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Alan Dye joins Meta and snark ensues

Apple’s set to lose yet another top executive as Alan Dye, the company’s head of user-interface design, departs for Meta Platforms, according to a new report Wednesday. And as you can see in the X.com posts inserted below, this major news already inspires Liquid Glass-fueled snark over whether it’s really such a big loss for the iPhone giant.

Apple design chief behind controversial Liquid Glass joins Meta

The move represents a victory for Meta as it pushes deeper into AI-equipped consumer devices and hardware manufacturing, according to Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman — although building sarcasm on social media seems to doubt that analysis.

Dye, a design chief for Apple since 2015, will assume the role of chief design officer at Meta on December 31, leading a newly created design studio focused on hardware, software and AI integration across the company’s interfaces.

“We’re entering a new era where AI glasses and other devices will change how we connect with technology and each other,” said Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Threads, “With this new studio, we’re focused on making every interaction thoughtful, intuitive, and built to serve people.”

At Apple, Dye oversaw some of the company’s most significant design work in recent years, including the Vision Pro headset interface and comprehensive redesigns of Apple’s operating systems.

Dye’s portfolio also included design leadership for flagship products like the Apple Watch, iPhone and the company’s suite of apps. Most recently, his team contributed to developing Apple’s upcoming smart home devices.

But despite Dye’s accomplishments, jokes bubbled up on social media about perceived missteps, like hard-to-read Liquid Glass design elements.  “Alan Dye’s legacy,” quips the post reply below, showing a half-readable Steve Jobs quote.

“After Liquid Glass, hard to tell whether this is a win for Meta or Apple,” quipped one wag on X.

“Oh no, not this guy,” was Basic Apple Guy’s sarcastic take.

Apple’s design team transition

Dye is being replaced by Stephen Lemay, a longtime Apple designer who has contributed to every major Apple interface since 1999. Apple CEO Tim Cook praised Lemay in a statement, noting he “has always set an extraordinarily high bar for excellence and embodies Apple’s culture of collaboration and creativity.”

The transition extends a troubling pattern for Apple’s design organization, which has struggled with talent retention since the 2019 departure of legendary design chief Jony Ive. Dye had assumed greater responsibilities following Ive’s exit, becoming instrumental in defining the look and feel of Apple’s latest products and software.

Part of broader executive departures

Dye’s exit compounds Apple’s recent leadership losses. Chief Operating Officer Jeff Williams retired last month after decades with the company, while AI chief John Giannandrea announced his departure this week after years attempting to accelerate Apple’s artificial intelligence efforts. Former hardware chief Dan Riccio also retired last fall.

The exodus may continue, with several remaining executives approaching typical retirement ages. Reports indicate that silicon chief Johny Srouji and environmental initiatives head Lisa Jackson considering possible moves.

Meta’s hardware ambitions

Dye will report to Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth, who oversees Reality Labs, the division developing wearable devices including smart glasses and virtual reality headsets. His primary focus will involve integrating artificial intelligence features into Meta’s consumer device lineup.

Billy Sorrentino, a senior director on Apple’s design team since 2016, will join Dye at Meta. Meta’s existing design leadership, including Josh To, Jason Rubin, and Peter Bristol, will report to Dye in the new structure.

Despite the departures, Cook emphasized Apple’s continued design strength: “Design is fundamental to who we are at Apple, and today, we have an extraordinary design team working on the most innovative product lineup in our history.”

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