Apple's Overhauled Siri Will Reportedly Run on Nvidia's Blackwell Chips
Apple will use Google Cloud and Nvidia’s Blackwell chips to process some Siri requests, with confidential compute encrypting data in transit.
- Apple will route some queries from its new Gemini-powered Siri through Google Cloud, utilizing The Nvidia Blackwell B200 for processing.
- The Information notes this "move diverges from strategy of attempting to control all the critical ingredients to its products," though it remains unclear how Apple's Private Cloud Compute will fit into the upcoming Siri product launch.
- To ensure data security, Apple will enable Nvidia's confidential compute feature, which "preserves the confidentiality and integrity of AI models deployed on Rubin, Blackwell, and Hopper GPUs."
- Under an agreement with Google, queries to the Gemini-powered Siri will run on a licensed version of the Gemini model within Google Cloud, expanding inference capabilities.
- During the upcoming WWDC, Apple is expected to discuss these technical plans for how the company will utilize Nvidia GPUs to support advanced AI inference on its new models.
27 Articles
27 Articles
Apple reportedly turning to Nvidia chips for Gemini-powered Siri
Apple will reportedly lean on Nvidia to fuel the next generation of Siri.The Information reported that Apple will "tap into Google’s fleet of Nvidia’s Blackwell B200 data center chips" to power requests from the new AI-enhanced Siri, which will allegedly go online with the launch of iOS 27 later this year. It's already been established that the new Siri will be based on Google's Gemini AI model, so Apple utilizing a Google fleet of Nvidia data c…
Apple's Overhauled Siri Will Reportedly Run on Nvidia's Blackwell Chips
Apple will rely on Google's fleet of Nvidia chips to power its overhauled version of Siri when it launches in September, according to a new report from The Information. Last week, the outlet reported that Apple plans to highlight the on-device AI capabilities of its devices at WWDC next week, but queries that require cloud-based processing will still fall back on one of Google's large Gemini models, as per an agreement between the two companies.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium









