Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - ChatGPT doubles down on healthcare, Google’s shopping and hardware push, and more
Episode Date: January 12, 2026Why did ChatGPT go all in on health.... twice? 🤔Did Google just silently win the week in AI with shopping and TVs? 🤔And is NVIDIA trying to be the new Tesla, but better? 🤔So many AI questions... to start 2026, and we've got AI answers. Join us LIVE as we break down the week's AI News That Matters. AI News that Matters:ChatGPT doubles down on healthcare, Google’s shopping and hardware push, NVIDIA’s big AI announcements and more -- An Everyday AI Chat with Jordan WilsonNewsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion on LinkedIn: Thoughts on this? Join the convo on LinkedIn and connect with other AI leaders.Upcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:Google Gemini AI Shopping IntegrationGemini Chatbot Instant Checkout FeatureNVIDIA Rubin Platform AI Chip LaunchAlphamaya Autonomous Vehicle Model UnveiledChatGPT Health Product for Medical DataChatGPT Healthcare Suite for HospitalsGoogle AI Inbox Preview for GmailGemini AI Assistant Features for Google TVMicrosoft AI Global Adoption ReportLG AI Home Robot Announcement at CESMeta Llama 4 Benchmarking ControversyAmazon Alexa Plus AI Web LaunchAnthropic Healthcare AI Features CompetitionEmerging AI Model Infrastructure TrendsConsumer AI Device Innovations at CESTimestamps:00:00 "Everyday AI: News that Matters"03:13 "Google Gemini Enables AI Shopping"06:39 "NVIDIA Unveils Rubin AI Platform"12:31 "ChatGPT Health Sparks Privacy Concerns"16:50 "AI Transforming Healthcare with Empathy"19:10 AI in Healthcare: Real-Time Revolution23:55 "Inbox Zero vs. Email Hoarding"26:09 Gemini Enhances Photos with AI28:56 "AI Adoption and Global Inequality"35:24 "Meta's AI Drama Unfolds"36:26 Meta Shifts and Alexa Plus42:11 "AI Advances and Market Shifts"44:17 "Subscribe, Rate, Join Inner Circle"Keywords:ChatGPT health, ChatGPT for healthcare, OpenAI healthcare, AI in medicine, Google Gemini, Gemini shopping tools, Google AI assistant, agentic checkout, instant checkout, Walmart GoogSend Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
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This is the Everyday AI Show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips.
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This was kind of a weird week in the AI world.
That's because even though there wasn't maybe one dominating AI news story like there usually is,
there were dozens, and I kid you not, dozens of noteworthy AI advancements, updates, and
controversies. Honestly, in a week, I haven't seen like this in a very long time. I mean,
we have much smarter TVs now powered by AI. You can chat with ALEXA online. I got to spell it out
in case you're watching. I mean, chat GPT got into health care in two very big ways. In
video change what's possible with AI. And there's Lama Drama at Meta. And that's just the tip of the
iceberg. All right. So we're going to be going over all of the AI news that matters in today's show.
Welcome to Everyday AI. What's going on, y'all? If you're new here, my name's Jordan and this is
Everyday AI. This is your daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter helping everyday business
leaders like you and me, not just keep up with all the AI advancements, but cut away the fluff,
cut away the marketing and focus on what really matters. And that's growing our companies and our
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to our website at your everyday AI.com, sign up for the free daily newsletter. We're going to be
recapping the highlights from today's show and a whole lot more. Also, in today's newsletter,
if you didn't already know, right, we've been quietly rolling this out to a select few. So we did
launch our new and updated prime, prime, prompt, polished chat, you bt course. It's been taken by more
than 15,000 people previously. So we just launched the brand new version in our inner circle community.
So if you want early access, make sure to go check out today's newsletter. I'm going to tell you
how to do it. All right. Enough chit chat. Let's get into the AI news that matters for the week.
Actually, I lie. I can chitch chat a little more. Live stream audience, what's up?
What's good to see everyone. Douglas, joining from Indian.
Minneapolis, Brian saying, good morning.
Heidi from Houston, Joe, joining from Fort Lauderdale.
I got to give the live stream people more shoutouts a little bit more here.
So thank you all for joining us.
Yeah, Marie saying, congrats to the Chicago Bears.
Yeah, if you're on the live stream, we're watching the video version, I had to do the
cheeky thing.
