Apple WWDC kicks off at 10:30 pm: Where to watch livestream, what to expect

Apple WWDC kicks off at 10:30 pm: Where to watch livestream, what to expect


Apple is set to kick off its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2024 on June 10 at Apple Park, Cupertino, US. The four-day annual developers-focused conference will start with a keynote address, which is scheduled to commence from 10:30 pm (IST). During the keynote address, Apple is anticipated to unveil its plan of action to take on rivals, such as Microsoft and Google, in the artificial intelligence space. Moreover, the US-based technology giant would share details about its upcoming operating system (OS) versions for the iPhones, iPads, MacBooks, and more.


Apple WWDC 2024: Where to watch


Set to start at 10:30 pm (IST), the keynote address from Apple at WWDC 2024 will be live streamed online on Apple website and its official YouTube channel for a global audience. You can also watch the keynote event in the video embedded towards the end of this article.


Apple WWDC 2024: What to expect


Artificial intelligence is expected to be the main talking point at Apple’s WWDC 2024. Apple is anticipated to take big steps by incorporating AI into its apps and services such as Mail app, Messages app, voice assistant Siri, and more. Potential enhancements to these services include AI-generated replies in the Mail, smart suggestions in Messages, and AI-powered photo editing tools in the Photos app.


Among the notable upgrades within Apple’s native apps and services is expected to be related to its digital assistant Siri. Apple has likely partnered with Microsoft-backed OpenAI to bring its GPT AI model backing for Siri. This would bring some advanced capabilities to Apple’s digital assistant, including improved natural language processing, multi-modality and even capability for handling in-app functions on user’s command.


Upcoming operating systems for Apple devices would likely bring other changes as well, especially in terms of design. Beyond AI, iOS 18 is expected to bring support for Rich Communication Services (RCS) which the company has confirmed previously. There might be new customisation options for home screen icons, a more streamlined Settings app, and improved functionalities in core apps like Safari browser.


While Apple’s major focus is expected to remain on the software front, the company has recently followed a trend of unveiling or offering a glimpse of upcoming devices during WWDC events. Although no major surprise hardware announcement is expected, Apple could bring some updates to existing products. For example, Apple could bring the M4 chip that recently launched alongside the iPad Pro model to the MacBook lineup. There have also been reports of an upgraded Apple TV box announcement.


Apple WWDC 2024: Watch keynote livestream

 


First Published: Jun 10 2024 | 10:27 AM IST



Source link

Apple aims to overtake early leaders in AI race despite starting late

Apple aims to overtake early leaders in AI race despite starting late


Both Google and Samsung already have released smartphone models touting AI features as their main attractions | Image: Bloomberg


Apple’s annual World Wide Developers Conference on Monday is expected to herald the company’s move into generative artificial intelligence, marking its late arrival to a technological frontier that’s expected to be as revolutionary as the invention of the iPhone.


The widely anticipated display of AI to be embedded in the iPhone and other Apple products will be the marquee moment at an event that traditionally previews the next version of software that powers the company’s hardware lineup.


And Apple’s next generation of software is expected to be packed with an array of AI features likely to make its often-bumbling virtual assistant Siri smarter, and make photos, music, texting and possibly even creating emojis on the fly a more productive and entertaining experience.


True to its secretive nature, Apple hasn’t provided any advance details about Monday’s event being held at the company’s Cupertino, California, headquarters.


But CEO Tim Cook has dropped strong hints during the first few months of this that Apple is poised to reveal its grand plans to enter a space that has been fuelling an industry boom during the past 18 months.


AI mania is the main reason that Nvidia, the dominant maker of the chips underlying the technology, has seen its market value rocket from about $300 billion at the end of 2022 to about $3 trillion.


The meteoric ride allowed Nvidia to briefly surpass Apple last week as the second most valuable company in the US Microsoft earlier this year also eclipsed the iPhone maker on the strength of its so-far successful push into AI.


But analysts have been have been getting increasingly worried that Apple may be falling too far behind in the rapidly changing AI space, a concern that has been compounded by an uncharacteristically extended slump in the company’s sales.


Both Google and Samsung already have released smartphone models touting AI features as their main attractions.


That’s why analysts such as Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities view Monday’s conference as a potential springboard that catapults Apple into another robust phase of growth. Ives believes infusing more AI into the iPhone, iPad and Mac computer will translate into an additional $450 billon to $600 billion in market value for Apple.


Monday’s conference represents the most important event for Apple in over a decade as the pressure to bring a generative AI stack of technology for developers and consumers is front and centre, Ives wrote in a research note.


