Apple在WWDC上展示Siri AI,虽速度慢但功能可用,由Mike Rockwell负责。Anthropic发布Fable 5模型,设置网络安全和生物安全护栏,后因公众反对撤销对LLM创建能力的限制。
(Apple)
Welcome back to This Week in Stratechery!
As a reminder, each week, every Friday, we’re sending out this overview of content in the Stratechery bundle; highlighted links are free for everyone. Additionally, you have complete control over what we send to you. If you don’t want to receive This Week in Stratechery emails (there is no podcast), please uncheck the box in your delivery settings.
On that note, here were a few of our favorites this week.
Apple Finally Ships Intelligence. Tim Cook’s final WWDC as CEO was in large part an effort to clean up a mess that Apple made two years ago, and even though Cook wasn’t driving the Siri AI presentations — that was Mike Rockwell, head of engineering and now head of Siri — the final product felt like an appropriate send off as his tenure nears its conclusion. Siri AI doesn’t dazzle, but it delivered. We saw working demos that were so slow they couldn’t have been faked. That’s distinct from the vaporware Apple displayed two years ago, and as Ben wrote Tuesday, competent AI that doubles down all the iPhone’s advantages may well be enough to keep Apple central in an entirely new generation of computing. — Andrew Sharp
Anthropic’s Fable. Anthropic released a public version of its Mythos model on Tuesday dubbed Fable 5, complete with a set of very visible guardrails on cybersecurity and biology topics, and silent nerfing around LLM creation capabilities. The latter decision was reversed on Thursday after public outcry, but I wasn’t surprised: I explained on Sharp Tech why this sort of behavior was predictable from Anthropic — indeed, it’s exactly why I criticized the company in its standoff with the U.S. government. And yet, Fable is also remarkable: in Wednesday’s Update I explore how Anthropic’s fusion of belief and business makes the company feel unbeatable. — Ben Thompson
The Future of European Industry. For anyone who’s missed it, the past few weeks have seen a steady rise in temperatures between the EU and China as various European leaders speak out about increasingly oppressive Chinese trade practices that are eroding European industries. Before next week’s G7 Summit in France and an EU summit in Brussels that will be dedicated to countering China, I wrote about all the dynamics driving the tensions and what comes next. In short: the smart money says that Europe will be more talk than action this summer, but even if a full blown trade war isn’t quite imminent, that destination may well be inevitable. — AS
Stratechery Articles and Updates
Google Buys Compute From SpaceX, Broadcom’s Outlook, Apple’s AI Politics — Google’s deal with SpaceX, and Broadcom’s earnings, both seem bullish for Nvidia. Then, what I’m looking for at WWDC.
The iPhone’s Last Stand — Siri isn’t state of the art, but as long as it works — and it appears it does — it’s good enough for the consumer market.
Fable 5, Anthropic Alignment, AI Tiers — Fable 5 is the public version of Mythos, and while it is very capable it sets some troubling new precedents.
An Interview with Ben Bajarin About Apple, AI, and Compute — An interview with Ben Bajarin about WWDC and the status of the AI compute industry.
Sharp Text by Andrew Sharp
Europe’s Final Warning — A closer look at Europe’s compounding China problems, and why a trade war is probably not imminent, but might be inevitable.
Dithering with Ben Thompson and Daring Fireball’s John Gruber
A Working Siri
WWDC Follow-Up
Asianometry with Jon Yu
The EU Chips Act is a Failure
Sharp China with Andrew Sharp and Sinocism’s Bill Bishop
Xi Goes to North Korea; Inspecting Xinjiang; A $295 Billion AI Buildout; The Pentagon Alleges PLA Links for Alibaba and Others
Greatest of All Talk
A Mid-Finals Mailbag: Instant Classics, Wemby the Villain, Officiating Angst, Brunson and KAT Questions, The Parity Decade, and Lots More
Sharp Tech with Andrew Sharp and Ben Thompson
Five Questions on WWDC 2026, Fable 5 And Its Guardrails, What Anthropic Has in Common With Apple
This week’s Stratechery video is on The Google Capital Company.