Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 291: Apple's AI Announcements: The good, the bad and what no one‘s talking about
Episode Date: June 11, 2024Apple's trying real hard to make 'Apple Intelligence' more important than actual Artificial Intelligence. Why? Let's be honest - Apple got some things right when it comes to AI. Bu...t it probably got more things wrong. Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan questions on Apple's AIRelated Episodes: Ep 286: Apple’s AI – Too little, too late?EP 274: 7 things you need to know about GPT-4o and what OpenAI isn’t telling the truth aboutUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:1. Apple Intelligence and Its Offerings2. New and Improved Siri3. ChatGPT Integration with Apple's AI4. Criticisms and Disappointments with Apple's AI5. Predictions and Speculations with Apple AITimestamps:01:40 Daily AI news05:01 Apple rebrands AI as Apple Intelligence07:36 Apple's track record suggests future success.11:47 Apple's 3 billion parameter model is small.13:50 App turns sketches into images, offers cleanup tools.19:07 Talking less to devices, using on-screen awareness.22:35 Market reacts to Apple's business strategy change.25:42 OpenAI releases base model, with added features.26:49 Edge AI uses personal data, then private cloud.31:14 AI helps prioritize important notifications over others.36:23 AI use for internet, productivity, missed opportunities.37:21 Apple Intelligence may just be a wrapper.40:32 Siri's missing temperature and selective improvement criticism.44:43 Skeptical about Apple's new AI assistant.47:03 Siri suggests using ChatGPT for some tasks.52:28 NVIDIA important, Apple may decline in rank.Keywords:Apple criticism, lack of innovation, AI announcements, stock price, Siri capabilities, natural language processing, Apple Intelligence features, reliance on OpenAI, integration with ChatGPT, ChatGPT Plus, Apple AI model, Siri improvements, on-screen awareness, personal context, privacy and data security, GPT 4 model, WWDC, Apple Intelligence, Meta's data privacy coSend Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
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Apple just announced what it calls Apple intelligence.
So for the last two years, Apple's kind of been sitting on the sidelines and everyone's been
waiting.
What is Apple going to do in AI?
Are they going to change how we work or is it just going to be a big nothing burger?
So we're going to be talking about that today and more on everyday AI going over Apple's
AI announcements, the good, the bad, and what absolutely no one is talking about.
I'm excited for today's episode.
What's going on, y'all?
My name is Jordan Wilson.
I'm the host, and Everyday AI is for you.
It is your daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter, helping you make sense
of everything that's going on in the world of AI.
So if you didn't know, yeah, Apple finally, and probably one of the most highly anticipated
tech announcements, I don't know, over the last decade or so, Apple finally unveiled
the wraps on Apple intelligence.
It's new AI offering for iPhone, for MacBooks, and a lot more.
So extremely excited to talk about that in today's episode.
So if you're joining us from the podcast, thank you as always.
Make sure to check out your show notes for more on today's show.
And also a link and go to your everyday AI.com.
Sign it for the free daily newsletter.
We will be recapping today's show.
What's going on in AI news today and a whole lot more.
So let's start with that.
What is going on?
on in AI news today.
So we're going to go over the top stories.
Number one, Meta wants to train its AI model on European data.
So Meta, obviously the parent company to Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and probably some
other social media apps I don't use, wants to use data from European users to train its
AI language models.
So this has raised concern about data privacy with a Vienna-based group urging privacy
watchdogs to intervene.
Meta has stated that it will not use private messages or data from users under 18
and has given the option for users to opt out.
So meta believes that the training data on European data is important for accurate
and culturally aware AI models.
This updated privacy policy will go into effect on June 26 and training for the next
model will begin soon thereafter.
Speaking of data and training, well, Microsoft recall is changing how it functions.
So Microsoft's their new AI-powered recall feature, which they announced at their Microsoft
Build Conference, and it automatically just literally kind of records everything you do on your
computer and you can talk to it.
But it's obviously faced criticism for privacy risks.
So in response, Microsoft makes some changes, such as making it opt-in instead of opt-out
and adding some additional encryption.
Some commend the swift action, while others expressed disappointment.
Microsoft plans to conduct further testing and review to address privacy and security concerns.
Last but not least, on that security and privacy concerns issue, Elon Musk says he'll ban Apple devices.
So billionaire Elon Musk went on his social media platform and axed.
I think, what do we call tweeted?
He put out an ex post and warned of what he said are potential security risks from integrating open AI's
official intelligence software with Apple devices following a presentation by Apple announcing their
plans to incorporate OpenAI's chat GPT chatbot into the series digital assistant.
So Musk threatened to ban Apple devices from his companies if Open AI is integrated at the operating
system level.
That's, I don't know.
I find it funny.
So obviously Elon Musk has his ex-Grock AI chatbot that I don't know if anyone uses.
And it seems like, ah, he does a.
want other people to be using Open AI and chat GPT.
So sour grapes, I guess, pretty early on, right?
It's like when you see something that's better than what you created, you're like,
I don't want anyone using that.
All right, but go log on to your log on.
Do people still log on?
Go to your everyday AI.com.
Sign up for the free daily newsletter for more on those news stories and a lot more.
But let's get into today's topic, y'all.
I'm excited for this one.
So let's go over Apple's AI announcements at WWDC, their worldwide developer conference that just kicked off yesterday, but it's going to be happening all week.
So we should be seeing some more news, but the big news was just the opening keynote saying, hey, Apple unveiled their Apple intelligence.