Apple definitely could use the boost that AI may be able to provide, particularly for its 13-year-old assistant Siri, which Forrester Research Dipanjan Chatterjee now calls an oddly unhelpful helper.


Meanwhile, OpenAI’s ChatGPT is getting increasingly conversational so much so that it recently sparked accusations of intentionally copying a piece of AI software voiced by Scarlett Johansson and Google last month previewed an AI agent dubbed Astra that can seemingly see and remember things.


Besides using AI to spruce up Siri, Apple may also team up with OpenAI to bring some elements of ChatGPT to the iPhone, according to a wide range of unconfirmed reports leading up to Monday’s conference.


This will be the second straight year that Apple has created a stir at its developers conference by using it to usher in its entrance into a trendy form of technology that other companies already had been making inroads.


Last year, Apple provided an early look at its mixed-reality headset, the Vision Pro, which wasn’t released until early this year carrying a $3,500 price tag that has been a major impediment to gaining much traction. Nevertheless, Apple’s push into mixed reality, tweaked with a twist that it bills as spatial computing, has raised hopes that what is currently a niche technology will turn into a huge market.


Part of the optimism stems from Apple’s history of releasing technology later than others and then using sleek designs and services combined with slick marketing campaigns to overcome its tardy start to unleash new trends.


Apple’s early reticence toward AI was entirely on brand, Forrester’s Chatterjee wrote in a preview of the developers conference. The company has always been famously obsessed with what its offerings did for its customers rather than how it did it.


Bringing more AI into the iPhone, in particular, will likely raise privacy issues a topic where Apple has gone to great lengths to assure its loyal customer base that it can be trusted not to peer too deeply into their personal lives.


One way Apple could reassure consumers that the iPhone won’t be used to spy on them is to leverage its own chip technology so most AI-powered features are handled on the device itself instead of remote data centres, often called the cloud. Going that route also would help protect Apple’s profit margins because AI technology through the cloud is far more expensive than when it is run solely on a device.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Jun 10 2024 | 10:07 AM IST



Source link

Here's why India should look back 300 years to learn a lesson in AI

Here's why India should look back 300 years to learn a lesson in AI



By Andy Mukherjee

 


India’s dominance in tech outsourcing is facing an existential challenge not unlike what its world-beating textile industry battled — and lost —  300 years ago.

 


In the early 1700s, it took 50,000 hours to spin 100 pounds of cotton. “Indian spinners were regarded as the most productive in the world, and they produced the best-quality product,” as Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson, economists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, note in a new paper. By 1795, however, automation had crunched the labour demand to 300 person-hours. 


The profound impact of the industrial revolution on cotton-spinning may be poised for a repeat in a $250 billion white-collar powerhouse. Each year, 5 million Indians churn out billions of lines of code for global banks, manufacturers and retailers. Research by McKinsey & Co. showed last year that with generative artificial intelligence it’s possible to cut the time taken for code generation by 35 per cent to 45 per cent , and slash documentation time by nearly half.


This is just the beginning. As generative AI morphs into artificial general intelligence — machines rivaling human cognitive abilities — even highly complex tasks may not require expert programmers.  


The improvement in speed “can be translated into an increase in productivity that outperforms past advances in engineering productivity, driven by both new tooling and processes,” McKinsey says. But how will the gains be distributed between customers and software vendors? More importantly, how will they be shared between shareholders of outsourcing firms and their employees? 


Acemoglu and Johnson glean insights for the interplay of machine and labour by comparing the age of AI to the early industrial revolution and the shift it produced in the thinking of David Ricardo, a prominent classical economist, ace bond trader and politician. As the spinning jenny became progressively more efficient, suddenly there was a lot of yarn looking for weavers, creating lucrative  new jobs. The golden age of weaving, the MIT economists surmise, is probably when Ricardo came to his famous conclusion that “machinery did not lessen the demand for labour.”


It was when handlooms gave way to power looms in the early 19th century — leaving no alternative occupation for displaced labour — that Ricardo updated his view. He acknowledged in a 1819 speech to the British parliament that “the inadequacy of the wages to the support of the labouring classes” was one of “two great evils for which it was desirable to provide a remedy.”


India’s tech companies are stuck on Ricardo 1.0, and investing very little into a future where artificial intelligence has made their current code-writing business irrelevant. The optimistic view goes like this:  Someone needs to prompt generative AI’s large language models with the right questions. Natural-language processing and prompt engineering will create jobs. Finding unique and affordable use cases — especially in local languages — may be another avenue for the most-populous nation to utilize its talent.

