Tech
Tech Moves: Amazon VP is now Chewy CTO; Smartsheet names CFO; Microsoft exec joins NetApp

— Yunyan Wang has left Amazon to become chief technology officer at Chewy, the leading online pet retailer. Wang spent more than 12 years at the Seattle-based tech giant, most recently as vice president of Commerce & Supply Chain Services.
“(Wang’s) track record driving innovation at world-class companies makes her the perfect addition as we double down on making Chewy ‘the’ trusted and convenient destination for pet parents and partners, everywhere,” said Chewy CEO Sumit Singh on LinkedIn.
At Amazon, Wang helped expand customer access to Prime Fulfillment, Multi-Channel Fulfillment, Amazon Supply Chain Services and other products — work that fed into the company’s broader push to commercialize its internal logistics capabilities. Amazon took a major step in that direction Monday, launching a business that makes its entire logistics network available to outside companies.
Wang also served two years as technical advisor to Jeff Wilke, Amazon’s first CEO of Worldwide Consumer. She began her tech career in 2001 as a software engineer at Microsoft and later was a director at Expedia.

— Enterprise software company Smartsheet has named Josh Schauer as chief financial officer. The Bellevue, Wash.-based company, which helps businesses organize and track work, last week announced four C-suite changes — two hires and two promotions — and appointed Rajeev Singh as CEO in October.
Schauer will be responsible for building Smartsheet’s revenue model and supporting strategic investments, the company said. He previously served as CFO at insightsoftware and has held leadership roles at Longview Solutions and Verisae. He will work remotely from Minneapolis.

— NetApp has named Alvaro Celis, a longtime Microsoft executive, as chief partner and ecosystem officer, a position in which he will lead the company’s World Partner Organization and build customer relationships.
Celis spent more than three decades at Microsoft before departing in 2024, where he held a series of vice president roles in global sales spanning devices, independent software vendors, education and other areas.
In the new role, Celis said he will focus “on strengthening the ecosystem that will help organizations succeed in this new era by connecting the right technologies, expertise, and outcomes.”

— Greater Seattle Partners (GSP) appointed Shannon Braddock as president and CEO of the regional public-private economic development organization. She succeeds Rebecca Lovell, who has served in an interim capacity since December.
Braddock most recently served as King County executive following Dow Constantine’s resignation to become CEO of Sound Transit. She spent eight years with the county in roles including deputy executive and chief of staff, and has held board positions for organizations focused on transit and homelessness.
At GSP, Braddock will lead efforts “across economic development, international relations, global marketing and research to drive jobs, investment and talent to the Greater Seattle region,” the organization said.

— K&L Gates has named Jake Bernstein to the newly created role of global AI and innovation partner, in which he will lead the Seattle-based firm’s artificial intelligence strategy, governance and innovation operations.
“It’s not every day that one’s professional life transforms from a stately drive around town into a rocket-assisted speed run straight into the Great Unknown,” Bernstein said of the appointment.
Bernstein has been with K&L Gates for more than five years, focusing on data privacy and cybersecurity law. He also teaches as an adjunct professor at Seattle University School of Law. Bernstein previously spent nearly eight years as an assistant attorney general in Washington state’s Consumer Protection Division.
— Robb Monkman is now chief marketing officer at Centegix, an Atlanta-based safety technology company. Monkman is the founder and former CEO of Seattle’s React Mobile, a startup that sells safety software and “panic button” devices primarily to hotels looking to protect their workforce. He joins Centegix from Teal Communications, which provides technology to connect devices to data networks worldwide.
— Following a national search, Seattle’s Fred Hutch Cancer Center named Dr. Christopher Li as director of its Public Health Sciences Division and promoted him to senior VP. Li, who has been with Fred Hutch for more than 15 years, will take the role on July 1. He succeeds Dr. Garnet Anderson, who has led the division for more than 13 years.
— Amazon‘s Marie Carlton has been promoted to director, taking on a new role leading AWS Applied AI Solutions partner go-to-market strategy. Carlton has been with Amazon Web Services for a decade. Her previous role focused on working with AWS partners, and she has led multiple women-in-tech initiatives.
— F5 has named Anand Eswaran to its board of directors. The Seattle-based security company said Eswaran will also serve on the board’s Audit and Talent and Compensation committees. Eswaran is CEO of Veeam, a Kirkland, Wash.-based data protection and ransomware recovery company.
