It’s odd that the article identifies Apple’s hardware as a limitation for AI. I don’t think this is the case. If anything it’s the opposite, and makes Apple’s lack of execution more mysterious.
I was running Stable Diffusion on my iPhone two years ago. You can get quite good open weights models running on-device today. What’s going on over there?
I don't think there's much mystery here. Apple has blocked their researchers from publishing and has a very siloed approach. Researchers don't like this, so they work for companies that allow them to publish and engage in the research community. As a result Apple can't hire the talent needed to execute in this space.
Sort by oldest. They had two papers in 2017 and three in 2018. It was only in 2019 that they started opening up more, but you can't change decades of culture quickly. The AI researchers I know (and I know a lot, having been VPE at multiple AI companies) would rather work with groups that are more open.
They did start this but they were a few years late to the game, so they're probably having to play catch up.
Also they still have a streak of secrecy so I wonder if any researchers are skittish thinking that Apple might just arbitrarily stop them from publishing certain papers?
As far as I can tell xAI doesn't publish because they don't have anything to publish. It seems to me like they aren't doing anything novel or state of the art, they're just consuming other people's research and implementing it.
I wonder if AI is just not up to Apple's standards yet. It's very, very amazing in some ways, but also, deeply flaky in others. Remember all the Apple news summarization memes? That sort of thing bothers any tech company but it really bothers Apple. "Very amazing but also deeply flaky" is fine for the Android ecosystem but it's not on brand for Apple.
I suspect Steve Jobs would be very aggressively driving them internally but also not necessarily releasing much yet either.
> The problem there is twofold. One is that so-called on-device AI hasn’t yet proved to be a major selling point for products such as PCs and smartphones. The other is that Apple’s lack of its own cloud-based AI capabilities leaves the $3 trillion company still in need of powerful allies. The company struck a deal with OpenAI last year to effectively back up its own AI capabilities, and analysts have widely been expecting similar partnerships involving other major AI services, including Google’s Gemini.
Yes. If I have to trade off a stupid phone with 100% determinism and good battery life versus an intelligent phone with 70% determinism and shit battery life then I'm going to take the stupid phone.
My phone 15 pro is almost always dead by the end of the day. Yesterday it actually died and I had to plug it in. last night it was at 5%
and, I’m not a major user. I don’t TikTok, X, Instagram, or any other social media. Nor do I do much else on my phone that I see heavy users do around me
You can see which apps are eating battery in settings. I do 80% charging doing about 6 hours of screen time a day and I usually end the day around 30-50%.
Thinner with a smaller battery, yes. Not a larger screen though, actually slightly smaller than the "Plus" iPhone which it will supposedly be replacing.
Wrong or not, it's a danger for Apple when this sort of thing starts popping up in the media.
It wouldn't take much for a "Apple have taken a wrong turn, and have left themselves unable to participate in the race for AI" narrative to take hold. If that happened, it would severely damage their position at the premium end of the market.
Its a low bar but a bar you cant walk back from if you collide poorly rather than pass with flying colours.
Take MS, sure they are doing a lot with AI, however some matters like Recall I'm not sure they can ever fully step back from, the trust has been lost for many by a rushed attempt.
Recall-like features will be a standard and accepted part of operating systems soon. People freaked out about Gmail "reading all your email" at first too.
I know there's a difference in the OS having access to everything on your screen, but people will still calm down once there are useful benefits delivered.
Why would I want ‘AI’ on my iPhone anyway? All I want is an all-in-one electronic notepad, calculator, encyclopaedia, communicator, music player and camera. And it already does all of that (almost) perfectly. And has done for the last fifteen years.
That’s it though. The iPhone set the paradigm for nearly 20 years. And up to that point nobody knew it was coming.
It’s been done and every tech company wants to find the next game changing thing.
I’m kinda rooting for Apple on this one. Give me a smarter smart phone that doesn’t sell out my privacy.
If they can do that and whatever AR or VR or whatever ends up finally being usable perhaps it will be built with user privacy back in mind. As it is I’m not getting anywhere near a Meta or a Google or an Amazon reality device
I agree mostly, but what exactly do you mean by privacy?
