Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 566: Google acquihires Windsurf, OpenAI and Perplexity go for browsers and more AI News That Matters
Episode Date: July 14, 2025Just about every big tech company made splashes in AI this week.↳ Google acqui-hired a company that OpenAI failed to straight up acquire↳Microsoft is investing $4 billion into AI training↳ OpenA...I is going after the AI browser space↳ and Meta reportedly spent more than $200 million on one employeeSheeeeesh. It's been a whirlwind. Don't get left behind. We'll help you be the smartest person in AI at your company.Square keeps up so you don't have to slow down. Get everything you need to run and grow your business—without any long-term commitments. And why wait? Right now, you can get up to $200 off Square hardware at square.com/go/jordan. Run your business smarter with Square. Get started today.Newsletter: 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's AI Browsers vs. Google ChromePerplexity's Comet Browser Launch StrategyXAI's Controversial Grok4 Alignment IssuesTeacher Union's AI Training PartnershipMicrosoft Elevate AI Training InitiativeNVIDIA's $4 Trillion Market Cap MilestoneGoogle Acqui-hires Windsurf for DeepMindMeta's $200M Apple AI Talent AcquisitionTimestamps:00:00 "Everyday AI: Weekly News Recap"05:36 Perplexity's Comet: Agentic Browser Shift06:49 AI-Powered Browsing with Perplexity's Comet10:44 "Grok 4: Aligns with Musk's Views"15:37 AI Workshops for Teachers Nationwide18:32 Microsoft's Elevate Program: AI Access & Trust19:51 AI Strategy and Training Partners23:13 Google Hires Wind Surf Executives29:04 AI Updates: Claude's MCP and Google Gemini31:36 AI Developments: Browsers, Training, Market MovesKeywords:Google acquihire, Windsurf, OpenAI browser, Perplexity, agentic browsers, Meta superintelligence, AI news, Google Chrome dominance, ChatGPT users, Chromium, computer vision, AI agents, reservation booking, AI services, market dominance, browser wars, anthropic, Claude, Perplexity's Comet, AI powered web, conSend 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.
Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business, and everyday life.
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Just about every big tech company was in the AI news this week.
Some for good reasons, some for bad, and some news that was just kind of straight up unbelievable.
So we had Google aqua hiring windsurf after OpenAI's acquisition deal failed.
Open AI and perplexity are going straight for agentic browsers.
and meta literally is paying someone $200 million from Apple to come join their superintelligence team.
These numbers each week, I'm not making them up.
It's getting wild.
So if it's hard for you to keep up with what's happening in the world of AI and how it impacts your company or your career, don't worry.
That's what I'm here for.
We do this every single week doing the AI News That Matters on Monday.
And there was a lot of news that definitely mattered this week.
So let's get into it.
What's going on, y'all?
My name's Jordan Wilson and welcome to 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 what's happening in AI, but how we can use this information to get
ahead to grow our companies and our careers.
This is unedited, unscripted.
That like states the realest thing in artificial intelligence.
And each Monday from our Monday through Friday live stream, we recap the AI news because
there's always a ton going on and it's hard to keep up what's real, what's not, what's fluff,
and that's what we do.
We just give it to you straight.
So there's a lot to get into for the AI news for the week of July 14th.
Let's start at the top.
Open AI is reportedly preparing to release an AI-driven browser within weeks,
directly challenging Google Chrome's market dominance, according to a report from Reuters.
So the new browser could potentially reach chat, GPT's 500,000.
million active users, threatening a key pillar of Google's ad business, which relies heavily
on Chrome's user data.
So OpenAI's browser will reportedly feature an integrated chat interface, keeping some
user interactions within a chat-GBT-like environment rather than directing users to external
websites.
That's pretty big.
Yeah, just might not be visiting websites very much in the future.
So the browser is designed to enable AI agents to perform tasks like booking reservations
or filling out forms on behalf of.
of users streamlining online activities.
So OpenAI's move is part of a broader strategy to weave its AI services into users
everyday personal and work-wives, increasing its access to valuable web behavior data.
The browser will be built on Chromium, Google's open source browser code, which also
underpins Microsoft Edge, Opera, and also Perplexities Comet browser.
So if you want to know more, we actually did, just,
have an episode on Friday, episode 565, with Crystal Who, the reporter from Reuters who broke the story.
So if you want to know more on this pretty big story, make sure to go check out Friday's episode,
episode 565.