So we're going to be going over the good, the bad, and what literally no one is talking about.
So let's start super high level.
So Apple intelligence is what Apple is called.
this, right? They're trying, only Apple would try to actually rebrand AI and artificial intelligence
and just say Apple intelligence, which is funny, because they said it like 60 times. I believe
the official count was somewhere around 60. They said Apple intelligence, but they very rarely
said artificial intelligence, which I found interesting. They'd say personal intelligence a lot,
some more on that later. And their slogan, I guess, was AI for the rest of us, which I have some
thoughts on that, which we'll get to later.
But let's first start with our take on all of this.
It is hot take Tuesday.
Every single Tuesday, we come with a hot take.
Yeah, if you're new here, Mondays, we go over the AI news that matters.
Tuesday, we do a hot take Tuesday.
And Wednesday through Friday, we usually bring on guest experts in interviews so you can
learn from them.
So our hot take Tuesday today, our hot take on Apple and their long-awaited AI announcements,
eh, me, that's kind of it.
But I think Apple created a seemingly basic AI model that won't be that great.
And we'll probably actually have to wait a long time to really use much of it or any of it.
So more on that here in a minute.
But let's go over first in overview of what's announced.
And then we're going to go over really what I think are the eight things that you need to know.
And we're also going to go over the good, the bad, and what no one's talking about.
So here's probably like the eight bullet point overview.
So if you only got a couple minutes, I'm not going to get mad if you leave after this.
So here's the eight things.
Number one, new AI model capabilities.
Yeah, Apple actually released a new model and didn't even really mention it by name in their
keynotes.
Number two, they have an AI image model in image generation.
Number three, they have actions that can happen with this Apple intelligence.
Number four, an improved Siri, maybe.
Number five, personal context.
Six, chat GPT integration.
finally, it's been released, right?
Seven, semantic media.
And eight, some AI functions in their main apps.
All right.
So let's go over two important pieces you need to know first.
So it's kind of a big release timeline.
So, you know, Apple generally has their WWBC conference in June.
And then they say, oh, you know, September 15th or September 20th, we're going to be rolling
all these things out.
We got a little bit more of a vague timeline.
So some of the things that Apple said, well, this is coming in fall.
So whether that means September or December, I guess is up to Apple.
And then other things such as some improvements in Siri, they said over the course of the next year.
So yeah, are we going to be seeing these anytime soon?
Not sure.
However, Apple is, I think has a much better track record than like Google as an example for actually shipping what they say they're going to ship.
So if they say over the course of the next year, yeah, it might be a week.
or two before their next WWDC announcement, but I do assume that Apple will actually ship these
things. And yeah, fall might end up being December and not September, but I do expect Apple has a
much better track record than most of the other big tech companies on actually shipping what
they say. So yeah, we might still be waiting with it, waiting for it. Also, there's a good chance
you aren't even going to be able to use it. So, you know, as an example, I like to put this out
there. I use everything Apple, everything, Macs.
I'm a little bit of a fan boy, but I'm looking at all the Microsoft stuff, and I'm like,
okay, that's, that's good.
I like that.
Hey, someone from Microsoft, some of a couple laptops or something, right?
Anyways, you might not even be able to use all this stuff because you need an iPhone 15 pro or higher to use most of this Apple intelligence on your iPhone.
Presumably the new iPhones that will be announced, Nax will also have compatibility.
but, you know, I'm even recording this, you know, live stream video here on a, I don't know,
an Apple 12 or something like that.
I don't know what number it is.
But yeah, I'm sure the majority of people aren't going to have access to this.
So, you know, Apple is obviously hoping everyone sprints out of their door and goes to buy,
you know, iPhone 15 pros or higher, or pro jumbos or proxels.
I don't actually know what they're called.
Or on your computer.
So come to MacBook as well, I think that's a little.
friendlier in terms of minimum requirements to ride this ride.
So you do need a Mac M-Series chip or higher.
So, you know, the Intel, Max, you know, those won't work.
But if you have an M1, M2, M3, et cetera, chip, Apple intelligence should work there.
All right.
Let's start with the important stuff here, y'all.
Number one is they have a new AI model, right?
So it was, it was interesting because Apple was kind of,
of vague, and maybe that was intentionally so, but they were a little vague,
vague on what Apple intelligence even is.
Is it a model in and of itself?
Not really.
It seems like it's just this umbrella term for a bunch of stuff that's presumably going on
under the hood, but no one was talking about this.
They didn't mention this by name, you know, during their presentations at the first day
of WWDC.
But yeah, there's an actual new model that they released that they just put on their
machine learning blog.
by name, which is funny because at least, you know, at 5 a.m. this morning, literally not a single
other human being in the world had talked about it. All right. So at least, you know, you're getting
some breaking news here. Maybe by the time you're listening to this, someone else has talked
about it. But essentially this, some of the stuff that's going under the hood, going on under
the hood is new models called Jacks. So, you know, original reporting was it was going to be called
Ajax like a year ago.
So it is the jacks and xLA that is kind of some of the background technology for this new model, right?
People are like, okay, so is the GPT model running this entire thing?
No, Apple has a base model running the majority of this Apple intelligence, Jacks and XLA.
And it is a 3 billion parameter on device model.
Okay, so that's edge AI.
