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Apple's inability to ship its own cutting-edge AI model has paradoxically become a strategic advantage. Instead of bearing the immense cost of foundation model development, they can now integrate best-in-class third-party models onto their dominant hardware ecosystem, a position Mark Gurman calls 'falling ass backwards into it.'

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Unlike competitors feeling pressure to build proprietary AI foundation models, Apple can simply partner with providers like Google. This reveals Apple's true moat isn't the model itself but its massive hardware distribution network, giving it leverage to integrate best-in-class AI without the high cost of in-house development.

While tech giants' capital expenditures skyrocket to fund AI development, Apple's has declined. The company strategically sidesteps the costly race to build foundation models by partnering with Google. It will integrate Gemini into its products, letting Google bear the immense infrastructure and training costs.

Apple isn't trying to build the next frontier AI model. Instead, their strategy is to become the primary distribution channel by compressing and running competitors' state-of-the-art models directly on devices. This play leverages their hardware ecosystem to offer superior privacy and performance.

While other tech giants are massively increasing capital expenditures to build AI data centers, Apple's CapEx is down. This reveals a deliberate strategy to avoid the high costs of training foundation models by integrating third-party AI, like Google's Gemini, into its products.

Apple is letting rivals like Google spend billions on building AI infrastructure. Apple's plan is to then license the winning large language models for cheap and integrate them into its massive ecosystem of 2.5 billion devices, leveraging its distribution power without the immense capital expenditure.

Apple is avoiding massive capital expenditure on building its own LLMs. By partnering with a leader like Google for the underlying tech (e.g., Gemini for Siri), Apple can focus on its core strength: productizing and integrating technology into a superior user experience, which may be the more profitable long-term play.

Apple is focusing its AI efforts on creating a seamless ecosystem of AI-powered hardware (iPhone, AirPods, glasses) that leverage models from partners like Google. Their competitive advantage lies in device integration and user experience, not competing in the costly model-training race.

Apple is successfully navigating the AI race by avoiding the massive expense of building foundational models. Instead, it's partnering with companies like Google for AI capabilities while focusing on its core strength: selling high-margin hardware. This allows Apple to capture the end-user without the costly infrastructure build-out of its rivals.

According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple's 2018 hiring of Google's AI chief was a strategic disaster that left the company far behind in AI. The subsequent multi-billion-dollar deal to integrate Google's Gemini model into Siri is a stark admission of this failure, forcing Apple to rely on a direct competitor for core functionality.

By licensing Google's Gemini for Siri, Apple is strategically avoiding the capital-intensive foundation model war. This allows them to focus resources on their core strength: silicon and on-device AI. The long-term vision is a future where Apple dominates the "edge," interoperating with cloud AIs.