Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - OpenAI’s Code Red, Google’s Deep new model, Perplexity facing big lawsuit and more
Episode Date: December 8, 2025OpenAI has launched a code red. 🚨After increasing pressure from Google, OpenAI is reportedly in ‘all hands on deck’ mode to reclaim the LLM crown. Meanwhile, Google quietly released an EVEN MO...RE powerful version of Gemini 3 that hardly no one noticed. And Perplexity? They got hit with a massive lawsuit. You take one week off of AI, and you could be months behind if you’re in a fast-moving industry. Don’t sweat… we do the heavy lifting for you. Join us for our weekly ‘AI News That Matters’ segment, your weekly shortcut to save you hours on the AI happenings. OpenAI’s Code Red, Google’s Deep new model, Perplexity facing big lawsuit and more — An Everyday AI Chat with Jordan WilsonNewsletter: 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:Google Gemini 3 DeepThink Model LaunchPerplexity Lawsuit by New York Times, TribuneAmazon AWS Nova 2 AI Model FamilyAccenture Deploys ChatGPT Enterprise PartnershipAnthropic Prepares for $300B IPOGoogle Workspace Studio No-Code AI AgentsGoogle and Replit AI Coding PartnershipOpenAI Code Red: GPT-5.2 Model Release RumorsTimestamps:00:00 "Gemini 3 Deep Think Rollout"05:31 "Perplexity Sued Over Copyright Violations"09:04 "Amazon's NovaForge Enterprise AI Service"10:56 Accenture Adopts ChatGPT Enterprise15:59 OpenAI vs. Anthropic: Profitability Debate17:46 "Google Workspace Studio Automation"22:07 "OpenAI's Code Red Response"23:18 "OpenAI Shifts Focus Amid Competition"26:44 "Google's Big November Wins"31:06 "2025 AI Deals & Outlook"Keywords:Gemini 3, Gemini 3 Deep Think, Google AI, powerful reasoning model, parallel reasoning, large language models, GPT QA Diamond, Arc AGI 2, code execution, AI Ultra subscribers, advanced benchmarks, complex math problems, AI outages, OpenAI, code red, GBT 5.1 Pro, ChatGPT 5.1 Pro, Anthropic, Claude 4.5, consulting adoption of GenAI, Accenture ChatGPT enterprise, enterprise generative AI, copyright lawsuit, Perplexity AI, New York TimesSend Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
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This is the Everyday AI Show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips.
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Even though we're nearing the end of the year,
there's actually some juicy AI news happening this week.
There's a major new lawsuit against perplexity that might actually have some teeth.
Amazon made a big splash with some noteworthy AI announcements at their yearly conference.
And Google very quietly released a new version of Gemini 3.
That's actually more powerful than the version of Gemini 3 Pro.
They just released like two weeks ago.
Yet,
There's just two words that people are focusing on, not those stories.
It's code red.
That is because according to reports, OpenAI is kind of shaking in their AI generated boots
as they've kind of slowly lost their stranglehold on the AI world, mainly due to Google's
just extremely impressive growth this year.
So we're going to be covering that in a lot more on today's edition of Everyday AI.
What's going on, y'all. Welcome. My name is Jordan Moulson and this thing's for you.
Everyday AI is a daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter, helping everyday business leaders like you and me,
not just keep up with AI news, but how we can make sense of it. Cut the BS, the marketing and just really extract the good insights that we need to grow our companies and our careers.
So if that's where you're trying to do, great starts here with the unedited, unscripted live stream podcast.
Make sure you go check out the free newsletter, though, on your everyday AI.com.
each day we recap that day's highlights from the podcast.
So if you ever miss an episode, don't worry.
And hey, just so you know, on Mondays, we go for the AI News That Matters.
Most Tuesdays do kind of like a hot take Tuesdays.
On Wednesdays, we do AI at work on Wednesdays, more of a practical hands-on look at AI.
And usually on Thursdays and Fridays, we do some interviews.
All right, so enough chit-chat.
Let's get into the AI News That Matters for this week.
All right.
Our first news headlines.
Yeah, Google rolled out.
a more powerful version of Gemini 3 as if that was possible.
So Google has launched its new Deep Think mode for Gemini 3,
now available to AI Ultra subscribers.