I'm from Chicago.
I had to wear my, my Bears holiday sweater, right?
Because the Bears beat the Packers.
I don't know.
everyone else did your uh did your NFL team win or lose i don't do it a lot right but pretty big deal
for the bears to beat the packers in the playoffs so i had to do the cheesy thing sorry all right
actual AI news let's go uh so google announced a major expansion of shopping tools into its
gemini chatbot aiming to let users search for products and complete purchases without
even leaving the chat so this was actually kind of some late
breaking news from the National Retail Federation's annual convention in New York, a major retail
industry event drawing about 40,000 attendees. So according to reports, Google is partnering with
some major retailers to get this kicked off, including Walmart, Shopify, Wayfair, and other
retailers to turn Gemini into both a shopping assistant and a virtual merchant. So there is a new
instant checkout feature that will allow customers to buy items directly.
inside the Gemini chat using payment methods linked to their Google accounts with PayPal
support expected to be added soon. Walmart said customers who link their Google and Walmart
accounts will receive product recommendations based on past purchases and items bought
through Gemini can be added to existing Walmart or Sam's Club online carts. Google said
the AI shopping features will initially be available only to U.S. users with international expansion
planned in the coming months.
So the move puts Google in direct competition with OpenAI and Amazon, as those companies
have rolled out similar features, although on a very limited scale, as everyone's trying
to race to bring a gentic checkout and a gentic shopping to large language models.
So OpenAI and Walmart announced a similar partnership in October, allowing Chad GPT users to
instantly buy most Walmart products.
However, at least within Chad TPT, I don't think the Open AI has really highlighted this feature.
It's actually, I wouldn't say hidden, but you have to really be looking for it to trigger this.
Where I think, I mean, we'll see.
But my thought is with Google, I mean, they're going to be pushing this front and center.
This is what they've been doing for a decade plus, at least heavily winning kind of the online top of funnel, you know, search for.
shopping. So this one to me is another signal, right? I don't know. I think the internet's going to
die, right? Think of all the things that we're doing over and over in every single big AI company,
right? Open AI, Anthropic, co-pilot, Google, everyone is bringing all of those day-to-day activities
that we use the internet for into chat pots, right? Things like connectors and apps, right? I find myself
more and more each day,
spending less time on the internet
and more time doing things
I used to do online in actual chatbot.
So this big announcement from Google,
the latest indicator that, yeah,
I think, yeah,
internet's going to die.
In some way, shape, or form, right?
How we've been using the internet for decades,
it's all moving into large language models,
which is why I've been pushing the concept
of AI operating systems for multiple years, y'all.
That's why you've got to listen to,
to keep up and stay ahead.
All right.
Our next, yeah, yeah, Dr.
Rossifaz says here,
if you know, you know, yeah, we keep you ahead.
All right.
Big news from Nvidia at CES.
So, Nvidia founder and CEO, Jensen Wong,
kicked off CES,
the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas
with a keynote and a series of announcements,
really kicking off NVIDIA's next wave of AI computing.
So Wong announced.
the Ruben platform, NVIDIA's first extreme code-signed six-chip AI platform, now in full production
and promising to cut AI token generation costs by 90% compared to previous platforms.
And that piece is huge because essentially if you use AI, there's a high likelihood unless
you're using Google Gemini that in some way, shape, or form, it is powered by NVIDIA's chips.
So the Rubin platform and promise to cut token generation by 90% could be pretty big news in terms of what's possible and also costs that big AI frontier labs have to pay on the front end.
So the Rubin platform features tightly integrated GPUs, CPUs, networking, storage and software all together designed to eliminate bottlenecks and accelerate AI development across industries.
Aside from the chips, maybe one of the biggest announcements from Nvidia is, well, they're kind of positioning themselves to be a Tesla competitor, maybe.
That's because Wong also introduced Alpamayo in Open Reasoning Model family aimed at advanced autonomous vehicle technology,
including the first open reasoning vision language action model for self-driving cars.
So that one in and of itself could be the biggest story of the week if it does pan out.
When we talk about, you know, Tesla in their autonomous driving, yes, it's finally here in certain areas.
But this is one of those things that we've been hearing about for, I don't know, at least 10 years.
And it's taken them that long to roll it out.
So, Nvidia ships fast.
They move fast.
They push the speed of AI.
