All eyes are on Apple as the company spent Monday trying to answer the question that’s hung over the company since 2024: Can it finally deliver on the future it promised?
At its 2026 Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday, the iPhone maker unveiled Siri AI, a long-awaited overhaul of its voice assistant, powered by a new generation of Apple Intelligence models developed in partnership with Google. It also announced a slate of new AI features across its ecosystem.
The stakes are high for Apple. The company spent the past two years facing criticism and a class action lawsuit after many Apple Intelligence capabilities it previewed in 2024 were delayed or failed to arrive as initially promised.
Here is what the smartest voices in business and tech are saying about Apple’s flurry of announcements.
Gene Munster, Apple analyst and managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management
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Gene Munster wrote in a post on X that Monday’s moves would be a success for Apple if it could deliver everything it showed in the demo.
“Keep in mind, it’s still a demo, they overpromised with demos two years ago,” Munster wrote. “That said, if they deliver what they showed today, it will drive hardware sales.”
“It goes beyond one-shot prompts and can reference previous conversations. The examples felt 10x better than using ChatGPT for personal tasks,” Munster added.
Munster wrote in a subsequent tweet that Apple is “aggressive” in its new child safety tools, which he called a “smart move because these little features tighten the grip that keeps parents in the Apple ecosystem.”
Christina Warren, developer relations executive at GitHub
Warren wrote on X that Apple’s AI strategy reflects the growing reality in the industry that smartphones aren’t powerful enough to run the most advanced AI models entirely on-device.
“As I expected, Apple is going to punt the ‘on-device’ story for Apple Intelligence and push towards the ‘private cloud compute’ story for the models that you’ll actually want to use,” Warren said on Monday.
“I’m glad on-device isn’t going away, but it’s clear a hybrid approach is absolutely necessary,” Warren added. “We will probably reach the point in the future where you could do good-enough on-device processing for certain tasks, but that day isn’t today.”
Ben Bajarin, CEO and principal analyst at Creative Strategies
Bajarin said that Apple seems to be turning Siri into a central hub for a one-stop AI experience rather than a collection of separate tools.
“As we talk about enterprise workflow control plane, the Apple opportunity here is Siri is turning into the control plane for consumer AI,” Bajarin wrote on X on Monday.
“Personal context, screen awareness, app actions, writing, search, and visual intelligence route through one assistant layer, which is a different product experience all together,” Bajarin added.
Max Weinbach, consumer technology analyst at Creative Strategies
Weinbach wrote on Monday that the Siri upgrade is potentially bad news for AI companies looking to build consumer products.
“If the new Siri and AI features are good, and Apple can provide them for free with every new Apple device, everyone should be terrified of what happens to the AI companies,” Weinbach said on X.
“Siri AI is basically what most consumers use ChatGPT and Gemini for,” Weinbach added in a follow-up post. “RIP consumer ambitions for AI companies.”
Alex Heath, tech journalist
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Heath said in a series of tweets that Apple is aiming for exactly what the big AI players are: a “super personalized, all-knowing/present assistant.”
“What Apple is showing — Siri understanding whatever is on an iPhone’s screen and providing contextual responses — is a huge unlock if it works as shown,” Heath wrote on X on Monday.
“Also shows how Apple continues to leverage platform control to do things folks at the app layer can’t,” Heath added.
Heath was previously a senior reporter for Business Insider.
Ernest Wong, head of research at Baskin Wealth Management
Apple’s lengthy introduction of its new child safety feature is “a perfect example” of “strategy credit,” meaning an uncomplicated decision that improves the company’s image relative to other competitors, Wong said.
“It’s an easy decision for Apple that simultaneously brings kids/teens into their ecosystem and handicaps competitors (social media apps), and looks good while doing it,” Wong wrote on X.
Chris Pirillo, founder of LockerGnome
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Apple’s AI could make creating automations as simple as describing the result you want, much like vibe coding, Pirillo said.
“This is basically vibe coding, folks. At a macro level,” Pirillo wrote on X.
Joanna Stern, chief tech analyst at NBC
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Stern said in a series of posts on X that she used to be an “Apple Shortcuts hater,” but the AI updates might significantly change her perception.
“I’m glad Apple is finally giving parental controls some attention. But parents don’t just need more controls. We need the controls to actually work,” Stern added in subsequent posts regarding Apple’s child safety updates. “I hope there’s a major under-the-hood improvement here focused on syncing, reliability and consistency across devices.”
Dan Ives, tech analyst at Wedbush Securities
Ives said in a note on Monday that Apple was finally delivering on what it promised two years ago with a “robust AI strategy and the announcement of Siri AI.”
“Overall, this was an impressive event that did not disappoint as Cook and Apple finally unveiled an AI strategy that will unleash the true monetization opportunity for AI in the Cupertino consumer ecosystem after a few years of promise … now it’s finally here,” he wrote.