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One more thing — Tim Cook logs off as Apple CEO
US President Donald Trump shakes hands with Apple CEO Tim Cook in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC on August 6, 2025. — AFP pic

SAN FRANCISCO, April 21 — Apple on Monday announced that Tim Cook will step down as the tech giant’s chief executive officer in September, handing the top job to company veteran John Ternus.

The announcement answers long-simmering questions about a successor for 65-year-old Cook, who said he will become executive chairman of the board when he cedes Apple’s CEO position.

“It has been the greatest privilege of my life to be the CEO of Apple and to have been trusted to lead such an extraordinary company,” Cook said in a statement.

Cook joined Apple in 1998, rising through the ranks and helping drive its success as chief operating officer coordinating the iPhone maker’s complex supply chain.

He became chief executive in 2011 after its iconic co-founder and leader Steve Jobs left due to health issues.

Cook is credited with expanding Apple’s product line and ramping up the company’s value to some US$4 trillion (RM16 trillion) based on the value of its shares.

Cook was the mastermind of the strategy that made China the primary manufacturing base for Apple devices, with the vast majority of iPhones assembled by contractor Foxconn and other suppliers in Chinese factories.

“Tim’s unprecedented and outstanding leadership has transformed Apple into the world’s best company,” outgoing chairman of the board Arthur Levinson said in the statement.

“His integrity and values are infused into everything Apple does.”

Levinson currently holds the board chairmanship in a non-executive role. He will become the board’s lead independent director.

Ternus joined Apple’s product design team in 2001 and became a senior vice president of hardware engineering over the course of the following two decades.

He is credited by Apple with playing roles in an array of products including iPhones, iPads, Apple Watch, and Mac computers.

“Having spent almost my entire career at Apple, I have been lucky to have worked under Steve Jobs and to have had Tim Cook as my mentor,” Ternus said in the same statement.

Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks during Apple’s ‘Awe-Dropping’ event at the Steve Jobs Theater on the Apple Park campus in Cupertino, California on September 9, 2025. — AFP pic

Apple at 50

Apple marks its 50th anniversary this year as artificial intelligence challenges the Silicon Valley legend to prove it can deliver yet another culture-changing innovation.

Jobs, a driven marketing genius, and Steve Wozniak, who invented the Apple computer, revolutionised how people use technology in the internet age.

The two men – both college dropouts – changed the way people use computers, listen to music and communicate on the go, giving rise to lifestyles revolving around smartphone apps.

Apple’s hit products – the Mac, the iPhone, the Apple Watch and the iPad – command a cult-like following, long after the company’s humble beginnings on April 1, 1976 in Jobs’s Cupertino, California garage.

“Apple is making a major transition on its AI strategy and long-time CEO and legendary Cook leaving now is a surprise,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said in a note to investors.

“There will be a lot of pressure on Ternus to produce success out of the gates especially on the AI front.”

A concern haunting investors is that Apple appears to be easing into AI while rivals Google, Microsoft and OpenAI race ahead.

A promised upgrade to its Siri digital assistant was delayed, in what analysts called a rare stumble for the company.

Rather than relying on its own engineers to overhaul Siri, Apple has turned to Google for AI capability.

While Cook has guided Apple into new categories like watches and AirPods, he is not known for the kind of “big thing” that Jobs delivered.

Under Cook, Apple spent billions of dollars on a self-driving electric vehicle project it wound up scrapping in 2024.

An Apple Maps service launched in 2012 was so rife with error that Cook published an apology letter.

And, while a technical marvel, Apple Vision Pro “spacial computing” headgear, with a price tag of US$3,500, has little traction in the market. — AFP

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