Apple has long emphasized that a traditional chatbot doesn't fit its AI strategy. However, with iOS 27, a standalone Siri app now appears on the home screen. Craig Federighi has explained why this isn't a contradiction – and where Apple draws the line between app and chatbot.
With iOS 27, Apple introduced a standalone app centered around the new Siri, allowing users to manage conversations with the assistant. This is noteworthy because Apple had previously explicitly distanced itself from building a chatbot like ChatGPT or Gemini. During a Q&A session following the keynote at Apple Park, software chief Craig Federighi directly addressed this apparent change of heart and explained how the app fits into Apple's overall strategy.
A U-turn that wasn't supposed to be one
Just last year, Federighi and marketing chief Greg Joswiak laid out the plan: Apple Intelligence should be an experience embedded in everything you do on the device – and definitely not a chatbot running in the background. Federighi was recently asked about this very statement. The existence of a dedicated Siri app seems, at first glance, to be the opposite of what Apple had announced back then.
Why there is now an app after all
Federighi's reasoning revolves around a practical point: users should be able to find, continue, and access previous conversations with Siri. Apple internally explored various ways to best recall a previously conducted dialogue. The result was that the most natural solution on Apple's platforms is an app that can be managed and opened on the home screen, allowing users to return to where they left off. The Siri app thus replicates precisely the capabilities that are already part of the system experience.
Apple's interpretation: integrated rather than attached
Federighi rejects the supposed strategic shift. Siri, he argues, is not a separate space for casual chatter, but rather a conversational tool integrated into the moment, deeply embedded in the user's workflow. The assistant captures what's on the screen and intervenes directly where work is being done – for example, when proofreading a document or providing feedback. According to this logic, the app is not an independent chatbot ecosystem, but simply the most convenient way to return to an existing conversation. The core functionality of the revamped Siri in iOS 27 remains the core feature – the app is merely the framework that makes these capabilities accessible.
Semantics or a genuine change of course?
Whether this is merely a reinterpretation or a genuine change in strategy is a matter of perspective. In terms of content, Apple is sticking to its integration concept: the new Siri is intended to work throughout the system, not just in a separate window. At the same time, it's hard to deny that a Siri icon on the home screen is very similar in operation to those chatbot apps from which Apple has long sought to differentiate itself. The difference lies less in the app itself than in what lies behind it – and whether Apple's promise of seamless integration in everyday use will actually materialize will only become clear when iOS 27 reaches users this fall. (Image: Apple)
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