Apple (AAPL) used its big developer showcase to introduce an AI version of Siri — one built with technology developed alongside Alphabet's Google (GOOGL) — that can finally draw on your own data to answer more complicated questions and complete tasks, instead of punting them to a web search.

Apple (AAPL) used its big developer showcase to introduce an AI version of Siri — one built with technology developed alongside Alphabet's Google (GOOGL) — that can finally draw on your own data to answer more complicated questions and complete tasks, instead of punting them to a web search. The event doubled as a send-off: it was Tim Cook's 15th and final WWDC as chief executive.
For a company that has trailed on consumer AI, leaning on Google's models is pragmatic — and it deepens an already lucrative relationship between the two. We had Apple on watch into this event rather than chasing it; with a credible AI story now in hand, we're comfortable reinforcing the position. The bigger tell is that even the biggest names are partnering up, not going it alone.
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