From www.macrumors.com
A new report from The Information today reveals much of the internal turmoil behind Apple Intelligence‘s revamped version of Siri.
Apple apparently weighed up multiple options for the backend of Apple Intelligence. One initial idea was to build both small and large language models, dubbed “Mini Mouse” and “Mighty Mouse,” to run locally on iPhones and in the cloud, respectively. Siri’s leadership then decided to go in a different direction and build a single large language model to handle all requests via the cloud, before a series of further technical pivots. The indecision and repeated changes in direction reportedly frustrated engineers and prompted some members of staff to leave Apple.
In addition to Apple’s deeply ingrained stance on privacy, conflicting personalities within Apple contributed to the problems. More than half a dozen former employees who worked in Apple’s AI and machine-learning group told The Information that poor leadership is to blame for its problems with execution, citing an overly relaxed culture, as well as a lack of ambition and appetite for taking risks when designing future versions of Siri.
Apple’s AI/ML group has been dubbed “AIMLess” internally, while employees are said to refer to Siri as a “hot potato” that is continually passed between different teams with no significant improvements. There were also conflicts about higher pay, faster promotions, longer vacations, and shorter days for colleagues in the AI group.
Apple AI chief John Giannandrea was apparently confident he could fix Siri with the right training data and better web-scraping for answers to general knowledge questions. Senior leaders didn’t respond with a sense of urgency to the debut of ChatGPT in 2022; Giannandrea told employees that he didn’t believe chatbots like ChatGPT added much value for users.
In 2023, Apple managers told engineers that they were forbidden from including models from other companies in final Apple products and could only use them to benchmark against their own models, but Apple’s own models “didn’t perform nearly as well as OpenAI’s technology.”
Meanwhile, Siri leader Robby Walker focused on “small wins” such as reducing wait times for Siri responses. One of Walker’s pet projects was removing the “hey” from the “hey Siri” voice command used to invoke the assistant, which took over two years to achieve. He also shot down an effort from a team of engineers to use LLMs to give Siri more emotional sensitivity so it could detect and give appropriate responses to users in distress.
Apple started a project codenamed “Link” to develop voice commands to control apps and complete tasks for the Vision Pro, with plans to allow users to navigate the web and resize windows with voice alone, as well as support commands from multiple people in a shared virtual space to collaborate. Most of these features were dropped because of the Siri team’s inability to achieve them.
The report claims that the demo of Apple Intelligence’s most impressive features at WWDC 2024, such as where Siri accesses a user’s emails to find real-time flight data and provides a reminder about lunch plans using messages and plots a route in maps, was effectively fictitious. The demo apparently came as a surprise to members of the Siri team, who had never seen working versions of the capabilities.
The only feature from the WWDC demonstration that was activated on test devices was Apple Intelligence’s pulsing, colorful ribbon around the edge of the display. The decision to showcase an artificial demonstration was a major departure from Apple’s past behavior, where it would only show features and products at its events that were already working on test devices and that its marketing team had approved to ensure they could be released on schedule.
Some Apple employees are said to be optimistic that Craig Federighi and Mike Rockwell can turn Siri around. Federighi has apparently instructed Siri engineers to do “whatever it takes to build the best AI features,” even if that means using open-source models from other companies in its software products as opposed to Apple’s own models.
For more details on Apple’s Siri debacle, see The Information‘s full report.
Popular Stories
iOS 19 Leak Reveals Alleged New Design With Rounder App Icons, Floating Tab Bar, and More
YouTube channel Front Page Tech is back today with another video that provides a closer look at iOS 19’s alleged design changes. The video contains re-created renders of iOS 19, which are allegedly based on real footage of the software update, provided by sources within Apple. Overall, iOS 19 is expected to have a more glass-like, visionOS-inspired design, with added translucency for user…
iPhone 17 Pro’s New Rear Camera Bar ‘Same Color As Rest of Device’
Apple’s upcoming iPhone 17 Pro models will feature a redesigned rear camera panel that spans the width of the device, but it will be the same color as the iPhone itself, rather than being part of a two-tone design. That’s according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. Writing in his latest Power On newsletter, the reporter says the iPhone 17 Pro won’t have a two-toned back, as some renders have…
Apple Planning ‘Bold’ New 20th Anniversary Design for 2027 iPhone Pro
Apple is preparing a “major shake-up” for the iPhone’s 20th anniversary in 2027, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. iPhone X released in 2017 for 10th anniversary Writing in his latest Power On newsletter, Gurman says that Apple plans to launch a foldable iPhone alongside a “bold” new iPhone Pro model that makes more extensive use of glass. Could this mean Apple plans to realize former…
Trump Believes Apple Could Manufacture iPhones in the U.S.
Tuesday April 8, 2025 12:08 pm PDT by Juli Clover
U.S. President Donald Trump “absolutely” believes that Apple could manufacture its iPhones and other devices in the United States, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said today during a media briefing. Leavitt was asked whether Trump thought that iPhone manufacturing is the kind of technology that could move to the U.S. “Absolutely, he believes we have the labor, we have the workforce, we have …
5 Biggest Changes Rumored for iPhone 17 Pro
Tuesday April 8, 2025 2:38 am PDT by Tim Hardwick
Later this year, Apple will introduce the iPhone 17 series, which includes the iPhone 17 Pro and the iPhone 17 Pro Max, two new high-end flagship devices that will be sold alongside the regular iPhone 17 and an all-new ultra-thin iPhone 17 Air. If you have been holding out for the iPhone 17 Pro or its bigger sibling, here are five of the biggest changes, informed by the latest reports and…
Is Now the Time to Upgrade Apple Devices Before Tariffs Lead to Price Increases?
Friday April 4, 2025 3:41 pm PDT by Juli Clover
If you have an older Apple device that you’ve been considering upgrading, you’re probably wondering how the newly announced tariffs might impact prices going forward, and whether it’s worth buying now before there’s a price hike. Given analyst and economist responses to the tariffs, market panic, and Trump’s stance on the current financial chaos, the answer is that making a purchase…
iPhone 17 Pro Models Rumored to Offer Dual Video Recording Feature in Camera App
YouTube channel Front Page Tech on Monday shared renders of iOS 19’s alleged new design. The end of the video also revealed a new feature that is supposedly planned for the iPhone 17 Pro models later this year: dual video recording. According to Front Page Tech host Jon Prosser, the iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max will allow users to record video with the front and rear cameras…
Vision Pro 2 May Now Be in Production Ahead of Launch Later This Year
The second-generation Apple Vision Pro may now be in mass production ahead of its rumored launch later this year, Chinese website IT Home today claims. Reporting on information from an unknown source, the website says that key components of the new Vision Pro, including panels, housings, and circuitry, have moved into mass production ahead of the product’s purported release later in 2025….
Report Reveals Internal Chaos Behind Apple’s Siri Failure
A new report from The Information today reveals much of the internal turmoil behind Apple Intelligence’s revamped version of Siri. Apple apparently weighed up multiple options for the backend of Apple Intelligence. One initial idea was to build both small and large language models, dubbed “Mini Mouse” and “Mighty Mouse,” to run locally on iPhones and in the cloud, respectively. Siri’s…
[ For more curated Apple news, check out the main news page here]
The post Report Reveals Internal Chaos Behind Apple’s Siri Failure first appeared on www.macrumors.com