A principios de este año, Samsung lanzó un dispositivo llamado edición generativa Como parte de ello Inteligencia artificial galaxia Gracias a él, los usuarios del Galaxy S24 pueden editar sus fotos utilizando nuevos métodos de IA generativa.
Portrait Studio utiliza inteligencia artificial para convertir fotografías de retratos en dibujos. Puedes elegir diferentes estilos para tu selfie, como animación 3D, boceto, acuarela y guión gráfico, y la IA hará el resto, como eliminar fondos y diseñar la toma.
Sketch to Image utiliza herramientas de IA generativa de formas ligeramente diferentes. Permite a los usuarios dibujar algo y convertir cualquier dibujo que hayan realizado en dibujos más detallados.
¡A veces, Sketch to Image funciona muy bien! Otras veces, te recuerda con dureza que no puedes convertirte en un mejor artista usando solo la IA, un ejemplo de lo cual es la IA que intenta convertir un dibujo primitivo del Pato Donald en algo mejor, como se muestra en las imágenes a continuación.
Pero si bien todas estas son excelentes adiciones a Galaxy AI y divertidas de usar, falta algo y, con suerte, el siguiente paso en el viaje de Edición Generativa de Samsung agregará esa pieza que falta.
La próxima actualización de Galaxy AI Generative Edit debería permitirnos convertir cualquier foto en presentaciones de IA
El único problema con las herramientas actuales de Portrait Studio y Sketch to Image es que no te permiten convertir todo en una representación de IA.
Portrait Studio sólo funciona con personas, ya que Samsung utilizó rostros humanos para entrenar la IA. Además, si la imagen contiene varias caras, deberás repetir el proceso para cada cara. Portrait Studio no puede convertir varios rostros en retratos al mismo tiempo.
Mientras tanto, Sketch to Image te permite dibujar algo nuevo y convertirlo en una presentación. Pero la herramienta no le permite utilizar un gráfico de presentación existente. Ninguno de tus dibujos de PENUP se puede convertir en una presentación de IA, por ejemplo. Tienes que dibujar algo nuevo y solo entonces podrás convertirlo en una hermosa presentación utilizando el poder de la IA generativa.
La historia continúa después del vídeo…
Quizás puedas ver hacia dónde se dirige esto. Pero solo para asegurarnos de que estamos en la misma página: con suerte, el siguiente paso en la saga de edición generativa de Galaxy AI será la capacidad de convertir cualquier foto, boceto o foto en un renderizado de AI, incluso si es una foto antigua tomada hace años. Hace con un teléfono diferente o un boceto. Uno viejo hecho con un Galaxy Note S Pen retirado.
Por ahora disfrutaremos de las nuevas herramientas que Samsung introdujo con la actualización One UI 6.1.1. Cualquiera que sea el futuro, hablaremos más sobre los dispositivos actuales en nuestras próximas revisiones del Galaxy Z Fold 6 y Flip 6. Estén atentos para más información.
Adobe ha lanzado una nueva incorporación a su plataforma de edición de fotografías llamada Lightroom eliminación generativaAprovecha Firefly, el modelo de IA generativa de Adobe, para permitir a los editores de imágenes principiantes y aficionados identificar y borrar elementos de las imágenes, donde el contenido de reemplazo encaja perfectamente en su entorno.
Con la reciente llegada de Genetic Remove, han surgido tres razones principales para esto sala de luz Potente paquete de edición de fotografías para no profesionales:
Fácil de limpiar
Con Geneative Remove, los usuarios de Lightroom pueden simplemente usar el mouse o pasar el cursor sobre objetos, personas, cualquier cosa que esté interfiriendo con su foto bien compuesta, y la herramienta reconocerá automáticamente lo que no pertenece y lo borrará de la foto. No es necesario seleccionar el elemento seleccionándolo. La Eliminación Genética sabe lo que indica y cómo deshacerse de él.
Además, el motor de IA puede crear fondos muy realistas o imitar patrones complejos como paisley basándose en la información visual de la imagen.
Velocidad de la luz triturable
Efectos de lente a nivel de estudio
Lightroom viene con Lens Blur, una herramienta para agregar efectos de lentes profesionales a sus fotografías en posproducción. Con esta función, puede lograr el enfoque suave y la apariencia general de la lente asociados con la fotografía de estudio con cualquier cámara o teléfono inteligente.
