- Apple unveiled a fully overhauled Siri AI at WWDC, launching in beta this fall for iPhone 15 Pro, all iPhone 16 and 17 models, and recent iPads and Macs — powered by Apple’s own on-device models combined with Google Gemini for cloud processing.
- The new Siri activates via a swipe down from the top of the screen, has its own dedicated app, and now features camera integration — users can point their phone at objects and ask Siri questions about what it sees.
- Apple says only relevant data is sent to the cloud and immediately deleted, with neither Apple nor Google able to view conversations — a privacy pitch designed to justify letting Siri access messages, emails, and other sensitive personal data.
- The most powerful on-device capabilities, including enhanced dictation and voice customization, are restricted to the newest silicon: iPhone 17 Pro, Macs with M3 or newer, and iPads with M4 or newer.
What Happened?
Apple used its WWDC keynote to finally deliver the overhaul of Siri it promised two years ago but failed to ship. The new Siri AI is built on Apple Foundational Models for on-device processing with Google Gemini handling more complex cloud queries. The assistant can now give detailed, contextual answers from the top of the screen, answer personal questions by scanning messages and emails, act on on-screen content in real time, and see through the iPhone camera. It launches in beta this fall for Apple Intelligence-compatible devices, which already include roughly 450 million iPhones worldwide. Apple framed privacy as a core differentiator: only relevant query data is sent to the cloud and immediately deleted, with neither Apple nor Google able to view conversations.
Why It Matters?
The real significance of Apple’s AI play is distribution, not capability. ChatGPT and Claude may be more powerful today, but they require deliberate download and sign-up. Siri AI will simply be there — reachable by anyone with a compatible iPhone via a swipe or voice command. With 450 million capable devices already in the market, even modest adoption rates produce enormous usage numbers. Whether Siri can convert casual users into habitual AI users depends on how reliably it works in practice — especially with third-party app integration, where access is still limited to what developers enable.
What’s Next?
The beta launches later this year, giving Apple Intelligence device owners early access. Full rollout and deeper third-party app integration will follow as developers build Siri support into their products. The key watch items: whether major platforms like Gmail, Google Photos, and WhatsApp open their data to Siri, and whether the privacy architecture holds under scrutiny. The new Siri represents Apple’s most important software bet since the App Store — and Apple has given itself a two-year runway to get this right.
Source: The Wall Street Journal














