Apple gets into AI: all the news on iOS 18, macOS Sequoia, and more

By The Verge | Created at 2025-01-29 03:16:56 | Updated at 2025-01-30 07:56:21 1 day ago
Truth
  • Richard Lawler

  • Emma Roth

    iOS 18.3 is out with tweaks to AI notification summaries

    Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

    iOS 18.3 is here, and it’s bringing changes to AI notification summaries on your iPhone. In iOS 18.3’s release notes, Apple says it has temporarily disabled notification summaries for news and entertainment apps.

    The change, which was first spotted in the iOS 18.3 beta, comes after the BBC called out the feature for incorrectly summarizing one of its headlines. If you opt-in to the feature, Apple will notify you once it becomes available again.

    Read Article >

  • Emma Roth

    Apple Intelligence is enabled by default in iOS 18.3

    A photo showing the iPhone 16 Pro

    A photo showing the iPhone 16 Pro

    Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

    Apple Intelligence will be switched on by default, starting in iOS 18.3, iPadOS 18.3, and macOS 15.3. In release candidate notes spotted by 9to5Mac, Apple says it will switch on AI-powered features automatically for new users or those upgrading to the latest versions of its operating systems.

    The AI update will only apply to devices that support Apple Intelligence, including the iPhone 15 Pro and later, iPads and Macs with the Apple Silicon M1 chip or later, and the most recent version of the iPad mini.

    Read Article >

  • Umar Shakir

    Apple says it will ‘clarify’ AI summaries after botching BBC headlines

    A graphic showing a robot performing multiple functions

    A graphic showing a robot performing multiple functions

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    The BBC reports Apple will change how iPhones and other devices display Apple Intelligence-summarized notifications to make it clearer to users when its AI tech has adjusted the words. Not long after the still-in-beta feature launched in the UK in December, the news organization complained about how it rewrote a headline about the UnitedHealthcare shooting suspect, incorrectly suggesting that the BBC reported Luigi Mangione shot himself.

    Since then, according to the BBC, Apple’s summaries had incorrectly rewritten notifications from its app to name a PDC World Darts Championship winner before the event even started and falsely claiming that Rafael Nadal revealed himself as gay. “These AI summarisations by Apple do not reflect – and in some cases completely contradict – the original BBC content,” writes the outlet.

    Read Article >

  • Umar Shakir

    iOS and iPadOS 18.2.1 are out.

    They address “important” bugs for iPhone and iPad owners, but Apple’s patch notes don’t explain which ones. Apple has iOS 18.3 and iPadOS 18.3 public beta out right now, which MacRumors notes may launch in a regular release later this month.

    iOS 18.2.1 311.4MB

  • Richard Lawler

    Apple’s iOS 18.3 public beta is now available.

    However, you may not have much to try, as the only noticeable changes we’ve heard about include Genmoji in macOS Sequoia 15.3 and hints of robot vacuum support in Apple Home.

  • Wes Davis

    Apple’s App Store is inviting me to ‘search the way you talk’

    The image displays Apple’s blue App Store logo in front of a pink and black background.

    The image displays Apple’s blue App Store logo in front of a pink and black background.

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    I opened the App Store today to find an emulator I’d read about, and a new prompt appeared under the search bar inviting me to “search the way you talk.” I hadn’t seen the prompt before on my iPhone 13 Pro Max, and quite frankly, I had missed the iOS 18.1 update note about it.

    As it describes, Apple’s update in October added, “App Store search lets you use natural language to find what you’re looking for more easily.” It’s also not the only place Apple is adding natural language search with iOS 18, in addition to Photos, Music, and Apple TV.

    Read Article >

  • Richard Lawler

    Apple releases iOS 18.3 developer beta and tests Genmoji in macOS Sequoia.

    Now that iOS 18.2 and Apple’s associated software updates with Apple Intelligence and ChatGPT are widely available, it’s followed up with a new round of developer betas released Monday afternoon.

  • Umar Shakir

    Apple’s AI summary mangled a BBC headline about Luigi Mangione

    An image showing a robot performing various tasks

    An image showing a robot performing various tasks

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

  • Andrew Liszewski

    You can now use AirTags to expedite a lost luggage reunion through United’s mobile app

    The United Airlines mobile app running on a smartphone being held by someone in the baggage claim area of an airport.

    The United Airlines mobile app running on a smartphone being held by someone in the baggage claim area of an airport.

    Following the official release of Apple’s new Share Item Location feature with iOS 18.2 yesterday, United Airlines has announced it has integrated it into its mobile app. Passengers finding themselves at their destination without their luggage can now file a delayed baggage report through United’s app along with a Share Item Location link that will potentially expedite a reunion.

    Passengers will need to ensure the United mobile app is up to date, but once a report has been submitted with a Share Item Location link connected to an AirTag or a tracker that’s compatible with Apple’s Find My network, customer service agents will be able to determine its current or last known location using an interactive map, according to United Airlines. Having access to the Find My network data for a missing bag will allow the airline “to more quickly find delayed bags and reunite them with customers.”