También hay siete ajustes preestablecidos para elegir, lo que brinda a los principiantes una manera fácil de aplicar estos efectos de ensueño a sus fotografías.
Flujo de trabajo optimizado para dispositivos móviles
Crédito: Adobe
Adobe sabe que muchas de las fotografías actuales se capturan y visualizan mediante teléfonos inteligentes. La empresa diseñó una interfaz de usuario optimizada para dispositivos móviles para su aplicación Lightroom, de modo que los creativos puedan gestionar su producción fotográfica de principio a fin, todo desde la aplicación móvil. Esto incluye la extirpación obstétrica.
Si está listo para probar Lightroom con tecnología de inteligencia artificial, Adobe ofrece una prueba gratuita de siete días. Empezar aquí.
Microsoft, which has gone “all-in” on artificial intelligence, has developed a generative AI model designed expressly for U.S. intelligence services. Unlike other AI platforms, such as Microsoft’s own Copilot, this one will be “air gapped” and won’t require a potentially unsafe connection to the internet.
Bloomberg notes, “It’s the first time a major large language model has operated fully separated from the internet… Most AI models, including OpenAI’s ChatGPT rely on cloud services to learn and infer patterns from data, but Microsoft wanted to deliver a truly secure system to the US intelligence community.”
18 months of development
The tool will allow intelligence services to use AI for tasks such as analyzing vast swathes of classified data without the fear of data leaks or hacks that could potentially compromise national security.
William Chappell, Microsoft’s CTO for Strategic Missions and Technology, told Bloomberg that the company spent 18 months working on this special GPT-4-based tool which will be able to read and analyze content, answer questions and write code without needing to go online. Equally importantly, it reportedly won’t learn from, or be trained on, the data it is fed.
At a security conference last month, Sheetal Patel, assistant director of the CIA for the Transnational and Technology Mission Center, said, “There is a race to get generative AI onto intelligence data, and I want it to be us.”
More from TechRadar Pro
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
While bias in generative AI is a well-known phenomenon, it’s still surprising what kinds of biases sometimes get unearthed. TechCrunch recently ran a test using Meta’s AI chatbot, which launched in April 2024 for over a dozen countries including India, and found an odd and disturbing trend.
When generating images using the prompt “Indian men,” the vast majority of the results feature said men wearing turbans. While a large number of Indian men do wear turbans (mainly if they’re practicing Sikhs), according to the 2011 census, India’s capital city Delhi has a Sikh population of about 3.4%, while the generative AI image results deliver three to four out of five men.
Unfortunately, this isn’t the first time generative AI has been caught up in a controversy related to race and other sensitive topics, and this is far from the worst example either.
How far does the rabbit hole go?
In August 2023, Google’s SGE and Bard AI (the latter now called Gemini) were caught with their pants down arguing the ‘benefits’ of genocide, slavery, fascism, and more. It also listed Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini on a list of “greatest” leaders, with Hitler also making its list of “most effective leaders.”
Later on that year in December 2023, there were multiple incidents involving AI, with the most awful of them including Stamford researchers finding CSAM (child abuse images) in the popular LAION-5B image dataset that many LLMs train on. That study found more than 3,000 known or suspected CSAM images in that dataset. Stable diffusion maker Stability AI, which uses that set, claims that it filters out any harmful images. But how can that be determined to be true — those images could easily have been incorporated into more benign searches for ‘child’ or ‘children.’
There’s also the danger of AI being used in facial recognition, including and especially with law enforcement. Countless studies have already proven that there is clear and absolute bias when it comes to what race and ethnicity are arrested at the highest rates, despite whether any wrongdoing has occurred. Combine that with the bias that AI is trained on from humans and you have technology that would result in even more false and unjust arrests. It’s to the point that Microsoft doesn’t want its Azure AI being used by police forces.
It’s rather unsettling how AI has quickly taken over the tech landscape, and how many hurdles remain in its way before it advances enough to be finally rid of these issues. But, one could argue that these issues have only arisen in the first place due to AI training on literally any datasets it can access without properly filtering the content. If we’re to address AI’s massive bias, we need to start properly vetting its datasets — not only for copyrighted sources but for actively harmful material that poisons the information well.