According to Nandan Nilekani, co-founder and chairman of Infosys Ltd., India’s second-largest outsourcing firm, building foundational AI models is for people with capital. “Our advantage currently lies not in compute, cloud, or chips,” he said in a speech. “Our advantage is our population and their aspirations.” 


Trouble is that artificial intelligence will come with its own power loom. Companies will recover their hefty investment costs by selling souped-up devices. “We expect AI-enabled hardware to be the only sustainable and meaningful way consumers and corporations begin paying for AI features, justifying billions of dollars invested in GenAI,” writes Nilesh Jasani of GenInnov, a Singapore-based global innovation fund.


The computers, phones and tablets that come out ahead may control access to the smartest tutors and navigators, the best office assistants and the most empathetic robotic friends. To extract value from this new world, Indian outsourcing firms may have no choice except to emulate the transformation at Alphabet Inc. and Microsoft Corp. 


Ten years ago, these software giants didn’t see the need to invest the truckloads of money that came in routinely via advertising or subscription. But they paid attention to Nvidia Corp., which would go on to become the world’s most valuable chipmaker by enabling the artificial-intelligence revolution: “AI is eating software,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang  said in 2017. Nowadays, Alphabet and Microsoft put a third of cash from operations into capital expenditure. 


Infosys, and its bigger rival, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd,. seem to have ignored the memo. Billionaire founders of Indian outsourcing firms enjoy the society’s admiration for all the jobs and wealth they have helped create. Why should they  bet any of it on risky moonshots?


Ultimately, though, the shareholders’ quest for high dividends and liberal stock buybacks may jeopardize the future of young engineers. The vaunted Indian Institutes of Technology haven’t been able to place all their graduates this year. For the first time in more than a quarter century, the country’s outsourcing industry is shrinking.


Some of the downturn may be cyclical. But what if a part of the decline is AI-induced, mirroring the misgivings Ricardo would go on to harbor about the textile industry? And he was right — real wages for handloom weavers collapsed between 1800 and the early 1820s. “We find little evidence for offsetting employment or wage gains in other industries,” the MIT economists note.

It’s still not too late to pivot. There is plenty of capital available. The Biden administration is giving billions of dollars in grants and loans to Samsung Electronics Co. and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. for chips that will be used in AI. Elon Musk’s xAI just raised $6 billion to challenge OpenAI. Closer to home, the economic rivalry of MBS and MBZ — Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and the UAE President Mohammed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan — is a wishing tree that Indian entrepreneurs ought to be shaking vigorously. Sadly, the pedigreed outsourcing companies are missing the trick.


Disclaimer: This is a Bloomberg Opinion piece, and these are the personal opinions of the writer. They do not reflect the views of www.business-standard.com or the Business Standard newspaper

First Published: Jun 10 2024 | 7:51 AM IST



Source link

Hey, Siri! Let's talk about how Apple is giving you an AI makeover

Hey, Siri! Let's talk about how Apple is giving you an AI makeover



Each June, Apple unveils its newest software features for the iPhone at its futuristic Silicon Valley campus. But at its annual developer conference on Monday, the company will shine a spotlight on a feature that isn’t new: Siri, its talking assistant, which has been around for more than a decade.

 


What will be different this time is the technology powering Siri: generative artificial intelligence (AI).

 


In recent months, Adrian Perica, Apple’s vice president of corporate development, has helped spearhead an effort to bring generative AI to the masses, said two people with knowledge of the work, who asked for anonymity because of the sensitivity of the effort.

 


Perica and his colleagues have talked with leading AI companies, including Google and OpenAI, seeking a partner to help Apple deliver generative AI across its business. Apple recently struck a deal with OpenAI, which makes the ChatGPT chatbot, to fold its technology into the iPhone, two people familiar with the agreement said. It was still in talks with Google as of last week, two people familiar with the conversations said.

 


That has helped lead to a more conversational and versatile version of Siri, which will be shown today, three people familiar with the company said. Siri will be powered by a generative AI system developed by Apple, which will allow the talking assistant to chat rather than just respond to one question at a time. Apple will market its new AI capabilities as Apple Intelligence.

 


Apple, OpenAI and Google declined to comment. Apple’s agreement with OpenAI was previously reported by The Information and Bloomberg, which also reported the name for Apple’s AI system.

 


Apple’s move into generative AI will test whether the company can once again enter a new market and redefine it. While Apple didn’t make the first digital music player, smartphone or smartwatch, it transformed those categories with the iPod, iPhone and Apple Watch. Now, after two years of watching Microsoft, Meta, Google and Samsung integrate generative AI into products, Apple is going from observer to potential challenger. Weaving generative AI into iPhones is also set to be a key moment for the technology, which can answer questions, create images and write software code. Apple will broaden generative AI’s reach to more than a billion users and determine how useful it is for everyday iPhone customers.