So so much of, you know, what's going on locally and we'll get to.
that here in a couple of minutes. But it is happening locally with this $3 billion
parameter on device model, which is technically small, right? So if you compare it to,
you know, GPT4 Turbo, I believe is 1.8 trillion parameters, right? So a $3 billion parameter
model is technically kind of small, right? If we were saying five years ago, you might say,
oh, that's big. But, you know, compared to state of the art models, a $3 billion parameter
model is pretty small. But it is just for limited scope for what this model is presumably
actually performing under this Apple intelligence umbrella.
The number two thing you need to know about is AI image model and generation.
So yes, part of this is a diffusion model that can create images in a variety of forms.
Personally, to me, I don't know if I would ever use this, you know, as someone, and I should
have put this, you know, precursor out there, right?
myself and our team, we've been using the GPT technology since late 2020.
So, you know, coming up on almost four years now, and we've used hundreds, literally hundreds of AI tools and, you know, a handful of great AI image generators like, you know, Dali and Mid Journey, stable diffusion, et cetera, right?
When we look at this new Apple AI image model, I don't think I would ever use it.
Apple is playing it safe as Apple always does.
I don't think you're going to run into any deep fake issues here because you can't actually
create realistic photos.
Kind of the options, I believe, were illustration, sketch, et cetera.
There was three.
But it's more of a cartoony thing.
So, you know, if you want to send, you know, the example here that I'm sharing on the
screen is, you know, kind of showing like, oh, your mom is a superhero.
or something like that, but a cartoon one.
So we'll get more into these features here a little bit,
but I don't know.
To me personally, I'm not really going to be using that,
but big piece.
So here's what you need to know about the AI image model generation,
so a diffusion model.
They have a new app called Image Playground,
where you can create these apparently unlimited
or until your phone runs out of space.
They also have the gen moji.
Hey, everyone's losing their mind about AI powered emojis.
I don't know.
To me, don't get it.
care. Don't care at all. But yeah, you can use AI to make a custom emoji if you care about that. Also,
they have an image one app that turns your sketch into an image. I'd say if you're a student,
that could be pretty cool, right? It's one of the examples here that they have. You know,
you can sketch something on your notes, you know, circle it if you're using like an iPad app,
and then it'll turn it into an image. They also have cleanup tools, a clean up tool for
photos, which we've seen in Google Photos for a long time.
You can circle someone if someone photo bombed you and, you know, it erases them.
Natural language search inside of photo videos, which we're going to get to and memory movies.
So we're going to touch on those two things here in a couple of minutes.
Next, which I say is probably one of the more, I don't know if impactful is the right
word necessarily, but probably a more beneficial feature here is actions, right?
So that's essentially between Apple intelligence and this new quote unquote smarter Siri is we are going to see actions.
So let's talk a little bit about what that means.
So we're going to have cross-app and in-app actions.
And you can just use this new, whether you're talking to the new and improved Siri or just this Apple intelligence in general is going to be able to perform very simple actions across Apple's built-in apps.
Also for third-party developers, presumably this will be rolling out soon via what they're calling app intents.
So not like camping intents, like intent, but intense.
So app intents allows third-party developers to provide similar functionality to presumably allow Siri in this Apple intelligence to perform simple tasks on users behalf.
So that part's pretty cool, right?
Also, you know, it's kind of like the shortcuts, right?
So Apple has had these shortcuts, but you kind of had to program them manually before.
You know, it's like, oh, when I start a workout on my watch, launch the activity, you know,
app on my iPhone or something like that, right?
So you could program these shortcuts before, but now you can just use natural language and texting
Siri.
That's new as well.
And essentially, it can complete small actions across its apps, right?
So if you are texting someone about dinner plans for next weekend,
then you can just tell Siri, create that as a calendar, right?
Then it'll do it for you.
Yay, and it'll use all the information and all the context from that conversation.
All right.
Number four, an improved Siri.
Yay.
Are we finally going to have a smart, smart assistant?
I got some takes for this at the end of the episode.
We're going to play an example.
But the example here that, you know, Apple has on their website, it says, you know,
Siri, set an alarm for, oh, wait, no.
No, set a timer for 10 minutes, actually make that five.
Right.
So just more, you know, natural language processing, you know, before Siri, Alexa and just
about all smart assistants.
They've been very not smart for 13 years.
You know, maybe it was a novel at first.
But, you know, once large language models came out, you can't, you couldn't really use, right?
So from 2022 to, you know, today, if you try to use Siri or Alexa or, you know,
I guess Google Assistant is improving as well.
It's like permanent face palm emoji.
It's terrible.
All of these smart assistants are terrible.
So now presumably, you know,
Siri's got to get a little smarter by using this base, new, large language model
and might tap into some future GPD40 technologies,
which we'll talk about here in a minute.
So what you need to know about this apparently new and improved Siri.
Yeah, I got some takes on that here in a minute.
but better context, more natural language.
So, yeah, if you make a mistake, on-screen awareness, which I think that's pretty cool, right?
So, yeah, if you are, let's say, reading a, I don't know, an email, and then you can say,
you know, ask Siri to look up something from what's on your screen, right?
Look up bullet point two.
Right.
So, yeah, I mean, pretty nice.
I don't know.
For me personally, I'm not always talking a lot to my computer or.
or my phone. Maybe in the future, we will be more, but at least having that kind of on-screen
awareness pretty good. Like we talked about, a new feature, being able to type to Siri, for me,
not that great, but I can see how that would actually be useful for a lot of people, right?