I think the real pressing issue is not ‘privacy’ or ‘tracking’ or whatever; it’s having one’s views slowly but surely warped by AI-enabled mass disinformation campaigns and having one’s eyeballs taken hostage by whichever company pays enough to keep you watching. Half the world seems to now be addicted to short-form video slop/brainrot now, and they don’t even enjoy it!
That’s really the hallmark of addiction — you’re consciously aware that it’s completely pointless and detrimental to your life and yet you can’t put it down.
Perhaps the same was said of TV when it was new, but, looking at what the BBC used to broadcast as recently as twenty years ago, I’m shocked how far we’ve fallen. If Apple really wants to save the world, they should find a solution to this. Since (fairly uniquely) their business isn’t dependent on selling attention to advertisers, they might just have a shot.
Privacy here means Apple is not a data broker. Your inference requests are completely anonymous.
Apple made their money when they sold an expensive bit of hardware. They even use some of these large margins to build out private compute cloud to make sure they never see what you send them
Frankly they are the only big tech company I will even remotely trust. The fact that their AI isn’t bleeding edge is a feature for me
If everyone's iPhones already do everything they want, the only reason to buy a new one is if the current one breaks. Which would decimate Apple's stock price.
This is the real tragedy: That we have to throw away perfectly working phones because their manufacturer and the software ecosystem are working together to make sure our devices outlive the software on them.
The 6s still got an update earlier this year. I sold it to someone who was going to use it. It was just sitting around otherwise. So I'm not sure that's entirely true.
Not sure you can fault Apple for stopping investment in software for devices past a certain age. And certain functionality just isn't supported by older hardware.
Doesn't mean the devices stop working. Just that Apple is saying you're on your own.
(Although the proprietary nature of Apple software means you also can't continue upgrading the software on your own or through a third party.)
You’re not wrong, but how does it relate to my question? I’m asking why I would want AI, not why Apple would want to artificially inject ‘AI’ into their product — that’s obvious.
I care that they do the tasks I command them to do, quickly and efficiently. If the developer achieves this using AI somehow, great. If the developer achieves this using traditional algorithms, also great. It doesn't even remotely matter to me if they are "using AI" any more than it matters whether they are "using Python."
I never liked Siri but leaving Perplexity/ChatGPT in voice mode so I can just verbally ask for web searches etc while I'm doing other things is amazing. Something like that with MCP would actually be revolutionary.
My biggest concern is that it will degrade my phone sooner and its battery life. I rather just hit an LLM in the cloud somewhere from my phone.
If the tech ever reaches the point where Apple can fully do, on device-first and there's no issues with it, then they'll likely invest drastically into it.
Hard disagree. Apple powers search with Google because Google pays them. Google pays them because they can show ads and scarf down user data. I don't want my devices' ability to do certain tasks controlled by the highest bidder for my attention and data.
Gemini hasn't even been "the best" for a year. Google's quick answers AI is the most laughably bad high-exposure model out there. In six months, Anthropic or OpenAI or any other provider might have a model or models that are exceedingly good for the use cases that Apple cares about.
Hell, Meta or Microsoft might surprise us and make a really robust model that uses very little in the way of resources and battery (arguably, MS has in the past and will do it again), and on-device compute will be the best option.
There's no best option right now. And if you're not aiming for short term ROI on AI products, there's no reason to make commitments that you might regret in a quarter or two.
Feels more like Apple is sticking to its position that "all those LLMs are gimmicks and not actual AI". So they think they're not late because they see the primary tech behind oAI (etc) as a base for non-threatening features.
This stance will probably age very poorly but that's what it is.
They didn't do anything with "blockchain" either, and are no worse off for it. It's actually nice to see a company not just chasing whatever is hot and trendy each month.
I'd say they're correct from the consumer POV. In the context of a phone that's consumed mostly by non-technical people, AI in its current form is at best a better Google that occasionally fabricates the truth (or a silly image generator for creating memes).
AI products have shown a lot of progress over the past few years, even if they haven't "reached the bar".
But Apple is failing to deliver anything solid in the same time frame. Disregarding an arbitrary notion of "reaching the bar", they need to show progress.
What has Microsoft delivered? What has any hardware manufacturer delivered? What features of any operating system have been added by any company, that are worth while?
