After more than a decade of memes, frustration, and unfulfilled promises, Siri is good. Like really good. That’s not just our take — it’s the verdict from respected WSJ tech journalist Joanna Stern after she spent an entire week living with the new Siri AI in the iOS 27 beta. Her detailed testing (captured in a must-watch YouTube video below) shows that Apple has finally delivered on the vision it teased for years: a conversational, context-aware, privacy-first digital assistant that actually understands you. The Game-Changer: Personal Context + On-Device Intelligence What sets the new Siri AI apart is its deep integration with your personal data — all processed with strong privacy protections. Unlike cloud-heavy competitors that often feel generic, Siri can pull relevant information from your Messages, Calendar, Voicemail, Photos, and more, right on your device. Stern’s real-world examples are compelling: • On a beach trip, she asked Siri for souvenir ideas for her kids “based on what you know about them.” Siri recommended reptile-themed toys — information drawn directly from her Messages. When she followed up (“How did you know that?”), Siri transparently explained the source. • Siri AI synthesized data from her calendar, messages, and voicemail to suggest relevant work tasks for the day. This is the kind of personalized assistance that actually feels useful in daily life, not just flashy demos. Siri also demonstrated strong on-screen awareness, correctly identifying locations in photos (with quick corrections when needed) and offering helpful follow-ups like directions or nearby recommendations. Real-World Testing Across Everyday Scenarios Stern didn’t just ask scripted questions. She took Siri on a road trip to the beach, used it for shopping, meal analysis (via camera for nutritional insights), bill-splitting, and even tested its boundaries with personal/medical queries and lighthearted attempts to make it her “girlfriend.” Key takeaways from her testing: • Helpful and conversational — It handles natural back-and-forth dialogue far better than old Siri. • Responsible guardrails — It politely refuses medical advice or romantic advances (“I’ve always thought of you as my friend”) and directs users to human professionals when appropriate. • Privacy-first design — Queries use on-device processing where possible, with Private Cloud Compute for more complex tasks. Relevant personal data is sent only when needed and deleted afterward. No long-term storage by Apple. • Beta realities — Some delays, occasional errors, and slower responses are still present (as expected in early testing), but the core foundation is solid. Stern’s bottom line, shared on X and in her video: “Siri is good. Like good-good. After years of broken promises, Apple’s rebuilt the foundation it needs for the future.” She was even impressed enough to consider switching to Apple Mail because of how well Siri leverages the data within Apple’s ecosystem. Official Backing from Apple This isn’t just beta hype. At WWDC 2026, Apple officially introduced Siri AI as a profoundly more capable and personal assistant powered by Apple Intelligence. It features natural conversations, personal context understanding, onscreen awareness, broad world knowledge, and the ability to take actions across apps. A dedicated Siri app lets you revisit conversations (synced via iCloud). It’s currently in developer beta on iOS 27, iPadOS 27, macOS 27, and visionOS 27, with a public beta expected later this year on supported devices. Why This Matters For years, Siri lagged behind Google Assistant, Alexa, and newer AI chatbots. The new Siri AI doesn’t just catch up — it leverages Apple’s unique strengths: deep ecosystem integration, on-device processing, and industry-leading privacy. By keeping sensitive personal data largely on-device while still delivering smart, contextual help, Apple is positioning Siri as the trustworthy choice for everyday assistance. MacDailyNews Take: Stern’s week-long experiment proves that Siri AI no longer just marketing. The rebuilt architecture works in real life — helping with souvenirs for the kids, prepping for your day, or analyzing your breakfast — while staying firmly within responsible boundaries. The old Siri is gone. The new Siri AI has arrived in a very promising way – and it’s still just in beta. Our little birdies — who’ve been telling for months that the new Siri not only works, but is actually pretty great — knew what they were talking about! Support MacDailyNews at no extra cost to you by using this link to shop at Amazon. [Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Fred Mertz” for the heads up.] The post Siri AI is REALLY good — WSJ’s Joanna Stern’s week-long test proves it (with video) appeared first on MacDailyNews. You're currently a free subscriber to MacDailyNews. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription.
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Saturday, June 20, 2026
Siri AI is REALLY good — WSJ’s Joanna Stern’s week-long test proves it (with video)
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Siri AI is REALLY good — WSJ’s Joanna Stern’s week-long test proves it (with video)
After more than a decade of memes, frustration, and unfulfilled promises, Siri is good. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ...
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