So Deep Think is Google's most advanced reasoning model designed to tackle complex math,
science, and logic problems using what they call parallel reasoning to explore multiple
hypothesis at once.
So the feature builds on Gemini 2.5.2.2.2.
5, which also had a deep think version with marked improvements and key benchmarks, including a 93.8 score on GPDQA diamond and a 45.1 score on ARC AGI 2 with code execution.
So yeah, at least on the ARC AGI 2 quiz, I mean, blowing everyone else, including the normal version of Gemini 3 out of the water.
So answers generated in deep think mode typically take a few minutes, reflecting the depth,
and complexity of the reasoning process.
So Google delayed the rollout in November
to allow extra time for safety evaluations
and feedback from safety testers.
So that's why we got the Gemini 3 in,
I think it was November 18th.
And then we got Gemini 3 Deep Think
here in the first week of December.
But unfortunately, it's only available to Google Ultra subscribers.
So those are people like me
who pay $250 a month to get just really,
I won't say unlimited, but much greater limits on most of Google's AI tools.
Unfortunately, at least for the first couple of days, it wasn't super usable, right?
There was a lot of kind of downages or outages, whatever you want to call it.
But when it does work, it is extremely impressive.
The new mode is aimed at professionals and researchers needing more nuanced code,
better visualizations, and improved prototyping for challenging problems.
So Gemini 3 Deep Thinks performance on humanity's last exam, another popular, more popular recent benchmark reach 41% without tool use.
So I mean, just the new Deep Think mode in Gemini 3 absolutely bonkers.
Hopefully this will roll out to all paid users.
You know, it's it's kind of a bummer that more people can't, you know, use this mode because it is really good.
So I'll say this.
If you've ever used GBT5 Pro or GPD51 Pro, it's very similar, right?
It's a slow model, right?
And sometimes, unfortunately, it's going to kick out errors.
But when it does work, right?
And if you do have access, this is the most powerful AI large language model that there is
available, bar none, right?
So I said this on last week's show and the week before this, that I still thought
Gemini 5 or sorry, opening eyes, chat GPT 5.1 Pro was the best model even after Gemini 3 Pro was released.
But now I need a little bit more time.
Google might have turned me on this one.
So keep paying attention to find out to see if I jump over to that ship.
All right.
Next piece of AI news.
Perplexity in more hot water.
That's because the New York Times.
in the Chicago Tribune have filed lawsuits against perplexity,
marking a major escalation in the battle over news content and AI.
So the New York Times alleges that perplexity used its articles without permission
to train AI models and power their chatbots in a very similar, you know,
lawsuit that they had with OpenAI.
And perplexity's AI products reportedly, according to the Times,
reproduce Times articles verbatim and have falsely,
attributed fabricated information to the newspaper.
The Times also says it sent several cease and desist letters to perplexity,
but the company continued using its content.
Chicago Tribune's lawsuit, kind of similar, claims that perplexity copied millions of
its stories, videos, images, and, and more with its generative AI tools,
producing outputs identical or nearly identical to the Tribune content.
So, yeah, essentially, both newspapers are saying,
perplexity is going in past their paywalls, scraping content that they don't have licenses for
and reusing it, sometimes verbatim.
So these lawsuits join a growing list of legal actions by publishers against AI firms,
including the marquee lawsuit that's been going on now for almost two years,
which is the New York Times versus Open AI and Microsoft for similar copyright concerns.
And I've been saying this all long.
That one is the first big domino.
right the open AI New York Times lawsuit I believe it was late December in
2003 when it was first launched yeah so here we are almost two years into that
lawsuit but that is the first in the biggest domino to fall and I've been saying this
since December of 2023 I don't think that case will go to trial but whatever
does happen between the New York Times and Open AI
I think will set the president for the future of AI and copyright, right?
If for some reason there's a settlement in Open AI or Microsoft has to pay,
that's going to trickle down to literally every single, you know,
AI company.
And conversely, if Open AI just beats the lawsuit with no slap on the wrist,
yeah, a lot of these lawsuits are going to fall.
And just the kind of the whole concept of copyright, at least here in the U.S.,
is going to come into a question.
All right.
