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  • Acute cholera outbreak plagues DR Congo as health crisis deepens-Xinhua

    Acute cholera outbreak plagues DR Congo as health crisis deepens-Xinhua

    A medical worker takes care of patients at a cholera treatment center in Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, July 10, 2025. (Str/Xinhua)

    The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is wrestling with a deepening health crisis as a cholera outbreak hit an “acute phase,” compounded by escalating insecurity, a resurgence of mpox, and a nationwide strike by health workers. 

    KINSHASA, July 12 (Xinhua) — The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is wrestling with a deepening health crisis as a cholera outbreak hit an “acute phase,” compounded by escalating insecurity, a resurgence of mpox, and a nationwide strike by health workers.

    At a press conference in the capital, Kinshasa, Health Minister Roger Kamba said that since January, more than 33,000 cases of cholera have been reported nationwide, with a case fatality rate approaching two percent. This figure has already surpassed the 31,749 cases recorded in 2024, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

    The disease has now spread to 17 of the country’s 26 provinces, up from 14 reported by the government a day earlier, with newly affected areas including Kwilu, Mai-Ndombe, and Mongala provinces. “This means we are in the acute phase of the epidemic, which is still on the rise,” said Kamba.

    According to the WHO, a cholera outbreak was declared on May 5, following laboratory confirmation of cases in multiple provinces.

    A medical worker takes care of a patient at a cholera treatment center in Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, July 10, 2025. (Xinhua)

    Kinshasa is among the hardest-hit areas, with confirmed or suspected cases identified in 27 of its 35 health zones. Every week, some 130 new cases emerge, often accompanied by deaths. The minister announced the gradual opening of new treatment centers and free care for patients.

    In South Kivu province, particularly in Uvira city, which became the temporary provincial administrative center after Bukavu was seized by the March 23 Movement (M23) rebels in February, the situation remains dire.

    Ongoing armed conflict is severely hindering humanitarian access and the delivery of essential medical supplies. Health authorities have had to reroute supplies through Kalemie, a town on the western shore of Lake Tanganyika, more than 300 km south of Uvira.

    The logistical detour, compounded by a shortage of boats, has significantly delayed the emergency response, Kamba said.

    The Tshopo province has also been flagged as one of the initial epicenters of the outbreak, largely due to poor sanitation along rivers. Open defecation, particularly in port areas, remains a major contributing factor.

    Alongside cholera, the Central African nation is concurrently battling a resurgence of mpox, while its health system buckles under a continuing strike by health workers.

    This convergence of health and social crises is placing significant pressure on the country’s already limited response capacity.

    Medical workers prepare for disinfection at a cholera treatment center in Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, July 10, 2025. (Str/Xinhua)

    According to the WHO, more than 37,000 confirmed cases of mpox have been reported by 25 countries since early 2024, with the DRC accounting for 60 percent of confirmed cases and 40 percent of reported deaths. The country continues to report between 2,000 and 3,000 suspected cases weekly, in addition to confirmed cases.

    Against this tense backdrop, members of the Free Doctors’ Union (SYLIMED) have declared a nationwide strike starting Friday. The union issued its notice on Wednesday, citing the Congolese government’s failure to honor past commitments.

    SYLIMED Secretary-General Andre Kasongo criticized the authorities for neglecting frontline doctors and reported several deaths among health workers combating the cholera outbreak.

    “The government must provide ammunition to its health fighters,” Kasongo said. “If it refuses to acknowledge their precarious conditions, doctors will simply give up. That is exactly what we have done.”

    At Thursday’s press conference, the health minister spoke of the country’s structural vulnerability to recurring outbreaks.

    “You know our country is one where epidemics often emerge, due to a combination of factors, some natural, others not, such as disasters and mass displacement of people. All these elements contribute to the heightened risk of epidemics,” Kamba noted.

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  • USA Men Start World Championships In Singapore With 18-9 Win Over Canada

    USA Men Start World Championships In Singapore With 18-9 Win Over Canada

    Singapore – July 12 – The USA Men’s National Team delivered a convincing effort to open play at the World Championships in Singapore, defeating Canada 18-9. Max Irving scored four goals and earned player of the game honors. Adrian Weinberg recorded 10 saves in net in more than three quarters of work before Bernardo Herzer came on to close things out, adding one save. Team USA returns to action on Sunday at 9pm et/6pm pt against Brazil. Live streaming of all USA matches will be available on Peacock (login required).

    Team USA bolted out of the gates with a hot start opening up a 3-0 lead in the first quarter. Irving started things off with a goal early on and then it was quiet for most of the rest of the quarter. Team USA got back in the mix with less than a minute to play as Hannes Daube and Dylan Woodhead converted to build the lead to 3-0 after one. Nicolas Saveljic opened the second quarter with a penalty shot score for a 4-0 lead before Canada finally broke through with a tally with 5:20 remaining in the first half. Canada would get another goal in the period but Team USA fired back with goals from Ryder Dodd, Ryan Ohl and Irving to snag a 7-2 lead at the break.

    The United States left no doubt in the second half, adding 11 more goals. After Canada scored to open the third, Team USA ran off four in a row to go up 11-3, the last coming from Ryder Dodd with 3:58 left in the third quarter. Chase Dodd finished off the scoring in the period and Team USA led 12-4 headed to the fourth. Canada had their best offensive showing of the match in the final period, delivering five goals, but Team USA was up for the challenge. Irving scored twice early in the period as the two sides traded goals back and forth. Dominic Brown put the United States up 16-5 with 4:38 left in the match and it was consecutive goals from Daube and Saveljic to close things out en route to the 18-9 win.

    Team USA went 1/3 on power plays and 3/3 on penalties while Canada went 0/2 on power plays and 3/3 on penalties. 

    Scoring – Stats

    USA 18 (3, 4, 5, 6) M. Irving 4, H. Daube 3, N. Saveljic 3, R. Dodd 2, C. Dodd 1, J. Larsen 1, D. Woodhead 1, D. Brown 1, R. Ohl 1, B. Liechty 1

    CAN 9 (0, 2, 2, 5) A. Oussadou 3, D. Lapins 2, R. D’Souza 2, A. Gardijan 2

    Saves – USA – A. Weinberg 10, B. Herzer 1 – CAN – B. McKnight 4, M. Radenovic 2

    6×5 – USA – 1/3 – CAN – 0/2

    Penalties – USA – 3/3 – CAN – 3/3

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  • 3 Reasons to Buy Bitcoin Before March 2028

    3 Reasons to Buy Bitcoin Before March 2028

    • There is a significant opportunity arriving for Bitcoin in early 2028.

    • It’s the same cyclical opportunity as there was in April 2024.

    • Understanding these catalysts in advance means you can prepare for them.

    • 10 stocks we like better than Bitcoin ›

    When an asset has a built-in clock that cuts new supply in half every four years, ignoring that clock is like refusing to set your alarm before a predawn flight.

    On that note, Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) will once again slash its block reward sometime in late March or early April of 2028 in a process called the halving that makes the coin much harder to produce. That range is far enough away for complacency to set in, and close enough for disciplined investors to prepare to reap the rewards of early positioning.

    Halvings have a habit of rewiring market psychology and tightening supply in ways that headlines rarely capture in real time. Let’s examine three reasons why loading up on this coin well before March 2028 still looks attractive.

    Across the last three halvings, Bitcoin rallied hard in the 12 months just before the event.

    Research by Coinbase tallies an average gain of 61% during the six months ahead of the 2012, 2016, and 2020 halvings, with most of that surge starting roughly a year out. Extrapolating that window forward lands investors in March 2027, and there’s plenty of runway between now and then with which to build up a position.

    Why does the market front-run the actual catalyst?

    In short, because Bitcoin miners know their future revenue will halve, so they hoard their inventory or buy coins to bolster their reserves. Long-term holders refuse to part with coins when they see miners tightening supply. New buyers, noticing the pullback in exchange balances, scramble to secure positions. The feedback loop is thus self-fulfilling until something breaks or the halving passes.

    Could 2028 disappoint the trend? Absolutely.

    Each cycle’s pre-halving pop has been a bit smaller than the last, and regulatory surprises or a liquidity crunch could blunt investor enthusiasm for buying risk assets. Still, betting that the pattern simply vanishes requires believing that human nature around scarcity has changed, which seems unlikely.

