Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - Claude Opus 4.5 drops, U.S. government makes bold AI move and ChatGPT ads landing soon? And More AI News that Matters
Episode Date: December 1, 2025Claude Opus 4.5 has entered the Chat. 🗣️A week after OpenAI, Grok and Google released their most powerful AI models to date, Anthropic joined the party with their major drop in Claude Opus 4.5. ...But that probably wasn't even the biggest AI news of the week. That's because OpenAI isn't just building AI hardware that can hear/know everything, they're reportedly close to launching ads in ChatGPT soon that can take advantage of all that user data. Don't spend hours a week trying to keep up with AI news. That's what we do. And on Monday, we bring you the weekly AI News That Matters -- your one-stop shop for being the smartest in AI at your company. Claude Opus 4.5 drops, U.S. government makes bold AI move and Ads may be on their way to ChatGPT and more -- An Everyday AI ChatNewsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion:Thoughts on this? Join the convo and connect with other AI leaders on LinkedIn.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:OpenAI Unveils Jaw Dropping AI HardwareOpenAI’s Consumer Device vs. Apple PlansUS Government Launches Genesis AI MissionFederal Supercomputing AI Platform InitiativeNVIDIA Defends AI Chip Market LeadershipMeta Eyes Google TPU Data Center SwitchOpenAI Rolls Out ChatGPT Shopping AssistantChatGPT Shopping Feature Uses GPT 5.1 MiniAmazon $50B AI Cloud Infrastructure ExpansionClaude Opus 4.5: Anthropic’s Latest ModelClaude Opus 4.5 Coding Benchmark ResultsAI Model Cost and API ImprovementsOpenAI Prepares ChatGPT Ads for Free UsersChatGPT Ad Monetization Strategy and LeakGoogle Gemini 3 Pro vs. OpenAI ModelsTimestamps:00:00 OpenAI's First AI Hardware Prototype06:04 "US Launches AI-Powered Genesis Mission"09:33 NVIDIA Defends AI Chip Dominance13:44 "ChatGPT Launches Shopping Feature"15:14 AI-Powered Shopping Research Insights19:09 "AI Advancements in AWS Partnership"23:41 "AI Model Comparisons and Uses"27:50 "AI, Privacy, and Advertising Potential"30:42 Tech Updates: AI & Browser Advances33:23 "Everyday AI: Stay Connected"Send 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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A week after OpenAI, GROC, and Google all released their most powerful AI models to date.
Anthropic followed suit with Claude Opus 4.5.
But that might not even be the biggest AI news of the week.
That's because OpenAI was busy making headlines on AI hardware and potentially ads in chat GPT,
while even the federal government is throwing its hat in the ring on trying to create AI breakthroughs.
So maybe you were in a little bit of a turkey coma this week over Thanksgiving holiday.
And you miss some of these AI news headlines.
Don't worry, I'm going to be getting you caught up today on Everyday AI.
What's going on, y'all?
Welcome to Everyday AI.
My name is Jordan Moulson.
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We're going to be not just recapping today's show going over the AI news, but keeping you up
to date with everything else that's happening today. So if you are brand new here, maybe listening
for the first time. Most Mondays, we do this AI News That Matters segment. So you don't have to waste
hours every single day trying to play with new tools or trying to see, you know, who dropped what model.
That's what we do. So join us on Mondays as we bring you the AI News That Matters. Most Tuesdays,
we do hot take Tuesday. Wednesday, we do AI work on Wednesdays, kind of a hand-on, hands-on kind of
of demo. And then usually Thursday and Fridays, we do interviews. So let's get into the big AI news
that matters this week.
If I sound a little hoarse, it's because I am.
Feeling a little bit under the weather, but AI news doesn't take a day off.
And, well, I guess I don't either.
All right.
First, hardware?
Open AI?
Yeah.
So Open AI CEO, Sam Altman says OpenAI is finally finished its first AI hardware prototypes and called
them jaw dropping good in a discussion hosted by Emerson Collective and reported by CNBC.