If you're, you know, in work or in class or, you know, in a crowded place, maybe you just don't
want to seem like a weirdo, you know, talking into your phone all the time, but you can just type
to Siri. Also, like we talked about Siri actions, being able to
do these actions cross-app in-app, as well as app intent for third-party developers,
that Siri will be able to complete in-app actions for you.
All right.
Number five, personal context.
I think this is the big one.
Essentially, all your data, right?
Yeah, and you can opt out of this.
Apple says you can opt out of this, and they have what's called a private cloud compute.
So we're going to get to that, you know, here in a couple of minutes.
More or less, I think this is an area that Apple has been the leader in, right, privacy,
which is huge, right?
So I think Apple made a big play away from business, right?
They weren't really talking a whole lot about this is going to help you do better at your job,
you know, grow your career.
It wasn't a lot of that.
This is more, it seemed like an AI app for your personal life or, you know, a new AI
phone for your personal life.
That's what it seemed like to me.
which a lot of people are thinking about privacy, right?
So let's say you're texting with your spouse,
maybe about a medical condition.
And, you know, I don't know,
do you want Siri to put that information into a calendar event?
Do you want, you know, Siri or Apple to just always be reading all that information?
For me, I don't care.
For me, take that data, right?
I forget things hundreds of times a day, hundreds.
So for me, personally, I'm looking forward to this, right?
I think for my personal life, a lot of this Apple intelligence is going to be great.
You know, I don't care.
Take all my data.
Give me better retargeting, right?
Like, I know that's not what Apple's doing, but I'm the same thing with anything.
Google take my data, YouTube, take my data.
I got nothing to hide, make my life easier, right?
So Apple kind of going down that same route with this personal context, but with a huge
lean on privacy, obviously as Apple always has that heavy lean, saying that your data is
in this private cloud AI saying your data is never stored,
use only for your request in verifiable privacy.
All right.
So essentially what that means is it just knows everything, right?
So you could be texting and it's going to know what's in your calendar.
It's going to know your events.
You can, you know, talk to Siri and presumably it's going to know your life.
I'm actually extremely excited about that part, you know,
especially how I can apply that to business to, you know, gain back things a little
wins, right? I feel personally, that's what Apple's going for here instead of huge product,
like business productivity, you know, a 10-hour task that now you can do it in three minutes.
Now they're saying, you know, it seems like, you know, dozens of tasks that would take you
five minutes are now going to take you two minutes or, you know, a task that would take you,
45 seconds is now going to take you four or five seconds.
So I'll take that.
Not huge productivity gains.
That's why I think the market reception, you know, Apple stock went down yesterday after the announcement
because it's like, ah, is this going to change how we do business, right?
Because when you follow big companies, you know, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, right?
All the other big companies, even meta, right?
They're changing how we do business.
And, you know, I think a lot of people were expecting something similar out of Apple, right?
Is this going to impact how we work?
And Apple, I really just didn't pay much attention to that.
if I'm being honest, but this personal context, I think, is pretty huge.
But like I said, Apple is marketing it as security first focus and private cloud with opt-out.
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All right, the big one here.
Chat GPT integration.
So a quote, unquote, direct interstate.
integration with GPT40, Open AI's newest model.
So obviously, there's been a lot of reporting and a lot of confusion on what Apple is actually
doing.
So, you know, we heard almost a year ago that Apple was spending millions of dollars each
day trying to build its own internal large language model.
And they obviously release some of the findings of their models via research papers.
So, you know, at that point, everyone's like, oh, okay, Apple is going to be going with its own
model.
But then you heard all these reports back and forth, Open AI.
Oh, no, now it's Google Gemini.
Now it's Claude Anthropic.
Oh, back to Open AI.
So yes, there is an official direct, quote unquote, direct integration with chat GPT.
So we'll talk about that more at the end when we go over the good, the bad and what no one's talking about.
But chat GPT integration where they're saying it's seamless, right?
So kind of having that ability to use all of these chat GPT features pretty much wherever you are.
So, you know, if you have a Mac and if you've been using their desktop app, it's similar to that.
So it's bringing the power of this new GPT40 model to your desktop.
Not all the features, though, right?
Because there's a lot that in this new model that OpenAI has still not even announced yet.
So presumably once those features, once OpenAI releases them to everyone, so all they really
release is the base model, right?
But Open AI also talked about a lot of other things, kind of this live Omni, you know,
where the desktop app can see everything in real time,
you know, with one click of the button,
kind of this way more natural, you know, voice,
you know, being able to have a live conversation back and forth.
So, you know, will, you know, Mac, you know, iPhone, Siri,
be getting that next updated version of GPT40, potentially,
and we'll get to that here in a second.
But the direct integration, it's like this, right?
because yes, this is confusing, and all the original reporting kind of ended up being true
because there was also reporting that said Apple is going to use both on-device AI or Edge AI
as well as kind of cloud compute as well.
So that turns out to be the truth, right?
So it first is going to use internal models to answer what it can, right?
So we talked about that Jack's internal model, the 3 billion parameters.
So it's going to use what it can for that first.
And then what it can't, it's going to send to a private cloud AI, which they did not release a ton of details on that.
I don't know if that's still the Jacks model or if that's the GPT model.
So there's multiple tiers, which is a little confusing, but we'll get to that later.
