Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Tablets
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple Intelligence is right around the corner, with a few absent perks

Add as a preferred source on Google
Apple Intelligence update on iPhone 15 Pro Max.
Apple Intelligence has spurred some notable delays that extend well into 2025. Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Back in September. Apple announced that its suite of next-gen AI features would make their way to supported hardware in October. Today, Bloomberg reports that rollout of those AI features – clubbed under the Apple Intelligence banner – will begin on October 28.

The AI toolkit will arrive with the iOS 18.1 update for the iPhone 15 Pro pair, the entire iPhone 16 series, and iPads with M1 (or newer) silicon in the series. Unfortunately, this is not the full Apple Intelligence package that the company announced a while ago.

Recommended Videos

On the contrary, it’s just a phased rollout, which means we are only getting a few of those tricks. Among them are Writing Tools, a suite of AI-driven features that perform tasks like summarization, proofreading, and style adjustment, to name a few.

Apple Intelligence on iPhone 15 Pro.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

Writing tools will be available in a majority of Apple products, such as Notes, Mail, and Pages, followed by third-party apps. The Notes and Phone apps are also getting an automatic transcription and summarization convenience.

The update will also add a new Reduce Interruptions mode that intelligently silences the barrage of notifications and only allows the important alerts to pass through. On a similar note, we have notification summaries, which seem to be working just fine during the beta testing phase.

As far as the meatier feature updates, such as the ChatGPT integration, goes, they will only be here with the iOS 18.2 update at a later date. Moreover, Siri’s ability to cross-talk with external apps and access their data for more effective voice-based control will reportedly be ready with the iOS 18.4 build that arrives next year.

Writing Tools on iPhone 15 Pro.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

“I’m told that Apple is taking its time with the rollout to ensure that major bugs are eliminated and it can support all the new traffic on its AI cloud servers,” writes Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman.

It seems Apple Intelligence could still use a lot of work. The Writing Tools work, but only when dealing with English (US) language. A similar situation applies to audio note transcription and voicemails as well.

Support for more languages will only arrive “over the course of the next year,” says Apple. In hindsight, the staggered rollout also makes sense, as it gives Apple time to polish its AI products and avoid landing in embarrassing AI flub scenarios that have already hit Google and Microsoft in their race for AI dominance.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is the Managing Editor at Digital Trends.
Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro review: I swapped my trusty iPad for this and didn’t miss it at all
A rare Android tablet that will make you stick around with it for the long game.
Person using the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro Android tablet.

For years, I've kept a default disclaimer ready whenever I am asked to recommend Android tablets. "It's good/meh, for an Android tablet." That little clarity did a lot of heavy lifting. It excused the issues with laggy apps stretched haphazardly across an oversized screen, the ho-hum firepower, and software that always felt like a phone wearing a costume two sizes too big. So when the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro landed on my desk, I had my disclaimer loaded and ready to unload indiscriminately.

I'll save you the suspense and tell you it never came out. This slate is a genuine powerhouse, the kind of tablet that goes after the iPad Air and the Galaxy Tab S-series without flinching, and then upturns the value debate with its attractive asking price. It runs Qualcomm's top-tier Snapdragon 8 Elite, which means it can chew through all kinds of mobile tasks with ease.

Read more
Android might finally have an answer to the iPad mini, and with an OLED screen on top
A leaked OnePlus tablet could fill Android’s compact flagship gap
Oppo Pad mini launched in China.

Compact Android tablets usually come with a compromise. You can find smaller models easily, but most sit in the mid-range or budget category. The moment you want serious performance in a smaller body, the choices usually shift toward gaming-focused tablets from brands like Lenovo and Red Magic.

That is why the latest OnePlus leak is interesting. Tipster Abhishek Yadav claims OnePlus is working on a compact tablet for global markets with an 8.8-inch OLED display with a 144Hz refresh rate, and a Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 chipset. The tablet is also tipped to use LPDDR5X RAM, UFS 4.1 storage, an 8,000mAh battery, and 67W charging.

Read more
Walmart’s new ONN tablets are light on the wallet and big on the value you get
These new Android tablets are built for bargain hunters
Furniture, Table, Accessories

Walmart’s Onn brand has added two new Android tablets for shoppers who want a capable device without spending iPad-level money. The latest lineup includes a compact 8.1-inch Core Tablet and a larger 13-inch Pro Tablet. Both tablets are built for everyday use, like video streaming, browsing, online classes, and light work.

What does the smaller Onn tablet offer?

Read more