Computing

Report: Apple’s AI plans for Siri hit major roadblocks behind the scenes



A new report from Bloomberg has claimed that the Apple’s plans for an AI overhaul of its Siri voice assistant have not gone as smoothly as the brand originally hoped, but that plans plans may be subject to a delay.

The publication indicated that the Siri team recently had an all-hands meeting where Apple senior director Robby Walker, discussed the state of the project, calling the delay an “ugly” situation.

He reportedly told the team there’s no guarantee the Siri features will be ready for iOS 19 this year, but “doesn’t mean that we’re shipping then,” he said.

Currently, Apple is aiming to release the feature in June to coincide with its mobile software. The Verge noted that Apple first planned to launch the AI-inundated Siri last June to compete with the brand’s contemporaries in the market.

Last week, a brand spokesperson confirmed to Daring Fireball a second delay of the feature, which was rumored to launch in April with iOS 18.4. Reports before that noted that the project, known internally as ”LLM Siri,” could be delayed potentially for several iOS generations, up until 2027.

A longer timeline

It also appears Apple may be prioritizing other developments over the Siri project at this time. The company is rumored to have several upcoming hardware launches, in addition to the aforementioned iOS 19 rollouts. Reports also indicate the brand plans to being the way its platforms work closer together, to bring a more consistent experience.

Apple is expected to showcase the updates at the World Wide Developers Conference in June. If true, the Siri project could be held back even further.

“We have other commitments across Apple to other projects. We want to keep our commitments to those, and we understand those are now potentially more timeline-urgent than the features that have been deferred,” Walker said, per the Bloomberg report.

While there has been only one official statement from Apple, there has reportedly been a lot of buzz among the company’s senior executives behind the scenes. Walker is said to have told the Siri team that software chief Craig Federighi, and AI head John Giannandrea, among others, are taking “intense personal accountability” for the advanced features of Siri “taking longer than expected.”

In a prior Bloomberg report,  it was suggested Federighi discussed having concerns over features malfunctioning during internal tests.

However, Walker assured his team that their progress on the project was impressive and that Siri’s AI features would launch as soon as they were ready.

“Customers are not expecting only these new features, but they also want a more fully rounded-out Siri. These are not quite ready to go to the general public, even though our competitors might have launched them in this state or worse,” he said.








READ SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.