Craig Federighi Explains Why Apple Pivoted to a Siri Chatbot App - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Craig Federighi Explains Why Apple Pivoted to a Siri Chatbot App

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.

Ask Siri iOS 27
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 addressed the apparent about-face during a post-keynote discussion for the media at Apple Park this week, responding directly to a question about Apple's prior public stance.

Following WWDC 2025, Federighi and senior vice president of worldwide marketing Greg Joswiak went on a media tour in which they described Apple's approach as weaving ‌Siri‌ into the user's existing workflow rather than offering "a bolt-on chatbot on the side."

Federighi this week said the decision came down to a practical user need to return to and continue past ‌Siri‌ conversations. Apple determined that a home screen app was the most natural affordance on its platform for that purpose, and framed the ‌Siri‌ app as an extension of the system experience rather than a standalone product:

We see Siri not as a separate chatbot, just an unintegrated place you go and chit-chat, but rather as an integral, conversational tool that you use in the moment, deeply integrated into your experience.

Understanding what's on screen, able to interface, not in some separate world, but directly in the document that you're editing and that you want help proofreading, that you want tips on. And so all these experiences are conversational. They are really an extension of your system experience, deeply integrated into your flow.

Now, we did go back and forth on what's the best way, if you want to get back to such a chat that you had, because you want to continue it, you want to reference it, and quite honestly, in our platform, the most natural affordance for any user to go find something like that is to have an app that they can manage on their home screen, launch, and get back to. And so we have a Siri app, and that Siri app just re-embodies those capabilities of that core system experience.

The ‌iOS 27‌ developer beta is available now, though access to the new ‌Siri‌ requires joining a waitlist in Settings, with a public beta expected in July.

Popular Stories

Finder Siri Feature

iOS 27 Getting Major Siri Redesign With Chat Interface and Dedicated App

Tuesday May 12, 2026 1:38 pm PDT by
Apple is introducing an overhauled version of Siri in iOS 27, evolving the personal assistant into a more capable chatbot and AI agent able to compete with ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. With Siri's transition, Apple will be making multiple Siri-related design changes in iOS 27, according to a new report from Bloomberg. Siri will largely live in the Dynamic Island in iOS 27, but there will also be...
OpenAI vs Apple Feature

OpenAI Considering Legal Action Against Apple Over 'Strained' Siri Partnership

Thursday May 14, 2026 10:52 am PDT by
OpenAI is preparing to potentially take legal action against Apple due to a "strained" relationship with the iPhone maker, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. The two companies reached a partnership in 2024 that saw ChatGPT integrated into features like Siri and Image Playground across iOS, iPadOS, and macOS. iPhone users can also subscribe to ChatGPT directly via the Settings app, with...
iOS 27 and Siri Finder Thumb

iOS 27: Dedicated Siri App to Include Auto-Deleting Chats Feature

Monday May 18, 2026 4:00 am PDT by
Apple in iOS 27 will include an enhanced Siri with a dedicated app that gives users options to keep conversations in memory for a limited time, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. Writing in his latest Power On newsletter, Gurman says that Apple is keen to market its privacy credentials as a key advantage in the way it is implementing AI across its software compared to rivals....

Top Rated Comments

Sebosz Avatar
15 hours ago at 05:31 am
Basically said a bunch of nothing instead of simple "we changed our mind based on consumer expectations"
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Astuces iOS Avatar
15 hours ago at 05:10 am
Pov : people still using Claude/Chatgpt/Gemini apps
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
throAU Avatar
14 hours ago at 06:45 am

Apple has not missed the boat on AI, they’ve been concentrating in other areas, that in the end will benefit end users by not sacrificing their privacy. They side-stepped the whole data center/chatbot rush to build more efficient and specialized local models to enhance features. This has (had) been their M.O. for years.

They were hesitant to put A.I. out in front and instead pushed it to the back to let “features” become how users took advantage of A.I.’s strengths. What they have failed at is recognizing the need for an advanced conversational A.I. model and that their previous path was not going to work for how users may want to take advantage of maintaining context in any given conversation and continuing to work within it.

The Siri App allows users to “save” specific conversations and disregard those that are no longer relevant. This allows the system to be more efficient in that it doesn’t need to remember everything, only what the user specifically wants it to.
Yup, and fundamentally, Apple are the only vendor to have all of the plumbing in the OS for AI to control any app on any of your devices.

They haven't put out a decent chatbot... But they're going to kill the pig when it comes to the agentic OS that is coming.

The scaffolding has been there for years and no other platform right now has the capability to drive virtually every native app on the platform programmatically that Apple does.

Microsoft have been talking the talk with regards to copilot being able to do stuff on PC (but it's basically useless). Apple's platforms have the actual plumbing to make this work.


Apple's advantage here isn't the chatbot, it isn't the large language model.

It's the ability for apps to communicate with one another via the frameworks they use.

Being able to describe building a Siri shortcut in basic English is just the start.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
15 hours ago at 05:35 am
Craig Federighi has been absolute failure when it comes to AI. He should not be in charge of Siri.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
14 hours ago at 05:48 am

This is barely a reason why...
This seems to me to be an OBVIOUS reason why. The intricate details of past convos are stored on-device for security purposes. If instead Siri was just an embedded bot that learned everything about you a little too deeply and stored it in the cloud forever, this would conflict with Apple's stated promise of privacy, security, and personal cloud compute. I'm not even remotely interested in Alexa+ for this exact reason.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Mac Fly (film) Avatar
15 hours ago at 05:39 am

This is barely a reason why...
To get back to a convo you had with Siri is the perfect reason to have a dedicated app.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)