Apple has slashed hundreds of jobs in Silicon Valley, an ominous disclosure that suggests the tech industry’s staffing cutbacks have yet to run their course in the Bay Area.
SANTA CLARA —
Cupertino-based Apple’s job cuts mark the iPhone maker’s first officially disclosed layoffs in the Bay Area since tech companies began to unleash layoffs at an elevated level starting in 2022.The tech company described the layoffs as “permanent,” according to the WARN letter Apple sent to the state’s labor agency.
An estimated 371 of the 614 Apple layoffs in Santa Clara were slated to occur at a company office building at 3689 Kifer Road in Santa Clara.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
South Bay author's latest novel looks at Silicon Valley from an Asian female perspectiveA new novel by Bay Area author Kyla Zhao takes a critical look at the experience women have in the male-dominated tech industry, hoping to provide greater representation in publishing by building the story around an Asian woman.
Read more »
Apple Car Project Reveals Involvement of Apple Silicon TeamDetails emerge about the Apple Car project, including the involvement of the Apple Silicon team and the powerful chip that would have powered the vehicle.
Read more »
Apple apps reporting outages: What you need to knowThe impacted apps included the App Store, Apple TV, Apple TV+ and Apple Music.
Read more »
Silicon Valley office market starts to stabilize — yet vacancies persistThe office market in the South Bay showed signs of stabilizing in a big way during the first three months of 2024.
Read more »
Sen. JD Vance's Silicon Valley network bankrolling his Midwest mission to dump vulnerable DemGOP Sen. JD Vance of Ohio is putting his contacts in the tech industry and Silicon Valley to work on behalf of fellow Republicans running in the 2024 elections, including former President Trump.
Read more »
New blood test developed by Silicon Valley-based group screens for colon cancerMore than 53,000 Americans are expected to die from colon cancer this year. Even more alarming is that the number of deaths has increased among people under the age of 50.
Read more »