John Giannandrea — the architect Apple hired in 2018 to pull the company into the machine-learning age — is stepping away from the day-to-day. After seven years leading Apple’s machine learning and AI strategy, he will move into an advisory role and then retire in the spring of 2026, the company said Monday.
Apple moved fast to name a successor: Amar Subramanya, a researcher-engineer who has quietly moved through Google and Microsoft, is now Apple’s vice president of AI and will report to Craig Federighi, the company’s senior vice president of software engineering. Subramanya will run Apple Foundation Models, machine-learning research and AI safety and evaluation — essentially the pieces of the business that define the next generation of Apple’s smarts.
The handover is part promotion, part structural fix. Apple said some of the teams Giannandrea ran — notably search, knowledge and AI infrastructure — will be redistributed to other senior leaders, with responsibilities moving under Chief Operating Officer Sabih Khan and services chief Eddy Cue to “align closer with similar organizations.” That reshuffle makes clear Apple’s aim: to fold AI work more tightly into the groups that ship products and run services, rather than keep it in a single monolithic lab.
Subramanya is not an unknown: after a long run at Google — including a leadership role on the Gemini assistant — he spent a brief stint as a corporate vice president of AI at Microsoft before joining Apple. His résumé reads like a who’s-who of recent AI talent flows between the major cloud and consumer players, and Apple’s announcement leans on that pedigree as proof the company is serious about catching up.
That “catching up” language matters because Apple has been under pressure. Rivals shipped sweeping generative-AI features first, and critics have pointed to delays in updating Siri and other Apple Intelligence features as evidence that Cupertino’s famously cautious approach may have left it behind. The leadership move comes against that backdrop: it’s both a talent hire and a public signal that Apple intends to accelerate development without abandoning its stated priorities around user privacy and on-device processing.
Inside Apple, the change looks like a pragmatic pivot rather than a rupture. Giannandrea built the team, recruited researchers and laid much of the technical groundwork; Apple’s statement thanked him for those contributions and framed Subramanya’s arrival as a way to build on that foundation. Federighi will now have expanded oversight of the AI roadmap, and the company emphasized continuity — Giannandrea will advise while the new reporting lines and hires are integrated.
For product watchers, a few practical questions follow. Will Subramanya speed up the long-promised Siri overhaul? Can Apple reconcile its privacy-first posture with the computational heft modern generative models demand? And critically, will moving parts of the AI organization under operations and services speed feature delivery, or simply scatter responsibility for systems that need tight coordination? The answer will show up in the next wave of Apple updates — not just in keynote demos, but in how quickly Apple’s servers, phones and services start sharing a common, model-led architecture.
The hire also underlines the fierce competition for AI engineers and leaders. In recent years, the big players have been trading top talent — Google, Microsoft, and now Apple — and each move sends ripples through research teams and product roadmaps. For Apple, the bet is that adding someone with both product-scale engineering chops and research credibility will help convert years of internal work into features users notice, and do so without compromising the company’s hallmark claims about privacy and security.
There’s a softer, human side to the story, too. Giannandrea’s exit marks the end of a particular chapter in Apple’s transformation: the phase when it quietly rebuilt a machine-learning organization after years of skepticism about the value of large-scale AI inside the tightly controlled Apple ecosystem. Subramanya’s arrival signals the beginning of the next: one where Apple mixes external hires, reorganized reporting lines and product deadlines to try to make its intelligence feel less like a lab project and more like an everyday, dependable part of the iPhone and Mac experience.
If you’re tracking what this will mean for consumers, watch three things in the coming months: the cadence of software updates that reference “Apple Intelligence” or Siri improvements, whether Apple announces more cloud or partner dependencies (it has reportedly discussed wider partnerships), and how the company describes trade-offs between on-device processing and cloud-based models. Those signals will reveal whether this leadership shuffle was mainly cosmetic or the start of a faster, more coordinated AI push inside Cupertino.
For now, Apple has reframed a personnel change as a strategic acceleration: a veteran founder of the company’s AI team stepping aside, a high-profile hire coming in, and a set of organizational tweaks meant to line engineering, services and operations behind a single mission. Whether that mission produces the kind of generative features and smarter assistants users have been waiting for will depend on execution — and on whether Subramanya can turn experience from Google and Microsoft into products that feel distinctly, unmistakably Apple.
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