The Verge tested the new Siri AI shipping with iOS 27 at WWDC 2026 and came away cautiously impressed. The headline feature: Siri can now read unstructured emails or poorly formatted flyers and add events — like soccer schedules or school spirit-week theme days — directly to your calendar in one step. It's a practical, everyday win and a sign that Apple Intelligence is beginning to deliver on real-world utility.
Apple announced “Siri AI,” a more conversational version of its voice assistant planned for this fall. The update is tied to a two-tier AI model overhaul powered in part by Google technology. The move signals Apple’s attempt to close the gap with modern AI assistants while preserving its system-level integration and privacy-focused positioning.
Apple announced a major Apple Intelligence overhaul built around Apple Foundation Models co-developed with Google using technologies behind Gemini. The architecture supports on-device and Private Cloud Compute execution, with stronger reasoning, understanding, and multimodal capabilities. A new system orchestrator coordinates AI features across Apple platforms, though Apple has not yet specified which devices receive the higher-power model.
Apple announced improvements to Image Playground at WWDC 2026, positioning the iPhone’s built-in AI image generator as a more capable tool. The update emphasizes natural-language photo transformations, multi-person image use, flexible output dimensions, and integrations across lock screens, iMessage backgrounds, and contact posters. TechCrunch has not tested it yet, but the presentation suggests Apple Intelligence apps may become more practical.
The Verge frames Apple as behind in AI, but argues that lagging may not be entirely bad. At WWDC, Apple appears ready to introduce the new Siri again after earlier Apple Intelligence promises slipped. The key question is whether Apple can turn AI into a reliable, system-level assistant experience rather than another generic chatbot feature set.
INSIDE reports that a major iOS 27 leak points to a redesigned Siri experience, potentially arriving as a standalone app rather than only a system voice assistant. The new Siri is said to integrate deeply with Dynamic Island, suggesting a more visible and persistent interaction layer. The headline also mentions camera customization, but the available text does not provide enough detail to confirm how that feature would work.