As with any investment they make in their platform, they hope it will make more people buy their devices and use their services than if they didn't build out this functionality. And they hope it will make existing customer stick with them.
In reading the rest of this comment, understand that I am far convinced how useful all the large language model stuff will be in the long term. I use it extensively for technical stuff, as when you use it with a good understanding of its limitations, in areas where you have enough understanding to spot its mistakes, it can be very effective.
Apple AI covers a
lot of different and varied features.
Writing tools - this is all the "summarise this", "make this more formal" stuff which uses Apple LLM models and also "Compose text" which uses ChatGPT to generate completely new text from prompts
I can definitely see quite a few people using those features, not everyone is confident in their writing so I can see it having some appeal. There are also subtle but unmissable (not Clippy) prompts to use it, so I think there is a chance people will actually discover these features.
There will of course be news stories of people who claim to have got sacked because Apple AI summarised something for them and made a significant mistake (which it definitely will do, it is an LLM).
Apple Mail - the mail app attempts to identify important messages, it summaries messages when viewing them in a list and it has "smart reply" stuff to attempt (basically fancy auto complete for suggesting whole replies to emails). It also has automatic filing of emails into categories (like GMail has done for a long time),
I think plenty of people will use all of that, though as with all LLM stuff it remains to be seen if Apple can crack things like making the summaries accurate, they have a long way to go from what I've seen so far. I think a lot of people will use the automatic categories, if Apple make it work well (for me it hasn't, but I've seen other people who love it).
Messages - has conversation summaries and "smart reply" stuff
Safari - webpage summaries, can be fairly handy, but few people will ever use it because it is two taps deep...
Phone and audio recordings - transcripts and summaries of those transcripts. Looks handy, but I expect few people will ever notice they can record a call or record audio in Notes (the age old discovery of new features problem)
Image Playground - generates [censored] images with a very Apple UI (mainly there to try and stop you from making images of famous people or making porn/other content some people find upsetting). The sort of thing that people might use for a few weeks and then get bored
Genmoji - lets you create your own emoji with a prompt
Many people
love emoji, I can see this getting lot of use (more message threads where you have to guess what people actually mean 😢)
Image Wand - lets you generate an image from a sketch you have made.
I can see this being actually useful for people, if Apple can get it to generate good quality images.
Photos - they have used it to make the search far, far better. You can also use a prompt to create a memory and they've added a reasonably ok generative image clean up tool.
Plenty of people will use the search and the clean up tool (for those who actually realise they can edit their photos)
Notifications - this is what made the headlines with clumsy and inaccurate summarisation of BBC New app notifications.
Plenty of people will leave this enabled, lets see if Apple can actually make it give accurate summaries...
Siri - the current changes to Siri are mostly UI. But it now uses the ChatGPT to answer some stuff inline and it will also for some queries hand you off to ChatGPT proper.
People aren't going to be impressed with Siri in 18.3, because it doesn't have the potentially transformative changes that Apple announced last year.
I've probably missed some stuff.
-------------------
When you say "I don't think most people are that bothered about AI to be honest", I think you are probably right. They probably aren't bothered about the nebulous concept of "AI".
But they will be bothered about actually useful or fun new features that are enabled by "AI" (if they do actually turn out to be useful/fun). Apple AI is many things beyond just a chatbot.
And on the subject of Siri, at the moment is appears to be universally recognised as being worse and Alex and Google Assistant (though in my experience Alexa on my aging Echo Show is just as bad as Siri).
The changes Apple have planned for Siri, if they can actually make them work, would be game changing. Obviously Goole/Amazon/OpenAI/etc are also working to to the same things.
The changes are roughly:
- combine the current basic "turn on this", "set a timer" interface with something akin to asking ChatGPT questions
- giving Siri access to various data on your device (contacts, emails, messages, data in other apps)
- giving Siri the ability to take actions within any app that chooses to make itself available to Siri
If they can actually make that work well, then you Siri could actually be that dreamed for (by some at least) digital assistant that understand your personal context:
"Siri, what time does my aunts flight get in ?"
"Her email from Tuesday says she gets in at two this afternoon. Her flight is with BA, arriving at terminal 5"
"How long will it take me to get there"
"With traffic the drive to Heathrow will be around 45 minutes. Her flight is due in an hour from now, do you want me to message her and let her know you are leaving soon ?"
"Yes please"
"Ok, I've messaged her and I've put a route into Maps for you. Don't forget that last time you went to Heathrow you got a parking ticket for stay in the short stay car park for too long"
"What is the longest you can stay in short stay ?"
"60 minutes"
and as you are driving to the airport
"I have an update on your aunt's flight, looks like it is going to be 30 minutes late arriving. Do you want me to plan a route to the medium stay car park ?"
"Yes"
Who knows if Apple (or anyone else can actually pull this off), if they do I think the EU is going to insist they make all the hooks into iOS to do it available to everyone else as well...
So, in summary:
More caveats than a software license agreement.
More caveats than a used car salesman’s promises.
More caveats than a reality TV contract.
More caveats than an online dating profile.
More caveats than a magician’s trick reveal.
More caveats than an insurance policy’s terms and conditions.
More caveats than a politician’s campaign speech.
More caveats than the ingredients list on a diet snack.
More caveats than a Wi-Fi hotspot in a coffee shop.
More caveats than a time traveler’s warning.
More caveats than a genie’s wish-granting manual.
(ChatGPT's finest work, humorous phrases is not an area it shines in, though the genie one is ok, I'd have gone with "More caveats than a genie’s instruction manual")
Edited by andynormancx (Sat 01-Feb-25 09:17:42)