Apple Computer in Strategic Retreat? Is It Shifting from Its AI Fantasies to Its Old Religion of Usability-Focused Hardware-Software Integration?

Perhaps the keynote at Apple Computer’s WWDC reveals less about the future of tech than about Apple’s own institutional anxieties, the ghosts of Apple-Microsoft relationships past. Perhaps Apple is pivoting—wisely—away from fake and unbelievable claims that it is at the frontier of the New New Thing, and back to its core strengths: design, integration, and developer and customer empowerment. Perhaps…

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The best recent take I have yet seen on Apple Computer’s current situation, and on its currently ongoing developer conference, is from Ben Thompson of Stratechery.

His conclusion:

Ben Thompson: Apple Retreats <https://stratechery.com/2025/apple-retreats/>: ‘I understand why many people were underwhelmed… particularly in comparison to the AI extravaganza that was Google I/O, [but] I think it was one of the more encouraging Apple keynotes in a long time. Apple… needed to retreat. Focusing on things only Apple can do is a good thing; empowering developers and depending on partners is a good thing; giving even the appearance of thoughtful thinking with regards to the App Store (it’s a low bar!) is a good thing…. Tech companies promis[e]… the future… [but] a prerequisite is delivering in the present, and it’s a sign of progress that Apple retreated to nothing more than that…


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Ben’s take, in brief:

  • This is very healthy…

  • Apple is refocusing on delivering real value in the present by making excellent products…

  • Apple is “retreating to safety,” focusing on what it does best: polished, integrated hardware and software…

  • The “Liquid Glass” design language shows Apple’s user interface-design strength…

  • The other WWDC 2025 tentpoles show Apple’s ability to integrate across its device ecosystem…

  • Apple empowers developers by opening up on-device AI models, letting third parties experiment without cloud costs…

  • Apple is deepening partnerships with AI leaders rather than trying to build everything in-house…

  • Apple may be loosening its grip on the App Store…

  • Legal and regulatory pressures (especially in Europe) are forcing Apple to retreat from some of its most aggressive platform control…

  • Apple acknowledged overpromising on AI…

  • Apple is no longer chasing hype…

  • Apple is no longer overreaching in areas where it lacks a competitive edge…

I think Ben may well be overgeneralizing from what was, after all, just one 90-minute pre-taped presentation. But, aside from my wanting to be several shaes more cautious in interpreting the tea leaves, he has said what I wish I had been smart enough to think and say.

So what else do I think? What expansion would I give?

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