Live Updates From Apple WWDC 2025 đŽ
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On Monday, June 9 at 1 p.m. ET / 10 a.m. PT, Apple will announce an avalanche of software updates for all of its platforms at its annual WWDC 2025 developer conference. Weâll see new versions of iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, visionOS, and tvOSâall of which are rumored to jump straight to version â26.â
Apple is expected to introduce all-new visual looks, inspired by the Vision Proâs glassy and translucent visionOS, to unify the interfaces and make them more consistent across devices. For its largest and most important platformâiPhoneâthat means the first major software facelift since Jony Iveâs iOS 7 flattened software in 2013.
The elephant in the room is going to be AIâspecifically, Appleâs brand of artificial intelligence called Apple Intelligence. Will Apple address its big fumbling of its next-gen Siri voice assistant that was supposed to have arrived by now but still hasnât? Or will it downplay its lagging AI features as Google, OpenAI, Anthropic, and other major AI companies drop new and more advanced LLM-powered chatbot and generative features at a seemingly rapid-fire pace?
Senior Consumer Tech Editor Raymond Wong will be in Cupertino, Calif. to bring live WWDC 2025 coverage from Appleâs spaceship-shaped Apple Park. The Gizmodo consumer tech team, including Senior Writer James and Staff Reporter Kyle Barr, will be on deck breaking down the news announcements, too. Be sure to come back on Monday for live updates!
Greetings from Gizmodo Japan!

Gizmodo Japanâs Chisato Kuroda flew from Tokyo to Cupertino to attend her first WWDC at Apple Park. When I asked her what her favorite announcement was, she said it was iPadOS 26âs new multitasking and app windowing. Nearly every journalist and content creator Iâve talked to at the developer conference has said pretty much the same thing. My observation was that the media lounge was filled with people using MacBooks to make their content. But next year? I think itâs very possible there will be a lot more people using iPads paired with Magic Keyboards to do ârealâ work. âRaymond Wong
Liquid Glass Is the Most âOrganicâ iOS Has Ever Been
Gizmodoâs Senior Editor of Consumer Tech Raymond Wong is busy at WWDC25 in back-to-back briefings with Apple, but heâs still here to tell you what he thinks about Liquid Glass and the missing Apple Intelligence-enhanced Siri. If youâve been paying attention to your social feeds, youâll know there are a number of people who canât stand the new aesthetic across iOS 26, macOS 26, iPadOS 26, and all the rest. However, thereâs a neat organic effect to all the new menus and bubbles that will feel extra enticing if youâre bored of standard buttons. All thatâs well and good, but in Wongâs words, the lack of any real talk about AI at this yearâs dev conference makes Apple Intelligence truly seem like a âdud.â â Kyle Barr
Brief Thoughts Now That Iâve Seen and Touched Liquid Glass

