Nueva York, (EFE).-Tim Cook used his final WWDC keynote as Apple CEO to close out a chapter — and insist the story is far from over.
Speaking Monday at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference in Cupertino, California, Cook delivered what amounted to a valedictory address, telling the audience that despite everything Apple has built under his leadership, “the best is yet to come.” He leaves the CEO role on September 1, when hardware engineering chief John Ternus takes over.
“Creating the best products in the world to deliver experiences that enrich people’s lives has always been our north star,” Cook said, in a speech that felt as much like a personal goodbye as a product announcement. He called leading Apple “the honor of a lifetime” and praised the teams whose “creativity, care, and conviction continue to make a lasting difference in people’s lives.”
A Standing Ovation Before It Even Started
The mood in Cupertino set the tone before Cook said a word. Attendees rose to their feet in a prolonged, unanimous standing ovation as he took the stage — a rare and genuine show of respect from an audience that typically saves its enthusiasm for product reveals. Cook, visibly moved, acknowledged the moment before launching into his remarks.
What Was Actually Announced
The sentimental backdrop didn’t overshadow the substance. Monday’s keynote included the unveiling of a new generation of Apple Intelligence — Apple’s AI platform — along with a significantly upgraded Siri powered by artificial intelligence. Cook framed the new capabilities as tools that will let users “connect, create, and learn in extraordinary ways,” staying true to the product-as-empowerment narrative he’s championed throughout his tenure.
WWDC runs June 8–12 at Apple’s Cupertino headquarters.
The Transition Ahead
Ternus, who will succeed Cook in less than three months, was not part of Monday’s presentation. He did attend an Apple media dinner on Sunday evening, where he was seen mingling and taking selfies — a low-key introduction to a very public role he’s about to step fully into.
Cook’s exit marks the end of an era that saw Apple become the most valuable company in the world. Whether Ternus can sustain that trajectory — while navigating AI competition, regulatory pressure, and a post-iPhone hardware landscape — is the question the industry will be watching closely.