You'd be forgiven for thinking this day would never come. Siri has spent a decade and half somewhere between "sort of useful at a few things" and "utterly disastrous, why did I even try, can it honestly not even set a timer." But the wildest thing just happened: Apple put out a new version of Siri, and it actually seems to be pretty good.
On this episode of The Vergecast, David and Nilay talk about their early experiences with Siri AI, and what it means for users, and the rest of the AI industry, for the iPhone's built-in assistant to be good enough at most things. There's very little about Siri AI that feels bleeding edge or brand new, but …
Read the full story at The Verge.
S&P 500 record and a 6% SOX rebound put chips back in charge as Intel foundry headlines and Apple chatter sway sentiment. Key catalysts, risks, and signals to watch.
The iPhone 18 Pro's price hike highlights the tech industry's vulnerability to supply chain disruptions, impacting consumer costs and market dynamics.
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The Apple-Intel partnership could reshape the global semiconductor landscape, boosting US manufacturing and reducing reliance on foreign suppliers.
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Apple execs are now acknowledging the company is going to need to raises prices to cope with higher component costs, particularly memory. Apple has been battling to avoid doing so, but warned this week that those efforts are “unsustainable.”
The price pressure is being felt across the tech industry. Omdia predicts the average selling price (ASP) of smartphones globally will increase by around 20% this year — partly because AI industry demands have pushed up RAM prices and partly because of rapid cost increases in processor production as a direct consequence of war in the Middle East. This impacts anything that uses memory or processors.
Apple must raise prices, CEO warns
“We’re doing our best to mitigate the huge increases that are being passed to us, and we’ve been trying to shield our customers from the increases, but the situation has become unsustainable,” current Apple CEO Tim Cook told the Wall Street Journal.
OK, so prices are going to go up. But how?
If Apple must raise prices,
Intel's strategic pivot to US-based chip production for Apple could reshape the semiconductor landscape, enhancing national security and market dynamics.
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The collaboration could bolster US semiconductor manufacturing, reduce reliance on foreign production, and impact global tech supply chains.
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The collaboration could reshape global tech supply chains, boost US manufacturing, and intensify competition in the semiconductor industry.
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Apple's price hikes highlight the tech industry's vulnerability to AI-driven supply chain shifts, potentially reshaping consumer spending habits.
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