So if you are a fan of, you.
you know, kind of autonomous driving, Alpamio, is a huge announcement.
So, Nvidia's other open AI models, they announced, train on its own supercomputers,
span across six different domains.
That's healthcare, climate science, robotics, embodied intelligence, reasoning, and
autonomous driving.
So, yeah, really, obviously, Nvidia putting AI absolutely everywhere they can.
The company also showcased live DGX Spark.
their desktop AI supercomputer, demonstrating personalized AI agents running locally and interacting
physically through robots.
So yeah, I was actually at the, it was at their NVIDIA CES show in March where they
announced the DGX Spark.
And then they did a live demo, which is really cool, right?
A legit supercomputer in the DGX Spark that used to take, I don't know, if you looked 10 years
ago, would have taken an entire data center to get.
that level of compute, now it's, you know, a small little, think of it, like a giant hockey puck,
right? The level of compute that you have in something like a DGX spark is absolutely bonkers.
Wong also revealed the first passenger car featuring the Alpamio technology that will hit the
U.S. this year in the Mercedes-Benz CLA following its five-star safety rating in Europe.
So, yeah, there was a whole lot more. Obviously, that InVDivya announced at,
CES and more on CES announcement in a bit. Yeah, Marie said, watch out Elon. Jensen is in the fast lane.
Absolutely. Right. And everything, if you don't know a lot about NVIDIA and you're like,
okay, Jordan, how could NVIDia like compete with Tesla, right? If Tesla's been doing this for a
decade and Tesla has millions of cars out on the road that are actively trading, how can a company
you like Nvidia. Well, Nvidia is actually powered the autonomous vehicle industry. Also, for a decade,
people just don't really know about this, right? Their chips, their software, it's all been in there.
So this is just their first official foray, right, slapping, you know, a new brand name on the
Alamo, right? Luckily, I get to talk to really smart people at Nvidia all the time. We have
partnership going back with them for a couple of years. And I've talked to some of their leaders
on the autonomous vehicle side. So they've been doing a,
ton in this space for a decade plus.
I don't think people just know.
So, you know, I saw a lot of chatter online.
People are like, oh, AlpaMiles, not going to do anything.
You know, this is Tesla and, you know, some of the other companies.
And I'm like, no, this is big, right?
Like, automatically, I think this makes Nvidia a top three name in the autonomous
vehicle space, right, especially with it going open source.
All right.
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Surprising update here. OpenAI has launched a new chat GPT health product in the US, allowing users to
share medical records and app data for personalized health advice. So more than 230 million
people have already asked apparently chat gpti health and well-being questions weekly making the launch
especially significant so yeah uh open a i came out with a report that said 230 million people were
already talking with chat gbt about health on a weekly basis so they are essentially spinning
off a new product or a new version of chat gpti that is targeted specifically for that so chat gpt health
Let's users upload data from apps like Apple Health, Peloton, and My FitnessPal, as well as your personal medical records to receive tailored responses.
So OpenAI says conversations in chat GPT health are stored separately from your other chats and will not be used to train its models.
Even if you're on a free plan, and let's say that even you have that feature toggled on for your normal chat GPT account by default.
OpenAI is saying that they will not train.
on chat GPT health data.
So privacy advocates, including those from the Center for Democracy and Technology,
warn that health data is highly sensitive and requires airtight safeguards because, yeah,
there's obviously been a decent amount of outcry about this new offering from OpenAI
and a lot of concerns that have been raised about firms collecting, sharing in using health
data, especially since U.S. companies set their own data rules and may not be bound by strict
privacy protections. So Chad GPT Health is currently only available to a small group of early users
in the U.S. as it launched with a wait list that's open for others interested in joining.
The feature has obviously not launched in a lot of other countries throughout the world
that have stricter privacy and data rules as it may not be totally allowed to run yet.
So as an example in the UK, Switzerland, in the European economic area, yeah, just because of stricter data protection regulations, not sure if this will launch in those areas or when.
So Open AI highlights enhanced privacy measures for chat chavit health.
And also in kind of related news, like literally a day after this, Anthropic also launched some health care record features, all right, intensifying their health care competition.
with OpenAI. So like I said, this is a separate, technically a completely separate product from
Open AI. So it's not like you're going to be in Chad GPT and use this, right, where it's like,
okay, well, now I'm going to scroll down and, you know, click this health button. It is a separate
offering altogether. So I believe you will be able to still use your same account, but it's in two,
lives in two separate silos, so to speak. So I did sign up for the wait list.