But essentially, when you need something more powerful than just what your personal data is,
or if you want to kind of parlay your personal data with the real world or the outside world, I believe,
you know, is something that was referred to is, well, then you're going to have to use this direct
GPT for integration, 4-0 integration.
So it's free, which is great.
You know, they didn't really reveal a lot of details, right?
So, like, as an example, if you are having ongoing conversations with the GPT
4-0 model, is it going to remember those things, right?
If you tell, you know, if you're talking to Siri and you, it needs to use chat GPT
4-0 direct integration for something, is it going to remember that in context or is they
going to completely forget it as soon as you kind of close out, right?
Because presumably the good thing with the edge AI is it's going to have this working memory,
right?
It's going to continually be able to remember things that are in all, you know, your mail, your
messages, your documents.
that maybe you store, you know, on Apple's apps.
But outside of that, isn't going to remember things that it uses Chad TPT for.
I don't know.
All right.
Number seven, we have semantic media.
So we kind of talked about this with the, it kind of rolls over into the diffusion,
you know, AI images.
But, you know, the example that Apple has on their website is essentially, you know,
think you have probably thousands of photos and videos.
you know, on your iPhone or your Mac computer and then just being able to search
semantically.
So the example they gave, you know, presumably someone's taking a photo of their child here.
And then they say Katie with stickers on her face.
And then it returns all the photos of Katie.
So at some point you've told it, this is Katie or you've identified.
And then it can go through all your photos and say, all right, here's the photos of Katie
with stickers on her face.
Sorry, excuse me.
Got some allergies kicking in here.
But then semantic media, here's what this actually means.
Well, it's going to understand what's actually going on in your photos and videos, right,
which is great.
Again, we've seen parts of this.
Apple has had pieces of this, but kind of this, you know, Apple intelligence is presumably
bringing it all together, connecting it a little better.
And then also it can create custom memory movie based on your request.
Nothing new here.
Apple has had this.
Google announced this as well.
But, you know, before they were just kind of auto-generated, you know,
it might say, you know, two years ago on this day, if you took a bunch of pictures two years ago
and it would make you a little, you know, photo montage. So now you can kind of request and say,
oh, you know, make me a montage of, you know, that trip from Mexico from two years ago or something
or, you know, all of the times I, you know, was playing with a puppy outside, right? Like whatever.
So you can just kind of do that with a request. And then last but not least, which I think is probably
one of the better features here is AI functions inside of Apple apps. So the example here,
which I think is great, is summarizing notifications. So let's say you're someone, if you're in a
meeting for an hour, you know, my phone is literally on D&D almost every single day. I don't get any
notifications because I hate them, but a lot of people, right, you're on a meeting, you look at
your phone and you have 10 notifications. And then you have to waste time individually going in and
seeing what all those applications are actually about. So what Apple intelligence is presumably going to do,
it's just going to kind of tell you.
It's going to read your text, you know,
and it's going to say, hey,
here's what this person texts you about.
Here's what you need to know,
your Slack messages, et cetera.
It's going to give you a summarization,
presumably either using the Jacks model or GPT,
and then it's just going to pop that up to your home screen, right?
So I think those are some of the best, I think,
features inside of these Apple apps.
So having your notifications summarized, right?
So if you open your Apple mail,
you'll have the ability instead of it showing the normal preview text, you know,
it'll show you a two-line summary.
That's good, right?
You don't got to read through everything.
And it's also going to use some AI to kind of prioritize things for you as well.
So, yeah, if a doctor appointment gets changed or if a meeting gets rescheduled,
that might be more important than, you know, the group chat from the poker buddies, right?
You know, no disrespect to the poker group chat.
But, you know, probably if a meeting.
gets rescheduled from 5 o'clock to 3 o'clock and it's 2 o'clock Apple is presumably going to know
and put that at the top of your notification so you know about that right away.
All right.
So that's a recap of what's new.
Now let's go over the good, the bad, and the things that no one is talking about.
All right.
So here's the good.
In typical Apple fashion, they made things shiny and sexy, nice UI, UX, right?
Even just what I just talked about, using AI to summarize things to prioritize your
notifications, kind of these app actions, it's all really good, right?
Is it anything new?
Absolutely not.
You know, I should have started the show with this, but we got really nothing new or extremely
exciting from Apple, right?
It's all stuff that we've had, you know, maybe it was in two different apps, maybe it was
in 20 different apps.
So now, I guess the nice part is you bundle it all up into Apple's nice user interface,
right?
the summarization and the GPT4 writing tools,
being able to access those anywhere.
Again, we've had that.
If you've used Chrome extensions like I have,
you've already had that for years, years, right?
And so, okay, cool.
Now you get that inside of Apple's apps.
Fine, not bad, right?
And I do think you're going to get some baked in AI features
that are going to replace some other popular apps.
As an example, you know, part of that,
you know, if you're writing an email inside mail,
inside Apple's mail program, you can click to make it longer, make it more informal,
improve your grammar, right?
So it's like, I don't know.
If I'm grammarily, I'm not super stoked at this Apple announcement, right?
So I think that Apple is actually going to kill off the need for people to use some apps, right?
Like some non-AI things is they have a passwords app now.
Another one is the ability to record calls.
It does, Apple says, it does record the other or sorry, notify the other party.
but then it can transcribe those calls, right?
And then, you know, voice notes, it can transcribe those.
So, yeah, all these things, again, all these AI capabilities that many of us have
been using for many months or multiple years are now going to be just baked in features.