During today’s earnings call covering the second fiscal quarter of 2024, Apple CEO Tim Cook again spoke about Apple’s work on generative AI. He said that Apple has “advantages” that will “differentiate” the company in the era of AI, and some “very exciting things” will be shared with customers in the near future.
We continue to feel very bullish about our opportunity in generative AI. We are making significant investments and we’re looking forward to sharing some very exciting things with our customers soon.
We believe in the transformative power and promise of AI and we believe we have advantages that will differentiate us in this new era, including Apple’s unique combination of seamless hardware, software and services integration, groundbreaking Apple silicon with our industry leading neural engines, and our unwavering focus on privacy, which underpins everything we create.
Rumors have suggested that Apple’s first AI features are designed to run on-device rather than contacting a cloud service, which would make Apple’s AI much more private and secure than an online AI option. Apple’s plan to have generative AI available on-device will require significant CPU and GPU power, and Apple is planning to focus on AI with the upcoming M4 chip.
We could see the M4 chip as soon as next week in new iPad Pro models, with Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurmanindicating last weekend that there is a chance Apple will unveil the chip in the iPad Pro models.
Apple is expected to announce iOS 18 during its WWDC keynote on June 10, and new features have already been rumored for many apps, including Apple Music, Apple Maps, Calculator, Messages, Notes, Safari, and others. Below, we recap iOS 18 rumors on a per-app basis, based on reports from MacRumors, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, and others: Apple Maps: At least two new Apple Maps features are…
In his Power On newsletter today, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman outlined some of the new products he expects Apple to announce at its “Let Loose” event on May 7. Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos. First, Gurman now believes there is a “strong possibility” that the upcoming iPad Pro models will be equipped with Apple’s next-generation M4 chip, rather than the M3 chip that…
Apple’s upcoming iPad Pro models will feature “by far the best OLED tablet panels on the market,” according to Display Supply Chain Consultants. Set to be announced on May 7, the OLED iPad Pro models will feature LTPO (a more power efficient form of OLED), a 120Hz ProMotion refresh rate, and a tandem stack and glass thinning that will bring “ultra-thin and light displays” that support high…
Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman today said that iOS 18 will “overhaul” many of Apple’s built-in apps, including Notes, Mail, Photos, and Fitness. Gurman did not reveal any specific new features planned for these apps. It was previously rumored that the Notes app will gain support for displaying more math equations, and a built-in option to record voice memos, but this is the first time we have…
Best Buy today has discounted Apple’s M1 iPad Air (64GB Wi-Fi) to a new all-time low price of $399.99 in the Starlight color option, down from $599.99. Best Buy says this deal will last through the end of the day, and it’s only available in one color at this record low price. Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Best Buy. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a…
Apple has announced it will be holding a special event on Tuesday, May 7 at 7 a.m. Pacific Time (10 a.m. Eastern Time), with a live stream to be available on Apple.com and on YouTube as usual. The event invitation has a tagline of “Let Loose” and shows an artistic render of an Apple Pencil, suggesting that iPads will be a focus of the event. Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more …
With iOS 17.5, Apple is adding a “Repair State” feature that is designed to allow an iPhone to be sent in for service without deactivating Find My and Activation Lock. The fourth iOS 17.5 beta that came out today adds a “Remove This Device” option for all devices in Find My, and using it with an iPhone puts that iPhone into the new Repair State. Right now, sending an iPhone to Apple to be…
Nvidia continues to invest in AI initiatives and the most recent one, ChatRTX, is no exception thanks to its most recent update.
ChatRTX is, according to the tech giant, a “demo app that lets you personalize a GPT large language model (LLM) connected to your own content.” This content comprises your PC’s local documents, files, folders, etc., and essentially builds a custom AI chatbox from that information.
Because it doesn’t require an internet connection, it gives users speedy access to query answers that might be buried under all those computer files. With the latest update, it has access to even more data and LLMs including Google Gemma and ChatGLM3, an open, bilingual (English and Chinese) LLM. It also can locally search for photos, and has Whisper support, allowing users to converse with ChatRTX through an AI-automated speech recognition program.
Nvidia uses TensorRT-LLM software and RTX graphics cards to power ChatRTX’s AI. And because it’s local, it’s far more secure than online AI chatbots. You can download ChatRTX here to try it out for free.