— Yoodli, the AI speech coaching platform, has appointed Georgia Gier as director of customer success. Gier joins the Seattle startup from Kirkland, Wash.-based Enlyft. Past employers include Moogsoft, which was acquired by Dell Technologies, and Seattle’s BrandVerity.
— Aaron Altabet launched Shoal Events & Design, a Seattle-based professional events company that organizes conferences, summits, retreats and other meetups. Altabet has held internship roles at organizations including Pack Ventures and Pioneer Square Labs.
— Sara Dutta is now founder of Ocilisni, a life sciences consultancy based in Kirkland. The firm offers AI strategy, business development and program management. Clients include the Allen Institute and Synthesize Bio.
Tech
Apple’s iPhone 20 may finally ditch the design we’ve known for years
The iPhone’s journey began in 2007 by changing the smartphone market forever, replacing physical keyboards with a 3.5-inch multi-touch display. Now, as the device moves toward its 20th anniversary, Apple may be preparing for another major design shift, a seamless, completely buttonless iPhone.
Is Apple planning its biggest iPhone redesign in years?
Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman has added fresh weight to the iPhone 20 redesign rumors. In the Q&A section of his Power On newsletter, Gurman said Apple’s 20th-anniversary iPhone overhaul is internally referred to by some as “Glasswing,” a name inspired by the glasswing butterfly and its transparent wings.

According to Gurman, the design includes glass edges that curve smoothly into the display on all four sides. Gurman also said Apple’s Liquid Glass interface is being shaped around this hardware direction, with the software designed to visually blend into the iPhone’s glass-heavy body. The idea appears to be a tighter connection between the device and the operating system.
Previous reporting has also pointed to Apple exploring a return to curved-screen styling. The design may aim for a seamless visual effect rather than bringing back the sharply sloped waterfall displays seen on some older Android phones.
Could the iPhone 18 start the shift earlier?
The buttonless part of the story comes from an earlier Weibo leak by Chinese tipster Instant Digital from October 2025. The tipster claimed Apple’s solid-state button plan had completed functional verification and was being prepared for mass production on the 2027 iPhone 20.

According to that leak, the power button, volume buttons, Action button, and Camera Control button could all move to solid-state controls with localized vibration feedback. That would allow the iPhone to simulate a physical click without using traditional moving buttons.
Instant Digital also claimed Apple may begin the transition earlier with the iPhone 18. The Camera Control button is said to get a simpler structure by removing the capacitive sensing layer and keeping pressure recognition.
Ming-Chi Kuo had previously reported that Apple was working on solid-state power and volume buttons for the iPhone 15 Pro. However, the feature was later shelved due to technical and manufacturing issues. If Apple has managed to fix those issues, the iPhone 20 might finally be the one to go fully buttonless.
Tech
Valve Releases Design Files For Its Out-Of-Stock Steam Controller
The Steam Controller has been a hot topic for the PC gaming world for the past few weeks, and a new tidbit could keep the conversation going: Valve released the CAD files for the gamepad’s shell. They’re free to download under a Creative Commons license, meaning people can now design and construct their own accessories for the Steam Controller and its puck.
The files are only for the device’s exterior; you won’t be able to 3D print yourself the innards to build your entire controller from scratch. That means that if you are on the hunt for a Steam Controller, you may be waiting for a bit while the sold-out gamepad is restocked. Fortunately, since Valve hasn’t given a release window yet for the Steam Machine and Steam Frame VR headset, it’s probably not an essential purchase right this instant for most gamers. But it is a good controller if you can find one, and it’s a nifty idea for Valve to let people get creative with the casing.
Tech
Telehealth Abortion Is Still Possible Without Mifepristone
Abortion provider Carafem’s phones were ringing nonstop over the weekend after a US federal appeals court reinstated a nationwide requirement that the drug mifepristone, one of two pills used for a medication abortion, must be obtained in person. The decision, handed down on Friday, left patients unsure if they could gain access to their treatment through telehealth. “People are afraid, and they’re angry,” says Carafem’s chief operations officer, Melissa Grant. “I had people contact us saying, This can’t be true. Do you still have the medication available? Can’t you just give it to me? They were bargaining.”
