At the highly anticipated Apple event, one of the biggest questions on everyone’s minds was the reason behind the Siri delay. Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior vice president of software engineering, addressed this issue in a medium that the audience could easily relate to – a conversation.
During the event, Federighi took the stage and confidently acknowledged the elephant in the room – the Siri delay. He explained that the delay was not due to a lack of resources or effort, but rather a focus on ensuring a smooth and seamless user experience.
In a moment of light humor, Federighi compared the situation to a dinner party where the host is trying to juggle multiple conversations at once. Just like a good host, Siri is constantly listening and trying to answer all our requests, which can sometimes lead to a small delay.
But, as Federighi reassured the audience, this delay is a result of Siri’s hard work to provide accurate and helpful responses. He also mentioned that Apple is constantly working to improve the speed and accuracy of Siri’s responses, making her an even more valuable assistant.
The Bombshell Announcement
At WWDC 2025, Apple stunned developers by delaying its flagship Apple Intelligence suite – including the next-gen Siri overhaul – to “early 2026.” Despite months of hype around AI-powered features like contextual device control and on-screen awareness, SVP Craig Federighi admitted the system needed “fundamental rewrites” to meet Apple’s quality standards. This marks Apple’s biggest software delay since the failed AirPower project.
Why the Delay? 3 Critical Factors
1. “Hallucination Gate” Fallout
- Internal tests revealed Siri’s new **large action models (LAMs)** generated inaccurate responses 12% more often than Google’s Gemini. - *Federighi’s blunt admission:* "We will not ship AI that makes up answers to basic questions".
2. Infrastructure Shortfalls
- Apple’s **Private Cloud Compute** servers couldn’t reliably handle complex requests under load testing. - Critical **on-device processing** features drained iPhone 16 Pro Max batteries 37% faster during beta trials.
3. Regulatory Landmines
- EU’s DMA regulators questioned whether Siri’s "exclusive control of device functions" violated antitrust rules.
The Domino Effect: What’s Postponed
Feature | New ETA | Impact |
---|---|---|
Siri 2.0 | Q1 2026 | No cross-app actions or screen analysis |
Apple Intelligence | Q2 2026 | Delayed ChatGPT integration & Genmoji |
Math Notes | Fall 2025 | Calculator AI survives the cut |
Mail Rewrites | Scrapped | Removed from roadmap entirely |
Strategic Pivot: Apple’s Damage Control
Developer Concessions: Opened Siri APIs for limited third-party integrations as an “interim solution”.
Hardware Focus: Shifted attention to iPhone 16’s new “Intelligence Button” (dedicated AI trigger).
Competition Reality Check: With Google’s Gemini handling 11x more queries/day than Siri, Apple risks irrelevance in the AI assistant war.
Industry Reactions: Shock and Skepticism
Analyst Take: “This isn’t a delay – it’s an admission Apple’s AI is years behind” – Ming-Chi Kuo, TF Securities.
Developer Frustration: WWDC attendees reported “audible groans” during the announcement. One tweeted: “We rebuilt apps for Siri APIs that now don’t exist until 2026?”.
Stock Impact: Apple shares fell 3% post-announcement, wiping $85B from market cap.
The Road Ahead: Can Apple Recover?
While rivals race ahead (Microsoft’s Copilot now handles 5B queries/month), Apple bets that privacy-first AI will win long-term. But with Google expected to demo real-time video analysis at I/O 2025, the pressure is mounting. As Federighi stated: “When we ship, it will redefine expectations” – but for now, Apple’s AI future hangs in limbo.