 


To date, the technology’s promise has been undercut by its flaws. Google has introduced and pared back generative AI search abilities that recommended people eat rocks, while Microsoft has been criticised for the security vulnerabilities of a personal computer that uses AI to record every second of activity. “We’re still figuring AI out because it’s so complicated,” said Carolina Milanesi, president of Creative Strategies, a tech research firm. “Apple is pretty conservative when it comes to everything, so I don’t know that they will ‘wow’ people.”

 


Wall Street investors, and not Main Street consumers, are a major reason Apple is jumping into AI The technology has lifted the values of Microsoft, a big player in generative AI, and Nvidia, which sells AI chips. In January, Microsoft dethroned Apple as the world’s most valuable public tech company.

 

The market reshuffle happened as Apple stayed silent about AI.  The company has a policy of not sharing future product plans, but as its stock position dropped, Tim Cook, Apple’s chief executive, broke protocol and told Wall Street analysts  that it would soon introduce generative AI offerings.


STRATEGIC MOVE


– Siri will be powered by a generative AI system developed by Apple, which will allow the talking assistant to chat rather than just respond to one question at a time




– The company will market its new AI capabilities as Apple Intelligence




– Apple’s move into generative AI will test whether the company can once again enter a new market and redefine it




– After two years of watching Microsoft, Meta, Google, and Samsung integrate generative AI into products, Apple is going from observer to potential challenger




– Apple will broaden generative AI’s reach to more than a billion users and determine how useful it is for everyday iPhone customers



©2024 The New York Times News Service

First Published: Jun 10 2024 | 12:04 AM IST



Source link

More women joining workforce in India but leadership gaps remain: Report

More women joining workforce in India but leadership gaps remain: Report


More women are joining the workforce in India but leadership gaps remain, says a report by LinkedIn and public policy consulting firm The Quantum Hub. The percentage of women in senior leadership roles increased from 16.6 per cent in 2016 to a peak of 18.7 per cent in 2023. It dropped to 18.3 per cent in 2024. Women’s representation in the workforce has grown from 23.9 per cent in 2016 to 26.8 per cent in 2024. The study is based on data about LinkedIn members in India, where the firm has over 100 million people registered. 

First Published: Jun 09 2024 | 10:25 PM IST



Source link

Tech major Asus places big bets on India's personal computer market

Tech major Asus places big bets on India's personal computer market


India’s personal computer (PC) market is better than the rest of the world and low penetration level of the devices offers a good growth opportunity for the Taiwanese tech major Asus said.


India’s personal computer (PC) market is better than the rest of the world and low penetration level of the devices offers a good growth opportunity for the Taiwanese tech major Asus, senior company officials have said.


The Taiwanese PC maker has seen positive growth in the Indian market.


Asus India consumer and gaming PC vice president Arnold Su told PTI that “India’s PC penetration per household is around 10 to 11 per cent. Which means around 90 per cent of Indian households still do not have a PC, which means it is a very good opportunity for us,” he said.


Su said Asus is continuing to invest in India making its product available across the country. “… If you see today in India, out of 750 districts, we have already covered around 450 districts,” he added.


Asus general manager for Asia Pacific System Business Unit Peter Chang told PTI that post COVID pandemic, the company has not seen very positive signals in PC demand both globally and in India.


“However, this year… the interest to buy a laptop has increased, so we believe that very soon the market should get back to normal,” he said.


“Also, I think India’s PC market is better than the rest of the world,” he added.


Market research firm IDC had recently said that shipments of personal computers in the Indian market declined by about 30 per cent year-on-year in the January-March 2023 quarter to 29.92 lakh units due to slowing of demand in both consumer and commercial segment.


According to International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly Personal Computing Device Tracker, 42.82 lakh PC units were shipped to India in the March 2022 quarter.


Chang said artificial intelligence right now is a very important topic for the Taipei-headquartered firm to incorporate.

Responding to a question on India’s IT hardware PLI (production-linked incentive) scheme, he said, “Actually we applied for the PLI scheme with our partners, and also we started manufacturing in India.”

Chang said Asus will keep evaluating its investment in India and see how it can expand its investment further. “We also hope that if things can be smooth, then we can keep investing,” he added.


Asked whether supply chain disruptions have eased for the PC industry, Chang said right now the supply chain situation is already back to normal.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Jun 09 2024 | 1:33 PM IST



Source link

YouTube
Instagram
WhatsApp