Apple Re-Hires Flipboard Co-Founder Evan Doll for Continued Push Into Health Initiatives - MacRumors
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Apple Re-Hires Flipboard Co-Founder Evan Doll for Continued Push Into Health Initiatives

Apple has re-hired software engineer Evan Doll to help the company "develop more health-related software," according to information spotted by Bloomberg on Doll's LinkedIn account. Specifically, Doll is now a director of health software engineering at Apple, a position which he began sometime in July, but his profile information doesn't provide any further details into his role at the company.

The software engineer worked at Apple from 2003 to 2009, helping create and develop the software operating system for the iPhone. In 2009, he left Apple and co-founded magazine app Flipboard with Mike McCue. Similar to Apple News, Flipboard curates content and stories tailored to each user's personal tastes and preferences, and has even been endorsed by Apple in the past.

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The launch of Apple News was reported as a steep competitive challenge for the small company, resulting in a majority of its executives leaving the company -- including Doll himself -- in September 2015. Despite his background in the news curation space, Doll's new placement at Apple has him focused on potential new health initiatives, an area that the company has slowly been building upon lately.

Apple has been beefing up its engineering team for health-care applications, hiring Sage Bionetworks founder and Merck & Co. veteran Stephen Friend and former Nest Labs technology chief Yoky Matsuoka earlier this year. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook is increasingly positioning the Apple Watch as a wellness accessory as he tries to win a slice of the $4.6 trillion U.S. health and fitness industry.

A report from earlier in the week suggested that Apple is working on a new health-tracking piece of hardware to launch alongside the 10th anniversary iPhone in 2017. Although details are still lacking for a product launch over a year away, the product is said to collect heart rate, pulse, and blood sugar changes, which could be describing a next-generation Apple Watch if it's not an entirely new addition to the company's hardware lineup.

Earlier in the year, Apple CEO Tim Cook spoke with Jim Cramer on "Mad Money," discussing Apple's initiatives in the health landscape. Cook described services like ResearchKit and the Health app as "significantly underestimated" sections of the technology market. Ultimately, when asked what the "next frontiers" in product development, Cook described health, and all the inroads taken by Apple to provide detailed analysis of a user's well-being, as "the biggest one of all."

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Top Rated Comments

Donoban Avatar
126 months ago
He's still a kid! What talent.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
smacrumon Avatar
126 months ago
Flip Flop Flip Flop Flip Flop... Flip?
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
126 months ago
Please hire a new designer and CEO, instead of releasing a third-gen iPhone 6, which will suck badly compared to the Note 7.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
S.B.G Avatar
126 months ago
Good to see he's still on good terms with Apple and able to contribute in a positive way to the company. I do love Flipboard and hope it stays around for a good long time.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
LordQ Avatar
126 months ago
Ah, Flipboard... Used to love that app but all changed when the Ads nation attacked.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Adam Warlock Avatar
126 months ago
When Apple breaks into the Health market, I want to see what the people that say that Apple should focus on macOS in lieu of iOS and watchOS have to say...
Please. Health is or rather should be a serious endeavour, not fashionable or taken lightly like 'a hobby'. Would you trust your health or that of a loved one to a company whose software leaves so much to be desired of late? Maybe if you'd like to replace the cuff on your blood pressure monitor with colourful ones once in a while, or be 'cool' (*snicker, snicker*) with a Beats-banded pacemaker or something. I dunno. Perhaps a garishly-colored UI on those multi-parameter monitors they hook you up to in hospitals? One in which nurses struggle to figure out where to find various functions because most of them are hidden, some units require Force Touch, others don't have enough RAM to juggle all your vitals at the same time and still others prompt you to use Apple Pay to purchase more space in iCloud because your complimentary 5 GB is filled with episodes of Planet of the Apps.

Let's get serious: Apple in the health industry would be similar to so-called health stores: fluffy crap that may make some people feel good about themselves but ultimately does little or nothing for your actual health, and in fact do harm in some cases. Best leave health to the real professionals IMO.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)