logo
Insta360 X5 360 Camera Review: Capture the World in One Shot

Insta360 X5 360 Camera Review: Capture the World in One Shot

CNET01-07-2025
8.9
/ 10
SCORE Insta360 X5
Pros Excellent image quality
Easy to use
Replaceable lenses Cons Expensive
X4 is cheaper and almost as good
Insta360 X5
8.9/10 CNET Score
Insta360's X5 is easily the best 360 camera ever (for consumers, at least). It's even easier to use than previous models, has big (for an action cam) image sensors for better dynamic range and low-light performance, and best of all, it has user-replaceable lenses.
It's also quite expensive. Its photo and video resolutions aren't any higher than its predecessor, the X4. So, in many situations, the image quality will be similar. So while it's not a huge leap for a new model, there are a number of worthwhile improvements that make it a better option if you can afford it. I gave the X5 a quick look when it first launched, but after spending more time with the camera, here's what I think as someone who has tested nearly every consumer 360 camera ever and uses them regularly.
Specs and hardware
Geoffrey Morrison/CNET
If you've used or seen any of Insta360's recent 360 cameras, the X5 shares more than a passing familial resemblance. It continues their "candy bar" design, with a 2.7-inch touchscreen and four physical buttons. Generally speaking, in my experience at least, this shape and size make the X5 and its predecessors easy to use and carry when not in use. The large touchscreen makes navigating menus and settings a breeze while letting you get a sense of what you just shot without having to connect to your phone.
Insta360 X5 specs Photo resolution 72 megapixels (11,904x5,952) Video resolution 8K30 (spherical) Sensor size 1/1.28-inch (x2) Lens 6mm (35mm equivalent) f/2 (x2) Image stabilization Digital Screen type 2.7-inch LCD touchscreen Storage MicroSD/SDXC Weight 200g
The X5's headline feature is the larger image sensors compared to the X4 -- well, compared to the X4 and most other 360 and action cameras. The dual 1/1.28-inch sensors, 44% larger than the X4's 1/2-inch sensors, are also larger than the 1/1.7-inch ones found in the KanDao QooCam 3 Ultra and the 1/1.9-inch ones in the GoPro Hero 13 Black. While sensor size isn't a guarantee of better image quality, larger sensors theoretically mean greater dynamic range and better performance in low-light situations.
Larger image sensors are certainly noteworthy, but the biggest improvement of the X5 is the addition of user-replaceable lenses. This is a big deal, and its importance can't be overstated. Like I said, I've used 360 cameras since the days when Ricoh was the only consumer option, and I've lost track of how many I've wrecked with a cracked or scratched lens. I'm typically extremely careful with my camera gear, but 360 camera lenses protrude from the body. A lot. You have to be really careful with them. Even if you're careful, accidents happen. Recently, I stepped into the shade while hiking at Arches National Park, and the camera, mounted on my backpack and slightly above me, brushed against an outcropping. Oops. That lens was toast.
Geoffrey Morrison/CNET
While you could send the camera for lens replacement, that would take time and cost a small fee. Lens guards are also available, but they could reduce image quality, and you'd have to remember to put them on. Which is to say, having the option to replace the lenses if you're an idiot like me is brilliant and a long time coming.
There are a few more minor improvements still worth mentioning. The X5 is waterproof to 49 feet (15 meters), an improvement from the X4's 33 feet (10 meters. The mic has a built-in wind guard for better sound when recording outside. The battery is slightly larger, 2,400-mAh versus 2,290-mAh, but this will likely only add a few minutes of additional recording at the same resolutions and framerates compared to the X4. Still, more is more, and if it means getting a shot I would've otherwise missed, it's a good thing.
Usability and photo quality
A Tiny Planet photo, one of the ways you can edit a 360 image, taken with the X5. In this case not only showing yours truly but its immediate processor, the X4. Yes, I routinely look this cool when testing cameras.
Images in this section are as close to "out of the camera" as is possible with a 360 camera, mostly with only Insta360's Color Plus active and just slight touches to contrast.
Geoffrey Morrison/CNET
Using the X5 largely feels like using the X4 and other recent Insta360 cameras. Swiping the screen or pressing one of the buttons lets you select one of the variety of video and picture modes. A few more taps on the screen let you select resolutions and frame rates, and broadly speaking, that's all you need to do. There's no need to aim, as the camera captures everything. Framing remains the biggest challenge with good 360 photography and videography, in a fun way. You can get wildly different results with the camera above and behind you (like a drone following you), in front of you (your own invisible cameraman) and so on.
Oh, to be as chill as this turtle.
Geoffrey Morrison/CNET
There are two new modes worth discussing: PureVideo and InstaFrame. One of the most time-consuming aspects of shooting 360 is editing to post it anywhere. However, the variety of possible results is 360's biggest strength, so it's a trade-off. The InstaFrame mode aims to address both of these aspects. It records two videos at the same time -- actually, one video that the camera crops in real time and saves as a separate file.
The result is a 360 video you can edit as normal, but also a 16:9 or 9:16 1080p cropped video that either tracks a subject or shows a fixed view from the front or rear lens. So, for example, let's say you're hiking while recording in this mode. As soon as you hit stop, you'll have a video you can share on social media once you download it to your phone. Or, if during recording a bear jumps out in front of you to say, "Hi," you can edit the 360 file to show the bear and your reaction. Best of both worlds, especially if you regularly record videos that match one of the preset views. The only limitation is frame rate maxes out at 30 instead of 60.
You can also just use one of the X5's lenses, taking 36-megapixel images or 4K60 video.
