While the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are locked to using Meta AI, there are other smart glasses on the market that have chosen to adopt OpenAI's ChatGPT as their assistant of choice, like the Solos AirGo 3 smart glasses.
Apple’s AI features for iPhones will be available for free to users with any iPhone 16, iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max, who update to iOS 18.1. Apple Intelligence is also available for iPad and Mac models that support iPadOS 18.1 and macOS Sequoia 15.
It’s a lesson Apple is about to learn with the release of Genmoji, an upcoming iPhone feature that lets users concoct AI-generated emojis. Since its release in beta late last month, the tool has unleashed a gallery of devilish creations, with users ...
Wall Street is hyperfocused on Apple's guidance to see if AI features are driving consumer demand for the iPhone 16 lineup.
Click and the iPhone announces to all parties on the line that the call is being recorded. After the call ends, the recording and the AI-generated transcript and summary appear in the Notes app. And AI summarization works in many more places than just call ...
"This will be a multi-year AI journey that will define the future for Apple with its next generation chip architecture, hardware releases and future iPhone models built around the AI foundation ...
Apple has released a free software update that will inject its first dose of artificial intelligence into its iPhone 16 line-up as the trendsetting company tries to catch up with technology’s latest craze.
And then there’s the joy of processing a Camera Raw file in a digital darkroom such as Lightroom Classic to tease out more color and detail before rewarding ourselves with a perfect print that we’ve sharpened in post to give it more punch!
Apple launched the first wave of Apple Intelligence capabilities on Monday with a free iOS update for the new iPhone 16 and other devices.
Pixelmator said there “will be no material changes to the Pixelmator Pro, Pixelmator for iOS, and Photomator apps at this time.”
In this wide-ranging interview with WSJ’s Joanna Stern, Apple’s software chief Craig Federighi goes deep into AI privacy, preserving the art of photography, the idea of a sentient Siri and more.