For me, if you listen to the show at all, I'm always like, here you go, big company.
Take all my data.
I don't care.
I know I'm in the minority there.
I know many of you probably aren't going to use this.
Let me know in the live stream, Spotify comments, whatever.
Let me know if you're going to use this or not or if we should pay attention to it more
as it does become more readily available.
All right.
In very related news, yeah, Open AI double down on health care this week.
that's because they announced chat GPT for health care.
So this is on the other side.
So chat GPT health is for, you know, consumers.
It's for all of us individuals.
But Open AI also announced a version of this for health care companies.
So OpenAI has launched a new suite of AI tools designed for health care enterprises aimed
at improving care quality and efficiency.
So the major announcement is chat GPT for.
healthcare, a dedicated workspace powered by the latest GPT-5 family of models and tested by doctors
in real-world clinical scenarios. Early adopters of the tool include major hospitals,
like Boston Children's Hospitals, Cedar Sinai Medical Center, Stanford Medicine, Children's Health,
and several others. So the platform is built for researchers, clinicians, and administrators,
offering integration with enterprise tools such as Microsoft SharePoint and templates for
common clinical documentation tasks like discharge summaries and patient instructions.
So chat GPT for healthcare claims to draw on millions of peer reviewed studies and
clinical guidelines provided cited responses to medical queries, but the company has not detailed
safeguards against AI generated errors or hallucinated sources.
So patient data and protected health information remain under the healthcare organizations control
with options for data residency, audit log.
customer managed encryption keys and HIPAA compliant business associates agreements.
So OpenAI says content shared with chat GPT for healthcare is also not used to train its
models addressing privacy and data security concerns.
The company has also released an API for healthcare, which is pretty big news,
allowing developers worldwide to embed the latest AI models,
including the very impressive GPT52 directly into healthcare apps and
workflows with eligible customers able to apply for HIPAA compliance agreements.
OpenAI reports that over 260 doctors from 60 countries have evaluated the GP2
GP-2 models performance in more than 600,000 clinical outputs across 30 focus areas.
No surprise here, right?
I don't think people believe me two years ago when some of the early studies came out,
uh, blind studies that showed patients,
preferred. Chat GBT GBT responses to doctors, at least when it came to Bentside Manor.
Right. Because people are always like, oh, you know, AI chatbots are fun and cute, but, you know,
they're not empathetic, right? So literally studies have shown that AI models are more empathetic
than doctors. Right. It's probably also because here in the U.S. doctors are extremely overworked,
right? Let's start there. You know, the last thing you probably want is, you know, a surgeon that's at the
tail end of their, you know, 14 hour shift, right? So I think that this is a very complex issue,
but I've been saying this for years. I'm like, it's going to be very common for doctors to use
chatypte. And I would want them to, right? And people are always like, oh no, absolutely not. That's
why you go see a human doctor, right? This has been, I don't know about you. This has been happening to me
for years, right? Maybe this is as the internet's gotten better. I don't know. But I remember,
five plus years ago that I would be sitting in a doctor's office and my doctor is just Googling things,
right? Maybe I don't know. Maybe I needed to go to a different doctor, right? But I mean, this has
been happening for a very long time. So people are always like, oh, no, chat chip, but he's not going to be in
healthcare. And I'm like, of course it is. And I think that most people, if you want high quality
care, you want your health care provider to be using chat chit in real time or Gemini in real time or
Claude in real time or co-pilot in real time or whatever it is, you just hope that they're
using the right model and they've gone through our free prime prompt polish course, right?
I had to get that in there because there's always, you know, there's a couple of viral instances
that, you know, chat ch tpt using doctors has gone or sorry, doctors using chat chbtee
has gone viral on the internet, right?
Someone taking photos and yeah, it spreads like wildfire.
But, you know, I'd always zoom in and be like, yeah, that doctor is using the free plan, right?
or, you know, this doctor's not using the right model.
They're not using a thinking model.
You don't want that.
So, yes, this is obviously exciting for what's possible
and hopefully providing better care for millions of the people around the world.
However, this does highlight just how important it is for everyone,
regardless of what you do, to understand how large language models work.
