Intel’s Workforce Shakeup and Apple’s Liquid Glass Era
Alex and Morgan dig into two major stories from the heart of the tech industry—Intel’s bold restructuring strategy and Apple’s visual and functional leap with iOS 26. Whether it’s chip manufacturing at risk or AI-infused design updates reaching the hands of consumers, today’s episode captures how legacy tech companies are evolving to meet the future on their own terms.
Introduction: Weather and Markets Check The episode opens with a rundown of national and Sacramento weather, followed by a look at the day’s key market indicators: Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Bitcoin. It’s a concise backdrop to the more strategic changes happening inside two of tech’s most iconic companies.
Intel Plans Deep Workforce Cuts and Signals Risk to Chip Roadmap The first story focuses on Intel’s announcement that it will cut 15–22% of its workforce by 2025, part of a sweeping effort to become more agile and cost-effective. But perhaps more concerning is the company’s warning that it may abandon its 14A process node, a critical part of its chip manufacturing roadmap, if it cannot attract enough external customers. Alex and Morgan discuss what’s at stake—not just for Intel, but for U.S. semiconductor leadership more broadly—and what this signals about the fierce global competition for foundry dominance.
Apple Unveils iOS 26 Public Beta with “Liquid Glass” Design Next, attention turns to Apple’s first public beta of iOS 26, which debuts the company’s striking new “Liquid Glass” aesthetic across iPhone and iPad interfaces. Alongside the visual overhaul, iOS 26 introduces improvements to the Camera and Phone apps, including Call Filtering and new Apple Intelligence features like Genmoji and Live Translation. Alex and Morgan weigh the promise of the update against early feedback around readability and stability, particularly for users eager to preview Apple’s AI ambitions in action.
Recap and Close From Intel confronting the economics of advanced chipmaking to Apple inviting users into a new generation of AI-driven design, today’s stories show how established tech leaders are choosing between reinvention and risk.
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