The run-up to WWDC 2025 puts Apple in a rare and pivotal spotlight, as anticipation dampens in the wake of internal leaks and industry skepticism regarding the company’s artificial intelligence trajectory. Insiders and tech analysts alike agree: Apple’s expected announcements will fall short of spectacular. The brand, once seen as unbeatable in making late, polished debuts, is now playing catch-up in a technological race defined by rapid, bold moves from OpenAI and Google.
Last year’s unveiling of ‘Apple Intelligence’ promised a thoughtful, privacy-focused approach to artificial intelligence, but reality hit hard. While new features such as Writing Tools, Genmoji, and Priority Notifications found some utility, they failed to match the scale or versatility of offerings from industry leaders. The most anticipated upgrade—a transformative overhaul of Siri—was quietly delayed. Apple’s cautious approach, intended to sidestep blunders, has instead left Siri feeling stagnant while competitors’ assistants evolve to handle personal data and even generate multimedia content.
This year’s WWDC will see Apple offering developers access to small-scale Foundation Models for basic on-device artificial intelligence tasks, introducing a battery management system with modest artificial intelligence enhancements, and updating translation features. The company is also set to rebrand legacy features in Safari and Photos as ‘artificial intelligence-powered’ without unveiling major new capabilities. A naming shift to iOS 26, macOS 26, and watchOS 26 signals an acknowledgment of the accelerating pace of tech life, while a revamped ‘macOS Tahoe’ and a broader gaming hub hint at Apple’s attempt to diversify its platform’s appeal.
Yet most of Apple’s heavy lifting in artificial intelligence is slated for 2026. Ambitious projects, including a complete Siri rebuild into a conversational assistant, a ‘Mulberry’ health artificial intelligence doctor, and a web-connected ‘Knowledge’ chatbot, are deep in development but hampered by internal unease over artificial intelligence hallucinations and quality control. Despite breakthroughs with models reaching 150 billion parameters—on par with current ChatGPT releases—Apple remains hesitant, missing the urgency displayed by competitors. While there’s optimism about Apple’s capacity for deeply integrated consumer tech, the risk is that slow-moving perfectionism may leave the company a step behind, with WWDC 2025 marking an unusually vulnerable chapter as the world waits for Apple’s real artificial intelligence comeback.