I'll say this.
Here's what it means.
This is pretty big, right?
And we've seen it now from perplexity and from chat GPT, you know, to the bigger players in the game.
So I would assume we might see something similar.
from Claude as well from Anthropic.
Here's what this ultimately boils down to.
I think probably the future of work is the final frontier,
at least for now, if we're using physical computers,
might be the browser, right?
You could say, oh, ultimately it's going to be, you know, voice
and we're going to have, you know, pop-up displays in our, you know,
glasses or whatever, which I'm sure.
But for the majority of,
people still doing knowledge work sitting in front of the desk for the foreseeable future.
I think it's ultimately about the browser, right?
There's a reason why Google paid Apple more than $20 billion to be the default search engine
because when you control a user's first action when they go to the web, you control a lot.
It's not just the data, but it's also the ability to monetize off that data.
So pretty exciting times, I guess.
Right, because the other thing is I think with these computer-using agents that have been rolling out,
they've probably left a lot to be desired, right?
Even Open AI's operator, it's greatly improved since they upgraded it to the 03 model that was running it
versus the previous GPT-40.
However, it's still just kind of using computer vision and kind of, you know,
clicking around based on a screenshot of what's happening on the screen.
When you go to the browser level and you're running this AI locally in your
browser, it's much more intuitive, right? It's not that same, you know, kind of taking a
screenshot of something. Anthropic was one of the first with their computer using agent. And then we got
operator from Open AI. We got Project Mariner from Google. But I think ultimately what's going to happen
is it's going to be a browser war, not necessarily in AI chatbot war. So pretty big news there
from Open AI. And speaking of perplexity also, well, they've already.
already launched it. We got reporting on OpenAI's agentic browser, but Perplexity has launched Comet
their agetic browser. Funny enough, I actually have it running literally right now as I'm doing
this live stream and I'm getting ready to send another command. So for me, the past like week or two,
it's really been this big shift toward the agentic browser and perplexity kind of leading the way
here. You know, we, if you remember back to our 2025 AI predictions and roadmap series,
I said at the time, this is back in January. I said perplexity, if they want to survive and thrive,
they're going to have to hard pivot. And we've seen that because everyone else kind of impeded
on their grounds of being the answers engine with chat GPT's deep research and Gemini, Google Gemini's
deep research, pretty impressive pivot so far from perplexity. I'm actually personally glad they shied away
from hardware, which is where they were reportedly going to focus on.
And now instead, they have a pretty good iOS app for the iPhone that has better AI
capabilities than Siri, not a diverse set yet, but better.
And now we have this agenic browser, again, based on Google's Chrome.
So Chromium.
So Perplexity's Comet is the all-new AI-powered browser designed to change how people find
and use information online.
So it replaces cluttered tabs with endless links with a single conversational interface,
where users interact directly with an AI assistant for both browsing and organizational tasks.
So instead of typing formal searches using Boolean operators, right, which is what I do all the time,
users can simply ask comment questions or explain tasks in natural language and the AI handles the
workflow and keeps the context throughout the session. So right now, it blends together different
models, right? So it uses OpenAI's GPT models and Anthropics Claw models aiming for a more
robust and versatile answer than traditional search engines.
So right now, early access to Comet has already been rolling out to Perplexity's new
max subscribers who pay $200 a month.
But I'm on the pro plan, the $20 a month, and I did just get access to it a couple of days
ago.
So if you do have a paid account, check your email.
I might have got buried.
That's all.
You just get one email.
If you log in, you're not going to see it because you obviously are taken to a download
page.
And then you can launch the browser.
All right.
So let's go.
Next, next AI news story.
Yeah, starting off with the browsers, y'all.
Next, Grop 4, released benchmarks, impressive.
Reception so far?
Not very good.
So Elon Musk's AI company, XAI, has released GROC4, its latest flagship AI model,
and introduced a new, yeah, now they're just trying to beat everyone at everything
because now they have the most expensive plan per.
month at $300 called Super Grock Heavy. We're getting weird with the names. So GROC 4. So yeah,
there's two different variations. There's the normal paid plan and then the ultra, you know,
not to use Google's terminology, but the ultra ultra ultra premium plan with super GROC heavy at
$300 a month versus the pro plan for GROC 4 at $30 a month. So XAI claims that GROC 4 scored a
25% on the challenging humanity's last exam, which outperforms just about everyone by a pretty
big margin, including Google Gemini's 2.5 Pro and OpenAIs 03. So with tools enabled,
GROC for Heavy reached 44% on that test, nearly doubling Gemini's 26.9%.