So, reportedly, the new AI prototypes from Open AI are the first big step since OpenAI bought Johnny Ives startup I.O for $6.4 billion in equity back in May, signaling OpenAIs serious push into AI-powered consumer devices.
Altman would not say what the actual device is, just that it was jaw-dropping good, but said it aims for a calmer experience than smartphones, comparing phones to walking through noisy,
Times Square and his vision to quietly sitting in a cabin by lake.
Altman said the device would look over long periods, filter out distractions,
and only notified users what really matters, potentially knowing everything you've ever
thought about, read and or set, which obviously raises a lot of personalization and privacy
tradeoffs and well, maybe more on some of this data collection here later in the show.
So Johnny Ives, the former Apple Design
Chief is now leading the hardware push for Open AI said he expects the device to be revealed
within two years while warning the hardware development is unpredictable.
So according to reports, the project is being watched closely because a successful open
AI device could pressure Apple, which has delayed major Siri upgrades to 2026 and has yet
to launch an AI focus device design.
Open AI also recently announced a deal with Foxcon, which is Apple's major hardware supplier,
to build AI infrastructure in the U.S., which deepens its hardware ties.
So it's going to be interesting what this device is.
A lot of people said it's calling it a third device, so it's not a phone.
It's not a laptop.
A lot of people have speculated that it's more of a small puck type thing that you would put
into your pocket and it would just hear everything that goes on.
What's interesting here is kind of this nod to also anything you've ever thought about.
Right.
So obviously, I don't think most people are assuming that this is a neural link type device,
but that's interesting.
So maybe it's just something, a small thing that you would put in your pocket and, you know,
kind of records every single conversation that goes on, maybe, which would obviously have
a lot of privacy implications.
or something that you could just, you know, talk to at any time, right?
So almost like a chat GPT in your pocket, but you can just, you know, talk through problems
of your day, et cetera, save, you know, to-dos for later.
Not sure.
But regardless, we've covered on the show a lot over the past couple of weeks.
The amount of hires that Open AI specifically has kind of swiped away from Apple.
Reports have said dozens of Apple.
AI hardware leaders have left Apple and have joined Open AI.
So regardless, it's whatever it is, it's either going to be, I think, a huge hit or a huge
flop, right?
Open AI obviously has fundamentally changed the way that the everyday person interacts with
technology because of chat GPT and large language models.
So I would assume that Open AI is going for a big swing here with whatever their AI hardware
device is.
Speaking of big swings, the federal government is making one.
So U.S. President Donald Trump has signed a new executive order creating the Genesis
mission, a large-scale federal push from the U.S. to use AI and supercomputers, specifically
to speed up scientific discovery.
So this new initiative directs the Department of Energy in its 17 national labs to build an
integrated AI platform that connects their current and future supercomputers,
aiming to cut research timelines in areas like health, energy, and engineering from years to
days or maybe even hours. So this new centralized AI platform is designed to analyze
massive federal, university, and private sector data sets into automate tasks like
experiment design, advanced simulations, and predictive modeling. So the administration says,
the most visible impact could come in health care, where faster AI-driven research could help
develop new therapies for serious diseases that are currently often fatal, potentially changing
treatment options within the next five years. The White House says private companies,
including Nvidia and Dell, have already shown interest in contributing AI super competing capacity,
indicating that this mission could further tighten the link between government labs and leading
tech firms. Yeah, we've already seen that line start to
a little bit, even with the U.S. government taking a equity share in a public tech company the first
time I believe that's ever happened. So another kind of intersection here. But when I read this last
week and we shared about it in a newsletter, I was kind of scratching my head. I was like,
okay, this is good, but why had this not even existed before? Right. And maybe it's because, you know,
that U.S. doesn't really have a kind of large AI presence across different branches of government.
So maybe this is looking at using the Department of Energy specifically, well, because for
AI compute and infrastructure, well, you need energy.
So it should, I think, sorry, it shouldn't go without saying that this is extremely important
for the U.S., right?
So we're going to be talking about this probably next month when we go over our 2026
AI prediction and roadmap series.
