iOS 27 brings AI-powered Siri, enhanced Photos tools, and major performance gains

The assistant now understands what's on your screen and can help you navigate apps.
Siri's transformation from command-response tool to contextually aware assistant represents iOS 27's central innovation.

A cada ciclo tecnológico, as ferramentas que usamos moldam silenciosamente os hábitos que nos definem. Na WWDC 2026, a Apple apresentou o iOS 27 — não como uma revolução de hardware, mas como uma aposta filosófica: que a inteligência do dispositivo deve crescer ao encontro da inteligência humana, tornando o iPhone menos um instrumento passivo e mais um colaborador ativo no quotidiano de centenas de milhões de pessoas. A questão que fica suspensa no ar não é técnica, mas existencial — até onde queremos que as nossas ferramentas nos conheçam?

  • A Siri foi reinventada de raiz: deixa de ser um assistente de comandos para se tornar um agente contextual que lê o ecrã, interpreta imagens e mantém conversas naturais — uma mudança que redefine o que significa 'pedir ajuda' ao telefone.
  • As funcionalidades mais avançadas ficam reservadas ao iPhone 15 Pro e modelos posteriores, criando uma divisão visível entre utilizadores e alimentando o debate sobre obsolescência programada.
  • A Europa enfrenta atrasos regulatórios no acesso a várias capacidades de IA, sublinhando a tensão crescente entre inovação tecnológica e soberania legislativa.
  • As melhorias de desempenho são concretas e mensuráveis — apps até 30% mais rápidas, fotos a carregar 70% mais depressa — sinalizando que a otimização do software pode rivalizar com saltos de hardware.
  • A compatibilidade alargada, do iPhone 11 ao iPhone 17, garante que a atualização chega a uma base massiva de utilizadores, democratizando pelo menos uma parte das novidades.

Na WWDC 2026, a Apple escolheu o software como protagonista. O iOS 27 foi apresentado como uma atualização centrada em inteligência artificial, desempenho e personalização — uma declaração de que o futuro do iPhone não passa necessariamente por novo hardware, mas por tornar o existente mais capaz.

A Siri é a peça central desta transformação. A nova versão compreende contexto, sustenta conversas naturais e trabalha com texto, voz, imagens e vídeo em simultâneo. Consegue ler o que está no ecrã, ajudar a navegar em aplicações e identificar objetos através da câmara. É uma mudança de paradigma — de ferramenta reativa para assistente que percebe o que o utilizador está realmente a fazer. A ressalva é dupla: as funções mais sofisticadas exigem iPhone 15 Pro ou superior, e na Europa vários recursos de IA não estarão disponíveis no lançamento devido a restrições regulatórias.

A aplicação Fotos recebeu um conjunto de ferramentas generativas que competem diretamente com o que o Android oferece: reencadramento automático de composições, expansão inteligente de imagens para além das suas fronteiras originais, e uma ferramenta de limpeza melhorada para remover objetos indesejados. Os resultados demonstrados no primeiro beta foram convincentes. O Safari ganhou organização automática de separadores por IA, monitorização de páginas web e a capacidade de criar extensões de browser em linguagem natural.

O desempenho geral foi afinado de forma substancial, com aplicações a lançar até 30% mais rápido e fotos a carregar 70% mais depressa. Os controlos parentais foram reforçados com opções mais granulares. E mais de 250 funcionalidades adicionais tocam áreas como Mapas, Saúde, AirPods, Mail e iCloud.

O iOS 27 é compatível com dispositivos desde o iPhone 11, garantindo uma base de instalação ampla. O primeiro beta já está nas mãos dos programadores, e o que a Apple sinaliza é inequívoco: a próxima vaga de utilidade do iPhone vive no software — mais inteligente, mais rápido, mais sintonizado com a forma como as pessoas realmente vivem.

Apple took the stage at WWDC 2026 with a different kind of keynote. Rather than unveiling new hardware, the company spent its time introducing software tools designed to reshape how people use their iPhones. The centerpiece was iOS 27, an update that leans heavily on artificial intelligence, performance optimization, and deeper personalization across the entire system.

