Apple's new Siri will run on Gemini and let you pick the AI
At WWDC, Apple unveiled a rebuilt Siri powered by a Google Gemini model and a system that lets users choose between ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude.
Apple tends to arrive late to the party, but it arrives in a tailored suit. At its developer conference, the company finally unveiled the big overhaul of Siri, the assistant that had been crying out for a reboot for years.
The news that got people talking is who Apple teamed up with. The new Siri will be built on a custom Google model, Gemini, in a deal that will pay the Android maker around a billion dollars a year. The assistant now speaks more naturally, back and forth, and can chain tasks together: check the dates of a concert, set a reminder to buy tickets, and even map the route to pick up a friend.
Pick your engine
The most interesting detail for the curious is the extensions system. Apple will let users choose which artificial intelligence powers certain features, between ChatGPT, Gemini and Anthropic’s Claude. It is Apple doing what it does best: taking other people’s technology and wrapping it its own way.
The company leans hard on the privacy argument, noting it collects less data than cloud-based AI services and uses information stored on the phone itself to personalise. Investors were not entirely convinced: the stock fell close to 2 per cent after the announcement.
For the everyday user, the takeaway is simple. The AI war is no longer fought only in labs, it is fought on the phone in our pocket, and Apple has just stepped into it for real.
See also: OpenAI’s GPT-5.6. More at Apple’s official site.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons