
Tesla’s planned robotaxi launch in tech-friendly Austin has Musk playing catch-up in his hometown
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adminThe Texas flag flies outside TDECU Stadium in Houston, Oct. 21, 2023.
Tim Warner | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images
Tesla’s long-awaited entry into the robotaxi market — expected later this month — is coming to Austin, Texas, which has emerged as a key battleground for self-driving technology.
CEO Elon Musk wrote in a post on X last week that the company has been testing Model Y vehicles with no safety drivers on board in the Texas capital for several days.
Tesla’s Austin robotaxi service will kick off with 10 vehicles and expand to thousands, moving into more cities if the launch goes well, Musk said in a May 20 interview with CNBC’s David Faber.
But while the market remains nascent, Tesla already faces a hefty amount of competition.
The electric vehicle maker is one of several companies using Austin as a testing ground and debut market for self-driving technology. They’re all taking advantage of Austin’s robotics and AI talent, tech-savvy residents, affordable housing relative to other technology hubs and a city layout with horizontal traffic lights and wide roads that makes it particularly conducive to mapping software.
But the biggest reason they love Texas may be the state’s robotaxi-friendly regulation.
Volkswagen Group of America starting its first autonomous vehicle test program in Austin in July 2023.
Courtesy: Vokswagen AG
Already in Austin are Alphabet’s Waymo, Amazon’s Zoox, Volkswagen subsidiary ADMT, and startup Avride.
Waymo began offering robotaxi rides in Austin with Uber in March. Zoox started testing there last year, while ADMT has been testing Volkswagen’s electric ID vehicles in the city since 2023. Avride is headquartered in Austin and is testing its autonomous vehicles and delivery robots in the Texas capital. Avride said it plans to begin offering paid robotaxi rides in the city later this year.
“The winners of the space are emerging, and it’s just a matter of scaling,” said Toby Snuggs, head of sales and partnerships at Avride.
According to Uber, its Austin launch with Waymo has proved successful thus far. Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi told investors in May that riders are choosing the robotaxis over regular cars, and the company is preparing to scale its Austin autonomous fleet to hundreds of vehicles in the coming months, ahead of a robotaxi expansion into Atlanta later this year.
“These approximately 100 vehicles are now busier than over 99% of all drivers in Austin in terms of completed trips per day,” Khosrowshahi told investors in May.
Avride, which spun out of former parent company Yandex last year, has delivery robots in a fleet of about a dozen Hyundai Ioniq 5 vehicles in downtown Austin. The company said it plans to expand its Austin fleet to 100 vehicles later this year and aims to begin offering robotaxi rides in Dallas with Uber in 2025.
Tesla primarily relies on camera-based systems and computer vision to navigate its vehicles rather than the Waymo model of using sophisticated sensors such as lidar and radar. Tesla’s “generalized” approach to robotaxis is more ambitious and less expensive than Waymo’s, Musk said during Tesla’s first-quarter earnings call with investors in April. Musk has been promising Tesla investors that a self-driving car is on the way for roughly a decade and has repeatedly missed self-imposed deadlines.
“There’s probably a lot of ways it can be done, but we’re the only ones that have done it,” Waymo co-CEO Tekedra Mawakana told CNBC’s Deirdre Bosa in May. “We’ve been doing it 24 hours a day for almost five years. And so to us, it’s really important to focus on safety … and then cost — not cost and then safety.”
“You have to be able to see at night, you have to be able to have this vision that’s better than humans,” Mawakana said.
‘Friendly’ regulation
In addition to Austin, Phoenix is an AV hub for companies such as Waymo, which has been testing in the region since 2016. Waymo and the auto manufacturer Magna International announced in May that they plan to double robotaxi production at their new plant in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa by the end of 2026.
The San Francisco Bay Area, where Google began working on its self-driving car project in 2009, also has a large fleet of Waymo vehicles. Waymo opened its paid ride-hailing service to all local users almost a year ago, and said earlier this year that it’s expanding its service to include another 27 square miles of coverage in the region. Zoox is also testing in San Francisco.
