Apple CEO Tim Cook believes that a four-year degree is not really necessary to excel at coding and termed it an old traditional view.
Earlier this week, Cook visited Orlando, Florida and surprised a 16-year-old coder, Liam Rosenfeld, who is one of the 350 scholarship winners attending Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) next month in San Jose, California, MacRumors reported.
While in Florida, Cook also attended a conference that saw SAP and Apple announce an expanded partnership focused on new enterprise apps taking advantage of technologies like Machine Learning (ML) and Augmented Reality (AR).
"I don't think a four year degree is necessary to be proficient at coding. I think that's an old, traditional view. What we found out is that if we can get coding in the early grades and have a progression of difficulty over the tenure of somebody's high school years, by the time you graduate kids like Liam, as an example of this, they're already writing apps that could be put on the App Store," TechCrunch quoted Cook as saying on Friday.
Cook believes that many businesses have still not adopted the technological advancements and are still using very old technologies, but with more solutions from SAP and Apple, and tech-savvy employees of the future like Rosenfeld, that could change, the report added.
Apple has been busy launching stores across the globe, and reports recently claimed that the Cupertino-based giant is finally looking to set up its own shop in India. It is likely to finalise one of the high-street areas in Mumbai as its first retail destination.
The company hasn’t been able to grow in the country, owing to its steeply priced iPhones, but experts believe that local assembling of iPhone X could offset the trend in the coming quarters.
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