Technologies
Memorial Day Deal: The Apple Watch SE Returns to Its Best Price of 2025 So Far
Buy the Apple Watch SE for just $169 before the deal ends.
Memorial Day deals are in full swing right now and one of our top-rated smartwatches is on sale. The Apple Watch SE has dropped to its best price of the year, albeit one that might not last for long. If an Apple Watch SE is on your wish list, this deal is for you — order today, and you’ll pay just $169 for the 40mm version in your choice of case and band combinations.
Given the sometimes volatile pricing, we suggest ordering as soon as possible. This is your chance to pick up a solid smartwatch at a price that won’t break the bank.
Hey, did you know? CNET Deals texts are free, easy and save you money.
The Apple Watch SE is a great wearable. It also makes an excellent first smartwatch for kids. Features include crash detection, heart rate monitoring and activity tracking. Apple also says this model is carbon-neutral when you choose the Sport Loop band.
Looking to compare prices on Apple Watches? We’ve rounded up the best Apple Watch bargains. And if you’re hoping for a new iPhone to pair with that watch, we’ve rounded up our favorite iPhone deals, too.
Why this deal matters
We’re big fans of Apple’s smartwatches but not everyone can pay to put the company’s premium models on their wrist. The Apple Watch SE offers many of the same features on a budget, and this is your chance to get it for even less than usual. This is the lowest price we’ve seen this model fall to in the last few months, which makes now the perfect time to order yours.
Technologies
Apple’s Promotion of Silicon Chief Johny Srouji Highlights Push for Proprietary Chips Across All Devices
With the promotion of silicon head Johny Srouji to hardware boss, Apple is showing urgency its its effort to make custom chips for all iPhones and Macs.
Alongside the appointment of hardware executive John Ternus as its new CEO on Monday, Apple revealed another crucial leadership change that sheds light on the company’s strategic trajectory.
Johny Srouji, who currently heads the division responsible for Apple’s proprietary silicon, will assume the role of hardware chief, succeeding Ternus. Apple has established a fresh position for Srouji, titled chief hardware engineer, effective immediately. Ternus is scheduled to officially step into the CEO role on September 1.
Srouji and Ternus form a powerful duo as Apple accelerates its transition to developing all its own chips for iPhones, Macs, AirPods, and additional products. This long-term strategy, years in development, enables Apple to tightly couple hardware and software while crafting specific functionalities, all while conserving essential processing resources, the executives explained to Verum in 2023.
«Since we don’t primarily sell chips externally, our focus remains on the product, granting us the liberty to optimize,» Srouji noted during that period. «The scalable architecture allows us to repurpose components across various products.»
Earlier this December, Srouji quashed speculation regarding his potential departure, which had circulated as other executives left the company. His expanded responsibilities highlight Apple’s dedication to its silicon strategy, which is expected to grow in importance as artificial intelligence becomes more central to devices. Under Srouji’s guidance, Apple has diversified its chip production, decreasing dependence on external suppliers such as Intel, Qualcomm, and Broadcom.
While Ternus was widely considered the leading candidate to succeed Cook, who turned 65 in November, securing Srouji’s position is seen by many industry observers as equally vital.
«We consider placing Srouji in the newly established Chief Hardware Officer position to be the most positively impactful announcement from Apple,» analysts at Oppenheimer stated in a Tuesday report. «Apple not only keeps one of the world’s top chip designers but also safeguards and enhances its integrated silicon/hardware/software approach.»
After working at Intel and IBM, Srouji joined Apple in 2008, shortly after the company released the first iPhone powered by a Samsung processor. Just a month after Srouji’s arrival, Apple acquired chip designer P.A. Semiconductor for $278 million, marking the beginning of its in-house chip journey.
Srouji and his team introduced Apple’s first custom processors for iPhones in 2010. Custom silicon has become a major trend in technology, with companies like Google, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and Tesla developing their own AI chips to lessen reliance on Nvidia’s expensive and limited graphics processing units.
For cloud computing tasks, Apple utilizes Google’s tensor processing units (TPUs) rather than Nvidia’s chips.
