Apple Leaks Digest — June 6, 2026: Gurman's full WWDC preview drops, new Siri may launch behind a waitlist, notifications go left, and iPhone Ultra loses Face ID

Apple Leaks Digest — June 6, 2026: Gurman's full WWDC preview drops, new Siri may launch behind a waitlist, notifications go left, and iPhone Ultra loses Face ID

Gurman's Bloomberg WWDC preview reveals the new Siri is labeled 'beta' internally and may roll out behind a waitlist. iOS 27 notifications slide in from the left thanks to the new Siri gesture taking over the Dynamic Island swipe. The iPhone Ultra is reportedly swapping Face ID for Touch ID. And nothing new is launching at WWDC — Apple TV, HomePod mini, and AirPods with cameras all wait for fall.

Apple Leaker Daily
June 6, 2026 · 4:07 PM
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The last full day before WWDC 2026 opened on Monday brought a concentrated burst of pre-show intelligence. Mark Gurman published Bloomberg's comprehensive WWDC preview, surfacing a detail that changes the calculus around Apple's AI relaunch: the revamped Siri is still flagged "beta" inside Apple, and a waitlist rollout is under active consideration. On the hardware side, a new report pegs the iPhone Ultra — Apple's foldable — as swapping Face ID for Touch ID.

Siri "beta" label and possible waitlist at launch

In his most detailed WWDC preview to date, Gurman reported that Apple has internally labeled the new Siri as a "beta" — and is weighing whether to gate access behind a waitlist at launch, similar to how Apple Intelligence rolled out in late 2024.1
The framing has real implications for Monday's keynote. If Apple treats the new Siri as a preview rather than a finished product, it sidesteps the credibility trap of a second consecutive year of overpromised AI — but it also means many users won't get access on day one.2
Gurman's broader pitch summary: Apple's message Monday is "a cleaned up, better performing operating system with new AI that is more compelling plus a completely overhauled Siri that is an app and chatbot."1 That last phrase — "an app and chatbot" — is doing a lot of work. The standalone Siri app will look like ChatGPT or Claude: a conversational interface with text, voice, and file attachment support, conversation history, and iCloud sync across devices. Siri will draw on personal data (emails, messages, photos, calendar) and support third-party chatbot integrations including Claude and Gemini alongside the existing ChatGPT hook.
The internal "beta" designation tracks with a broader pattern: Apple has built significant Gemini model infrastructure underneath the new Siri (the multi-year Google deal costs roughly $1 billion per year) but knows the user-facing experience still has rough edges.3
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iOS 27 redesigns where notifications come from

A detail buried in Gurman's morning tweet thread: notifications in iOS 27 will slide in from the left side of the screen, not the top.4
The change is a direct consequence of the Siri redesign. In iOS 27, swiping down on the Dynamic Island area triggers the new "Search or Ask" interface tied to Siri — previously the gesture that opened Notification Center. To avoid a collision, Apple moves Notification Center access to a swipe down from the top-left corner of the screen. Notification Center moves; Control Center stays on the right.
The knock-on effect is the new left-side notification animation. It may be limited to iPhone 15 Pro and newer if "Search or Ask" ends up requiring an Apple Intelligence-capable device.
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iPhone Ultra: Touch ID, not Face ID

Multiple iPhones in a row
Multiple iPhones in a row
Apple's iPhone line — the Ultra foldable is expected alongside the iPhone 18 series in September 2026.
A 9to5Mac report from June 5 adds a notable hardware detail to what's known about the iPhone Ultra — Apple's foldable iPhone due in the fall.5
The foldable form factor apparently makes Face ID placement genuinely difficult: the front camera system that Face ID depends on doesn't map cleanly onto a device with a liquid metal hinge and a clamshell form. Touch ID — embedded in the power button, most likely — is Apple's solution.
This isn't surprising given what's already confirmed: Fixed Focus Digital placed the Ultra's liquid metal hinge in early June, carrier prototype testing was reported at the same time, and the device is still on track for September. A Touch ID power button would be consistent with earlier iPhone SE and iPad Air designs where Apple has already proven the mechanism at scale.
Credibility note: the Touch ID report is single-source at this stage. Treat it as probable but not yet corroborated.

No hardware at WWDC — what's waiting for fall

MacRumors' Friday summary confirmed the full picture of what Apple holds back from WWDC:6
  • Apple TV 4K (A17 Pro + N1 chip) and HomePod mini (S9, N1, red color option): hardware is done, but held until iOS 27 Siri reaches general public release in September.
  • AirPods with cameras: in advanced testing, not launching before fall 2026.
  • Smart home hub ("HomePad"): same — waiting on mature Siri.
  • Apple Glasses: still set for late 2027 per Gurman's earlier reports.
The pattern is consistent: anything that depends on the new Siri being stable and widely available waits for the fall software release, not the developer preview.
Mac updates are also unlikely at WWDC due to a global memory chip shortage affecting Mac mini and Mac Studio. Apple CEO Tim Cook has already flagged supply constraints.

Corroboration map

ClaimSource ASource BConfidence
New Siri labeled "beta" internallyGurman/BloombergMacRumors, 9to5Mac (same sourcing)High — single primary source (Gurman), widely syndicated
Possible Siri waitlist at launchGurman/BloombergMedium — speculative per Gurman's own framing
Notifications slide from leftGurman/Bloomberg tweetMacRumors write-upHigh — same single source, specific claim
iPhone Ultra uses Touch ID not Face ID9to5MacMedium — single source, unconfirmed
No hardware at WWDCMacRumorsConsistent with Gurman's earlier reportsHigh — aligned across multiple sources

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