There's basically one "killer ai app", that's the chatbot. There's a second, plausible case, for agentic additions to IDEs.
But where is this high bar we're meant to be seeing? All I see is google and stackoverflow being replaced by openai.
I think part of the problem is nobody has a clear vision of what "progress" would look like here. What is the thing that they should be shipping today that would get someone to upgrade their phone, or to switch to iPhone?
Inverting it, what are the AI features that Google has shipped that are getting people to upgrade their Android phones, or to switch to Android?
My Apple devices are pretty useful for AI devices now given that I can run e.g. ChatGPT and Claude on them. I know they have to do something so the tech press can stop saying they are behind, but it still feels premature given lack of consensus on how best to integrate phones with the unreliable AIs we have today.
That’s what I was thinking. The most valuable AI tools are probably coding assistants, and I’d argue they haven’t even reached the bar. What AI products have reached the bar?
On the one hand, I actually thought it was pretty refreshing to see a tech company keynote that wasn't wall-to-wall with just-so futuristic AI demos that will, if they ever arrive, inevitably be unreliable and finicky under real world usage. Apple has a pretty big opportunity to be a company that invests in its core product functionality and to add AI strategically where it makes sense, keeping its products performant and stable while everyone else sloppifies.
But I don't think they are consciously doing that. I assume like every other company they are throwing a lot of resources at the new hype and just failing, and this is the backup plan. I'm not sure what that says about the strategy at the top.
People keep talking about grand things like new paradigms, but given current limitations I wouldn’t be surprised if for the most part, the best AI winds up being that which you can’t see (the strategic application you mention). Think less miraculous everything machines and more specialized models enhancing things that already exist.
The tendency for LLMs to flub and hallucinate gets downplayed but I think it’s actually the main blocker for it becoming a “smartphone killer” kind of thing. The problem is that fixing this issue is anything but easy and might even require actual reasoning capabilities (not the current Markov chain ping-pong “reasoning”), e.g. something adjacent to AGI, and I think we’re probably still many years away from that.
Because they want to have their own belief—that AI is more important than others believe it to be—reinforced. They think it's important and significant, so anybody who doesn't must be an uninformed, unimaginative idiot (or a failing company).
This will play out exactly how you think. The hubris will be confronted with harsh reality at some point, all of the chest puffers will get real quiet, and companies like Apple will look wise for not getting too involved, too soon.
The problem with Apple's platforms is they can't choose to wait until they have it right like they did with IE vs Safari. The walled garden means their approach is the only one available to users.
If the mac worked the way the iPhone does the mac just wouldn't have a browser until after the .com boom was over. That's why I'm shorting them. Their inability to give people an escape hatch so their users can actually do useful things with what they build is killing their platforms.
I can't agree more. I hope a more convergent os (and hopefully an open and private one at that) is over the horizon, the problem being that as it stands, linux is lacks accessibility and the commonality factor that would make using it as a developer worth it.
VTEs are incredibly accessible and language models I think mean using languages will actually be the most accessible UI to non-technical users going forward.
I'd argue GNU-style CLI and libinput based tools are actually more discoverable than GUIs now that smartphones killed CUA and friends. Is pressing tab twice really worse than "reverse three finger pinch?"
I don't disagree but you're just talking about iOS. I run third party AI stuff on Mac including ollama and https://boltai.com which gives you a common interface for both local and remote models.
iOS devices are just consumer devices for consuming content. They're almost a completely different platform.
As for integrated AI, I kinda like that Apple is trying to get it "right" in the sense of being on device in many cases (or at least capable of it) and secure (privacy respecting).
Their models are behind though. If they were really serious they would buy Anthropic or Mistral with all their cash. Anthropic might not sell but Mistral seems like something they could bulldoze with cash if they wanted, and they'd get better models and a better model-making team.
More than a bean counter analysis would show. It makes them the dominant PC platform for developers and many forms of "serious work." Abandoning or ruining the Mac would, over time, relegate them to one of the "other" ecosystems from a developer POV. As everyone knows the "other" ecosystems are the ones that get less attention.
I do "serious work" from a mac and the only software I use on it is OpenSSH, Safari, Webex, and Outlook. Everything actually serious gets done on a Linux VM in a datacenter.
