Apple’s 2025 keynote celebrated the physical form, with the 5.6mm-thin iPhone Air taking center stage. The message was clear: design and engineering are paramount. However, the event’s sparse mention of artificial intelligence highlighted a growing gap between Apple and its Silicon Valley rivals, who have made AI the centerpiece of their new technology.
While CEO Tim Cook lauded the iPhone Air’s titanium build as a “new standard,” the software story felt less revolutionary. The promised reinvention of Siri did not materialize, and the “Apple Intelligence” suite announced in 2024 was largely absent from the presentation. This stands in stark contrast to Google, which has aggressively integrated its advanced Gemini AI into its Pixel phones for years.
The product announcements themselves were solid, if incremental. The iPhone 17 line received camera and performance bumps. The new AirPods Pro 3 added live translation—a feature Google’s hardware has had for some time. The Apple Watch Series 11 gained hypertension alerts, a valuable health tool but not the generative AI leap some were anticipating.
For now, Apple is betting that a beautifully designed, high-performing device like the $999 iPhone Air is what consumers want most. But as the tech world pivots sharply toward generative AI, the company’s perceived lag in this critical area could become a significant challenge, leaving Wall Street analysts and tech enthusiasts wondering when Apple will truly enter the AI race.
While Apple Touts Thinness, Competitors Push Ahead on AI
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