So, you know, I guess for many people, right, this is going to be their first introduction
to artificial intelligence, right?
Because, yeah, a lot of people just don't use AI or they use it very limited in a very
limited capacity.
And then obviously the direct chat GPT integration.
All right.
Here's the bad, y'all.
Here's the bad.
There's model confusion here, right?
Open, or sorry, Apple didn't even really announce chat GPT or open AI until the very end.
And if I'm being honest, it's a little confusing.
Essentially, there's like three and a half or four different tiers of models, right?
So they have their kind of their own model, this Apple AI, Jacks, XLA model, the 3 billion
parameter that is on-device edge AI.
So when that's happening, nothing is getting sent to a cloud, right, or a third-party service.
Then Apple says, hey, for some things, we are going to use private cloud AI.
And it's like, okay, well, why?
I guess what's the need for that tier?
again, a little confusing.
Apple didn't do a good job of even saying,
oh, we're using our own model for this.
Chat GPT for that, right?
So they have number one, on-device AI,
the Jack's 3 billion parameter.
Number two, a private cloud compute.
Okay, when's that being used and why?
That number three, you have this direct and free, right,
which is great, free integration to GPT40,
but only when you tell it to.
So I'm like, okay.
But then they also said in the future, you're also going to be able to use your paid version.
So you can bring in paid features of a GPT40, right?
Because, yeah, a lot of these new features that haven't been released that we've kind of referenced, right?
This live Omni or people call it her, right?
That's only available on the paid plan.
Some of this more, you know, natural language, these voices that they preview that we don't have,
that presumably Siri is going to get because Siri's voice and also series,
intelligence and seem to get much better if I'm being honest, but maybe it will with these paid
features. So again, confusing. It's almost like there's three and a half four different tiers
of AI models that are being used depending on the scenario, which I guess if most of it is
happening under the hood, it's not a bad idea. But here's the thing. It's not all happening
under the hood. And I think this is a bad thing, right? Because so much I think of what people want
to use AI for or what we've been using it previously.
It's to interact with things on the internet, right?
It's to be productive at work and in your job.
And I mean, some of those things you'll be able to do on device and you won't have to,
quote unquote, have to use chat chit.
But chat chit is a more powerful model, right?
If I'm being honest, I think Apple missed the boat here.
They should have just figured out a way to, you know,
similarly how Google Gemini has Gemma, which is a lightweight,
version of the Gemini model.
I think obviously Apple would have been much better if they could have partnered with OpenAI
to just create a lightweight version of GPT4 that ran locally.
So you're essentially working with multiple models that, you know, technically speak multiple
languages.
So you're not going to be getting consistency, I think, when you're kind of working with
these different AI assistants.
And worse than that, you know, some people said, okay, so is Apple intelligence really just
of wrapper, right? Is Apple just, you know, you take off its hood and it's just chat GPT underneath?
Well, yeah, kind of. But isn't really a direct integration because Apple showed this, you know,
because it essentially if you ask Siri or if you ask this Apple intelligence for something,
and it's number one, if it doesn't know, which I'm guessing is going to be a lot of things,
or if it's too powerful, if it requires more compute, whatever, it essentially gives you a message
that says, do you want literally, you get a pop up that says, do you want to use,
chat GPT to do that and then you quit cancel or use chat GPT.
So I mean, is this a direct integration?
It's like you're just launching an app in the background.
So is Apple intelligent really super intelligent?
Did we really get AI?
Or did we just get kind of like a seamless shortcut to launch chat GPT in the background?
I don't know.
It seems like a fail to me.
that's me.
So yeah, is Apple intelligence just a rapper?
And also Siri, let's talk about Siri, y'all.
Yeah, I got some thoughts on Siri here.
So is this advanced Siri and other Apple intelligence features later this year, right?
So later this year, okay, does that mean 350 days from today?
Does that mean by December 31st, 2024?
Let's just go ahead.
Let's go ahead.
You know, I actually have a bone to pick here.
right. If I was Apple, I literally wouldn't have done this.
All right.
Let's go ahead and listen, speaking of Siri and is Siri smarter now?
Or is it only going to get smarter if you have the paid version of GPT40, right?
Because Apple said that you can integrate the paid version later, right?
So let's just, let me talk about this.
Let me play this little 30 second clip from their presentation yesterday.
someone kind of going over here talking about Siri.
So let's go ahead and listen,
and then let's break down the example.
And you can speak to Siri more naturally.
Thanks to richer language understanding capabilities.
Even if I stumble over my words,
Siri understands what I'm getting at.
What does the weather look like for tomorrow at Mear Beach?
Oh, wait, I meant near Woods.
The forecast is calling for clear skies in the morning
near Muir Woods National Monuments.
Okay.
Did anyone, did you notice what didn't happen there?
So, okay, here was the query for Siri, right?
What does the weather look like for tomorrow at Muir Beach, right?
Guess what's, you?
Y'all, when you ask, all right, I'm going to go on a small rant here.
Hot Take Tuesday.
This is a fail.
What's the one thing you want to know when you ask for the weather?
The temperature.
Guess what Siri didn't say?
The temperature.
I don't know.
If I'm Apple, I'm being very selective about the, you know, the polished, the most polished version of, you know,
Siri that you showcase.
That, to me, if I'm doing that right now, I'm like,
Come on, Siri or Alexa or whatever.
Is that a smarter Siri?
I don't know.
So I guess we'll find out, but I don't know.