While Tesla was started in the Bay Area, Musk moved its corporate headquarters to Austin in late 2021. In California, regulators at individual municipalities closely control where and how companies can operate autonomous vehicles. Texas has more relaxed regulations that benefit AV companies.
When Waymo decided on Austin, it “looked at the operational structure and how friendly the regulatory environment is,” said Shweta Shrivastava, Waymo’s senior product and strategy executive. “It’s a tech-forward city — there’s a lot of openness in terms of welcoming and adopting new technologies, so that’s been great.”
Tesla CEO Elon Musk speaks at the Tesla Giga Texas manufacturing “Cyber Rodeo” grand opening party in Austin, Texas, on April 7, 2022.
Suzanne Cordeiro | AFP | Getty Images
Part of that friendliness is a 2017 Texas law that prohibited municipalities from regulating autonomous vehicles, giving the state full authority.
“It’s not like California, where you have certain regulations in LA, separate regulations in San Francisco, and municipalities between,” said Yulia Shveyko, Avride’s head of communications. “In Texas, it’s the same all across the state, and this is one of the great things about being here as an operator.”
The state is responsible for establishing the framework for autonomous vehicle operation, which includes that AVs must adhere to the same regulations as traditional vehicles, including registration, insurance and compliance with traffic laws. Texas law also requires AVs to have data recording systems to document potential accidents and incidents.
The Texas Department of Transportation’s “role is to work with autonomous vehicle (AV) companies on what is needed to ensure the state’s infrastructure is prepared for the safe and efficient rollout of AVs,” a spokesperson said in an emailed statement.
Texas law allows for AV testing and operations on Texas roadways, “as long as they meet the same safety and insurance requirements as every other vehicle on the road.”
Companies are choosing to test their AVs in Austin because of its “lower barriers both in terms of regulation and the acceptance by consumers in the area,” said Wassym Bensaid, chief software officer at EV maker Rivian.
“This is really what makes Austin and San Francisco more open to this technology,” Bensaid added. Rivian in March rolled out a “hands-free version” of its driver-assistance system for highway driving, and the company plans to have an “eyes-off-hands-off” system available by the end of next year, Bensaid said.
A drone view shows the Tesla gigafactory in Austin, Texas, U.S., May 2, 2025.
Eli Hartman | Reuters
Texas’ transportation department created an AV task force in 2019. Formal meetings take place two to four times per year. Members of the task force include representatives from other agencies in the state and public entities as well as key industry stakeholders, its website says.
Waymo is an active member of the task force, the company confirmed.
The state’s transportation department didn’t respond to CNBC’s requests for further information about the task force.
Waymo has built goodwill with Austin officials by engaging with Texas stakeholders since it began testing in the city in 2015, the company told CNBC.
Known then as Google’s self-driving car project, the company started driving on Austin streets a decade ago with safety drivers on board.
Waymo closed Austin operations in 2019 to focus on its testing efforts in Phoenix, the spokesperson said, adding that it returned in March 2023, when the company’s technology was “more mature.”
Long before Waymo began testing in Austin, University of Texas at Austin’s Peter Stone entered his team’s vehicle in the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Urban Challenge in 2007. Stone is the director of the Learning Agents Research Group at UT, and his team’s entry was called Austin Robot Technology — one of the first deployments of a partially automated driving system on the streets of Austin.
Stone has been at the university for 23 years and has taught several students who are now employees at Waymo and other car companies, he said. Advancements in machine learning and years of testing have contributed to companies such as Waymo being able to navigate roads better than some human drivers, he said.
Lone Star influence
Officials from around the U.S. and the world are looking to Texas as a model for self-driving regulations, experts said. Some regulation, however, is still being sorted out.
Lewis Leff, City of Austin assistant director, said that more cities are reaching out to ask, “How do you handle these situations?” Cities that have inquired include New Orleans and Nashville, Tennessee, as well as some outside the U.S., Austin officials told CNBC.
