Tim Cook


What does Nvidia’s massive stock sell-off tell us about the economy?


A $250 billion question.


As Congress pressures Tim Cook to testify, the EU announces two antitrust investigations into Apple.


Trump keeps saying Apple just opened a plant in Texas. The problem: The facility in question has been around since 2013.


Apple moved fast and broke Facebook.


Tim Cook won’t come out and explain Apple’s plan to take on Big TV. But he’s almost there.


On Pivot, NYU’s Scott Galloway talks with his colleague, the co-author of The Coddling of the American Mind.


$2 trillion, though, will be tricky.


Recode’s Dan Frommer explains why the company is focusing on software updates, including ARKit and Siri.


“We reject the excuse that getting the most out of technology means trading away your right to privacy.”


“After this huge thing happens — our country gets attacked — I think the customers would have been like, ‘Okay! That makes me feel like you’ve got it!’”


The full interview from the Recode MSNBC “Revolution” special.


Kara Swisher and MSNBC’s Chris Hayers interviewed Cook in a school auditorium in Chicago in front of a live audience.


Education, iPhones, privacy and Facebook were all big topics of discussion.


The show starts at 8 pm ET / 5 pm PT.


“We care about the user experience. And we’re not going to traffic in your personal life,” said Cook.


It “goes to the core of who we are as Americans.”


Facebook sells ads to make its service free. “I don’t think at all that that means that we don’t care about people.”


Much as Tim Cook said last week, the legendary tech leader didn’t want anything to do with the social networking site either.


“Our purpose is to serve humanity.”


“I think we’re beyond that here.”


Assembled in China. But key parts and equipment are American.


Kara Swisher and Chris Hayes will interview Cook from Chicago.


In the meantime, here’s a $30 battery swap.



“This is about basic human dignity and respect,” says Apple’s CEO.

Welcome to Apple Park.


He also pledged big donations to the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League.


You want pics? We got pics.


He urges graduates to apply their values to the stuff they create and build.


We compressed Apple’s two-hour event into just the stuff you need to know.


“There has to be a massive campaign.”


The move comes as other tech leaders finally start speaking out against the new president’s policies.


The company’s top six executives still took home more than $100 million in collective pay.


We actually don’t know what Steve Jobs would have done. And today’s market is very different than it was when Jobs was CEO.


The deals they’re making in a remote town will unfold over the coming year.


Cupertino doesn’t want to burn all of its GOP bridges.


Cook condemns the shooting as a “senseless, unconscionable act of terrorism.’“


Cook has been an outspoken advocate for equality.


As lawyers prepare to file a response in court, Cook offers a plainspoken defense on ABC’s “World News Tonight.”