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At 50, Apple confronts its next bigchallenge: AI

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

Steve Jobs, a driven marketing genius, and Steve Wozniak, who invented the Apple computer,
revolutionized how people use technology in the internet age and built a company now
worth more than $3.6 trillion.

The two 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’
Cupertino, California garage.

Apple has sold more than 3.1 billion iPhones since the handsets debuted in 2007, generating
about $2.3 trillion in revenue, according to Counterpoint Research.

The Apple logo is pictured on a large digital screen at the start of celebrations at the Battersea Power Station in central London on March 25, 2026, to mark the 50th birthday of US tech giant Apple. PHOTO: AFP/ JUSTIN TALLIS

For Counterpoint analyst Yang Wang, the iPhone is the most successful consumer electronics
product ever, reshaping human communication while becoming “a global fashion and status
symbol.”

Before the iPhone, Apple shook up home computing with the 1984 Macintosh, whose icon
based interface and mouse made computing accessible beyond specialists — and sparked a
legendary rivalry between Jobs and Microsoft’s Bill Gates.

“Apple was founded on the simple notion that technology should be personal, and that belief — radical at the time — changed everything,” chief executive Tim Cook said in an anniversary
letter posted online.

‘Cult of Apple’

Apple transformed the music market with the iPod and iTunes, made the smartphone a mass
market staple with the iPhone, and took tablets mainstream with the iPad.

The Apple Watch quickly seized the lead in the smartwatch market, despite debuting later
than its rivals.

While not an inventor, Jobs — who died in 2011 at age 56 — was renowned for his
uncompromising drive to marry technology with design to create products that were intuitive
and hassle-free.

Apple marketed the Macintosh as the “computer for the rest of us,” but it was the iPhone that
fulfilled that promise, said David Pogue, author of the recently released “Apple: The First 50
Years.”

Apple chief executive Steve Jobs unveils a new mobile phone that can also be used as a digital music player and a camera, a long-anticipated device dubbed an “iPhone” at the Macworld Conference in San Francisco, on January 9, 2007. Apple, founded on April 1, 1976 by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne, celebrates its 50th anniversary in 2026. PHOTO: AFP/ TONY AVELAR

The iPhone’s dominance reshaped Apple’s business model. With the premium smartphone
market widely seen as saturated, Cook has increasingly turned to selling digital content and
services to the company’s vast existing base of users.

Central to that strategy is the App Store, which Apple made the sole gateway to software on
its devices, taking a cut of transactions — and thereby drawing accusations of monopoly
abuse, regulatory scrutiny in Europe and court orders in the United States to open up its
platform.

‘China factor’

No country has been more central to Apple’s rise — or more fraught for its future — than
China, with Cook cementing ties to the Asian superpower through regular appearances at
local Apple stores and official visits.

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.

It is also one of Apple’s largest consumer markets, generating tens of billions of dollars in
annual revenue.

But the company faces mounting pressure on both fronts: trade tensions and tariffs have
accelerated efforts to diversify manufacturing to India and Vietnam, while competition from
domestic rivals such as Huawei has eaten into Apple’s Chinese market share.

‘AI challenge’

A concern haunting investors is that Apple appears to be easing into generative 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.

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

A man holds the newly released MacBook Neo during the “Special Apple Experience” launch event at the Apple Store in the Manhattan borough of New York City, on March 4, 2026. 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 Steve Jobs’ Cupertino, California garage. PHOTO: AFP/ TIMOTHY A. CLARY

But whether built in-house or outsourced, Apple’s obsession with user privacy and its
premium hardware could position it to drive widespread adoption of personalized AI — and
make it profitable, a goal that has proved elusive for much of the AI industry.

Already, Apple’s AirPods are being steadily improved with sensors and smart software, and
lessons learned from the Vision Pro could feed into AI smart glasses to rival Meta’s.

“They are the ones that always seem able to create something so simple that users just fall in
love with it,” said Carolina Milanesi, an analyst at Creative Strategies.

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