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Siri Is Finally Ready To Get Personal

Apple’s long-delayed Siri overhaul is finally moving forward. The new version is more personal, more chatbot-like, and powered in part through a Google Gemini partnership.

Released on 06/09/2026

Transcript

Siri is finally getting its long awaited upgrade

and Apple says it's serious this time.

At WWDC 2026, Apple announced its overhaul of Siri,

its voice assistant.

The one that was promised years ago?

Yeah, that one.

The company first promised a more personalized Siri

powered by AI tools back in 2024,

but those personalized features

were delayed over and over again,

eventually leading to a consumer lawsuit.

And now, Apple says this new Siri

is finally coming later this year.

And the pitch is simple,

Siri can do better if it knows more about you.

This revamped assistant can pull context

from across your Apple devices,

including personal info saved on your phone,

as well as what's on your screen right now.

So if you ask if for help writing an email,

Siri could use details from your Notes app

to generate a better response.

If you need better plans to send to the group chat,

Siri can generate a draft of that text.

Apple is making Siri feel more like ChatGPT.

There will be a standalone Siri app

where you can type requests, upload files,

revisit old chats, and continue those past conversations.

And Apple is bringing in outside help to make this happen.

A major part of the Siri revamp

is a partnership with Google Gemini,

which will help power the assistant's underlying AI model

as part of Apple intelligence.

Siri is also moving into the camera app,

[camera shutter clicks]

with a Google Lens-style feature

where you can ask questions about what you're seeing.

All of this could make Siri more capable,

but it also makes some of the questions

around personal data even more relevant.

Apple highlighted on-device processing

as part of its overall privacy-preserving approach.

But the trade off is clear here.

To make Siri smarter, Apple wants Siri to get more personal,

and the question is whether iPhone users still want

the AI assistant Apple promised them two years ago,

and whether they really want Siri to know them that well.