With the restriction in place, Carafem quickly pivoted to a backup approach. Instead of prescribing the two-drug protocol typical for a medication abortion—mifepristone, which blocks progesterone and prevents the pregnancy from progressing, and then misoprostol, which causes the uterus to contract—the organization began prescribing misoprostol on its own. While slightly less effective than the dual-pill option, it’s been widely used in the past. “We feel comfortable prescribing it,” says Grant.
Some Planned Parenthood clinics also pivoted to the misoprostol-only regimen this weekend. “Planned Parenthood providers are doing everything they can to make sure patients know that medication abortion is still safe, legal, and available,” says Danika Severino, vice president of care and access at Planned Parenthood Federation of America.
On Monday, the Supreme Court offered a temporary reprieve, pausing the appeals court ruling for a week. The measure allows patients to once again get mifepristone through virtual clinics at least until May 11, when SCOTUS will take another look at the case. Carafem and Planned Parenthood say they are prepared to shift back to misoprostol-only if necessary. Other providers, including the digital abortion clinic HeyJane, have confirmed that they will also take that approach if necessary.
Mifepristone was developed in the 1980s in France and has been extensively studied for safety and efficacy. It was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2000. Under President Joseph Biden, the FDA first allowed the drug to be obtained by mail instead of in person in April 2021, during the Covid-19 pandemic. The agency permanently lifted the in-person dispensing requirement in 2023.
After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, ending the constitutional right to an abortion, medication abortion via telehealth became a more sought-after option, especially for patients in states that adopted abortion restrictions. Approximately one in three abortions that took place in the first half of 2025 used abortion pills obtained through telehealth, according to public health nonprofit Plan C.
Access to mifepristone has become the next major battleground in reproductive health, with anti-abortion politicians and lobbyists seeking to reinstate in-person dispensing requirements on the drug and, by doing so, make medication abortion harder to obtain.
After conflicting legal rulings in 2023 sparked confusion over whether mifepristone would be available from virtual clinics, some of them planned to temporarily shift to offering misoprostol-only medication abortions. Some virtual clinics have offered single-pill options even before that. Carafem offered misoprostol-only medication abortions beginning in 2020, in an effort to provide patients with options for virtual care during the early days of Covid.
Originally developed to treat gastric ulcers, misoprostol has been used for medication abortion since the late 1980s. It remains the primary method of medication abortion in many parts of the world where access to mifepristone is limited.
“Mifepristone and misoprostol are both very safe medications, and in general, having mifepristone increases the efficacy and decreases complication rates of medication abortion,” says Rachel Jensen, a fellow with the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, which endorses the misoprostol-only protocol when mifepristone isn’t available. The single-drug regimen is also endorsed by the World Health Organization, the Society of Family Planning, and the National Abortion Federation.
Tech
Educators: Why Are You Thinking of Leaving the Field?
School’s (almost) out for summer.
When it comes time to throw open campus doors for the new school year in the fall, research tells us one out of every seven teachers won’t be returning — either because they moved schools or left the profession entirely.
But when the going gets tough, teachers don’t necessarily want to leave. Even when they’re burned out, they still love what they do.
So, the concerning data throughout the country tells a story about how stark the conditions of the teacher workforce are. In Wisconsin, for instance, teachers say they are exiting the profession at the highest rate in 25 years thanks to a range of issues, from poor leadership to safety concerns like students bringing guns to school.
Worse, shrinking student populations and rising costs have forced school districts like Portland Public Schools to make staff cuts in the face of astronomically high budget gaps. Early career teachers are thinking hard about whether they even want to continue in their chosen field.
That’s why we at EdSurge want to hear from educators who have recently left or plan to leave their jobs for another sector: What was the deciding factor? What could your school (or district or state-level leaders) have done differently to change your mind?
Your responses will help shape our coverage, and we may be in contact for an interview.
Tech
Microsoft’s new Xbox chief nixes Gaming Copilot for mobile and console, shakes up leadership

Microsoft is pulling the plug on its AI-powered Copilot assistant for Xbox, winding down the feature on mobile and canceling its planned launch on consoles.
The pullback, announced Tuesday by new Xbox CEO Asha Sharma, comes barely a year after the company debuted the gaming chatbot as a centerpiece of its AI push into gaming, demonstrating the limits of Microsoft’s strategy of embedding AI across its product lineup.
