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iPhone users have largely avoided the Apple Intelligence features released prior to iOS 18.2, a new survey suggests.

Apple-Intelligence-General-Feature-2.jpg

A survey conducted by SellCell, a tech trade-in platform, has revealed that while nearly half of iPhone users—47.6%—consider AI an important factor when purchasing a smartphone, 73% of those who have used Apple's AI offerings feel that the features add little to no value to their experience. This sentiment is not unique to Apple; the study also found that 87% of Samsung users expressed similar dissatisfaction with the AI tools available on Galaxy devices.

Apple introduced many of its AI features in October 2024 with the release of iOS 18.1. Among the most used tools were Writing Tools, which help with text editing and summarization, and Notification Summaries, which condense key information from multiple notifications into a single view. These were used by 72% and 54% of respondents, respectively. Other features, such as Priority Messages, Clean Up in Photos, and Smart Reply, saw lower adoption, ranging from 44.5% to 20.9%. Features such as natural language search in Photos and transcription summaries were even less popular, with fewer than 15% of users trying them.

One major finding of the study was that despite the general lack of use of the current features, Apple users were more likely than their Samsung counterparts to view AI as a significant deciding factor when purchasing a phone. While nearly half of iPhone users expressed that AI is a very or somewhat important consideration, only 23.7% of Samsung users felt the same. Nonetheless, many Apple users have not updated their devices to iOS 18.1 to access these features, with 57.6% citing this as their primary reason for not using Apple Intelligence. Others mentioned they found the features unhelpful or were concerned about accuracy and privacy.

Despite AI advancements, brand loyalty among Apple users has weakened in recent years, with the survey indicating that 16.8% of iPhone owners would consider switching to Samsung if Galaxy AI features proved significantly better. This represents a marked decline in loyalty, with only 78.9% of respondents now identifying as firmly committed to the Apple ecosystem, down from 92% in 2021. Conversely, just 9.7% of Samsung users expressed a willingness to switch to Apple for better AI features, suggesting that Apple faces stiffer competition in retaining its user base.

The survey also revealed that a majority of smartphone users are unwilling to pay for AI services. Only 11.6% of Apple users said they would consider subscribing to such features, compared to a mere 4% of Samsung users. It is yet to be seen if the arrival of iOS 18.2, which introduces features like Genmoji and ChatGPT integration, could shift perceptions.

The survey was carried out in late 2024 and included over 2,000 participants aged 18 and older in the United States. The pool consisted of iPhone and Samsung Galaxy users whose devices supported AI features.

Article Link: Most iPhone Users Uninterested in Apple Intelligence, Survey Suggests
 
Marketing fluff that has been shoved down our throats.

The image cleanup is probably the most useful of the bunch, but I have heard it isn't ready for prime time. This means that the Writing Tools are probably the only good feature. All-in-all, this really feels like an industry wide fail.

If nothing else, we got our 16gig bump.
 
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After using apple intelligence extensively across the 18.2 betas, I can only positively comment in one area:

Siri's connection with ChatGPT. Siri, nearly useless for the type of action(s) I'd like from it - thankfully can now hand off my queries to ChatGPT. Frankly, I'd rather have ChatGPT w/o Siri.

Most useless feature is image playground. The results lack creativity and, frankly, any real-world use.
 
I turned it off after using for a few days. I can’t say it made anything better.

Same. I tried it for a few days and then turned it off, but it's not just Apple AI. I haven't been able to find any use or reason to be interested from AI from any company.

Accuracy and citations > speed and a "human" sounding chat.
 
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Makes sense. Apple hasn't yet delivered a compelling set of features to make it wow people.

I think the Personal Context that's due next year has the potential to start showing the value of it. If Apple executes it well.

Meaning, the generative components of "AI" more accurately reflect the user. So, suggestions on how to respond to texts sound a bit more like the user and suggestions on what's important and what isn't start to reflect the user. Basically, it taking advantage of the iPhone's deep personal data set to make it much better than generic data sets from the likes of ChatGPT.

Right now, it is generative AI with smaller models that don't appear to do anything amazing... Since that is all due to arrive later next year it is very clear they should have likely done this all in iOS 19, but that's a separate discussion altogether.

Time will tell though if they've burned their opportunity with users or not. They've heavily marketed it and user's first impressions are a bit lack luster. Will they come to embrace it or will they just permanently write it off remains to be seen.
 
Features are all gimmicky. Hoping that contextual AI will prove to actually add value.

This is how I feel, specifically with Apple Intelligence. I’m not overly interested on AI in general.

I will say that I had AI (Apple Intelligence) re-write an email that I sent. It didn’t do a bad job, but it’s not like I was blown away with it.
 
They should've focused on Siri more with the developing/marketing/planning this rollout. Most Apple users feel Siri is "last decade", and frustrating, especially those who have been exposed to ChatGPT. The rest of these AI features feel gimmicky, and that would be okay if they led with integrated Siri AI improvements.
 
The new writing tools are pretty much irrelevant to me. When I want or need to, I write well enough that I don't need something to revise for me. And most of my emails are personal, so automatic spellcheck is all I use.

The auto responses for messages are completely useless to me because they don't match my style -- they sound like someone else's words. So, I never use them, and they kinda get in the way. I wish I could turn off that particular feature without turning off AI completely. (By the way, I feel the same about the AI responses in MS Teams.)

I have used Image Playground to generate some cute images. But that's not something I'll do a lot of the time.

On the other hand, I HAVE noticed Siri understanding more and responding better. So in that area, I'm all for the AI. As for the rest of the AI? It's just not something I have much need for.
 
This is the very, very beginning of an AI revolution, people. Zero surprise that this isn't yet of interest to most people. Early adopters will give way to more general users. Once people are exposed to the benefits, it will become second nature, it will become the default to use AI in many situations. In any case, AI is focussed more on assisting people in the background not just on-demand. People will benefit from more intelligent summaries, automated reminders, surfacing information, and many other proactive features yet to come.
 
I’m still rocking a iPhone 12 that I purchased new just over a year ago, so I haven’t been able to use any of the AI features. But honestly, looking at the press coverage of Apple’s AI system, it doesn’t really interest me at all. None of the features seem like anything that would change substantially any day-to-day use case I might have. Some of them like Genmoji, seems like a gimmick that will probably be used for the first week or so, and then never touched again; like Animoji was several years ago for me.

If somebody personally has a use-case for some or all of this, that’s great for you! I have no plans to upgrade for several years from the 12 simply to get these new “features”. Hopefully they will stay firmly in the realm of opt-in only.
 
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