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Why Apple makes AI an all-or-nothing thing is insane. There are a few features that I could find helpful, but why can't I just toggle them instead of EVERYTHING? (I know, I know, they want to showcase the 'awesome power' of AI to users)

It's like how they force you to go thru each app to turn off Siri Learning -- because they "give you control over your privacy" ... what they don't say is they don't make it convenient to do, thus forcing users into friction that discourages them from turning it all off. (Simple and convenient are not the same thing!)
 
Apple "Intelligence" highlighting spam as a "Priority Message" in Mail

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Posts like these corroborate my opinion that iOS (and all other OSs) are in dire need of a Snow Leopard moment. I fear it won’t happen without a leader that can keep shareholders at bay for 12 months and resist their pressure from adding and tweaking stuff for the sake of it. But man oh man is a Snow Leopard moment due. Also: divert the people working on new stuff to add on to the OSs to bring back Aperture.

*feels old and leaves*
 
I disabled it because I didn't find Apple Intelligence had any value to me and I was using ChatGPT (Pro) in the native app, as too many times Apple refused to do it (over cautious settings?). I didn't use emoji or playground beyond the initial couple of day intrigue.
 
Not only deactived Apple Intelligence, but also deactivated Apple Intelligence + Siri (my 13 mini does not have Apple Intelligence integreation) is allowed to learn from my Apps (done with each individual App).

All this AI down your throat made me reevaluate other settings and I made them stricter.

Sure I won't get suggestions if somebody offers me an appointment and will add it to my calender after a prompt... but I can live with doing this manually.
 
That doesn’t really help. It still comes across as being 21 GB per device. I saw the article only after the title change and still read it that way. The number in the title needs to be 7 GB. It doesn’t make sense to sum up storage savings across multiple devices.
But it gets people clicking on a nothing article 🤣
 
They need to let us choose the parts we want. They can have Playground and Genmoji. Two really useless gimmick tools.
It's getting really upsetting seeing all these Android devices being released with AI that actually works and is useful.
 
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As I mentioned in post #9 (see pic), Cleanup still works with Apple Intelligence turned off.

Which app are you using? I have the Affinity Suite but it's kind of cumbersome at times for this type of stuff.


7 GB per device. As others have said, the title was kind of clickbaity.
It's called Retouch.
 
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That’s a lot of space. All I want is Siri to be able to handle some better requests, I use ChatGPT on via the app directly I don’t need it embedded.
 
Apple intelligence does not appear in the settings for my 4th generation iPad Air. I guess AI is not supported.
I believe you have to have at least an M1 processor on an iPad Air, which is the 5th Generation. As I recall the Air 4 has an A14 processor. I have a 5th Gen iPad Air. I just updated to iPadOS 18.3 overnight. The first thing I did was disable "Apple Intelligence". But even if that was not my choice to use it, the "Intelligence" tools were available on my device after my iPad OS update.
 


Apple this week released iOS 18.3, iPadOS 18.3, and macOS Sequoia 15.3, software updates that enable Apple Intelligence on supported devices by default. Whether you own an iPhone, iPad, Mac – or indeed all three – regardless of what you think about Apple Intelligence, there's one reason why you may want to disable Apple's AI features at the earliest opportunity: To reclaim storage.

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Apple's marketing machine has made much of Apple Intelligence since its announcement at WWDC in June 2024. Apple brought the first features to compatible iPhones, iPads and Macs in October with a point update to iOS 18/iPadOS 18 and macOS Sequoia, followed by a further update in December that brought a more fleshed-out set of AI-powered features, with the most recent update adding some much-needed refinements.

Despite the raft of updates, Apple Intelligence remains in beta, and in terms of the AI suite's current usefulness, opinions remain decidedly mixed. For some, however, when considering the relative worth of these features, the deciding factor will be their local storage overhead. According to Apple's support page, Apple Intelligence now requires 7GB of storage space. This number applies whether you're using an iPhone, iPad, or Mac.

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That might sound like a lot, but it's one way that Apple is able to tout the privacy credentials of Apple Intelligence. Many of these features run locally, and in order to do so, they must download AI models to your device(s), which currently requires 7GB of storage. This means if you have an iPhone, iPad, and a Mac, it effectively equates to 21GB of storage across your devices that is being taken up by AI models that you may never even use.

But don't assume that 7GB is any sort of hard cap. In April, Apple is expected to release iOS 18.4 featuring some broad enhancements to Siri's AI capabilities, which will likely hike the storage requirement further. And that's not even taking into consideration the storage demands that iOS 19 will bring later this year...

AI or No AI? Time to Decide

Here's the deal. After updating to iOS 18.3, iPadOS 18.3, or macOS Sequoia 15.3, Apple Intelligence is an opt-out feature, not an opt-in feature. In other words, if you have updated – or plan to update – your devices to the new software, Apple Intelligence will be automatically enabled upon doing so.