    Read Article >

  • Allison Johnson

    With iOS 18.2, Apple completes its AI starter kit

    Photo of visual intelligence identifying a houseplant.

    Photo of visual intelligence identifying a houseplant.

    I was about to okay my friend’s restaurant suggestion for lunch — an Indian place on 2nd — when Apple Intelligence swooped in with another idea. “How about The Ritz?” appeared above the keyboard as a suggested response, highlighted in that telltale AI rainbow glow. The other suggested response, “Sounds good!” was much more reasonable. But ignoring both, I typed out my affirmative answer, hopped on my bike, and headed to downtown Seattle, where there are, to my knowledge, zero Ritzes.

    Suggested replies aren’t new in iOS 18.2, but they’re a piece of the Apple Intelligence feature set that’s falling into place with this week’s public release of 18.2. Those suggestions I got while planning lunch kind of sum up my whole experience with Apple’s AI up ’til now: occasionally helpful, sometimes way off base, and often good for a laugh. But once the novelty wears off, it’s easily ignored — just like the AI feature sets on every other so-called AI smartphone I’ve used this year.

    Read Article >

  • Emma Roth

    The iPhone 16 Pro now lets you layer recordings in Voice Memos

    Screenshots showing the iPhone’s Voice Memos

    Screenshots showing the iPhone’s Voice Memos

    Image: Apple

    Apple is bringing layered recordings to the Voice Memos app on the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max. With the new feature, you can record vocals while listening to an instrumental track out loud in iOS 18.2.

    Even though the microphone will technically pick up the instrumentals, Apple says the iPhone 16’s A18 Pro chip allows it to isolate vocals with “advanced processing and machine learning,” letting Voice Memos create a separate track with just your voice. From there, you can mix the two layers, as well as edit or listen to them separately.

    Read Article >

  • Wes Davis

    The Vision Pro’s ultrawide Mac display is very close to being a killer app

    Screenshot of the ultrawide virtual display in one of the Vision Pro’s immersive environments.

    Screenshot of the ultrawide virtual display in one of the Vision Pro’s immersive environments.

    Since its release, I’ve mostly used Apple’s Vision Pro like a movie theater. The VR headset is an amazing way to watch Dune — but beyond that, it hasn’t really lived up to its potential as a general-purpose computing device.

    Today, that’s finally starting to change. With the update to visionOS 2.2, Apple is seriously upgrading the headset’s ability to work with a Mac. It’s probably the closest thing the Vision Pro has to a killer app.

    Read Article >

  • Richard Lawler

    iOS 18.2 and all the other Apple updates are available now.

    After Apple announced iOS 18.2, iPadOS 18.2, and macOS Sequoia 15.2 this morning, the updates are now going out widely starting at 1PM ET as they’re usually scheduled.

    That also goes for new 18.2 updates for the HomePod and Apple TV, and visionOS 2.2 for the Vision Pro.

  • Jay Peters

    iOS 18.2 is rolling out now, adding ChatGPT integration and more Apple Intelligence tools

    iOS 18.2 is now available for iPhone, iPad, and Mac.

    iOS 18.2 is now available for iPhone, iPad, and Mac.

    Apple announced the release of iOS 18.2, iPadOS 18.2, and macOS Sequoia 15.2, adding many new Apple Intelligence features, including Image Playground, Genmoji, and integration with ChatGPT. After a morning announcement for the new updates, they started rolling out widely at about 1PM ET, bringing along new updates for the Apple TV, HomePod, and Vision Pro too.

    With Image Playground, users can generate an image from a prompt or make something based on one of Apple’s suggestions. However, Image Playground seems to opt for cartoony or stylistic photos instead of photorealistic images, which could prevent potential misuse. Image Playground is available as a standalone app, alongside being integrated into Messages, Freeform, and Keynote.

    Read Article >

  • Allison Johnson

    Apple Pay’s first competitor on the iPhone has arrived in Norway

    Image showing tap to pay with Vipps app.

    Image showing tap to pay with Vipps app.

  • Wes Davis

    The latest Apple betas let you copy links to highlighted text in Safari.

    It’s driven me bonkers ever since Google introduced linking to highlighted text in Chrome that I couldn’t do the same in the Safari browser. Now it seems that’s changing.

    I spotted it in the most recent macOS 15.2 beta, where it appears when you right-click highlighted text. MacStories’ Federico Viticci noticed it in the iOS 18.2 beta, where you get it by long-pressing.

    Screenshot showing the Copy Link with Highlight option in Safari on a Mac.

    Screenshot showing highlighted text and the option to “Copy Link with Highlight” in the iOS long press menu that appears when you highlight text.

    1/2Copy Link with Highlight! Screenshots: Safari in iOS 18.2 and macOS 15.2

  • Wes Davis

    Apple AI notification summaries exist; rarely useful, often hilarious

    Photo of iPhone 16 running iOS 18.1 on a bench.

