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In mid-January 2026, one of the most entrenched rivalries in tech quietly collapsed.
Apple has officially chosen Google Gemini to power the next generation of Siri—marking a seismic shift in Silicon Valley and a major rethink of Apple’s long-standing strategy of owning everything from silicon to software.
In this episode of techaily.ai, David and Sophia unpack why Apple is paying Google a reported $1 billion per year to rent AI intelligence from its oldest rival, what went wrong with Apple’s internal AI efforts, and why startups like Anthropic and OpenAI were ultimately sidelined.
This isn’t just a partnership story. It’s about power, timing, pride, and the brutal economics of modern AI.
The conversation explores:
At a deeper level, this episode asks whether the smartphone era itself is starting to fracture. If Apple provides the hardware, Google provides the intelligence, and OpenAI is building its own device from scratch, the industry may be heading toward an entirely new kind of hardware war—one where AI comes first and screens come second.
For listeners, the takeaway is simple but profound: Siri in 2026 will finally be smarter, more capable, and more useful—but its brain will belong to Google. And that reality signals a future where even the most powerful tech companies can no longer go it alone.
Subscribe to techaily.ai for clear, grounded analysis of the biggest shifts shaping technology. If this episode changed how you think about Apple, Google, or the future of AI hardware, share it with someone who still believes the old rivalry lines matter.
By TechDaily.ai2
44 ratings
In mid-January 2026, one of the most entrenched rivalries in tech quietly collapsed.
Apple has officially chosen Google Gemini to power the next generation of Siri—marking a seismic shift in Silicon Valley and a major rethink of Apple’s long-standing strategy of owning everything from silicon to software.
In this episode of techaily.ai, David and Sophia unpack why Apple is paying Google a reported $1 billion per year to rent AI intelligence from its oldest rival, what went wrong with Apple’s internal AI efforts, and why startups like Anthropic and OpenAI were ultimately sidelined.
This isn’t just a partnership story. It’s about power, timing, pride, and the brutal economics of modern AI.
The conversation explores:
At a deeper level, this episode asks whether the smartphone era itself is starting to fracture. If Apple provides the hardware, Google provides the intelligence, and OpenAI is building its own device from scratch, the industry may be heading toward an entirely new kind of hardware war—one where AI comes first and screens come second.
For listeners, the takeaway is simple but profound: Siri in 2026 will finally be smarter, more capable, and more useful—but its brain will belong to Google. And that reality signals a future where even the most powerful tech companies can no longer go it alone.
Subscribe to techaily.ai for clear, grounded analysis of the biggest shifts shaping technology. If this episode changed how you think about Apple, Google, or the future of AI hardware, share it with someone who still believes the old rivalry lines matter.