Greetings from WWDC 2025 Day 2. Today, Iâm in briefings to get a closer look at everything that Apple announced during its packed keynote. Iâve had some brief time with iOS 26, iPadOS 26, macOS 26 Tahoe, and watchOS 26 (all under Appleâs very clean and very controlled watch) and just wanted to share some first impressions before I piece together a story later.
My first thought was that Liquid Glass looks cool AF. Yes, itâs basically a modern-day version of Windows Vistaâs Aero glass, but itâs done so much better. Itâs not just veneerâthe glass really does react to the content underneath it with delightful little animations that feel organic, fluid, and fun. I said this when the Dynamic Island was introduced on the iPhone 14 Pro, and itâs true for the little touches in Liquid Glass. Apple didnât need to go so hard mimicking real glass and how it warps when you look through it or create a water-droplet like magnification and bounce when you tap between icons on a menu bar, but it did because itâs fun. Apple devices with Apple silicon also have the performance and efficiency to support these âsillyâ or âunnecessaryâ flourishes without killing battery life.
My point is, thereâs enough software out there that doesnât make you feel anythingâand Appleâs own software platforms even became that over time. Why not try to do something that does make you feel a little joy? Thatâs Liquid Glass. Now, the concerns about the readability of the transparent and translucent menu bars and buttonsâspecifically, text buttons hovering over content textâare valid, but I think we all have to remember theyâre only out in developer beta. None of this stuff is finished software, and Apple has traditionally used the summer to gather feedback and fine-tune and polish things before their fall release. At the very least, Apple will probably include some kind of accessibility setting to increase contrast or make the translucency of these elements more opaque for people who simply find it too visually distracting. âRaymond Wong
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Itâs the End of the Line⊠for Intel Macs
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From the Liquid Glass redesign (whoâs excited for a transparent menu bar?!) to a more advanced Spotlight search to new Continuity iPhone features that work more seamlessly on Macs, macOS 26 Tahoe is chock full of small upgrades that tighten up the whole operating system. But one thing you should know is that itâs the last version of macOS that will support Intel-based Macs. Macs with an Intel processor will still get three years of security updates after, but they wonât get macOS 27 and newer. If youâve got one of these ancient machines, youâre gonna need to get with it and switch to Apple silicon to get the new new. âRaymond Wong
Apple Intelligence Is Watching
Apple Intelligence didnât get any huge updates, but among the most useful features is Visual Intelligence, which can see what youâre doing on your iPhone and then take some actions for you. On one hand, itâs a little creepy (though Apple says its AI is processed on-device, which should assuage some privacy concerns), and on the other, itâs a little ho-humâGoogleâs Gemini already has a similar feature for shopping and for search.
Either way, Visual Intelligence might also be pretty useful. If agentic AI makes navigating menus or shopping less annoying, then Iâm here for it. âJames Pero
Apple Intelligence Can Now Creep on Your iPhone Screen
Your New Health Coach Is Here

Other than jumping straight to version 26 like the rest of Appleâs software, watchOS got a few updates today, including a new AI health coach that could either be motivational or annoying, depending on your attitude toward AI. Additionally, watchOS is bringing live translation and an update to the Workout app that adds several new buttons. Not a huge day for watchOS, but definitely not a total snub, either.
My favorite new thing is something I already mentioned earlier in the live blog: a wrist gesture that lets you shake away annoying notifications. It uses a combination of the gyroscope and machine learning, according to Apple, which gives me confidence that it wonât end up shaking away important notifications by accident. âJames Pero
Appleâs watchOS Adds a New Wrist Gesture to Ignore Annoying Notifications
Why Canât Apple Do Gaming Right

Todayâs M3- and M4-powered Macs may be powerful enough for gaming, but Apple still canât seem to comprehend the specific demands of gamers. The Apple Games app helps put all your titles in one place for easily accessing your Apple Arcade titles, but beyond leaderboards and achievements, it doesnât add much to the iPhone gaming experience. As for Macs, Apple decided to offer gamers a special overlay that lacks basic functionality PC and console gamers expect to see, like an FPS counter. Apple needs more games to make gaming on Mac more accessible, but it needs to open itself up more to outside game launchers like Epic Games Store or Steam. â Kyle Barr
Is This Really Appleâs Big Plan to Make Gaming Stick?
Developer Betas Available Today, Public Betas in July, Final Release This âFallâ

There you have it: If youâre itching to try out all of Appleâs new software versions and all their new Liquid Glass glory (just remember there will be bugs, probably lots of bugs), you can download the developer betas today. Tim Cook said the public betas will be available next month in July, followed by the final official release in the fall.
As always, make sure to back up your devices before installing any beta software. Thereâs always a chance youâll experience data loss. Be safe out there! âRaymond Wong
iPadOS Multitasking Is Good Now?

Holy sh*t! Apple just gave iPad users exactly what weâve been asking for years: proper app windows with close, minimize, and resize buttons. Thereâs also a macOS-like menu bar that sits at the topâYES! Other macOS-ish features include ExposĂ© for managing apps; apps even minimize into their app dock icons just like on macOS. Craig also says the mouse pointer is âpointierâ for more precision. The Files app is getting an upgrade to be more versatileâagain, more like managing files in Finder on macOS âRaymond Wong

