Apple is about to let the broader public take iOS 26 for a spin. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman says the first public beta will drop “around Wednesday, 23 July,” lining up with the fourth developer build rather than the usual third—a two‑week slip Apple attributes to extra polishing of its headline feature set. When the download goes live, anyone enrolled in the free Beta Software Program will be able to install an update that folds Apple’s revamped interface, dubbed Liquid Glass, and the full Apple Intelligence tool‑kit into day‑to‑day iPhone use for the first time.
Apple Intelligence is the umbrella term for a suite of on‑device and cloud‑backed generative AI tricks: Live Translation pipes real‑time transcripts and AI voices into Phone and FaceTime calls; Writing Tools can automatically summarize, rewrite or expand text system‑wide; Genmoji and Image Playground let users mash emoji with short prompts to create sticker‑quality art; and Screenshot Sense can turn a captured boarding pass into a ready‑made Calendar entry. Power users will notice new Shortcuts actions that tap directly into Apple’s private Ajax language model, while a quieter Adaptive Power Mode throttles background tasks so older batteries survive the extra AI load.
Visually, Liquid Glass wraps icons, widgets and toolbars in a refractive, translucent layer that morphs with wallpaper colours and introduces a 3‑D lock‑screen effect on devices as far back as iPhone 12. Controls float on a “functional layer” above apps, and developers can summon secondary menu panes that expand or condense without forcing full‑screen context switches. The overhaul ships alongside smaller perks such as Polls in Messages, playlist folders in Apple Music, a Games launcher and the long‑rumoured Clear icon style that renders home‑screen tiles transparent for theme builders.
Compatibility is tighter than past releases. Apple Intelligence requires the A18‑class Neural Engine found in iPhone 16 Pro and newer, while entry‑level features like Live Translation and AI‑powered Shortcuts actions run only on those same models. Devices as old as iPhone 12 will still receive Liquid Glass and most UI changes, but some real‑time AI will be greyed out. Apple warns beta testers to back up before installing and to expect heavier battery drain until Adaptive Power Mode is fully tuned.
The public beta’s arrival also puts a pin in rumours that iOS 26 might skip a public test entirely; Gurman notes that Apple still plans a second wave of Apple‑Intelligence upgrades—including on‑device Genmoji creation without cloud calls—in a point update closer to the iPhone 17 launch this September. Meanwhile, whispers of iOS 27 have already surfaced, but for most users the chance to test Apple’s first AI‑native operating system is the headline. If Apple hits its target, devices enrolled in the program should see the over‑the‑air update button turn green by mid‑day Wednesday in California (late evening UK time), giving early adopters six to eight weeks to hunt bugs and weigh in before the polished build ships this fall alongside new iPhones.
With Google’s Android 16 already in public preview and Microsoft pushing weekly Copilot builds, Apple can ill‑afford another delay. A smooth beta next week would show that the company’s bigger‑than‑usual pause was worth it—and give millions of curious users their first hands‑on proof that “Apple Intelligence” is more than a marketing phrase.
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