“We were in Japan launching our service with Rakuten earlier this year and the minister of economics, and the questions they were asking was, ‘What is the regulation in Texas like?'” Avride’s Snuggs said.
Meanwhile, the AV industry is pushing for federal-level standards that would ease regulatory uncertainty around putting new tech on public roads. In Tesla’s third-quarter earnings in October, Musk said that should Donald Trump win the coming election, he would use his influence with the administration to push for federal AV regulation.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy speaks during a news conference on May 20, 2025 in Austin, Texas.
Brandon Bell | Getty Images
As president, Trump and his transportation secretary, Sean Duffy, have both been supportive of federal-level standards, Waymo’s Mawakana told CNBC in May, adding that she’s “optimistic” it will be arranged sometime during this presidential term. Waymo supports proposed federal frameworks for national safety standards and has voiced that support to the Trump administration, a company spokesperson said.
“Now’s the time,” Mawakana said, pointing to places such as China, which invests in AV supply chains and grants and has federal AV rules. “We should be in the exact same position.”
‘Changing environments’
The concentration of regulatory power, however, comes with some concern that cities will be mostly powerless should issues arise, experts said.
A state senate transportation hearing in September addressed the lack of regulation in Texas for driverless vehicles.
“To many of our first responders communities, this is new territory for them,” Democratic Texas state Sen. Sarah Eckhardt reportedly said at the hearing. “I mean pulling over an autonomous vehicle, you know, what do you do? An autonomous vehicle in an accident, what do you do?”
In one example, Houston city officials reportedly faced delays in enforcement instructions from state regulators after Cruise cars caused a backup on the city’s Montrose Boulevard in 2023.
Texas has at least 17 companies that have deployed or tested on roads, said Nick Steingart, director of state affairs at Alliance for Automotive Innovation, at the state hearing.
“As the technology matured and evolved, we fully expected that the laws would evolve as well,” Steingart said.
The state is considering legislation that may provide some clarity, according to Austin’s transportation department.
Several AV companies in Austin have safety protocols and proactively work with local first responders. Zoox, for example, has held trainings with first responders and met with city officials, a spokesperson said. But there is technically no requirement for AV companies to engage with emergency services, Austin officials confirmed.
Companies hoping to succeed in Texas often begin their conversations with the state by focusing on safety first, Austin’s Leff said. “They note their technology can recognize a fire vehicle or a hand signal, so there’s a lot of focus on things like that,” he said.
Austin’s transportation department has been collecting information about incidents that pose a risk to public safety and relaying that data to the appropriate operators, the city said. It places “all reports we receive about AV incidents into our dashboard, about half of which over time have come from our city department colleagues,” city officials said.
Waymo launched its ride-hailing service in Austin, Texas, a hotspot for autonomous vehicle testing, in March.
Jennifer Elias | CNBC
Waymo, which has become one of the most visible leaders in the robotaxi market, has said it has made safety a priority. Mawakana and co-CEO Dmitri Dolgov told employees at a November all-hands meeting that they should scale up as aggressively as possible but do so with safety at the forefront of all their efforts, people familiar with the matter told CNBC. The people asked not to be named because they were not authorized to speak publicly.
Waymo tracks incidents involving its vehicles but doesn’t share city-level data publicly, a company spokesperson said.
With Texas regulation around AVs relatively lax, some AV makers worry what impact a collision by one of the players in the state could mean for the entire industry.
“It takes a long time to earn trust, and it doesn’t take that long to lose it,” Mawakana said. “There can always be an overreaction by regulators — their job is to protect the public.”
Already, the AV industry has suffered a number of black eyes. General Motors shut down its Cruise robotaxi service in December after one of its vehicles dragged a woman 20 feet on a street in San Francisco in 2023. Uber also pulled out of the self-driving space after one of its self-driving test vehicles struck and killed a woman in Arizona in 2018.
