Part 3 of 3…
There is a version of this story where Apple is the Wright Brothers.
It is not an unreasonable version. Apple has done the safety bicycle move more times than almost any company in history — taken a technology the engineers built for engineers and brought it down to earth, made it a machine for everyone. The Mac. The iPod. The iPhone. Each one was a wheel coming down. Each one arrived after a period of apparent slowness, of critics saying Apple had lost its edge, of the industry having already moved on to the next thing. Each one was, in retrospect, obvious. Apple had been in the bicycle shop the whole time. You just couldn’t see what they were building.
So when Apple showed its hand at WWDC this week — a rebuilt Siri operating at the OS level, accessing your messages and mail and photos in real time, understanding context across apps, doing things the old Siri could only approximate — it is tempting to read it as Kitty Hawk. The long preparation made visible. The brothers finally leaving the shop.
It might be. It also might not be. That is the only honest thing to say.
What Apple showed was real. The new Siri, built on Apple’s own Foundation Models with help from Google’s Gemini, is not the Siri that became a punchline. It holds context. It moves across apps without being asked. It knows what you were doing five minutes ago and connects it to what you are doing now. It can surface a photo without opening Photos, build a navigation route from an image, draft a message in the tone of the conversation it is joining. These are not features. They are the beginning of an operating system that understands you, which is a different thing from an operating system that executes your commands.
The structure of the keynote said more than the words did. Apple led with fixes before features. iOS 27 is a Snow Leopard update — performance, reliability, the underlying machinery — and Siri AI was presented as one item on a long list rather than the main event. This is Apple’s tell. When they are doing something foundational they tend to understate it, the way a craftsman doesn’t announce the quality of his work but simply does it and lets you find it. The penny-farthing riders called their machine the ordinary. They didn’t think they needed to explain.
But here is the thing about the bicycle shop analogy that the optimistic version leaves out. The Wright Brothers knew what they were trying to build. They had been thinking about flight for years before Kitty Hawk. The bicycle shop gave them the craft knowledge, the physical intuition, the hands-on education in how machines move through space. What it did not give them was the destination. They brought the destination themselves.
The question Apple has not answered for me — the question this week’s keynote raised rather than resolved — is whether they know where they are going. Or whether this has only been a partial reveal and there’s much more behind the curtain?
The OS-level integration is the chain drive. Decoupling AI from the app, letting it run through the substrate the way a chain runs through a drivetrain, is exactly the kind of architectural insight that changes what a machine can do. It is not a feature you add. It is a rethinking of what the machine is for. Every previous AI assistant lived above the operating system, looking down at your data from a remove. Apple’s new architecture lives inside it, which is a different relationship entirely — the difference between a mechanic who reads about your car and one who has driven it for a year.
That is the Coventry precision. The tight tolerances. The discipline of making things that have to work at the level where failure is not an option.
What nobody knows, including Apple, is what you build with it.
There is also this: Tim Cook will not be driving this evolution. He announced that John Ternus takes over in September, which means this WWDC — this particular showing of the hand — is the last one Cook owns. Ternus is a hardware engineer, the man who built the Apple Silicon transition, the person most responsible for the Neural Engine that makes on-device inference possible. He is, in the bicycle shop metaphor, the craftsman who built the lathe. Whether he knows how to use it to make something that flies is the question the next several years will answer.
History is patient about these things. It lets the work speak.
In 1892, two brothers opened a shop on West Third Street in Dayton and started fixing bicycles. They were not trying to change the world. They were trying to make a living, to learn a machine, to understand in their hands what the books couldn’t teach them. The flying came later, and it came because of the shop, not despite it. The shop was the point. They just didn’t know it yet.
Apple has the best lathe in the bicycle shop. They have the chain drive architecture, the on-device precision, the installed base of two billion devices that will carry whatever they build into more hands than any other platform on earth. They have a new set of hands on the wheel starting in September, hands that know the metal intimately, that built the engine the whole thing runs on.
What they do not have yet — or if they have it, they are not showing it — is the image of what they are flying toward.
Maybe that’s the ordinary part. Maybe that’s always been the ordinary part. You don’t know what you’re building until you’ve built it, and by then the world has already changed, and everyone says it was obvious, and they are right, and they are also completely wrong about when the decision was made.
The shop is open. The lathe is running. Work is underway.
What happens when someone finally knows what to make?