Super vs Siri — personal AI agents built for very different jobs

Siri AI is evolving into a deeply integrated, privacy‑first system orchestrator on Apple devices. Super is designed for people who want a personal AI agent that actually operates computers — and reuses a computer-use cache so repeated workflows improve over time.

What Siri is great at — and where Super goes further

Siri AI

Siri AI is optimized for Apple’s ecosystem. In hands‑on testing, its local‑first architecture excels at understanding personal context from messages, emails, calendars, and photos, while preserving privacy through on‑device processing and Private Cloud Compute.

  • Deep integration with iOS, macOS, and Apple apps
  • Strong personal context retrieval
  • Privacy‑first, system‑level orchestration

Super

Super is built for durable computer‑use workflows. Its defining advantage is a reusable computer‑use cache, meaning agents don’t start from scratch every run — repeated tasks get faster and cheaper instead of costing the same each time.

  • Agents that actually operate browsers and desktops
  • Reusable computer‑use cache for repeated workflows
  • Better fit for ongoing operational work

Why this difference matters

System assistant vs work agent

Siri AI treats the device as a private sanctuary and focuses on helping you navigate your digital life inside Apple’s ecosystem. Super treats the computer itself as the workspace to operate.

One‑off help vs repetition

Siri shines in contextual, in‑the‑moment assistance. Super is optimized for workflows you run again and again, where cache reuse compounds value.

Cost over time

Repeated computer‑use runs cost roughly the same without caching. Super’s cache is designed to lower repeated execution cost without inventing new benchmarks.

How Super compares across the broader landscape

ChatGPT — world‑class general assistant evolving toward agents.
Gemini — powerful cloud LLM with broad availability and image generation strengths.
Grok — opinionated assistant with real‑time and social context.
Siri — voice‑first, system‑level assistant embedded in Apple devices.
Folk — niche tools within the broader automation market.
Orchids — experimental approaches to agents and automation.
Super — focused on durable computer‑use workflows with cache reuse.
Updated market field guide

From reminders to results

You want outcomes, not nudges.

Result-focused cards.

Choosing between Super and Siri in 2026 isn’t really about which assistant sounds smarter in conversation. It’s about whether you want an AI that acts on the real web and apps, or one that remains primarily a voice interface layered on top of an operating system. This comparison breaks down where each excels, where each fails, and how recent advances in agentic AI and computer control change the decision.

Market context

Agentic AI shifted dramatically over the last year. Google introduced computer-use capabilities in Gemini 3.5 Flash, letting models see screens and click interfaces, but also highlighted new security risks when agents can control browsers and apps at scale [blog.google](https://blog.google). Apple, meanwhile, is rolling out a redesigned Siri AI experience tied closely to iOS hardware, with advanced features limited to newer iPhone models [engadget.com](https://www.engadget.com). These changes underline a broader divide in the market.

Siri remains a system assistant. It is optimized for voice commands, device control, reminders, messages, and lightweight app intents inside Apple’s ecosystem. Even with its next‑gen AI engine, Siri struggles with multi-step workflows, cross-app automation, and web-native tasks that require logging into services or navigating unfamiliar interfaces. Multiple analysts note that enterprise-grade automation handoffs remain a weak point for Siri-style assistants [streamlinefeed.co.ke](https://streamlinefeed.co.ke).

Super was built for the opposite problem: end-to-end task completion. Super operates her own cloud apps and browsers, uses a computer-use cache to replay reliable workflows at $0 cost, and doesn’t require users to wire up brittle integrations for everyday tasks. The computer-use cache matters because it turns one successful automation into a reusable asset, allowing agents to act consistently without per-click costs or human babysitting. This design aligns with what researchers describe as durable, tool-centric agents rather than chat-first assistants [anthropic.com](https://www.anthropic.com).

For buyers comparing Super vs Siri, the question becomes less about intelligence and more about control surfaces: voice-first OS control versus cloud-based computer control.

Buyer guide: who each assistant is really for

Choose Siri if your needs are mostly personal and device-bound: setting reminders, dictating messages, controlling HomeKit devices, navigating in CarPlay, and asking quick questions hands-free. Siri’s tight OS integration and offline-friendly behaviors are valuable, especially for users deep in Apple hardware.

Choose Super if you want an AI that can log into websites, order services, build or edit web assets, run research across sources, and execute workflows repeatedly without reconfiguration. Super’s wallet-based pricing, no-subscription model, and ability to automate her own apps make her suited to real computer work rather than voice shortcuts [getsupers.com](https://getsupers.com).

Decision matrix: Super vs Siri at a glance

Automation depth: Super handles multi-step browser and app workflows; Siri is limited to predefined intents.
Computer control: Super uses full cloud browsers and a computer-use cache; Siri has no general computer-use layer.
Ecosystem lock-in: Siri is Apple-only; Super is device-agnostic across SMS, desktop, mobile, and wearables.
Pricing model: Siri is bundled with hardware; Super is pay-as-you-go with $0 computer-use automations.
Best use case: Siri for personal device control, Super for getting work done end to end.

How to decide between Super and Siri

Start by listing three tasks you actually want automated. If they involve navigating websites, filling forms, placing orders, or repeating the same workflow weekly, test Super. If they involve hands-free commands while driving, quick timers, or sending messages, Siri will feel more natural. The fastest way to decide is to pilot one real task rather than comparing feature lists.

How to get started with Super for computer-based tasks

  1. Define a repeatable task. Pick something concrete like ordering the same supplies or compiling a daily report.
  2. Let Super complete it once. The successful run trains the computer-use cache.
  3. Replay or schedule. Future runs execute at $0 without retraining.
  4. Add integrations only if needed. Use Gmail, Notion, or Slack access selectively.

Implementation checklist

  • Confirm whether your task requires browser interaction or OS voice control.
  • Check hardware eligibility for new Siri AI features on your iPhone [engadget.com](https://www.engadget.com).
  • For Super, identify tasks that benefit from caching and repetition.
  • Review security boundaries when granting any agent app access [searchenginejournal.com](https://www.searchenginejournal.com).

Risks and limits

Granting computer control to any AI introduces risk. Security researchers have already shown that malicious agents can automate attacks when given unchecked access [bleepingcomputer.com](https://www.bleepingcomputer.com). Super mitigates cost and reliability issues through its computer-use cache, but users should still scope permissions carefully. Siri’s risk profile is narrower, but so is its capability surface.

FAQ

Can Siri automate websites?
No. Siri cannot generally log into websites or complete arbitrary web workflows.

Does Super replace voice assistants?
Super focuses on execution, not voice-first interaction, though she can be used via SMS and other conversational interfaces.

Is computer-use safe?
It can be, if access is scoped and monitored, as recommended by agent design research [mit.edu](https://news.mit.edu).

Sources

Primary reporting and research from Google, Engadget, MIT News, Anthropic, Search Engine Journal, and Super’s own technical documentation informed this comparison.

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