Apple reportedly taps Google Gemini and Nvidia Blackwell Chips for new Siri

June 8, 2026 Apple is reportedly partnering with Google and Nvidia to power the next generation of Siri, marking a significant shift in the company’s approach to artificial intelligence. According to a report from The Information, some Siri requests will run on Google Cloud using a licensed version of Google’s Gemini AI model and Nvidia’s Blackwell chips.

The reported strategy would see Apple rely on technology from two of the biggest names in AI as it works to deliver a more advanced Siri experience. The move stands out because Apple has traditionally favored developing key technologies in-house or spreading dependencies across multiple partners.

Under the reported arrangement, Google would provide access to Gemini, while its data centers would run Nvidia’s Blackwell B200 chips to process AI requests. The chips include a confidential computing feature designed to encrypt data while it is being processed. The use of confidential computing is intended to help maintain privacy and security, even when requests are handled on third-party infrastructure rather than directly on Apple devices or Apple-operated servers.

The report also states that Apple plans to tap into Google’s fleet of Nvidia Blackwell B200 processors to handle requests for the AI-enhanced Siri expected to launch alongside iOS 27 later this year.

Nvidia’s Blackwell architecture is designed for large-scale AI workloads and offers the memory bandwidth and computing power needed to support advanced conversational AI systems. The built-in encryption capabilities are also viewed as important for preserving Apple’s privacy-focused approach as it expands AI features across its products.

While Apple has not officially unveiled the new Siri, reports suggest it will function more like a chatbot than the current voice assistant. It is expected to remember personal context, understand content displayed on a user’s screen, and perform more advanced tasks than previous versions of Siri.

The upgraded assistant could represent Apple’s biggest Siri overhaul since the voice assistant was first introduced. The company is expected to share more details during its annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC 2026) taking place from June 8 through June 12.



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Mary Dada

Mary Dada is the associate editor for Tech Newsday, where she covers the latest innovations and happenings in the tech industry’s evolving landscape. Mary focuses on tech content writing from analyses of emerging digital trends to exploring the business side of innovation.
Picture of Mary Dada

Mary Dada

Mary Dada is the associate editor for Tech Newsday, where she covers the latest innovations and happenings in the tech industry’s evolving landscape. Mary focuses on tech content writing from analyses of emerging digital trends to exploring the business side of innovation.

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

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