Next piece of AI news, Amazon, making headlines with the launch of four advanced
AI models and a new service that lets company build their own custom versions as the company
announced at their AWS reinvent conference.
So AWS introduced the Nova II family featuring four new AI models designed to handle complex
tasks across text, images, video, and speech.
So the Nova 2 light model is focused on cost-efficient reasoning for everyday tasks,
while Nova 2 Pro tackles highly complex jobs like coding and advanced analytics.
Then you have Nova 2 Sonic, which brings speech-to-speech conversational AI,
and then Nova 2 Omni, which is their multimodal reasoning model able to process and generate
across text, images, video, and speech.
So aside from the four new models that,
Amazon announced, right? Nothing new there. Everyone kind of assumed that the second version of these would come out a year later. But AWS also rolled out Nova Forge, which is essentially an AI inferencing cloud service, but it's a service that allows enterprise customers to create customized versions of Nova models called Novellas for $100,000 a year. So Nova Forge gives companies access to pre-trained, mid-trained, mid-trained,
or post-trained models, enabling them to further train these models using their own proprietary data.
So interesting approach here from Amazon, almost like an in-between, not truly open source,
but I haven't seen this a lot, right?
Companies giving two frontier models, and we'll see where the new Nova II models land.
If they're really on the cutting edge or the frontier, I'd say probably.
not. I don't really expect them ultimately to be top 10 models, but even if they are,
you don't really see that a lot. Companies, you know, having the option to use either
pre-trained, mid-trained, or post-trained versions of models. So a pretty novel approach
from Amazon with this to see if they can compete in the, on the AI enterprise side.
Because aside from the cloud, take out the cloud, right? Take out AWS. I don't personally know
any company that uses the Nova models.
Again, unless they are really just handcuffed into AWS for any reasons or if they have
their entire company, you know, running in bedrock or something like that.
But I don't know, any company that just chooses to use Amazon's Nova models.
So maybe this could change the conversation.
I guess we'll see in 2026.
Well, guess who's going to be using at least one model?
Accenture.
Thousands of them are going to be using Chad ChbT.
That's because consulting giant Accenture is teaming up with OpenAI to roll out ChatGPT Enterprise to tens of thousands of its consultants, marking one of the largest enterprise adoptions of Gen AI to date.
So the partnership is expected to accelerate how Accenture develops consulting, operations, and tech services.
And according to CEO Julie Sweet, this move will help, quote, quote, accelerate enterprise reinvention,
in business outcomes and quote for clients.
So pretty big shift here, right?
That Accenture is making in this official partnership.
And Open AI did put out some words on this as well.
And they did confirm that Accenture will have the largest number of professionals
certified in Open AI technologies.
So if you turn back the clock, right, like two and a half years.
So, you know, we are now in.
into year four of chat chp tpt chat tpt is more than three years old but if you go back two years
right i said this at the time i'm like all these uh you know consulting companies were writing off
large language models which i found to be funny i'm like there's no choice right i said all of these
large companies that early on we're writing them off while we're not using them oh no we're just going
to use our own i'm like no you're not right you're going to go out of business um eventually
you're going to get leapfrogged by smaller competitors or you're going to end up using models from Google,
Claude or OpenAI. You don't have a choice, right? So it's foolish looking back at it now.
You know, some of the big financial institutions consulting firms, you know, back in late 2020,
early 2023 that said, yeah, we're not touching this chat GPT thing. Never, never. It's like,
no, yeah, you are. There's no getting around it. That's like saying you aren't going to use the internet.
they become one now. So regardless, it should be interesting to see how the consulting space is shaping up.
I do think that there is, well, going to be a lot of things. And I talked about this on my year-end
predictions last year. But I do think that you're going to see kind of hourly-based consulting
eventually got the window. And we're going to look back at it and be like, I can't believe
consulting companies charged hourly, right? Mainly, it's going to move to outcomes-based. It has to.
There's already been a couple of stories showing a pretty big percentage of consulting projects that have for decades just been billed hourly are now being billed by results because companies are getting smart.
They're like, hey, we're not going to pay Accenture or EY or KPMG or anyone else hourly anymore because we don't necessarily know how they're using AI.
So we're going to pay for the outcome or we're going to use AI ourselves and not pay these big consulting companies for this.
