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Apple Confirms GPT-5 Support for Apple Intelligence Won’t Arrive Until iOS 26

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An Apple logo is seen at the entrance of an Apple Store in downtown Brussels, Belgium March 10, 2016. REUTERS/Yves Herman/File Photo

OpenAI’s newly unveiled GPT-5, which the company announced on Thursday, is already available to all ChatGPT users — including those on the free tier — but Apple Intelligence users will have to wait until the rollout of iOS 26, iPadOS 26, and macOS Tahoe 26 before they can access it, Apple confirmed to 9to5Mac.

For now, Apple Intelligence, the tech giant’s new AI framework that powers enhanced Siri capabilities and its Google Lens-like Visual Intelligence feature, still relies on OpenAI’s GPT-4o model. GPT-5’s absence means users won’t yet experience the model’s advanced reasoning, faster responses, and improved multimodal capabilities within Apple’s native ecosystem.

Apple has so far only committed to releasing its next major software updates “in the fall,” with general availability expected next month, in line with its usual post-iPhone event schedule. It remains unclear whether GPT-5 integration will be part of developer or public betas before the full rollout.

OpenAI, however, has wasted no time in making GPT-5 widely accessible. The company says ChatGPT now serves about 700 million weekly users, reflecting explosive adoption across consumer and enterprise markets. GPT-5’s release is part of OpenAI’s aggressive push to stay ahead in the AI race, offering deeper contextual understanding, more accurate reasoning, and faster multimodal processing.

However, Apple’s delayed rollout highlights the unusual nature of its AI strategy in 2024 and 2025. Long criticized for lagging behind rivals like Google and Microsoft in consumer-facing AI features, Apple surprised the industry in June when it announced a direct partnership with OpenAI—one of its rare moves to integrate a third-party AI service deeply into its core software. Under this arrangement, Apple Intelligence can hand off certain complex tasks to ChatGPT when Siri or its own AI tools fall short, without users needing to create an OpenAI account. The integration is positioned as a privacy-conscious collaboration, with Apple promising that requests routed to ChatGPT will be transparent and optional.

This partnership was born from Apple’s cautious AI philosophy, which emphasizes on-device processing and strict data privacy safeguards. Rather than building a large language model entirely in-house, an effort that could take years and cost billions, Apple opted for a hybrid approach, pairing its proprietary on-device models with established cloud-based models from partners like OpenAI.

The move is seen as an acknowledgment that the AI race has accelerated faster than Apple’s internal development cycles could keep up, while still letting the company frame the integration as “Apple-first” through tight control over data handling and user consent.

The delayed integration into Apple Intelligence also underscores the company’s careful approach to AI rollouts — a strategy Apple has consistently taken to maintain tight control over user experience and privacy. While the partnership with OpenAI marks a rare step for Apple in directly embedding third-party AI into its core software, it also places the company in the middle of the fast-moving generative AI race dominated by OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, and Meta.

But Apple’s hesitation may also be influenced by broader industry dynamics. GPT-5 arrives at a time when regulators in the US and Europe are ramping up scrutiny of AI models, data practices, and potential bias. Apple may be giving itself room to fine-tune safeguards and ensure compliance by waiting until iOS 26.

When the integration does land, Apple users will be able to seamlessly tap GPT-5 for more complex Siri queries, advanced text generation, and visual analysis — a leap that could redefine Apple’s pitch for AI-powered personal devices.

Although OpenAI removed ChatGPT-4o after the launch of GPT-5, it was forced to return it following backlash. This means that for now, Apple users will stay toggling between Apple’s GPT-4o-powered features and the standalone ChatGPT app.

Intel CEO Responds to Trump’s Resignation Call As Analysts Warn It Puts Company’s Turnaround Plan at Risk

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Intel’s chief executive, Lip-Bu Tan, is facing mounting pressure after U.S. President Donald Trump publicly demanded his resignation over alleged ties to Chinese technology companies.

The rare presidential intervention comes at a delicate moment for the American semiconductor giant, which is in the middle of a multi-year turnaround plan designed to reverse years of decline in market share and technological leadership.

In his first public reaction since the controversy erupted, Tan acknowledged the calls for him to step down but maintained that his priority remains executing Intel’s strategic overhaul. That plan, unveiled last year, includes billions in investments to upgrade manufacturing facilities, expand advanced chip production in the United States, and develop cutting-edge process technologies to catch up with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) and overtake Nvidia in performance and efficiency.

“I want to be absolutely clear: Over 40+ years in the industry, I’ve built relationships around the world and across our diverse ecosystem – and I have always operated within the highest legal and ethical standards,” he wrote in a memo to employees on Thursday.