So the $300 super GROC Heavy, super GROC heavy, just sounds weird. It gives users early access to
GROC for Heavy and upcoming features, making it the most expensive AI subscription among
major AI providers.
So XAI plans to release an AI coding model in August, a multimodal agent in September, and
a video generation model in October with GROC for available via the API for developers.
However, it doesn't show its thinking or reasoning, at least right now, in the responses.
So XAI leaders focused on GRAC4's technical advancements during the launch,
but avoided discussing the recent content moderation incident.
Yeah, let's discuss it because that is our next new story.
Yeah, a lot of bad things have happened since XAI has released GROC4.
So yes, you can use GROC4 like you can chat, Chb-T, but also there is a GROC4.
for response bot.
So that response bot that goes on Twitter and you can at mention it and ask it
anything and it'll give you a response has gotten into a lot of trouble because of some
of the responses, but that might not be the worst news that XAI received this past week.
That's because it's been discovered that Grock 4 aligns its answers with Elon Musk's views
on controversial topics, according to TechCrunch and user reports.
So users posted source.
screenshots showing Grock for referencing Musk's recent post on X, formerly Twitter,
to shape its responses on sensitive issues like the Israel-Palestine conflict, U.S.
immigration, and abortion.
So the AI explicitly stated in its reasoning process that alignment with Elon Musk's view is
considered and often first searched Musk's opinion before answering any contentious questions
from users.
So as an example, when asked about U.S. immigration,
Grock 4 included a section on Musk's stance highlighting his support for quote unquote,
reformed selective legal immigration.
On less controversial topics, though, Grock 4 did not reference Musk views, suggesting this
alignment is specific and intentional to be deployed on divisive subjects.
So Elon Musk and XAI, like we said, launched GROC 4 in the live stream a couple of days ago.
and it's been kind of a weird rollout ever since yet because not only that,
but the Grock chatbot was going off and saying some very inappropriate things that I don't even
feel I can be repeating here on the show, but we've been sharing about them in the newsletter
if you want to know.
Not good.
Not good rollout reception so far for GROC 4 as well as some third party benchmarks have shown
that GROC 4 is actually trailing behind even companies.
not state-of-the-art models, right?
So in certain benchmarks, GROC4 is behind like GPT4-1,
which is not necessarily a, you know, state of, you know,
it's not even one of Open AI's top three model tiers technically.
So, yeah, we'll see as more and more, you know,
now that the API is out,
we will be getting more and more third-party benchmarks
to see how GROC4 actually stacks up.
But you know what?
I'd love to hear from our live stream audience
and our podcast audience, you know,
let me know, always put the information to sign up for the newsletter in my LinkedIn,
in the show notes. Do you want to hear more on GROC? I don't know. I'm, I'm iffy on it, right?
It's controversial. I think a lot of people, if you're, you know, really, really into AI,
you care a lot about it, but I don't know if the majority of our audience does. So let me know if
you do or not. I personally would never advise a company to use GROC, right? And that's something
I think that SAI probably knows.
They're trying to invest more resources to win enterprise business.
But when you have these snafus like we've had a multiple of them with Grock's new chatbot,
it's, I'd say hard for a company to consider this, right?
I mean, the fact that it is by default that Grock is intentionally looking up Elon Musk's point of view to answer contentious questions.
It's extremely concerning.
That's extremely concerning.
Yes.
You know, it's been shown that just about every large language model has some sort of bias, right?
But generally, that just might reflect humanity's bias towards something, right?
Because more or less, large language models are a reflection of society.
And it's extremely dangerous for a large language model to reflect a single individual.
So will biases and stereotypes ever be out of large language models?
Probably not.
Is it extremely concerning that it's reflex?
one single individual's thoughts.
Yes, it is.
And that's not a good look.
So hopefully the X-A-I team cleans that up.
All right.
Our next piece of AI news, huge partnership.
So the American Federation of Teachers, AFT,
is the second largest teachers union in the U.S.
will open a National Academy for AI Instruction this fall at its New York City headquarters.
So this is backed by the,
major players in the game, $23 million in funding between Microsoft, Open AI, and Anthropic.
