Current:Home > Contact-usApple expected to enter AI race with ambitions to overtake the early leaders-LoTradeCoin
Apple expected to enter AI race with ambitions to overtake the early leaders
View Date:2025-01-09 08:11:54
Apple’s annual World Wide Developers Conference on Monday is expected to herald the company’s move into generative artificial intelligence, marking its late arrival to a technological frontier that’s expected to be as revolutionary as the invention of the iPhone.
The widely anticipated display of AI to be embedded in the iPhone and other Apple products will be the marquee moment at an event that traditionally previews the next version of software that powers the company’s hardware lineup.
And Apple’s next generation of software is expected to be packed with an array of AI features likely to make its often-bumbling virtual assistant Siri smarter, and make photos, music, texting — and possibly even creating emojis on the fly — a more productive and entertaining experience.
True to its secretive nature, Apple hasn’t provided any advance details about Monday’s event being held at the company’s Cupertino, California, headquarters.
But CEO Tim Cook has dropped strong hints during the first few months of this that Apple is poised to reveal its grand plans to enter a space that has been fueling an industry boom during the past 18 months.
AI mania is the main reason that Nvidia, the dominant maker of the chips underlying the technology, has seen its market value rocket from about $300 billion at the end of 2022 to about $3 trillion. The meteoric ride allowed Nvidia to briefly surpass Apple last week as the second most valuable company in the U.S. Microsoft earlier this year also eclipsed the iPhone maker on the strength of its so-far successful push into AI.
But analysts have been have been getting increasingly worried that Apple may be falling too far behind in the rapidly changing AI space, a concern that has been compounded by an uncharacteristically extended slump in the company’s sales. Both Google and Samsung already have released smartphone models touting AI features as their main attractions.
That’s why analysts such as Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities view Monday’s conference as a potential springboard that catapults Apple into another robust phase of growth. Ives believes infusing more AI into the iPhone, iPad and Mac computer will translate into an additional $450 billon to $600 billion in market value for Apple.
Monday’s conference “represents the most important event for Apple in over a decade as the pressure to bring a generative AI stack of technology for developers and consumers is front and center,” Ives wrote in a research note.
Apple definitely could use the boost that AI may be able to provide, particularly for its 13-year-old assistant Siri, which Forrester Research Dipanjan Chatterjee now calls an “oddly unhelpful helper.”
Meanwhile, OpenAI’s ChatGPT is getting increasingly conversational — so much so that it recently sparked accusations of intentionally copying a piece of AI software voiced by Scarlett Johansson — and Google last month previewed an AI “agent” dubbed Astra that can seemingly see and remember things.
Besides using AI to spruce up Siri, Apple may also team up with OpenAI to bring some elements of ChatGPT to the iPhone, according to a wide range of unconfirmed reports leading up to Monday’s conference.
This will be the second straight year that Apple has created a stir at its developers conference by using it to usher in its entrance into a trendy form of technology that other companies already had been making inroads.
Last year, Apple provided an early look at its mixed-reality headset, the Vision Pro, which wasn’t released until early this year carrying a $3,500 price tag that has been a major impediment to gaining much traction. Nevertheless, Apple’s push into mixed reality, tweaked with a twist that it bills as “spatial computing,” has raised hopes that what is currently a niche technology will turn into a huge market.
Part of the optimism stems from Apple’s history of releasing technology later than others and then using sleek designs and services combined with slick marketing campaigns to overcome its tardy start to unleash new trends.
“Apple’s early reticence toward AI was entirely on brand,” Forrester’s Chatterjee wrote in a preview of the developers conference. “The company has always been famously obsessed with what its offerings did for its customers rather than how it did it.”
Bringing more AI into the iPhone, in particular, will likely raise privacy issues — a topic where Apple has gone to great lengths to assure its loyal customer base that it can be trusted not to peer too deeply into their personal lives.
One way Apple could reassure consumers that the iPhone won’t be used to spy on them is to leverage its own chip technology so most AI-powered features are handled on the device itself instead of remote data centers, often called “the cloud.” Going that route also would help protect Apple’s profit margins because AI technology through the cloud is far more expensive than when it is run solely on a device.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Why Game of Thrones' Maisie Williams May Be Rejoining the George R.R. Martin Universe
- Ryan Blaney wins inaugural Iowa Corn 350 to end victory drought
- Taylor Swift's ex Joe Alwyn breaks silence on their split and 'long, loving' relationship
- Mavericks' Kyrie Irving hopes for better performance with NBA Finals back in Boston
- Messi breaks silence on Inter Miami's playoff exit. What's next for his time in the US?
- Scooter Braun says he’s no longer a music manager, will focus on Hybe duties and his children
- Kenya Moore suspended indefinitely from 'Real Housewives' for 'revenge porn' allegations
- Kenya Moore suspended indefinitely from 'Real Housewives' for 'revenge porn' allegations
- NY forest ranger dies fighting fires as air quality warnings are issued in New York and New Jersey
- An Georgia inmate used a gun to kill a prison kitchen worker before killing himself, officials say
Ranking
- Kalen DeBoer, Jalen Milroe save Alabama football season, as LSU's Brian Kelly goes splat
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Sink, Sank, Sunk
- Key moments at the Tonys: Jay-Z and Hillary Clinton in the house, strides for women and a late upset
- A search for a biological father, and the surprise of a lifetime
- The charming Russian scene-stealers of 'Anora' are also real-life best friends
- CLIMATE GLIMPSE: Scorching Northern Hemisphere heat leads to deaths and wildfires
- Spoilers: Why that 'House of the Dragon' murder went too far
- Indiana Fever vs. Chicago Sky recap: Caitlin Clark wins showdown with Angel Reese
Recommendation
-
As the transition unfolds, Trump eyes one of his favorite targets: US intelligence
-
Singer Cody Simpson fails to make Australian Olympic swimming team
-
Full transcript of Face the Nation, June 16, 2024
-
Peruvian research team works to track infectious disease in tropical regions
-
Stock market today: Asian shares meander, tracking Wall Street’s mixed finish as dollar surges
-
Eriksen scores in Denmark’s 1-1 draw with Slovenia at Euro 2024, 3 years after his onfield collapse
-
A$AP Rocky stars alongside his and Rihanna's sons in Father's Day campaign: See the photos
-
Florida couple wins $1 million lottery prize just before their first child is born