Apple has confirmed this year’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) will take place June 8-12. The show begins with a keynote speech likely to be Tim Cook’s final public appearance as Apple’s CEO. His successor, John Ternus, will also be in the spotlight, but perhaps not quite as much as Apple’s promised smart Siri successor.
Getting AI right is incredibly important to the company this year, and Apple seems to recognize that. The official media invitation features a brightly glowing Swift logo with the tagline “Coming Bright Up,” which some see as a hint at the advanced AI capabilities Apple intends making available. It also hints at the new Siri user interface Apple is building, while the use of a Swift suggests the introduction of additional Foundation Models with which developers can add AI tools to their products.
On the developer website, Apple’s media images all show that bright glow, which also hints at potential improvements to Liquid Glass. There’s no doubt at all that the
Jamf has a new CEO: former CTO Beth Tschida. She succeeds previous CEO John Strosahl, who himself replaced Dean Hager on his retirement. Tschida has served as interim CEO since March.
Jamf-using IT pros should be pleased. Tschida is an engineer who joined the company in 2018 as senior vice president, engineering and became CTO four years later. She has led the company’s expansion into security as well as its ongoing mission in device management. She takes the helm as device management, and IT more generally, struggle with the potential and the peril of artificial intelligence deployment across industry.
‘We are making AI work on Apple’
“Over the last eight years, I’ve had the privilege of working with an exceptional team to build the leading platform for managing and securing Apple at work,” said Tschida in a statement. “Now, AI is reshaping how organizations work, and we are making AI work on Apple. We’re building autonomous management so devices manage themselves within boundaries, o
Firefox chief Ajit Varma explains how Mozilla is betting on privacy, optional AI tools, and its nonprofit structure to compete against browsers from Google, Apple, and Microsoft.
Apple is realizing real business benefits as it builds a circular manufacturing process across the company. Manufactured using recycled materials and renewable energy, the popular new MacBook Neo is a great illustration of this.
Apple says the Neo is manufactured using 45% renewable electricity and holds 60% recycled materials by weight. That recycling includes 90% recycled aluminium and 100% recycled cobalt in the battery.
e-Waste becomes input
The high-quality enclosure is made through a process in which durable recycled aluminum is pressed into near-final shape using just half the raw material of traditional machining.
Apple even leaned into corporate social responsibility when it came to the A18 chip it puts inside these systems, as it originally used ‘binned’ processors originally intended for the iPhone 16 Pro to drive the five core A18.
These were rejected processors Apple had in hand anyway, and while it has had to order additional chips to cope with demand for the MacBook A
SEC Tokenized Stocks Framework: Apple & Tesla on Crypto
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Ripple Treasury gained GTreasury’s 2021 SWIFT-compatible filing as Citadel reportedly took a $1.7M XRP ETF stake. Ripple Treasury has drawn fresh attention after a 2021 SWIFT Compatible Application Profile linked GTreasury to SWIFT messaging standards and integration layers. The record is being discussed again because Ripple later acquired GTreasury, according to the supplied information. The […]
The post Ripple Treasury Gains SWIFT Integration Roots In GTreasury 2021 Filing Record appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.
Tether’s investment into LemFi uses USD₮ to replace slow SWIFT transfers with nearly instant stablecoin transfers. LemFi caters to millions of diaspora customers in Africa and Asia who require affordable cross-border payments. The collaboration expands the reach of stablecoin infrastructure to remittance services and beyond, thus increasing financial inclusion. Tether’s investment in LemFi marks a […]
The post Why Tether’s LemFi Deal Could Transform International Remittances appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.
Tether’s undisclosed LemFi investment wires USDT into African and Asian remittance corridors, swapping slow SWIFT transfers for near‑instant, low‑fee stablecoin settlement. Tether has announced a strategic investment in LemFi, a UK‑headquartered cross‑border financial platform used by African and Asian diaspora…