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Opinion, Editorial, Views, Columnists, Columns | The HinduBusinessLine

Rupee can’t be defended from just one side Railways’ performance Why not have a women-only party? Labour pangs Pak’s peculiar comeback on the global stage Letters to Editor India has jobs, but it needs better ones Cross-border insolvency laws and trade A major health challenge Editorial. Snooping around Letters to the Editor dated April 20, 2026 All you want to know about the women’s reservation and delimitation bills fiasco Editorial. Process deficit Letters to the Editor dated April 19, 2026 WPI effect on new GDP series The tragic reality of police brutality India’s AI value paradox Prepare the ground India-Korea economic ties poised to strengthen Nari Shakti Bill — a missed opportunity Natural farming should become mainstream policy Insights from new GDP data Strategies to enhance fertilizer security Pathway to maritime insurance sovereignty Why the GoP’s jittery Clear the smoke Aiding piped gas push Stocks are the least over-priced asset in India Is TCS harassment case tip of the iceberg? SIP with caution Global gold ETFs post worst-ever $12 billion monthly outflow: WGC How India is funding Silicon Valley’s rise Cyber insecurity Continuity via status quo Iran war, a boon for the BRICS Assessing the easing of provisioning norms by RBI Iran war, a test for India’s economic resilience Iran war’s impact on India’s farm output and food inflation Economic competence in judiciary Pressure point India moving up the pharma value chain NFRA’s statutory leap Finance capital in time of war How West-Asia war could reshape the AI race When signals diverge: Reading the Nifty-Gold ratio Mohali’s miracle boys Plastic concerns Nice countries come last Lawyers matter more than ever for corporates Odisha central to our aluminium ambitions Editorial. Fair deal Editorial. Wait and watch Letters to the Editor dated April 10, 2026 Unfortunate fallout of cyber crime investigations Letters to the Editor dated April 9, 2026 Will the uneasy truce hold? Charting an intellectually honest way of forecasting RBI plumps for caution amidst uncertainty Large corporates and the sustainability transition of MSMEs MPC positive, despite strong headwinds Cease and desist Together, let us empower our Nari Shakti An AI model that’s too risky NPS funds consistency check: what 10-year rolling returns reveal Editorial. Nuclear milestone Letters to the Editor dated April 7, 2026 Packaging woes China’s perennial industrial policy Sensex has fallen on account of global forces India’s strategic defiance at the WTO meet Freebies will hit Tamil Nadu’s fiscal health Close the backdoor in tobacco FDI policy Is EU’s CBAM discriminatory? Editorial. Freebies unplugged Letters to the Editor dated April 6, 2026 Projecting growth is not easy Improving safety in Indian aviation Amendments to FCRA India’s outreach to Angola will contain energy risk Oil shocks and the rupee: The tricky 100s Sensex at 40: Secrets behind long-term wealth in markets Editorial. Sweeping powers India’s next social protection is care, not cash In West Asia, it is advantage China Is awarding Trump a Nobel Prize the best bet for peace? Editorial. Knotty regulations Letters to the Editor dated April 3, 2026 Time to push for rupee internationalisation Up in the air Time for industry to lead economic resilience Allied healthcare needs attention What holds back investor participation? Still no endgame in sight Challenging year What happens when CAD rises Reorienting farm research Telecom infra must rest on strong fibre network A severe test for monetary policy India’s chance in supply chain reset Bengaluru’s housing market is growing but affordability is shrinking
Editorial. Job well done
2026-04-24 · via Opinion, Editorial, Views, Columnists, Columns | The HinduBusinessLine
Tim Cook’s era at Apple was defined by operational excellence and ecosystem expansion

Tim Cook’s era at Apple was defined by operational excellence and ecosystem expansion | Photo Credit: MARIO ANZUONI

Tim Cook’s legacy at Apple is best understood not in comparison to Steve Jobs, but as a redefinition of what leadership after a founder leaves looks like. He did not replicate Jobs’ product genius. Instead, he built one of the most formidable corporate machines in history. Under Cook, Apple transformed itself from a company dependent on breakthrough hits into a highly predictable, cash-generating ecosystem. Revenues multiplied, margins strengthened, and the company’s market value climbed into the trillions.

Yet the critique of Cook is equally consistent. Apple, many argue, became more disciplined but less daring. There was no single product moment to rival the iPhone. Innovations such as the Watch, AirPods, and Apple Silicon deepened the ecosystem, rather than redefine it. Big bets like the Apple Car never materialised, and in emerging areas such as artificial intelligence, the tech major has appeared cautious, even slow, compared to rivals like Google and Microsoft. Nowhere is Cook’s long-game strategy clearer than in India. Once a marginal market, India has, under his tenure, become central to Apple’s future. The company has steadily built a premium consumer base, even as its overall market share remains modest. More significantly, India has emerged as a critical manufacturing hub, reflecting Apple’s effort to diversify beyond China and de-risk its supply chain. Retail expansion, local production, and a growing installed base together signal a structural shift: Apple is embedding itself within India’s economic trajectory.

The transition to the new CEO, John Ternus, a hardware-focused insider, marks a subtle but important pivot. If Cook’s era was defined by operational excellence and ecosystem expansion, the next phase will likely revive Steve Jobs’ era with a strong emphasis on product reinvention. The challenge for Apple under Ternus will be to find its “next iPhone moment” in a world already saturated with devices. At the same time, it must navigate geopolitical tensions, supply chain shifts, and rising regulatory scrutiny.

Apple’s relative restraint in the AI race, often seen as a weakness, could yet prove strategic. Unlike competitors whose business models depend on data extraction and advertising, Apple has the structural advantage of prioritising user privacy. Its emphasis on on-device processing and tightly integrated hardware–software systems positions it to develop AI that is less intrusive and more user-controlled. But leadership in what might be called “AI for good” will require more than branding. It will demand verifiable privacy standards, data minimisation, transparent systems, and a willingness to prioritise trust over rapid monetisation. This may come at the cost of being first or even best in raw capability. Yet, as regulatory pressures mount and public awareness grows, trust could become the defining currency of the AI era. Cook’s tenure, in hindsight, may come to be seen not as an era of missed invention, but as one of strategic preparation.

Published on April 24, 2026