Bloomberg
Apple Inc’s most important manufacturing partner has reassured investors it can still get the latest
5G-enabled iPhones ready for an autumn launch despite global Covid-19 upheaval.
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co, which makes most of the world’s iPhones, told investors it’s lost time to travel restrictions and other disruptions caused by the coronavirus pandemic. But with months to go before the first trial assembly lines start up in June, Hon Hai can still make the deadline, investor relations chief Alex Yang said on a private conference call hosted by Goldman Sachs.
Hon Hai, known also as Foxconn, struggled through much of February after the Covid-19 outbreak delayed the return of the hundreds of thousands of workers it needed to assemble iPhones and other electronics. While it’s since resumed normal operations, the month-long hiatus cast Apple’s carefully calibrated product launch schedule in doubt. Much now depends on the course of the pandemic and a postponement remained very much on the cards though the new iPhones should emerge in time to catch the crucial holiday season, Yang said.
“We and the customer’s engineers are trying to catch up the missing gap, after we lost some days due to travel ban. There’s opportunity and possibility that we might catch up,†Yang said.
“But if there’s a further delay in the next few weeks, months, then you probably have to reconsider launching time. It’s still possible.â€
Foxconn said in a conference call was intended to communicate its thoughts on the latest developments affecting the consumer electronics industry and not focussed on any specific products or customer.
The next iteration of Apple’s signature device may well be one of its most important in years — an iPhone that can make full use of the fifth-generation wireless networks that promise much faster video and gaming. The US company is already a step behind Samsung Electronics Co and Huawei Technologies Co, which began selling 5G devices last year.
Covid-19 is now jeopardising Apple’s plans. Mass assembly is only one part of the iPhone maker’s supply chain, which encompasses hundreds of suppliers. Apple and its many partners spend months or even years sourcing individual components that are assembled into final products. Any disruptions to that complex network could slow the introduction of future devices. Trial assembly typically begins in early June and — once finalised — mass production commences in August, Yang outlined.
As China’s largest employer and manufacturer of a plethora of electronics brands, Hon Hai encapsulates how the outbreak disrupted the global supply of made-in-China electronics.
Apple scrapped its revenue guidance for the March quarter after the contagion disrupted its production chain: Hon Hai was forced to postpone the reopening of its “iPhone City†mega-complex in the central city of Zhengzhou while it imposed strict quarantine measures on thousands of labourers. But Foxconn has since sharply raised signing bonuses to attract new workers and said it reached full seasonal staffing level earlier than an original target of late March.
Apple acquires AI startup to grasp natural language
Bloomberg
Apple Inc acquired Voysis, an artificial intelligence (AI) startup that developed a platform for digital voice assistants to better understand people’s natural language.
Dublin, Ireland-based Voysis focussed on improving digital assistants inside online shopping apps, so the software could respond more accurately to voice commands from users. A now-removed company webpage said the technology could narrow product search results by processing shopping phrases such as “I need a new LED TV†and “My budget is $1,000.â€
Voysis provided this AI to other companies to incorporate it into their own apps and voice assistants.
An Apple spokesman said the company “buys smaller technology companies from time to time, and we generally do not discuss our purpose or plans.â€
Voysis’s system taps into Wavenets, an AI-based method for creating more human-like computer speech that was first developed by Google’s DeepMind in 2016. Voysis co-founder Peter Cahill said in 2018 that his company managed to shrink its system to the point where, once the AI is trained, the software uses as little as 25 megabytes of memory — about the same size as four Apple Music songs. That made it much easier to run on smartphones without an internet connection.
Voysis was founded in 2012 and sold its services to several companies.