Analyse
While Apple under Tim Cook *did* emphasize premium design, branding, and high-margin products (e.g., the iPhone 6, Apple Watch), the company remained heavily engineering-driven. In 2014, Apple led in semiconductor design (A-series chips), biometric security (Touch ID), and supply chain engineering. Ellison’s framing conflates *aesthetic prioritization* with a lack of engineering rigor, which misrepresents Apple’s operational reality. His point about luxury positioning was partially valid, but the dismissal of engineering was hyperbolic.
Achtergrond
Ellison’s remark reflected a broader debate about Apple’s identity post-Steve Jobs, as critics questioned whether the company’s focus on aesthetics and profitability came at the expense of groundbreaking innovation. However, Apple’s R&D spending grew steadily (e.g., $6B in 2014, up 39% YoY), and its vertical integration—like custom silicon—contradicted the 'not an engineering company' claim. Ellison, as Oracle’s CEO, had a competitive incentive to downplay Apple’s technical strengths.
Samenvatting verdict
Larry Ellison’s 2014 claim that Apple was 'not really an engineering company anymore' oversimplifies Apple’s dual focus on design *and* engineering, ignoring its deep R&D investments and hardware/software innovations at the time.