    Image source: Getty Images.

    Cutting the drip of new coins in half is one thing. The market actually feeling the drought is another.

    In prior halving cycles, Bitcoin printed its largest percentage gains not before but after the halving, often starting approximately 12 months later, once the shock to daily issuance was fully absorbed. The average rally across the six months following past halvings was a staggering 348%.

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  • This Martian Region Is Hiding Thousands of Kilometers of Ancient Rivers – SciTechDaily

    1. This Martian Region Is Hiding Thousands of Kilometers of Ancient Rivers  SciTechDaily
    2. Carbonate formation and fluctuating habitability on Mars  Nature
    3. Ocean on Mars May Still Exist: NASA Finds Its Traces  Holistic News
    4. New discovery reveals Mars once had a river system mightier than the Ganga  MSN
    5. Mystery of Mars’ missing water could be solved by the planet’s tipsy tilt  Live Science

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  • Huawei Mate 80 may bring even better zoom camera than Pura 80 Ultra – Huawei Central

    1. Huawei Mate 80 may bring even better zoom camera than Pura 80 Ultra  Huawei Central
    2. Huawei Mate 80 Hospitals Predicted To Use New Main Camera From Smartsens  VOI.ID
    3. Huawei’s Kirin 9030 For The Upcoming Mate 80 Flagship Smartphone Series Is Rumored To Provide A 20 Percent Performance Improvement, But Lithography Details Not Revealed  Wccftech
    4. Huawei Mate 80 RS tipped to launch with new main rear camera from Smartsens  Notebookcheck
    5. Huawei Kirin 9030 Reportedly Offers 20% Performance Surge, Ready To Launch At The End Of 2025  VOI.ID

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  • Brazilian study links air pollution to brain health using interdisciplinary science

    Brazilian study links air pollution to brain health using interdisciplinary science


    An unprecedented study by Brazil’s National Observatory is pioneering new ground by combining geophysics, medicine, and public health to investigate how microscopic iron particles from air pollution may lodge in the human brain and be linked to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. 


    The project aims to characterise magnetic iron particles found both in urban air and in human brain tissue. This was reported by the official website of Brazil’s Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation.


    The research focuses on identifying the source of these particles and understanding their potential neurotoxic effects. Samples are collected from Sao Paulo’s metropolitan region, one of the most polluted in Brazil, with brain tissue provided by the University of Sao Paulo Brain Bank and airborne particles gathered from specialised monitoring stations.


    Initial findings reveal that most ferromagnetic particles in Sao Paulo’s air originate from human activities, particularly vehicle traffic. Pollution levels rise during the dry season due to limited atmospheric dispersion, while the rainy season sees a reduction in suspended particles, a phenomenon known as “atmospheric washing.” However, ultrafine particles, thousands of times smaller than a human hair, remain in the air and may pose significant health risks. 


    The study also examines how seasonal weather patterns, local conditions, and pollution sources interact to influence particle composition.


    According to the researchers, the study exemplifies how interdisciplinary science can tackle complex social and environmental challenges. By applying geophysical methods to health and environmental issues, the research highlights the potential for science to inform public policy and promote health. 


    Photo:
    iStock

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  • How to download the iOS 26 beta on your iPhone right now (and which models support it)

    How to download the iOS 26 beta on your iPhone right now (and which models support it)

    How do I install the iOS 26 public beta?

    Once Apple releases the public beta of iOS 26, you will not need to go through the above steps to to test the developer beta. Instead, follow the steps below. You’ll still need an iPhone running iOS 16.5 or later, and since not all iPhones are compatible with iOS 26, you’ll also need a model newer than the iPhone 11.

    1. Go to your iPhone’s Settings and select General.
    2. Go to Software Update in Settings.
    3. Enable Beta Updates (off by default).
    4. Select “iOS 26 Public Beta” (if available).
    5. Once you do this, return to the previous page. If an update is available now, your iPhone will prompt you to download and install it. You’ll then begin receiving automatic software updates to the latest beta version of iOS 26. 

    Which iPhones are compatible with iOS 26?

