IN 2011, A DAY BEFORE STEVE JOBS passed away, Apple’s former senior VP of software, Scott Forstall, took the stage to showcase Siri, which would be part of the iPhone 4S. Siri was supposed to be an AI assistant that would use its wicked smarts to make your smartphone experience simpler. You could speak to it and ask it questions, and it would whip out answers from the Internet.
Given the state of the networks and processing power at the time, it was impressive technology and its promise was enormous. In the years that have ensued, it has become a caricature of sorts as within two years it was usurped by Google and Amazon, and Apple’s advances were meagre.
Siri was originally an app on the App Store that caught the eye of Apple’s fabled mercurial co-founder and exCEO, the late Steve Jobs. He had made it his mission to woo its founders to join Apple. Jobs had personally called Dag Kittlaus, the AI wizard who had cofounded Siri. This was at a time when Jobs was ailing with pancreatic cancer. While reticent, the Siri team agreed to join Apple, but today none of the cofounders are left at Apple.
The founders of Siri, including Dag Kittlaus, left Apple within a couple of years of Jobs’ passing to found another startup which again dabbled in building another virtual assistant called Viv. This startup was then absorbed by Samsung, which eventually turned into Bixby.
But while all this happened, Apple kept going further and further away from its promise of an AI-powered smartphone as Siri meandered and Apple’s stance on privacy just didn’t allow it to become an AI powerhouse that Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Meta, its Silicon Valley and Seattle-based peers, have become. And all this happened before Generative AI was even a term.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MEMORIES & IMPRESSIONS
Ratan Tata was an exceptional human being. He was a visionary leader, esteemed industrialist, and a humanitarian, who left an indelible mark on India and the world.
The Robotaxi Market
The robotaxi market is shaping up to be a high-stakes battleground as tech giants and automakers race to transform urban mobility.
And the Nobel Prize Goes to AI
The recent Nobel Prize T awards to AI pioneers affiliated with Google have sparked a broader conversation about Big Tech's influence on research and the limitations of traditional prize categories.
Ola Electrified
Once considered a trailblazer in India’s electric vehicle (EV) ecosystem, Bhavish Aggarwal’s Ola Electric now faces a major accountability crisis.
Sharp Slide in Industrial Output on Eve of Deepavali
India’s index of industrial production (IIP) saw a sharp reversal in August, contracting by 0.1 per cent, in stark contrast to the 4.7 per cent growth in July, mostly because of significant contractions in mining and electricity generation.
Heralding the Solar Era with Sustainable Electrification
RAJEEV KASHYAP on the economics of solar power, the hurdles in scaling it, and much more
A WELL-GREASED MACHINE
The OmniBook X14 laptop runs on first-generation Snapdragon X Elite, which bets big on Al-enabled productivity and battery life, but falls short when it comes to overall experience, says Deep Majumdar
DO NOT LETA HEALTH CRISIS RUIN YOUR FINANCIAL HEALTH
For a family of four living in a metro, it is recommended to opt for a family floater health insurance plan with a sum insured of at least Rs 15-20 lakh
Disruption Ahead: Beyond Organisation Charts and Structures
ALBERT EINSTEIN FAMOUSLY said, “We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Dr. Rahul Shivajirao Kadam: A Visionary Leader Blending Sustainability, Innovation, And Social Empowerment
We are on the stage of global warming, and these technologies not only help prevent further damage but also leave behind a better environment for future generations.