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Apple names John Ternus as CEO

šŸ·ļø Tech NewsšŸŒ United StatesšŸ”„ TrendingšŸ”— 58 sources100Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Apple names John Ternus as CEO

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Apple announced on April 20, 2026 that longtime hardware chief John Ternus will succeed Tim Cook as chief executive on Sept. 1, 2026. Cook, 65, who has led the company since 2011, will remain at Apple as executive chairman and will work with Ternus through the summer to ensure a smooth transition and to engage with policymakers worldwide. Ternus, a 25-year Apple veteran credited with roles on the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch and other product lines and who led the move to Apple silicon for Macs, was described by Cook as a ā€˜ā€˜visionary’’ with engineering and product instincts. The change caps nearly 15 years of Cook’s stewardship during which Apple’s market value rose by several trillion dollars. Apple also announced senior hardware leadership moves, including elevating Johny Srouji to a new hardware role. The move comes as Apple faces strategic pressures to accelerate its artificial intelligence efforts and broaden product momentum after mixed adoption of recent devices such as Vision Pro.

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Apple names John Ternus as CEO

šŸ·ļø Tech NewsšŸŒ United StatesšŸ”„ TrendingšŸ”— 108 sources82Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Apple names John Ternus as CEO

šŸ“° Full Story

Apple announced on April 20, 2026 that longtime hardware executive John Ternus will succeed Tim Cook as chief executive on Sept. 1, 2026, as Cook transitions to the role of executive chairman. Ternus, 50, who joined Apple in 2001 and has been senior vice president of hardware engineering since 2021, has overseen teams behind the iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch and AirPods and led major product revamps including last year’s iPhone Air. The move completes a planned internal succession after nearly 15 years under Cook, whose tenure saw Apple’s market value surge to roughly $4 trillion. Apple also promoted Johny Srouji to chief hardware officer to run silicon and hardware technologies. The leadership change comes as Apple faces mounting competitive pressure in artificial intelligence and pushes to accelerate product innovation. Cook said he will stay through the transition and will assist with board duties and policy engagement worldwide. The company emphasised continuity by choosing an internal product-focused leader and establishing a handover timeline to reassure investors, partners and regulators.

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Social Summary
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Cook’s shift to executive chairman signals continued political and operational involvement, while Apple’s completed ARM transition and diversified manufacturing give incoming CEO John Ternus a strong, stable hardware platform; commenters foresee steady, incremental progress rather than abrupt change.

Amazon doubles down on Anthropic with $25 billion deal

šŸ·ļø Tech NewsšŸŒ United StatesšŸ”— 5 sources38Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Amazon doubles down on Anthropic with $25 billion deal

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Amazon and AI startup Anthropic announced an expanded strategic arrangement on April 20, 2026 that deepens their cloud and capital ties. Amazon will invest $5 billion immediately and up to $20 billion more tied to commercial milestones (widely reported as up to $25 billion in new funding). Anthropic, for its part, committed to spending more than $100 billion on Amazon Web Services over the next decade and has secured up to 5 gigawatts of capacity on Amazon’s Trainium AI chips (covering Trainium2 through Trainium4). Companies said nearly 1 GW of Trainium2/3 capacity will come online by year-end and that the full Claude platform will be available within AWS accounts. The deal follows Amazon’s similar, larger package with OpenAI and comes as hyperscalers race to lock major AI labs to their custom silicon. Amazon had previously invested roughly $8 billion in Anthropic; combining prior and potential future payments, total support could approach the low tens of billions.

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Social Summary
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Commenters express mixed sentiment—some bullish, some skeptical of circular financing and corporate priorities—but they do not contribute new, verifiable information or corrections to the announced deal.

Adobe launches CX Enterprise AI suite

šŸ·ļø Tech NewsšŸŒ United StatesšŸ”„ TrendingšŸ”— 8 sources32Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Adobe launches CX Enterprise AI suite

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Adobe on April 20 unveiled CX Enterprise, a new suite of AI agents designed to automate and personalise digital marketing, customer engagement and sales workflows for large organisations. The platform — which includes an autonomous worker called CX Enterprise Coworker — aims to let enterprises embed AI into existing processes and orchestrate agents across ecosystems. Adobe said it has partnered with major cloud and model providers including Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, Google Cloud, Nvidia, Anthropic, OpenAI and IBM to ensure cross-platform compatibility. The announcement, made at Adobe Summit, lifted the stock roughly 2–2.5% intraday after a year-to-date drop of about 30%. Adobe remains under investor scrutiny as competitors such as OpenAI, Anthropic and design-focused entrants press into image-generation and creative tools; reports also note OpenAI preparing a new image model. Adobe’s market metrics cited by analysts show a P/E around 14–15 and a market value near $100 billion. The company is also navigating leadership change after CEO Shantanu Narayen signalled plans to step down after 18 years, adding an extra layer of investor focus on whether CX Enterprise can convert into durable enterprise revenue.

Meta tests paid WhatsApp Plus cosmetic subscription

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Meta tests paid WhatsApp Plus cosmetic subscription

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Meta has begun testing a paid tier for WhatsApp called WhatsApp Plus, rolling out to a limited set of Android beta users as part of a broader push to introduce premium tiers across its apps. The subscription focuses on customization and organization: expanded pinned chats (up to 20), custom chat lists, 18 chat themes, alternative app icons, exclusive ringtones, animated sticker packs and other cosmetic perks. Meta confirmed the test and aims to gather user feedback before wider rollout; iOS support is planned later. Reported regional pricing is roughly €2.49 per month in Europe, MX$29 in Mexico and PKR 229 in Pakistan, with one-month trial offers in some markets. Core messaging, voice and video calls and end-to-end encryption remain free, and there is no indication paid plans remove ads in Status. The move follows Instagram Plus tests and fits Meta’s strategy to diversify revenue amid heavy spending on AI infrastructure and growing paid messaging for businesses.

Google expands Gemini in Chrome to Asia-Pacific

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Google expands Gemini in Chrome to Asia-Pacific

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Google said on April 20 it is expanding its Gemini in Chrome assistant to seven additional markets — Australia, Indonesia, Japan, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea and Vietnam. The feature appears in Chrome’s sidebar and is available on desktop and iOS in all listed countries except Japan, where iOS support is not yet offered. Gemini in Chrome connects to Google services through Personal Intelligence, allowing users to draft and send emails via Gmail, add events to Calendar, check locations in Maps and surface photos from Google Photos. The sidebar also provides access to Google’s Nano Banana 2 image generator. The rollout follows earlier launches in the U.S. (January) and expansions to India, Canada and New Zealand in March. Google noted that its more agentic capability — which can act across the browser to complete tasks — remains in testing and is restricted to AI Pro and AI Ultra paid plans for U.S. users.
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