The star of the show is Siri, now reimagined as a genuinely intelligent assistant. The new version understands context in ways the old Siri never could, maintains natural-sounding conversations, and works seamlessly with text, voice, images, and video. More significantly, Siri now reads what's on your screen, helps you navigate apps, and can use your camera to identify objects and pull up relevant information. It's a fundamental shift from a command-response tool to something that actually understands what you're doing. There's a catch, though: the most advanced features only work on iPhone 15 Pro and newer. And in Europe, regulatory hurdles mean several AI capabilities won't be available at launch.

Beyond Siri, Apple has overhauled the Photos app with a suite of generative AI tools that rival—and in some cases exceed—what Android phones have been offering. There's a reframing tool that automatically adjusts composition, an expansion feature that intelligently extends images beyond their original boundaries, and a significantly improved cleaning tool that removes unwanted objects from photos. The company demonstrated these tools on the first beta, and the results were striking: the intermediate steps showed visible distortion, but the final output was polished and convincing. Apple also refined the Liquid Glass design language introduced last year, adding opacity controls so users can dial the interface's transparency up or down depending on preference.

Performance gains are substantial across the board. Apple claims apps launch up to 30 percent faster, photos load 70 percent quicker, and file transfers via AirDrop move significantly quicker. The overall responsiveness of the system has been tightened. Safari has been upgraded with AI-powered features including automatic tab organization, webpage monitoring that alerts you to important changes, and the ability to create browser extensions using natural language instead of code. Shortcuts and Messages both received AI enhancements—Shortcuts can now be built by describing what you want in plain English, while Messages offers smarter contextual suggestions and predictive text that learns your communication patterns.

Parental controls have been strengthened too. The Screen Time and parental management tools now give parents more granular control over what their children can access, with new options to pause devices entirely or restrict specific apps on demand. Apple also packed over 250 additional features throughout the system, touching Maps, Health, AirPods, Passwords, Mail, Notes, Reminders, and iCloud.

The compatibility news is good: iOS 27 runs on everything from the iPhone 11 through the new iPhone 17, as well as the second and third-generation iPhone SE. That's a broad install base ready to receive the update. The first beta is already in developers' hands, and the refinements will likely continue through the summer. What Apple is signaling with iOS 27 is clear: the company believes the next wave of iPhone usefulness lives not in new hardware, but in making the software smarter, faster, and more attuned to how people actually work.

The assistant passes to integrate more deeply with the operating system, able to analyze content on screen, help with app usage, and use the camera to identify objects.
— Apple's iOS 27 presentation
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Inventor

Why did Apple choose to focus on software rather than new devices at this keynote?

Model

Because the real gains right now are in what the software can do with the hardware that's already in people's pockets. A faster processor helps, but an AI assistant that understands context, or a Photos app that can intelligently reframe your pictures—that changes how you actually use the phone day to day.

Inventor

The Siri limitations seem significant. Why restrict advanced features to iPhone 15 Pro and newer?

Model

Processing power matters for these AI tasks. The older chips can handle basic Siri, but the real contextual understanding, the multimodal input—that requires more horsepower. It's a practical constraint, not arbitrary gatekeeping.

Inventor

What about the European regulatory issue? How serious is that?

Model

It's real. The EU has strict rules about how AI systems operate and what data they can access. Apple couldn't ship certain features there at launch, so they're holding them back rather than fragmenting the experience. It's a friction point, but it's also Apple being cautious with regulation.

Inventor

The Photos tools sound like they're catching up to Android. Is Apple behind?

Model

Not anymore. The cleaning tool especially—Apple spent a year refining it after Samsung showed what was possible. Now the results are comparable or better. It's a reminder that Apple doesn't always move first, but when it does move, it moves decisively.

Inventor

Over 250 new features seems like a lot. Will users actually notice them?

Model

Most won't notice most of them. But they'll feel the speed improvements, they'll use the new Siri, they'll play with the Photos tools. The other 240-odd features are the texture of a mature operating system—small refinements that add up to a more polished experience.

Inventor

What's the real story here?

Model

It's that Apple is betting the future on making existing devices smarter, not on selling you new hardware. That's a shift. And it suggests the company thinks the next five years of innovation happen in software, not silicon.

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