And I am continually flabbergasted at how no one understands large language models,
even though we've been using them almost daily now for three, four plus years.
Right.
It is absolutely bonkers to me that people still think large language models are a deterministic search engine.
And no one knows, oh, here, you got to do these three things before you get started or else you're kind of screwed, right?
That's why you should go take our free prime prompt polish course.
All right.
All right.
Speaking of AI, that is probably going to impact maybe billions of people.
So Google has introduced a new AI inbox preview for Gmail, which replaces the traditional list of emails with AI generated tutus and topics based on the content of your email.
So the feature, which I saw and I'm like, let's go.
This is amazing.
Huge bummer.
It's only in early testing right now.
And is only available to select trusted testers with no public release date yet.
that. Yes, I think everyone saw this from Google and everyone lost their minds and is like,
oh my gosh, this is literally the only thing everyone's wanted from AI for years. And then it's
like, oh, man, it's trusted testers only, right? Slow rollout. However, it looks absolutely amazing.
This is what I've been, you know, having a lot of my agents and agentic models do for me
anyways, right, with scheduled runs. So I'm excited to have this by default when it does roll out.
So AI inbox is designed to help users manage emails by summarizing messages into actionable items and topics to track,
linking directly to relevant emails for quick access.
So in its current form, AI inbox only works with consumer Gmail accounts, not workspace or business accounts,
limiting its usefulness for professionals with high email volumes.
All right.
Are you guys ready for a little trick on this?
I actually had a conversation that we're going to debut probably this week or next week
with the CEO of a very, very large company.
And we're chatting about this after the fact, right?
How there's all these great AI features, but sometimes, you know,
Google rolls them out to personal or, you know, consumer Gmail accounts and not workspace accounts.
You want to know the hack here.
But this is only if you're a small business owner, probably because you shouldn't be doing this.
for your company.
But one thing I do around this, right,
I forward all of my work email to my personal email.
I filter it and put it in a certain folder, right?
So then I can use all these features that are sometimes rolled out to personal
gmails first.
So yeah,
I'm excited to get AI inbox.
I don't have it yet.
Hopefully I'll get it soon.
So the AI system can surface archived conversations and older emails,
sometimes highlighting topics that user may not consider urgent or relevant.
So yeah, some early testers have showed that this is extremely promising,
but sometimes the feature pulls up older emails that may not be relevant anymore,
although it might be relevant to what someone is working on at the time.
So for organized users who already keep their inbox tidy and act quickly on emails,
the AI generated summaries may feel cluttered or unnecessary,
requiring more scrolling in attention than their current system.
This is one of those other reasons, FYI.
I know I feel like in general, email, there's two very different types of people.
There's people who are like AI, you know, inbox zero and either, you know, delete or archive everything.
And then there's people that never delete a single thing.
I'm obviously the latter.
I never delete a single thing, right?
I don't archive a single thing.
And I'm glad I didn't because a lot of the connectors that we use today, right?
So, uh, Claude has a great connector to Gmail and Outlook.
Obviously, chatypt has great connectors or now apps to Gmail and Outlook, right?
Because if you archive all those emails or delete them or if you're inbox zero and you really want to use like an AI tool to get historical insights and trends from your emails, right?
I don't know.
If you archive them, they can't find them in most cases because they can only select the inbox and certain folders.
So it's one of those times where, you know, maybe not being an inbox zero person might pay off.
if you do so much of your day-to-day work inside your inbox.
So I'm excited about this one,
but big bummer that the new AI inbox is for trusted testers only.
It's probably going to be a super slow rollout and only for personal g-mails for now.
All right.
Speaking of new Google announcements that could impact a lot of people,
Google announced and is rolling out a significant update,
uh, update to its Gemini AI assistance for Google.
TV. So the new Gemini update will first debut on TCL, Google TVs, with plans to expand to more
devices in the future. So the new Gemini update will offer comprehensive answers to questions,
now including images and videos alongside text, making information more accessible directly from
the TV screen. There's also a new deep dive feature that uses AI narration and interactive
visuals to help users explore complex topics in detail.
enhancing educational and research capabilities at home.
Users can also control simple TV settings by voice,
like change the brightness or the color tone, right,
just by using your voice, which is pretty cool,
allowing Gemini to automatically adjust screen brightness or audio levels
in response to common viewing annoyances,
such as dim screens or muffled dialogue.
