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Apple a request iOS 18 presented in June at WWDC and will certainly release it officially in September. The problem is that this system will not include the biggest draw in the form of artificial intelligence. And from the looks of it, maybe even Google is not keeping up with its Android 15. 

Od iOS 18 we expected a lot in the area of ​​redesign and AI. We will get the former with the system's live release in September, but we will have to wait for the latter. The system iOS 18, which will also be included in iPhones 16 straight out of the box, will not include the feature Apple Intelligence simply because the company has not had time to properly debug them. So if AI is to be AppAs the main selling point of news, this is a significant problem. Apple is thus the first example of software development becoming more tedious than hardware development.

Samsung Google 

The second example is Samsung. He was supposed to release a beta for his build this week. One UI 7 running on Android 15, but that didn't happen. The company postponed the release to the third week of August because it can't even manage to distribute the live build. One UI 6.1.1. But here it is perhaps the least of the problems, because One UI 7 is not tied to the release of new hardware. One UI 6.1.1 was first introduced in foldables in mid-July and is also expected to reach the company's older foldable devices, tablets and a number of Galaxy S.

And thirdly, there is Google. He is currently preparing Android 15, but he kind of cut a branch under himself. In recent years, he presented the new Pixels in October, but this year he will do so already on August 13. And with the new Pixels, of course, the new Android came out, so this year it should be Android 15. But by pushing the deadline, Google lost two months of testing.

Current news So they say it's entirely possible that the Pixel 9 will come out with Android 14 and will get Android 15 as an update later. It would essentially be the same scenario as with iOS 18 has a iOS 18.1. So it seems that companies are not so much concerned with developing and releasing new hardware as with tuning their systems for it. Google may get its revenge for trying to overtake the iPhones with the Pixel 9. 

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