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The AI That Refused the Cloud

Why didn’t Apple build a cloud-based AI?

Why didn’t they jump on the generative AI boom?
Why haven’t they released their own large language model?
Why did they bring us not “AI,” but “Apple Intelligence”?

The answer, I think, isn’t so much about strategy as it is about limitation.
It’s not that Apple chose not to use the cloud. They couldn’t.

Of course, there’s iCloud—and Apple owns infrastructure on a scale most companies could only dream of.
But unlike Google or Meta, Apple never built a business around collecting behavioral logs and text data through search, ads, or social media.
They never spent decades assembling a massive cloud platform and the dataset to match.

And with a user base of Apple’s scale, building and maintaining a unified cloud—compliant with each country’s laws and privacy standards—isn’t just difficult. It’s structurally impossible.

So Apple arrived at a different conclusion: if the cloud was out of reach, they would design an AI that completes everything locally.

An AI that lives inside your iPhone

Apple engineered the iPhone to run machine learning natively.
Its Apple Silicon chips use a custom architecture, with Neural Engines that process image recognition, speech interpretation, and even emotion detection—all on the device.

This started as a privacy measure.
Photos, voice data, steps, biometrics, location—all processed without ever leaving your phone.

At the same time, it addressed battery constraints.
Apple had long invested in larger screens to increase battery capacity, adopted OLED, and brought UMA (Unified Memory Architecture) to MacBooks.
All of this was about sustaining AI performance without draining power or relying on constant connectivity.

It was an enormous challenge.
Apple designed its own chips, its own OS, its middleware, its frameworks, and fused it all with on-device machine learning.
They bet on ARM and fine-tuned the balance of power and performance to a degree most companies wouldn’t even attempt.

Vision Pro’s sensors are learning emotion

Vision Pro includes sensors for cameras, LiDAR, infrared, eye tracking, facial muscles, and spatial microphones—designed to read what’s inside us, not just outside.

These sensors don’t just “see” or “hear.”
They track where you’re looking, measure your pupils, detect shifts in breathing, and register subtle changes in muscle tension.
From that, it may infer interest, attraction, anxiety, hesitation.

And that data? It stays local.
It’s not uploaded. It’s for your personal AI alone.

Vitals + Journal = Memory-based AI

Vision Pro records eye movement and facial expressions.
Apple Watch logs heart rate, body temperature, and sleep.
iPhone tracks text input and captured images.

And now, Apple is integrating all of this into the Journal app—day by day.
It’s a counter to platforms like X or Meta, and a response to the toxicity and addiction cycles of open social networks.

What you did, where you went, how you felt.
All of this is turned into language.
A “memory-based AI” begins to take shape.
And all of it stays on-device.

Not gathered into a centralized cloud, but grown inside you.
Your own AI.

Refusing the cloud gave AI a personality

Google’s AI is the same for everyone—for now.
ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini—all designed as public intelligences.

Apple’s AI is different.
It wants to grow into a mind that exists only inside you.

Apple’s approach may have started not with cloud rejection, but cloud resignation.
But from that constraint, something entirely new emerged.

An AI with memory.
An AI with personality.
An AI that has only ever known you.

That’s not something the cloud can produce.
An AI that refuses the cloud becomes something with a self.

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What's in my bag

How I live in the decentralized world

As a permanent Airbnb resident or as a lifetime traveler, I need to carry much stuff while I’m not at my office in Tokyo. However, I don’t want to work with ordinary tools. The best tools which blown my mind away are the only things I need.

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How NFC devices change ads around us?


Here is an obvious thing. Foursquare and its clones including Japan made clones have to be happy with the Facebook’s decision about their location service.

Anyway, they must have ideal strategies to beat their enemies. There’re a lot of clones here in Japan now. A big difference between Foursquare and Japan made clones is mobile clients. Most of Japan made clones support typical Japanese mobile phones unlike iOS/Android devices. It means they’re based on Japanese mobile phone culture. This difference is making some innovative movement right now. They get some ideas from typical Japanese mobile phones.

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iPhone Doc For A Cool Office

iRetrofone

This is what I really want. The modern model looks nice but I prefer the retro model.

Desk Phone Dock

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New Personal Payment Methods May Change The World Economic Rules

This kind of products will make a new tech/business trend, I think. Currently we don’t have any tools to pay small amount of money each other except cash inside your pockets.

What kind of dream you can imagine with this brilliant concept?
Didn’t know but Jack Dorsey joined as co-founder. Sounds cool.

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DIY paper iPhone dock

Wnat an iPhone dock without paying $30? OK, I found a brilliant idea here.

Dessine moi un objet » Blog Archive » Iphone and Itouch paper stand / dock

I like to find these DIY tips but this iPhone dock is the best. Here are alternatives.

I already have the original Apple dock for my office but I’ll try this paper one for my home.

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Google iPhone App

Just installed the Google mobile app for my iPhone and tried a voice searching feature. Voice searching itself is not a surprising feature but when it works with iPhone, some big paradigm change may happen.

Watch a video from Google.

GPS, phone etc… The app have possibilities.

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Amazing iPhone App

Found an amazing iPhone app via Digg.

Apple’s iPhone-App-Approval Mouse Falls Off Treadmill: Buy The $1000 App That Does Nothing (AAPL)

Behold: “I Am Rich,” a $999.99 app from Armin Heinrich, which just displays a red gem on the phone’s screen — nothing else.

lol… Is he genius?!

See comments on digg here.

Digg – THE 1000 dollar iPhone app, that does NOTHING

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iPhone released in Japan

Finally, iPhone released here in Japan. However I can’t buy it today, I’m in Yodobashi Camera Umeda now 😛

Just came here to see the release event of the iPhone. Here is a video of the historical countdown with Dante Carver well known as "Yosou GUY" on TV commercials of SoftBank and a VP guy. Maybe he is a VP of SoftBank Mobile I think but not sure.

You can see a gap between US and Japan over the audience. Only a MC and some staff of the Yodobashi Camera are shouting. But don’t worry, all of us are excited.

There’re no more numbered ticket to get it here but I already reserved one at another place.

Hey, if you’re in Japan especially around Osaka, you should watch TV news tonight and find a guy wearing an orange shirt and a black sunglasses. It’s me!

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Monthly fee for the iPhone in Japan

Nice price! SoftBank did it! 7,280 yen for internet connection and basic rate of calling. And 23,040 yen for the iPhone itself.

Time to say good bye to docomo, though we had over 10 years relationship. I may not regret about it and never back to docomo again.

When can I get lined up at Apple Store Shinsaibashi?

ToDo

  • Break up with Willcom till the end of Jun cos I already got an emobile
  • Switch to SoftBank from docomo for the iPhone
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