"Bruce Tognazzini said ... " That's a wee bit trite. Every day billions of newly born/hatched/sprouted organisms do what is "baked in".
I have no idea how or why that particular baby (I assume you mean a human one) struggled to breastfeed. However you literally mention "premature baby".
I'll give a counter example or 10:
I have seen quite a few nature documentaries that involved birth and suckling or similar initial care, without any sign of learning. Last week I watched a sperm whale calf being born and then searching for and latching on a teat within around a minute. That's in the ocean. The baby weighs about a tonne and mum weighs about 15. She will be moving around and so does the ocean. Despite all that the baby manages to swim, locate a nipple, feed, surface to breathe and so on with minimal assistance.
Humans have hands and can pick up their offspring and direct all operations.
A kangaroo joey has to climb up mum and find the pouch, climb in and find the nipple. I recall that mum licks a trail for it to follow (or perhaps I've gone all ChatGPT - I'm not a biologist)
A random Apple employee is perhaps not best placed to make comparisons between computer interfaces and the natural world, involving birth. The very fact that you can read this comment, almost certainly means that you, when you were a new born baby was able to find your mother's teat and you did it without any prompting.
I have no idea how or why that particular baby (I assume you mean a human one) struggled to breastfeed. However you literally mention "premature baby".
I'll give a counter example or 10:
I have seen quite a few nature documentaries that involved birth and suckling or similar initial care, without any sign of learning. Last week I watched a sperm whale calf being born and then searching for and latching on a teat within around a minute. That's in the ocean. The baby weighs about a tonne and mum weighs about 15. She will be moving around and so does the ocean. Despite all that the baby manages to swim, locate a nipple, feed, surface to breathe and so on with minimal assistance.
Humans have hands and can pick up their offspring and direct all operations.
A kangaroo joey has to climb up mum and find the pouch, climb in and find the nipple. I recall that mum licks a trail for it to follow (or perhaps I've gone all ChatGPT - I'm not a biologist)
A random Apple employee is perhaps not best placed to make comparisons between computer interfaces and the natural world, involving birth. The very fact that you can read this comment, almost certainly means that you, when you were a new born baby was able to find your mother's teat and you did it without any prompting.