A New, AI-Supercharged Siri Is in the Works
Despite only mentioning Siri twice during Apple’s recent WWDC keynote, Siri was the most important topic.
Following WWDC, Apple’s Greg Joswiak and Craig Federighi have been on a mission: remind investors they’re playing a different game when it comes to AI. In recent interviews (WSJ, Tom’s Guide), Federighi has made it clear that Apple believes in the power of AI to shape the future:
“AI is a transformational technology… it’s going to have a decades-long arc of impact across the industry and the economy.” – Craig Federighi. SVP Software Engineering at Apple
Apple doesn’t want to compete directly with ChatGPT. They’re focused on pervasive AI throughout their products. That means your iPhone will be capable of more when using Apple Intelligence vs. ChatGPT. Next year’s delayed release of the new Siri will be Apple’s next big test in delivering on that vision.
Apple’s approach to AI is two-fold. First, keep making their world class hardware, software and services even better. Second, release a new version of Siri that begins to unlock pervasive AI experiences across Apple devices.
- As for making world class hardware, software and services, investors can continue to sleep well at night knowing the company will keep doing just that.
- As for releasing a world class Siri, investors will have some restless nights ahead given the product’s track record and the limited impact of Apple’s AI initiatives to date.
The big picture: what’s at stake goes beyond fixing Siri in 2026. The next version of Siri will set investors’ confidence level in Apple’s ability to capitalize on AI over the next few years. If they deliver, it sets the table for Apple to change how we use their devices over the next decade. If Siri falls short, it would be viewed as the second major AI failure for the company (the first was not getting Siri out in late 2024), and a sign that AI is not in the company’s DNA.
So there is a lot riding on the new Siri, and Joswiak and Federighi seem OK with that. Their confidence that they’ll get it right is reassuring.

