These three student-built iPhone apps show how Apple’s AI and 3D tools are shaping real apps

Apple’s Swift Student Challenge usually highlights winners. This year, the more useful signal is what students chose to build. The strongest ideas align directly with Apple’s push into on-device AI, accessibility, and immersive design.

Here are three projects that capture that shift clearly.

A student app shows how voice and AI can replace touch in everyday apps

Teddy, created by UC Santa Cruz student Morris Richman, turns spoken commands into camera actions using Apple’s Foundation Models and speech APIs.

The problem is straightforward. Many accessibility tools depend on gestures and memory. Teddy removes that layer. You speak, the app takes the photo. For users with motor or cognitive challenges, this makes the camera usable without learning complex controls.

The project is available in TestFlight and open source.

Another project treats screen time as something to control in the moment, not review later

ActivTimer, built with SwiftUI, monitors how long you stay on your phone and triggers alerts that push you to move or reset.

Most apps show usage later. ActivTimer interrupts usage as it happens. That shift turns screen time into something you manage actively instead of reviewing after the fact.

The app is not on the App Store, but its source code is public.

A 3D narrative app shows how iPhone interfaces are becoming immersive experiences

Write: A Literary Journey by Victoria Ali asks you to solve puzzles to reconstruct the lives of influential female authors.

It opens inside a 3D environment built with SceneKit and custom models. The interface is part of the experience, not just a wrapper. This shows how Apple’s tools now support immersive app design without heavy complexity.

The project also serves as a tribute to the developer’s grandmother, giving the experience a clear direction.

Together, these apps point to Apple’s shift toward AI-driven interaction and immersive design

Across these projects, the direction is consistent.

Developers are using on-device AI to simplify interaction, building apps that act in real time, and designing interfaces as experiences instead of static screens.

That alignment with Apple’s current tooling is what makes these projects worth paying attention to, even without an official win.

Ravi Teja KNTS

Written by

Ravi Teja KNTS

I’ve been writing about tech for over 5 years, with 1000+ articles published so far. From iPhones and MacBooks to Android phones and AI tools, I’ve always enjoyed turning complicated features into simple, jargon-free guides. Recently, I switched sides and joined the Apple camp. Whether you want to try out new features, catch up on the latest news, or tweak your Apple devices, I’m here to help you get the most out of your tech.

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