Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 596: GPT-6 rumors, Elon recruited Meta for OpenAI takeover, and more AI News That Matters
Episode Date: August 25, 2025Google had so many wins in AI this week that it was hard to keep track.Yet their competitors.... not so much. ↳ OpenAI has already shifted the conversation to GPT-6 after a rocky GPT-5 rollout. �...� Meta keeps reshuffling their AI teams and is reportedly on an AI hiring freeze. ↳ And Apple's AI prospects are getting so bleak that they might turn to their biggest competitor to get the job done.Don't waste hours a day trying to keep up with AI. Join Everyday AI on Mondays for the AI News That MattersNewsletter: 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:GPT-6 Rumors and Roadmap RevealedSam Altman Admits GPT-5 Rollout IssuesElon Musk, Meta, and OpenAI Legal ClashMusk’s $97B OpenAI Takeover Bid ExposedMIT Report: 95% AI Pilots Fail ROIAI Bubble Concerns Hit Enterprise AdoptionMicrosoft AI Chief Warns of Sentient AI RisksGoogle AI Mode Expands with Agentic FeaturesGemini for Home to Replace Google AssistantApple in Talks to Use Google Gemini for SiriMeta Freezes AI Hiring Amid RestructuringMeta and Midjourney Announce AI Visuals DealGoogle Teases Gemini Nano Banana AI ModelOpenAI Project Memory Enhances User ExperienceGoogle Photos Adds Conversational AI EditingOpenAI Integrates Gmail and Calendar SupportPerplexity and Eleven Labs Roll Out AI AgentsTimestamps:00:00 "OpenAI's GPT-5 Rollout Issues"05:44 Musk's Failed Bid for OpenAI07:20 Musk Sues Over OpenAI Structure13:32 "Risks of Attributing Sentience to AI"16:03 Google AI Offers Automated Reservations20:46 Google's Premium Features, Apple Lags22:29 Apple Considers AI Tech from Competitors27:16 Meta's AI Hiring and Cost Concerns31:05 AI Updates: Major Memory Innovations31:57 AI Enhances Gmail and CalendarKeywords:GPT-6, GPT 6 rumors, OpenAI, Sam Altman, GPT-5 rollout, GPT-5 backlash, GPT-4o, emotional bonds with AI, unhealthy AI relationships, model safety guardrails, user-controlled tone settings, AI capacity limits, GPU shortages, trillion-dollar data centers, Elon Musk, XAI, Grok, Meta, MSend 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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Google had so many AI wins this week.
We could only talk about their massive movements today.
And that would cover a majority of the AI news for this week.
I mean, they shipped some huge AI model updates.
They brought agentic features to Google search.
And they may beat Amazon and Apple for the first new age AI assistant in your home.
And that's just the low-hanging fruit of what Google was up to.
But their biggest AI competitors did not have the best week.
I mean, Apple is reportedly so far behind that their revamped AI Siri may need Google's models.
And OpenAI is already shifting the focus to GPT6 after a rocky rollout to GPT5.
Sheesh.
So much going on this week.
It was actually hard to whittle down.
what is the most important AI news.
But that's what we're here for and let's dive into it.
What's going on, y'all?
My name's Jordan Wilson and welcome to Everyday AI.
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And with that, let's get straight into it.
There's so much to cover this week in the AI News that matters for August 25th.
And if you are brand new here, almost every single Monday, we do this AI News that matters.
so you don't have to waste hours every single day,
wondering about what all of this AI movement means.
We spend hours every single day,
and then we on Mondays, break it down for you.
So let's get into it.
First and foremost, yeah, GPT6 is already a thing.
That's because that's where Sam Altman has kind of shifted his focus right now.
So according to reports, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said the company is,
said the company totally screwing.
up GPT-5's rollout after making it the default over their previous apparently very beloved model
GPT-40, which triggered a swift backlash and a partial reversal that they later restored 404-paying
users. So apparently, Sam Altman went out to dinner with a bunch of journalists, and this is one of the
topics that came up. So Sam Altman already talking about GPT-6 and admitting that there was some problem
We'll say that with the GPT-5 rollout.
So Altman also said that upgrading a product for hundreds of millions of people in one day
was a mistake, noting that people had formed habits and even emotional bonds with GPT-40.
Yeah, we already went into that.
It's, I don't know, y'all.
It's kind of weird, but we broke that down about two weeks ago.
So if you want to go listen to that episode 587, GPT-5.
was canceled for being a bad therapist and why I said I thought that was a bad idea that people are using it as one.