All right.
Anthropic could be going public.
Yeah.
So Anthropic is reportedly making early moves toward a potential public offering
that could just reshape the complete tech landscape.
So according to reports from the Financial Times and others,
Anthropic is reportedly seeking a new funding round that could value the company at over $300
billion.
And the company has hired a law firm this month to be,
again laying the legal groundwork for an IPO, a major step for any tech firm considering going
public. So despite these preparations, Anthropic has still essentially said that there's no immediate
plans for an IPO, but that's usually what a company that's laying the groundwork for an IPO says
about their upcoming IPO. They says, hey, there's no current plans, but well, it's going to be
rolling out, I would assume. So industry speculation suggests that Anthropic could list shares as early
as the first half of 2026, potentially racing against rival OpenAI for a first spot on the public
markets.
So Anthropic has reportedly held informal talks with major investment banks, but a possible IPO
signaling serious interest from Wall Street.
So the company's valuation has soared from $183 billion back in September to now more
than $300 billion driven by major recent investments from Microsoft and.
in the Nvidia last month.
So Anthropics annualized revenue runway is projected to reach $9 billion by the end of
2025 with enterprise customers making up about 80% of sales.
Also, reportedly, their new Claude product alone is approaching $1 billion in annualized
revenue.
So it is going to be interesting to see if Anthropic or OpenAI is the first to go public.
It seems like it might be anthropic.
We've seen reports that said OpenAI might be late 2026 as soon as early 2027.
Now we're seeing some of this code red talk from OpenAI, which we're going to talk about here in a couple of minutes.
And I will say this, and I've said this before.
I think Open AI has a much higher ceiling than Anthropic.
However, I would assume that Anthropic is much more profitable per user right now than Open
AI, which probably makes them a little more primed for an earlier IPO, right? Because when you look at
their finances and their CEO did say that they're on track to break even by 2028, whereas in, you know,
Open AI, a lot of the estimates have been 2029 or 2030. So it seems like open AI may be burning billions of
dollars for more years longer than Anthropic. And Anthropic could be profitable at a much
sooner rate. So that might make a little bit of a more attractive offering for going public
sooner, but we'll see. All right. Next piece of AI news, one I'm excited about and didn't really
see this one coming. So Google has officially launched Workspace Studio, a new platform that
lets employees build, manage, and share AI agents to automate routine tasks. So yeah, this is
pretty cool. It's a no code, low code automation builder. So if you've,
ever use something like Zapier, like Make, you know, or even their other product, which is
kind of similar, Google Flows.
This is a more robust version for workspace customers.
So the system uses Gemini 3's multi-modal reasoning, allowing users with no coding experience
to create custom automation and agents in minutes.
So Workspace Studio integrates directly into Gmail, drive, chat, and other workspace apps.
And according to Google, early adopters,
have already used workspace studio agents for more than 20 million tasks in the past 30 days
alone, ranging from reminders to handling legal notices and travel requests.
So here's how it works.
Users designed automations just by describing their goals in natural language.
So shifting away from more rules-based systems in lowering the barrier for non-technical employees
to automate workflows.
So agents can be shared across teams, supporting,
collaborative work in faster project cycles.
Workspace also can connect to popular third-party tools, such as Asana, Jira, Salesforce, MailChimp, and others,
and also allows more technical users to add custom logic via script, apps script from Google or Vertex AI.
Google does plan to roll out Workspace Studio to business customers in the coming weeks
and is inviting organizations to join its Gemini Alpha program for early access.
I did get access to this already.
I've been playing around with it a little bit.
Not enough yet that I am ready to jump in and do a full episode.
If I'm being honest, y'all, the last, I don't know, month or so, it's been hard.
Even as someone that does this every single day, right?
I still want to go use Google's workspace flows, right?
a little different than Workspace Studio.
And I barely had time to do that,
even though it's baked in now to the sidebar of my Gmail.
Right?
So it's been the last like five or six weeks.
It's been just so hard,
even as someone that does this daily to keep up.
But this is one I'm excited for inside Workplace Studio launch.
So hey, live stream audience, let me know.
Have you played with this yet?
What are you looking forward to?
Should we do a show on it?
You let me know.
I work for you.
All right.