    Apple removed the iPhone XR and XS from its list of supported devices with iOS 26, so any iPhone 11 or newer is compatible with the new operating system, including the iPhone SE.

    Also: Every iPhone model that can be updated to iOS 26 (and which ones don’t support it)

    When will iOS 26 be released?

    The iOS 26 developer beta (Beta 3) is available now. The public beta will likely go live mid-July 2025. If Apple follows its usual cadence, the final, general release of iOS 26 should arrive in September 2025.

    What to do before installing the iOS 26 developer beta?

    You can always join the Apple Beta program to get the latest beta versions of iOS. Before you download a beta version of an operating system, keep these housekeeping items in mind:

    • Back up your device and personal information.
    • Don’t download beta software, which will likely have bugs and glitches, on your everyday iPhone.
    • Beta versions are released so you can test new features and share feedback to improve iOS.

    How to submit beta feedback to Apple

    By the time the public beta is released, Apple will have two beta versions of iOS: iOS 26 public beta and iOS 26 developer beta. Both betas come with a built-in Feedback Assistant app, which can be opened from the Home screen on your iPhone or iPad. Whenever you experience an issue or something does not work as expected, send your feedback directly to Apple with Feedback Assistant.

    Also: Five iOS 26 features that I’ve been using on my Android phone for years

    Editor’s note: This article was originally published in 2024. It was fact-checked and thoroughly updated on July 8, 2025.

    Get the morning’s top stories in your inbox each day with our Tech Today newsletter.


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  • Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Answer and Help for July 12 #496

    Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Answer and Help for July 12 #496

    Looking for the most recent Strands answer? Click here for our daily Strands hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.


    If you love attending baseball games in summer, you’ll hit a home run with today’s NYT Strands puzzle. If you need hints and answers, read on.

    I go into depth about the rules for Strands in this story. 

    If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections and Mini Crossword answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.

    Read more: NYT Connections Turns 1: These Are the 5 Toughest Puzzles So Far

    Hint for today’s Strands puzzle

    Today’s Strands theme is: In the ballpark.

    If that doesn’t help you, here’s a clue: Play ball!

    Clue words to unlock in-game hints

    Your goal is to find hidden words that fit the puzzle’s theme. If you’re stuck, find any words you can. Every time you find three words of four letters or more, Strands will reveal one of the theme words. These are the words I used to get those hints but any words of four or more letters that you find will work:

    • TEER, MEER, MEET, TEEM, ROAD, STALL, TALL, BEST, PEAT, LUNH, CULT, BUMP, BILE, PEAL, METE, BULL, STUN, NUTS

    Answers for today’s Strands puzzle

    These are the answers that tie into the theme. The goal of the puzzle is to find them all, including the spangram, a theme word that reaches from one side of the puzzle to the other. When you have all of them (I originally thought there were always eight but learned that the number can vary), every letter on the board will be used. Here are the nonspangram answers:

    • GLOVE, HELMET, BULLPEN, PEANUTS, PITCHER, JUMBOTRON

    Today’s Strands spangram

    completed NYT Strands puzzle for July 12, 2025, #496

    The completed NYT Strands puzzle for July 12, 2025, #496.

    NYT/Screenshot by CNET

    Today’s Strands spangram is STADIUM. To find it, look for the S that’s five letters down on the far left row, and wind up and over.

    Quick tips for Strands

    #1: To get more clue words, see if you can tweak the words you’ve already found, by adding an “S” or other variants. And if you find a word like WILL, see if other letters are close enough to help you make SILL, or BILL.

    #2: Once you get one theme word, look at the puzzle to see if you can spot other related words.

    #3: If you’ve been given the letters for a theme word, but can’t figure it out, guess three more clue words, and the puzzle will light up each letter in order, revealing the word.


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  • From Regulatory Enclaves to Corridor Anchors: ZEDEs as Strategic Catalysts in Global Supply‑Chain Diplomacy

    From Regulatory Enclaves to Corridor Anchors: ZEDEs as Strategic Catalysts in Global Supply‑Chain Diplomacy

    Special economic zones (SEZs) have long served as instruments of export promotion and foreign direct investment. Yet Zones for Employment and Economic Development (ZEDEs) with their unique governance autonomy offer a new blueprint for anchoring and accelerating major trade corridors: IMEC (India–Middle East–Europe Corridor), INSTC (International North–South Transport Corridor), and the Middle Corridor across Central Asia and the Caucasus.