> It makes them the dominant PC platform for developers
In my 12 years of employment in this industry, I have yet to encounter a MacOS build server. "Serious work" doesn't happen on MacOS by design; it's not a deployment platform. You don't put Mac instances on your K8s network, most of the time your customers aren't using a Mac either. Even big companies like 1Pass have realized what a waste this is, and started porting their Mac software to Electron. Apple couldn't dominate developers if they systematically murdered every other POSIX-compliant OS.
The more time you spend as a development studio optimizing for a runtime you never use, the more capital you waste to achieve the same end-goal. It's not a real thing outside the comically capital-intensive SV culture.
I agree Apple is behind on AI, it's still up in the air if they "missed" AI yet (like MS missed mobile). I hope they are able to compete in the long run.
The Foundation models/SDK/APIs are a big step in the right direction but they are coming 6-12 months behind everyone else. AI is an area that it's not at all clear if "slow and steady wins the race" (Apple's normal MO). If there is a paradigm shift in how we interact with our phones using LLMs then Apple is going to get left behind as thing currently stand.
It's also damning that Sky [0] didn't come out of Apple. More damning is that the majority of the team behind Sky _DID_ come from Apple (and Workflow, aka Shortcuts) before that. Why did this team feel they had to leave Apple to create something like Sky? Maybe it's a ploy to get acquired again but I think that Apple just isn't good at LLM-based products because of the uncertainty. Apple wants to avoid the "glue on pizza" or "stop taking your meds" moment but it's causing them to miss the boat completely.
LLMs are far from perfect, they lie/hallucinate or just lose the plot. That said, there are some really valuable things you can do with them. Historically Apple has been unwilling to accept the downsides and would rather wait to ship but with LLMs I don't think they are going to ever get a "no downsides" approach to work.
> it's still up in the air if they "missed" AI yet (like MS missed mobile)
I think the clock on this won't start until someone ships something compelling that is not available on Apple devices. Currently, the leading AI tools have first-party iOS apps.
> Why did this team feel they had to leave Apple to create something like Sky?
No personal knowledge of that team, but the economics around an acquisition of an AI-based product in this market are very different from the economics around "generous bonus for shipping a successful product."
> It's also damning that Sky [0] didn't come out of Apple. More damning is that the majority of the team behind Sky _DID_ come from Apple (and Workflow, aka Shortcuts) before that.
Real reason is apple is probably stacked with legacy employees with 30 years of experience in some hyper specific apple stuff, and now with the ai paradigm shift, legacy employee expertise is not only obsolete, but is probably a hinderance. They will recover, will just be slow
It’s odd that the article identifies Apple’s hardware as a limitation for AI. I don’t think this is the case. If anything it’s the opposite, and makes Apple’s lack of execution more mysterious.
I was running Stable Diffusion on my iPhone two years ago. You can get quite good open weights models running on-device today. What’s going on over there?
I don't think there's much mystery here. Apple has blocked their researchers from publishing and has a very siloed approach. Researchers don't like this, so they work for companies that allow them to publish and engage in the research community. As a result Apple can't hire the talent needed to execute in this space.
> Apple has blocked their researchers from publishing
Counterexamples: https://machinelearning.apple.com/research/
Sort by oldest. They had two papers in 2017 and three in 2018. It was only in 2019 that they started opening up more, but you can't change decades of culture quickly. The AI researchers I know (and I know a lot, having been VPE at multiple AI companies) would rather work with groups that are more open.
They did start this but they were a few years late to the game, so they're probably having to play catch up.
Also they still have a streak of secrecy so I wonder if any researchers are skittish thinking that Apple might just arbitrarily stop them from publishing certain papers?
As if xAI publishes a lot. But even they have models that work.
As far as I can tell xAI doesn't publish because they don't have anything to publish. It seems to me like they aren't doing anything novel or state of the art, they're just consuming other people's research and implementing it.
I wonder if AI is just not up to Apple's standards yet. It's very, very amazing in some ways, but also, deeply flaky in others. Remember all the Apple news summarization memes? That sort of thing bothers any tech company but it really bothers Apple. "Very amazing but also deeply flaky" is fine for the Android ecosystem but it's not on brand for Apple.
