Report: Apple's New AI Strategy Firms Up Under Craig Federighi - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Report: Apple's New AI Strategy Firms Up Under Craig Federighi

Apple has restructured its artificial intelligence strategy under software chief Craig Federighi, accelerating plans to overhaul Siri by relying on external AI models after years of internal delays and organizational friction.

craig federighi wwdc 2018
According to a detailed report from The Information, Apple's approach to artificial intelligence has undergone a significant shift over the past year. Apple software chief Craig Federighi is said to be at the center of that shift, having assumed direct oversight of the company's AI organization and is now driving decisions that will shape the future of ‌Siri‌ and other Apple Intelligence features across the product lineup.

Last fall, Federighi apparently addressed a joint meeting of Apple's software and AI teams, expressing enthusiasm for closer collaboration while also signaling dissatisfaction with the company's pace of progress in artificial intelligence. Some members of Apple's foundation models team interpreted the remarks as criticism of their work.

In December, Apple moved to consolidate its AI leadership under Federighi, completing a transition that had begun earlier in the year when responsibility for ‌Siri‌ was removed from the AI group and brought under Federighi's software division. In January, Apple announced plans to use Google's Gemini AI models to power future AI upgrades, including an improved version of ‌Siri‌. In Federighi's view, integrating a third-party model would allow Apple to finally ship a revamped ‌Siri‌ later this year after controversially postponing the update in 2025.

However, the report also outlines internal concerns about the implications of placing AI under Federighi's control. People who have worked closely with him described him as highly cost-conscious and skeptical of investments with uncertain returns. This approach stands in notable contrast to rivals such as OpenAI, Meta Platforms, and Google, who invest tens of billions of dollars in data centers, chips, and AI researchers.

Apple has attempted to limit infrastructure spending by emphasizing on-device processing and its Private Cloud Compute system, which uses Apple silicon. The company was said to be waiting for the cost of AI computation and talent to decline, betting that most consumer use cases will eventually be handled locally on devices.

Federighi apparently viewed AI as unpredictable and difficult to control, preferring deterministic software behavior that could be clearly specified during design reviews. He rejected proposals to use AI to dynamically reorganize the iPhone home screen, arguing that such changes would confuse users.

Tensions over AI strategy have surfaced internally before. Around 2019, Mike Rockwell, who was leading development of the Vision Pro headset, reportedly proposed an AI-driven interface. He criticized Federighi's software approach as overly conservative, prompting a rebuke. Rockwell was later placed in charge of ‌Siri‌ in early 2025 and now reports directly to Federighi.

Despite his earlier skepticism, Federighi's stance shifted following the release of ChatGPT in late 2022. People close to him said he became convinced of the potential of large language models after experimenting with the technology and instructed his teams to explore ways to integrate similar capabilities into Apple products. Federighi reportedly concluded that Apple's internal models did not perform adequately on devices, while members of the foundation models team believed they were being blamed for challenges related to model optimization, which fell under the software organization's responsibilities.

Some team members complained they were not given sufficient guidance on how their models would ultimately be used, limiting their ability to compete with external alternatives. Around the time Apple removed ‌Siri‌ oversight from Giannandrea and assigned it to Rockwell, with Federighi directing the broader effort, Federighi instructed teams to evaluate deep integration of third-party models.

Despite the partnership with Google, Apple plans to continue developing its own AI models, particularly those designed to run on devices. Apple reportedly intends to shrink and adapt models derived from external partners so they can run more fully on Apple hardware, reducing long-term dependence. To support that goal, Apple is said to be considering acquisitions of smaller AI firms specializing in model compression and optimization.

See The Information's full report for more.

Popular Stories

Apple Silicon AI Optimized Feature Siri

Apple's Overhauled Siri Will Reportedly Run on Nvidia's Blackwell Chips

Thursday June 4, 2026 2:38 am PDT by
Apple will rely on Google's fleet of Nvidia chips to power its overhauled version of Siri when it launches in September, according to a new report from The Information. Last week, the outlet reported that Apple plans to highlight the on-device AI capabilities of its devices at WWDC next week, but queries that require cloud-based processing will still fall back on one of Google's large Gemini ...
apple intelligence architecture

Apple's New AI Models Contain 'None' of Google's Gemini Assistant

Tuesday June 9, 2026 6:46 am PDT by
Apple executives have detailed the architecture of the company's new Apple Foundation Models (AFM) and clarified exactly how Google's technology factored into their development. Craig Federighi, Apple's SVP of Software Engineering, held a post-keynote tech talk (via 9to5Mac) with press on Monday alongside AI VP Amar Subramanya, Siri lead Mike Rockwell, and software VP Sebastien Marineau-Mes...
Ask Siri iOS 27

Craig Federighi Explains Why Apple Pivoted to a Siri Chatbot App

Wednesday June 10, 2026 5:07 am PDT by
Apple senior vice president of software engineering Craig Federighi has explained why the company launched a standalone Siri app in iOS 27, after previously characterizing a dedicated chatbot as contrary to its Apple Intelligence strategy. The new Siri app, announced at WWDC earlier this week, gives users a centralized place to manage and revisit their conversations with Siri AI. Federighi...

Top Rated Comments

alanvitek Avatar
23 weeks ago
Agree with Federighi that the proposal to have AI rearrange icons on the iPhone Home Screen WOULD be more confusing than helpful. Glad he shot that one down
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
23 weeks ago
How many times can they reset, start over, firm up, shift, staff up, cycle out, pivot, flesh out, etc?

They do everything other than "deliver anything functional and good".
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
23 weeks ago

Until they get it right is the answer.

I'm fine with this. If you haven't actually worked with AI first hand, you might not know what a challenge it is to have it consistently deliver what's required.

Plenty of companies iterate. Relax.
Oh yeah... I'm sure Craig will solve it.
His hot garbage software division work speaks for itself.
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
repoman016 Avatar
23 weeks ago

Until they get it right is the answer.

I'm fine with this. If you haven't actually worked with AI first hand, you might not know what a challenge it is to have it consistently deliver what's required.

Plenty of companies iterate. Relax.
This would be better if they didn't market devices specifically to handle this awesome spectacular AI, and then NOT deliver. iPhone 16 anyone?
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
I7guy Avatar
23 weeks ago
I hope Craig can be a very successful driving force with apples AI implantation.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
alecto42 Avatar
23 weeks ago

He rejected proposals to use AI to dynamically reorganize the iPhone home screen, arguing that such changes would confuse users.
Well he’s right on that point, dynamically moving people’s apps around is a terrible idea.

I want my apps where I left them, otherwise you would have to go hunting every time you want to open an app.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)