Apple Intelligence is set to expand in iOS 19, here are a few things I'd like to see - 9to5Mac

Apple Intelligence has been off to a rocky start, especially when it comes to Siri.The assistant still has a lot to be desired, and that should definitely be at the forefront of Apple’s priorities.Regardless, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reports that Apple plans on expanding current Apple Intelligence capabilities to additional apps in iOS 19, and I figured I’d throw out some ideas I’d like to see.

Summaries in more places I think providing summaries is probably one of the better use cases of on-device large language models.Apple introduced notification summaries in iOS 18, and while there were some major inaccuracies early on, things seem to be mostly fine.Apple recently enabled Apple Intelligence on compatible devices by default, rather than making it an opt-in feature.

For one, I think it’d be neat if there were an API for developers to use summarization models in their apps.I’m sure Apple would put strict guardrails on it, but allowing third-parties to utilize Apple’s summarization models would be a big win.It’d empower indie developers to create AI features without having to worry about an OpenAI bill.

On top of that, I’d really like to see some summarization improvements in the Messages app, particularly in group chats.If you missed out on a 100-message conversation, Apple should provide a more detailed summary than what can fit within two lines.Or, say you’re a student – imagine being able to summarize the notes you took in a class after the fact.

You’d still need to read the notes to get a thorough understanding, but a note summary could serve as a great way to jog your memory if you’re quickly trying to recall something.Genmoji for everyone Genmoji is probably one of the most popular Apple Intelligence features unveiled at WWDC24.Unfortunately though, it’s only available on some of the most recent iPhone models: iPhone 15 Pro/Pro Max, iPhone 16e, iPhone 16/16 Plus, and iPhone 16 Pro/Pro Max.

If you have anything older, including the one-year-old iPhone 15, you can’t use Genmoji.I don’t expect Apple to make its models run locally on less capable hardware, as nice as that would be.However, they did announce Private Cloud Compute – a private server for handling Apple Intelligence requests in the cloud.

Those servers were likely low capacity when they just begun rolling them out, but it’ll have been over a year since the rollout begun by the time iOS 19 releases to the public.While I don’t expect Apple to give out Private Cloud Compute usage for free, I think it’d be pretty neat if they bundled Genmoji in iCloud+ subscriptions for users with older devices – giving people a taste of what Apple Intelligence offers.More customizable focus modes One of my favorite features in iOS 18 has been the new Reduce Interruptions focus mode.

In short, it analyzes every notification that comes through, and only presents what it thinks is important.The rest just stay in notification center.I’d really like to see Apple offer additional granularity here.

For example, you could configure a focus mode that only triggers on key words that you set up.I could also see the inverse being useful, where you’d normally allow an app to notify you, but you’d like notifications with matching key words to be muted.That’s just scratching the surface, but I really think there could be a lot of opportunity for AI to enable more granular notification management.

The new “Reduce Interruptions” focus is just the start.My favorite Apple accessories on Amazon: Anker 25K Compact Power Bank with retractable cable MOFT Magnetic Wallet Stand, fits up to 3 cards AirTag 4-pack (on sale for 30% off!) Anker MagSafe 2-in-1 Wireless Charging Stand with Qi2 AirPods Pro 2 (USB-C) SanDisk Extreme 2TB USB-C SSD, up to 1050MB/s   You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day.Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop.

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