But Altman estimated that fewer than 1% of users ultimately have unhealthy relationships with GPT40 in that regard.
But when you talk about 700 million people, that's still millions of people that were probably way to reliant on Open AI's old model just for their day-to-day functioning.
Also, Altman is reportedly shifting his focus to GPT6.
Yay, we can already start hyping GPT6 now, even though GPT5 has been out for like not even two weeks.
So the mandate for GPD6 is to feel much more personal without exploiting vulnerable users,
which likely means stronger safety guardrails, more user-controlled tone settings,
which I'd look forward to, and explicit consent for companion like benefits.
behaviors. So Altman said the gap between GPD 5 and GPD 6 will be shorter than the jump from
GPD 4 to 5, but GPU shortages are a gating factor. And Open AI did say, and Sam Altman said
that Open AI had better models, but can't deploy them widely due to capacity limits.
He also, in the meeting, floated the idea that demand could require trillions of dollars in new
data centers. And then we did see if you read
our daily newsletter each and every week.
You did see OpenAI's CFO kind of hit that they may eventually get into the infrastructure
game, which would obviously make sense because right now they're having to pay technically
some of their competitors in Microsoft and Google to help serve their models.
All right.
More Open AI drama.
We're just going to get that all out of the way first and then focus on what's new.
But this one's pretty big.
So Open AI is asking a court to compel.
Mehta to produce documents about any coordination with Elon Musk's XAI.
So essentially, reports just came out that Elon Musk and his XAI slash GROC kind of AI company
asked Meta and specifically CEO Mark Zuckerberg to join them in a bid to buy Open AI for an
unsolicited bid, FYI, that we covered and destroyed this.
I don't know, like what this was all about, but a $97 billion offer to acquire Open AI,
which obviously is a laughable, not a serious offer.
And that was back in February, which obviously Open AI rejected.
So Open AI says that it subpoenaed Meta in June after learning that must reach out to Mark Zuckerberg
about the XAI bid, including inquiries about potential investments,
though it's unclear whether meta holds responsive documents.
So META objected to the subpoena in July in Open AI is now seeking a court order for META's records concerning any actual or potential restructuring or recapitalization of Open AI, which is central to Musk's lawsuit.
Yeah, this lawsuit's been going on, which in AI years, it seems like it's like 30 years it's been going on, right?
Elon Musk suing Open AI, a company that he kind of helped start and was on the board of being an original co-founder.
So a meta spokesperson pointed to Open AIs filing, noting that neither Meta nor Zuckerberg signed
Musk's letter of intent.
And meta declined further comments.
And OpenAI and Musk's legal team did not immediately respond to reports.
So Musk's broader lawsuit challenges Open AI's conversion of its for-profit arm into a PBC or a
public benefits corporation, arguing that it violates the company's founding mission, which is not illegal.
while Open AI says the structure is needed to raise capital and potentially go public in the future.
So pretty interesting now that we technically have a third party that seemingly was roped into this ordeal.
So we don't know yet if these conversations were fruitful or went anywhere when Elon Musk reached out to Mark Zuckerberg.
So I'm going to be curious if did Elon need the money or was.
is he just trying to get kind of the second tier AI companies?
And I'm not saying that in a bad way, right?
I think that it's very clear that OpenAI and Google are kind of on the 1A, 1B or 1B1A,
one, whichever way you look at it.
Microsoft obviously benefiting from that partnership with OpenAI.
I think they're right up there in the 1C.
And then you have a little bit of a drop off.
And then you have Anthropic XAI and meta as well.
So maybe it's, you know, well, like closest competitors trying to take.
team up for this kind of takeover bid, which, by the way, the whole bid that we covered that
at length back in February, it was essentially a ploy from Elon Musk to try to stop
Open AI from growing, right? And, you know, essentially Elon Musk has a bone to pick with
Open AI over the past few years because he says that they've strayed from their original mission,
which he invested heavily in in the early years.
this one's juicy y'all and i might have to hot take tuesday this one tomorrow we'll see so
the headline and the story that everyone's been talking about over the past uh 72 hours or so
so a new mit study kind of says that's 95 percent of generative AI pilots aren't delivering
R-OI, raising concerns from some that there is an AI bubble, but companies claim they are
scaling by fixing, fixing accuracy and workflow issues.
So according to MIT's state of AI in business 2025 reports, which was based on 300 public
deployments and 150 executive interviews, 40% of organizations say they deployed AI tools.
And I'm wondering, like, what companies are they talking to?