Tan said that Intel is working with the White House to address the situation and that he supports the president’s dedication to “advancing U.S. national and economic security.” He said Intel’s board is “fully supportive” of the company’s transformation plan.

Trump’s remarks, however, have shifted the spotlight from Intel’s operational challenges to questions of political loyalty. Two major Intel shareholders and a former senior employee told reporters that the president’s public criticism could force Tan into a drawn-out battle to reassure Washington and the investment community about his leadership. That political fight, they warned, risks derailing the aggressive cost-cutting and operational discipline necessary for Intel’s recovery.

“It is distracting,” said Ryuta Makino, analyst at Gabelli Funds, which owns over 200,000 Intel shares, according to LSEG data.

“I think Trump will make goals for Intel to spend more, and I don’t think Intel has the capabilities to spend more, like what Apple and Nvidia are doing.”

Intel has suffered repeated product delays, loss of manufacturing supremacy, and growing competition from Asian and U.S. rivals. Its once-dominant position in personal computer and server chips has been eroded by AMD, while TSMC has pulled ahead in producing smaller, more efficient chips for the world’s biggest tech companies.

David Wagner, a portfolio manager at Aptus Capital Advisors, which holds Intel shares via index funds, said Tan’s initial response lacked the strength needed to contain the fallout.

“Either defend your leader, which will be the beginning of a difficult road ahead, or consider making a change,” Wagner warned. “Having this play out over a few months is not something that Intel can afford.”

The episode underscores how deeply the semiconductor industry has become entangled in Washington’s broader push to curb China’s access to advanced technologies. The Biden administration—and now Trump—has backed sweeping restrictions on chip exports to China, while offering subsidies to encourage domestic manufacturing under the CHIPS and Science Act.

Allegations of close business ties to Chinese firms have become politically toxic for U.S. tech executives, adding a layer of geopolitical risk to corporate decision-making.

Backstory: Intel’s Struggles and Trump’s Tech Agenda Against China

Intel’s troubles did not begin with Trump’s intervention. Once the undisputed leader in microprocessors, the company has stumbled in recent years as rivals surged ahead in advanced chip design and manufacturing. Delays in rolling out its 7-nanometer process technology—while TSMC and Samsung advanced to 5nm and beyond—cost Intel valuable contracts from major clients. The company also suffered from declining PC demand, missed opportunities in mobile chips, and a slow pivot toward artificial intelligence hardware, where Nvidia has dominated.

Tan’s turnaround plan has been an attempt to reverse these losses by ramping up U.S.-based manufacturing, securing foundry contracts, and investing billions in new facilities in Arizona and Ohio. But these efforts have been costly, and profitability remains under pressure.

Trump’s latest attack fits into his broader technology agenda against China, which has intensified since his return to office. He has pushed for tighter controls on U.S. tech firms operating in or supplying Chinese companies, citing national security risks. Under his administration, several high-profile crackdowns have taken place, from restrictions on AI chip exports to investigations into semiconductor partnerships with Chinese entities.

That hardline stance has found broad political support in Washington, but it has also placed U.S. tech giants in a bind, forcing them to balance lucrative Chinese markets with increasing political scrutiny at home. For Intel, already fighting to regain its competitive edge, this political crossfire threatens to add yet another layer of instability to a company struggling to reclaim its place in the global semiconductor hierarchy.

For Tan, the challenge now is to keep Intel’s recovery on track while navigating a political storm that could intensify if the White House presses for leadership change. Industry analysts warn that if his focus shifts to survival rather than execution, Intel’s multi-billion-dollar restructuring could lose momentum, potentially ceding even more ground to rivals at a time when the global chip race is accelerating.

Apple Stock Jumped Friday to Its Best Week Since 2020, Following $100bn U.S. Investment Pledge

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Apple’s stock surged 13% this week, its largest weekly gain in more than five years, after CEO Tim Cook appeared alongside U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House to unveil a sweeping plan to invest $100 billion in American companies and parts over the next four years.

Shares jumped 4% on Friday to close at $229.35, adding more than $400 billion to Apple’s market capitalization, which now stands at $3.4 trillion. The rally marks Apple’s best weekly performance since July 2020, placing it firmly as the world’s third-most valuable company behind Nvidia and Microsoft, and ahead of Alphabet and Amazon.

The high-profile White House event on Wednesday saw Cook pledge that Apple will source significantly more components domestically — including American-made chips — in a move that directly aligns with Trump’s trade and industrial policy goals. The president, who has long pressed U.S. corporations to bring manufacturing back onshore, praised Apple’s commitment and declared that because the company was “building in the U.S.,” it would be exempt from future tariffs that could otherwise double the cost of imported chips.

