Ask a few random people about Apple Intelligence and you’ll probably get quite different responses.
One might be excited about the new features. Another could opine that no one asked for this and the company is throwing away its reputation with creatives and artists to chase a fad. Another still might tell you that regardless of the potential value, Apple is simply too late to the game to make a mark.
The release of Apple’s first Apple Intelligence-branded AI tools in iOS 18.1 last week makes all those perspectives understandable.
The first wave of features in Apple’s delayed release shows promise—and some of them may be genuinely useful, especially with further refinement. At the same time, Apple’s approach seems rushed, as if the company is cutting some corners to catch up where some perceive it has fallen behind.
That impatient, unusually undisciplined approach to the rollout could undermine the value proposition of AI tools for many users. Nonetheless, Apple’s strategy might just work out in the long run.
What’s included in “Apple Intelligence”
I’m basing those conclusions on about a week spent with both the public release of iOS 18.1 and the developer beta of iOS 18.2. Between them, the majority of features announced back in June under the “Apple Intelligence” banner are present.
Let’s start with a quick rundown of which Apple Intelligence features are in each release.
iOS 18.1 public release
- Writing Tools
- Proofreading
- Rewriting in friendly, professional, or concise voices
- Summaries in prose, key points, bullet point list, or table format
- Text summaries
- Summarize text from Mail messages
- Summarize text from Safari pages
- Notifications
- Reduce Interruptions – Intelligent filtering of notifications to include only ones deemed critical
- Type to Siri
- More conversational Siri
- Photos
- Clean Up (remove an object or person from the image)
- Generate Memories videos/slideshows from plain language text prompts
- Natural language search

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