Microsoft first unveiled Copilot for Gaming at the Game Developers Conference in March 2025, pitching it as an AI sidekick that could offer gameplay tips, coaching, and recaps of where players left off. A beta launched on the Xbox mobile and PC apps and later on the ROG Xbox Ally handheld. The console version was expected to arrive later this year.
Sharma’s decision to kill the feature aligns with the AI strategy she outlined in an April 30 post on X, where she said Xbox was “refocusing our AI efforts to solving player problems like enhancing real-time graphics, improving discovery, and deepening personalization.”
She pointed to Automatic Super Resolution, which boosts image quality and performance in the background, as an example of AI done right — a contrast with the chatbot approach.

It’s part of a broader set of changes by Sharma, who told employees in a memo Tuesday that she’s overhauling Xbox’s leadership team, including bringing in executives from the Microsoft CoreAI engineering group where she previously worked.
“Xbox needs to move faster, deepen our connection with the community, and address friction for both players and developers,” Sharma wrote on X, noting that the company promoted leaders who helped build Xbox while bringing in new voices to the gaming unit.
According to CNBC, which saw the memo, the changes include the addition of four executives from CoreAI:
- Jared Palmer, formerly a vice president of product in CoreAI and a senior vice president at GitHub, will work on engineering, developer tools, and infrastructure.
- Tim Allen, a vice president of design who previously led design and research at Instacart, will lead Xbox design.
- Jonathan McKay, a former Meta director and head of growth for ChatGPT at OpenAI, will lead Xbox growth.
- Evan Chaki, a general manager, will run a forward-deployed engineering team focused on simplifying development.
In addition, David Schloss, a senior director of product and growth at Instacart, will take charge of Xbox’s subscription and cloud business.
Two execs with more than two decades each at Microsoft are departing: Kevin Gammill, who oversaw Xbox user experience and game development platforms, and Roanne Sones, who led devices and ecosystem and will take a leave of absence before moving to an advisory role.
Sharma took over as Xbox CEO in February, replacing Phil Spencer, who retired after 38 years at the company. She had been running Microsoft’s CoreAI product organization and previously served as chief operating officer at Instacart and as a vice president at Meta.
Since arriving, she has moved quickly, cutting Game Pass prices, dropping the “Microsoft Gaming” name in favor of Xbox, and adopting daily active players as the division’s new internal success metric.
The changes come as Xbox faces a sustained revenue slump. Gaming revenue totaled $5.3 billion in the most recent quarter, down from $5.7 billion a year earlier, and has declined in four of the past six quarters. Hardware revenue fell 33%.
Microsoft’s recent 10-Q filing also disclosed impairment charges in the gaming business, meaning the company has written down the value of some gaming assets, suggesting that parts of its gaming portfolio aren’t performing as expected.
Sharma described the decision to wind down Copilot on mobile and stop its development for consoles as part of a plan to “retire features that don’t align with where we’re headed.” Her post did not address the status of the Copilot beta on the Xbox PC app or the ROG Xbox Ally handheld.
The feature drew skepticism from the start. Gaming writer Thomas Wilde called it “a solution looking for a problem” in a March 2025 analysis on GeekWire, questioning whether players wanted an AI chatbot alongside their games.
More recently, Wilde raised additional concerns about the feature pulling guide content from the open internet without attribution, writing that Gaming Copilot was “eating its own seed corn” by undermining the ecosystem of online guides it depended on.
The feature’s full lifecycle, from announcement to cancellation, spanned roughly 14 months.
Tech
Lawsuit over delayed Siri features reaches $250M settlement
Apple has settled a class-action lawsuit over its delayed Siri features.
While Apple’s promised Siri overhaul is still nowhere to be found, shareholders who sued over the delay can now rest easy, thanks to a huge settlement.
At WWDC 2024, as part of its Apple Intelligence announcements, Apple previewed major enhancements for Siri. The virtual assistant was supposed to receive an AI-powered cognitive boost, allowing for advanced in-app actions, contextual awareness, and more.
The company went so far as to feature Siri’s new capabilities in its marketing materials, including video advertisements. Things went south in a matter of months, however.
Apple had to delay its planned Siri update, which led to a class-action lawsuit that was settled in December 2025. On Tuesday, as noted by The Financial Times, the settlement details were finally revealed.
The parties settled for $250 million, offering U.S. Settlement Class Members $25 per eligible device. Still, Apple could be forced to pay up to $95 per device if the number of claims filed is low. Part of Apple’s $250 million settlement will also go toward administrative costs and attorneys’ fees.