My hunch is saying when they said, oh, some Siri improvements are going to be coming later this year,
I think the only thing that you're, that the only improvement in Siri initially is going to be,
it's going to have access with this new internal Apple model to all of your data.
So you can say, oh, you know, catch me up on this text message.
or who email me, right?
So that might work better.
But everything else that you're using Siri for,
I don't know.
It might still stink for the next year.
You know, they kind of hinted at,
hey, more, you know, Apple or sorry,
more Siri improvements are coming over the next year.
So maybe they are actually literally just waiting on, you know,
chat GBT's Open or sorry, open AI's GPT4O,
these new voice and natural language features,
and it'll integrate directly with that.
but only if you have a paid chat GPT account.
So are we actually going to be getting a smarter Siri?
And if so, when and if so, is it going to require a paid chat GPT account?
I don't know.
That demo to me was a ginormous failure.
I would not have shown that.
If I was in charge of Siri and I'm seeing this at the keynote, I'd be like, why did we do this?
If you ask about the weather, yeah, you probably want to know, is it going to rain?
Is it going to snow?
And what's the temperature?
How are you not going to say the temperature, right?
Is it 95 or is it 45?
That's not useful, smart assistant.
Be smarter.
Understand, right?
Yeah, if there's natural language processing and, you know, natural conversations,
if I ask someone who's, you know, if my wife has the weather up on her phone and I say,
hey, what's the weather look like?
She's going to say, oh, yeah, it's either it's raining and, you know, it's cold, 50 degrees,
or she's going to say it is sunny, it's 90, right?
Come on.
This is simple stuff, simple stuff, Apple.
So other things, there was a report today out of Mac rumors that said,
a lot of these Apple intelligence features are actually going to have a wait list
during the initial limited preview.
So, yeah, so presumably there's going to be, you know, Apple always does beta versions.
So even when the beta comes out, if you're a dork like me and you want to
play around with these.
Some of these things might be waitlisted.
For the general release, will they be waitlisted?
I don't know, but there's a possibility that they could, right?
One thing you got to give credit to Apple for, usually they have a great record of shipping
things on time.
They ship what they say, right, but at least kind of this, you know, reporting today saying
that there's going to be a waitlist feature for some of these Apple intelligence.
Again, that might just be during the beta preview.
Not sure if that's going to be during the general release.
All right, things that no one is talking about, y'all.
All right.
Their main thing, right?
So if you go to the Apple Intelligence webpage, it says AI for the rest of us.
What the freak does that even mean?
AI for the rest of us?
Is Apple an indie brand now?
Like, are they against the man?
What does that mean, Apple?
I'm sorry, that's dumb.
AI for the rest of us?
Come on.
You have billions of devices.
The rest of us.
Hey, guess what, Apple?
Guess what?
Knock, knock.
The rest of us have all had access to AI for two to four years.
And we've been using it everywhere, right?
Literally everywhere.
AI for the rest of us.
Come on now.
No amount of marketing.
You can pull over my eyes.
And that is your main tagline, Apple?
AI for the rest of us.
us, come on now. That's silly. That's silly. Who came up with that? All right. Here's the other thing that
no one's talking about. This whole Siri thing doesn't really seem smarter. And it seems like it's not
really going to get smarter for at least a year. So they didn't say, is it only going to get
smarter with this improved GPT40 that, you know, the rest of us are waiting on for open AI? Is it,
is it actually a new model? Or is it still old Siri that we've been using that kind of stinks? And it just
has access to our personal data, right?
That's better than nothing, but are we actually going to get a truly smart assistant?
And if we are, is it only reliant on Open AI's technology?
And if it is, do we have to have a paid account to use it, right?
You know, it's something that Apple traditionally doesn't do is require a paid subscription.
But they did very distinctly say that some of the paid features of chat GPT you will be
able to integrate with.
All right.
Well, are we only going to get a smarter Siri if we have a $20 a month chat GPT Plus account?
Maybe.
All right.
Another thing that no one's talking about, this model confusion, right?
Like I talked about it, 5 a.m. this morning, you know, I was reading the blog posts on Apple's machine learning blog to learn more about this Apple AI.
And I googled it because I'm like, let me see what people are talking about.
And literally no one is talking about it.
At 5 a.m. this morning, there was not a single mention.
They're not a literal.
there was not a single mention of this model anywhere on the internet, not on Twitter,
not on a blog post, nowhere, nowhere except there.
No one's talking about this.
This Apple intelligence, it's this three billion parameter model.
Yeah, Apple app actually released their own model.
They just didn't really say it.
They just said, oh, it's called Apple Intelligence, right?
But people think that's just marketing and software, but technically that includes a model
that they create it, right?
That, yeah, people aren't talking about it or even mention.
it by name. The other thing, is this a real chat GPT integration? I don't know. Doesn't seem like it.
Seems like you're just running chat GPT in the background. Doesn't seem like it's baked in, right?
It's like, hey, Siri, you know, do something for me. And Siri goes, oh, I can't. Do you want
chat GPT to do it instead? Is that an integration, right? Or is that just an underperforming model
that's not very great, that then it just says,
I can't do anything.
Go have chat GBT do it.
Is Apple just a rapper now?
Are they just a rapper company?
Right.
Great UI, UX and all your data.
But really, to make great use of it,
you just got to use chat GPT anyways.
Right.
Another things, it just seems like so many useless features.
I don't want to create a cartoon version of someone
and send it to them and a text message.
