Apple May Eventually Develop a Direct OpenClaw AI Competitor

openclaw

Apple might eventually release a direct software competitor to OpenClaw. According to recent predictions from Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman, the tech giant is currently looking into building a fully agentic system. This means the software could independently operate your device and handle multiple tasks on your behalf without constant nudging. It would mark a massive shift from the simple request-based setup we have right now.

The new system architecture opens the door for autonomous actions

Gurman expects the company to develop a tool capable of fully controlling software across an iPhone, an iPad, and a Mac. This idea gained traction after recent comments from Siri engineering chief Mike Rockwell. Following the recent developer conference, Rockwell pointed out that the current voice assistant is mostly request-based. You ask for a timer, and it sets a timer.

However, Rockwell noted that the assistant now runs on a completely modern architecture. Because of its new foundation, he suggested that expanding into agentic AI is highly possible. An agentic tool operates on a continuous loop. It takes in information, makes its own decisions, and then takes action without needing you to press a button for every single step.

Other leaders at the company are keeping expectations grounded. Craig Federighi, the senior vice president of software engineering, mentioned that this category of artificial intelligence is still experimental. He stressed that finding the right user experience is the current priority. Still, he intentionally stopped short of ruling out a future release.

Right now, the upcoming Siri is built on a large language model but remains firmly rooted in answering direct prompts. Shifting to full computer-use functionality like OpenClaw would require a massive leap. If it takes that leap, your daily devices could shift from tools you operate into digital helpers that do the heavy work for you.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.