Eligible devices include iPhone models with Apple Intelligence support, purchased between June 10, 2024, and March 29, 2025, in the United States. This encompasses the entire iPhone 16 range, along with the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max.
Those who wish to submit a claim will need to provide proof of purchase, the serial number of the eligible device, their phone number, and Apple Account information. Apple will begin inviting claim submissions within 45 days, as of May 5, 2026.
Apple also provided a statement on the matter, as shared by 9to5mac.
“Since the launch of Apple Intelligence, we have introduced dozens of features across many languages that are integrated across Apple’s platforms, relevant to what users do every day, and built with privacy protections at every step. These include Visual Intelligence, Live Translation, Writing Tools, Genmoji, Clean Up, and many more.
Apple has reached a settlement to resolve claims related to the availability of two additional features. We resolved this matter to stay focused on doing what we do best, delivering the most innovative products and services to our users.”
As one would expect, Apple’s statement largely praises the currently available Apple Intelligence features, while treating the Siri-related settlement as little more than a footnote.
The now-settled class-action lawsuit accused Apple of promoting “AI capabilities that did not exist at the time, do not exist now, and will not exist for two or more years.”
It was also said that Apple’s advertisements “saturated the internet, television, and other airwaves to cultivate a clear and reasonable consumer expectation that these transformative features would be available upon the iPhone’s release.”
Legal troubles over Siri delays will continue elsewhere
At the time of writing, the long-overdue Siri features are still not available to end users. They are expected to roll out with the iOS 27 update, which is set to debut at WWDC 2026 on June 8.
However, Apple’s legal issues over its delayed Siri features are set to continue via a separate class-action lawsuit. This one is led by South Korea’s National Pension Service, which argues that Apple’s delays have cost billions in stock market losses.
“It is no secret that Apple faced challenges and weathered ups and downs in its stock price in 2025, like many major companies,” Apple said in a February 2026 request to dismiss the suit. “But plaintiff takes a massive and unsupported leap by claiming that securities fraud caused the temporary price drops.”
Ultimately, it remains to be seen if this lawsuit will be dismissed or if Apple will reach a similar settlement as it did in its other Siri-related case.
Tech
Reddit Is Making Some Mobile Web Readers Log In or Use the App Instead
You might run into trouble if you try to browse Reddit posts without logging in on your phone. Some Reddit users have reported seeing a new pop-up when visiting the website on mobile that prompts you to download the app to keep reading.
The social media platform said it’s running a test on a “small subset” of users who frequent the site on mobile browsers while logged out.
Multiple Reddit users have shared a prompt they encountered that says, “get the app to keep using Reddit.” I wasn’t able to replicate this message after deleting the Reddit app from my phone and poking around on the web version. Those who encounter the prompt while using their mobile web browser may be able to log in to continue without installing the app.
A Reddit spokesperson told CNET the company is running a test to see whether users find the app more satisfying than a mobile browser.
“These users are already familiar with Reddit, and we’ve seen that the experience is much better for them in the app,” according to a statement from Reddit. “The app offers a more personalized experience, and users can more easily find communities that match their interests.”
Redditors who noted the change expressed frustration with having to be routed to an app just to browse something that was otherwise visible as a website in a web browser. “This is a website,” one user said. “I do not want to use an app to view your website.” Others suggested possible workarounds, like having the site display as a desktop site.
Running into a prompt to log in or download an app isn’t uncommon when using social media platforms. LinkedIn curbs my anonymous snooping, so I’ve resorted to screen recording to share TikToks with some friends who’ve avoided the app.
During a quarterly earnings call last week, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman said that logged-in users spend more time on the platform than logged-out users, due to personalization.
“Seeing more users in the app, more users logging in, more users getting the personalization faster, drives engagement and, then, therefore, monetization,” Huffman said, according to a transcript of the call. “Again, all roads lead to basically the same strategy, which is: Help users find content that’s relevant to them and come back to the app more often.”