Can AI escape its ethical dilemma?
The concept of an AI chatbot using local data off your PC, instead of training on (read: stealing) other people’s online works, is rather intriguing. It seems to solve the ethical dilemma of using copyrighted works without permission and hoarding it. It also seems to solve another long-term problem that’s plagued many a PC user — actually finding long-buried files in your file explorer, or at least the information trapped within it.
However, there’s the obvious question of how the extremely limited data pool could negatively impact the chatbot. Unless the user is particularly skilled at training AI, it could end up becoming a serious issue in the future. Of course, only using it to locate information on your PC is perfectly fine and most likely the proper use.
But the point of an AI chatbot is to have unique and meaningful conversations. Maybe there was a time in which we could have done that without the rampant theft, but corporations have powered their AI with stolen words from other sites and now it’s irrevocably tied.
Get the hottest deals available in your inbox plus news, reviews, opinion, analysis and more from the TechRadar team.
Given that it’s highly unethical that data theft is the vital part of the process that allows you to make chats well-rounded enough not to get trapped in feedback loops, it’s possible that Nvidia could be the middle ground for generative AI. If fully developed, it could prove that we don’t need the ethical transgression to power and shape them, so here’s to hoping Nvidia can get it right.
Apple’s highly anticipated new iPad Pro could be the company’s first foray into generative AI. The rumored upcoming tablet, which we’re expecting to see on May 7, is tipped to be powered by an all-new M4 chip that’s optimized to support AI features.
This rumor comes via Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, who has a solid reputation when it comes to Apple leaks. He claims Apple’s Let Loose event on May 7 will showcase a new iPad Pro and iPad Air, and accessories, including a new Magic Keyboard and Apple Pencil.
According to Gurman, the new iPad Pro will be Apple’s first generative AI-enabled device thanks to a new, more powerful AI-driven M4 chip featuring an enhanced Neural Engine. If this is the case, the new iPad would skip Apple’s current M3 silicon, which is used in the latest and most powerful MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, and iMac models.
The rumored AI-focused M4 chip would significantly increase the new tablet’s computing power compared to the current iPad Pro, which uses the older M2 chip.
Apple usually wouldn’t abandon its latest chip after just six months, and the iPad seems like an odd choice to introduce new AI tech compared to iPhones or MacBooks with wider user bases. So if Apple does launch a generative AI-focused iPad Pro with an M4 chip it would be a big surprise, as most Apple watchers weren’t expecting to see any AI devices announced until at least June, at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC 2024).
Gurman claims a generative AI focus isn’t the only notable upgrade to the iPad series; he says the iPad Pro could feature an upgraded OLED display, similar to those on iPhone models since the iPhone X, which, if correct, should mean the screen is sharper, has better color accuracy, and is easier to use in bright sunshine. He also speculates that Apple will announce a new 12.9-inch iPad Air.
While Apple won’t be the first to jump on the generative AI train, as shown by the Google Pixel 8 series and Samsung Galaxy S24 line-up it could implement AI technology in a new, unique, or interesting way. For example, Gurman speculates that Apple aims to incorporate more AI into applications to do things such as auto-writing text and summarizing articles in Safari.
We could also see AI-generated wallpapers, and image manipulation tools similar to Google Pixel’s Magic Eraser. It also says those features will use Apple’s internal large language model exclusive to them named Ajax which Apple believes is more powerful than ChatGPT.
Get the hottest deals available in your inbox plus news, reviews, opinion, analysis and more from the TechRadar team.
This matches previous reports that Apple has been in talks with OpenAI and Google about implementing Chat GPT or Gemini AI into an upcoming iOS 18 update that could include an AI chatbot and new features.
Apple is once again talking with OpenAI about using OpenAI technology to power artificial intelligence features in iOS 18, reports Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman.
Apple held talks with OpenAI earlier in the year, but nothing had come of the discussion. Apple and OpenAI are now said to be speaking about the terms of a possible agreement and how Apple might utilize OpenAI features.
Along with OpenAI, Apple is still having discussions with Google about licensing Google’s Gemini AI. Apple has not come to a final decision, and Gurman suggests that the company could partner with both Google and OpenAI or pick another provider entirely.
