iOS 26 Beta 4 Is Here And Apple is Giving AI Summaries Another Shot

Apple's new update brings shimmer, splash, and a second chance for its AI to get the news right.

Nkeiru Ezekwere
4 Min Read

Let’s talk about Apple’s fourth developer beta 4 of iOS 26, which just dropped,and yes, it has a few new tricks.

Most of the changes are subtle, like tweaks to the Liquid Glass redesign that make your screen look like it belongs on a sci-fi set. But the real headline? AI-powered notification summaries for news are back, even after Apple had to pull them off the shelf earlier this year for, well, totally messing one up.

Before we dive into that, here is the quick backstory: this is a developer beta, meaning it is mainly for app developers to test their stuff before the real-deal public release. But the public beta is coming any minute now (probably this week), so this version gives us a solid preview of what your iPhone might be doing very soon, if you like living on the beta edge.

Related: VSCO’s New iPhone Camera App Is a Film-Lover’s Dream, and it’s Finally Global.

So, What is New in Beta 4?

  • New welcome screens. When you update, your iPhone now says “hello” with splashy intro pages. These aren’t just fluff; they walk you through changes to Siri, the AI notification summaries, and the overhauled Camera app.
  • AI News Summaries Return (With a Disclaimer). Remember when Apple’s AI summarized a BBC headline so poorly that it accidentally told the world someone had died when they very much had not? That was awkward. Apple pulled the feature, promised to fix it, and now it is back, with an asterisk.
    There’s now a clear warning: “Summarization may change the meaning of the original headlines.”
    Translation: Don’t blame us if the AI has a flair for drama. Verify the info, folks.
  • Liquid Glass Gets Shinier (Again). Apple’s ongoing visual experiment continues. Beta 3 toned things down, but Beta 4 brings the gloss back. Notifications now get a dynamic tint when you scroll, and apps like Music, Photos, Weather, and the App Store have been subtly re-polished. You probably won’t notice unless you’re staring hard, but that is the beta tester lifestyle.

There is also the usual sprinkling of under-the-hood performance tweaks and bug fixes. (Though Apple had not posted the official release notes at the time of writing, so there’s still stuff hiding under the hood.)

And it’s not just iPhones getting attention. Apple also dropped Beta 4s for everything else in its tech zoo: iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, tvOS, visionOS (yes, the headset), and even Xcode for developers. Everybody’s invited to the beta party.

Apple is bringing AI summaries back from the dead, but it’s doing it carefully, and with a giant “read at your own risk” sign attached. Combine that with a shinier UI and the usual round of stability upgrades, and iOS 26 is shaping up to be Apple’s most “transparent” update yet, literally and metaphorically.

But here’s the real question:
Can Apple get us to trust AI headlines again, or is it one glitch away from becoming a meme?

Share This Article