• @spaduf@slrpnk.net
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    9813 days ago

    Let’s be honest. They certainly plan to, but first they’re gonna see if saying “Apple Intelligence” a bunch is going to convince people they actually did something innovative.

  • @ArtVandelay@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    They’re trying to make people associate the term “AI” with its long form spelled out, which is obviously Apple Intelligence. The goal would eventually be that when people throw out the term AI, it’s assumed that they mean apple intelligence.

    • Quicky
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      12 days ago

      This is exactly why, and as simple as it is, it’s brilliant passive marketing. It stealthily implants an association to Apple Intelligence into every product and article that mentions AI, and might even require the author to distinguish their meaning when they use the acronym. They’ve Sherlock’d AI.

      • @ThirdWorldOrder@lemm.ee
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        12 days ago

        Samsung Lawsuits: Apple’s series of lawsuits against Samsung over alleged patent infringements related to smartphone and tablet designs and functionalities have been seen by some as overly aggressive. These lawsuits have led to significant financial penalties for Samsung and have been viewed as attempts to stifle competition rather than protect genuine innovations.

        App Store Patents: Apple has been known to enforce its patents related to the App Store, targeting other companies that have tried to create similar platforms. This has sometimes been criticized as an attempt to maintain a monopoly over app distribution for iOS devices.

        HTC Lawsuit: In 2010, Apple filed a lawsuit against HTC for allegedly infringing on 20 Apple patents related to the iPhone’s user interface and underlying architecture. Some viewed this as an aggressive move to slow down the growth of Android devices.

        Patent Assertions Against Smaller Companies: There have been instances where Apple has asserted its patents against smaller companies or startups. Critics argue that these actions can stifle innovation and competition, as smaller companies often lack the resources to fight prolonged legal battles against a giant like Apple.

        • @db2@lemmy.world
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          1012 days ago

          App Store Patents

          “Apple denies that, based on their common meaning, the words ‘app store’ together denote a store for apps”

          Actual quote from a legal filing by Apple in 2011. It’s about copyright but the effect and intent is the same. They wanted Amazon to not use the term “app store”.

        • @tyler@programming.dev
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          -112 days ago

          Did you generate this with chat gpt? And that’s not being a patent troll. A patent troll is specifically a company that buys up patents, that they do not intend to use and never do, and then sue for them. E.g. a company that does nothing, produces no value, and simply takes others to court for what they own.

          • @ThirdWorldOrder@lemm.ee
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            12 days ago

            Yeah it was generated, and you are right. I’m not sure how to format stuff to show it’s AI generated so I just use the quotes.

    • @themurphy@lemmy.ml
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      5312 days ago

      It’s the whole point. They’ll try to take over the AI brand by doing this.

      "So what does AI actually stand for? "

      “It stands for Apple Intelligence, of course!”

      “Wow, Apple really is everywhere, they are so good and competent.”

      This will happen too often.

      • @Chadus_Maximus@lemm.ee
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        812 days ago

        The worst part about this is us calling it “Apple intelligence” ironically will make idiots believe that to be correct.

        • @themurphy@lemmy.ml
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          12 days ago

          It does, because now it’s their own thing.

          So instead of having what everyone else is having, they have their own and also hijack theirs, because Apple put the company name in it.

  • Resol van Lemmy
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    1712 days ago

    If you acronymize “Apple Intelligence”, you will get AI. They were probably just hiding it.

    • @extant@lemmy.world
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      1512 days ago

      They always rebrand features for marketing, you aren’t in a video chat you’re FaceTiming™. You aren’t talking with AI you’re talking with Apple Intelligence™.

      • Resol van Lemmy
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        112 days ago

        Now let’s add these words to the dictionary because everyone will use them.

        Duh, I’m kidding, “Apple Intelligence” is a silly name anyway.

  • @Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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    1113 days ago

    Yeah, this is super on-brand for Apple. They still have the Jobsian slavish devotion to branding with all the Tim Apple complete lack of understanding as to its value or how to leverage that value.

    • @theherk@lemmy.world
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      6613 days ago

      Call Apple what you will, but suggesting the 9th highest revenue company in the world lacks understanding of how to leverage its brands doesn’t really make sense to me.

    • @Iheartcheese@lemmy.world
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      2113 days ago

      Did…did you really try to say Apple doesn’t understand how to leverage its value?

      How many billions did you make last year?

    • @thesmokingman@programming.dev
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      1813 days ago

      I agree with you. I think the responses to your comment are missing a few key points

      • Calling an Apple product something weird with “i” or “Apple” is Jobsian slavish devotion to branding
      • Under Tim Cook, innovation has arguably stagnated (see comparisons to Ballmer
      • Cook has not leveraged the value of Apple’s innovation successfully eg Apple Silicon being limited to Apple devices vs PowerPC days, the Vision Pro being horrible, the recent hilarious iPad creativity crusher ad.
      • A company with Apple’s market cap can do dumb shit and still appear valuable just because they have Apple’s market cap.