Rumors suggest that iOS 18 will have a major focus on AI, with Apple set to introduce AI functionality across the operating system. Apple CEO Tim Cookconfirmed in February that Apple plans to “break new ground” in AI.
We’ll get a first look at the AI features that Apple has planned in just over a month, with iOS 18 set to debut at the Worldwide Developers Conference that kicks off on June 10.
Apple has announced it will be holding a special event on Tuesday, May 7 at 7 a.m. Pacific Time (10 a.m. Eastern Time), with a live stream to be available on Apple.com and on YouTube as usual. The event invitation has a tagline of “Let Loose” and shows an artistic render of an Apple Pencil, suggesting that iPads will be a focus of the event. Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more …
Apple today released several open source large language models (LLMs) that are designed to run on-device rather than through cloud servers. Called OpenELM (Open-source Efficient Language Models), the LLMs are available on the Hugging Face Hub, a community for sharing AI code. As outlined in a white paper [PDF], there are eight total OpenELM models, four of which were pre-trained using the…
Apple is set to unveil iOS 18 during its WWDC keynote on June 10, so the software update is a little over six weeks away from being announced. Below, we recap rumored features and changes planned for the iPhone with iOS 18. iOS 18 will reportedly be the “biggest” update in the iPhone’s history, with new ChatGPT-inspired generative AI features, a more customizable Home Screen, and much more….
Apple has dropped the number of Vision Pro units that it plans to ship in 2024, going from an expected 700 to 800k units to just 400k to 450k units, according to Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. Orders have been scaled back before the Vision Pro has launched in markets outside of the United States, which Kuo says is a sign that demand in the U.S. has “fallen sharply beyond expectations.” As a…
Apple is finally planning a Calculator app for the iPad, over 14 years after launching the device, according to a source familiar with the matter. iPadOS 18 will include a built-in Calculator app for all iPad models that are compatible with the software update, which is expected to be unveiled during the opening keynote of Apple’s annual developers conference WWDC on June 10. AppleInsider…
Copyright is something of a minefield right now when it comes to AI, and there’s a new report claiming that Apple’s generative AI – specifically its ‘Ajax’ large language model (LLM) – may be one of the only ones to have been both legally and ethically trained. It’s claimed that Apple is trying to uphold privacy and legality standards by adopting innovative training methods.
Copyright law in the age of generative AI is difficult to navigate, and it’s becoming increasingly important as AI tools become more commonplace. One of the most glaring issues that comes up, again and again, is that many companies train their large language models (LLMs) using copyrighted works, typically not disclosing whether they license that training material. Sometimes, the outputs of these models include entire sections of copyright-protected works.
The current justification for why copyrighted material is so widely used as far as some of these companies to train their LLMs is that, not dissimilar to humans, these models need a substantial amount of information (called training data for LLMs) to learn and generate coherent and convincing responses – and as far as these companies are concerned, copyrighted materials are fair game.
Many critics of generative AI consider it copyright infringement if tech companies use works in training and output of LLMs without explicit agreements with copyright holders or their representatives. Still, this criticism hasn’t put tech companies off from doing exactly that, and it’s assumed to be the case for most AI tools, garnering a growing pool of resentment towards the companies in the generative AI space.
(Image credit: Shutterstock/photosince)
The forest of legal battles and ethical dilemmas in generative AI
There have even been a growing number of legal challenges mounted in these tech companies’ direction. OpenAI and Microsoft have actually been sued by the New York Times for copyright infringement back in December 2023, with the publisher accusing the two companies of training their LLMs on millions of New York Times articles. In September 2023, OpenAI and Microsoft were also sued by a number of prominent authors, including George R. R. Martin, Michael Connelly, and Jonathan Franzen. In July of 2023, over 15,000 authors signed an open letter directed at companies such as Microsoft, OpenAI, Meta, Alphabet, and others, calling on leaders of the tech industry to protect writers, calling on these companies to properly credit and compensate authors for their works when using them to train generative AI models.
In April of this year, The Register reported that Amazon was hit with a lawsuit by an ex-employee alleging she faced mistreatment, discrimination, and harassment, and in the process, she testified about her experience when it came to issues of copyright infringement. This employee alleges that she was told to deliberately ignore and violate copyright law to improve Amazon’s products to make them more competitive, and that her supervisor told her that “everyone else is doing it” when it came to copyright violations. Apple Insider echoes this claim, stating that this seems to be an accepted industry standard.
