EditorialIt happens like clockwork. Companies, including Apple this week, introduce new options to make their gadgets feel new and improved. And like clockwork, a vast majority of people won’t use these features. (Konrad Adam Modrzejewski/The New York Times)
EditorialFor years to come, Apple has planned for devices rolling off assembly lines to continue relying on chips made largely in Taiwan. (John Provencher/The New York Times)
EditorialApple’s “CODA” won the Oscar for best picture. Cool. But what happens when Big Tech stops throwing money around? (Asya Demidova/The New York Times)
EditorialThe international business community is getting out of Russia. Global tech companies including Google, Facebook and Apple remain mostly open for business there. (Jinhwa Oh/The New York Times)
EditorialThe international business community is getting out of Russia. Global tech companies including Google, Facebook and Apple remain mostly open for business there. (Jinhwa Oh/The New York Times)
EditorialWho wins when governments go head-to-head with technology giants — and whom should we root for? Apple’s fight with the Netherlands is an interesting test case, Shira Ovide writes. (Amir B Jahanbin/The New York Times)
EditorialAmerica’s five technology superpowers — Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Facebook — are titanic, and still growing. (Nick Sheeran/The New York Times)
EditorialApple unveiled a plan two weeks ago founded in good intentions: Root out images of child sexual abuse from iPhones. (Shira Inbar/The New York Times)