I suspect Steve Jobs would be very aggressively driving them internally but also not necessarily releasing much yet either.
This is much less of a Jobs Apple and more of a Sculley Apple
> The problem there is twofold. One is that so-called on-device AI hasn’t yet proved to be a major selling point for products such as PCs and smartphones. The other is that Apple’s lack of its own cloud-based AI capabilities leaves the $3 trillion company still in need of powerful allies. The company struck a deal with OpenAI last year to effectively back up its own AI capabilities, and analysts have widely been expecting similar partnerships involving other major AI services, including Google’s Gemini.
I think the challenge is battery. Frequent inference draws a ton of power.
Yes. If I have to trade off a stupid phone with 100% determinism and good battery life versus an intelligent phone with 70% determinism and shit battery life then I'm going to take the stupid phone.
I get 4 or so days of battery life. If I lost a day I don't think I'd notice.
My phone 15 pro is almost always dead by the end of the day. Yesterday it actually died and I had to plug it in. last night it was at 5%
and, I’m not a major user. I don’t TikTok, X, Instagram, or any other social media. Nor do I do much else on my phone that I see heavy users do around me
You can see which apps are eating battery in settings. I do 80% charging doing about 6 hours of screen time a day and I usually end the day around 30-50%.
Did you notice battery life tanking a few weeks ago or am I imagining things?
noticeable decrease after updating ios. yay
15 pro here. I noticed it with 18.5
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That’s where PCC comes in. But I still don’t understand how their device margins are going to fund all these AI data centers
Especially now that their App Store revenue is collapsing
Meanwhile, the main attraction of the upcoming iphone 17 lineup is a thin and light "Air" model that has a bigger screen and a smaller battery.
Thinner with a smaller battery, yes. Not a larger screen though, actually slightly smaller than the "Plus" iPhone which it will supposedly be replacing.
I wouldn't say that's a Unique Apple Problem though.
Wrong or not, it's a danger for Apple when this sort of thing starts popping up in the media.
It wouldn't take much for a "Apple have taken a wrong turn, and have left themselves unable to participate in the race for AI" narrative to take hold. If that happened, it would severely damage their position at the premium end of the market.
All I know is that my iPhone 13 pro had better battery life than my iPhone 15 pro. Is this Apple Intelligence chip just draining my battery?
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Its a low bar but a bar you cant walk back from if you collide poorly rather than pass with flying colours.
Take MS, sure they are doing a lot with AI, however some matters like Recall I'm not sure they can ever fully step back from, the trust has been lost for many by a rushed attempt.
Recall-like features will be a standard and accepted part of operating systems soon. People freaked out about Gmail "reading all your email" at first too.
I know there's a difference in the OS having access to everything on your screen, but people will still calm down once there are useful benefits delivered.
Why would I want ‘AI’ on my iPhone anyway? All I want is an all-in-one electronic notepad, calculator, encyclopaedia, communicator, music player and camera. And it already does all of that (almost) perfectly. And has done for the last fifteen years.
That’s it though. The iPhone set the paradigm for nearly 20 years. And up to that point nobody knew it was coming.
It’s been done and every tech company wants to find the next game changing thing.
I’m kinda rooting for Apple on this one. Give me a smarter smart phone that doesn’t sell out my privacy.
If they can do that and whatever AR or VR or whatever ends up finally being usable perhaps it will be built with user privacy back in mind. As it is I’m not getting anywhere near a Meta or a Google or an Amazon reality device
I agree mostly, but what exactly do you mean by privacy?
I think the real pressing issue is not ‘privacy’ or ‘tracking’ or whatever; it’s having one’s views slowly but surely warped by AI-enabled mass disinformation campaigns and having one’s eyeballs taken hostage by whichever company pays enough to keep you watching. Half the world seems to now be addicted to short-form video slop/brainrot now, and they don’t even enjoy it!
That’s really the hallmark of addiction — you’re consciously aware that it’s completely pointless and detrimental to your life and yet you can’t put it down.
