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Apple’s AI Catch-Up: WWDC Reveals a Gemini-Powered Siri

At WWDC 2026, Apple unveiled a reimagined, Gemini-powered Siri and opened the assistant to rival chatbots — a high-stakes bid to catch up in the AI race.

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After two years of stumbles, Apple used WWDC 2026 to make its long-awaited AI move. The company unveiled a reimagined Siri built on Google’s Gemini models, opened the assistant to rival chatbots, and showcased new on-device foundation models — a high-stakes bid to catch up in an AI race it has been seen as lagging. The question hanging over the keynote: is Apple’s AI moment finally here?

A new Siri

The assistant got a long-overdue overhaul. Apple rebuilt Siri on Google’s Gemini models, promising more natural voice interaction and visual intelligence, a dramatic shift for a company that prizes control. Pairing its own ecosystem with a partner’s frontier model reflects pragmatism — leaning on outside expertise to deliver the capable assistant users have demanded.

Opening to rivals

The bigger surprise was openness. Apple is allowing rival chatbots like Claude and Gemini to integrate with Siri, letting users route questions to their preferred AI. For a famously closed platform, embracing third-party assistants is a notable concession — and a recognition that no single company, even Apple, can dominate every layer of AI.

On-device innovation

Privacy remains the pitch. Apple’s third-generation foundation models move weights to flash storage, enabling 20-billion-parameter on-device AI without requiring full memory capacity — a clever engineering trick to run capable models locally. That keeps sensitive processing on the device, reinforcing the privacy-first story Apple has long told.

The catch-up question

Apple has ground to make up. Rivals have raced ahead with generative AI, and Apple’s earlier efforts underwhelmed, fueling perceptions it had fallen behind. WWDC 2026 represents a serious attempt to close that gap — but whether the combination of Gemini, openness and on-device models is enough to lead, rather than merely catch up, remains to be seen.

Why it matters

Apple’s scale changes everything. With more than a billion devices, even a catch-up move puts capable AI in front of an enormous audience, shaping how mainstream users experience the technology. Apple’s embrace of partners and openness also signals how the AI landscape is consolidating around a few frontier models that everyone, including Apple, must tap.

The bottom line

Apple’s WWDC 2026 unveiled a Gemini-powered Siri, openness to rival chatbots, and clever on-device models — a determined catch-up in the AI race. The strategy blends Apple’s privacy ethos with pragmatic partnerships, putting capable AI before a vast user base. Whether it is enough to lead remains uncertain, but after years of stumbles, Apple has finally made its AI intentions clear.

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