Apple finally rolled up its AI sleeves — and Tim Cook is stepping down
At WWDC 2026, Siri got real conversation, Apple teamed up with Google and Nvidia for the heavy lifting, and Tim Cook announced he'll leave in September.
For years the joke wrote itself: Siri is the assistant that understands everything except what you actually asked. At this year’s WWDC, Apple decided to retire the punchline.
The headliner was a revamped Siri that can hold a proper back-and-forth conversation. In a demo, it checked concert dates, set a reminder to buy tickets, and even mapped the route to pick up a friend along the way. It’s the leap a lot of people were waiting for — and one rivals made a while ago.
Apple asking for help (and that’s fine)
The most telling part was backstage. Apple admitted its most powerful cloud model runs on Nvidia GPUs and that it’s extending its “Private Cloud Compute” beyond its own data centers, leaning on Google Cloud too. In other words: the company that loves doing everything in-house realised that in the AI race, it’s better to show up with company.
And the goodbye
Tucked into the close of the keynote was the news no one expected: Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO since 2011, announced he’s preparing to step down in September. End of an era. For the rest of us — including anyone using an iPhone here in Portugal — the practical translation is simple: phones from the iPhone 11 onward get the update, with photos opening 70% faster and AirDrop 80% quicker. Small everyday luxuries.
Image: Wikimedia Commons