    ZEDEs combine legal innovation, administrative agility, and investment-friendly governance. Drawing lessons from Honduras, these zones have demonstrated the power of regulatory experimentation to attract FDI, stimulate job creation, and catalyze integrated infrastructure development.

    Anchoring Corridor Nodes

    Modern trade corridors have evolved beyond mere physical infrastructure, such as steel and concrete. Today, they require a robust and reliable regulatory framework that can facilitate the smooth flow of goods and services.

    This is where regulatory innovation comes into play, and zones like ZEDEs can play a crucial role. By implementing international best practices in customs, dispute resolution, and compliance frameworks, ZEDEs can significantly reduce border friction, making it easier for businesses to operate and thrive.

    Another key aspect of modern trade corridors is infrastructure integration. ZEDEs can serve as natural multimodal anchor points by co-locating ports, warehousing, logistics, and free-trade services.

    This integrated approach enables the efficient movement of goods, reducing transit times and costs, and increasing the overall competitiveness of businesses operating within the zone. By providing a one-stop shop for trade-related services, ZEDEs can streamline the logistics process, making it easier for companies to import and export goods.

    The strategic location of ZEDEs is also critical to their success. Zones positioned near transit chokepoints or node intersections can significantly enhance corridor throughput and efficiency. By leveraging their geographic location, ZEDEs can become key hubs for international trade, connecting businesses to new markets and customers.

    This, in turn, can drive economic growth, create jobs, and stimulate investment in the surrounding region. As modern trade corridors continue to evolve, the importance of regulatory innovation, infrastructure integration, and strategic geography will only continue to grow, making ZEDEs an attractive option for businesses and governments looking to stay ahead of the curve.

    Catalysts for Supply Chain Diplomacy

    ZEDEs are not only anchor points for trade corridors. Their development can be catalysts for economic growth, regional stability, and innovation. By offering investor-friendly regimes, ZEDEs can attract foreign direct investment (FDI) and foster industrial clustering in key sectors such as logistics, finance, and manufacturing. This clustering effect can create a snowball effect, where businesses are drawn to the zone’s favourable conditions, leading to a concentration of industry expertise and resources.

    ZEDEs are also at the forefront of customs and trade facilitation innovation. They can pilot and test new simplified customs procedures, such as single-window and bonded warehousing, and then scale these projects regionally. This allows ZEDEs to stay ahead of the curve in terms of trade facilitation, making them attractive to businesses looking to streamline their logistics and supply chain operations.

    Furthermore, ZEDEs are well-positioned to pioneer green and digital logistics solutions, aligning with the sustainability goals of trade corridors. By investing in low-emission freight handling and digital trade platforms, ZEDEs can reduce their environmental footprint while increasing efficiency and competitiveness.

    This can include the adoption of electric or hybrid vehicles, the use of renewable energy sources, and the implementation of digital tools to optimize logistics and supply chain management. By embracing green and digital logistics, ZEDEs can become models for sustainable trade and economic development.

    One of the companies leading ZEDE development is Honduras Próspera Inc. They are the developer and guarantor behind Próspera ZEDE, a charter city on Roatán founded under Honduran ZEDE law.

    Backed by securing backing from prominent venture capitalists such as Balaji Srinivasan, Peter Thiel, and Marc Andreessen, the firm has launched Próspera Africa as it scales and seeks to bring its ZEDE model to the continent.

    Coupled with this international expansion, in January 2025, Próspera secured a strategic investment from Coinbase Ventures. This signals deep alignment between crypto-friendly regulation, economic freedom, and digital innovation. It strengthens Próspera’s global credibility, and it also boosts its capacity to pioneer crypto-digital zones that can be embedded within major trade corridors.

    Corridor-Specific Applications

    Along the IMEC, ZEDEs in the Gulf and Eastern Mediterranean can serve as digital-physical hubs, integrating transshipment, logistics, and re-export services. These zones would connect India, the Gulf, Israel, and Europe, not only physically but also through shared regulatory frameworks.

    Along the INSTC, located in Iran, Azerbaijan, or Russia, ZEDEs could facilitate customs harmonization and act as crucial multimodal transfer points, reducing costs and mitigating geopolitical risks.

    Along the Middle Corridor, in Central Asia and the Caucasus, ZEDEs can foster local industries, secure supply chains, and support logistics services, playing a key role in the corridor’s goal of tripling trade volumes by 2030.

    However, in terms of risks and prerequisites:

    Legal and Political Continuity:** ZEDE regimes need stable governance structures. The reversal of ZEDE laws in Honduras highlights this vulnerability. 

    Geopolitical Coordination: These ZEDEs must align with broader state strategies to avoid creating divisions among corridor stakeholders. 

    Sustainability and Inclusivity: As ZEDEs expand, their impact on local communities and ecosystems must be carefully managed.

    The transition of the globalization narrative from a “hyperconnected world” into geo-economic blocs bound by connector economies—a jurisdiction that functions as a crucial intermediary between different geopolitical blocs or markets—means the world is in an era of expanding supply chain diplomacy.

     ZEDEs offer modular, adaptive platforms that can transcend national boundaries. By anchoring corridors with agile governance and integrating digital platforms, ZEDEs like Próspera can reinforce connectivity, resilience, and regional transformation.

    Delivering on this promise requires robust legal safeguards, multilateral coordination, and sustainable design. But the payoff is profound: corridors anchored not only in steel but in forward-leaning governance.

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  • Apple CEO Tim Cook has created more shareholder value than Steve Jobs. But suddenly his weaknesses are on display in the AI era

    Apple CEO Tim Cook has created more shareholder value than Steve Jobs. But suddenly his weaknesses are on display in the AI era

    It seems impossible that Tim Cook’s legacy as Apple’s spectacularly successful CEO could be in jeopardy. But in recent months, and especially in recent days, the impossible has become at least conceivable.

    The latest tremors came when Apple announced chief operating officer Jeff Williams would retire by yearend after 27 years. Just a day before, the company’s top AI executive, Ruoming Pang, had left to join Meta, and weeks earlier, another high-level AI researcher, Tom Gunter, had also left. The image of a leadership exodus was forming.

    More broadly, Apple stock is down 7.2% over the past year, while the S&P is up 6.5% and the Nasdaq is up 12.9%.

    Those events brought some of Apple’s most worrisome weaknesses into the forefront. Above all: an apparent serious lag behind competitors incorporating AI into products and services. Last year, with Hollywood fanfare, the company introduced Apple Intelligence, a version of AI that only Apple, creator of the world’s most user-friendly products and services, could possibly create. But it isn’t working out that way. Playing down Apple Intelligence so far, the company has a partnership with OpenAI for some chores performed by Apple’s virtual assistant, Siri, and it has reportedly considered a partnership with Anthropic and partnering with or buying Perplexity AI.

    For a company of Apple’s scale and stature, lagging behind its major competitors on AI is like lagging behind the competition on the internet in 2000. AI is a general-purpose technology, and those things don’t come along very often. The internet was one. So were digital computing and electricity. They change the world, and they revolutionize the business landscape for every company.

    With that in mind, it becomes clear how Tim Cook could be one of the all-time greatest CEOs from 2011 to now yet might not be optimal for the AI era.

    As background, remember just how staggeringly successful Apple has been under Cook. When Steve Jobs made him CEO, the company was worth about $300 billion. Now it’s worth $3.2 trillion—a remarkable compound annual growth rate of 18.4% over 14 years. Few people realize that Cook has created far more shareholder wealth than Jobs did.

    But now look closer. Craig Moffett, a founder of the MoffettNathanson research firm, is one of the extremely few Wall Street analysts who have a Sell recommendation on Apple stock. He is also a Cook admirer. “By any normal metrics he has had a wildly, wildly successful tenure,” Moffett says. But then he examines how that success has been achieved. “They haven’t produced a major new product outside of possibly the earbuds in a decade,” he says. “Apple has done far more to innovate process than it has product over Tim Cook’s tenure.”

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