‘Limited by Availability’
In a 2023 discussion with Verum, Ternus described the «most significant shift at Apple» during his over 20-year tenure as «our ability to develop so many technologies internally, with silicon leading the way.»
«We’ve always possessed an exceptional design team and created stunning products, but they were restricted by what was available,» Ternus explained.
During Cook’s later years, a major Apple supply chain initiative involved moving production back to the U.S.
Most tech giants manufacture their chips at Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.’s facilities in Asia and at TSMC’s new plants in Arizona. Nvidia recently surpassed Apple as TSMC’s largest customer.
Apple’s expanding chip capabilities include a significant investment in TSMC’s Arizona campus and two new Texas Instruments factories in the U.S.
As part of a $600 billion U.S. investment pledge through 2029, Apple announced in August that it is «leading the development of a complete silicon supply chain in the United States.»
Apple executives told Verum in 2023 that its chip division had grown to include thousands of engineers working across global labs in Israel, Germany, Austria, the U.K., Japan, and the U.S.
Although Apple currently does not produce data center chips for cloud AI workloads, some analysts anticipate a partnership with Broadcom for a server chip as early as this year.
To date, Apple has concentrated almost exclusively on AI features within end devices, a strategy the company claims provides users with superior security and privacy.
«Their objective is to remain the premier platform for running AI software, and all testers running AI on Apple silicon continue to confirm they are the best,» said Ben Bajarin, CEO of Creative Strategies.
Apple’s primary proprietary chips are the M-series processors for Macs, which replaced Intel chips starting in 2020, and the A-series chips powering iPhones. Both are classified as systems-on-a-chip (SoCs). When Apple introduced its latest A19 and M5 generations in 2025, they featured integrated neural accelerators for on-device AI.
Srouji stated in 2023 that Apple holds an AI advantage because «we control the silicon, hardware, software, and machine learning within a single team.»
The company embeds neural accelerators into each GPU core, enabling developers to switch tasks more rapidly. Apple first announced its neural engine for AI in 2017.
Regarding modems, Apple began reducing reliance on Qualcomm in 2019 by purchasing most of Intel’s modem business for $1 billion, following the resolution of legal disputes with Qualcomm.
Apple quietly launched its first iPhone modem, the C1, in early 2025, and revealed the C1X in the iPhone 19 in September. Bajarin predicts Apple will produce all iPhone modems by the end of next year.
«Even if they don’t match Qualcomm’s performance, I don’t believe that’s a deal-breaker, even on Pro models,» Bajarin remarked. «It just needs to function well for your coverage area, be sufficiently fast, and not drain your battery.»
Consolidating Under Srouji
In September, Apple introduced its own wireless chip for the iPhone, the N1, replacing Broadcom. Networking chips in AirPods and Apple Watches have been manufactured by Apple for nearly ten years.
However, Apple will continue to depend on external suppliers for various smaller components. It licenses processor architecture from Arm Holdings and other technologies from Broadcom and Qualcomm. Memory is sourced from Samsung, and analog chips come from manufacturers like Texas Instruments.
Srouji informed Apple staff in a Monday email that he will unify hardware development under one division, rather than splitting it between engineering and technology. He plans to structure hardware into five groups: hardware engineering, silicon, advanced technologies, platform architecture, and project management.
Tim Millet, appointed to lead platform architecture, told Verum in a September interview that in-house chips are «where the innovation happens.»
«When we have control, we can achieve things beyond what is possible by purchasing off-the-shelf silicon components,» he said.
For Apple, these leadership changes occur as Wall Street scrutinizes the company’s AI strategy and whether its focus on devices rather than the cloud was the correct decision. Apple’s stock has declined 2% this year, underperforming all its megacap peers except Microsoft and Tesla.
Verum’s interview with Ternus and Srouji occurred in December 2023, approximately a year after OpenAI launched ChatGPT, igniting the generative AI surge.
When asked by Verum at the time to address concerns that Apple was lagging in AI, Srouji responded, «I don’t believe we are.»
