Apple is continuing to improve the AI Support Assistant that it is testing in the Apple Support app, introducing new functionality in the latest update.
In addition to answering questions about Apple devices and services and providing device-specific help, Apple says the Support Assistant is able to help run diagnostics to show details about a device's health and performance.
The Apple Support app now has a more informative interface for the Support Assistant, and the tab for accessing the feature has an updated "Ask" label with a new icon instead of a "Chat" label. Apple is no longer calling the Support Assistant an "Early Preview," suggesting it is now available in a more official capacity.
Despite the update, the Support Assistant remains limited, and it is not yet available to all users. It's possible that Apple has expanded the feature to a larger number of testers, but not everyone will see it yet.
Apple began testing the Support Assistant last August. The tool uses AI to answer questions related to Apple support, and it is able to walk users through step-by-step solutions for common problems.
If the Support Assistant is unable to solve a problem, users are able to escalate a request to Apple's support staff for further help.
Bloomberg's Mark Gurman has high expectations for Apple's first foldable iPhone.
In his Power On newsletter today, he said the foldable iPhone will be "the most significant overhaul in the iPhone's history."
"iPhone 4, iPhone 6 and iPhone X were clearly a big deal, but this is a whole new design," he said.
Like Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold 7, the foldable iPhone will reportedly open up like ...
iOS 26.5 is now available for developers, and while it doesn't include any new Siri capabilities, there are some major changes for the European Union, and smaller tweaks for features available worldwide.
Suggested Places
In the Maps app, there's a new "Suggested Places" feature that recommends locations to visit based on trending places nearby and recent searches. When Apple launches ads in ...
Apple has been celebrating its upcoming 50th anniversary by hosting surprise performances and other events around the world over the past few weeks, and now Bloomberg's Mark Gurman has revealed details about the company's grand finale.
In a social media post, Gurman said Apple's celebrations will conclude this week with a finale at its Apple Park headquarters for employees.
A special...
Bloomberg's Mark Gurman has high expectations for Apple's first foldable iPhone.
In his Power On newsletter today, he said the foldable iPhone will be "the most significant overhaul in the iPhone's history."
"iPhone 4, iPhone 6 and iPhone X were clearly a big deal, but this is a whole new design," he said.
Like Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold 7, the foldable iPhone will reportedly open up like ...
iOS 26.5 is now available for developers, and while it doesn't include any new Siri capabilities, there are some major changes for the European Union, and smaller tweaks for features available worldwide.
Suggested Places
In the Maps app, there's a new "Suggested Places" feature that recommends locations to visit based on trending places nearby and recent searches. When Apple launches ads in ...
Apple has been celebrating its upcoming 50th anniversary by hosting surprise performances and other events around the world over the past few weeks, and now Bloomberg's Mark Gurman has revealed details about the company's grand finale.
In a social media post, Gurman said Apple's celebrations will conclude this week with a finale at its Apple Park headquarters for employees.
A special...
That's nice. The only discourse I've had with this thing is spamming "Live agent" until a real human being takes over and I can get my issue solved. But hey, keep wasting billions on this nonsense, Apple.
Having spent days with the AI «support» of Adobe and Adidas these past months, in endless loops of helplessness of the machine agent – this is not the way to go. Support is such an important part of your brandscape, you do not at ALL ever in any fashion give this over to digital agents that are much worse than even the free ChatGPT experience. It does not solve the problem. I think that making information available via AI, that having assistants online for simple problems, making support databases dialogue-based why not?
But when you **** up as a company and your client needs help, because your system is broken, you have a bug, you made an error... don't hide behind AI-crap.
In all cases I had, the best result was a real human, ideally of a higher support level with a certain experience, that solved the mess.
Except for Adobe, where a very simple problem was obviously too much and even after calling a number that is noooowhere on their site and which I found by googling in a forum and finalllllly had a human being in my ear... they could not solve a simple account-mess they did with my CC sub. I had to cancel my Adobe-Stock-subscription and lost 90 credits in the process, while the support dude actually still tried to hard-sell me on the Acrobat-AI-nonsense that really no one ever will need. Adobe is great, but they kill their brand with that kind of support.
When I want AI-support I can ask Gemini, GPT, Claude, whatever.
When I call Apple because they f*d up SMB or all the Electron Apps make my CPU go nuclear, I want a capable, experienced human being that at least can speak English and find a solution. Via Mail, in a Chat, on the Phone. But sure as hell not a roboChat that explains again and again how sorry it is that it cannot help me and that it understands my frustration that IT IS CAUSING. :-D