What companies?
60% of companies haven't deployed AI tools?
Like, I don't know.
Like, when I read that, I'm like, I, like, I really want to know every single company and who they talk to because I, that doesn't make sense.
We're in the year 2025.
There's, there's very few companies that are still around that haven't deployed AI tools.
Anyways, uh, there's still.
their study found that only 5% have integrated them at scale.
So the study says most projects stall in pilot purgatory because employees must double-check
outputs, wiping out efficiency gains and eroding trust in high-stakes settings.
Investors are reportedly shorting AI stocks over the past few days on fears that enterprise
adoption is scaling, although the report highlighting a small cohort that is successfully scaling.
So the company cites adoption by Fortune 500s, government agencies and regulated industries,
positioning itself as evidence that the right design choices can close the Gen A.I. divide.
So this is the news recap.
So maybe I'll save this.
I don't know.
Should I do a hot take Tuesday on this one?
I kind of last time MIT had a viral study, their brain rot, which was one of the,
most in my opinion, ill-conceived studies that I've read over the past few years.
I don't know.
Say MIT yes or MIT no.
All right.
So I think on Spotify, you can leave a comment on the show.
So go ahead do that if you want the hot take Tuesday.
That's kind of what we do on Tuesdays.
If I should do this live dream audience, let me know.
MIT yes or MIT no.
Should I dig into this study a little bit?
As a former journalist, like this one, unlike MIT's brain rot study, which was this,
their fault that they put out a terrible study.
This one is not so much that MIT put out a terrible study.
I would not have put out the study in this way.
As someone that literally, I've been reading and reporting on studies for 20 years,
not the best one.
So let me know.
MIT, yes, MIT, no.
Should we tear this one up a little bit for Hot Take Tuesday?
All right, here's, speaking of Hot Takes, here's one from Microsoft's AI boss,
our next piece of AI news.
So Microsoft's Mustafa Soleiman warns of risks from AI
becoming maybe sentient.
So Sulemont is the head of AI at Microsoft.
And it has raised some urgent concerns about the rise of seemingly conscious AI or
SCAI.
All right.
So when I say SCAI, talking about seemingly conscious AI,
which are AI systems designed to convincingly imitate
consciousness without actually being conscious.
So he just posts a very good read about this on his personal site.
And we did link to this in our newsletter last week.
That's why you got it read it every day.
So he explained that SCAI is not science fiction, but in imminent reality, achievable with
current technology and simple engineering over the next two to three years.
So when you combine advanced language skills, memory, goal setting, and apparent self-awareness,
that's when you might get to this seemingly conscious AI.
So the core risk arises, Solomon said,
because humans are naturally,
humans naturally attribute consciousness to entities that talk,
remember, and express emotions,
even when these are simulations,
leading to a growing number of people
who may believe AI companions are truly sentient.
So Solomon warns this belief could lead to serious societal problems,
including AI psychosis,
where users from fall,
form false attachments or delusions about AI.
They advocate for AI rights, so they treat AI like their humans or confuse AI companionship with real relationships,
which we actually saw already happening with millions of people when GPT or OpenAI essentially just wiped out GPT 40 overnight.
And millions of people apparently lost their screwed, lost their noodles because they had formed probably some, in some cases, unhealthy
the attachments to a specific model.
So yeah, that one's going to be interesting.
Actually,
going to see if we can get Mustafa on the show here in the coming months.
All right.
Now it's turning the page on the Google hour.
Like Google had so many both major and low key moves this week and some leaks.
It's hard not to talk about many of them.
So first, Google is expanding.
their AI mode with agentic features.
So they just announced this at their big event on Friday.
So these features are set to launch first for Google AI ultra subscribers in the US,
though the agentic capabilities in AI mode is an experiment in labs,
making it limited to early access release.
But here's a little bit about what will eventually be coming,
on the agenic side to Google search.
And Google CEO, Sondarvachai, did say, he did say previously that Google's normal search
would eventually be replaced by AI mode, which is why these updates to AI mode are
really important to talk about.
So now AI mode also is expanding to over 180 additional countries and territories in
English and that is already kicked off.
So you don't have to have a paid Google plan to have the Google AI mode, but these
agentic features that are rolling out, at least right now, they're limited to those paying
the hefty price for Ultra.
So the new experience pulls real-time availability across reservation platforms and presents
a curated list of restaurants that match specific constraints, such as party size, date,
location,
cuisine, then links directly to the booking page to complete the reservation.
