---
title: "A Hardware-Background CEO: Why Can He Lead Apple to Win the AI War?"
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/283468328.md"
description: "Apple has handed the reins to a hardware engineer known for being decisive, faction-free, and close to the front line. This appointment itself is a signal: rather than competing in cloud-scale computing, Apple is focusing on terminal integration. However, questions arise: Does this hardware executive, renowned for stability and execution, possess the risk-taking spirit needed to launch innovative product offensives in the AI era?"
datetime: "2026-04-21T09:14:43.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/283468328.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283468328.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/283468328.md)
---

# A Hardware-Background CEO: Why Can He Lead Apple to Win the AI War?

Tech giants are racing ahead in the AI arms race, and Apple's choice amidst this wave may be hidden within this leadership change.

On Monday, Apple announced that John Ternus will officially take office as CEO on September 1st of this year, succeeding Tim Cook who has led the company for 15 years. Cook will transition to Executive Chairman. At 50 years old, Ternus has been with Apple for 25 years and previously served as the head of Hardware Engineering, leading the research and development and launch of multiple product lines including the iPad and AirPods.

This leadership change occurs at a critical juncture for Apple. The company has maintained its $4 trillion market cap thanks to strong iPhone sales, but **it is clearly lagging behind competitors like Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta in the AI field.** Apple has not yet launched its own foundational large models, and major upgrades to its core voice assistant, Siri, have been delayed; currently, it relies primarily on Google's Gemini to support AI functions.

Analysts point out that this hardware executive with a background in mechanical engineering will lead the world's most valuable technology company in search of the next growth engine during the artificial intelligence era. Whether Ternus can propel Apple to accelerate its breakthrough in the AI field will become the core strategic challenge upon his assumption of office.

## Decisive, Faction-Free, Close to the Front Line: Ternus's Internal Portrait

If Jobs was the visionary for products and Cook was the master of the supply chain, then Ternus is the first internal successor cultivated by Apple since the Jobs era.

According to reports from _The Wall Street Journal_, **Ternus is known internally for being decisive and skilled in collaboration.** In a company historically famous for strong personalities, he has almost made no enemies. Apple employees describe him as having clear goals in meetings, actively driving decisions, and tending to communicate directly with frontline employees who know the products best, rather than relying on management chains where information passes through layers.

In recent months, Apple has gradually increased Ternus's visibility. He showcased the new iPhone Air model at a press event, welcomed the first customers at the UK flagship store on its opening day, and released the new MacBook Neo last month. At Apple's 50th-anniversary celebration, the only two people appearing together were Cook and Ternus.

## Under Pressure to Catch Up in AI, Can Ternus's Hardware Path Break Through?

When Ternus takes over Apple, the company faces obvious pressure to catch up in the AI field. While Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta invest tens of billions of dollars annually to build data centers and purchase AI chips, Apple has chosen another path—**betting that AI computing will migrate to device-side local chips within a few years, thereby leveraging its traditional advantages in deep hardware and software integration.** However, this strategy does not mean Apple is maintaining conservatism in capital expenditure. In fact, **Apple is also accelerating investment, but the focus is on terminal computing power rather than cloud clusters.**

Currently, Apple's AI functions are concentrated in the "Apple Intelligence" product line, offering features such as image generation, notification summaries, and integration with OpenAI's ChatGPT, with mixed market reactions. Of note, ChatGPT and Anthropic's Claude rank first and second on the App Store free app chart, while Gemini ranks fourth and Meta AI eighth—these third-party AI products are rapidly penetrating Apple's own platform.

According to Bloomberg, Apple is accelerating the development of three AI wearable devices centered around Siri, covering smart glasses, pendant-style devices, and AirPods equipped with cameras. Additionally, Apple is expected to launch foldable phones. Creative Strategy Analyst Ben Bajarin calls this move "the most transformative hardware moment in years."

Timothy Hubbard, Assistant Professor of Management at Notre Dame University, stated:

> "Apple's choice of Ternus, who has a hardware background, as CEO may be sending a signal that **the company still believes the future of artificial intelligence will be realized through highly integrated devices, not just software.**"

## Mac Mini Past: A Decisive Update Proves His Hardware Philosophy

Ternus's approach of "driving the ecosystem through hardware integration" has long been evident throughout his career.

During his tenure leading Apple's Hardware Engineering department, **he deeply participated in the engineering implementation of the full transition of Mac computers to Apple's self-developed chips**, which is one of the important milestones in his career.

The Mac Mini urgently needed an update. At that time, the AI revolution had not yet arrived, and this product was far from becoming the globally popular device it would later become. However, software developers were urgently in need of a new version equipped with upgraded chips. Yet, redesigning the shell for the Mini might require Jonathan Ive's industrial design team to devote significant effort, likely leading to delays in the product launch.

According to reports citing insiders, after judging that the existing design required no major modifications, Ternus decisively ordered the advancement of this update. He did not consider the product's profit potential too much, but instead **emphasized its value to Apple's overall ecosystem.** This is just a microcosm of his many moves—decisive decision-making, a deep understanding of Apple culture and products, and the ability to efficiently drive execution within the company.

Today, an AI strategy with hardware integration as its underlying color waits for this incoming CEO to make a decision.

## Service Monetization and the Privacy Paradox: Another AI Battle for Ternus

**Beyond hardware strategy, Ternus must also drive AI monetization in the services business.** Currently, Apple's service revenue mainly relies on iPhone users paying subscriptions for AppleCare, iCloud, Apple TV+, etc., while taking a cut from in-app subscriptions of third-party generative AI services like ChatGPT and Claude.

**Another more subtle contradiction lies in the inherent conflict between privacy and personalization.** During the Cook era, Apple established "privacy-first" as a core label distinguishing it from Meta and Google; however, AI-driven personalized services are built precisely on data collection. As AI penetration increases, the tension between these two will become increasingly sharp.

Gene Munster, Partner at Deepwater Asset Management, stated that his firm recently increased its holdings in Apple stock, optimistic about Apple's prospects in the "personalized AI" field. "Apple has the opportunity to tell investors a quite compelling story," Munster said.

Forrester Analyst Dipayan Chatterjee warned of risks: "In the coming years, Apple will face turbulent waters because the way consumers interact with technology is undergoing huge changes, especially the impact brought by generative artificial intelligence."

## **Too Stable, Innovation Yet to Be Tested: Can Ternus Carry Apple's AI Banner?**

Both supporters and critics of Ternus point to a core question: **Does this hardware executive, renowned for stability and execution, possess the risk-taking spirit needed to launch innovative product offensives in the AI era?**

According to media reports citing insiders, Ternus is not known for betting on high-risk decisions, which leads some observers to doubt whether he can fill the product vision that the company has lacked since the passing of Jobs.

At the same time, Ternus is actively practicing the inheritance of Apple's culture. He has spoken to employees multiple times, reiterating the product confidentiality principle established by Jobs, requiring anyone not to discuss unreleased products of the company externally.

Apple will announce its financial results for the second quarter of the current fiscal year next week, at which time Cook will still serve as CEO. But investor eyes are already turning toward Ternus and the AI future he will paint for Apple.

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