8 big takeaways from Apple's WWDC 2026 event

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Tim Cook waves his right arm while standing on a stage with "WWDC26" in the background.

Tim Cook gave his final WWDC opening speech as Apple's CEO on Monday. WWDC

Apple's AI era is taking shape.

On Monday, the iPhone maker held its Worldwide Developers Conference — the annual event that offers developers, customers, and investors a road map for the company's future product vision.

This year's conference previewed software coming next to the iPhone, Mac, iPad, Apple Watch, and Vision Pro. The keynote also carried extra weight as Tim Cook's final time hosting WWDC as CEO.

Here are the biggest takeaways from Apple's presentation.

Everything is AI, AI, AI

The view from Apple's Vision Pro wearable inside a living room.

Apple highlighted AI dozens of times during the event. Apple

If there was one phrase the company wanted people to remember from WWDC 2026, it was Apple Intelligence, its very Apple-y branding for its suite of AI features.

Apple said its new AI software, which has undergone a broad overhaul, is being threaded through every product — including its phone-based digital assistant Siri and the Vision Pro wearable.

Siri, in particular, is getting an AI glow-up (more on that below). Safari will be able to organize tabs by topic, monitor webpages for updates, and create custom extensions from a natural-language prompt. Messages, Mail, Calendar, Phone, Home, and Shortcuts are all getting new AI-powered features that will help users do tasks faster.

"We believe that truly helpful AI must be centered around you and your needs," Apple's senior vice president of software engineering, Craig Federighi, said.

Own an older iPhone? Good news…

Several people stand in front of a white screen that says "iPhone 11."

Apple said its latest update will serve mobile phones ranging back to the iPhone 11. Bloomberg/Getty Images

Apple says iOS 27 is designed to make some aging devices feel more responsive.

Stacey Ford, Apple's vice president of operating systems program management, said the company is bringing an optimized CPU scheduler to older mobile devices, going all the way back to the iPhone 11. The system helps manage how the phone allocates computing power as users juggle different tasks throughout the day.

Ford said the software update's inclusion of older phones makes it "available to more users than any iOS update, ever."

Siri gets the chatbot treatment — and its own app

A shot of the iPhone with Apple Maps and Siri's new AI capabilities on the screen.

Siri is getting a much-needed overhaul, powered by AI. Apple

Siri is getting a much-needed makeover — and it's largely powered by AI.

"We know there are times when you expect more from Siri," Mike Rockwell, Apple's VP of Siri engineering, said. "Siri is now a profoundly more capable assistant that helps you find what you need and gets more done."

Siri's software will make the assistant more conversational and better able to handle multi-step requests, even in third-party apps. The new AI-enhanced Siri can answer follow-up questions, pull from personal context located on the device, understand what's on your active screen, and take actions across apps — like finding photos from a trip and adding them to a shared album.

Apple is also giving Siri AI its own app, where users can revisit past conversations across devices.

Apple leans further into altering your photos with AI

Three iPhones, showing the camera's new AI capabilities, are on the picture editing screen.

Apple said it's using AI to help edit a user's photos. Apple

Apple wants to be an iPhone user's photographic editor. The photo app has three new tools to help.

Photos is getting an upgraded Clean Up tool, which removes distractions even in busy images; Extend, which can generate more images around the original frame; and Spatial Reframing, which lets users shift the perspective as if they had moved the camera before taking the shot.

Apple says the tools are meant to improve composition, not rewrite reality.

"At Apple, we have a deep respect for the craft of photography," Alok Deshpande, Apple's director of photo and camera software engineering, said. "Our goal for bringing AI into the Photos app is to help photographers enhance their images in ways that respect the original moment."

Sorry, Apple fans in China and the European Union — you'l have to wait

Customers shop in an Apple store in China.

Some of Apple's biggest AI features won't be available everywhere at launch. Cheng Xin/Getty Images

After laying out all the benefits of Siri AI, Federighi shared the catch: users in the EU and China will find their access restricted.

Apple cited the Digital Markets Act for the restriction, and said that it had spent "several months" proposing solutions that EU regulators have rejected. Users in the EU will be able to use Siri AI on their Macs, but not on their phones or watches.

"We're working hard to find a path forward that preserves our users' privacy and security," Federighi said.

After riding high for much of WWDC, Apple's stock sank following the announcement.

Parents: Your oversight powers are leveling up

An iPhone from a parent user. It asks whether a parent wants to approve or decline a child's potential app download.

Apple is giving parents more ways to control what kids can see, who they can contact, and when they can use certain apps. Apple

Apple is expanding its protections for child accounts, introducing restrictions on how long your child can use their device and what they can see.

Parents can now instruct their child to request website access before browsing, or to request to text someone before messaging. They can also set time allowances for apps and restrict access during certain times of day, such as school hours.

For those wanting an immediate shutdown, parents now have a "pause device" button.

"For those under the age of 13, access to personal devices should be limited and expanded when a child is ready," said Sumbul Ahmad Desai, Apple's VP of Health. "As parents, we want our kids to develop healthy digital habits."

Hate Apple's Liquid Glass design theme? There's now a slider for that

A screen showing an Apple Music webpage with Apple's updated liquid glass design.

Apple is introducing new updates to its liquid glass design. Users can now toggle the opacity. Apple

Last year's WWDC brought a new "Liquid Glass" interface to Apple's screens. Not everyone loved it.

After rolling out the glossy design language last year, Apple said it is making tweaks to improve readability and make apps feel more structured.

While the company isn't letting users fully get rid of the fresh look, a new settings slider lets users adjust Liquid Glass from ultra clear to fully tinted.

Tim Cook reflected on his final WWDC as CEO

Tim Cook's hands are pressed together as he talks onstage during the 2026 Apple Worldwide Developers Conference.

CEO Tim Cook, who is stepping down in September, expressed gratitude during Monday's WWDC. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

This is Cook's final WWDC as Apple's top boss. He'll make way for John Ternus to take over as Apple's CEO in September.

Cook ended the conference with a "personal note" about his career at the company.

"Some of the greatest highlights of my time as CEO have been events like this," he said. "I truly believe that the best is still ahead."

Cook said that his work at Apple has been the "honor of a lifetime."

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Ben Shimkus is a reporter for the Business News desk. He writes about cars, transportation, retail, and jobs. Ben's reporting has appeared in Rolling Stone, The Verge, Automotive News, USA Today, AutoBody News, LGBTQ Nation, TopSpeed, and Out Magazine. He's also held staff writing positions at The U.S. Sun and the Daily Mail. He graduated from NYU with a Master's in journalism in 2024. Email Ben at [email protected] or message him privately on Signal at bshimkus.41. 

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