Speaking of Google news, big partnership with Replit.
So Replit and Google Cloud have announced a major expansion of their strategic partnership,
aiming to bring more advanced AI-powered coding tools to enterprise developers.
Well, in shorter words, Google and Replit shook hands on bringing vibe coding to more people.
So under this new multi-year agreement,
Replet will rely even more on Google Cloud's infrastructure and services, including Google Cloud Run, Big Query, and others to support future scaling.
So Replit will integrate Google's latest AI models, including Gemini 3, Gemini 2.5 Flash, Gemini 2.5 Flashlight, and Imagine 4, powering new coding and multimodal features for Replit developers.
So Google 3 was recently added to Replites' design mode.
offering advanced capabilities for co-generation and design workflows.
As part of this agreement, Google Cloud will remain Replite's primary cloud provider,
and both companies will pursue joint go-to-market efforts through the Google Cloud Marketplace and co-selling programs.
So yeah, another one that was kind of like, huh, didn't see this one coming,
you know, really getting the enterprise kind of handshake on vibe coding.
And if you haven't noticed, Google has gone all in and then some on vibe coding.
I mean, we've seen multiple new kind of vibe coding tools from Google, including anti-gravity,
Opel, Jules, Gemini, CLI, right?
So there's four kind of vibe coding tools that didn't exist last year.
Then you have the build feature in AI studio.
And now you have this official partnership with Replit, one of the other leaders in the
vibe coding era. So Google is not shying away from vibe coding, right? If you thought that this was a
trend, if you thought it was going to, you know, be here today, gone tomorrow. Absolutely not.
It is here to stay. And again, hate to keep going back to my old, you know, 20, 24 predictions that
I made about 2025. I said, everyday people are going to be building their own software. And here
you have it. And I've been seeing it, you know, fill up my, my,
my timeline on Twitter and on LinkedIn, non-technical people, literally building themselves tools
that they use every day.
So another nod to vibe coding with this one.
Adobe just introduced an entirely new way to create, bringing the power and precision of its
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See it today at firefly.adopi.com.
All right.
And our last big news story for the day.
Here we go.
It is code red time.
So what the heck is going on?
at OpenAI. Well, according to reporting from The Verge, OpenAI is reportedly moving up the release
of a new model, which could be called GVT52, and it could be released as early as tomorrow.
So this is in response to heightened competition from Google and their Gemini 3. So yes,
according to The Verge and earlier reporting from the information, reports said that OpenAI
CEO Sam Altman declared an internal code red emergency after Google Gemini's 3 model outperformed
OpenAI's current model on just about every single benchmarks. So the alert reportedly called
for an immediate shift in priorities across OpenAI with teams directed to focus more on improving
the speed, reliability, and reasoning power of chat GPT rather than focusing on developing new consumer
features. So staff were reportedly instructed to accelerate the development and deployment of the
next major model update reportedly called GPT5-2 with a target release date, which now could,
according to the verge, be tomorrow. So yeah, first we heard from the information and others that
it might be early January, and then it was like, oh, mid-December, late December, and nope,
now it just could be tomorrow. So the irony for those that are keeping,
score at home is it was, well, the tables have been flipped, right? Open AI here calling a code
red on Google because, hey, two years ago, Open AI had no real competitors. Now, Google has been
running away with the, at least on the model side in 2025, but it was actually flipped because if you
go back to December 2022, reportedly, it was Google that had its own emergency code red meeting
in December of 2022 after OpenAI released ChatGBTGBT.
Because most people don't know this, but Google actually had AI products that they were
testing in the market before ChatGVT landed.
But their approach was just too conservative.
And I'd say that at least in 2025, Google has been winning the model race, just on the model
race, while Open AI has been winning kind of the modes and features and growing the consumer
base.
But apparently Sam Altman wants to be.
winning the model race and is apparently worried enough that he's calling a code red on this one.
So the reports are saying that Open AI is now going to be shifting back a little bit more of its focus
toward models.
What I really hope is I hope that this doesn't mean a lot of these other features that were
maybe more consumer base get abandoned, right?
I hope not like GPTs and projects and Atlas and Agent Mode, some of these fantastic, just literally
like mind-bogglingly good features.