However, sovereign AI is going to be definitely at the top of most people's lists as you
look at 2026 in what's happening in AI.
And what that essentially equates to is, well, governments specifically looking at
AI as more than a technology and really as a natural resource.
And probably one of the most important kind of resources that any country could have in the same way that, you know, they might view oil or gold or even their military.
I think the AI is probably going to meet or exceed that for most countries in 2026.
So I'd say this is a pretty good move and a good first step from the U.S. in this Genesis mission to kind of centralize AI compute and information sharing across different branch.
of government.
All right.
Invidia taking shots.
Yeah, didn't see this coming.
So, Nvidia making headlines this week,
as it went out of its way to say that its AI technology
is still a generation ahead of the industry,
pushing back on fears that Google's in-house AI chips
could chip away at Nvidia's dominance.
So, yeah, this statement that they put out,
online, which a lot of people were scratching their heads about, followed a roughly 3% drop in
Nvidia's share price on Tuesday after reports that meta may use Google's TPUs or tensor processing
units in its data centers instead of relying solely on Nvidia's GPUs. So in a post on Twitter or
X, as some people call it, but I refuse to, Nvidia said that it is quote, unquote, delighted by Google
's success and noted that it continues to supply chips to Google while also arguing its
platform is the only one that can run all major AI models everywhere computing is done.
So yeah, Nvidia essentially has contrasted its GPUs with specialized chips like Google's TPUs,
claiming their GPUs offer better performance and flexibility because they can run many types
of AI workloads for many customers,
not just a single company or function,
whereas a lot of companies now are looking at Google's TPUs for inference,
right, where I think with NVIDIA,
they still have an absolute stranglehold on using GPUs for training.
So analysts estimate that NVIDIA still controls more than 90% of the AI chip market,
but Google's TPUs are drawing fresh attention as an alternative,
especially as NVIDIA's newest Blackwell GPUs are both extremely powerful and very expensive.
So Google does not yet sell its TPUs directly.
Instead, it uses them internally and rents TPU capacity to customers through Google Cloud,
giving companies another way to run large AI models without buying their own hardware.
And this obviously comes not just the meta news reportedly entering into a partnership to use
Google's TPUs, but this also comes right after Google launched.
It's very successful and extremely capable Gemini 3 AI model.
So essentially there's been a lot of industry hype, and I would say it's well-deserved,
around not just Google's AI models in Gemini 3, but also how they've been able to train their
models with TPUs.
So, Invidia took a rare step this week and literally just putting out of
a tweet that was like, all right, we see you Google, but we're still far ahead of everyone.
So pretty interesting kind of PR or comms move there from Nvidia.
Adobe just introduced an entirely new way to create, bringing the power and precision of its
creative suite into one conversational experience.
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start with your vision, just describe what you want and shape the outcome as it takes form with
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Adobe Firefly AI assistant now in public beta. See it today at firefly.adopi.com.
All right. Speaking of interesting moves, maybe another one. We
didn't see coming, but could save you a little bit of time. So OpenAI has announced and has
already rolled out a new shopping research feature in chat GPD that turns any shopping
related question into a guided product finding session. So the feature is available on all chat
GVT plans, both free and paid and mobile and web, with what OpenAI says is nearly unlimited
usage during the holiday shopping season, making it likely to reach a very large audience quickly.
So as an example, if you ask Chad Chitabit, what's the best TV in bright lighting?
Chad GPD now responds with normal text, but then adds a button offering to do additional research,
which starts a more structured, personal shopper style experience.
Or if you've used deep research before with OpenAI and inside chat, GPD, it's kind of like a slightly
faster, but more interactive version of that.
So the new shopping flow asks follow-up questions about budget, intended use in this example,
and specific features working much like filtering menus on major retail sites, but
inside of a chat instead of a web form, which could save time for busy shoppers.