In Austin, a woman posted a TikTok video in April showing a Waymo vehicle that she said had abruptly stopped underneath a highway with her and another passenger inside. After other cars began honking at them, they contacted customer support for help but were told the Waymo couldn’t be moved. The woman said the car locked the passengers inside until they threatened to go live on TikTok.
“Now we’re walking,” the woman says in the video, “and our Waymo is still there. This is insane.”
Riders “always have the ability to pause their ride and exit the vehicle when desired by pulling the handle twice — once to unlock and another to open the door,” a Waymo spokesperson said in response to the video.
Despite such incidents, UT’s Stone said he thinks cities are being overly cautious.
“The standard people are aiming for is perfection, and the standard they should be aiming for is better than people,” he said. “A fatal car accident rarely makes the local news, but if autonomous cars reduce that number, it should be seen as a huge societal win.”
— CNBC’s Lora Kolodny and Deirdre Bosa contributed to this report.
WATCH: Waymo co-CEO on 10 million driverless rides and Tesla’s coming robotaxi challenge

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DocuSign stock tanks 18% after company cuts billings outlook
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24 mins agoon
June 6, 2025By
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The Docusign Inc. application for download in the Apple App Store on a smartphone arranged in Dobbs Ferry, New York, U.S., on Thursday, April 1, 2021.
Tiffany Hagler-Geard | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Shares of DocuSign tanked 18% in trading on Friday, a day after the e-signature provider reported stronger-than-expected earnings but slashed its full-year billings outlook.
Here’s how the company performed in the fiscal first quarter, compared with estimates from analysts polled by LSEG:
- Earnings per share: 90 cents, adjusted, vs. 81 cents expected
- Revenue: $764 million vs. $748 million expected
Billings, a closely-watched sales metric, came in at $739.6 million in the fiscal first quarter, which ended April 30. That was lower than the $746 million expected by analysts, according to StreetAccount. It also fell short of the company’s own forecast, which guided for billings between $741 million and $751 million.
For the current fiscal year, DocuSign said it expects billings of $3.28 billion to $3.34 billion, down from a range of $3.3 billion to $3.35 billion.
Read more CNBC tech news
In the first quarter of DocuSign’s 2026 fiscal year, revenue jumped 8% year over year to $764 million. Subscription revenue increased 8% from the same period a year ago to $746.2 million.
DocuSign reported net income of $72.1 million, or 34 cents per share, compared to net income of $33.8 million, or 16 cents per share, a year earlier.
For the fiscal second quarter, the company expects revenue to be between $777 million and $781 million, compared to consensus estimates of $775 million, according to LSEG. For the full fiscal year, DocuSign projected revenue of $3.15 billion to $3.16 billion. Analysts were expecting $3.14 billion, according to LSEG.
The company also announced an additional $1 billion stock buyback, taking its share repurchase plan to $1.4 billion.
DocuSign shares are down more than 16% year to date.
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Technology
Britain wants to lift a ban on a key crypto product — and catch up to the U.S.
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June 6, 2025By
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Benoit Tessier | Reuters
LONDON — The U.K. is set to lift a ban on a key type of crypto debt security in a bid to catch up to the U.S. and other financial hubs as it looks to become a global hub for digital assets.
On Friday, the Financial Conduct Authority, the U.K.’s main regulator for financial services, announced a proposal to reverse its ban on offering crypto exchange-traded notes to retail investors.
Exchange-traded notes are a type of debt instrument that are linked to one or more specified assets — cryptocurrencies, in this case. In essence, they allow investors to gain exposure to digital tokens through the use of a regulated exchange.
Sales of crypto ETNs to retail investors have been prohibited in the U.K. since the FCA put in place a ban in 2019 due to concerns over the potential harms they pose to consumers.
On Friday, however, the FCA said it proposed lifting the ban on crypto ETNs “to support UK growth and competitiveness.” A restriction on crypto derivatives will remain in place, the watchdog added.
