The Future Is Here
We may earn a commission from links on this page

5 Things Apple Tried to Destroy at WWDC 2016

We may earn a commission from links on this page.

Apple, the perpetual copycat, introduced a ton of new ideas today that weren’t really new at all. Many companies have made the products and features Apple showed off today—and now Apple aims to destroy them with its own better versions.

So here is our yearly roundup of the stuff Apple tried to kill at WWDC. We’ll have to wait and see which of these actually catches on, but at the very least, the Apple versions pose an existential threat to the competition.

Advertisement

Every voice assistant

Advertisement
Advertisement

Alexa, Google Now, Cortana—Apple’s got some competition when it comes to smart assistants. Apple’s offering, Siri, has always been just a little bit dumber than the rest.

Today, Siri took a major step forward with two long-overdue developments. First, Siri is coming to your desktop via MacOS, with search functionality much like what you get from Microsoft’s Cortana. Second, Apple’s opening Siri to developers, so that it’ll be able to do things like get you an Uber.

Spotify

Advertisement

Apple Music was supposed to be a Spotify killer, and it just wasn’t. It had a bunch of features nobody asked for—Beats 1, Connect—and lacked cool things offered by Spotify, like the fabulous Discover Weekly playlist. Today, Apple introduced a Discover Weekly clone called, wait for it, Discovery Mix. Hmm, I wonder where they got that idea?

Samsung’s SmartThings/ Nest

Advertisement

Announced two years ago, Apple’s HomeKit hasn’t gotten very far since it launched. It’s nothing, especially compared to the competition. Samsung’s SmartThing’s platform is by far the most robust smart home ecosystem out there—it’s full of slews of fun gadgets that work with it. And despite its recent problems, Google’s Nest products are quite popular, too.

Apple’s new Home app is the missing piece that could take HomeKit to primetime. The app allows you to monitor and control your many smart devices from a central hub. There’s some smart automation features as well as all-important Siri integration. It’s frankly incredible that anyone bothered to develop for HomeKit before this existed.

Advertisement

PayPal

Advertisement

Many people already use Apple Pay, but NFC payments remain an elusive convenience that doesn’t necessarily make sense for most. But now that Apple Pay is coming to the web, it’s actually a slick service you might want to sign up for.

The demo of this functionality today was quite impressive. When you’re at the checkout screen for a particular transaction, you simply click the “Pay with Apple Pay” icon, which appears much the way a PayPal icon might. To authorize the transaction, just use your fingerprint sensor on your phone. So simple.

Advertisement

Google Maps

Advertisement

Apple Maps still exists, and it is still miserably inferior to Google Maps. But that hasn’t stopped Apple from introducing loads of new features in hopes that it might give the old Googs a run. In particular, Apple is opening up the product to developers so that you’ll be able to do things like make reservations at a restaurant or order a car using third-party apps.

What else did Apple try to beat? Let us know below.