iPhone Apple is not affected


Apple CEO Tim Cook said in a meeting.

"I'm not going to tell you that Apple is not affected," said Cook, but he seemed to reassure workers against workplace accidents, saying that Apple continued to pay its retail workers while the stores closed.

Cook said social separation and temperature controls should be acquired when stores reopen, and that coronavirus is an opportunity.

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Apple CEO Tim Cook held a virtual meeting with the entire organization on Thursday to investigate the effects of the coronavirus pandemic, according to Bloomberg.

Cook warned that Apple "is not invulnerable to general monetary patterns", but has focused on keeping the organization going by investing heavily in research and development, said Bloomberg.

When Cook received information about the layoffs from Apple specialists, he said the organization was in a healthy financial position and stressed that it had continued to pay its retail employees during the closure of its physical stores. "I will not tell you that Apple is not affected," added the CEO.

Apple relaunched its first store outside of China in South Korea on Thursday. Bloomberg reports that the organization hopes to revitalize its US operations in early May.

Cook said that once stores are reopened, social separation and temperature checks should be done, and a coronavirus test could also be done.

Cook also highlighted the deliveries of the new MacBook Air, iPad Pro and iPhone SE to prove that the organization of the pandemic does not stop the arrival of new items.

It seems to have indicated that shipping the items will be essential to Apple's emergency response process. He made reference to the fact that Apple responded to the money-related difficulties by unloading the first iMac in 1998 and the organization in 2010 after relieving the first slowdown of the iPad in 2008.