OpenAI says the new system is powered by a version of GPT5 Mini, tuned specifically for shopping
tasks using quality sources across the internet to surface product details such as current prices,
availability, reviews, text facts, and images. The company does warn that shopping research can
still make mistakes on key details like price and stock levels and urges users well to be the human
in the loop. Products shown in chat TVT can be purchased on external retailers' sites and
OpenAI does plan to add an instant checkout feature so that users can
buy certain items directly inside of chat GPT from participating merchants, which could further
obviously blur the line between search advice and purchasing or ads when and if technically
Open AI does roll out those ads.
So I did use this a little bit over the weekend and I was kind of loop warm on it.
I don't know.
I think using the GPT51 mini, right, even comparing, right?
I did a quick comparison of a,
kind of a shopping style or shopping related query using normal deep research,
uh,
which presumably uses,
uh, the GPT 51 thinking and then using this kind of new, uh, shopping research
assistant, which uses GPT 51 era,
a version of GPT 51 mini and the GPT 51 mini, at least in my very limited testing,
let me say that with a huge grain of salt.
It was bad, right? Uh, again, compared to using, uh, Google's, or sorry,
compared to using open AI's deep research, which deep research is extremely, extremely good.
Or even using, similarly did, just did a normal query using GVD51 thinking, you know,
induced the thinking up a little bit.
So I don't know, maybe for free users, there might be some utility in this.
Obviously, I think this is in the long run is a way for Open AI to monetize through affiliate
partnerships, especially when they start bringing more of these purchase options.
available in app, right? I think that's ultimately where, you know, Open AI is probably going to be
making much more money on the commission or affiliate side. I don't know, but first impressions
for me and very limited testing. You know, what I did is I asked what, you know, Black Friday
deals there were for different AI softwares, right? And the shopping version came back with a bunch
of irrelevant things. It was trying to sell me like prompt packs.
right? So it did a very poor job.
But, you know, doing it obviously in the normal deep research or using GPD 51 thinking gave me
much better results. So I don't know. Maybe for free users, this could help, you know,
if you're asking more about specific products. But for me, probably not going to be using it
anytime soon. All right. Next, Amazon will invest up to $50 billion to expand AI and super
super computing infrastructure for U.S. government customers on AWS, according to, well,
Amazon. So this is one of the largest ever public sector cloud commitments to date and shows
how central secure AI computing has become to both big tech and federal agencies. So starting
in 2026, the project will add nearly 1.3 gigawatts of AI in high performance computing capacity
across AWS Top Secret,
AWS Secret, and AWSGGGG cloud regions.
So, well, if you're like me and you're like,
what the heck is a gigawatt?
Well, you know, so this project will add 1.3 gigawatts.
So one gigawatt of power can support about 750,000 U.S. households,
meaning this expansion represents the rough equivalent
of the power demands of close to a million homes focused on government AI workloads.
So federal agencies through this partnership will get access to AWS services such as Amazon SageMaker for training and customizing models, Amazon Bedrock for deploying models and AI agents, and foundation models, including Amazon's own Nova and Anthropic Clawed.
So AWS's CEO, Matt Garman, said the initiative aims to remove tech barriers that have held governments back, potentially enabling more automation, efficiency, and cost savings.
in how agencies operate.
So analysts note that while Amazon still leads the cloud market,
its lead is pretty slim,
especially with AI-related cloud growth from rivals like Google and Oracle.
Also, this investment reflects the broader AI race
between the United States and China as Washington seeks to expand its AI compute
capacity to maintain a strategic edge.
All right.
Claude in there. And that is our next piece of AI news. So Anthropic kind of just low key
released a pretty big model. So Anthropic released its most advanced AI model, Claude Opus
4.5 this week, which scored higher. And this one's pretty noteworthy than any human
candidate that they've ever had on their own internal tough engineering.
assessment. So the new model also comes at a much reduced cost compared to even Sonnet 4.5 or Opus
4.1. So Quad Opus 4.5 is priced at $5 per million input tokens and $25 per million output tokens,
a dramatic reduction from previous rates and a move expected to pressure competitors on both
cost and performance.
Benchmarks, really good.
So Opus 4.5 achieved an 80.9% accuracy on Sweedbench verified, outperforming OpenAI's GPD51
Codex max and Google Gemini's Gemini 3 Pro in real-world software engineering tests.