“This consultation demonstrates our commitment to supporting the growth and competitiveness of the UK’s crypto industry,” David Geale, executive director of payments and digital assets at the FCA, said in a statement.
“We want to rebalance our approach to risk and lifting the ban would allow people to make the choice on whether such a high-risk investment is right for them, given they could lose all their money.”
‘Major milestone’
The development was swiftly praised by crypto firms as a significant moment for the industry in the U.K. Britain is often perceived as falling behind the U.S., European Union and other global players when it comes to digital assets.
Spot crypto exchange-traded funds have been available in the U.S. since the Securities and Exchange Commission approved rule changes to allow the creation of the first bitcoin-linked ETFs early last year.
In April, the U.K. government published draft legislation for the crypto sector with the goal of making the country a “world leader in digital assets.” The FCA is separately working through a detailed roadmap of consultations and discussion papers with a view to implement a regulatory regime for crypto by 2026.
“Until now, the UK has been an outlier on ETNs. We hope this move will improve consumer protections and we will continue to make the case for lifting the ban on retail investors from accessing highly-regulated derivative products,” said Ian Taylor, board advisor to crypto trade body CryptoUK.
Kraken’s U.K. General Manager Bivu Das said that the proposal to approve sales of crypto ETNs to consumers marked a “major milestone for the UK’s crypto ecosystem.”
The FCA is “acknowledging that the market has matured significantly and that outdated restrictions no longer serve their intended purpose,” Das added. “Regulatory moves like this are critical if the UK is to stay competitive in the race to lead in digital assets.”

Technology
At WWDC, Apple’s AI strategy comes into question
Published
4 hours agoon
June 6, 2025By
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One year ago, Apple announced Apple Intelligence, its response to the wave of sophisticated chatbots and systems kicked off by the arrival of ChatGPT and the age of generative AI.
Analysts said Apple’s installed base of more than 1 billion iPhones, the data on its device and its custom-designed silicon chips were advantages that would help the company become an AI leader.
But it’s been an underwhelming 12 months since then.
Apple Intelligence stumbled out of the gate while rivals like OpenAI, Google and Meta have continued to make headway launching new generative-AI models.
Now, investors are calling for Apple to do something major to catch up in AI, which is rapidly transforming the tech industry.
When CEO Tim Cook speaks at Apple’s annual Worldwide Developers Conference in Cupertino, California, investors on Monday, fans and developers will want to hear how the company’s approach to AI has changed. That’s especially important after some Apple executives have said that the technology could be the reason the iPhone gets supplanted by the next-generation of computer hardware.
“You may not need an iPhone 10 years from now,” Apple services chief Eddy Cue said in court last month in one of the government’s antitrust case against Google, adding that AI was a “huge technological shift” that can upend incumbents like Apple.
The Apple Intelligence rollout was rocky. The first features launched in October — tools for rewriting text, a new Siri animation and improved voice, and a tool that generates slideshow movies out of user photos — were underwhelming. One key feature, which came out in December, summarized long stacks of text messages. But it was disabled for news and media apps after the BBC discovered that it twisted headlines to display factually incorrect information.
But the biggest stumble for Apple came in early March, when the company said that it was delaying “More personal Siri,” a major improvement to the Siri voice assistant that would integrate it with iPhone apps so it could do things like find details from inside emails and make restaurant reservations.
Apple had been advertising the feature on television as a key reason to buy an iPhone 16, but after delaying the feature until the “coming year,” it pulled the ads from broadcast and YouTube. The company now faces class-action suits from people who claim they were misled into buying a new iPhone.
Tim Cook, chief executive officer of Apple Inc., during the 60th presidential inauguration in the rotunda of the US Capitol in Washington, DC, US, on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.
Bloomberg | Getty Images
Although Apple Intelligence had a rough first year, the company hasn’t said much publicly. However, it’s reportedly reorganized some of its AI teams.
