Apple Leaks Digest — May 6, 2026: iOS 27 Opens Siri to Rival AIs, Apple Courts Intel and Samsung for US Chips

Mark Gurman delivered two major Bloomberg scoops in one day: iOS 27 will let users swap in ChatGPT, Gemini, or Claude for Apple Intelligence features — the first time Apple has opened core OS-level AI to outside providers — and Apple is exploring Intel and Samsung as US chip foundry alternatives to TSMC. Tata Electronics hit 75,000 employees in India, surpassing Foxconn as Apple's largest contract manufacturer by headcount. The rest of the leaker ecosystem was quiet for this cycle.

Gurman filed twice in one day. That alone tells you this was a signal-dense cycle. The iOS 27 AI model story is the bigger one — it's a structural change in how Apple thinks about intelligence at the OS level. The chip story has been building since May 1; today's report added concrete operational detail that makes it read less like hedging and more like a plan.
The rest of the tracked leaker ecosystem — Kuo, Pu, Ross Young, Majin Bu, UniverseIce — was silent. No new supply chain leaks, no regulatory filings, no beta code strings. Three items worth your attention this cycle; one to keep on the radar with caveats.

iOS 27: Apple opens Siri to ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude

ChatGPT on iPhone — the AI competition Apple is inviting inside iOS 27
ChatGPT on iPhone — the AI competition Apple is inviting inside iOS 27
Image: Pexels / Sanket Mishra
Apple will let users choose which AI model powers Apple Intelligence in iOS 27, iPadOS 27, and macOS 271. The three confirmed third-party options are ChatGPT (OpenAI), Gemini (Google), and Claude (Anthropic). The feature covers Siri, Writing Tools, and Image Playground.
Internally, Apple is calling this system "Extensions." The mechanics are straightforward: install a compatible AI app from the App Store, configure your preferred model in system settings, and Apple's intelligence layer routes requests accordingly. Siri and third-party AI assistants will use distinct voices so you know which you're talking to. A dedicated App Store section will surface compatible models. Apple has been testing the system with Google and Anthropic since at least March 20261.
Gurman's report is based on people with knowledge of the matter, and the claim has been independently covered across The Verge, Engadget, 9to5Mac, and Digital Trends — all describing the same model names and feature scope.
The strategic shift here is real. Apple has spent three years treating Apple Intelligence as a walled garden where its own models were the only option. Letting ChatGPT and Gemini operate at the OS level — inside Siri, inside Writing Tools — is the kind of concession that doesn't get reversed. The framing Apple will use at WWDC (June 8–12) will be about user choice, but the competitive pressure from Google's Android AI integrations is the more obvious driver.

Apple explores Intel and Samsung for US chip manufacturing

Golden microprocessor chip — Apple is evaluating Intel and Samsung as TSMC alternatives
Golden microprocessor chip — Apple is evaluating Intel and Samsung as TSMC alternatives
Image: Pexels / Jeremy Waterhouse
Apple has held exploratory discussions with Intel about chipmaking services and sent executives to tour Samsung's under-construction fab in Taylor, Texas2. No orders have been placed. Intel's stock jumped more than 10% on the Bloomberg report.
The supply context matters here. Tim Cook has said publicly that TSMC's advanced-node capacity is the primary constraint on iPhone output, and Mac mini and Mac Studio supply is constrained by "several months"3. The specific process node Apple is evaluating at Intel is 18A-P, per TrendForce4, which would be used for M-series Mac chips rather than iPhone SoCs. There's relevant context on the Samsung side too: Apple and Samsung announced a partnership in August 2025 for image sensor co-development at Samsung's Austin fab — so this isn't Apple's first conversation with Samsung about US manufacturing.
Apple has concerns about non-TSMC process technology, and these discussions remain preliminary2. But when Gurman, Ian King, and Ryan Gould co-author a Bloomberg piece and TrendForce independently adds a specific process node, "exploratory" starts to carry some weight.

Tata Electronics hits 75,000 employees in India

Tata Electronics has expanded its India workforce to 75,000, up from roughly 15,000 in 2023, surpassing Foxconn as Apple's largest contract manufacturer in India by headcount56. The 500-acre Hosur campus in Tamil Nadu is the core hub. Tata's stated long-term goal is a $30 billion semiconductor business covering chip manufacturing, advanced packaging, and electronics services — meaning it's positioning for something well beyond iPhone assembly.
This is the fifth consecutive week this channel has tracked Tata India progress. The trajectory is now steep enough to matter: five times the headcount in two years puts Tata in a structurally different position in Apple's supply chain than it held at the start of 2024.

iPhone 18 delay: new supply chain corroboration

Chinese Weibo leaker "Fixed Focus Digital" reports Apple is extending iPhone 17 production beyond its normal cycle and expanding capacity at existing facilities — a move typically seen when a successor is running late7. The inference: base iPhone 18 delayed to spring 2027.
This is a single-source Chinese leaker with an unclear track record. The reason it's here is that it corroborates the multi-source delay narrative already established by Jeff Pu and Ming-Chi Kuo in earlier cycles. Production extension is a new operational data point, not just another pundit echoing the same conclusion. Treat it as supporting evidence, not standalone confirmation.

What else came out of 9to5Mac's iOS 27 roundup

9to5Mac published a seven-features iOS 27 roundup on May 5 that's worth skimming8. Four items hadn't made it into this digest's prior coverage: Photos AI editing tools (Extend, Enhance, Reframe), Health app coaching videos (free tier), keyboard autocorrect with word replacement suggestions, and Safari auto-naming for Tab Groups. All four trace back to prior Gurman reports rather than independent sourcing. Not new ground, but useful consolidation ahead of WWDC.

Leaker tracker: all quiet

No new leaks from Ming-Chi Kuo (Medium last updated March 2026), Jeff Pu (Facebook page inaccessible, no GF Securities research detected), Ross Young / DSCC, Majin Bu, or UniverseIce (who tweeted Samsung One UI content only). Regulatory and firmware channels — FCC OET, Bluetooth SIG, iOS beta code strings — were silent for the tenth consecutive cycle.
The day's signal was concentrated entirely in Gurman's output. That's two scoops in one filing window, which is unusual even for him. WWDC in five weeks is likely accelerating the information pace — expect more from the same direction before June 8.

Cover image: Pexels / Sanket Mishra (pexels.com)

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