Tim Cook to Step Down as Apple CEO; John Ternus to Take Over
John
Ternus, an Apple veteran who runs hardware engineering, will take over an extraordinarily
profitable company in need of new ideas.
·
Leadership
Transition:
o
Tim
Cook steps down after 15 years; John Ternus, head of hardware engineering, will
take over in September 2026.
o
Transition
coincides with the launch of the next iPhone.
·
Cook’s
Legacy:
o
Oversaw
Apple’s rise to a multitrillion‑dollar company.
o
Criticized
for being less of a “product visionary” compared to Steve Jobs.
o
Most
successes were iterations of existing products (iPhone, Mac, iPad).
o
New
products (HomePod, Vision Pro) often late or flawed.
·
AI
Gap:
o
Apple
missed early opportunities in AI, especially with Siri.
o
Google
now provides AI tech for future Siri versions.
o
Competitors
like OpenAI and Anthropic lead in AI innovation.
·
Wish
List for Ternus:
1.
Dare
to Be Weird Again:
§ Revive Apple’s experimental spirit (e.g.,
quirky iPods leading to Apple Watch).
§ Explore bold ideas like robot helpers or
chic electric vehicles.
2.
Make
AI Less Cringe:
§ Apply Apple’s design polish to AI tools.
§ Focus on family‑friendly, constructive
applications (e.g., better photo editing, study‑guide apps).
§ Build on successes like AirPods’ real‑time
translation.
3.
Streamline
Product Lineup:
§ Reduce confusing overlaps among iPhones,
iPads, and Macs.
§ Address engineer burnout from maintaining
too many models.
4.
Repair
Developer Relations:
§ Rebuild trust with app developers frustrated
by strict policies.
§ Encourage exclusive, polished iOS apps to
differentiate from Android.
[ABS
News Service/21.04.2026]
Apple
said on Monday (20.04.2026) that Tim Cook,
its chief executive for the last 15 years, will hand the reins to John Ternus,
its head of hardware engineering, in September. The transition, which will happen
around the launch of the next iPhone, will end an era of financial highs and a few
product lows.
Mr.
Cook played the difficult role of carrying the company after the death of Steve
Jobs, a founder known for his mercurial leadership, sharp vision and delivery of
products that people aspire to own. Although Apple became a multitrillion-dollar
company under his leadership, Mr. Cook never shook the perception that he was not a “product guy” like Mr. Jobs.
Many
of the best-selling products unveiled during Mr. Cook’s tenure — namely iPhones,
Macs and iPads — were iterations of past Apple hardware. At the same time, most
of Apple’s new products, such as the HomePod smart speaker and Vision Pro
headset, were reactions to similar gadgets from rivals and either too flawed or
too late to make a dent in the tech universe.
I
found Mr. Cook to be eloquent, charismatic and in command of the details of his
company when I interviewed him, but it has been a long time since Apple has had
a new, mainstream product hit.
In
the end, the next big thing that eventually arrived — artificial intelligence —
came not from Apple but from research labs like OpenAI and Anthropic. And because
Apple dropped the ball
many years ago on its voice assistant, Siri, which could have been a contender in
the A.I. race, its chief rival, Google, will be providing the A.I. technology for
a future version of Siri.
There’s
a lot to reflect on and hope for. As a tech writer who has reported on the company
for two decades, I offer my wish list for what Mr. Ternus will do with Apple.
Apple
should dare to be weird again.
When
Apple was a much smaller company, it experimented with edgier ideas. For one, it
introduced all sorts of iPod music players with novel designs, including a tiny
iPod with a touch screen, released in 2010. That iPod, which was the size of a belt
buckle, initially looked strange to me, but lots of customers quickly realized it
could be attached to a strap and worn around a wrist. This inspired Apple’s
designers to make the Apple Watch, which was one of the bright spots during Mr. Cook’s term.
Apple
should take risks and embrace weirdness again. Give us a robot helper. A chic electric
vehicle of some sort. (If not a car, then perhaps a great bike?) Something cool
that solves a real problem for consumers rather than for the Wall Street investors
hungering for more growth. Some new ideas may fall flat but eventually lead to great
products.
Apple
could make A.I. less cringe.
One
of Apple’s strengths has been making quirky ideas more tasteful and appealing to
normal people, not just the techie suburbanites of Silicon Valley. (Exhibit A: Look
at the white stubs dangling out of everyone’s ears now.) On that note, A.I. technology
could use Apple’s special touch. Chatbots and various A.I. tools are known as much
for their abuses as for their benefits — generating so-called deepfakes, cheating
in school and infringing copyrights, to name a few.
On
the upside, Apple’s A.I. technology, Apple Intelligence, is so limited that it can’t
easily be used for nefarious purposes. Now the company has an opportunity to focus
on delivering A.I. tools and apps that families can enjoy in positive and constructive
ways.
An
obvious example is Apple’s A.I. image editor, a “Clean Up” button for automatically
erasing photo bombers and distracting objects. It’s a feature that lots of people
would find useful, but it currently does a sloppy job at removing objects.
Apple’s
latest AirPods, which can automatically translate foreign languages inside your
ears, are another practical example of how A.I. can be used in empowering ways.
Apple should focus on doing more like this. (An idea off the top of my head: A nicely
designed iPad app that uses A.I. to automatically create a study guide or flashcards
from lecture notes would be a boon for students.)
Apple
should make fewer products better.
Apple
now sells so many different models of iPhones, iPads and Macs with slight variations
that it’s difficult to keep track of which product does what without a spreadsheet.
It’s hard to imagine why some of these products need to exist. (For $1,000, you
could get an iPad Pro, which has a faster chip than a normal $350 iPad — or for
$600, you could get an iPad Air, which also has a faster chip than a normal iPad.)
While
having so many models for lots of different customers sounds nice in theory, consumers
trying to buy an Apple product may find the lineup confusing.
There’s
another downside to maintaining all those products: Over the last few years, the
company has shed lots of talented engineers, and a common complaint is burnout from
trying to do too much with too little time.
Apple
should repair its relationship with app developers.
In
the past, there was a gulf between Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android, which was mostly
created by the quantity of apps available for each platform. Apple, which was first
to introduce an App Store in 2008, started out with thousands more apps than Google’s
app store. Nowadays, Google’s app store, Play, has millions more than Apple’s. And
if you were to choose an iPhone or an Android phone, the experience would be mostly
uniform because many developers create the same apps for both operating systems.
The
differences used to be more distinct. Apps made exclusively for iPhones were more
polished and functional than similar apps on Android devices. More polished iOS
apps still exist but are outliers, in part because many app developers grew frustrated
with Apple’s strict policies. Playing nicer with independent developers would help
restore what once made it feel special to be an iPhone user.