Geoffrey Morrison/CNET
PureVideo attempts to improve low-light video recording and largely succeeds. ("Largely" being the key word, as it's still not great.) Videos are typically brighter and often less noisy than previous 360 cameras, but there can still be some wobble in fine details if the camera is moving. Anything in motion can also blur, and there's a fair amount of processing artifacts. However, it's markedly better than most 360 cameras, and even the X5 itself in regular video modes, which is to say the results are actually usable. So it's definitely an improvement.
Comparing low-light performance to the Kandao QooCam 3 Ultra, however, shows why sensor size doesn't tell the full story. Even though the 3 Ultra uses slightly smaller sensors, its lenses have a brighter f/1.6 aperture. That's two-thirds of a stop faster, which doesn't sound like a lot, but it means roughly 66% more light hitting the sensor. So while the 3 Ultra's video is still a little soft and not quite as bright, it's a bit of a wash as to which looks better. If what you want is a recording you can share and that will let people see what's going on, either will work. If what you want is great low-light image quality like what you can get during the day, neither will.
Geoffrey Morrison/CNET
Overall, though, image quality is very good, among the best I've seen in a 360 camera. There's great dynamic range and detail, but it's not a huge improvement in normal lighting compared to the X4. Better? Yes, but if you already have an X4, the image quality alone (unless you shoot in low light a lot) shouldn't be why you're upgrading. If you're not a fan of doing a lot of editing, direct out of the camera, the photos and videos from X5 can be a little better, or at least more interesting-looking, than photos and videos direct from the QooCam 3 Ultra. However, if you don't mind a little post processing, the 3 Ultra gives you a little more room to get the result you want, not least for its ability to capture 96-megapixel images and 10-bit LOG video.
A shot made possible by putting the X5 into some flowers to create a frame.
Geoffrey Morrison/CNET
Speaking of processing, Insta360's color science has a distinct aesthetic, which you can see in the images in this section. It's extra vibrant and a little on the warm side. You can edit them in the app, or if you want to go a step further, you can also shoot raw and get them to look however you want. The app, conveniently, has all the tools you'll need to adjust the final result. Except for 72-megapixel images on Android, that is. You can crop them, but for other editing, you'll need a separate app or use Insta360's desktop app. Recent iPhones don't have this issue.
Geoffrey Morrison/CNET
In every one of the X5's modes, other than InstaFrame or Single-Lens, you're going to have to edit your photos and videos to be able to share them. Insta360 has had the best app for this for many years, and the latest version mostly improves on that. You can manually create videos fairly easily, cutting what's boring and focusing on what's interesting. You can combine multiple clips into a single video, speed up and slow down what you have, add royalty-free music, adjust color and other picture settings and so on. It's a full-featured video and picture editor.
There are "AI" options as well that will attempt to create a video for you. My only complaint, and it's a weird one, is that there is a lot going on here. It's good that Insta360 regularly adds features, but with every new feature, the app gets bigger and more complex. There's a learning curve here, and anyone new to 360 cameras should factor in a bit of time to learn how it all works before they head out on an adventure. Thankfully, there are tutorials built into the app to help, and the first time you use it, you're led through the basics.
You can see a few more images I took with the X5 in my first look: I Tried Insta360's New X5 360 Camera. It's Full of Impressive Upgrades.
A 360 world
Note the invisible selfie stick (you can see its shadow on the wall to my left). Most 360 cameras can do this trick, and when shooting video, it can make it look like you have a drone or cameraman.
Geoffrey Morrison/CNET
The bottom line
It's odd that I can say something like "This is the best all-around 360 camera I've used" and still be somewhat reserved in my actual recommendation of it. Don't get me wrong, that is a true statement. This is a fantastic camera. It takes everything that was good about the X4, a brilliant camera in its own right, and improves in several key ways. Larger image sensors are almost always a good thing, the new InstaFrame mode is incredibly handy, and while the battery isn't that much larger, every bit helps.
When I look at the price difference, though, $125 or 30% as of this writing, I hesitate. The X4 is a really, really good camera, and in many situations, the X5's larger sensors aren't going to be that noticeable. If you're taking the camera down to depths where the added waterproofing matters, you should probably just buy a dive case for either camera anyway. Since the resolutions and frame rates are the same, for most people, the results they'll get will be nearly identical for most shots with either camera.
However, the replaceable lenses are a huge selling point, even just for the peace of mind. Even a minor scratch in the middle of a lens can and will ruin your shots. So that, plus significantly better low-light performance and all the rest, do make it a better option than the X4 if I were buying one today. So the X5 is the best 360 camera, but if you're unsure why sensors matter and you don't mind lens protectors, the X4 and some accessories will do just fine.
In addition to covering cameras and display tech, Geoff does photo tours of cool museums and locations around the world, including nuclear submarines, aircraft carriers, medieval castles, epic 10,000-mile road trips and more.
Also, check out Budget Travel for Dummies, his travel book, and his bestselling sci-fi novel about city-sized submarines. You can follow him on Instagram and YouTube.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Apple Expands 18-Year-Old iPhone Glass Deal in Bid to Avoid Trump Tariffs
Apple Expands 18-Year-Old iPhone Glass Deal in Bid to Avoid Trump Tariffs