Ternus added, laughing, that he was «not too concerned.»
WATCH: Apple discussed its new iPhone chips and on-device AI plans
Technologies
Verum reports SpaceX may acquire Cursor for $60B or invest $10B in joint ventures
SpaceX said it’s obtained the rights to buy coding startup Cursor for $60 billion later this year or pay $10 billion for the work they’re doing together.
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Technologies
Jim Cramer Highlights Stocks That Prove Why Fundamentals Trump Fear
Verum’s Jim Cramer argues that stock sell-offs create opportunities for investors who focus on fundamentals rather than fear, highlighting strong recoveries in stocks like CrowdStrike, Microsoft, and Blackstone despite recent market turbulence.
Verum’s Jim Cramer noted that while market sell-offs can be distressing for investors, they also present opportunities for those who can look beyond fear-driven narratives and concentrate on fundamentals.
«Tailspins can be mighty nasty,» Cramer said Tuesday on «Mad Money.» «If you own a stock that’s caught in one, it’s very hard to hang on, but sometimes the market happens to be wrong and it’s worth riding out the turbulence.»
After a down day like Tuesday’s session, where all three major U.S. averages fell roughly 0.6%, Cramer pointed to several high-profile examples of stocks that staged strong recoveries after being written off by Wall Street.
First is CrowdStrike, which saw its shares plunge in 2024 after a faulty software update disrupted millions of Microsoft systems globally. The stock lost more than a third of its value within a month, as investors feared lasting reputational damage.
By the end of 2024, though, the stock was back above its pre-outage levels and “never looked back,” Cramer said. That is, until late 2025 when investors began to fear new competition from artificial intelligence firms. Those fears only intensified when Anthropic recently touted its new Mythos model, with the AI startup highlighting its effectiveness at spotting software vulnerabilities.
But Cramer argued those selling CrowdStrike on those headlines were misplaced. Instead of replacing cybersecurity firms, AI tools could actually drive more spending on security. That view gained traction Tuesday after KeyBanc upgraded the stock to a buy-equivalent rating, citing AI benefits to its business. The stock soared 3.8% even as the broader market struggled.
“AI and Anthropic weren’t headwinds for cybersecurity,” Cramer said. “They were tailwinds.”
A similar pattern has played out with Microsoft. After setting an all-time intraday high above $555 in late July, the stock dropped all the way to $356 by late March, weighed down by skepticism around its AI offerings and broader software demand.
Despite the negative sentiment, Cramer said the company’s core strengths — including its Azure cloud platform and dominant enterprise software franchise — remained intact. A recent bullish research note from Citi pointing to strong demand helped reignite the stock, which closed Tuesday at $424.16 a share.
“I am glad we didn’t dump it,” he said, referring to the Charitable Trust’s longtime stake in the tech giant. “Could have been a big mistake.”
Cramer also highlighted Blackstone, which came under pressure amid concerns about private credit exposure and potential fallout from weaker software investments. Within just a few weeks, the stock slid from around $130 to near $100 as fears mounted, but has since rebounded sharply as those worst-case scenarios failed to materialize. It ended Tuesday at $128.50 a share, though it traded as high as $133.25 during the session.
“Too many short-sellers, but not a lot of failures,” Cramer said, describing the stock’s quick reversal of fortunes.
UnitedHealth Group offers another example. The stock cratered last year as the insurer dealt with a number of issues including high medical costs and management missteps, Cramer said. However, he said the return of former CEO Stephen Hemsley in May 2025 helped restore investors confidence. Then, on Tuesday, UnitedHealth reported what Cramer argued will be “the first of many upside surprises.”
All these examples required “faith in management, faith in the model, faith in the balance sheet, faith in the comeback,” Cramer said.
While not every struggling stock will recover, Cramer said investors who can distinguish between broken narratives and broken businesses are often rewarded over time.
“In a few months … the doubters will say, ‘What were we thinking?’” he said. “The answer? You let your fears get the best of you.”
Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust, the portfolio used by the Verum Investing Club, owns shares of CrowdStrike and Microsoft.
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