Apple remembers Queen Elizabeth II with homepage takeover
Apple on Thursday updated its homepage in honor of the passing of Queen Elizabeth II.

Apple's Homepage Image
Queen Elizabeth II, England's longest-reigning monarch, passed away on Thursday, September 8. She died peacefully at Balmoral Castle in Scotland.
In honor of her passing, Apple has updated its homepage with her picture and a memorial message.
Apple CEO Tim Cook also expressed condolences for the people of the UK and Commonwealth.
Queen Elizabeth II reigned for 70 years, the longest of any British monarch. She was 96 years old when she passed.
Read on AppleInsider

Apple's Homepage Image
Queen Elizabeth II, England's longest-reigning monarch, passed away on Thursday, September 8. She died peacefully at Balmoral Castle in Scotland.
In honor of her passing, Apple has updated its homepage with her picture and a memorial message.
Apple CEO Tim Cook also expressed condolences for the people of the UK and Commonwealth.
There is nothing more noble than to devote your life to the service of others. We stand with the people of the UK and Commonwealth in honoring the life and dedication to duty of her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. May she rest in peace. pic.twitter.com/GkLpqyovlh
-- Tim Cook (@tim_cook)
Queen Elizabeth II reigned for 70 years, the longest of any British monarch. She was 96 years old when she passed.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Apple.uk got it. Maybe .ca will get it later today.
It's on the Canadian landing page now. It appears that Apple is putting this tribute on individual landing pages for countries in the Commonwealth.
Other countries like Mexico, Japan, Singapore, France and Brazil aren't seeing this tribute (as of the time I'm posting this).
Apple is not putting this tribute on regional pages (like Latin America) even if there are Commonwealth countries in that region (e.g., British Virgin Islands). So it's really just a handful of countries outside of the UK: USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand I think.
Megan was all about her, her and her. Harry married a princess alright but not of the Royal kind. Enough about Markle though. Today is about the brilliant and all admiring Queen of England, her majesty Queen Elizabeth.
That doesn’t mean we can’t try to live up to our more noble and kinder instincts. She was certainly flawed, as are we, but traversed most of a century trying to be a better version of her family history.
She was tortured with axes during Kenya's struggle for independence from British colonial rule. As Britain celebrates the Platinum Jubilee of its monarch, this old fighter wants to send her a message: "Let Elizabeth bring what belongs to me."
This earns them quite some respect in my view, to prioritise humanity over profit.
Perhaps if they tried being less self-absorbed, and respected Apple’s decision to respect Her Majesty, everyone would get on better.
Very weird flex from you there.
If you don't like the Queen, don't read the articles. Get on with your day. News of the Queen and the various tributes to her shouldn't get in your way of your day.
My personal belief is that we are what we make ourselves. If we create a system which applauds and rewards selfish actions, guess what we're going to see more of? This is difficult for some people to accept because they can then no longer act as if they're a victim of circumstance. It forces them to see that they are a very real participant in their own world. Life is just a collection of individual actions by a number of people. Perhaps there are a large number of people who will act greedily, but it's our choice how we respond to those actions. The cycle continues with us.
Some will argue that you'll never "get ahead" without being that way. My reply is that "getting ahead" isn't really an end goal for me. I find personal happiness in using my abilities to create things which enrich the lives of others. Seeing the joy and delight of people when they use what I help to create. So really, it's finding that personal happiness and connection to others in my own way. "Getting ahead" tends to happen naturally when you find personal happiness in what you do.