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Apple Expands 18-Year-Old iPhone Glass Deal in Bid to Avoid Trump Tariffs

(Bloomberg) — Apple Inc. (AAPL) Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook is using a familiar strategy to stay in Donald Trump's good graces: expanding existing initiatives to show he supports the president's 'Made in the USA' agenda. All Hail the Humble Speed Hump Mayor Asked to Explain $1.4 Billion of Wasted Johannesburg Funds Three Deaths Reported as NYC Legionnaires' Outbreak Spreads Major Istanbul Projects Are Stalling as City Leaders Sit in Jail PATH Train Service Resumes After Fire at Jersey City Station Standing in the Oval Office on Wednesday between Trump and Vice President JD Vance, Cook announced that Apple will increase its US investment commitment to $600 billion over four years — up from the $500 billion pledged after Trump's second-term victory. A centerpiece of the expansion is a $2.5 billion investment into Corning Inc. (GLW), Apple's longtime glass supplier. For the first time, the cover glass for all iPhones and Apple Watches will be manufactured in the US, at Corning's facility in Kentucky. Though Apple has touted the US roots of iPhone glass before, a portion of that glass was previously made overseas. 'Apple's been an investor in other countries a little bit. I won't say which ones, but a couple. And they're coming home,' Trump said when making the announcement. The $600 billion investment, he said, is 'the biggest there is.' The iPhone maker also discussed increased agreements focused on semiconductor manufacturing, expanding deals with partners like Samsung Electronics Co. ( Texas Instruments Inc. and Broadcom Inc. Apple is branding the effort the American Manufacturing Program, or AMP. The agreements that Apple touted included: Working with GlobalWafers Co. in Texas to produce US wafers — the basis for the chips that go into the iPhone and other devices. Apple also said it was partnering with Applied Materials Inc. (AMAT), the biggest US producer of semiconductor-manufacturing equipment, to make more of that gear in Austin. But in those cases, Apple will be on the sidelines, rather than building the machinery and components itself. Expanding a partnership with Texas Instruments (TXN) to support the manufacturing of chips in Utah and Texas. The facilities will make components that ultimately go into the iPhone and other devices shipped around the world, Apple said. It's also teaming up with Samsung to create new chips in Texas that can boost the power and performance of devices. A deal with GlobalFoundries Inc. to boost US manufacturing of wireless technologies and power-management components in New York state. Investing in an Arizona facility run by Amkor Technology Inc. that tests and packages chips. The location will handle Apple-bound silicon made by partner Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM, at its nearby plants. In all, the announcements provided just enough evidence that Apple was focusing on America — without forcing it to make major changes. Corning has supplied Apple since the first iPhone in 2007, and Cook has long promoted the iPhone's American-made glass. What's new is the modestly increased scale. Apple is pointing to the deals as it seeks relief from looming tariffs. The Trump administration is letting exemptions on smartphone and gadget levies expire and adopting new duties on Indian imports — a potential issue for Apple, which recently shifted US-bound iPhone assembly to India. Cook even seized on Trump's famous love of gold. He presented the president with a large, circular Corning glass plaque engraved with the president's name, mounted in 24-karat gold. The Apple CEO said that the glass came off an assembly line in Kentucky while the gold was produced in Utah. Cook added that a former US Marine who works at Apple designed the plaque. Trump, meanwhile, announced a major enticement: He said that companies investing in the US — even if the projects are in early stages — would get a break from some tariffs. 'The good news for companies like Apple is, if you're building in the United States, or have committed to build,' Trump said, 'there will be no charge.' Apple's pledges are expected to meet that criteria, even if it isn't actually making iPhones and other popular devices in the US. Assembly of the smartphone — a costly and complex process of combining components, testing and boxing devices — will continue in China and, increasingly, India. That part will stay 'elsewhere for a while,' Cook said. But 'there's a lot of content in there from the United States, and we're very proud of it.' Trump acknowledged that assembly was 'set up in other places, and it's been there for a long time,' but he reiterated his desire to bring that stage of production to the US someday. 'This is a significant step toward the ultimate goal of ensuring that iPhones sold in the United States of America also are made in America,' he said. Trump's existing tariffs have already taken a toll on Apple. It said last week that the levies will cost the company about $1.1 billion in the September quarter. But Apple is looking to avoid incurring further costs, especially as it prepares to unveil the iPhone 17 line next month. Cook is also likely seeking support from Trump on other fronts: The US Justice Department is suing the company for alleged antitrust violations, and the agency is threatening its $20 billion search deal with Alphabet Inc.'s Google (GOOG) in a separate case. The US government also could potentially help Apple cope with tough new restrictions on the App Store in the EU. This isn't the first time Apple has used US manufacturing announcements to promote Trump's priorities. In 2019, the company promised to assemble a new Mac Pro in Texas. It wasn't a big change: Apple had produced the previous model in the state since 2013. But that gesture helped land the company a reprieve from tariffs. Earlier this year, after Trump's return to office, Cook unveiled the initial $500 billion commitment — an acceleration of the investments Apple had begun under President Joe Biden. At that time, Apple announced it would start making AI servers in Houston. Cook said Wednesday that the first test units rolled off that factory's assembly line last month. 'We're going to keep building technologies at the heart of our products right here in America,' he said. Russia's Secret War and the Plot to Kill a German CEO The Pizza Oven Startup With a Plan to Own Every Piece of the Pie AI Flight Pricing Can Push Travelers to the Limit of Their Ability to Pay Government Steps Up Campaign Against Business School Diversity A High-Rise Push Is Helping Mumbai Squeeze in Pools, Gyms and Greenery ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign up for Yahoo Finance's Week in Tech By subscribing, you are agreeing to Yahoo's Terms and Privacy Policy Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Billionaire David Tepper Is Selling Nvidia, AMD, and TSMC, and Loading Up On Shares of This Trillion-Dollar Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Instead
Billionaire David Tepper Is Selling Nvidia, AMD, and TSMC, and Loading Up On Shares of This Trillion-Dollar Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Instead

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Billionaire David Tepper Is Selling Nvidia, AMD, and TSMC, and Loading Up On Shares of This Trillion-Dollar Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Instead