Gemini also integrates this part's really cool
with Google Photos, enabling users to search
and display personal photos and albums on their TV by using their voice and apply a
apply AI powered filters using the photo remix feature.
The assistant can also generate images from scratch using Google's nanobanana image model
and also create short videos with Google VO.
And you can also use nanobanana and or to remix or create new versions of your own Google
photos, which is pretty cool, right?
I don't know.
Imagine, you know, chilling on the couch.
with your significant other and you have this and you can be like, you know,
where are we going to go on vacation?
Right.
And if you have some previous Google photos of, you know, you and your significant other
on vacation, you can use this remix feature powered by nano banana.
And be like, hey, show us on, you know, a tropical island here.
You know, show us in Iceland chasing the northern lights and you can see actual photos, right?
Really cool what the technology is capable of where, you know, even like two years ago,
we'd be like, oh, you can never do that.
Yeah, you can now.
All right.
Our next piece of AI news, a study.
Yeah.
We got to use our brains here on the show.
So a new report from the Microsoft AI Economy Institute reveals that generative AI is now the fastest spreading technology in history.
But its benefits remain unevenly distributed around the world.
This one I found extremely interesting.
So Microsoft's report found that generative AI has already reached more than 1.2 billion users.
globally in under three years with 16% of the world's population using these tools in the second
half of 2025 alone. So despite the U.S. and China building most of the world's AI data centers
and hosting 86% of the infrastructure, both countries, interestingly enough, lag in everyday
workforce adoption. So the U.S., this one, crazy. You would think the U.S. in terms of global
AI adoption when it comes to the workplace adoption would be fairly high.
They are 24th with only a 28% adoption rate, which is absolutely bonkers to me.
Right.
So the U.S. and China account for 86% of AI infrastructure buildouts.
Yet, the U.S. is not even in the top 20 in workplace adoption.
So who is number one?
That's the UAE, the United Arab Emirates.
the world with 64% of its workforce using generative AI, followed closely by Singapore at about 61%.
There's also a huge gap between high income in developing nations in growing with adoption rates in wealthier countries,
averaging out at about 25% compared to only 14% in what Microsoft calls the Global South.
So they highlighted this huge disparity between the global.
North, right, which is U.S., Canada, you know, EU, China, right, with the global south.
A lot of times considered, you know, South America, Africa, some other places.
So both geographically, you know, they found this pretty large divide between not just access to AI,
but AI use.
Another important finding that I thought is worth calling out, Chinese open source AI models like
Deepseek are rapidly gaining.
ground in specifically Africa, Russia, and Iran, offering affordable alternatives where Western
platforms are less accessible. Also, while the gender gap in consumer AI use has nearly disappeared,
the report found that men are still more likely than women to use AI for work tasks,
highlighting ongoing workplace inequality. All right. If you do want more on that study,
we're going to be sharing it in our newsletter. And this is one of those.
I think one of those studies every single year I take a look at, right?
There's hundreds of AI studies out there.
A lot of them aren't really good.
This one is one of the best.
So if you really want to have a good understanding of where, you know,
global AI is trending, where it's trending in the U.S.,
where it's trending in certain sectors, what you need to be taking a lookout for,
this report from Microsoft every year is one of the best.
All right.
Speaking of the best, the best of the best was on display at the consumer electronic show.
And this year, we all knew it was going to be AI, AI, AI,
shoving AI in the fridge.
There's actually an AI powered fridge that only works with your voice, right?
It won't even open, right?
Talk about, I don't know, to me, nightmare fuel, right?
Not being able to use appliances in your house without being forced to use a voice activated feature.
right anyways c s marked a major shift for a i as the focus moved from generative ai chatbots from the year
past uh to physically interacting with the world so i'm going to highlight here some of the bigger
a i announcements from some of the bigger companies uh so one of the bigger ones was lg's cloyd a mobile
home robot with articulated arms and advanced vision language a i capable of finally
folding laundry, loading the dishwasher, and fetching objects, making the zero labor home
a maybe future reality.
Nvidia kind of already referenced this, but they kind of shifted their focus away,
at least from an announcement point of view, from their GPUs to introducing the Ruben AI
platform in Vera CPU.
Also, AMD launched the Helios Rack scale platform for data centers.
the Ryzen AI 400 series for consumer devices.
