Updated June 9, 2026 — 8:38am, first published 5:55am
iPhones and other Apple devices will be updated with Siri AI later this year, with the long-awaited evolution of the personal digital assistant promising an experience similar to Google’s Gemini on Android phones. Apple’s assistant will be able to draw on personal information, see what’s on a user’s screen, fetch new data from the internet and sync conversations across devices. But it’s also designed to keep all personal data away from prying eyes, including Apple’s.
The announcement of Siri AI came as part of a raft of new features unveiled for the company’s 2027 software systems at its annual Worldwide Developer Conference in California, also including new child safety options, an equaliser setting for AirPods, AI upgrades for Photos, Safari and Image Playground, and new smart home capabilities.
Demonstrations of the new version of Siri showed natural back and forth conversation and a knowledge of user’s information stored in text conversations and calendars. On iPhone, a new animation in the Dynamic Island at the top of the device shows when Siri is thinking, and a swipe down gesture at the top of the screen gives easy access to chat with the assistant. On Mac, the chatbot will be integrated into Spotlight Search. Combined with Apple’s Visual Intelligence and Siri’s new ability to take screenshots and camera views as input, the result appears similar to Gemini’s capabilities on Android phones.
In the dedicated Siri app, Apple showed new text and image generation capabilities, the ability to analyse files, and much-improved voice dictation. Siri AI will be available as a beta in Australia later this year, and will initially be available only in English. Apple said the improved chatbot was not coming to iPhones in Europe owing to local legislation, and was not currently planned for China.
It’s a pivotal moment for Apple, which has to demonstrate to investors and consumers that its AI technology is back on track. Elsewhere, Apple Intelligence is being used to add more AI features to many of the apps included with Apple devices, with the new features scheduled to launch with this September’s OS updates:
Safari will be able to organise your tabs into topics, watch a website to notify you of changes and create new extensions if you describe them. Apple’s AI will be able to sign in to services on your behalf and automatically change your passwords to make them more secure.
Photos will get new editing tools that allow users to reframe and even adjust the angle of images after they’re taken. The Google-like Clean Up tool is also getting an upgrade. Photos will now be labelled with an invisible SynthID watermark so they can be identified as AI-edited.
Image Playground will be overhauled to enable the generation of photorealistic images. Previously, Apple has limited its generations to cartoon-like images only. Users will be able to make edits by describing them, generate any aspect ratio, apply images to wallpapers or contact images and more. These images will also be SynthID labelled.
The Messages and Phone apps are getting context-specific suggestions similar to Google’s Magic Cue. This could include prompting users to turn information into a reminder or note, or surfacing confirmation codes or reservation details from your data when calling a business.
Underpinning almost all the new features are the company’s latest Apple Foundation Models, which were built on Google Gemini technology following a high-profile agreement between the tech giants made early this year . Like all Apple Intelligence features, the company said, its latest technology was custom-built and designed to run only on devices or in super-secure cloud environments. Apple continues to put privacy forward as a key differentiator in its AI products, reiterating that user data is never stored or made available to Apple at any point in the process.
Outgoing Apple chief Tim Cook acknowledges the crowd in California. Bloomberg
The market’s response to the latest announcements was tepid, with a stock gain of more than 3 per cent soon fizzing to close 1.9 per cent lower on Wall Street. Apple has been under pressure from investors to close a perceived gap in artificial intelligence features. The AI-powered Siri, alongside many other generative features, was first announced by Apple years ago, but the combination either failed to eventuate or arrived in stunted form.
At the conference, Apple’s software engineering boss, Craig Federighi, said the features were worth doing properly and carefully.
“Truly helpful AI must be centred on our users’ needs, deeply integrated into the products they rely on every day, grounded in personal context, and built with privacy at every step,” he said.
“With useful features for browsing the web, expressing creativity, editing photos and so much more, today marks a big step forward on our journey to integrate powerful AI into the core of our platforms and make our prod…
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