So early testers report the model demonstrates improved judgment and intuition, handling complex
workflows, and producing coherent summaries from internal,
documents and Slack channels.
Efficiency gains also significant.
So Opus 4-5 matches or exceeds prior models performance while using up to 76% fewer output
tokens helping enterprise cut costs and speed up development.
Anthropic for developers on the API side also introduced an effort parameter that lets
users adjust the models computational intensity, balancing speed, cost, and output for different
tasks.
So obviously dropped some of the API information there.
We did on Wednesday of last week, episode 662, if you want to go check that out.
We gave kind of our non-dev, non-technical review of Claude Opus 4.5.
Very topical, by the way, right?
I don't know.
For me, wasn't super impressed.
It could have just been, you know, tested it a little bit too early.
most of the little demos that we ran were super buggy.
However, I do expect most of that to improve.
And I do think that, you know, I think what happened, right,
if I'm just taking a look at the landscape, right?
You have your four big competitors that I always talk about, right?
You have Microsoft co-pilot.
You have Google Gemini.
You have OpenAIs, chat TPT, and then Anthropics Claw.
Right.
So right now, at least Microsoft.
is not really focusing on their own models, mainly using Open AI and a little bit of anthropic
across their co-pilot suite.
So you really have three frontier AI building companies, right?
Sorry.
No one uses Grox XAI, right?
No one uses that.
Mistral's great.
There's other great models, but for the most part, it's a three model race, right?
It's anthropic, Google, and Open AI.
I think Open AI's base model, the new 5.1 update, at least for me and a lot of others,
it's really annoying to talk to now, right?
It's it's it's overly verbose.
It's just too too chatty, right?
I think they were trying to kind of appease the people who were upset at GPT
4O going away.
So I think Gemini 3 pro came in as a, you know, great daily driver.
Even for me personally, I'll probably still use Gemini 3 pro as a daily driver,
but use GBT 5.1 pro for, you know, kind of the heavier lifting.
But Opus 4.5, again, didn't do great in our live demos.
But I think for anything coding, software development, anything on the financial side,
they have a new improved integration with Excel.
I think Opus 4.5 for specialty use cases is always going to have its case.
For me, not so much for a lot of, I think, teams and companies, not so much.
But if you are software, dev, if you're in finance, if you're in Excel all day, I think
Claude Opus 4.5 is still going to be a model that you have to look at.
All right.
In our last big AI news story of the week, yeah, ads are apparently coming to chat GPT,
maybe sooner than a lot of people thought.
And going back to our first AI news story, right, talking about an AI hardware device that
that will just see and hear and understand everything that happens in your life.
Oh, that's some valuable data, right?
Okay. Well, where's the, how does open AI monetize that?
Well, here you go.
Ads.
So Open AI is reportedly rolling out a new way for users to see ads.
So Open AI's chat GPT app appears set to introduce ads for free users at least,
based on a new code reference found in OpenAI's Android beta version by AIPRM engineer,
Tibor Blahoe.
So, yeah, essentially this was a code leak found in the newest version of OpenAI's Android beta.
And the code mentions include different features to ads,
including ads features, bizarre content, and search ads, carousel, signaling a shift
toward in-app advertising.
So this marks a major change.
Well, if and when this happens,
we'll mark a major change for OpenAI and ChatGPT,
which has previously focused on paid subscriptions
and API access for revenue.
The move comes as OpenAI faces financial pressure.
Forbes reports the company needs an additional $207 billion
to fund its growth and is not expected to be profitable
until 2030, according to HSBC.
So CEO Sam Altman recently acknowledged on a podcast that advertising is being considered,
citing Instagram ads as an example he personally finds effective.
Also, you've got to talk to sheer numbers.
ChatGPT currently boasts around 800 million weekly active users,
making it, well, one of the biggest online platforms in the world,
and out of all of them, really the only one that isn't running ads, right?
Any of those biggest website in the world, they're almost all monetizing on free users
in one way, shape, or form.
