Apple isn’t shying away from its AI ambitions with the introduction of the new M3 MacBook Air. CNET’s Bridget Carey breaks down what Apple’s new AI could do for MacOS and iOS—and what she hopes it won’t do. Read CNET’s article: Hidden AI features available on your iPhone right now 0:00 Apple’s M3 chip is in the MacBook Air 0:53 Apple is under pressure to embrace AI 1:45 Apple’s new AI-optimized MacBook Pros 3:02 MacOS AI Advances Expected at WWDC 4:20 How AI Influences Phone Development 4:57 Smarter Siri Brings Privacy Implications 6:01 Creators Concerned About Generative AI 6:55 AI Now in Your iPhone 8:09 Slow and Steady Wins the AI ​​Race Subscribe to CNET on YouTube: Never miss a deal again! Check out CNET’s browser extension 👉 Check out CNET’s Amazon Storefront: Follow us on TikTok: Follow us on Instagram:…

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44 thoughts on “How Apple’s AI Can Change Macs and iPhones”
  1. You are so funny 🤣 😂 your videos are informative and funny, thank you! I am waiting for the next version with WiFi 7.0, OLED screen, AI chip to be on device!

  2. I want something that can learn the weird tech work arounds we all inevitably need to create to allow us to move past the latest computer issue that f’s up your work.

  3. apple getting sued again so stock price is down, buy low now sell high later as another lawsuit will prove apple doesn't have a monopoly just like the previous lawsuit proved meritless.

  4. Apples walled garden approach and play hardball is going to catch up to them sometime. Macs are not selling as they want them to. iPhones doing well but they have arm twisted many contributing companies and scared them some off the platform. The app store is slipping way below play store. Sooner or later google is going to catch up them there in the smartphone market once all the differences in features vanish. Unless apple starts to take companies and consumer desprate neeeds into account. They will suffer. The extent , only time will tell

  5. Apple A.I will tell you how great Lightning port were, how Apple protecting user from harmful apps, how to…..how wokeness is good for Apple to shave the sheep ..how..😂😂😂😂😂😂

  6. So what happens to the travel agents when AI replaces them? What happens to the people who curate songs as playlists on Youtube when you turn to AI recommendations? No matter what you do, the purpose of AI is to replace humans, as has technology always been.

  7. Apple really needs to work on AI; it needs to catch up. Siri is good for simple tasks like "set my timer for __ minutes,”. Siri’s dictation is terribly bad; it doesn’t understand 7 out of 10.
    Every time I search for something, it brings me too many unrelieved files (like 13,000) that I don’t know what these are like .meta, .str, .py, .json, .res.
    I don’t need them. They waste my time and energy. Filtering searches is not as easy as you think. I'm optimistic that Apple can fix the problems and bring real AI to us.

  8. it may go further than being a tool as this video suggests, it may change how the home screen looks altogether, it may break the cycle of looking at apps , instead smart siri becomes the home.

  9. I am sure Apple will be just fine with doing the right thing with getting A.I. right. They always do. You just need to keep learning new things and maybe, just maybe you’ll get more smarter, maybe. Like using an Apple watch instead of a speaker to find your phone. That sounded pretty dumb considering you tried it more once and it didn’t work…

  10. I 100% agree with you on what they’ve done with AI so far. Yes some of what they’ve done is “cool”, but it definitely is NOT useful in most peoples real lives… All personal assistants (Google, Alexa and Siri) are pretty much useless at most things, with Alexa (in my opinion) beating out the other 2 purely based on its smart home capabilities, but even at that it’s pretty dumb. They get confused at simple requests, can’t do things you’d think they’d be good at by now, very limited eco systems and have altogether barely advanced in the past 5 to 10 years… And with all the advancement we’ve had over the past year in the field of generative AI, what did we get at Samsungs big joint Google release? Photo editing, summarising emails / chats / notes and something that’s basically reverse image search / Google lens made slightly easier…. Oh and they put Google translate in messaging… I am hoping that next year (maybe this year with Apple, but I suspect they won’t release anything huge this year, they’ll just announce they’re working on it) we’ll see some big things and actual upgrades to assistants. I wouldn’t be surprised if the next snapdragon chip has some major local AI processing upgrades which will massively aid on device features, which will then lead to Apple doing the same next year.

  11. Another great presentation. I’m not really a big fan of AI. I’m not sure how much longer I’m gonna stay in the electronic world if I have to deal with AI or too much. I may get a dump phone at some point and just forget about it.

  12. "I hope Apple keeps the slow thoughtful pace here, because I'd rather see AI done right to help people, rather than have it rushed to help Wall Street." Well said, Bridget! Apple's, or any other company for that matter, primary focus should ALWAYS be on how it can better help its customers rather than Wall Street.

  13. The thing that worries me with AI everywhere is the great unknown of malicious use and possible AI virus.

    AI on iOS should come with a shut down button.

  14. These apple fans are only jealous of android because it's fun, just listen to her bashing Google's magic editor what's the difference with photoshop. 😂 they are the same except magic editor is free.

  15. you know, the craze of non-engineer tech enthusiast on AI was amusing. But right now, it's just disturbing and hurting tech industries, not by taking job. But by shifting attention of investors here and there. Causing job deficits randomly.

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