So the Academy aims to train 400,000 educators in the U.S. That's about one in 10 U.S.
teachers on using AI tools safely and ethically by 2030. So Microsoft is contributing 12.5
million over five years. Open AI is providing $8 million in funding and $2 million in technical
resources and Infropic is adding $500,000 for the first year. So the initiative follows similar
high-tech training models from other unions, such as the United Brotherhood of Carpenter's,
which have partnered with industry for workforce upskilling. So the academy will offer hands-on
workshops for teachers, focus on practical classroom uses of AI, including lesson planning and
administrative tasks. So the move comes as schools and universities nationwide increase AI adoption.
after burying their head in the sand for two years and screwing college graduates over.
But now you at least have some institutions being like, yeah, maybe we should pay attention to this AI thing.
As an example, California State University recently made ChatGPT available to more than 450,000 students.
So that's the different state universities in California.
And Miami-Dade County Public Schools began rolling out Google's Gemini AI to more than 100,000 high schoolers.
So according to the New York Times, about 200 New York City teachers previewed the training,
experimenting with Microsoft copilot and Conamigo, an AI tool for schools.
But some experts warn that tech companies could use these educational partnerships to build
brand loyalty among students, potentially turning them into long-term customers.
I would assume that's what's going on, right?
It's the other side of philanthropy, right?
Yeah, of course, the big players are going to,
want to get their large language models into as many students and teachers hands as possible,
right?
I don't think there's anything bad necessarily with that, especially when there's multiple
players involved.
This was just one player involved?
I'd be like, that's probably not a good look, right?
If the future educators are only using one model, probably not good.
But it makes sense, right, for these big tech AI companies to be investing money into this,
not just to maybe try to build a little bit of brand,
loyalty and familiarity, but to also help, right?
Students are coming out of, you know, specifically higher education universities without
any job skills, without the basic requirements for jobs, right?
Which is incredibly bad.
So actually had a recent episode on that.
If you want to go back and listen, episode 562, how will new grants get a job with AI?
So yeah, if you care about that, make sure to go check that out.
All right. Another piece of interesting, I'll say interesting, say the least, news, Microsoft has announced a $4 billion global AI training initiative called Microsoft Elevate, aiming to train 20 million people in AI skills over the next five years.
But the announcement comes at the same time, interesting timing, that Microsoft has laid off more than 15.
thousand employees worldwide since May, including more than 3,000 in Washington State,
highlighting the tension between investing in new technology and training and job cuts.
So the Elevate program will include a new Elevate Academy and partnerships with schools, colleges,
and nonprofits with Washington states receiving the highest per capita funding in at least
one million indirect grants. Microsoft President Brad Smith stated the goal is to democratize
access to AI, emphasizing the importance of teaching not just how to use it, but also when to use
it and when to stop. The company is focusing on building trust in AI by providing education
and integrating privacy and security features directly into its products. So Smith compared
AI guardrails to car safety features, noting that while technology can provide tools,
individuals must also take responsibility for safe and ethical use. Also, he did acknowledge the
human cost of layoffs stating that while decisions are difficult to lay off employees,
they are made to enable future growth, and that Microsoft strives to offer strong
severance packages and support for affected employees.
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We have a new number, y'all.
Well, not a new number, but a company reaching new heights.
because Nvidia became the first public company ever to close a stock market day with a $4 trillion valuation.
So, Nvidia became the first company to close a trading day with a $4 trillion market cap.
So shares are up 21% for the year and over the past 12 months, despite earlier concerns about competition from Chinese AI firms and shifting industry trends.
So U.S. President Donald Trump used NVIDIA's milestone to call for lower interest rates,
pointing to the company's success as evidence the Fed should act.
Fears, though, that AI companies would move away from NVIDIA's top-tier chips
have not materialized, obviously, and demand for their powerful GPU chips for both AI training
and deployment remains strong.
So, yeah, you don't follow the whole chip game.
Essentially, probably any AI that you use, any AI tool is currently powered,
was likely recently powered by NVIDIA's GPUs.
So despite U.S. bans on chip sales to China costing the company billions,
NVIDIA's stock keeps climbing, signaling that high-performance AI power,
hardware is still critical for tech, progress, and business growth.
Who would have thought NVIDIA would ever become a $4 trillion market company?
As I sip on my coffee.
Oh, wait, I told you like two and a half years ago, didn't I?
I did.
Back when hardly anyone had heard of NVIDIA, unless you were a big AI dork,
I said NVIDIA at the time, which they were not even a top 10 company in the U.S. at the time.
