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Apple Intelligence will come to the iPhone in France, but you will have to be patient

In a press release, Apple revealed the arrival of its internal artificial intelligence in France. It will be available in French in April 2025.

Last June, Apple introduced Apple Intelligence, its artificial intelligence system that will offer a host of features to iPhone owners. While users in the United States will have access to it from this Monday, October 28, through the deployment of an update, those in France and the EU will still have to wait a few months.

In a press release published on October 28, the company announced the arrival of Apple Intelligence in the EU by April 2025.

New Siri, Genmoji and writing tools

These features will be available in French, Apple said. Among them, users will have access to the new Siri, which will offer “a more natural and flexible experience.” In addition to using their voice, they will be able to write to the Apple assistant to, among other things, ask questions. If Siri is not efficient enough to answer a question, users can call ChatGPT.

Other new features include writing tools, which aim to help users find the right words in the Messages, Mail and Notes apps. The Rewrite tool will allow you, for example, to choose between different versions and adjust the tone of the text (professional, concise or friendly) depending on the objective.

Finally, Apple Intelligence will allow you to create Genmoji in messages. This is an improved version of the Memoji (avatar creation) and Animoji (animal faces on yours in Facetime) previews. Specifically, from the emoji menu, you only need to describe your idea by writing it in the bar to generate a Genmoji. Users will also be able to use their photos to create Genmojis of their friends or family.

Note that Apple Intelligence will only be available on the iPhone 15 Pro. Apple’s announcement comes after the company postponed the launch of its in-house AI in the EU due to the Digital Markets Act (DMA), a European law which forces technology giants to open up to competition by imposing a series of rules on them. . To justify this postponement, the company alleged “regulatory uncertainties” linked to this law.

Author: Kesso Diallo
Source: BFM TV

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