Intel debuted Panther Lake Chips, the Core Ultra Series 3, focusing on power efficiency
and graphics for Next Generation AI enabled laptops using its new 18A manufactured process.
Robotics obviously stole the spotlight as they do normally at these types of shows with Hyundai
and Boston Dynamics showcasing the Atlas Robox integration Atlas Robots.
integration into smart digital factories.
And then in the smart home rivalry, LG's robot was demoed live, while Samsung's
badly once a leading concept was highly shelved, highlighting LG's lead in practical home
automation.
All right.
There's more, y'all.
I told you.
This week was jam-packed.
All right.
Our next piece of AI news, meta's outgoing chief AI scientist, Jan
Lacoon says the company, quote unquote, fudged a little bit when testing its latest Lama 4 models in a new Financial Times interview.
Spicy.
All right.
So, LeCoon revealed that Meta's researchers use different versions of the Lama 4 Maverick in Lama 4 Scout models on separate benchmarks instead of evaluating a single version across all tests.
And this practice is not standard in AI development and may have led to artificially improved results for Lama 4 in official benchmarks.
So yeah, this was kind of reported on.
So when Lama released their Lama 4 series of models, they did really, really well, like surprisingly well on all benchmarks.
And everyone was like, first of all, like, wow, look at these open source models that are now leading all these benchmarks.
And then a couple of days later, everyone was like, wait, is this real?
because when people were using them in practical scenarios,
they're like, these models aren't doing very well.
So at the time, it was kind of reported, yeah,
meta might have created a different version of Lama
that was overfitted or designed to just perform very well on benchmarks.
It was never confirmed.
And now here you go.
Jan Lacoon, one of the biggest names in AI ever,
coming out and saying, yeah, Meta kind of fudged on the model.
So, you know, as he starts his own startup,
But interestingly enough, stirring up a little controversy on the way out.
So Meta's leadership has denied releasing different models, blaming performance
discrepancy on variations in cloud infrastructure.
So the benchmarks controversy fueled internal frustration in eroded confidence among
meta's leadership, including CEO Mark Zuckerberg, according to reports.
So in June, Zuckerberg restructured Metas AI division.
creating meta super intelligence labs or MSL and bringing in scale AI co-founder Alexander Wang to lead the group.
So meta paid about $14 billion for a 49% stake in scale AI.
But according to Lacoon, Wang was young and inexperienced in research, which for him raised concerns about meta's future direction in AI development.
nothing like some baby llama mama drama to start the new year off right and it's going to be
really interesting to me to see how meta responds not just to this controversy right but meta had
been on a fairly we'll say quote unquote normal release schedule with their llama models but they've been
silent absolutely silent since i believe it was april or may when they announced announced
for and they didn't even come out with the biggest variation that they announced at the time.
So essentially, meta blew the whole thing up.
And we've been seeing a lot of reports about what they're doing next, right?
All these code names, the avocado and mango.
And we heard that they're going to be competing directly with like Google's nano banana pro and all these different things.
So I'm personally very excited to see how meta responds, not just to this controversy, not just to the now what, like eight.
nine month gap in model releases, which for AI Frontier Labs is like a decade, but also there's
been reports that meta is going to potentially shift away from the open source strategy and go
to proprietary models. All right. Speaking of proprietary models that people may or may not use,
Amazon is getting into the consumer chatbot game as they've officially launched a browser-based
version of its Alexa Plus assistant. So, uh, uh,
Amazon announced that the Alexa Plus website is now live for select users.
So you can go to Alexa.com, allowing them to chat with Alexa Plus directly from their browser for the first time.
So the new Alexa.com platform is designed only for Alexa Plus users who must join a wait list or own newer Amazon devices to get access.
So Alexa Plus is Amazon's revamped AI assistant, which first debuted in February 2020.
and is still in early access mode.
So with the new website, right, so Amazon may be in the long run looking to compete with chat chbtee here.
Users can ask questions, explore complex topics, create content, plan trips, get homework help,
all the stuff you can normally do with large language models, all within the browser chat window.
So previously, Alexa Plus was only available on mobile apps or certain echo devices,
not being able to not accessible on the web.
Amazon says tens of millions of users now have access to Alexa Plus,
but the company is still gradually rolling out the services.
And let me be honest, it's a good thing they're doing this gradually because I'm going to say this.
