Apple used its biggest stage of the year to admit what the market had suspected: it needs help with AI. At WWDC 2026 in Cupertino on June 8, the company unveiled a dramatically rebuilt Siri — powered, strikingly, by Google’s Gemini — and signaled a more open Apple Intelligence. It also marked a milestone, billed as Tim Cook’s final keynote at the helm.
A Gemini-powered Siri
The headline was the long-delayed Siri overhaul. The revamped assistant gains a dedicated chat mode, the ability to handle multi-step commands, deeper Dynamic Island integration, and developer extensions — all running on Google’s Gemini models. For a company that has marketed itself on doing AI its own way, leaning on a rival’s frontier model is a notable concession that building a competitive assistant in-house was taking too long.
Apple Intelligence opens up
Apple also moved to loosen its walled garden. With iOS 27, iPadOS 27 and macOS 27, users will be able to set third-party AI services as the default for Apple Intelligence features such as Writing Tools and Image Playground. That is a meaningful philosophical shift: rather than forcing everyone through Apple’s own models, the platform will let people pick the engine they trust.
Why the Gemini deal matters
Partnering with Google is pragmatic and risky at once. It gives Apple a genuinely capable assistant now, not in some future release — but it also deepens Apple’s dependence on Google, already its default search partner, and invites fresh antitrust scrutiny of the two giants’ relationship. For users, the practical question is simpler: does Siri finally work the way it was always promised to?
A send-off for Cook
The keynote carried extra weight as what was framed as Tim Cook’s last WWDC address leading the company. Under Cook, Apple grew into the world’s most valuable company on the strength of the iPhone and services — but his tenure has also been defined, lately, by the perception that Apple fell behind on generative AI. Handing Siri to Gemini is, in that light, both a fix and an acknowledgment.
The bottom line
WWDC 2026 was less a victory lap than a reset. Apple chose to ship a working AI assistant on someone else’s model and to let users bring their own — a humbler, more open posture than the company usually strikes. Whether it restores Apple’s reputation in AI now depends on execution, the one thing Apple has historically been trusted to deliver.
Photo: public domain via flickr