Apple continues with its prepared plan for the launch of AI functions within the Apple Intelligence combo. In the coming days, iOS 18.1 is likely to be officially launched, the Big Apple’s first major litmus test to bring its artificial intelligence closer to users. Later, iOS 18.2 will arrive with functions such as Visual Intelligence. Everything seems to be going smoothly… within Apple’s plans. However, Apple internal sources believe they are two years behind with respect to artificial intelligence. But Mark Gurman assures that they believe they will make up for the gap over time.

Apple will recover its delay in AI despite its lag

Artificial intelligence has been with us for a couple of years and since then many technology companies have dedicated millions to developing their own tools and services for their products. However, during this time Apple seemed to have focused on virtual reality with the launch of the Apple Vision Pro, although promising that AI functions will arrive no matter what. Finally, Apple Intelligence was presented at WWDC24 and although the full launch will not take place until well into 2025, Apple will hide behind the fact that these functions will arrive.

Apple Intelligence

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Apple accelerates the renewal of Siri with Apple Intelligence: this is the expected schedule

In it new sunday bulletin by Mark Gurman, the leaker assures that internal Apple sources They seriously believe that they are two years behind in the evolution of artificial intelligence functions. The design of its technology is complex for several reasons. To preserve the user’s privacy, Apple wants to make all its models work inside the device and that means more power with more powerful chips, which new devices are gradually having. Therefore limiting the upload of content to the cloud to extract better answers. That’s what ChatGPT’s integration with the entire iOS 18 ecosystem will be for.

However, Gurman believes that the lag in artificial intelligence will cease to exist in a couple of years. Apple will get around the problem by developing and investing in its own engineers or buying companies that could develop services for them. It is similar to what happened with Apple Maps in its origins. The launch in 2012 was a complete disaster with bad maps and terrible user experiences. A few years later, the evolution was clear and it is currently one of the browsers most used by users.