WWDC reveals Apple’s distinctive approach to artificial intelligence development
Apple has been perceived as lagging in artificial intelligence (AI) innovation, especially before their Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). However, this perception overlooks Apple’s fundamentally different approach to AI compared to its competitors. At WWDC, the tech industry was eager to see if Apple would catch up in AI and whether it needed to rely on external collaborators like OpenAI.
Apple users have unknowingly been leveraging AI for years. When Siri, the first voice assistant, was introduced in 2011, it was powered by AI. Similarly, iPhone photos are the result of sophisticated AI processes that combine multiple images in fractions of a second. Apple has never heavily marketed these as AI features.
The company’s approach to AI is more proactive. Greg “Goose” Joswiak, Apple’s PR head, explained that the company has been implementing AI technologies for years without explicitly calling them AI or machine learning. Craig Federighi, head of software, emphasized that the user’s experience has always been the priority, rather than the underlying AI technology.
The company faced pressure leading up to WWDC, especially with the rise of generative AI technologies like ChatGPT and Midjourney. Customers began to question why Apple hadn’t offered comparable AI advancements. Reports indicated that the company was taken aback by the sudden AI wave, with Federighi and his team experimenting with the technology but unable to keep pace due to other product focuses like the Vision Pro data glasses.
At this year’s WWDC, Apple demonstrated the complexities involved in AI and machine learning development. Apple Intelligence, the company’s AI suite, won’t be fully available immediately, with significant features like improved Siri integration rolling out months later. Its AI strategy reflects its commitment to user privacy, ensuring AI prioritizes privacy by processing data directly on devices.
Interestingly, the company’s newest AI features will only be compatible with the iPhone 15 Pro models, which have the required 8GB of RAM, excluding even the recent iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus. This decision might deter some buyers but underscores Apple’s focus on performance and capability. Older iPhones will still receive new AI functionalities with iOS 18, but not the full suite of Apple Intelligence features. Apple remains consistent in not labeling its new features explicitly as AI, focusing on practical benefits to users.