Key Points Quarterly-filed Form 13Fs provide a way for investors to track which stocks Wall Street's leading asset managers are buying and selling. Appaloosa's David Tepper has been a persistent seller of AI stocks over the last year, including hardware giants Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, as well as Taiwan Semiconductor. Only 11 public companies have ever reached the trillion-dollar valuation plateau -- and one of these companies has been on Tepper's buy list. These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires › For some investors, earnings season is the pinnacle of each quarter. This six-week period, where many of Wall Street's most influential businesses lift the hood on their operating results, provides investors with invaluable information. However, an equally strong argument can be made that the quarterly filing of Form 13Fs with the Securities and Exchange Commission is just as important as earnings season. A 13F offers investors a way to see which stocks Wall Street's top money managers have been buying and selling. In other words, these filings clue investors in to the stocks, industries, sectors, and trends that have piqued the interest of highly successful asset managers. Arguably no trend has been hotter than the rise of artificial intelligence (AI). Empowering software and systems with the tools to make split-second decisions without human intervention is a multitrillion-dollar global opportunity, which explains why AI stocks have soared. But not all of Wall Street's prominent billionaire fund managers are along for the ride. Based on 13Fs filed in mid-May that detail first-quarter trading activity, Appaloosa's billionaire chief David Tepper has been a big-time seller of three red-hot AI stocks -- Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD), and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM), or TSMC -- over the previous year. Curiously, though, Tepper has been loading up on another AI stock that somewhat recently joined the exclusive trillion-dollar club. Billionaire David Tepper has been a persistent seller of Nvidia, AMD, and TSMC stock Tepper and his team tend to be fairly active and are regularly building up or reducing their existing stakes. Rather than looking at changes from the prior three-month period, more wisdom can often be gained by examining year-over-year changes to Appaloosa's more than $8 billion dollar investment portfolio. Between April 1, 2024, and March 31, 2025, Tepper oversaw a significant reduction in, or the complete exit from, three of the AI revolution's top companies: Nvidia: 4,120,000 shares sold (93% reduction), which has been adjusted to account for Nvidia's 10-for-1 stock split in June 2024. Taiwan Semiconductor: 230,000 shares sold (46% reduction). Advanced Micro Devices: 1,630,000 shares sold (completely exited position). All three of these companies have been successful in their own right within the AI arena. Nvidia's graphics processing units (GPUs) account for the bulk of GPUs deployed in AI-accelerated data centers, while AMD's Instinct series chips are slowly adding market share. Meanwhile, TSMC is the world's leading chip-fabrication company, with its chip-on-wafer-on-substrate capacity rapidly expanding to satiate growing enterprise demand for AI infrastructure. If everything is going to well for Nvidia, AMD, and TSMC, the question that has to be asked is: Why did billionaire David Tepper sell over a 12-month period? Simple profit-taking is one of the more logical answers. All three companies have seen their shares appreciate noticeably over the trailing-three-year period, and Tepper has demonstrated he's not shy about locking in gains. What's worrisome is there may be more to this persistent selling activity than just a desire to take some chips off the table. For example, every next-big-thing technology since (and including) the proliferation of the internet in the mid-1990s has navigated its way through a bubble that eventually burst. In plainer English, investors continually overestimate the adoption rates and/or utility of game-changing technological advances. It's going to take time for AI to mature as a technology and for businesses to figure out how to optimize their solutions and generate a positive return on their investments. This suggests another bubble may be brewing. Whereas Taiwan Semiconductor is a diversified company that generates a meaningful percentage of its net sales from fabricating chips for smartphones, Internet of Things, and automotive, Nvidia