And maybe this is because I think Google Gemini and their Gemini Live is just so much better.
Right.
And I really wish that opening I would update the model of their advanced mode, of their previously advanced voice mode.
which is their voice mode.
Because I think when this came out,
Open AI was the best, right?
Their advanced voice mode was the best.
But they haven't updated the engine running it.
It's still running on a version of GBT4O.
So I don't know, at least for me personally,
I hate talking with the voice mode from Open AI.
I hope they update that because it could be really good.
I think Google Gemini Live is running away in the AI voice category.
Because if you have used Alexa,
Plus, right?
I got access to it.
It's terrible.
It's terrible, right?
Yes, it can provide better responses than the traditional Alexa, but reports are it's powered
by infographics models, which are really good.
But I don't know, for whatever reason on the implementation, it's slow, it's clunky,
it gets the majority of everything wrong.
And some of the things that you might use Alexa for on an ongoing basis, like, I don't
know, time, direction, weather's.
Now, there's a very annoying.
Sometimes three, four, five second delay, right?
Asking for the time.
Asking for the weather.
Literally, sometimes at three to five second delay, which is bonkers, right?
So I don't know.
At least for me, I'm not super bullish on Amazon competing with chat chippy T on the web.
And I'm also, at least with my own personal use in the home, not super excited for Alexa Plus.
I really thought it was going to be great.
but for me pretty bad.
All right.
That's all the big AI news stories.
Now let's go into a quick bullet point version.
This is funny from, from Douglas.
Hey, Douglas said here on the live stream, Amazon announces Alexa Plus AI and the crowd goes mild.
I've never heard that.
That's so good.
Crowd goes mild.
All right.
So like I said, this week, I kid you not.
I always go through all the AI news and I do this.
manually, because I'd like to use my brain and think about it.
But I usually go over the top eight to 10 news stories every week in our monthly,
or sorry, in our weekly news segment on Mondays.
And usually I get a list of like 15 stories and then I pair it down to the top 10,
right?
I'm like, okay, these are the top 10 stories.
These are the ones that we're going to spend time on.
This week, my list was 30.
I had 30 stories that I'm like, these could all be top stories.
All right.
So the what's new and what's next bullet points here at the end.
A lot of these are pretty big, FYI.
All right.
So let's go through them very quickly.
The what's new and what's next.
So Microsoft's co-pilot now supports native checkout with PayPal.
GROX AI image generator has been temporarily restricted after sexualized deepfakes.
XAI raised $20 billion for GROC and their supercomputing networks.
OpenAI is reportedly asking contractors to share actual work outputs and deliverables
from previous jobs when they onboard with the company.
That's wild.
Alliance had partnered with Anthropic.
OpenAI acquired Convogo, a data automation platform.
Meta has postponed the global release of its rayband display smart glasses,
originally planned for early 2026 because reportedly the U.S. demand was too high and it caused
inventory shortages.
China launched a regulatory probe in a Metis AI acquisition of Manus.
Lenovo introduced Queera, I believe it's Cura, Quira, a new cross-device AI assistant at CES,
2026.
A similar web released its first global AI tracker of 2026 that showed Gemini had the 20% market share after being at only 5% a year ago, mainly eating into chat GPUT share.
Although OpenAI's share is still technically growing, their slice of the pie is just getting smaller, but the pie is getting exponentially larger.
Boston Dynamics announced a new AI powered version of its Atlas humanoid.
that's way more flexible and way stronger.
Leaks show that OpenAI is developing a new AI agent focused on careers called jobs.
Google launched flight deal where Gemini will find you flight deals based on a prompt.
Reports show that Claude's upcoming task mode will include integrations with calendar, Slack,
Salesforce, Asana, and more.
So yeah, we've seen this report from testing catalog a couple of times that Claude is,
working on kind of a task or an agent mode in their front end chat bot.
All right.
XAI is going to soon introduce rock build, a vibe coding platform.
GBT2 codex max may be slowly rolling out according to leaks.
Benchmarking site, Alam Arena raised $150 million.
And last but not least, Anthropic is reportedly raising another $10 million.
My gosh, there was so much, so much impactful and important AI news this week.
I know this one was a little longer, but that's just the reality.
If you want to keep up, sometimes you might got to sit through 44 minutes of AI news
and a little bit of my needless banter.
So thanks for putting up with that as well.
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