Tech
The Metal Gear Solid 2 leak is massive and perfectly timed – modders are already dreaming big
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The full assets of Metal Gear Solid 2’s HD remaster were recently leaked on 4chan. An unnamed party used the notorious imageboard to distribute the source code for every version of the remaster across all supported platforms, including the PlayStation Vita edition. The leak also reportedly includes 30GB of raw,…
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Tech
Boston Dynamics’ Atlas Masters Every Shift in a Demanding Balance Routine

Boston Dynamics engineers just released new footage of their Atlas robot being tested. The machine is shown lurching from two feet to all sorts of weird positions, challenging its balance with each stride. It is not uncommon to watch it shift its weight from both legs onto one while the other extends outward like a spear, arms waving in sync to keep its center of mass stable as it totters about. Atlas quickly puts both hands on the floor and throws its entire body into a handstand, smooth as silk.
Then, just as you get comfy, the legs fly straight out in a horizontal line. Atlas manages to ease right back down again, with no wobble or drama, just flawless. Following that, the robot performs some gymnastics, moving into a clean stand-up stance and landing flat on both feet with barely a judder. Every recovery is a precision motion, as the software makes the smallest modifications on the fly, via the hips and ankles, to absorb the shock. The same process occurs in a cartwheel, where the arms and legs work in perfect harmony to keep the torso on track.
Unitree G1 Humanoid Robot(No Secondary Development)
- Sleek & Durable Design: Standing at 132cm tall and weighing only approx. 35kg, the G1 is constructed with aerospace-grade aluminum alloy and carbon…
- High Flexibility & Safe Movement: Boasting 23 joint degrees of freedom (6 per leg, 5 per arm), it offers an extensive range of motion. For safety, it…
- Smart Interaction & Connectivity: Powered by an 8-core high-performance CPU and equipped with a depth camera and 3D LiDAR. It supports Wi-Fi 6 and…
We already know that Atlas is more than willing to do some heavy lifting for factories, transferring loads with steady hands from container to dolly without flinching, even in uneven flooring environments, and the balance system that allows the robot to flip also means it has the ability to step across uneven ground or recover when loads shift unexpectedly on the job, as the robot delivers results on both fronts with aplomb.
Boston Dynamics claims that its test teams fine-tune Atlas by subjecting it to simulation after simulation after real-world test, with the machine learning its way through to the point where it can detect its own position without relying on external cues to stay on track. All combined, its hydraulic/electric actuators respond faster than the blink of an eye to data from all of the numerous sensors, transforming moments of uncertainty into smooth sailing.
Tech
Apple culls Mac mini, Mac Studio configs as RAM costs grow
Apple has pulled even more higher-end configurations of its Mac Studio and Mac mini, removing some of the most expensive memory options as the entire industry deals with the RAM crisis.
The ongoing memory supply problem has claimed another victim from Apple’s roster. After the removal of the 512GB RAM option for the Mac Studio in March, Apple has slimmed down its product options a bit more, as component costs bite.
This time, it’s not just the Mac Studio that’s being hit. The Mac mini is also affected by the memory downgrade.
Prospective buyers of the M3 Ultra version of Mac Studio previously could buy the model with either 96GB or 256GB memory. However, as spotted by @BasicAppleGuy on X, potential shoppers selecting the model will no longer see the 256GB option, only the 96GB.
During April, it was found that the M3 Ultra Mac Studio with 256GB was “unavailable,” while the 96GB version had a lengthy lead time. There was also a similar issue for the M4 Max version, which listed the 128GB capacity as unavailable.
Checks reveal that the 128GB option is also not listed at all for the M4 Max Mac Studio either.
At the same time, anyone looking at the Mac mini with one of the M4 Pro chips will see slim pickings when it comes to memory. Previously, it had an option for 64GB of unified memory, but that too has disappeared, leaving 24GB and 48GB options.
This is the second configuration change for the Mac mini in May alone. Earlier in the month, it removed the option for the $599 256GB capacity M4 model.
Instead, consumers wanting the cheapest desktop Mac model will have to pay at least $799 for the M4 Mac mini with 16GB of memory and an increased 512GB of storage.
RAM bites
While Apple has so far insulated itself from the memory problems affecting the rest of the industry, it wasn’t going to be that way forever.
During the Q2 results call, current-CEO Tim Cook confirmed that the memory pricing problem is affecting Apple’s bottom line. While it didn’t affect the December nor March quarters due to carry-in inventory offsetting the issue, Cook said there would be a significant effect felt in June.
Into future quarters, Cook warned that there will be a further increase in impact, but added that Apple had a range of options available.
Evidently, those options include lopping higher-priced configurations off the deck.
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