WWDC 2026: Siri Returns Smarter and Apple Intelligence Takes Centre Stage
WWDC 2026 is shaping up to be one of Apple’s most significant software events in years. Instead of spotlighting new hardware, Apple is focusing on major improvements to Siri, deeper system‑wide intelligence and a renewed commitment to performance and stability across its platforms. This year’s keynote marks a deliberate shift toward strengthening the foundation that millions of users rely on every day.
Siri’s Biggest Upgrade Ever
This is the year Siri finally gets the transformation people have been waiting for. Apple hasn’t just adjusted the assistant — it has rebuilt it.
The new Siri is now capable of advanced web searches, image generation, file summaries and multi‑step tasks across apps. Apple is also introducing a refreshed interface and a standalone Siri app for those who prefer typing over speaking.
Rumour: Siri may also gain a full chatbot mode and much deeper on‑screen awareness, allowing it to understand what you’re doing and assist more naturally.
Rumour: Siri’s biggest upgrade may be powered by a new Apple‑tuned model built on top of Google’s Gemini technology, giving it a major leap in conversational ability and on‑screen awareness.
If even half of this comes to fruition, Siri could become the most helpful part of the entire Apple ecosystem.
Apple Intelligence Becomes Core to the OS
Apple is threading intelligence into every corner of its operating systems. This includes improved suggestions, smarter automation and cleaner, more consistent behaviour powered by on‑device processing.
Rumour: Apple is developing a new underlying AI framework designed for generative and context‑aware features across all platforms.
The result is an ecosystem that quietly feels smarter in everyday use.
iOS 27 and macOS 27: A Return to Stability
This year’s updates focus on refinement, reliability and speed rather than redesigns.
Expected improvements include:
- Faster, smoother animations
- Better battery life
- Fewer bugs
- Cleaner, more consistent interface behaviour
- Significant internal code cleanup
iOS 27 will also continue smoothing the Liquid Glass design introduced last year.
Rumour: iOS 27 may include side‑by‑side multitasking designed specifically for a foldable iPhone form factor.
macOS 27 Ends the Intel Era
macOS 27 is expected to run exclusively on Apple silicon, officially signalling the end of major OS updates for Intel‑based Macs.
Rumour: This release may also begin the phase‑out of Rosetta 2, which would complete Apple’s multi‑year transition to its own chips.
If your Macs are still Intel, this is your sign to start planning ahead.
Clues About the First Foldable iPhone
WWDC doesn’t reveal hardware, but the software often gives the game away. Apple’s first foldable iPhone is widely expected later in 2026.
Rumoured features include:
- A book‑style folding design
- 5.5‑inch outer display and 7.8‑inch inner display
- A near‑crease‑free flexible OLED screen
- New multitasking behaviours exclusive to the foldable hardware
- A potential December 2026 launch window rather than September
If iOS 27 starts looking suspiciously tablet‑like in certain places, this is why.
A Big Smart Home Push Is Coming
2026 looks like Apple’s biggest smart home year in a decade. Many products have reportedly been ready for months but held back until the new Siri is fully baked.
Expected updates include:
Apple TV 4K (Next Generation)
- Faster processor
- Updated wireless standards
- Better compatibility with Apple Intelligence
HomePod mini 2
- New chips
- Improved sound
- Updated wireless hardware
- New colours
New Home Hub
Rumour: Apple may release a new device featuring a built‑in display, FaceTime camera, presence detection and a choice of wall mount or speaker‑base versions. This could serve as a central control point for the smart home, built around the new Siri.
If Apple delivers everything rumoured here, the smart home experience could finally feel fresh again.
Will There Be Hardware at WWDC?
While WWDC is set to focus on software, there’s always the possibility that Apple will surprise us with a hardware preview. Still, expectations point firmly toward the software announcements being the real stars this year.
How to Watch Without Losing a Day
Keep it simple:
- Catch the keynote or a recap
- Don’t install early betas on important devices
- Wait for the public releases for a smoother experience
WWDC 2026 sets the stage for a smarter, faster and more reliable Apple experience, and the momentum this year feels genuinely exciting. With a reimagined Siri, deeper intelligence woven through every device and a renewed focus on stability, Apple looks ready to deliver the kind of leap forward users have been asking for.
Once the keynote wraps, Your Mac Tech will break it all down so you know what matters, what can wait and how to get your devices ready — making the upgrades easier, clearer and a lot more fun.