JPMorgan Chase analyst Samik Chatterjee said in a note this week that investor expectations were set for a “lackluster” WWDC, as the company still needs to bring to market the features it announced last year, versus “addressing the more material issue of lagging behind other large technology companies in relation to advancements in AI.”
Meanwhile, Apple is facing renewed competition in its core business.
OpenAI in May acquired the startup io for about $6.4 billion, bringing in former Apple chief designer Jony Ive to build AI hardware. The company hasn’t provided details about its future devices.
Meta has made a splash with its Ray-Ban Meta Glasses, selling over 2 million units since launching in 2021. The devices use Meta’s Llama large language model to answer spoken questions from the user.
And last month, Android maker Google said its Gemini models will become the default assistant on Android phones. The company showed Gemini doing things that go beyond Siri’s capabilities, such as summarizing videos. Google also announced a $150 million partnership with Warby Parker to develop its own pair of AI-powered smart glasses.
A working Apple Intelligence is important for the company to encourage its users to buy new iPhones since devices released before the iPhone 15 Pro in 2023 don’t support the suite of features. But AI hasn’t been a key driver of sales for smartphones yet, and may not be for years, said Forrester analyst Thomas Husson.
“There’s been some new cool features and services, but I don’t think it has drastically changed the experience yet,” Husson said.
Apple declined to comment.
Apple needs to do something big
For years, Apple didn’t like the words “artificial intelligence.” It preferred the more academic term “machine learning.”
Apple focused its efforts on what could efficiently run on its battery-powered phones. The AI race, led by OpenAI and Google, was about bleeding-edge capabilities that required high-powered servers based on Nvidia graphics-processing units, or GPUs.
Then ChatGPT launched in late 2022, making AI the most important term in Silicon Valley. Soon after, Cook was telling investors that Apple was spending “a tremendous amount of time and effort” on the technology.
While Apple Intelligence is based on a series of language and diffusion models that the company trained itself, Apple hasn’t publicly competed with Google, OpenAI, Anthropic, or other companies in what are called “frontier models,” or the most capable AI systems that often have to be trained on large server clusters packed with Nvidia chips and fast memory.
The difference between the way Apple and its rivals approach AI can be seen in the company’s approach to capital expenditures. Apple spent $9.5 billion on capital expenditures in its fiscal 2024, or about 2.4% of its total revenue.
The iPhone maker has rented the computing power needed to train its foundation models, it revealed last year, from Google Cloud and other providers. Apple’s rivals are gobbling up billions of dollars of GPUs to push the technology forward.
Meanwhile, Meta, Amazon, Alphabet and Microsoft are planning to collectively spend more than $300 billion this year on capital expenditures, up from $230 billion last year. Amazon alone is aiming to spend $100 billion, and Microsoft has allocated $80 billion.
Apple’s best chance to quickly catch up up may be to do what it’s done many times in the past: Buy a company, and turn it into a killer feature.
It bought PA Semi in 2008 for $278 million, and turned it into the seed for its semiconductor division. Ahead of releasing the Vision Pro headset, Apple bought over 10 startups that worked on virtual and augmented reality. Even Siri was a startup before Apple bought it for more than $200 million in 2010.
With $133 billion in cash and marketable securities on hand as of the start of May, there isn’t much Apple can’t buy, assuming it could get regulatory clearance. However, OpenAI, Apple’s current Siri partner, is likely out of reach with a valuation of $300 billion. And given OpenAI’s new relationship with Ive to build hardware, there are reasons for Apple to slow the partnership down.
Apple’s senior vice president of Services, Eddy Cue participates in a featured session: “Severance’s” Ben Stiller: Moving Culture Through Innovation and Creativity” during the SXSW 2025 Conference and Festivals at the Austin Convention Center in Austin, Texas on March 9, 2025.
Suzanne Cordeiro | AFP | Getty Images
Anthropic, whose Claude chatbot is powered by one of the leading AI models, was valued at $61.5 billion in a funding round in March. In the Google antitrust case, Cue, a senior vice president at Apple, mentioned Anthropic as a potential replacement for Google as the default search option in the iPhone’s Safari browser.