Vision Pro Personas May Not Look Like Glassy-Eyed Marionettes Anymore

There are a few upgrades coming to visionOS 26, but one is meant to quash all those people still laughing about the dead-eyed âPersonasâ that first launched with the Vision Pro early last year. The next update should make Personas look far more human than before. The new versions should have less of a putty look to human skin, and it should take into account the silhouette of your face far better than before.
Alongside this update, the Vision Pro should get better at remembering where you left your various windows around the room. You can also use custom new widgets to inset a calendar or picture into a wall, as if that old family photo of yours is staring back at you from the other side of a wall. â Kyle Barr
Apple Didnât Design Controllers for the Vision Pro, but It Gave Us the Next Best Thing
PSVR 2 Controller Support Coming to Vision Pro
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Would you look at that? Sonyâs PSVR2 controllers are now supported for games on Apple Vision Pro. Feels like a missed opportunity for Apple to design its own controllers, but okay. âRaymond Wong

MacOS 26 Is Supposed to Work Even Better With iPhone

Alongside the push to make all its software look similar with the new âLiquid Glassâ aesthetic, Apple is pushing macOS 26 to work even better with iPhones. Alongside the Apple Games appâwhich now comes with a Mac-specific game bar to adjust brightness or controller connectionâthereâs a new Phone app that drags your calls from your iPhone directly to your desktop. This lets you take and make video or audio calls, and it should work with other new features like live translation.
The new makes the menu bar completely transparent, and the Dock will sport a glassier look. The other big feature introduced with macOS 26 is an update to Spotlight. Hitting the CMD+Space shortcut for Spotlight will highlight more context-sensitive apps and functions for users. There are a few more power user capabilities with shortcuts on Spotlight. â Kyle Barr
Welcome to the New Mac, Now With More âWindowsâ

Spatial Computing IRL

CNETâs Scott Stein is using a pair of Xreal smart glasses connected to his laptop for presumably a virtual display while the keynote is happening. I also kid you not⊠the guy next to me is also using a pair connected to his laptop (update: itâs the Spacetop LOL). The irony is that Apple is talking about the new visionOS 26 features. Is this the new reality? âRaymond Wong

Playback Controls That Refract Light

Like iOS 26 and watchOS 26, tvOS 26 is getting the Liquid Glass treatment. Apple says playback controls that sit on top of content will refract the light when theyâre selected. Overdesigned? Yes. Unnecessary? You betcha. But damn it if it doesnât look cool AF and makes me forget how bad Apple Intelligence is. âRaymond Wong

A Flick of the Wrist
Apple Watchâs watchOS is getting a new gesture that lets you dismiss calls and notifications by just flicking your wrist. On one hand, that sounds usefulâI love silencing unwanted calls. On the other hand, however, I hope it isnât too sensitive. I could see this gesture accidentally ignoring notifications if itâs not deployed right. âJames Pero

Letâs Get Visual
Visual Intelligence is an AI update that leverages multimodal capabilities in a similar vein to Gemini from Google. While previously, Visual Intelligence was used via the iPhone camera, it can now read your screen and interact with what youâre looking at.
Per Apple:
âUsers can ask ChatGPT questions about what theyâre looking at on their screen to learn more, as well as search Google, Etsy, or other supported apps to find similar images and products. If thereâs an object a user is especially interested in, like a lamp, they can highlight it to search for that specific item or similar objects online.â
Itâs not the most original application of AI, but itâs keeping pace with competitors like Samsung and Google. âJames Pero

Appleâs Games App Will Show You All Your Games in One Place

Beyond Apple Arcade, the big new push for gaming on iPhone is the Apple Games app. This new pre-installed app collates all the games on your device and puts them all in one place. Beyond that, it will include leaderboards based on Game Center data and lists of your people in your Contacts who are also playing the same games. â Kyle Barr
Apple Music Subtitles Will Let You Karoake In a Language You Donât Know

Appleâs big push for live translation extends to Apple Music. The big update this time around is in the lyrics view. Now, any song being sung in a language other than English will receive automatic translations so you can finally understand what that French song you love is about. It may also help you perform karaoke by providing the lyrics written in English characters to help you sound out that K-pop song thatâs stuck in your head. â Kyle Barr
Translation Please
A new AI-powered live translation feature is being integrated into Messages and calls. The call aspect in particular looks interesting to me and displays text on the screen that is generated in real-time. How well it works is anyoneâs guess, but effective real-time translation has been a Holy Grail not just for Apple but basically every phone company for quite some time. Maybe some AI infusion can actually make that vision a reality for iPhone users. âJames Pero