So yeah, if you give Google AI mode a little bit of criteria,
it will actually just go agentically do the reservations for you.
So under the hood, Google said it uses live web browsing via Project
Mariner, which I've enjoyed using and direct partner integrations and signals
from their knowledge graph and Google Maps.
Partners right now include OpenTable, Rezi, Talk, Ticket Maps,
Stubhubh, Seatgeek, Booksy, and others.
So right now, the agenic capabilities available in AI mode are mainly focused on reservations
and buying tickets, although there are plans for this to roll out more broadly across
different services and businesses in the near future.
Also, there's some new personalization updates.
So those features are live for U.S. users opted into AI mode in labs.
And that surfaces dining results tailored to inferred preferences.
according to what you search.
So users also do remain in control of personalization with settings adjustable in their Google account.
There's also a new link sharing feature, which seems pretty cool that lets users share AI mode results.
So friends and family can continue the same thread.
So yeah, if you haven't used AI mode, it's actually really, really cool.
And I think it's a cool way for people to experience a little bit of AI.
I'm always telling my wife when she's Googling something on our phone.
I'm like, oh, click on AI mode and keep talking with it.
Right.
So I think it's just a nice way to get kind of almost like deep research-esque.
Because even in AI mode, the response might only take five seconds, maybe last three seconds.
And oftentimes it's going to 50, 70, 80 websites each and every time.
So Google obviously has a huge advantage there with their cache of pages that they can go through very quickly.
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Are we finally going to get some actual smart AI assistance?
Well, maybe.
Google has unveiled its plans for Gemini for Home to replace their Google assistance.
So Google is rolling out in all new voice assistance.
for the home in October, at least for early access, signaling a major shift in smart
home control and a direct challenge to Amazon's Alexa Plus, which I don't know.
Does anyone actually have access to that?
So anyways, Google says their new Gemini for home will ultimately replace their older AI
assistants.
So if you look at the, I like to say the dumb AI assistants that have been around for 10 years,
right, the original Siri, original Alexa.
original Google Assistant.
And now we're ushering in this wave of large language model powered AI assistant.
So that's what we're seeing here.
Google getting official talking about their Gemini powered Google for home.
So now it kind of stays on in the background.
And some of the first offerings are apparently going to be rolling out on Nest speakers
and displays.
So you can keep the kind of,
Hey, Google, Wakephrase while adding more natural context aware voice control.
So the rollout begins in October with an early access program for both free and paid users,
though Google has not announced pricing for the premium plan.
So Gemini Live will also be integrated for more conversational back and forth without having
to repeatedly say, hey, Google, or having to repeat the contacts, right?
That's one of the things that's worse for me, try to use these old school dumb, you know,
voice assistants is, you know, for three plus years, right, using.
large language models even before that, but more in the chat interface, right? You're so used to
having that context. So, you know, having 5, 10, 15, 20 conversations without having to repeat the
context or repeat what you're talking about. And that's when you're trying to use these home
assistance. It's terrible, right? Because we've ingrained probably a good habit of the smart
AI, you know, kind of remembering things. So pretty exciting here. So Google may bundle some
premium features into existing subscriptions such as Nest Aware or Google One.
So access will likely be gated through Google's public preview program at first with a cautious
phased rollout due to safety concerns around controlling critical devices like locks,
appliances, and HVAC systems.
So yeah, I might have to, you know, get myself one of these.
I have a couple of Lexas around the house, but I haven't gotten access to the Alexa plus.
which is powered by Claude.
So I don't know.
Might have to jump ship there with a smart home assistant.
Because chances are we're going to be waiting until like 2045 for Apple to roll one out.
Speaking of Apple and voice assistants, talk about an intentional transition.
So Apple is so far behind in this Siri that they've been promising for like a year and a half
and they face multiple lawsuits, class action lawsuits about this because they're like,
go buy our new hardware.
You're going to get this new smart AI Siri.
You're not.
They can't build it.
And it's getting so bad.
We've reported on this previously that they were maybe going to partner with OpenAI.
But according to a new report from Bloomberg, they're actually maybe going to be partnering
with their biggest rival in Google.
So Apple, according to Bloomberg report, is in early talks to use Google's Gemini as the backbone
for their new version of Siri.
So according to the report, Apple has.
has approached Google to build a custom AI model for Siri that could debut next year,
with Google already training a version designed to run on Apple's servers.
That is huge.
The fact that they've already started training a version, I mean, Gemini's voice assistant,
Gemini Live really, really good.
So if they already are trying to train a version specifically for Apple,
which, you know, has to run on their, you know, private and semi-private cloud,
I don't understand Apple's Cloud, but that's pretty big news right there.
So the discussions are described as early and private, meaning terms could change or the deal could fall through.
But the talk signal Apple's willingness to source core AI tech externally and especially from one of their biggest competitors on the hardware side.
That's the part that's crazy to me.
Yeah, it didn't really take me too far back.
It didn't take, I wasn't too far taken aback by previous reporting that we've talked about on the show that Apple was reportedly in talks with Open AI to use.
their kind of advanced voice mode AI powered tech because they have the partnership right now.
So with the Google one, this is a little surprising.
So running the model on Apple's servers, according to report, does suggest more of a hybrid
approach because Apple can enforce privacy and security and also control how Google's AI is
leveraged. And this is pretty big news because there would probably be some little regulatory
scrutiny. Yeah, basically any deal that could come between Apple and Google, two of the five
biggest companies in the world, or two of the four biggest companies in the world, is going to be
heavily scrutinized by the Department of Justice, potential antitrust attention. So, yeah,
it could help benefit anyone that is an iPhone user. That's myself, but we'll see if it actually,
the deal actually happens or if maybe it falls through. All right. We have one,
One slide I forgot to put up, right? So I don't, I don't have the slide for this one. Sorry, y'all, but this one is pretty big news. So according to a new report, META is freezing hiring in their AI division amid some market jitters. So META has frozen all of its hiring in its AI division as part of a leadership reshuffle, according to a report from the Wall Street Journal. So the
move comes as tech stocks late last week tied to AI, saw a sharp sell-off with shares of
Nvidia and Palantir dropping, fueling concerns that valuations ran ahead of current
capabilities and revenue.
So, yeah, we saw these stories.
Oh, Meta is pausing AI hiring.
That doesn't make sense.
They've spent billions, literally billions of dollars acquiring like a dozen people, right,
giving them a lot of them.
multi-hundred million offers over the course of a few years.
So, yeah, for a lot of people, this isn't adding up this story.
Also, Alexander Wang, whose met us recently hired chief AI officer.
And you could say he might be like in theory, at least when it comes to AI, he's second in command, right?
Aside from CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
So on Twitter, Wang denied the reporting saying, and I quote, we are truly only
investing more and more into meta superintelligence labs as a company.
Any reporting to the contrary of that is clearly mistaken.
All right.
So let's look a little bit more on this report.
So meta reportedly characterized the freeze as basic organizational planning,
aligning it with a broader restructuring of its AI leadership and strategy rather than a budget
cutting retreat.
So as part of this shakeup, meta's super intelligence lab or MSL will
now house four units. This is like the third time they reshuffled their AI organization in the last
few weeks. So I don't know. Maybe we should hand the just the organization part over to AI so we don't
have to change it every week and get our audience confused, including myself. I'm reading these
stories. I'm like, didn't I report on this the last three weeks? Yes, I did. And they keep shuffling it
around. Anyways. So now you have meta's super intelligence lab housing four units total. So MSL is
the umbrella company.
So then you have the four different units and the AGI Foundations Group responsible for the
latest Lama models.
That one has been dissolved after the last rollout of their models, kind of drew some
criticism over some alleged benchmark inflation.
So at least three members of the AGI Foundation's team have announced departures,
according to the Wall Street Journal, raising questions about continuity on meta's core model
work. But before the reported freeze, Meta hired more than 50 people for AI, including roughly 20
researchers and engineers from Open AI, many of them scoring multimillion or $100 million-plus
deals. So because of this and a few other things that happened this week, including, you know,
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman referencing in AI bubble, analysts have raised red flags about Meta's reported
billion-dollar scale compensation offers for key recruits, warning that oversized stock packages
could dilute returns for shareholders if performance lags. But the spending backdrops remains intense
across industries with firms investing tens of billions in AI infrastructure, while revenue
trails increasing the risk that costs may outpace near-term payoff for companies and investors.
So Mark Zuckerberg insists the new organization can deliver
on ambitious goals, including automating all valuable work, what he said, but execution risk
is high given leadership churn, product credibility questions, and market skepticism.
And I don't know, is everyone going to remember what team they're on on meta when we keep
reshuffling the organizational structure and what everyone works on?
So hopefully this is the last time that we have to talk about, you know, MSL restructuring
and all their different teams underneath, right?
But all right, that's a lot.
but there's still a lot more. So let's talk about what's new and what's next. So this is kind of
our new-ish. I think we've been doing this for a couple of months. There was so much news this week.