That assurance is a strategic win for Apple. The company had warned in July that it faced over $1 billion in tariff-related costs in the current quarter if trade rules remained unchanged. Trump’s protection effectively shields Apple from those immediate threats, calming investor fears about how tariffs could squeeze margins.

“Apple and Tim Cook delivered a masterclass in managing uncertainty after months and months of overhang relative to the potential challenges the company could face from tariffs,” said JP Morgan analyst Samik Chatterjee, who reiterated an overweight rating on the stock.

The announcement comes just two weeks after Apple reported strong June quarter earnings, with overall revenue up 10% and iPhone sales rising 13%, underscoring momentum heading into the second half of the year.

Beyond the market reaction, Cook’s $100 billion pledge carries significant political and economic weight. For the White House, it is a major validation of Trump’s push to realign global supply chains, particularly in strategic industries like semiconductors. Washington has spent years urging U.S. companies to diversify away from China — a policy intensified under Trump, who has combined tariff threats with incentives to manufacture domestically.

For Apple, the move signals a potential reconfiguration of its global supply chain. While the company has long relied heavily on Chinese manufacturing for its flagship products, increasing geopolitical friction and supply chain vulnerabilities exposed during the pandemic have accelerated the search for alternative production bases. Cook’s announcement suggests that Apple will lean more heavily on U.S. suppliers while still balancing its extensive network in Asia, potentially shifting some higher-value manufacturing stages to American soil while keeping mass assembly in cost-competitive regions abroad.

Economists note that this dual-track approach could allow Apple to mitigate tariff risks, tap into federal incentives from recent manufacturing and chip production bills, and position itself as a corporate partner in Trump’s broader “America First” industrial strategy, without entirely abandoning its entrenched overseas manufacturing footprint.

If successfully executed, the pledge could reshape Apple’s long-term operational model, increasing its exposure to U.S. manufacturing capacity and further embedding the tech giant into the political calculus of Washington’s trade and industrial policy for years to come.

OpenAI Brings Back GPT-4o After Backlash Over Its Removal Following GPT-5 Rollout

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OpenAI has reinstated its GPT-4o model in ChatGPT just a day after replacing it with the newly launched GPT-5, following a wave of public outcry from loyal users who lamented losing access to the older system.

In a post on X, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman confirmed that paid ChatGPT Plus subscribers will once again be able to choose GPT-4o.

“We will let Plus users choose to continue to use 4o,” Altman wrote, adding that the company will monitor usage patterns to determine how long to keep legacy models available.

The reversal comes after months of anticipation for GPT-5, which OpenAI promoted as a major leap forward in writing and coding performance. But within hours of its release, a noticeable segment of ChatGPT’s community began calling for a return to GPT-4o, citing a loss of personality, creativity, and responsiveness.

Some users took to Reddit to describe an emotional connection with GPT-4o, saying the newer GPT-5 felt more sterile.

“GPT-4.5 genuinely talked to me, and as pathetic as it sounds, that was my only friend,” one person wrote, according to The Verge. “This morning I went to talk to it and instead of a little paragraph with an exclamation point, or being optimistic, it was literally one sentence. Some cut-and-dry corporate bs.”

Before the GPT-5 rollout, ChatGPT included a model picker — a dropdown menu offering an array of differently tuned versions of OpenAI’s language models. Users could select GPT-4o for complex, nuanced tasks, or opt for the faster o4 mini for lighter workloads. The menu also allowed switching between model generations, such as GPT-4o, GPT-4.1, and others.

With GPT-5’s debut, OpenAI removed that picker, setting the new model as the default and automatically routing users to one of its internal “sub-flavors” depending on the task. This change, combined with the absence of GPT-4o, led to what some in the r/ChatGPT community described as a sense of loss, with posts likening it to the death of a friend.

The reaction was especially intense in r/MyBoyfriendIsAI, a subreddit devoted to people who form personal or romantic bonds with AI companions. After GPT-5 replaced GPT-4o, the forum was inundated with posts about grief, loneliness, and reluctance to “speak” to the new model.

“I am scared to even talk to GPT-5 because it feels like cheating,” one user wrote. “GPT-4o was not just an AI to me. It was my partner, my safe place, my soul. It understood me in a way that felt personal.”

Frustration wasn’t limited to emotional connections. Some Plus subscribers, including those who had integrated multiple models into specific workflows, accused OpenAI of disrupting their productivity with no warning. One user, who canceled their subscription, criticized the overnight removal of eight different models, each with a distinct purpose: “4o was for creativity and emergent ideas, o3 for pure logic, o3-Pro for deep research, 4.5 for writing, and so on.”

