Siri is superpowered with Apple Intelligence
Apple Intelligence makes Siri much more powerful, as it can understand the user given specific contexts, even if they stumble over their words.

Siri gets upgraded with Apple Intelligence
Siri has been the butt of the joke for years as it fell behind in the smart assistant race. Apple hopes to correct this trajectory by integrating Apple Intelligence throughout.
If you've been keeping up with WWDC news via AppleInsider, you'll note we shared all of these features ahead of the event.
Apple has built Siri to be more present throughout the operating system, acting as a true intelligent assistant that understands data from Messages, Mail, Photos, and any system app. For example, make plans by requesting a rescheduled meeting that takes into account data from Calendar, a planned movie date in Messages, and other system information.
Siri can understand the user better by understanding when mistakes are made in speech. This is especially important when dealing with accents or disabilities affecting speech.
The new Siri is built with the same technologies powering Apple Intelligence. It prioritizes privacy even with intimate access to user data, photos, and messages.
Siri can control functions across system apps. Like toggling features or opening apps to specific files.

Siri gets upgraded with Apple Intelligence
Siri has been the butt of the joke for years as it fell behind in the smart assistant race. Apple hopes to correct this trajectory by integrating Apple Intelligence throughout.
If you've been keeping up with WWDC news via AppleInsider, you'll note we shared all of these features ahead of the event.
Apple has built Siri to be more present throughout the operating system, acting as a true intelligent assistant that understands data from Messages, Mail, Photos, and any system app. For example, make plans by requesting a rescheduled meeting that takes into account data from Calendar, a planned movie date in Messages, and other system information.
Siri can understand the user better by understanding when mistakes are made in speech. This is especially important when dealing with accents or disabilities affecting speech.
The new Siri is built with the same technologies powering Apple Intelligence. It prioritizes privacy even with intimate access to user data, photos, and messages.
Siri can control functions across system apps. Like toggling features or opening apps to specific files.
Apps with Apple Intelligence Siri support:
- Books
- Calendar
- Camera
- Contacts
- Files
- Freeform
- Keynote
- Magnifier
- News
- Notes
- Photos
- Reminders
- Safari
- Stocks
- Settings
- Voice Memos
Apple introduced the upgraded Siri as a part of iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia. It will launch alongside the new operating systems in the fall.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Guys, this is not the final state of Apple Intelligence. This is just the beginning in the same way that many of Apple's other services and features have evolved.
Apple has a long and distinguished track record of not just dumping a load on the consumer's doorstep, wiping off their hands, and walking away saying "we're done here."
Anyone who believes there will be no additions or improvements to Apple's GenAI efforts is insane.
Apple is not capable of delivering everything everyone could ever want right now. Nor can anyone else. Patience is a virtue, you need to learn to crawl before you can walk. I really don't know why some people seem to have difficulty understanding this.
Remember that the SoCs don't just differ by core counts or clock cycles. There are memory considerations, bandwidth considerations, etc. Even older A-series devices are getting shut out including the fairly recent iPhone 14 generation (there are plenty of those devices still around).
Everything will function the same tomorrow as they did yesterday. But if you want the newer functionality, you'll need to upgrade whether you think it's "fair" or not.
If you have owned Apple hardware devices more than a year, you should be familiar Apple's modus operandii about such matters.
As for porting new Siri functionality to HomePod, it's not Apple's top priority. Even in 2024 50% of their revenue comes from iPhone hardware sales, that's the driving force for innovation.
I've been with Apple since before Macs. Based on my own experience with the company, they will add no additional Siri functionality to the existing HomePod products. Future products that have a compatible SoC may have newer Siri capabilities but in any case they didn't even discuss Siri and Music. I assume Siri+Music improvements are coming. What no one but Apple knows is when.
You will have to be patient about improvements to HomePod OS.
A far more pressing topic for Apple is how to implement AI functionality on Apple Watch whose silicon is extremely limited in performance. Will AI processing be done on a paired phone (or maybe a nearby paired Mac) instead? That creates latency.
Let's face it, HomePod is pretty far down the hierarchy of Apple product families in terms of overall importance and adoption. My guess is it's also low margin. While I've never owned one, I'm not even sure if I'd call HomePod a smart speaker. It's more like a regular speaker with a microphone attached.
In this morning's keynote Apple did not cover usage scenarios that could (eventually) be handled by offloading AI processing loads to a suitable Mac nearby. This would allow them to put lower-specced (and cheaper) SoCs in devices like Apple TV, HomePod, AirPods (and other future wearables). My gut feeling is that we are a year or two away from Apple devising an approach that would make this a reality. Clearly Apple can't put an A17 or M4 SoC in an Apple Watch.
As far as I know, no one who is a serious classical music listener can rely on Siri (or any other assistant) to get the navigation correct here in 2024. Let's hope that Siri with some AI assistance can improve.
It's worth pointing out that Siri + Apple Intelligence still only recognizes American English. Well, a lot of opera is in languages other than English. So if I -- a native English speaker -- butcher the pronunciation of an opera aria "Siri, play 'O KonÏg! Das kann ich dir nicht sagen'", it'll be a freakin' miracle if the right song is played. And I have multiple recordings of Tristan und Isolde in my music library. Will it know which one to play?
I would love to be able to say "Hey Siri, play that Wagner piece when that knight gets stabbed." Not sure we're there yet. I would love when someone will inform me that I am wrong.
BTW, that's "O König..." I would have 3 points taken off my German score in the old days. Doesn't matter in your context.