I don't want to create an AI emoji.
Why is Apple,
so gung-ho on like do they really think the majority of their customers, right?
Yeah, it's probably fun for kids or for, you know, grandmas or something like that.
But I don't know, for people 20 to 60, do you really want to create an AI emoji?
Do you really want to create, you know, a customized birthday image for someone?
I don't know.
It's weird.
What's the use case?
I don't know.
It seems like Apple is really relying heavily.
that people are going to like cutesy AI stuff.
Y'all, we've had enough of that.
We're tired.
We've had QTYI stuff.
Apple, hey, while you were sleeping the past two years,
we've had all this crap.
It's gone.
We don't care.
We don't pay attention to it anymore.
People want AI to improve their companies,
to help them save time in their business
so they can spend more time in the real world.
And Apple's just like, ah, AI emojis, have fun.
Cartoon versions of your coworkers, send them to them.
No.
That's tone deaf, right? Apple, I think, missed a huge opportunity.
It seems like they pretty much stayed away from business.
They stayed away from enterprise.
They stayed away from, you know, work productivity, right?
I mean, they kind of touched on it a little bit.
But for the most part, this, this WWDC, this Apple intelligence, you know, presentations
were just kind of based on your personal life, which is great.
Don't get me wrong.
There's a lot of a lot of time to be one.
there, but like I said, you know, Open AI, Gemini, Amazon, Microsoft, they're saying, hey,
here's how you can take a business task that takes 20 hours and do it in two minutes.
That's great.
Apple's saying, hey, this used to take you 10 seconds.
Now it's going to take you two seconds.
It's like, okay, that's fine.
Here's stickers you can annoy your friends with.
I don't care.
I don't care.
I don't know if it's just me, but yeah, I don't care.
Just a huge lack of business focus.
And I'm just wondering if Apple finally realized internally after reportedly spending millions of dollars a day to make their own model.
And then they just ended up using GPT4.
Anyways, maybe they just came to an internal realization.
They saw everything that Microsoft has been, Microsoft's been crushing it.
They've been killing the game like they're hunting safari, right, to borrow a ratchew.
app line there.
Like maybe Apple just said,
we can't compete with Microsoft.
We're not going down this business route.
We're going for personal productivity.
Maybe that's what they're saying.
Maybe that's what they're doing here.
I don't know.
Huge fail.
Apple is the most cash happy company in the world.
They had the most cash.
They're Scrooge McDuck sitting on piles of cash and they couldn't get this figured out.
They had to rely on someone else.
It's a huge loss.
just huge, huge loss, Apple.
And instead, they're like, oh, you know, Apple intelligence is going to help you create
calendar events faster and summarize your emails.
Y'all, we've had this.
That is not the future of technology.
Apple used to tell us and show us and give us the future.
Instead, Apple said, here's what you've had for two to five years, just with some nice
marketing, just with a nice user interface with your data.
It's like, okay, that's fine.
But this is a $3 trillion company.
This is a company that is supposed to be leading the world in how we interact with technology in the future.
And instead it said, ah, here's, you know, does anyone remember now what I call music, right?
When it would, you know, recap the best, you know, or like kids bop, right?
That's what this feels like from Apple.
It's like, hey, here's all the things you've been enjoying over the last two years.
but wrapped up in a nice little package in one CD, right?
Fail, huge, huge, huge failure on Apple's part.
And I think eventually the stock price is going to reflect that, right?
Apple is relying, is relying on people wanting this, right?
Wanting this Apple intelligence.
But I think people are going to realize, number one, well, just seems like it's kind
of chat TVT, number one.
Number two, not everyone's going to rush out.
Apple is, I think, their strategy.
here because it's only going to work on iPhone 15 plus and above.
So their thought is, oh, well, everyone's, we're going to have hundreds of millions of
people, you know, waiting in line to go upgrade their phones.
It's like, I don't know, maybe, but is that your strategy, right?
That's a temporary solution here.
I personally see, this isn't financial advice.
I'm not a stock analyst, but number one, I did stay at a holiday and express once.
And number two, I did tell you a year ago that Invidio was.
probably the most important company in the world and no one listened.
I think Apple is going to tank.
Not tank, but right.
Like they've always been company number one or company number two.
I wouldn't be surprised at this time next year if Apple is the fourth biggest company and
someone else has passed them, right?
Whether it's Amazon, whether it's meta, you know, I don't know.
I don't think Apple is going to be a top two company at this point next year.
They're relying that everyone's just going to go buy new hardware to take.
advantage of all this, but, yo, Apple, I don't know if you've been literally sleeping in a lab for the last
two and a half years trying to catch up to Microsoft, to Google, to everyone else. We've had this.
We're tired of this, actually, right? You are giving us kids, Bob. You are giving us now 32. That's what I call hits.
Don't care. Don't care. Am I going to use it? Yeah, I'm going to use it, right? Yeah. You know,
not being hypocritical. I'm just being honest. But is this the Apple that we're used to that that, that
changes how we use technology, that changes, you know, how we connect with the world.
Nope, it's not.
All right.
That's it, y'all.
That is our hot take Tuesday.
Apple's AI announcements, the good, the bad, and what no one's talking about.
Hope you enjoyed this one.
If you're listening on the podcast, appreciate your support.
Make sure you check out the show notes.
There's a link there.
You don't even got to do.
You don't even got to text Siri, right?
Just check out the show notes.
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