Perhaps the same was said of TV when it was new, but, looking at what the BBC used to broadcast as recently as twenty years ago, I’m shocked how far we’ve fallen. If Apple really wants to save the world, they should find a solution to this. Since (fairly uniquely) their business isn’t dependent on selling attention to advertisers, they might just have a shot.
Privacy here means Apple is not a data broker. Your inference requests are completely anonymous.
Apple made their money when they sold an expensive bit of hardware. They even use some of these large margins to build out private compute cloud to make sure they never see what you send them
Frankly they are the only big tech company I will even remotely trust. The fact that their AI isn’t bleeding edge is a feature for me
apple's pro privacy stance is marketing
That's a huge, near existential threat for Apple.
If everyone's iPhones already do everything they want, the only reason to buy a new one is if the current one breaks. Which would decimate Apple's stock price.
We're already there. I only buy a new one every 2 years because they last so damn long that my three kids can get them handed down that long.
Just got rid of a 9 year old 6s a few months ago that still worked fine!
This is the real tragedy: That we have to throw away perfectly working phones because their manufacturer and the software ecosystem are working together to make sure our devices outlive the software on them.
The 6s still got an update earlier this year. I sold it to someone who was going to use it. It was just sitting around otherwise. So I'm not sure that's entirely true.
Eh.
Not sure you can fault Apple for stopping investment in software for devices past a certain age. And certain functionality just isn't supported by older hardware.
Doesn't mean the devices stop working. Just that Apple is saying you're on your own.
(Although the proprietary nature of Apple software means you also can't continue upgrading the software on your own or through a third party.)
You’re not wrong, but how does it relate to my question? I’m asking why I would want AI, not why Apple would want to artificially inject ‘AI’ into their product — that’s obvious.
I don't care if my products "have AI" in them.
I care that they do the tasks I command them to do, quickly and efficiently. If the developer achieves this using AI somehow, great. If the developer achieves this using traditional algorithms, also great. It doesn't even remotely matter to me if they are "using AI" any more than it matters whether they are "using Python."
Want Siri to actually work?
i have disabled siri for well over a decade now
i don't need that sort of thing
I never liked Siri but leaving Perplexity/ChatGPT in voice mode so I can just verbally ask for web searches etc while I'm doing other things is amazing. Something like that with MCP would actually be revolutionary.
Agreed. Even if it worked perfectly, I’d rather just press a couple of buttons than have to speak to it. It’s just of no interest to me.
No, I do not
My biggest concern is that it will degrade my phone sooner and its battery life. I rather just hit an LLM in the cloud somewhere from my phone.
If the tech ever reaches the point where Apple can fully do, on device-first and there's no issues with it, then they'll likely invest drastically into it.
Agree. AI features definitely eat up battery and processing power, even if they're not running 24/7.
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Apple should power their AI features with Gemini, the same way they got their search feature from Google Search.
Yesterday's presentation shows that their software wheelhouse is making fancy user interfaces.
Hard disagree. Apple powers search with Google because Google pays them. Google pays them because they can show ads and scarf down user data. I don't want my devices' ability to do certain tasks controlled by the highest bidder for my attention and data.
Gemini hasn't even been "the best" for a year. Google's quick answers AI is the most laughably bad high-exposure model out there. In six months, Anthropic or OpenAI or any other provider might have a model or models that are exceedingly good for the use cases that Apple cares about.
Hell, Meta or Microsoft might surprise us and make a really robust model that uses very little in the way of resources and battery (arguably, MS has in the past and will do it again), and on-device compute will be the best option.
There's no best option right now. And if you're not aiming for short term ROI on AI products, there's no reason to make commitments that you might regret in a quarter or two.
Feels more like Apple is sticking to its position that "all those LLMs are gimmicks and not actual AI". So they think they're not late because they see the primary tech behind oAI (etc) as a base for non-threatening features.
This stance will probably age very poorly but that's what it is.
They didn't do anything with "blockchain" either, and are no worse off for it. It's actually nice to see a company not just chasing whatever is hot and trendy each month.
I'd say they're correct from the consumer POV. In the context of a phone that's consumed mostly by non-technical people, AI in its current form is at best a better Google that occasionally fabricates the truth (or a silly image generator for creating memes).
>>all those LLMs are gimmicks and not actual AI
If that's their stance, they aren't wrong.
https://archive.ph/2025.06.10-094500/https://www.wsj.com/tec...
