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On this week's episode of The MacRumors Show, we discuss all of the major announcements from Google's AI-focused I/O conference this week and the mysterious device former Apple design chief Jony Ive is designing at OpenAI.


At its I/O 2025 conference, Google unveiled a wide range of artificial intelligence enhancements surrounding its Gemini AI platform. Chief among these is a dedicated AI Mode for Google Search, which leverages contextual understanding to return more relevant, nuanced results and allows follow-up questions. Within Google Chrome, Gemini has also been integrated to assist with summarizing web content, composing messages, and providing intelligent suggestions. Gemini Agent Mode is designed to be an autonomous assistant that completes tasks on your behalf, while Gemini Personal Context pulls from your Gmail, Calendar, Docs, and more to offer personalized, proactive help.

Google introduced Gemini Live, which brings real-time AI assistance to iPhone users. The feature supports screen sharing, camera access, and integration with services like Google Calendar and Maps. The company also devoted time to generative models: Veo 3 for video generation, Imagen 4 for image synthesis, and Deep Research, a tool designed to provide thorough, AI-powered insights across complex subjects.

Moreover, Google introduced significant developments in wearable computing with Android XR, a new operating system designed specifically for augmented reality headsets and smart glasses. The platform gains features like live translation, turn-by-turn directions, and real-time contextual support powered by Gemini. Samsung will be the first partner to release a headset running Android XR later this year, followed by a smart glasses product.

Google's own smart glasses initiative was also showcased. The new glasses are equipped with in-lens displays, microphones, speakers, and cameras, allowing users to see and hear the world with real-time assistance from Gemini. The glasses will be designed in partnership with eyewear brands Gentle Monster and Warby Parker.

In other news, OpenAI this week set out plans to acquire io, a hardware startup co-founded by legendary former Apple design chief Jony Ive, in a deal valued at approximately $6.5 billion. The acquisition brings a team of influential former Apple designers, including Evans Hankey and Marc Newson, into OpenAI. The company is working on developing a new category of device described as a "third core device," envisioned to complement the smartphone and laptop without replicating either.

The new hardware is neither a phone nor a pair of glasses, but a compact, screenless device designed to sit on a desk or in a pocket. Unlike legacy devices, it apparently seeks to reduce dependence on screens and offer more ambient, contextual interactions with AI. According to reports, the device is aware of its surroundings through microphones and cameras, and integrates tightly with a user's life while remaining unobtrusive. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has described the product as "the coolest piece of technology the world will have ever seen."

Development of the product remains highly secretive. Comparisons have been made to the Rabbit R1 and Humane AI Pin, but the involvement of Jony Ive and his team designing around OpenAI's industry-leading technology suggests that this product could be different. The device is expected to be revealed in late 2026.

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If you haven't already listened to the previous episode of The MacRumors Show, catch up to hear our discussion about the long-awaited rollout of Apple CarPlay Ultra and Samsung's all-new S25 Edge, which is positioned to rival the iPhone 17 Air later this year.

Subscribe to The MacRumors Show for new episodes every week, where we discuss some of the topical news breaking here on MacRumors, often joined by interesting guests such as John Gruber, Mark Gurman, Kevin Nether, Jon Prosser, Luke Miani, Matthew Cassinelli,... Click here to read rest of article

Article Link: The MacRumors Show: Google and OpenAI Step Up AI Tech Ahead of WWDC
 
I literally have no interest in any of these vendors any more. Over promise. Under deliver.

Don’t announce anything until it’s on the market and actually works. Then I might have some interest.

Hype needs to die.
 
No live Keynote at WWDC is emblematic of a deeper problem: a company once revered for its bold innovation now seems trapped in a loop of controlled, overly polished presentations that mirror its increasingly incremental product updates.
 
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io’s “third core device” sounds something like a smartphone without a screen. Since a redesigned smartphone (a couple more cameras and microphones, etc.) might be able to do all the things that io’s device is rumored to do, and you can already set a smartphone on a desk or put it in a pocket (I’ve tried it), I’m wondering if people will instead opt for such a redesigned smartphone and keep their carry-around “core device” count down by one.
 
Just to say I enjoyed your podcast very much.
I was surprised you totally skipped over the whole Fortnite story as that is one of the biggest things (for certain reasons in years to hit a few days ago)


But anyway........

It seems my past requests about the low volume of this podcast has still not been addressed, and as has been the case for ages, The MacRumors Podcast is only about 70% ish the volume level of every single other podcast.

Does no-one involved in the creation of the podcast ever read this so they are aware they have a problem to address?
 
Just to say I enjoyed your podcast very much.
I was surprised you totally skipped over the whole Fortnite story as that is one of the biggest things (for certain reasons in years to hit a few days ago)


But anyway........

It seems my past requests about the low volume of this podcast has still not been addressed, and as has been the case for ages, The MacRumors Podcast is only about 70% ish the volume level of every single other podcast.

Does no-one involved in the creation of the podcast ever read this so they are aware they have a problem to address?
The MacRumors Show is hosted on a great site — MacRumors.com — which many of us follow daily for timely updates on Apple and its competitors. But the issue with the show is that it often just repeats what’s already been posted on the site. For regular readers, there’s not much new to gain from watching.

Even when guest speakers are brought in, they tend to be fellow rumor-watchers rather than people actually involved in the industry. It would really elevate the show if it featured deeper analysis, original insights, or interviews with insiders who are part of the decision-making or product development processes. Right now, it feels more like a recap than a show that adds value beyond the headlines.
 
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