Call Screening Will Help You Avoid Picking Up on Scam Callers

Weâre all inundated with routine spam and scam calls, and if youâre like me you never pick up your phone until you get the voicemail. Appleâs revised Phone app may help by taking those scam calls without ever ringing your phone. The AI assistant will take the callerâs name and reason for bothering you, and then offer a quick summary in a notification. The system should be able to parse between telemarketers and people you actually need to talk to.
Similarly, in Messages, Apple will parse out âUnknown Sendersâ for people sending you scam texts. Youâll still see time-sensitive messages like a verification code to help you sign in, but maybe it will cut down on the number of scam texts I get from people pretending to be E-Z Pass trying to get me to send them money. â Kyle Barr
Messages App Gets Polls and Custom Backgrounds

Ever wanted polls and custom backgrounds in WhatsApp? iOS 26 is giving you just that. For the latter, you can choose your own background for group chats or⊠use Apple Intelligence to generate a background. The Messages app is also getting typing indicators in group chats so you can see who is typing. âRaymond Wong

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âLiquid Glassâ is The New Universal, Semi-Transparent Look to Everything

Everything, from iOS 26 to iPadOS 26 down to watchOS 26, will sport a new UI thatâs supposed to be more âdynamicâ and clearâliterally. This is all encompassed in what Apple calls âLiquid Glass.â This aesthetic stretches from the app icons down to the lock and menu screens. App widgets and notifications will be able to flex as if they were made of a flexible, fluid-like material. This allows for more themes on usersâ devices. On iPhones, Apple fans should be able to use a semi-transparent âClearâ look for their apps that may blend in better with usersâ wallpapers.
Apple also showed how the lock screen wallpapers should be better at expanding or resizing the clock to show the best aspects of usersâ images. The design is more subtle than it first appears. App icons look a little more rounded, and thereâs a subtle effect around various menus to create a subtle depth off the screen. âKyle Barr
Every App Is an AI App
Apple says that any app can now tap into on-device AI with the Foundation Models framework, which is basically a new API that incorporates Apple Intelligence. Per Apple:
â⊠app developers can easily access the Apple Intelligence model with as few as three lines of code. Guided generation, tool calling, and more are all built into the framework, making it easier than ever to implement generative capabilities right into a developerâs existing app.â
One example it used is AllTrails, so I guess hikers should prepare for more AI in their hikes? âJames Pero
Apple Intelligence âNeeded More Timeâ

After walking in with his big F1 helmet and failing to do any parkour stunts from previous yearsâ WWDC conferences, Apple senior VP of software Craig Federighi first tried to stress all the great things its AI has done for Apple devices, such as genmojis or ChatGPT integration with Siri. However, the full capabilities of the companyâs AI wonât arrive today.
âThis work needed more time to reach our high-quality bar,â Federighi said. Weâll have to wait until âlater this yearâ before we might see an AI-enhanced Siri. âKyle Barr
Failed Protest

Apple CEO Tim Cook took to the stage to kick off the keynote. After handing things off to software chief Craig Federighi, an attendee tried to disrupt the event. He shouted into the crowd before security escorted him out. Not sure what he was protesting, though. He wasnât very audible over the promo video of Craig in an F1 car âracingâ on top of Apple Park. âRaymond Wong

The Stage Is Set

Like previous years, WWDC is a hybrid indoor/outdoor event at Apple Park. VIPs and broadcast are upfront and shaded. Us media are melting in the California sun. âRaymond Wong
The Breakfast Club
Iâve got this obsession with the food situation at tech events. Compared to the food at Google I/O last month, Appleâs breakfast for media is a 10/10. They did not need to go this hard with the Apple logo latte art, but itâs a cute touch. The small bites were deliciousâbetter than the mini vegan burritos at I/O.âRaymond Wong
Just to Be ClearâŠ
Iâm excited for a few things this WWDC, but one of the biggest items I have my eye on is Appleâs rumored vibe shiftâa new design ethos that is supposed to affect the look of every corner of Apple software. While we canât say for sure, it looks like Apple may introduce a âclearâ aesthetic that makes app icons and other key UI elements see-through.
First we had skeumorphism, then neumorphism, and now weâre at the dawning of the age of glassmorphismâor, as Apple may put it, Liquid Glass. Apple didnât invent glassmorphism, to be clear, but it might be the tech company to really popularize it. Itâs hard to say what Appleâs designers have in store for us, but if it looks anything like this mockup, Iâm here for it. âJames Pero
The dawn of new aesthetics. pic.twitter.com/H3EjiNCQFU
â Wojciech ZieliĆski (@zielinskiwoj) June 9, 2025
Iâm Out Hereeee!

