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7 biggest takeaways from Tim Cook’s interview at WSJD Live

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Photo: WSJD
Photo: WSJD

Tim Cook gave a rare public interview on Monday night at the Wall Street Journal’s new tech conference, WSJD. The Apple CEO touched on a range of topics, including Apple Pay’s success, a big potential partnership, why the iPod classic was discontinued, and more.

Here are the biggest takeaways from Cook’s comments:

iPhone will be Apple’s cash cow for awhile

Cook sees the iPhone accounting for at least 50% of the company’s revenue for the next five years. “The iPhone will continue to be a majority of the company’s revenue and profits,” he said.

Apple Pay is already the biggest name in mobile payments

GIF: Buster Hein/ Cult of Mac
GIF: Buster Hein/ Cult of Mac

One million people signed up for Apple Pay in the first 72 hours, making it already bigger than “the other guys,” as Cook put it. “I feel fantastic,” he said.

CVS blocking Apple Pay is a “skirmish”

Cook briefly touched on the news that CVS and Rite Aid are blocking Apple Pay in favor of MCX. He called it a “skirmish” and noted that merchants will only be relevant if they are loved by their customers. Burn.

Apple Watch will need to be recharged daily

Cook thinks the watch is “profound” because of what it could unlock for peoples’ health and productivity. While Apple has yet to give any official battery life stats, Cook said “we think people are going to use it so much you will end up charging it daily.”

For the Mac, all market share isn’t created equal

 

The Mac is an excellent business for Apple to be in, especially given that sales are up while the rest of the PC industry is tanking.

iPod Classic’s death caused by lack of parts

Photo: Apple
Photo: Apple

Apple stopped making the iPod Classic because “we couldn’t get the parts anywhere on earth” and it wasn’t practical to design a new one.

Potential Alibaba partnership on the horizon

Cook is meeting with Alibaba’s Jack Ma later this week to discuss a potential partnership. “I have the utmost respect for Jack,” said Cook. “We love to partner with people who are wicked smart, have flexible teams, who are product based and push us. I think Jack has a company that’s exactly like that. If we can find some areas of common space, I’d love it.”

Could that mean some kind of Apple Pay/Alipay integration down the road? Maybe!

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3 responses to “7 biggest takeaways from Tim Cook’s interview at WSJD Live”

  1. Christopher Robinson says:

    I’ve started a petition for this. Please sign it and I will ensure the customer dissatisfaction makes it to these retailers.

    Join the campaign:
    https://www.change.org/p/cvs-stop-blocking-nfc-payments-apple-pay-google-wallet

  2. CelestialTerrestrial says:

    What I’m most interested in the AppleWatch is this.

    1. What’s the price for the watch and the different options for the Stainless Steel model. Gold is just going to be too expensive for me. So I don’t even want to know.

    2. What is the expectant useful lifespan of the AppleWatch. From what I’ve seen, I don’t know what else they could/would add to these things where it would deem replacing every couple of years because sensor technology that the would add would most likely be other devices/sensors that you wear either as a cuff like the blood pressure, glucose which might be a sensor that sticks on your skin, etc. I’m just wondering what might be the future rollout for new models that would compel someone to buy a new AppleWatch. That’s a major cause for concern.

    • Point number 2 is my biggest concern. Watches are typically replaced very infrequently (particularly those with a $350+ price tag) and I don’t want to get caught up in the must-have-the-latest-sensor-or-watch-face cycle that seems to happen with phones and tablets.

      Are they intending to release new models yearly? Is there going to be OS upgrades and new features that the current CPU won’t be able to support in 2 years?

      I don’t lose sleep over these things, but I was hoping for more sensors (glucose is a good one) which I’m sure will be included in future iterations. Do I then wait for the AppleWatch S in 12 months? Or AppleWatch 2 in 24 months?

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