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Note that this still applies if you already disabled it in the previous point updates but then allowed the latest update welcome screens to steer you towards enabling Apple Intelligence again. If however you chose "Set Up Later" at the on-screen prompt, you have no action to take – these features will respect your prior decision and remain disabled. For everyone else, it's time to decide: Is Apple Intelligence really worth all those precious gigabytes?

Why Disabling Apple Intelligence Reclaims Storage

Apple Intelligence utilizes something called the MobileAsset framework to manage and deliver its machine learning models and related assets to your devices. This framework dynamically downloads and updates the necessary components, ensuring that your devices have access to the latest capabilities without requiring comprehensive system updates.
Thankfully, when you disable Apple Intelligence, the system identifies that the associated assets are no longer in use. The MobileAsset framework then purges these unused assets when additional space is required – optimizing and freeing up your local storage in the process. Here are the steps you need to take to ensure that happens.

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How to Disable Apple Intelligence

Disabling Apple Intelligence completely is simply a matter of flipping the associated switch on each supported device running the latest software. Compatible devices include any iPhone 16 model, iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max, any iPad with A17 Pro or M1 and later, and any Mac with M1 or later.

Disable Apple Intelligence on iPhone and iPad

On iPhone and iPad, you can find it in Settings ➝ Apple Intelligence & Siri. Toggle off the switch next to Apple Intelligence.

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Disable Apple Intelligence on Mac

On Mac, open System Settings, select Apple Intelligence & Siri in the sidebar, then click the switch next to Apple Intelligence at the top of the menu window to toggle it off.

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What You Lose by Disabling Apple Intelligence

In iOS 18.2 or later, iPadOS 18.2 or later, and macOS Sequoia 15.2 or later, turning off Apple Intelligence will knock out the following features:
  • Genmoji
  • Image Playground
  • Image Wand in the Apple Pencil tool palette
  • Writing Tools
  • Clean Up in Photos
  • Create a Memory movie in Photos (not available in macOS)
  • Natural language search in Photos
  • Notification summaries
  • Reduce Interruptions Focus
  • Intelligent Breakthrough & Silencing in Focus
  • Priority messages in Mail
  • Smart Reply in Mail and Messages
  • Summaries in Mail and Messages
  • Siri enhancements, including product knowledge, more resilient request handling, new look and feel, more natural voice, the ability to type to Siri, and more
  • ChatGPT integration within Siri and Writing Tools
If you don't see any of the features listed above on your device, your specific model likely doesn't support Apple Intelligence, so you don't have anything to worry about.

Article Link: Save 7GB Storage Per Device by Disabling Apple Intelligence
So it consists of professionally questionable features (summaries) and gimmicks and a poor integration of ChatGPT you can access elsewhere.

Neat.
 
I might in the minority here, but I wish I could uninstall many built-in macOS apps. I don't use them, and being able to reclaim space would be nice. I don't want to hide them, or turn them off. I want them GONE. macOS has become so bloated, I want it be streamlined and out of the way.
On a different note, I also wish security & patches were separate from feature updates. In my opinion Apple would do better to not have yearly upgrades setbacks. Instead, just have core macOS. Security updates & patches go out to everyone, and new features can be added separately, and still call them Cali names if they want. We'd see just how many people are interested in their newest "features", and they could easily support devices for much longer (given they greenwash so much...). If the newest features don't work on my device, I can either get a newer one or if I don't care just keep using my perfectly good current one securely.

Ok, I'll get off my soapbox now...
 
So it consists of professionally questionable features (summaries) and gimmicks and a poor integration of ChatGPT you can access elsewhere.

Neat.
Photos Cleanup is truly useful. There are other applications that do the same thing but Cleanup is included for "free".
 
It isn't 21gb. It is 7gb per device. The headline writer assumes you "might have" three devices, and 7 per device times three devices is 21.

So yeah, you'll save 7gb.
Well, very poorly written then…
7 GB are definitely more manageable, even on a 128 GB device.
 
It doesn't take up 7 GB

How much does it take up? In their support document, Apple originally said 4 GB I believe, but now they say 7 GB.

Apple said:
Apple Intelligence requirements for iPhone, iPad, and Mac

- iPhone 16 models, iPhone 15 Pro, or iPhone 15 Pro Max; any iPad with A17 Pro or M1 and later; Mac with M1 or later
- iOS 18.1 or later, iPadOS 18.1 or later, or macOS Sequoia 15.1 or later
- Device language and Siri language set to a supported language
- 7 GB of storage*

*If you turn off Apple Intelligence, the on-device models may be removed from your device.

However, I don't know how much of that is just for installation and how much is the final amount needed after installation.
 
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