Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.
I hope this will be as exciting as Jobs'. Really love Jobs' as it tells quite a lot of story of Jobs' life and behind the scenes, and that's for Jobs who is already quite a spotlight. Not much is known about Tim Cook, so it would be great to read up about it.

Not sure about the negative comments here, but for sure, it reminds me of the quote used for the Think Different campaign.
You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you can't do is ignore them.
 
Apple is not about Tim Cook, Give credit where credit is due! Steve Jobs!! There would not be an iPhone if it had not been for Steve Jobs. Just saying...
 
I suspect the book was released now because Cook has had an outstanding run, along with Apple, over the years he's been there. And, there's a market for the book, Cook being head of one of the largest and most successful tech companies in the world. Nothing wrong with writing a book about that as there's a lot of interest in Apple and its CEO.

It's what authors do...and that's write books. And hopefully make a little money in the process.
Good question. That would be a question for people who are "hating" on Tim Cook. From my observation, some MacRumors forum members have a tendency to say not so nice things about Tim, Angela, and Eddy.
 
I hate his hardware.
OS X and iOS are still the best operating systems.
Agreed. If I could get iOS on a Huawei or Samsung I'd be a happy camper. I don't like Android's OS though, which is the only reason I haven't made the switch yet. The new iPhone hardware is appalling, though.
 
Love reading all the cogent insights from all the Fortune 10 CEOs on this board who have personally managed a multinational, aspirational, trend-setting corporation valued around $1T. Thank you all for taking time to share your first-hand experiences of the last eight years /s



tim_cook_kahney_cover-250x355.jpg
Several years ago, Leander Kahney released a well-received biography of Jony Ive, outlining how the publicity-shy "genius behind Apple's greatest products" came to play such a prominent role at Apple. Kahney painstakingly researched Ive's background, interviewing numerous friends and acquaintances from various stages of his life to put together a portrait of Apple's design guru.

Kahney has now returned with another biography of an Apple executive, and this time he has his sights focused on CEO Tim Cook. Like Ive, Cook is an intensely private person, but Kahney spoke with a number of friends and family members, as well as former coworkers and even a few current Apple executives to learn more about the leader who has had the gargantuan task of following Steve Jobs.

While Apple has had some considerable successes under Cook, some have been critical of the direction the company has taken under his leadership, whether it be product missteps, a perceived lack of innovation, or changes in the company's focus. Kahney finds little to dislike about Cook's tenure, however, as is made immediately clear by his book's title: Tim Cook: The Genius Who Took Apple to the Next Level.

Kahney centers his book around six values he argues "provide the foundation" for Cook's leadership at Apple: accessibility, education, environment, inclusion and diversity, privacy and security, and supplier responsibility.

After a quick look at Cook's 2011 elevation to the CEO position and the death of Steve Jobs, the book delves into Cook's history, starting with his upbringing in Alabama and his time at IBM and Compaq.

The book then looks at his decision to join Apple upon the return of Jobs when the company was still on the brink of bankruptcy, and his operations prowess that saw Apple streamline and outsource its manufacturing, radically improving efficiency and allowing for the scale of growth Apple was to experience.

The bulk of the biography covers Cook's time as Apple CEO, highlighting his transition into the role and some of the early major product announcements like iPhones, Apple Pay, the Apple Watch, and more. The book's focus then turns to broader themes like Cook's emphasis on the environment and sustainability, privacy and the fight with the FBI over creating a backdoor into iOS, and efforts at increasing diversity.

The book wraps up with a look at Apple Park and the company's work on self-driving car technology, and ultimately asks whether Cook is the best CEO Apple has ever had. Analyst Horace Dediu believes that he is, arguing that Jobs was "always the head of product" and "never really a CEO." That emphasis was needed when Apple was fighting for survival, but as Apple got back on its feet, Jobs largely turned over the day-to-day operation of the company to Cook, and Cook's generalist perspective has been what the company needs now that it has matured.

While the book does highlight a few missteps along the way, The Genius Who Took Apple to the Next Level is overall a glowing portrait of Cook and the job he has done leading Apple. You can agree or disagree with that conclusion, but either way, it's an interesting look at one of the most important figures in Apple's history and a story that hasn't really been told at length until now.

With material drawn from those who knew Cook in his early days, as well as current and former Apple executives like Lisa Jackson, Greg Joswiak, Deirdre O'Brien, and Bruce Sewell, Kahney does a good job of weaving new bits of information into parts of the narrative that are already well known.

If you're interested in hearing more from Kahney about his book and the process of writing it, we're going to be holding an "Ask Me Anything" session with him in our forums later today. Stop by our Apple, Inc and Tech Industry forum at 11:00 AM Pacific (2:00 PM Eastern) today, and Kahney will be available to answer your questions.

Penguin Books has also graciously agreed to offer ten copies of Tim Cook: The Genius Who Took Apple to the Next Level as part of a giveaway. To enter to win, use the widget below and enter an email address. Email addresses will be used solely for contact purposes to reach the winners and send the prizes. You can earn additional entries by subscribing to our weekly newsletter, subscribing to our YouTube channel, following us on Twitter, following us on Instagram, or visiting the MacRumors Facebook page. By request of the publisher, only U.S. residents who are 18 years or older are eligible to enter.


The contest will run from today (April 9) at 7:00 a.m. Pacific Time through 7:00 a.m. Pacific Time on April 16. The winners will be chosen randomly on April 16 and will be contacted by email. The winners will have 48 hours to respond and provide a shipping address before new winners are chosen.

