Apple, the iconic Cupertino, CA-based company that produces the popular iPhone, MacBook Air, iPad and a slew of other devices, computers and services, was long thought of as a consumer-centric firm. But the enterprise uptake of its hardware and popular operating systems (macOS, iOS, and iPadOS to name a few) has given Apple a real place in the business world. Most recently, it has begun to tout (and roll out) "Apple Intelligence," its take on the generative AI revolution. Here's our latest round-up of news, analysis, features and authoritative opinion about what the company is doing:
At its JNUC event this week, the company took big steps toward becoming an extensible platform.
The annual Jamf Nation User Conference (JNUC) takes place this week and Apple admins are flying in.
It's getting easier and easier to migrate to the Mac.
Twenty years ago, Intel was in the cat-bird seat in the computer chip industry. Now, it’s taking US government funds and looking around for money to climb back into market prominence.
The government has hit Apple with a demand for UK customer data.
Apple sells millions of these things every year, so the arrival of new models that offer built-in translation and health tracking matters.
High computational performance with low energy consumption: seven words that define both Apple’s ecosystem and the needs of modern business.
Apple has an internal AI chatbot it is using to test new Apple Intelligence services. It's named after the Latin word for "truth."
Enterprise IT decision-makers really need to look beyond tradition and sticker price.
MacStadium’s inaugural CIO survey indicates there's been rapid Mac deployment across US business during the last two years.
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