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What does the future hold for Apple?
The future for Apple is clear; hardware, software, machine learning, and artificial intelligence. The recipe is quite simple: Apple must secure current technology advantages, develop new ones, and create smash hits in the genre of the iPhone.
What is the future of Apple Quora?
The future of Apple is very much up to Apple. They have amazing products and amazing software. But they are going to need to keep innovating to maintain design leadership. Even if they don’t, they will be around a very, very long time.
Will iphones be replaced?
Apple’s looking to replace the iPhone “in roughly a decade,” according to a new report in The Information. A “sleeker” pair is scheduled to arrive in 2023 — and Apple’s senior managers see the headsets replacing the iPhone “in roughly a decade,” it said.
What will the Apple of 2030 look like?
Looking out 10 years, the Apple of 2030 should continue to incrementally improve its hardware products and even introduce some new ones — but in a new twist, Apple will also expand its brand to develop a suite of bundled consumer services. That will be a big challenge for the tech giant, but also an opportunity.
Is Apple facing more threats now than ever?
Apple is simply facing more threats now than ever. It would be a mistake not to acknowledge that Apple’s market situation has changed. Read on to find out about the threats Apple will face and why the company’s position in the technology industry might not be as cemented in success as some think.
What can we expect from Apple over the next decade?
Like other large tech giants, Apple will make a big effort to create a bundled ecosystem of consumer services over the next decade, as hardware sales inevitably slow down but Apple’s installed base expands. I expect several new private-label services to be introduced over the coming decade, and for the existing services to get better over time.
Is the iPhone the future of the services ecosystem?
The iPhone-maker will become a broader services ecosystem over the next decade, but the iPhone will still be key. I love looking at the “story” behind investments from an interdisciplinary point of view, with an equal appetite for high-growth disruptors and beaten-down value names.