For those interested in purchasing the book, it launches next Tuesday, April 16, but you can pre-order now through Amazon, Apple's Book Store, and other outlets.

Article Link: Tim Cook Profiled in New Biography as 'The Genius Who Took Apple to the Next Level' [Author AMA Today]
 
As an Amazon Associate, MacRumors earns a commission from qualifying purchases made through links in this post.
I'm actually curious what kind of information about Tim the book contains that we don't know about. We all know that Tim isn't Steve, but I wonder what he has done that made this author write this.

A lot of us don't know these people, neither Steve, nor Tim, because we never actually try to get to know about them, we just judge them basing on Apple's products and performance. It's interesting to see if the author can pinpoint key contributions and what is the justification for the book's title.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 5105973
I always marvel at how willing people are to quickly spend hundreds or thousands of dollars for Apple products. Even if they get burned by a faulty iPhone or a Macbook keyboard failing, many will still turn right around and buy more Apple products.

I’m amazed by people who recommend buying AppleCare, specifically, in case one of the commonly known defects (i.e. butterfly keyboards) becomes an issue in the future. So Apple makes a faulty product and the buyer’s solution is to give Apple even more money for AppleCare?
 
To all those lamenting that Tim Cook isn't a "visionary" like Steve Jobs, can you please point to another tech company that currently has a visionary leader on that level?

The man was a once in a lifetime type of CEO. It would be nearly impossible for anyone to fill his shoes.

Maybe Tesla, dude / haha, nice try
 
There is a certain genius to making obscene profits on buggy & mediocre software, SJW-ing & last-in-class hardware.
This is just nonsense. Mediocre software? Really? Android is better? More secure? Smoother? Longer usable life?

The iPhone 5s is able to run the newest OS. Brand new Android phones don't even run the newest OS.

Last in class hardware? LOL!! The A series silicon is best in industry. FaceID still can't be reproduced despite continued attempts by other OEMs to copy it. Device value on the secondary market? Go look how much an iPhone 7 costs versus a Galaxy S7...says it all. iPhone cameras are among industry leaders.

Hate on.
 
For those who blast Cook on innovation, can you point to something specific where Apple fell far behind? Or is it just this idea that Jobs would have come up with something incredible and completely unknown to us after 2011 to change the industry again? FWIW, I doubt he would have, it's not like we have seen anything from anybody else, Apple after 2000 did great by finding good ideas buried in terrible products and executing them correctly, where is that now? I mean, they did do that (IMO) with AirPods so they still got it sometimes. The big issue for them is that the industry seems to be far better at catching up than they used to.

Cook has been in charge while this company has grown to an amazing size. I think he has done a good job of that, the company has lost some of its soul but that was inevitable. I think he's also made structural mistakes by handing too much power to Ive that have led to issues in things like QC that have eroded trust. But the scale at which this company operates today was simply inconceivable even 5 or 6 years ago, and he deserves credit for (mostly) pulling that off smoothly.

The real question is if Cook has some skillset that made him uniquely qualified and able to pull this off, and here is where I doubt it. I would say he's been fine, above average to good, but I don't see what he has that nobody else does.
 
If you think the reason that most people are dissatisfied with Tim are "dumb" because of stage presence, then I don't know what to tell you. It's shipping products. I get that there are only so many iPods or iPhone like leaps. It's the little things. So many improvements for the sake of thin that made things functionally worse. Anyway, I am hoping that most of this is actually Ive's influence and the man has less of it.

Where did I say it was solely about stage presence? I made a list ending in etc etc to indicate that it went on and on.
The man is paid hundreds of millions of dollars by Apples board because of what he does. Any keyboard warrior earning 0.00000000001 % of what he’s paid us no clue.
 
  • Like
Reactions: MEJHarrison
Bragging about being a genius does not sound good to me.
I don't think Tim came up with the title so he can't really be blamed for that.

But everything that man does, says or quotes really does grind my gears.
 
I remember growing up and everyone hated Microsoft back in the day. I started purchasing Apple products in 2012 and find it a great company with great products, and that continues to this day today.

You must have forgotten (or not paid attention) that many people hated Apple back then too. It was a different kind of hate though, arguably worse than it is now.
 
So here I am, now in my tenth year of waiting for a new desktop Mac which provides the power I want. And this guy gets a frickin' book written about how he's a genius. Laughable. A true genius – a Jobs-like genius – would have driven innovation, brought to market products that were flawless and universally praised, and would not have signed off on that cluster**** of a keynote two weeks ago. I cannot wait for him to take early retirement so someone can make Apple great again. And not just great at servicing investors.
 
  • Like
Reactions: AlexGraphicD
You must have forgotten (or not paid attention) that many people hated Apple back then too. It was a different kind of hate though, arguably worse than it is now.

I guess, when I joined Macrumors back in 2012 it didn't seem as bad as it is today. But you're from 2008 so I'll take your word for it. In 2012 I was pretty enamored with my iPhone and came here to share in that like - found a lot of people who thought the same way. Now, seems to me that this place is overrun with the opposite. It is cool to dislike Tim Cook and think Apple is 1 second away from absolute and total destruction.
 
It’s lower level. Always been a iPhone user since 1st iPhone launch. House hand an iMac pro. But iphone in Asia countries sales are dropping. Iphone after Steve job is totally no wow factors. In the past always see Long Q when iPhone launch. Now.....the longest q for mobile iPhone launch is Huawei p30 pro. That phone camera is the king. I don’t think Apple would be near to P30 pro even then next iPhone launch. But apple. Am jumping from iOS to android.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.