Just picked up my media badge at Apple Park. Need to go find coffee! âRaymond Wong
Whatâs Cookinâ WWDC?
Appleâs annual developer conference, WWDC, is almost here, so weâre ready, and naturally, so is Tim Cook. The keynote starts at 10 a.m. PT / 1 p.m. ET and should be pretty packed as far as software updates go. Iâd say take a shot every time Apple doesnât mention Siri, but itâs Monday and a little early for tying one on, so maybe stick to orange juice for now. After all, itâs shaping up to be a long show, and you wouldnât want to miss Appleâs rumored redesign of iOS. âJames Pero
See you soon #WWDC25! pic.twitter.com/xna3JqcGvp
â Tim Cook (@tim_cook) June 9, 2025
Goodbye Flat Design, Hello âLiquid Glassâ Interface?

If youâre looking for some spoilersâŠ. Bloombergâs Mark Gurman shared in his PowerOn newsletter that Apple will reportedly call the big UI revamp for all of its platforms âLiquid Glass.â As weâve been hearing for months, the interface is supposed to be modeled after visionOS (pictured) and make use of âtransparency and shine effects in all of Appleâs tool bars, in-app interfaces and controls.â
In the same newsletter, Gurman also claims Apple is working on a 20th anniversary iPhone for 2027 (codenamed âGlasswingâ) that will have âextraordinarily slim bezels and no cutout sectionâ and âcurved glass sides around the entire phone, even at the edges.â It sounds⊠expensive! âRaymond Wong
Apple May Make All Its Software Look Like a Sunroom

Thereâs a light at the end of the long, long tunnel. Apple will finally let us peep its next slate of software updates. If the rumors are to be believed, every OS is jumping to â26,â and instead of iOS 19 or macOS 16, weâll get iOS 26 and macOS 26. The new naming convention hints that Apple may try to unify the design of all its software, which is supposedly inspired by the Vision Proâs glassy visionOS.
The Mac menu bar, your iPhoneâs app icons, and widgets will also have a glassy appearance. Beyond the changes to the UI, Apple may introduce a few more features, like a Preview-type app for iPhone and iPad. We may also see a section on gaming with an all-new âGamingâ app for mobile. Just donât expect too much in the way of âApple Intelligenceâ updates save for new live translation features for phone calls and texts. âKyle Barr
Everything We Expect Apple to Announce at WWDC25 on June 9
A Leap Year for iOS

Simultaneously, one of the biggest but also the most superficial changes at WWDC 2025 could be with Appleâs naming conventions. As reported by Bloombergâs Mark Gurman, all of Appleâs softwareâthatâs iOS, macOS, iPadOS, watchOS, and visionOSâmay jump from their respective numbers, 18, 16, 18, 11, and 2, respectively, to⊠26. That shift changes the year-over-year system from chronological numbers to the year itâs released plus one, like a Toyota or whatever.
In a way, it wonât really mean much of anything, but in another way, it signifies a big change and might actually match the major vibe shift weâre expecting with the new version of iOS. Itâll make things simpler, I suppose, but poor visionOS might have some whiplash. âJames Pero
Apple Reportedly Says âScrew Itâ and Jumps From iOS 19 to iOS 26
Hey Siri, Do You Still Suck?

Apple announced Apple Intelligence at last yearâs WWDC. Generative AI features like Genmoji, notification summaries, and writing tools rolled out, but the big oneâa revamped Siri with on-screen awareness and agentic functionality to help do things on your behalfâfailed to materialize even after months of delay. Reports have claimed that the new Siri features were fictitious and Appleâs marketing had pushed for them to be shown off before the Siri team had even gotten them working.
Our Senior Writer James Pero thinks Monday is going to be looked upon as Appleâs make-or-break AIâitâll be largely about optics. Will Apple emerge as an innovator or a laggard? âRaymond Wong
Apple Has a Huge Siri Problem That WWDC 2025 Probably Wonât Fix
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