“They probably need to acquire Anthropic,” said Deepwater Asset Management’s Gene Munster, who has followed Apple for decades, in an interview.
That would be by far Apple’s largest acquisition. To date, the most the company has paid is $3 billion, when it bought Beats Electronics in 2014 for $3 billion, part of an effort to catch Spotify in the music streaming market.
Apple could buy a company that’s developing AI-based apps, even if they’re on open-source or other company models. Perplexity, which is currently fundraising at a $14 billion valuation, has shown strong interest in the smartphone market and understanding of the value of being a default AI service.
In April, Perplexity announced a partnership with Motorola, and it’s reportedly in talks with Samsung to integrate its technology into the South Korean company’s version of Android, as well as take investment from the Apple rival. Cue mentioned that Apple had been in discussions with Perplexity about its technology at the May trial.
It’s also possible for Apple to treat frontier AI like it treated search — as a service that can be filled with a partnership. Apple software chief Craig Federighi implied as much last year at a panel discussion during WWDC, saying that Apple would like to add other AI models, especially for specific purposes, into its Apple Intelligence framework.
Federighi specifically mentioned Google, whose Gemini can now fluidly speak to the user and handle input that comes from photos, videos, voice or text. Documents revealed during the Google trial showed executives from Apple, including Cue and M&A chief Adrian Perica, were involved in the negotiations over Gemini.
Each chip in the M1 family — M1, M1 Pro, M1 Max, and now M1 Ultra.
Courtesy: Apple
Apple’s AI advantages
Apple has been designing its own chips since 2010, and with AI in mind since at least 2018.
The most powerful Apple M-series chips can tap into something called “unified memory,” says WebAI co-founder David Stout, making them ideal for doing AI inference. Apple also includes good GPUs on its chips, he said. WebAI is building software that allows users to fine-tune, train and run big models on consumer hardware.
Stout’s company has built clusters of consumer-grade Mac Studio computers to run big AI models, like Meta’s Llama.
“We picked Apple Silicon because we think it’s the best hardware for AI,” said Stout, adding that in his company’s tests, Apple’s chips can output 100 million tokens per dollar spent versus 12 million tokens per dollar for an Nvidia H100.
Part of Apple’s strategy for Siri, announced last summer, was to cajole its developers to build snippets of new code into their apps, which would make it simpler for Apple Intelligence and Siri to use the apps and get things done.
While Apple is still pushing “App Intents” — the same system powers stuff like lock screen widgets — the framework for how they work with Siri hasn’t been released yet.
Jony Ive attends The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute benefit gala celebrating the opening of the “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” exhibition on Monday, May 5, 2025, in New York.
Evan Agostini | Invision | AP
‘You may not need an iPhone’
The threat that advanced AI like Google Gemini and OpenAI’s ChatGPT represents to Apple was underscored by Cue at the trial last month. He suggested that the rise of AI threatened Apple’s biggest business.
“AI is a new technology shift, and it’s creating new opportunities for new entrants,” Cue said at the trial last month.
There is a growing sense in Silicon Valley that sophisticated AI interfaces might one day replace smartphones and laptops with new devices that are designed from the ground up to take advantage of AI-based interfaces. That could mean people speaking or chatting with their devices to command AI agents, rather than tapping on touch screens or keyboards.
Upon joining OpenAI in May, Ive said he believes AI is enabling a new generation of hardware.
“I am absolutely certain that we are literally on the brink of a new generation of technology that can make us our better selves,” Ive, the iPhone designer who retired from Apple in 2019, said in a video announcing that his company had been acquired.
Though AI represents a risk to Apple’s current business, Deepwater Asset Management’s Munster said the company has more time than many believe to adapt because of so many years of customer loyalty.
“This is still something that has existential risk to all these companies, including Apple, but I don’t think we’re at some break point in the next year around it,” Munster said.
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