Why is it just assumed that all companies should be "doing something with AI" and if they are not, then they are somehow "behind?"
This is like saying "Company X is behind on Python" when they just don't use Python to make their products.
When you onboard a 100 million users in a week, people assume there’s money to be made there.
No idea what this means. Who is onboarding 100 million users a week, and where is there money to be made?
Oh the press AI hit job. Here we go.
No one has reached the bar.
How so?
AI products have shown a lot of progress over the past few years, even if they haven't "reached the bar".
But Apple is failing to deliver anything solid in the same time frame. Disregarding an arbitrary notion of "reaching the bar", they need to show progress.
What has Microsoft delivered? What has any hardware manufacturer delivered? What features of any operating system have been added by any company, that are worth while?
There's basically one "killer ai app", that's the chatbot. There's a second, plausible case, for agentic additions to IDEs.
But where is this high bar we're meant to be seeing? All I see is google and stackoverflow being replaced by openai.
I think part of the problem is nobody has a clear vision of what "progress" would look like here. What is the thing that they should be shipping today that would get someone to upgrade their phone, or to switch to iPhone?
Inverting it, what are the AI features that Google has shipped that are getting people to upgrade their Android phones, or to switch to Android?
My Apple devices are pretty useful for AI devices now given that I can run e.g. ChatGPT and Claude on them. I know they have to do something so the tech press can stop saying they are behind, but it still feels premature given lack of consensus on how best to integrate phones with the unreliable AIs we have today.
> they need to show progress
To whom?
Customers deciding whether or not to buy new phone models.
No one has delivered anything solid. Progress is asymptotic here and everything x months and y billion dollars away.
We have shitty chatbots which confidently spew garbage and a new button on laptops no one wanted.
And the customers are worried that the technology is coming for their jobs, their income and their lives.
That’s what I was thinking. The most valuable AI tools are probably coding assistants, and I’d argue they haven’t even reached the bar. What AI products have reached the bar?
On the one hand, I actually thought it was pretty refreshing to see a tech company keynote that wasn't wall-to-wall with just-so futuristic AI demos that will, if they ever arrive, inevitably be unreliable and finicky under real world usage. Apple has a pretty big opportunity to be a company that invests in its core product functionality and to add AI strategically where it makes sense, keeping its products performant and stable while everyone else sloppifies.
But I don't think they are consciously doing that. I assume like every other company they are throwing a lot of resources at the new hype and just failing, and this is the backup plan. I'm not sure what that says about the strategy at the top.
People keep talking about grand things like new paradigms, but given current limitations I wouldn’t be surprised if for the most part, the best AI winds up being that which you can’t see (the strategic application you mention). Think less miraculous everything machines and more specialized models enhancing things that already exist.
The tendency for LLMs to flub and hallucinate gets downplayed but I think it’s actually the main blocker for it becoming a “smartphone killer” kind of thing. The problem is that fixing this issue is anything but easy and might even require actual reasoning capabilities (not the current Markov chain ping-pong “reasoning”), e.g. something adjacent to AGI, and I think we’re probably still many years away from that.
Why do people think Apple is "failing" at AI instead of simply making the bet that AI, at least on a phone, is not something people really care about?
Because they want to have their own belief—that AI is more important than others believe it to be—reinforced. They think it's important and significant, so anybody who doesn't must be an uninformed, unimaginative idiot (or a failing company).
This will play out exactly how you think. The hubris will be confronted with harsh reality at some point, all of the chest puffers will get real quiet, and companies like Apple will look wise for not getting too involved, too soon.
The problem with Apple's platforms is they can't choose to wait until they have it right like they did with IE vs Safari. The walled garden means their approach is the only one available to users.
If the mac worked the way the iPhone does the mac just wouldn't have a browser until after the .com boom was over. That's why I'm shorting them. Their inability to give people an escape hatch so their users can actually do useful things with what they build is killing their platforms.
I can't agree more. I hope a more convergent os (and hopefully an open and private one at that) is over the horizon, the problem being that as it stands, linux is lacks accessibility and the commonality factor that would make using it as a developer worth it.