As we’ve seen with many other novel technologies, the legislation and ethical frameworks always arrive after an initial delay, but it looks like this is becoming a more problematic aspect of generative AI models that the companies responsible for them will have to respond to.
Get the hottest deals available in your inbox plus news, reviews, opinion, analysis and more from the TechRadar team.
(Image credit: Apple)
The Apple approach to ethical AI training (that we know of so far)
It looks like at least one major tech player might be trying to take the more careful and considered route to avoid as many legal (and moral!) challenges as possible – and somewhat surprisingly, it’s Apple. According to Apple Insider, Apple has been pursuing diligently licensing major news publications’ works when looking for AI training material. Back in December, Apple petitioned to license the archives of several major publishers to use these as training material for its own LLM, known internally as Ajax.
It’s speculated that Ajax will be the software for basic on-device functionality for future Apple products, and it might instead license software like Google’s Gemini for more advanced features, such as those requiring an internet connection. Apple Insider writes that this allows Apple to avoid certain copyright infringement liabilities as Apple wouldn’t be responsible for copyright infringement by, say, Google Gemini.
A paper published in March detailed how Apple intends to train its in-house LLM: a carefully chosen selection of images, image-text, and text-based input. In its methods, Apple simultaneously prioritized better image captioning and multi-step reasoning, at the same time as paying attention to preserving privacy. The last of these factors is made all the more possible for the Ajax LLM by it being entirely on-device and therefore not requiring an internet connection. There is a trade-off, as this does mean that Ajax won’t be able to check for copyrighted content and plagiarism itself, as it won’t be able to connect to online databases that store copyrighted material.
There is one other caveat that Apple Insider reveals about this when speaking to sources who are familiar with Apple’s AI testing environments: there don’t currently seem to be many, if any, restrictions on users utilizing copyrighted material themselves as the input for on-device test environments. It’s also worth noting that Apple isn’t technically the only company taking a rights-first approach: art AI tool Adobe Firefly is also claimed to be completely copyright-compliant, so hopefully more AI startups will be wise enough to follow Apple and Adobe‘s lead.
I personally welcome this approach from Apple as I think human creativity is one of the most incredible capabilities we have, and I think it should be rewarded and celebrated – not fed to an AI. We’ll have to wait to know more about what Apple’s regulations regarding copyright and training its AI look like, but I agree with Apple Insider’s assessment that this definitely sounds like an improvement – especially since some AIs have been documented regurgitating copyrighted material word-for-word. We can look forward to learning more about Apple’s generative AI efforts very soon, which is expected to be a key driver for its developer-focused software conference, WWDC 2024.
It’s no secret that Apple has been biding its time on the AI front, and the latest intelligence surrounding iOS 18 suggests that the company’s upcoming generative AI features could differ from those already available on Samsung and Google Pixel devices in one key way.
According to Bloomberg’s resident Apple expert Mark Gurman (via MacRumors), Apple’s generative AI features will be underpinned by a proprietary large language model (LLM) that runs entirely on-device, rather than via the cloud. This approach would prioritize speed and privacy, since an on-device LLM doesn’t require an internet connection to function, though Apple’s AI tools may be slightly less powerful than those available from cloud-based rivals (like Galaxy AI) as a result.
As above, on-device processing delivers quicker response times and superior privacy over cloud-based solutions, which fits with Apple’s traditional commitment to style, simplicity and security. Indeed, according to Gurman, this is how Apple will market its AI features – as reliable, usable tools that enhance users’ daily lives, rather than all-powerful creative ones.
Superior Siri
(Image credit: Apple)
There’s still no word on what Apple’s AI features will be, exactly, but the likes of Siri, Messages, Apple Music and Pages are expected to receive significant AI-based improvements in iOS 18, with the former reportedly in line for a ChatGPT-style makeover.
In any case, Apple’s suite of AI features are reportedly on track for a grand unveiling at WWDC 2024, so we don’t have too long to wait before we find out how the iPhone 16, iPhone 16 Pro Max and other iOS 18-compatible devices will challenge the current best phones on the market in the AI department.
Get the hottest deals available in your inbox plus news, reviews, opinion, analysis and more from the TechRadar team.