those in favor of the proposal indicated their desire for Apple's board to have a more diverse set of political opinions, and one shareholder said the board needs more shareholder input.

Shareholders rejected a proposal to give wider access to nominate board members. The entire board, which includes Cook, former U.S. Vice President Al Gore and Walt Disney Co. CEO Bob Iger, was re-elected.

One shareholder criticized Apple for donating $1 million to the Southern Poverty Law Center in the wake of the violent Charlottesville, Virginia, attack in 2017. The shareholder indicated that if Apple's board was more diverse politically, the company might not have made the donation. Much of the room clapped when another shareholder rebuked the suggestion that Apple shouldn't have given money to the center, which monitors hate groups and combats discrimination.

 

Catch all the Latest Tech News, Mobile News, Laptop News, Gaming news, Wearables News , How To News, also keep up with us on Whatsapp channel,Twitter, Facebook, Google News, and Instagram. For our latest videos, subscribe to our YouTube channel.

First Published Date: 02 Mar, 12:54 IST
NEXT ARTICLE BEGINS