and AMD are increasingly reliant on enterprise GPU orders. If an AI bubble were to form and burst, these two companies would be hit hard. Valuation may have also come into play for Appaloosa's billionaire chief. Historically, industry-leading businesses thriving on the heels of a next-big-thing trend have topped out at 30 to 40 times trailing-12-month sales. Nvidia's price-to-sales (P/S) ratio is 31, as of this writing. With the stock market also historically pricey, Tepper may view Nvidia, AMD, and TSMC as being on shakier ground than their respective share prices would indicate. This trillion-dollar AI stock is bucking the trend in Tepper's fund Whereas billionaire David Tepper has been an undeniable seller of artificial intelligence stocks over the trailing year, based on 13F filings, there's one trillion-dollar AI stock that's managed to buck the trend. During the March-ended quarter, Appaloosa gobbled up 130,000 shares of Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO), which is one of only 11 public companies around the world to have ever reached a $1 trillion valuation. While Nvidia and AMD have locked down the lion's share of GPU market share in AI-accelerated data centers, Broadcom is the preferred choice for its host of AI networking solutions. Its products are capable of connecting tens of thousands of AI-GPUs in order to maximize compute capacity, as well as minimize tail latency. Put simply, Broadcom's hardware reduces lag, which facilitates the split-second decisions that need to be made by AI-empowered software and systems. Broadcom is also making a name for itself thanks to its custom AI chips. During the company's fourth-quarter conference call in late 2024, CEO Hock Tan opined that a few of its hyperscaler clients could spend anywhere from $60 billion to $90 billion in fiscal 2027 (its fiscal year ends in late October or early November). As long as AI remains a hot trend, Broadcom is expected to be one of the more unstoppable stocks. But what Appaloosa's Tepper might appreciate most about Broadcom is that it's much more than just an AI-driven company. While AI is, unquestionably, Broadcom's most meaningful growth driver at the moment, it has plenty of other channels that generate sales and positive operating cash flow. Before AI became the hottest thing on Wall Street, Broadcom was known for its lead role in developing wireless chips and accessories used in next-generation smartphones. Even though smartphones aren't the growth story they were a decade ago, the ongoing expansion of 5G service globally provides a modest growth opportunity for Broadcom. In addition, it offers an assortment of solutions for industrial product lines and automobiles, as well as owns an enterprise cybersecurity solutions division. The point being that if the AI bubble were to burst, Broadcom would, in all likelihood, be in better shape to navigate the coming storm than hardware giants Nvidia and AMD. Lastly, Tepper may have found Broadcom's valuation more palatable than the likes of Nvidia. As of this writing on Aug. 5, Broadcom is valued at 35 times forward-year earnings, but appears to be sporting a sustainable annual growth rate of 20% or greater. Don't miss this second chance at a potentially lucrative opportunity Ever feel like you missed the boat in buying the most successful stocks? Then you'll want to hear this. On rare occasions, our expert team of analysts issues a 'Double Down' stock recommendation for companies that they think are about to pop. If you're worried you've already missed your chance to invest, now is the best time to buy before it's too late. And the numbers speak for themselves: Nvidia: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2009, you'd have $462,306!* Apple: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2008, you'd have $38,522!* Netflix: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2004, you'd have $619,036!* Right now, we're issuing 'Double Down' alerts for three incredible companies, available when you join , and there may not be another chance like this anytime soon.*Stock Advisor returns as of August 4, 2025 Sean Williams has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, Nvidia, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool recommends Broadcom. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Billionaire David Tepper Is Selling Nvidia, AMD, and TSMC, and Loading Up On Shares of This Trillion-Dollar Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Instead was originally published by The Motley Fool

