
Say hello to Siri AI.
Apple
After going MIA for two years, Apple's redesigned Siri has finally resurfaced. At WWDC 2026, the company showed off a new version of the AI-powered Siri we first saw in 2024. Apple is calling the new assistant Siri AI. As announced at the start of the year, Apple has partnered with Google to rebuild Apple Intelligence and Siri on top of the company's Gemini models.
On the iPhone, the new Siri lives inside the device's Dynamic Island, which debuted on the iPhone 14 Pro in 2022 before Apple brought it over to the regular iPhone in 2023. As before, you can wake the assistant by saying "Siri" or holding down the power button. Apple has also added a new swipe gesture, which involves pulling down from the top center of your device. The actions brings up a new "Search or Ask" interface that allows you to do things like open apps, start text messaging, add calendar appointments and search through your notes. Over on macOS, users can wake Siri through Spotlight. Apple claims the search tool is intelligent enough to know when you're trying to ask a question of the assistant and will route the prompt accordingly.
Apple
On returning a response, Siri will display an interactive card that will pop out of the Dynamic Island. Users can swipe down on the popup to open larger window where they can ask further questions of the digital assistant. As part of the redesign, Apple says it has made the assistant's voice more natural. Users can adjust the pace and expressivity of Siri's new voice, with individual sliders for each. On the subject of using your voice to communicate with Apple products, the company says it has also improved voice dictation throughout iOS and elsewhere, with the feature offering better understanding of capitalization and more.
Mike Rockwell, vice-president of Siri engineering, demoed the new assistant. He first asked Siri AI about an upcoming Suki Waterhouse concert to show how the assistant can draw on real-time information to generate an answer. In this case, Siri told Rockwell he had to enter a lottery to see Waterhouse perform, to which the executive asked if the assistant could to save a reminder for him. In a separate demo, Rockwell showed off Siri's newfound visual intelligence, which allowed him to ask about the landmarks seen in the pictures on the display. With a follow-up voice command, Rockwell instructed Siri to add his family to a shared album, and the assistant dutifully responded.
Alongside the new Search or Ask window, Apple is releasing a dedicated Siri app to offer iPhone users with a first-party alterative to ChatGPT and Claude. Like those apps, the software allows you to converse with Siri through text and voice. You can also upload images and documents for the assistant to analyze. Apple says the dedicated app "makes it easy to revisit an existing conversation or open a new one," with your chat history synced privately thanks to iCloud.
Siri AI will launch in English first, with Apple promising availability in other languages to follow quickly.
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