Skip to content

Welcome to ResidentialBusiness.com — your guide to building a thriving home-based business

Your entrepreneurial journey starts here

Build the business you've
always known you could.

Home-based. Remote. Independent. Whatever your model — this community exists to help you go from idea to income with real support, real conversations, and real momentum.

15+
Years running
10K+
Members strong
6
Active topic hubs
Free
To join forever

"In today's dynamic world, entrepreneurship has become a gateway to financial independence — and launching a home-based business is one of the most accessible paths to get there."

It offers the freedom to be your own boss, control your schedule, and shape your financial future on your terms. This community is your starting point — designed to spark your entrepreneurial mindset and equip you with the core principles to transform an idea into a thriving business. Whether you're fueled by passion, a groundbreaking product, or a smart solution to a common problem, success begins with aligning your vision to real market demand, researching your audience, and laying the foundation with a solid business plan.

Working from home unlocks advantages like flexibility, minimal overhead, and the chance to create a work-life balance that fits your lifestyle — but it requires discipline, structure, and smart time management. Carve out a dedicated workspace, implement efficient routines, and harness the power of technology to automate tasks and stay connected with clients.

With the right mindset, strategic planning, and a willingness to learn and adapt, you can turn your home into a hub of innovation and income. This is more than just a resource — it's a call to action. Take control of your future and build a business that reflects your passion, purpose, and potential.


Explorer membership is free forever. Paid plans unlock the full platform — no ads, no limits.

The one thing Apple’s new CEO needs to get right on AI

Featured Replies

rssImage-35d10c23ff4e839b2c42bed9a070654b.webp

“Apple has a new CEO; he’s a hardware guy.”

That quick distillation of Apple’s impending leadership change spread fast across Silicon Valley and the broader tech world. The company’s choice, John Ternus, rose through the ranks on the hardware side, taking over iPhone engineering in 2020 and all hardware engineering a year later.

Analysts say Ternus’s elevation to succeed Tim Cook signals that Apple will enter the AI era with a family posture: using AI strategically to make its devices work better, but not stretching to incorporate AI into all of its services and businesses.

While its peers are pouring tens of billions of dollars per year into AI research and data centers, Apple’s spending on those areas has remained relatively flat. Its AI research group has not become the company’s center of gravity.

But appointing a “hardware guy” as CEO doesn’t mean Apple’s AI efforts will be suppressed or confined to inconsequential features like erasing an unwanted object from a photo. That’s because Apple’s big opportunity lies in running powerful AI models on its own hardware, not in the data centers of some unaccountable corporation.

The company’s personal AI models would live in a secure enclave within an Apple chip, much like Apple Pay, which keeps financial information invisible to Apple or anyone else. Running on-device, these models could process personal and sensitive data with speed and efficiency without sending that data to the cloud while also maintaining privacy.

Do these things really matter? You bet they do. As distrust of big AI labs grows and regulators lag, guarantees of security and privacy will become potent selling points. Apple has spent years building credibility on data privacy. AI is its chance to cash in.

Right now, running giant AI models on laptops and phones is still a work in progress. But under Ternus, Apple may have the right leadership mix to get there. He helped drive the transition to Apple Silicon, which is foundational to the company’s AI strategy. Johny Srouji, who built and ran Apple’s silicon engineering effort, is moving into Ternus’s former role leading hardware.

Ternus also has a long and productive working relationship with Apple software chief Craig Federighi, who is taking control of most of Apple’s AI research group and will play a key role in integrating AI models into Apple’s operating systems and apps. To make large models run on small chips, Apple’s hardware, silicon, and software teams will need to work in tight coordination.

Apple’s record on AI includes plenty of misses. Siri remains a broken promise. In 2024, Apple said it would transform the command-based assistant into a systemwide AI agent powered by large language models and deliver highly personalized features to iPhones. It has yet to follow through.

But as I wrote at the beginning of this year, the company still has a chance to lead from behind. Apple is unlikely to catch up with OpenAI, Anthropic, and others in building massive general-purpose models. What it can do is use those models to power Siri, as it has said it will, while focusing its own research on smaller models tuned for the unique information tasks of individual users.

My only concern about Ternus is his reputation as a perfectionist. Hardware design rests on mathematical certainties. AI does not. At its core it is probabilistic, not deterministic. It can’t be perfected; it has to be iterated, often in the wild, to improve through real-world use. That may be a difficult shift for a company built on polished, “it just works” products.

Ternus will feel pressure to play it safe. He will soon be running a $4 trillion company and will be accountable to shareholders. It would be easy to prioritize avoiding mistakes over taking risks. But AI just hits too close to Apple’s core identity to play things safe.

Apple’s superpower is providing an artful hardware-software experience that mediates between a human user and digital technology. Eventually, somebody will wield AI to humanize, personalize, and bring more intelligence to that experience. Why not Apple?


View the full article

Join ResidentialBusiness.com as a free Explorer member to access the community

Advertisement

ResidentialBusiness.com — Free to join

You're reading as a guest.
Explorers actually participate.

Create your free Explorer account in seconds — no credit card, no commitment. Get instant access to post, reply, and connect inside one of the longest-running home business communities on the web.


Post topics & reply to discussions
Access the Community Business Lounge
Connect with remote & home-based founders
Build your member profile & reputation

The Community Business Lounge is where real conversations happen — business models, income strategies, remote work, and what's actually working right now. Guests read. Explorers contribute. The difference is one free signup.

Already growing and want more? Our Builder, Vanguard, and Pro Visionary plans remove ads entirely and unlock the full platform — but Explorer is the right place to start.

Free forever. No card required. Upgrade only when you're ready.

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.