We couldn't fit it all and give everything an actual story. So this is more of our bullet point
roundup of things that were either just released, some things that have been rumored, some things that are
in testing right now. There is an absolute insane amount. Ready? All right. First, meta,
and Mid Journey are reportedly teeming up and plans for future licensing deals in Mehta's products.
So meta may be getting some better AI visuals.
Google teased a Gemini-enabled smart speaker at their made-by-Google event.
It was just kind of in the background and everyone's like, wait, that's a new Google speaker.
Yeah.
Speaking of Google teasing things, they've been teasing very a lot.
They've been teasing nanobanana, their AI image-generating model that could shake up the entire creative industry.
I don't want to be Adobe when nanobanana drops and when it drops on the API.
My gosh, we've been shared about this in the newsletter.
But maybe we'll do an actual show when it drops and maybe get someone from that team on the show as well.
If you guys would like that, let me know.
Next, we have a new coding model kind of under the radar that was spotted in cursor called Sonic.
Some are saying it might be Grok's new coding model.
Google may be bringing its deep research to notebook LM, according to testing catalog.
A new Google Docs has rolled out AI-generated audio for documents in Google Docs.
Google Photos bringing conversational AI editing to Google Photos with their new flagship device,
the Pixel 10 getting first access.
So pretty cool, like AI photo editing just with your voice.
DeepSeek has released its newest model.
Deepseek v3-1.
Still no updates yet on their R2 model.
11 Labs released their text-only AI agents.
Microsoft is rolling out a new copilot function in Excel beta, beta,
powered by GBT4-1.
Open AI, this is a big one.
This is how much news there was.
Open AI is rolling out project memory,
which seems like a very small thing,
but it's actually huge.
And we're probably going to be rolling this out
into our finally
refreshed prime prompt polish
V2 course.
So project memory,
really, really big.
Perplexity, speaking of memory,
perplexity is working on
and teasing what they're calling super memory
for users as their CEO
said that memory will ultimately
be the moat for those companies using AI.
Google is testing a way to export
Gemini canvas creations to its Firebase Studio, which will be amazing.
I can't wait for that one to happen.
And Open AI added Gmail, Google Calendar, and Dropbox support to its responses API,
which you might not really, I mean, unless you're dev, you might not understand what that
means.
But essentially, a whole bunch of AI tools out there are now going to be working better and
more agentically with your Gmail and Google calendar.
So if you are a Google organization versus a Microsoft in terms of your email, calendar, etc,
that one's huge.
There's going to be probably a ton.
I would guess dozens of pretty decent startups that are either launching or updating their
current projects that are going to just make it easier and better to work through your
email and your calendar.
So a lot of your day-to-day things, it might actually be working much better now and
being able to take action on those things.
So small update, it seems, but big news.
That's what's next.
and what's new.
My gosh, we got to a lot.
Let's very quickly recap what was new this week.
There's a ton.
So CEO Sam Altman admitted that GPT5 got off to a rocky start.
And the backlash is actually shaping plans for GPT6 as he's already talking about it.
Open AI is seeking records from meta after Elon Musk's apparent bid to get Mark Zuckerberg to join
XAI in an open AI takeover, juicy.
The new MIT report says that 95% of AI projects failed.
Microsoft's Mustafa Saliman warns of AI risk from seemingly conscious AI.
Google expanded their AI mode with some agentic features and rolled it out to more countries.
Meta is reportedly freezing AI hiring, even though its chief AI officer said, not
true. Google unveiled Gemini for home to replace their old AI assistant. And they might be the
first big company to bring an actual smart LLM powered AI assistant to the home. And beat
Amazon. Speaking of that, Apple is exploring Google Gemini's help for a Siri revamp. And that's it.
So much. I hope this was helpful. Don't spend hours every single day trying to keep up.
with the AI news and what it means for you, your company, your department.
Join us on Mondays.
This is what we do.
We've been doing this every single Monday for a year and a half at least.
So I hope this was helpful.
Join us tomorrow for our hot take Tuesday.
On Wednesdays, we do putting AI to work at Wednesdays.
We'll probably put a poll in our newsletter, either today or tomorrow, asking you all
what you want for that.
I think that's been a pretty well-received segment on Wednesdays.
People are always like, oh, so many AI tools and modes.
What do I do?
Well, we get to work with you live on Wednesday, so make sure to join that.
And then on Thursdays and Fridays, you know, usually we do interviews, bring a bunch of smart
people on and talk about certain topics in AI.
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