VTEs are incredibly accessible and language models I think mean using languages will actually be the most accessible UI to non-technical users going forward.
I'd argue GNU-style CLI and libinput based tools are actually more discoverable than GUIs now that smartphones killed CUA and friends. Is pressing tab twice really worse than "reverse three finger pinch?"
I don't disagree but you're just talking about iOS. I run third party AI stuff on Mac including ollama and https://boltai.com which gives you a common interface for both local and remote models.
iOS devices are just consumer devices for consuming content. They're almost a completely different platform.
As for integrated AI, I kinda like that Apple is trying to get it "right" in the sense of being on device in many cases (or at least capable of it) and secure (privacy respecting).
Their models are behind though. If they were really serious they would buy Anthropic or Mistral with all their cash. Anthropic might not sell but Mistral seems like something they could bulldoze with cash if they wanted, and they'd get better models and a better model-making team.
People said similar things about Blackberry near the peak. They're setting themselves up for disruption and decay.
How much revenue does Mac bring in compared to iOS devices? Apple's success is entirely due to iOS/iPhone. The Mac is irrelevant
More than a bean counter analysis would show. It makes them the dominant PC platform for developers and many forms of "serious work." Abandoning or ruining the Mac would, over time, relegate them to one of the "other" ecosystems from a developer POV. As everyone knows the "other" ecosystems are the ones that get less attention.
I do "serious work" from a mac and the only software I use on it is OpenSSH, Safari, Webex, and Outlook. Everything actually serious gets done on a Linux VM in a datacenter.
> It makes them the dominant PC platform for developers
In my 12 years of employment in this industry, I have yet to encounter a MacOS build server. "Serious work" doesn't happen on MacOS by design; it's not a deployment platform. You don't put Mac instances on your K8s network, most of the time your customers aren't using a Mac either. Even big companies like 1Pass have realized what a waste this is, and started porting their Mac software to Electron. Apple couldn't dominate developers if they systematically murdered every other POSIX-compliant OS.
The more time you spend as a development studio optimizing for a runtime you never use, the more capital you waste to achieve the same end-goal. It's not a real thing outside the comically capital-intensive SV culture.
I agree Apple is behind on AI, it's still up in the air if they "missed" AI yet (like MS missed mobile). I hope they are able to compete in the long run.
The Foundation models/SDK/APIs are a big step in the right direction but they are coming 6-12 months behind everyone else. AI is an area that it's not at all clear if "slow and steady wins the race" (Apple's normal MO). If there is a paradigm shift in how we interact with our phones using LLMs then Apple is going to get left behind as thing currently stand.
It's also damning that Sky [0] didn't come out of Apple. More damning is that the majority of the team behind Sky _DID_ come from Apple (and Workflow, aka Shortcuts) before that. Why did this team feel they had to leave Apple to create something like Sky? Maybe it's a ploy to get acquired again but I think that Apple just isn't good at LLM-based products because of the uncertainty. Apple wants to avoid the "glue on pizza" or "stop taking your meds" moment but it's causing them to miss the boat completely.
LLMs are far from perfect, they lie/hallucinate or just lose the plot. That said, there are some really valuable things you can do with them. Historically Apple has been unwilling to accept the downsides and would rather wait to ship but with LLMs I don't think they are going to ever get a "no downsides" approach to work.
[0] https://www.macrumors.com/2025/05/28/sky-ai-mac-app/
> it's still up in the air if they "missed" AI yet (like MS missed mobile)
I think the clock on this won't start until someone ships something compelling that is not available on Apple devices. Currently, the leading AI tools have first-party iOS apps.
> Why did this team feel they had to leave Apple to create something like Sky?
No personal knowledge of that team, but the economics around an acquisition of an AI-based product in this market are very different from the economics around "generous bonus for shipping a successful product."
> It's also damning that Sky [0] didn't come out of Apple. More damning is that the majority of the team behind Sky _DID_ come from Apple (and Workflow, aka Shortcuts) before that.
Time for an acqui-hire?
Real reason is apple is probably stacked with legacy employees with 30 years of experience in some hyper specific apple stuff, and now with the ai paradigm shift, legacy employee expertise is not only obsolete, but is probably a hinderance. They will recover, will just be slow