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Apple Needs to Evolve to Compete in the Artificial Intelligence Era

Apple Needs to Evolve to Compete in the Artificial Intelligence Era

Apple was caught flat-footed in the generative AI race, and the company will need to change its strategy if it wants to catch up. Also: The misguided attempt to differentiate the iPad from the Mac; get ready for a new AirTag; and Apple banks on Asia to make the Vision Pro a success.

Apple Inc. has faced its share of challenges during Tim Cook’s tenure, but none may be bigger than the one it’s contending with now: the need to come from behind and win in artificial intelligence.

As chief executive officer, Cook successfully steered Apple away from a potential rut after the death of Steve Jobs in 2011. He navigated a trade war with China, proved the company could still pioneer new product categories and fought off smartphone rivals like Samsung Electronics Co. But the dawn of AI is his biggest test to date.

To give a sense of what Cook is up against, let’s compare this to a basketball game. Coming in, Apple has actually practiced longer than its rivals and has the home court. After all, it launched the Siri digital assistant in 2011, years before others got into the space. And yet, the game is now underway and Apple is already down 20 points.

Even if it’s only the game’s first quarter, staging a comeback is going to be difficult for Apple. Their competitors (OpenAI and Alphabet Inc.’s Google) have become AI superstars, and they’re only getting stronger as the contest goes on. Apple’s priority now is not getting smoked on its home floor.

Of course, Apple has some advantages of its own — money, talent and a powerful platform — and should at least be able to make it a closer game. But it will require a meaningful change to its strategy, as well as some help from its AI competitors.

Though Apple might disagree, the company’s AI-related features like Siri have been stymied by an outsized reliance on processing information on the iPhone itself and a lack of data collection. Apple does both these things deliberately, part of its efforts to protect privacy and security. But they don’t always make for the best experience.

The good news is, Apple has an opportunity to start fresh. The company is unveiling new generative AI features at its Worldwide Developers Conference on June 10 and is poised to make some bold changes.

Though the company will still rely on the on-device approach — with its own large language models powering AI features on phones and computers — it’s also planning to deliver services via the cloud. As I’ve reported, Apple is putting high-end Mac chips into its data centers to handle these online features.

The move shows that Apple recognizes the need to evolve. As part of the changes, the company will improve Siri’s voice capabilities, giving it a more conversational feel, and add features that help users with their day-to-day lives — an approach it calls “proactive intelligence.”

That includes services like auto-summarizing notifications from your iPhone, giving a quick synopsis of news articles and transcribing voice memos, as well as improving existing features that auto-populate your calendar and suggest apps. There will also be some enhancements to photos in the form of AI-based editing, but none of those features will impress people who have used AI in Adobe Inc.’s apps for the last several months.

The big missing item here is a chatbot. Apple’s generative AI technology isn’t advanced enough for the company to release its own equivalent of ChatGPT or Gemini. Moreover, some of its top executives are allergic to the idea of Apple going in that direction. Chatbot mishaps have brought controversy to companies like Google, and they could hurt Apple’s reputation.

But the company knows consumers will demand such a feature, and so it’s teaming up with OpenAI to add the startup’s technology to iOS 18, the next version of the iPhone’s software. The companies are preparing a major announcement of their partnership at WWDC, with Sam Altman-led OpenAI now racing to ensure it has the capacity to support the influx of users later this year.

Still, that agreement will only go so far. To be as successful as possible in AI, Apple is going to have to eventually move away from a partnership approach, build a chatbot of its own and integrate it deeply into the company’s products. For now, it believes the combination of its homegrown AI features (both on devices and in the cloud) and the OpenAI deal will be enough to get the job done.

Though Apple has held talks to license Google’s Gemini for iOS 18 as well, the parties haven’t reached an agreement, and we’re less than a month away from WWDC.

Then there’s the question of how to handle online searches. For years, Apple has toyed with the idea of building a search engine of its own — possibly one with privacy features that would make it more like DuckDuckGo than Google or Bing. Given how close search and AI are aligned, Apple should probably revisit this idea and move forward with its own search technology.

That would be costly. Apple gets billions of dollars a year from Google to have that company’s search engine be the default option on devices. But in the long run, Apple having its own AI-based search engine could be worth more.

Last week, both OpenAI and Google  rolled out the next phase of their AI efforts, putting Apple even further behind. OpenAI’s GPT-4o model can hold a lifelike conversation, prepare users for a job interview, portray sarcasm and even serve as a customer service agent. It’s all ridiculously impressive — and scary to some extent. For its part, Google is deeply integrating generative AI into search.

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