Siri in iOS 18.4 is getting worse before it gets better


Never mind that the beta of iOS 18.4 doesn’t include the promised Siri improvements yet, Apple’s voice assistant is now poorer than ever.

Right from the start of Apple Intelligence, a key part of its promise has been that Siri will be radically improved. Specifically, Apple Intelligence would give Siri a better ability to follow a series of questions, and even understand when we change our mind and correct ourselves.

Siri will be able to use the personal information in our devices, such as our calendars. And while never exactly becoming sentient, Siri will, with permission, be able to relay queries to ChatGPT if more resources are needed.

All of this was promised and still is promised, but then practically from that moment, Apple has said the improvements start with iOS 18.4.

That iOS 18.4 has now entered developer beta and there is no sign of an improved Siri — beyond its very nice new round-screen animation. Things slip, especially in betas, and there were already reports of problems delaying Siri, so as disappointing as it is to have to wait longer, it’s not a surprise.

Smartphone displaying apps and calendar on black, tech-themed background with gradient border.
Siri has a new glow animation, but not much else

What is a surprise is that somehow the existing Siri is definitely worse than it used to be. In one case during AppleInsider testing, the problem was that Siri erroneously wanted to pass a personal information request on to ChatGPT, as if that functionality were in place and this was the correct thing to do.

But the rest of the time, Siri is simply often wrong.

However, as great as Siri can be, it does have the frustrating habit of suddenly being unable to understand something it has successfully parsed many times before. So your mileage may vary, but in testing we asked Siri the same questions over a couple of days and consistently got the same incorrect responses.

Keeping it simple

If you ask Siri, “What’s the rest of my day look like?” then it will tell you what’s left on your calendar for today. Or it did.

Ask Siri under iOS 18.4 and most of the time you get “You have 25 events from today until March 17.” The date keeps moving back — it’s always a month — but the number of events is always 25, seemingly whether that’s correct or not.

Smartphone displaying a virtual assistant interface with a keyboard and recent prompts, including 'What's left on my timer' and 'What's the weather' queries.
Type to Siri works great, but Siri doesn’t

But of course, the key thing is that you ask about today, and you get told the next four weeks instead. Just occasionally and for no apparent reason, the same request doesn’t get you the wrong verbal answer.

Instead, it gives you the wrong answer visually. You may instead get a dialog box showing today’s and the next few days’ events.

“Siri, what am I doing on my birthday?” ought to be a straightforward request because iOS has the user’s date of birth in their contact card or health data, and it has the calendar. But no, “You have 25 events from today to March 17.”

“When’s my next trip?” also should be able to check the calendar, and it does. But it returns “There’s nothing called ‘trip’ in your calendar.”

Or rather, you can first get the absolutely maddening response of, “You’ll have to unlock your iPhone first.” Since there is a switch in Settings called Allow Siri While Locked, this is right up there with how Siri will sometimes say it can’t give you Apple Maps directions while you’re in a car.

Half integrated with ChatGPT

Much of the improvement with Siri is supposed to come with ChatGPT, and that isn’t here yet — except iOS thinks it is. You can try something Siri definitely can’t do now, should be able to do eventually, but which it has a go at answering anyway.

Hands hold a smartphone displaying ChatGPT setup options, highlighting Siri integration, text composition tools, and account features on a light background.
Apple Intelligence works with ChatGPT

“Siri, when was I last in Switzerland?” That’s using personal on-device data, again really just checking the calendar. But instead, you get the prompt — “Do you want me to use ChatGPT to answer that?”

If you then say why not, go on then, good luck with it, then Siri passes the request to ChatGPT. That either comes back saying it doesn’t do personal information, duh, or sometimes asks you to tell it yourself when you were last there.

Mind you, it seems to always ask you that through a text prompt, and Siri is inconsistent here. Sometimes asking Siri to “Delete all my alarms” will solely get you a text prompt asking if you’re sure, but “what’s 4 plus 3” gets both text and a spoken response.

Then ChatGPT is also just in an odd place now. If you go to Apple’s own support page about using Siri and recite all of its examples in your iPhone, most of them work — but not in the way you might expect.

It used to be, for instance, that Siri would do a web search if you asked, as Apple suggests, “Who made the first rocket that went to space?” Now if you ask that, you are instead asked permission to send the request to ChatGPT.

iPhone screen showing a prompt to use ChatGPT for sending content from Safari, with cancel and send options.
Sending images and text to ChatGPT is a feature of Apple Intelligence, but also a crutch

The next suggestion in Apple’s list, though, is “How do you say ‘thank you’ in Mandarin?” and the answer depends on whether you’ve just used ChatGPT or not.

If you haven’t, Siri asks which version of Mandarin you want, then audibly pronounces the word. If on your immediately previous request you agreed to use ChatGPT, though, Siri now uses it again without asking.

So suddenly you’re getting the notification “Working with ChatGPT” and no option to change that. Plus, ChatGPT gives you the answer to that question in text on screen, rather than pronouncing it aloud.

All of which means that Siri can be flat out wrong, or it can give you different answers depending on the sequence in which you ask your questions.

We are so far away from being able to ask “Siri, what’s the name of the guy I had a meeting with a couple of months ago at Cafe Grenel?” — like Apple has been advertising.

Some signs of improvement

To be fair, you can never know entirely for sure whether an issue with Siri is down to your pronunciation or the load on Apple’s servers at the time you ask. But you can know for certain when a request keeps going right or wrong.

Or, indeed, when it suddenly works.

“Siri, set a timer for 10 minutes,” has been known to instead set the timer to something random, such as 7 hours, 16 minutes, and 9 seconds. Since iOS 18.4, AppleInsider testing has not shown that problem again, the timer has always set itself correctly.

So there’s that. But then there’s all the rest of this about inconsistencies, wrong answers, and the will-it-never-be-fixed “You’ll have to unlock your iPhone first.”

Apple is right to regard the improved Siri as a great and persuasive example of Apple Intelligence because it’s a part that will most visibly, most immediately, and most users will benefit from. And it’s nobody’s fault that the improvements have been delayed.

Close-up of a smartphone featuring three camera lenses against a colorful, blurred neon background.
Apple Intelligence is here, but Siri hasn’t benefited from it yet

But Apple ran that ad about whoever the guy was from Cafe Grenel five months ago. Apple was telling us Siri is fantastically improved before it is.

Even this doesn’t account for how Siri is worse than before, but new Apple Intelligence buyers will be disappointed. Long-time Apple users will understand things can get delayed, but still, there are limits.

Siri didn’t get better at the start of Apple Intelligence as Apple’s ads promised. It hasn’t gotten better with the first beta release of iOS 18.4.

At some point, it will surely, hopefully, improve exactly as so long rumored — but by then, there will have to be users who won’t ever try Siri again.



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