So if implemented, users of the free version of ChadGBT could start seeing sponsored products
and deals similar to ads that you might see on Google or Instagram.
Also, we did cover in our newsletter.
Google is also starting to test ads in its AI results.
We've already seen that with Microsoft, so nothing new there.
But it's kind of been this hot topic with open AI.
And when and if the leading AI company would do something like that.
And I think that there's a big conversation to be had around this.
Mainly when you're using something like Google or even on, you know,
meta's platforms like Facebook or Instagram.
I think you're only giving those platforms so much.
In the case of Google, as an example, you're putting in search terms.
You know, for Facebook, you know, maybe you're entering your interests on a Facebook profile
or you're liking or commenting on certain type of content.
So Medica can start to connect the dots there, right?
A large language model, specifically something like chat TVT that many people, I will say this,
unfortunately, use as a therapist because I don't think that's a good.
idea, but that's one of the biggest use cases for Chachapit is using it as a therapist, as a life
coach, uh, you know, as a mentor, as a friend, right? So obviously people are revealing so much more
about themselves that they would never reveal, uh, you know, to Google or puts, you know,
that kind of information, uh, inside of a social, uh, network that meta might own. So the, uh,
the ceiling for advertising is obviously huge just from a strictly financial perspective.
right. Obviously, Google has been the leader in advertising for decades,
meta as well, right, for at least 10 plus years. So we did do an entire episode last month.
Actually, no, sorry, it was the end of October. So just over a month ago. So go back and listen to that.
It's episode 641, chatGBT ads, nine reasons why personalized ads are coming to chat GBT
soon. I laid out right before any of this reporting, I laid out the case pretty cut and dry,
right, saying, hey, yeah, ass are coming. Here's why. Here's what they're going to look like.
And here's how this will change business. So if you are interested in that, make sure to go listen to
episode 641. All right. That is a wrap for the big AI news stories. Now let's get over kind of
our bullet point roundup section. You know, not everything was a top AI news story of the week.
There were some smaller features and some rumors and rumblings of what's around the corner.
So let's kind of round up what's new and what's next.
So Chad Chivity updated their live voice mode for a more interactive experience.
Pretty cool.
I used it a couple times.
I like it.
Google rolled out remix in photos, which uses nanobanana to remix images.
Google also rolled out interactive images in Gemini, which looks really cool.
Black Forest Labs released Flux Point 2.
I think it's just Flux 2, actually.
I think it might be a top image model along with Nanabonanata Pro once all the benchmarks are in.
Perplexity with a pretty big under the radar update.
They rolled out memory capabilities for its Comet browser, putting it more in line with Chad Chibb T's Atlas.
Chad Chabit may be rolling out a new, faster, style-driven version of their image.
Gen called ImageGen B2, which could also include cameo-style features, like what's made their
SORA app in their SORA AI video generator extremely popular, being able to kind of do these
cameos of your friends or public figures.
So that may be rolling out in the ImageGen.
So OpenAI, try to keep pace with Google's nanobanata there.
Anthropic, aside from Opus 4.5, they expanded access for cloud code desktop.
Claude for Excel and Claude for Chrome.
Google may be linking notebook LM notebooks directly in Gemini.
That'll be great, something I've been asking for for more than a year.
DeepSeek released a new model called DeepSeek Math B2 that achieved gold level performance on the IMO.
So pretty rare company they're in, I believe just with Open AI and Google that have achieved the same with large language models.
Also, Google is working on revamping the user interface in Gemini, which could be a big move for them to continue to compete with Chachypti on the consumer side.
Amazon is, I believe, starting today hosting their reinvent conference.
So there may be some AI announcements coming soon.
Meta is reportedly weighing using Google's TPUs, which we already referenced earlier.
and OpenAI is previewing an app store-like experience for chat GPT apps.
All right, that was a ton of AI news.
I hope this show was helpful.
Sorry, I'm a little hoarse.
Hopefully I'll be feeling better soon.
So if you haven't already, please share this with someone, right?
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Thanks y'all.
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