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Apple Intelligence Siri is over a year late, but that might be a good thing

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Apple Intelligence-powered Siri is very late, to say the least. That’s largely been because Apple has struggled to keep up with developing their own AI models. I’d say its largely played out this way because Apple has been hesitant to wanting to spend a lot of money, not to mention that Apple’s stance on privacy makes it hard to train a model – Apple just doesn’t have much data.

Nonetheless though, this delay actually comes with a bit of upside.

This week, Apple and Google announced that Gemini models will run on Apple’s private cloud compute servers to power future Apple Intelligence features, including the all-new Siri that was announced at WWDC24.

While this does cover the more intensive features, local models will still be a part of the picture. When announced at WWDC24, Apple Intelligence required an A17 Pro or later. That meant it was only available on the latest (and highest end) iPhone models: iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max.

More people will get to use Apple Intelligence Siri

All of this time passing means one thing: a lot more people have an Apple Intelligence-capable device.

Everyone who bought any iPhone 16 or iPhone 17 model at all in the past two years (plus anyone who already had an iPhone 15 Pro), will be able to use Apple Intelligence.

There’s now 11 Apple Intelligence-supported iPhone models that have had a fair share of time in the market. There were only 2 when the features initially debuted, or 6 if you add in the freshly-launched iPhone 16 models.

That’s a pretty big deal. When Apple Intelligence just launched, it almost felt like a selling point of the iPhone 16 series. Now, it’ll just be a free software update for devices that now take up a substantial portion of the iPhone customer base.

Wrap up

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