Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) this month should provide an indication of what Apple is working on in the generative AI area. Apple Intelligence is said to be the branding of Apple’s AI offerings. But it seems clear enough Apple will focus on on-board processing capabilities related to smartphone apps.
Given the importance of Siri, it would not come as a surprise to hear something about Siri AI features. Other areas where Apple’s on-board processing approach could support AI could include summarization features, photo editing or chatbot features.
All that would make sense with the arrival of iOS 18, the next major update to the iPhone operating system.
But lots of apps should get a boost, including:
Apple Music: Auto-generated playlists and smarter song transitions.
Apple News: AI-generated news article summaries.
Health: New features powered by AI
Keynote and Pages: AI-powered features for auto-generating slides in Keynote, writing faster in Pages
Mail: Incoming email categorization, and suggested replies to emails, as well as email thread summaries and text composition assistance.
Messages: Per-word effects, suggested replies, custom emoji, message recaps..
Notes: A built-in audio recording tool and audio transcriptions
Notifications: AI-generated notification summaries.
Photos: AI-powered photo retouching.
Safari: Browsing assistant that can summarize web pages, and a "Web Eraser" tool.
Spotlight: More intelligent search results and improved sorting.
Voice Memos: Audio transcriptions.
Though Apple is widely considered to be “behind” in generative AI leadership, that perception is likely misplaced. Recall Apple’s traditional approach to technology innovation: it rarely is the “first” to deploy any new technology. Instead, it has excelled at packaging new technology in better, more user-friendly or elegant ways.
In fact, it would have been a shock had Apple emerged early as a generative AI leader.
Where Apple should emerge as a force is on-device AI, given its leadership in devices and device functions, where AI already has been deployed to support smartphone operations related to imaging and cameras; user voice input; voice-to-text translation or facial recognition.
The advantages of on-the-device edge processing include latency performance, battery life improvements and privacy and security, as well as the ability to work when internet connectivity is lost.