      I read OP as “names are dumb and this is just Apple trying to be different in the same way everyone else is.” I think all of that is true and I think it’s valid criticism of the product. My last point about Apple’s value is probably the most important. They can do a lot of dumb shit before it matters.

    • MudMan
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      13 days ago

      Sorry to bring this argument to yet another thread, but the only reason why what is fundamentally the exact same feature was generally perceived as a disaster for Microsoft last week and what seems to be a net win for Apple this week is that man, they do seem to understand these things.

      “Apple Intelligence” is a very stupid name, though.

      • Kraiden
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        2213 days ago

        I’d say it’s because Apple’s implementation isn’t essentially spyware at it’s core. The Microsoft implementation was straight up deranged and dangerous, frankly.

        • MudMan
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          013 days ago

          Nah, it’s exactly the same. Arguably in some aspects more suspect, in that it doesn’t seem to have an opt-out at all and it IS sending some data over the Internet for remote processing.

          Presumably better local security than the first version MS announced, but we’ll have to see when compared to the shipping version. Definitely obscuring what they’re actually doing a lot more. It’s Apple magic, not just letting some AI look at your screen and stuff.

          But hey, ultimately, that’s my point. The fact that they went on that stage, sold the exact same thing and multiple people are out here, of all places going “no, but this time it’s fine” shows just how much better at selling stuff Apple is. I’m not particularly excited or intend to use either of these, but come on, Apple’s messaging was so far ahead of MS’s on this one.

            • MudMan
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              12 days ago

              Oh, did I miss that? Did they explain how that works and what AI features are still functional if you don’t turn it on?

              EDIT: I’m not being passive aggressive here, BTW. I genuinely don’t know if they’ve explained this either way. If somebody can source it, I’m genuinely interested.

          • @Petter1@lemm.ee
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            112 days ago

            Apple‘s solution does not require 200gb of screenshots where most personal info is visible in plain text… Apple wins here because they have a clear structure in their OS and all important data already in Apple‘s own Apps. And they analyze this stuff already very much as one can see with all the Siri suggestions everywhere since, I don’t know 5 years? microsoft‘s chaos approach in their Windows is now shooting them in their foot real hard.

            I hope, that we can get a open source linuxAI to be run locally, that integrates like AppleAI. Should be better possible since, at least, all apps are installed mostly the same way(s) and are designed to be dependent on each other.

            • MudMan
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              412 days ago

              I’m not saying anything particularly new and I’m mostly repeating what I’ve been saying since tghe announcement, but I’d argue that all of those caveats are entirely down to branding and PR and not engineering.

              App design, yes. Microsoft made their Timeline 2 so that it actually shows you in the UI all the screenshots that it took from you doing stuff and that’s creepy. Apple doesn’t tell you what they’re pulling and they are almost certainly processing it further to get deeper insights… but they do it in the background so you don’t have to think about it as much.

              So again, better understanding of the user, messaging and branding. Same fundamental functionality. Way different reactions.

              • @Petter1@lemm.ee
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                12 days ago

                Yes, but apple doesn’t need to screenshot shit, thats the point, they trained their customers to only use apple apps, where they have full control and force developers to use their AI API to stay relevant.

                Microsoft failed to convince user to use microsoft everywhere except with teams and the office suite

                Google has the relevant data of most microsoft user, and screenshoting this (like scraping) would have allowed microsoft to get to that data without paying google for it

                But that is kinda shady and thus not widely accepted.

                • MudMan
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                  212 days ago

                  But they do, though.

                  The use cases they have presented are literally asking for a picture you received last week that contained a particular piece of text, selecting the text and copying it over.

                  I know Apple made it seem like AI is magic, but here in the real world that uses real world computers you need to know what’s on the image to do that.

                  But hey, no, that’s my point. You understand what taking a screenshot of your desktop looks like. You can grok that to the extent that you can feel weird about the idea of somebody doing that to you every five seconds. You can’t wrap your head around the steps of breaking down all your information to the extent Apple is describing. Yeah, they know exactly what you did and when, and what you looked at and what it said and how it relates to everybody you know and to your activity. But since you can’t intuitively understand what that requires you don’t know enough to feel weird about it.

                  That right there is good UX, even if the ultimate level of intrusion is the same or higher.

  • @uebquauntbez@lemmy.world
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    712 days ago

    … or BI for better Intelligence, CI for common intelligence … YI for yummy intelligence, ZI for zoomers intelligence …