Apple Intelligence Now Takes Up Nearly Twice as Much Storage as It Did at Launch

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Apple Intelligence, a feature that is most notable for this very bad Shortening texts and notifications, quietly taking up more and more of your unused storage space. as As identified by 9to5MacApple Intelligence has gone from requiring 4GB of available storage at launch in September 2024 to 7GB just four months later – nearly double the amount of space a device takes up.

appeared first on Jump to Storage Needs Introducing iOS 18.2 and macOS Sequoia 15.2which was first made available to the public in early December and expanded into the first set of Apple Intelligence features debuting with iOS 18.1 and Sequoia 15.1. The December update introduced two generative AI features: Image Playground, which creates images based on user prompts, and Genmoji, which lets users create their own custom emoji.

Part of the reason these features require so much space is because Apple Intelligence uses on-device processing, so the models that power the features must be stored on the device. Also why only devices that are equipped with the company’s own chipset, are M1 or A17 or higher, get access to the features—while other chipsets can probably handle the processing, Apple wants its AI functionality to run as smoothly as possible.

On-device processing offers some additional privacy (although, surprisingly, Apple is still scanning your photos and other content for AI training), this means that every time a new Apple Intelligence feature is introduced, your storage space is likely to shrink. The company is Siri is planning to give AI an overhaul Soon, and Apple will likely continue to lean on AI for future operating system updates, so hopefully it will continue to fill your available storage space for the foreseeable future.

What makes Apple Intelligence even worse is the fact of the side Someone is actually all that enthusiastic About using this feature. In a survey conducted at the beginning of this year, Dr Sales It found that 73% of iPhone owners who tried Apple Intelligence said it added “no value” to their phone experience.

This will likely change as Apple introduces new features that people actually want to engage with, but it will be interesting to see if the trade-offs prove worth it. Users have already started complaining Battery drain Apple is associated with intelligence operations. For now, it sure seems to be Apple Intelligence’s core capability Providing incorrect summaries of news articlesAnd all it costs you is an increasingly large portion of your limited storage space and the need to charge your device more frequently. Not sure it’s a great value proposition.

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