Apple’s Siri Promise Falls Short
During WWDC 2024, Apple introduced a next‑generation Siri that could act across apps and sense context through a system called App Intents. The company later filmed those features in an iPhone 16 advertisement.
As of 2025, those revolutionary Siri tricks remain unseen on iPhones. Earlier this year, shareholders sued Apple over misleading marketing that overstated the AI prowess. The company even had to pull an ad highlighting Siri upgrades.
What’s Missing?
- App Intents that bridge multiple apps
- Contextual awareness that knows the user’s situation
- Seamless actions that transcend app boundaries
Legal Fallout
Shareholders alleged Apple’s ads misrepresented Siri’s capabilities. The resulting lawsuit forced Apple to rescind the “next‑gen Siri” ad campaign.
Future Outlook
According to Bloomberg, Apple’s digital assistant will receive a new App Intents overhaul early next year. The company’s next‑gen Siri may still take time before it launches on iPhones.

Next‑Generation Voice Interaction
Imagine having only your voice to navigate every digital touchpoint. According to the latest report, Siri can pull a photo, edit it and mail it without turning a screen. It can comment on Instagram, scroll a shopping app, add an item to a cart, and even authenticate a service just by speaking.
Key Voice‑Enabled Features
- Photo Handling: locate, modify, and send images via voice commands.
- Social Media Interaction: post replies to Instagram stories or comments without typing.
- E‑Commerce Navigation: browse catalogs, add products, and manage purchases using spoken instructions.
- Secure Authentication: log into accounts securely by verified voice input.
Implications for Everyday Digital Use
Voice‑centric interfaces eliminate the need for manual screen interaction, enabling seamless, hands‑free access to photos, social media, shopping, and secure logins.
Futuristic, with a pinch of caution
Apple is adopting a cautious stage‑by‑stage approach for launching its voice‑based technologies. Rather than unleashing all functionalities at once, the company is currently testing cross‑app Siri interaction only with its own pre‑installed applications and a handpicked selection of third‑party services, such as Amazon, Uber, WhatsApp, and YouTube.
Users can download the public betas of these operating systems on their iPhone, iPad, and Mac.
Apple’s earlier AI endeavour hit a rough patch. The notification summarization system—deployed alongside Apple Intelligence last year—made significant errors that prompted criticism from the BBC. Consequently, Apple had to disable the feature for several months.
With these lessons in mind, Apple’s forthcoming Siri refresh is taking a safer, more measured route.

Apple Revolves Voice Interaction into a New Ecosystem
Apple’s next grand ambition is to elevate the voice assistant into the core of its experience. While Siri will now listen to voice commands that could directly modify apps, the company will maintain tight privacy vigilance.
Defensive Borders Around Sensitive Applications
- Apple will set sharp restrictions for Siri in financial apps and digital wallet interfaces.
- In some cases, the assistant will be entirely shut out from very sensitive sectors to avoid a potential fallout.
Voice Supersedes Touch‑and‑Tap Input
Rather than a small tweak, Apple treats this as a definitive pivot. Voice will take precedence over the traditional finger‑tap workflow.
Such a strategy aligns well with Google’s Project Mariner or the emerging AI‑augmented browsers that aim to accomplish tasks with the fewest possible steps.
Apple’s AI Delay and the CEO’s Future Promise
Apple’s foray into artificial intelligence has long been a public conversation. Even Tim Cook admitted that the company was falling behind the rest of the industry.
Cook has recently asserted that Apple will gain momentum and that the sail of Siri’s upgrade will be a robust example.
Looking Ahead: “AI Brain Transplant”
The ultimate goal would be to place Siri in the same league as Google’s Gemini or Microsoft’s Copilot. Apple’s next step will determine whether the voice‑first future arrives on schedule.