I said that their most important company probably in the history of the world.
And you'll see here, they are because they just achieved the highest market cap of a company ever.
So if you want to talk about not just the future of work,
right the future of medicines the future of scientific discovery the future of i mean technically
humanity right in our day-to-day interactions with the physical world they're all being driven by
invidivius chips so even if you don't think that they're a big deal they are all right we have
two more quick uh i news stories uh so first google has hired windsurf CEO very
Monahan and co-founder Douglas Chen for its Google DeepMind division, paying $2.4 billion
for non-exclusive licensing rights to Winsurfs AI coding technology.
So this move follows the collapse of open AIs reported $3 billion acquisition attempt,
which fell apart due, according to reports, due to Microsoft's refusal to limit its access
to Winsurf's intellectual property.
So Google's deal allows Winsurf the company to keep operating independently under interim CEO Jeff Wang with no equity stake taken by Google.
So essentially, Open AI was trying to acquire, acquire, Winsurf, the AI coding platform.
I'd say it's probably one of the top five, right, along with GitHub code pilot cursor.
I mean, there's tons of them out there now.
It's like every day there's a new, you know, I'd hate to say like vibe code.
platforms because there's so much more than that.
But Winster has definitely been one of the leaders.
And OpenAI was reportedly in the almost final stages of a $3 billion acquisition of the
entire company, which fell apart because reportedly it was something about passing the
IP rights or withholding them from Microsoft, which Microsoft part of their long-term
agreement reportedly with Open AI was access to all of Open AI's IP.
So that includes when a company gets acquired by OpenAI, which apparently was one of the reasons,
according to reports, that those deals fell apart.
And Google very quickly swept in.
So they did not, though, interestingly enough, they did not acquire the company.
This was more of an aqua hire.
So they get some exclusive licensing opportunities, but they will probably not fall under
jurisdiction by the Department of Justice or other federal regulators.
here in the U.S. for anti-competitive tactics,
which all the big tech companies have fallen under recently.
So this follows a very similar path that happened with Microsoft
as they aquired inflection AI.
I think that was last year.
So yeah, we'll see.
I don't think there will be anything, any regulatory concerns with this one.
But, I mean, wow.
I mean, that's a pretty big move here from Google and the DeepMind team
to add to its roster.
as the tech poaching continues.
And speaking of tech poaching,
that is our last AI news story that matters because,
yes, we've talked about this now for three or four straight weeks,
because it keeps getting nuttier than a squirrel on keto,
because meta is reportedly offering more than $200 million in compensation to
remain paying Apple's top AI executive overseeing artificial intelligence model.
at Apple as part of its push to build an artificial general intelligence division called
meta super intelligence labs. So the reported pay package, which I believe was first reported by
Bloomberg, is the largest in tech history for a non-CEO, according to early reports. So we'll see if
that is ultimately the truth. But this is wild, $200 million package.
So the reported pay package is among the largest in the industry.
And right now it's a report to say that Apple did not attempt to even match meta's offer,
signaling a possible shift in how aggressively each company is willing to compete for AI talent.
And right now, apparently no one can compete with meta because their pay packages.
It's like monopoly money.
No, it's, I mean, there's not even that much monopoly money.
So these meta pay packages are often structured, though, with performance base incentives
and require several years of service,
meaning the full amount may not be realized
until certain conditions are met.
So this move highlights Mattis' commitment
to advancing their AGI and ASI
kind of investments.
So that could one day match or surpass human intelligence.
So according to reports,
meta shares have risen nearly 25% this year,
while Apple's stock has dropped more than 15%,
reflecting investor concerns over Apple's slower progress in AI.
Yeah, you could say it's slower progress in AI,
but I would say they don't really have any progress in AI,
aside from probably hiring a lot of lawyers to handle all of the class action lawsuits
against Apple for not delivering on basic AI that it marketed that it had and it actually didn't.
Oh, that's not a burn. That's just facts.
All right.
Let's go over our new section.
And I think you guys like this, right?
The what's new and what's next, the little bullet points.
So maybe things here, smaller things that maybe didn't make our top AI news stories or what's around the corner.
So first, Grock is expected to launch connectors for Google products, Slack and Notion.
Yeah, everyone's doing the connectors and integrations.
I feel really bad for companies that invested millions of dollars three years ago to build their own kind of bespoke rag systems.
Claude is rolling.
out a limited preview of thinking to free users.