Apple just gifted Trump a 24K gold Gorilla Glass statue, and a $100 billion peace offering
Apple just gifted Trump a 24K gold Gorilla Glass statue, and a $100 billion peace offering

Android Authority

time17 minutes ago

  • Android Authority

Apple just gifted Trump a 24K gold Gorilla Glass statue, and a $100 billion peace offering

NBC News TL;DR Apple CEO Tim Cook has gifted US President Donald Trump a circular Gorilla Glass statue with a gold Apple logo and a 24K gold base. The commemorative statue was presented to Trump ahead of Cook's $100 billion US investment announcement at the White House. The peace offering comes after the President criticized and pressured Apple to bring more of its supply chain stateside. In a heartwarming display of capitalism, Apple has gifted US President Donald Trump what may be the world's most expensive piece of Corning Gorilla Glass, or a very luxurious paperweight, depending on how you see it. The statue features a Gorilla Glass disc with a gold Apple logo etched into it. The disc itself sits on a 24-karat pure gold base. Cook unveiled the gift during a White House press conference to celebrate Apple's pledge to invest another $100 billion into US manufacturing. The words 'Apple American Manufacturing Program' and 'Made in USA' are etched in the Gorilla Glass display alongside the President's full name printed boldly on top. Tim Cook's signature features at the bottom of the glass circle that sits on a gold base made in Utah. Meanwhile, the Gorilla Glass was reportedly designed by a former US Marine Corps corporal now employed at Apple. Reuters In addition to gifting this unique sculpture to Trump, the Apple CEO announced the company's commitment to bringing more of its supply chain stateside, including sourcing chips from Samsung's US facility. This isn't the first time Apple has courted favor with President Trump. Back in his first term, Trump praised Cook for being 'a great executive.' Cook also reportedly calls Trump directly, with publications like The New York Times deeming him 'The Trump Whisperer.' It looks like Cook has figured out how to deal with the US President without tweeting about it, like some other tech CEOs. Follow

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store