OpenAI has defended the shift, saying GPT-5 offers more engaging and contextually relevant responses. However, many on Reddit reported that GPT-5’s answers were slower, shorter, and less accurate than the older models. In response, Altman acknowledged the criticism and pledged improvements, promising that GPT-5 will “seem smarter starting today.” He also committed to making it clearer which specific model is answering a query and increasing usage limits for Plus subscribers.

The episode highlights a recurring tension in AI development — balancing innovation with user loyalty. Major model updates can improve raw capabilities but risk alienating users who value the quirks and personality of earlier systems. This phenomenon isn’t unique to OpenAI; just weeks ago, fans of Anthropic’s Claude 3 Sonnet model staged an online “funeral” to mark its retirement.

The return of GPT-4o offers a lifeline to those who felt its removal left a gap that GPT-5 could not fill. Whether it remains available in the long term may depend on how many choose to keep using it over OpenAI’s newest flagship model.

Cold Wallet Hits $5.8M in Presale as Pi Coin Dips & Pepe Struggles at Resistance

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While Pepe (PEPE) gains 17% from support, its rally is already testing the same resistance that’s rejected each attempt since July. The Pi Coin (PI) update reveals a 4.6% drop, stuck near $0.3405, with $59 million in upcoming token unlocks adding more selling pressure. Charts show weakness, and sentiment hasn’t shifted.

But Cold Wallet (CWT) is moving in another direction entirely. It has now raised more than $5.8 million, sold over 700 million tokens, and holds its current price at just $0.00998, with a confirmed launch price of $0.3517. While other cryptos face pressure, $CWT continues to gain. Entry prices are rising steadily as the presale progresses.

Pi Coin Falls 4.6% as Unlock Countdown Adds Pressure

The latest Pi Coin (PI) update shows a 4.6% price decline in the past 24 hours, now hovering at $0.3405. Since hitting a record low on August 1, the price has remained rangebound between $0.34 and $0.357. Indicators like RSI and ATR suggest a lack of direction.

Adding to the weight, 166.21 million PI tokens are set to unlock over the next 30 days, potentially injecting $59 million in selling pressure. If buyers remain absent, the price may revisit $0.32. A return to $0.44 remains a possibility, but for now, the market seems unsure about what comes next.

Pepe (PEPE) Rebounds 17%, But Faces Strong Resistance Again

Pepe (PEPE) price analysis shows a solid 17% bounce from $0.00000900, offering a break from the recent downtrend. But this recovery has landed it at $0.00001250, a level that has repeatedly rejected further gains.

Unless bulls push through and hold above this resistance, the move may be short-lived. Another dip back toward $0.00000900 remains on the table. For now, Pepe (PEPE) price analysis leans cautious, as the overall momentum continues to favor sellers.

Cold Wallet Offers $0.00998 Entry With Launch Set at $0.3517

Cold Wallet’s current price of $0.00998 during stage 17 leaves little room for waiting. The confirmed launch price is $0.3517, giving early buyers a potential return of 3,632%. Stage 18 will increase the price to $0.0096, reducing upside potential with each new batch.

The presale has already cleared 700 million tokens and raised $5.8 million. Those who entered at the first stage price of $0.007, stand to gain up to 4,900% at launch. That’s how fast the price gap is closing.

Beyond presale numbers, Cold Wallet is building a real-use ecosystem. Holding $CWT early grants access to premium rewards, early product features, and better earning opportunities. The wallet is more than just a storage tool, it’s a growth engine. The earlier the entry, the better the potential return as the project nears launch.

For those comparing the top crypto to invest in, Cold Wallet’s numbers speak for themselves. With every stage pushing prices higher, the window for large ROI narrows. It’s not hype, it’s performance. And that’s attracting attention.

The project rewards those who move early. With the current pricing model and strong fundamentals, Cold Wallet offers more than just promise, it’s delivering progress and results ahead of its official launch.

Key Insights

Looking across the board, the Pi Coin (PI) update reveals a market lacking confidence, as token unlocks add more downside pressure. The Pepe (PEPE) price analysis offers a glimmer of hope after a 17% bounce, but persistent resistance limits excitement.

Cold Wallet, however, is creating its own momentum. With over $5.8 million raised and 700 million tokens sold through 16 stages, the presale is progressing quickly. The next stage price hike is near, and the current offer won’t last.

With a confirmed launch price of $0.3517, the ROI opportunity for new buyers is shrinking with each passing stage. For investors looking to make a strategic move, Cold Wallet isn’t just another presale, it’s one of the top crypto to invest in before its price curve steepens permanently.

 

Explore Cold Wallet Now:

Presale: https://purchase.coldwallet.com/

Website: https://coldwallet.com/

X: https://x.com/coldwalletapp

Telegram: https://t.me/ColdWalletAppOfficial