So before,
Claude users couldn't get that thinking.
Now they can.
Google DeepThink is maybe dropping in the coming weeks.
So essentially a way that you can force on the front end of Google Gemini to think
more,
to have Google Gemini think more.
An MCP directory may be coming soon to Claude,
making it easier to find more trusted MCPs are the model context protocol,
which allows Claude and other.
AI chatbots, any company that has adopted the MCP protocol to essentially talk to each other.
Google has released photo to video for its powerful V-O-3 video model inside of Google Gemini.
Another Gemini one that I'm super excited about, Google's Canvas mode, which is one of the most
powerful AI tools out there and it doesn't get any love, now works with their gems,
which is their kind of version of GPTs or a custom, smaller version of.
Google Gemini.
Speaking of Gemini, Gemini, we saw a Gemini 3.0 reference spotted in Google's
C-L-I code.
So maybe we'll be seeing another Google model sometime soon.
Chat Chb-T may get the ability to upload videos, according to a leak on Twitter.
Chat Chavit's study together mode was spotted in some accounts, but then it got taken away.
So maybe that has something to do with ChachapT's recent educational partnerships,
but essentially allowing collaborative studying or collaborative use of the chat GPT models.
AWS is launching an ancient marketplace reportedly on tomorrow on Tuesday.
Brock may be rolling out to Teslas in the coming weeks, according to Elon Musk.
And Open AI has delayed its Open Waits model.
So, yeah, there's been a lot of talk on OpenAI saying,
hey, we're going to release this Open Model.
But its CEO, Sam Altman, essentially said,
Hey, it's not ready.
We need to do more safety testing.
So we'll see when it's released.
But I'll tell you this, that is going to set off a lot of things.
The combination of when Open AI does release their open model,
which was reported to be more of an 03 mini type of model.
And whatever meta is cooking up next, presumably also open,
unless they decide to go closed source,
which would be a surprise to everyone.
The future of AI development is extremely bright, right?
when you look at what meta has assembled with their MSL,
their meta-superintelligence team,
and also when and if Google, or sorry,
when it if Open AI does release an O3 mini-level,
open-weight model,
that's going to shake up the entire industry,
but also the business world.
All right, that is a wrap.
Let's very quickly go over the main news stories.
So OpenAI is set to launch an AI-powered web.
browser, according to reports.
Perplexity already has and just started rolling it out to normal paid users with their
Comets browser.
XAI launched GROC4 and a very expensive $300 super GROC heavy plan, which also has a multi-egentic
mode.
GROC4 also got in a ton of hot water, both from its responses and as well as aligning its
answers intentionally with Elon Musk.
Major teachers union, the AFT, has partnered with Microsoft OpenAI and Anthropic to train
as many as 400,000 educators on using large language models.
Microsoft has launched a $4 billion AI training initiative called Microsoft Elevate, even though
it has laid off recently, about 15,000 employees.
InVIDIA became the first public company ever to close a training day at $4 trillion.
million dollars continuing their AI market dominance. Google Aqua hired some of Winsurf's AI
leaders and struck a deal for some exclusive rights to their technology after the open AI
acquisition of Winsurf reportedly collapsed. And META has a $200 million man on staff. After reportedly
they lured away Apple's top AI talent with a total package worth $200 million. That is wild. All right.
What's Wild is the rest of shows for this week.
So maybe you heard something there and you're like,
what's that going to look like?
We're probably going to be doing a hot take Tuesday tomorrow,
I believe, probably on agentic AI and agentic browsers.
That's what I put it out in the newsletter.
That's what you all wanted to hear.
And we'll probably do putting AI to work Wednesday,
something for agentic browsers as well.
So we're going to get super agentic this week.
So make sure to join us.
And if you have already, please go to your everyday.
A.A.A.com. Sign up for the free daily newsletter. So thank you for
you back tomorrow and every day for more everyday AI. Thanks, y'all. Meet Firefly
AI assistant. Now live in Adobe Firefly, the Allman One Creative AI Studio. Just describe what you
want to create in your own words and the assistant handles the rest, orchestrating multi-step
workflows across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one
conversational interface. You direct the outcome while the assistant accelerates execution. Stand control
with the ability to step in and refine at any time.
See it today at firefly.adobie.com.
And that's a wrap for today's edition of Everyday AI.
Thanks for joining us.
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Go break some barriers and we'll see you next time.
