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Why Apple is playing it slow with AI
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在人工智能浪潮中,苹果公司采取了与众不同的策略,选择“慢”行。尽管其他科技巨头竞相发布AI功能,苹果的“Apple Intelligence”却预计到2026年才能广泛普及。这种延迟在追求速度的市场中显得尤为突出,但文章认为,这恰恰是苹果稳健风格的体现。苹果过往的经验表明,他们倾向于在产品打磨成熟后再推出,以避免出现劣质软件。相较于竞争对手产品存在的各种问题,苹果的谨慎可能是一种更明智的选择,旨在为用户提供真正可靠的AI体验,并在AI技术成熟时抓住机遇。

🍎 **苹果AI发布策略独特,注重质量而非速度:** 苹果将AI功能打包命名为“Apple Intelligence”,但其广泛发布日期定在2026年,远晚于竞争对手。文章认为,这并非落后,而是苹果一贯坚持的“不急于发布不成熟产品”的策略,旨在确保AI功能的稳定性和可靠性,避免出现类似竞争对手产品中常见的错误和低效问题。

🚀 **竞争对手AI产品现状堪忧,问题频出:** 文章指出,当前市场上许多AI产品,如微软的Copilot和ChatGPT,存在回答错误、捏造信息、输出不稳定等问题。开发者也反映,AI生成的代码片段可用,但复杂项目仍需大量修改,修复成本甚至高于从头编写。这为苹果的谨慎策略提供了佐证。

💡 **延迟发布是明智之举,规避市场风险:** 文章引用分析观点,认为当前AI技术尚未完全成熟,苹果的延迟可能是最理性的选择。通过观察竞争对手的“试错”过程,苹果可以学习其错误,规避潜在的负面影响,如安全问题、用户抱怨和资金浪费。这种“等待、观察、再行动”的策略,与苹果在智能手表和平板电脑市场的过往成功经验相似。

⏳ **苹果无需追逐热点,掌握主动权:** 苹果拥有硬件、操作系统和应用商店的生态系统控制权,因此无需像其他公司那样通过激进的AI功能发布来吸引投资者或维持相关性。他们可以根据自身节奏,在AI技术真正成熟且可靠时,推出符合其品牌形象的产品,避免错过AI发展的关键节点,同时也能在AI泡沫破裂时保持优势。

🏆 **“做好”比“先行”更重要:** 文章总结,如果苹果的AI产品最终能真正实用且可靠,那么其缓慢的推出策略就是一次巨大的胜利。即使AI技术未能如预期发展,苹果也避免了向市场推送大量无效工具。在充斥着半成品和承诺未兑现的技术周期中,苹果的“不作为”反而可能成为最“大胆”的举措,因为它将用户体验置于首位。

Apple is taking its time with AI. While most tech companies are racing to push out AI features as fast as they can, Apple is doing the opposite. Its big announcement – Apple Intelligence – won’t arrive for most users until 2026. That’s a long delay in a market where speed seems to matter more than quality. But maybe that’s the whole point.

At this year’s WWDC, Apple showed off new AI features tied to Siri, writing tools, and app suggestions. It called the bundle “Apple Intelligence,” but those tools won’t be widely available any time soon. For now, they’re limited to beta users on select devices in the US. The rest of the world will have to wait. According to Macworld, even early access to Apple Intelligence is expected to be restricted, and many users may not see the features until iOS 18.4 (at the earliest) in 2025. A wider release could slip into 2026.

Not falling behind – just not rushing in

To some, the delay looks like Apple falling behind. OpenAI has already rolled out GPT-4o, Google is squeezing Gemini into Android, and Microsoft has pushed Copilot into Office, Windows, and pretty much everything else. Compared to that, Apple seems slow.

Apple tends not to ship bad software. It delays when things aren’t working. The company has a long history of waiting until something is polished before pushing it out. That kind of caution can be frustrating, but it also avoids something worse: giving people tools that don’t work properly.

Meanwhile, competitors ship bugs

Plenty of companies don’t seem to care about quality. Microsoft’s Copilot, for example, often gives wrong answers, makes up citations, or produces junk text. ChatGPT has its own set of problems, from hallucinating facts to giving inconsistent results. Even tools like Claude or Gemini, which show promise in short bursts, tend to fall short on long-term tasks or anything that needs precision.

Ask developers what it’s like using AI to write production code, and you’ll often hear the same message: it works fine for code snippets or boilerplate, but it’s more work than help when it comes to complex projects. Fixing AI-written code often takes longer than writing it from scratch.

Apple’s delay might be the smarter play

An opinion piece from TechRadar captured the consumer viewpoint. The author said they were glad Apple delayed Siri’s AI overhaul, arguing that the current generation of AI isn’t good enough. They said we often have the AI discussion backwards – we assume the tech is ready, and criticise companies for being too slow. But what if the tech just isn’t there yet? Apple’s delay might not be a flaw; it might be the only rational move.

Apple seems aware of this, making a lot of noise about being “excited” by AI, but it hasn’t forced it into every product, flooding iOS with half-baked tools. It hasn’t promised that Siri will be your new work assistant, for example. And while it may talk up the potential, it’s also been quiet about timelines.

Playing the long game

Some would call that playing it safe, but there’s another way to look at it. Maybe Apple doesn’t actually believe the current wave of AI is ready? Maybe it’s not convinced the technology will hold up under real pressure. So it’s watching the chaos from a distance.

And there’s plenty of chaos to watch. Companies are rolling out AI products that don’t work as advertised. Security issues, bad output, and inflated expectations are becoming common. Behind the scenes, many AI companies are burning through cash trying to make their models useful. If the bubble bursts, Apple gets to say it never went all-in.

Wait, watch, then act

That might not be a bug in the company’s strategy or problems in production: It might be the company’s strategy.

If users grow tired of AI that doesn’t deliver, Apple comes out looking smart for not jumping in too fast. If the tech improves and becomes reliable, Apple can still step in with a product that feels stable and is reliable.

This kind of delay has worked for Apple before, not launching a smartwatch until years after others tried. In the tablet market too, it wasn’t the market leader, but ended up setting the standard once involved.

With AI, Apple might be trying the same thing. Let everyone else test the limits, hit the walls, and suffer the backlash. Meanwhile, Apple learns from their mistakes, avoiding rushing out tools that make headlines for all the wrong reasons.

No rush required

It also helps that Apple doesn’t need to hype itself to stay relevant. It already controls the hardware, the OS, and the app store. It can roll out AI when it wants, how it wants, without chasing investor attention.

Of course, there’s always a risk in waiting too long. If AI tools do become reliable and useful across the board, Apple might miss the shift, but as of now, that shift hasn’t happened, with tools out there still struggling with accuracy, nuance, and consistency.

Getting it right beats being first

So maybe Apple is right to wait. Maybe the smartest move in this hype cycle is to do less.

“If Apple’s slow and cautious AI rollout results in something actually useful, that’s a win,” TechRadar says. And if it doesn’t? At least Apple didn’t spam the market with tools that waste everyone’s time.

In a tech cycle full of broken promises and half-working products, doing nothing might be the boldest move Apple could make.

(Photo by appshunter.io)

See also: Apple loses key AI leader to Meta

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