    Photo of iPhone 16 running iOS 18.1 on a bench.

    iPhones, iPads, and Macs with Apple Intelligence now have a unique AI feature that summarizes notifications for you. Starting with iOS / iPadOS 18.1 and macOS 15.1, when multiple notifications pile up for a given app, the tiny LLM that Apple has crammed into our stuff tries its hardest to algorithm up a brief overview for you. (Part of a group text with lots of people? It’ll try to tell you what they’re discussing.) This is sometimes good. It is very often funny.

    I like the way the summaries handle some of my Apple Home notifications — like when I read “Garage changed status multiple times; recently closed” in lieu of a stack of messages about my garage door. The wording changes, but without fail (so far), it’s been right about whether the last thing it did was open or close, so I don’t have to open Apple Home or my garage camera to verify it. (I still do sometimes because LLMs can be lying liars.)

    Read Article >

  • Wes Davis

    Apple’s iOS 18.2 public beta starts opening up access to more AI features

    An illustration of the Apple logo.

    An illustration of the Apple logo.

    Illustration: The Verge

    Apple has released iOS / iPadOS 18.2 into public beta, as spotted by MacRumors. It includes access to the second wave of Apple Intelligence features that were already available to developers, like the AI-generated custom emoji feature Genmoji and the Image Playground feature that generates pictures.

    It also adds ChatGPT integration, Visual Intelligence for searching using iPhone 16 cameras, a more robust Siri with improved responses to queries, and OpenAI’s ChatGPT is an option to step in and answer instead. ChatGPT access is free and doesn’t require an account to use it.

    Read Article >

  • Wes Davis

    iOS 18.2 puts Safari download progress right on your iPhone’s lockscreen.

    The iOS 18.2 update is expected to come in December.

    Screenshot showing Safari download progress on an iPhone lockscreen.

  • Emma Roth

    iOS 18.2 could finally estimate your iPhone’s charging time

    A photo showing the iPhone 16 Pro

    A photo showing the iPhone 16 Pro

    Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

    The iPhone could finally show you how long it’ll take to finish charging. Code spotted in the second iOS 18.2 beta by 9to5Mac shows a new “BatteryIntelligence” feature that will let you receive a notification with the iPhone’s estimated charging time.

    Some Android phones already show how long it takes to charge — a feature that has become increasingly helpful considering the many different types of chargers, cables, and charging protocols that are available. The iPhone’s “BatteryIntelligence” feature still appears to be a work in progress, though, which means might have to wait a little longer until its official release, according to 9to5Mac.

    Read Article >

  • Jay Peters

    Apple Intelligence will come to EU iPhones in April

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge

    Apple Intelligence has finally launched in US English, and if you’re in the EU, you’ll be able to use the new AI features on your iPhone and iPad starting in April, according to an Irish Apple newsroom post.

    When the features roll out to iPhones and iPads in the EU, they’ll include “include many of the core features of Apple Intelligence, including Writing Tools, Genmoji, a redesigned Siri with richer language understanding, ChatGPT integration, and more,” Apple says in the post.

    Read Article >

  • Jay Peters

    If you want to try Apple Intelligence, you’ll have to get on a waitlist.

    To join the waitlist after you’ve updated to iOS 18.1, go to Settings, then “Apple Intelligence & Siri,” and then tap the “Join the Apple Intelligence Waitlist” option.

    Apple says that Apple Intelligence is “usually available for activation within a few hours of joining the waitlist.”

    A screenshot showing the option to join an Apple Intelligence Waitlist.

    Image: Apple

  • Allison Johnson

    Apple Intelligence is here, but it still has a lot to learn

    Image of iPhone 16 running iOS 18.1 with Apple Intelligence on a bench.

    Image of iPhone 16 running iOS 18.1 with Apple Intelligence on a bench.

    Apple Intelligence has finally arrived, and like most AI on smartphones so far, it’s mostly underwhelming.

    The debut features of Apple Intelligence are all very familiar: there are glowing gradients and sparkle icons that indicate the presence of AI; writing tools that make your emails sound more professional; and an AI eraser in Photos that blots away distractions. It’s all here, and it all works okay. But none of it is even close to the time-saving computing platform shift we’ve been promised.

    Read Article >

  • Allison Johnson

    Apple Intelligence is out

    iPhone 16 in blue

    iPhone 16 in blue

    Apple’s AI features are finally starting to appear. Apple Intelligence is launching today on the iPhone, iPad, and Mac, offering features like generative AI-powered writing tools, notification summaries, and a cleanup tool to take distractions out of photos. It’s Apple’s first official step into the AI era, but it’ll be far from its last.

    Apple Intelligence has been available in developer and public beta builds of Apple’s operating systems for the past few months, but today marks the first time it’ll be available in the full public OS releases. Even so, the features will still be marked as “beta,” and Apple Intelligence will very much remain a work in progress. (You’ll have to get on a waitlist to try Apple Intelligence, too.) Siri gets a new look, but its most consequential new features — like the ability to take action in apps — probably won’t arrive until well into 2025.

    Read Article >

More Stories
Read Entire Article