I hope they don't all get kind of left out to die in lieu of newer models.
We'll see what Open AI does.
But a little bit more on this GPT-5-2 update that could come as early as tomorrow.
It's designed to close the performance gap with Gemini 3, focusing on, like I said,
improvements in speed reasoning and reliability rather than just new features.
So this was originally planned for later in December, but the launch was kind of moved up
because of this pressure from Google
and a little bit from Anthropic as well.
Internal sources say that OpenAI's own evals
show that GPT5-2 could match or exceed Gemini 3's capabilities.
So regardless, it's not even shit-miss yet.
So if you're wondering like, what the heck is shit-miss?
Well, last year, Open AI and Google went
literally toe for toe, right?
Open AI did more of a big announcement, some splashy marketing, right?
They did this 12 days of shipmiss.
So right before the Christmas holiday here in the U.S., OpenAI had 12 different releases.
It was pretty big deal and they were good, really good.
Google didn't come out with any marketing and they, in the midst of it, came out with some
huge releases and a lot of people said Google probably won last December.
So a lot of people were saying,
like, okay, is this thing still going to happen?
There were some chatter online, at least from open AI that said, yeah, we're still going to be bringing a lot of new updates in December.
Obviously, we got Googles, maybe big updates in November.
Is there going to be more?
I don't know.
But apparently there may be a new open AI model, their best one as soon as tomorrow.
All right.
I know that was a lot, but there's technically a lot more.
So at the end of our AI news recap, uh, kind of episodes, we do a what's new and what's next.
So these are some rumors, some small pieces of news, some big pieces of news that maybe just didn't make our main new stories because there was a lot happening.
So here we go.
Our, uh, quick list here of what's new and what's next.
All right.
Meta.
Sorry.
Still overcoming a sickness here.
So losing my voice.
But meta has.
signed licensing deals with news publishers for meta-a-I.
Apple got a new AI chief after their old AI chief has retired.
Anthropic acquired Bun JavaScript runtime, marking the company's first ever major acquisition.
Klinge AI released their V-2-6 of their video product.
Pretty good, but I would say not really on V-O-3-1 or SORA level just yet.
Speaking of Google, Google is reportedly working on a nano-banana to Flash.
So it might be a little confusing because I think it's technically a nano,
nano banana pro and then nano banana two flash.
So we'll see if that's the naming that they stick with.
Mistral AL released the Mistral 3 family in 10 open models.
Google may be rolling out Gemini 3 to notebook L.M soon.
So currently, notebook L.M runs on Gemini 2.5, so it may be getting the Gemini 3 update soon.
Open AI announced a $4.6 billion Australian AI campus.
Open AI also announced, yeah, this one, I think, threw a lot of people for a loop.
They announced an ownership stake in Thrive Holdings, right?
Yeah, so Open AI getting into the capital game.
Google, according to Leaks, is testing projects and scheduled actions manager.
runway announced their Gen 4-5 AI video model, and it actually topped Google's V031 and
OpenAI's SORA 2 on a lot of the benchmarks.
However, it seems like it hasn't really rolled out yet.
So they said, like, hey, it's out.
But most people, including myself, I've had a runway subscription since, I don't know, it came
out.
I don't have access to that yet.
I don't see a lot of people do.
So I don't know.
Maybe they had a problem.
They couldn't, maybe they didn't have enough compute to roll it out.
Maybe they ran in some issues after they announced it.
So a pretty interesting one there from Runway.
Notebook LM launched over the weekend, I think, launched some major mobile updates,
including image support.
That's one that I love.
I just wish you could do more than 10 images at once because I have so many screenshots
on my phone and just being able to upload them into Notebook LM as kind of just my brain to be able to do that quickly.
Great.
But unfortunately, only 10.
time. Meta acquired AI wearables, startup limitless, formally called or rewind, and apparently
they just might be squashing their development and just having them work on meta raybans.
Apple, Apple displays executive in charge of the Vision Pro joined OpenAI's hardware team.
Pretty big news. We've been talking about that a lot, open AI, making a big play on hardware,
specifically coaching a lot of people from Apple.
XAI's GROC 4.20 wins a real,
Money Trading League outperforming other frontier models.
Open AI's People First AI fund awarded $50 million to nonprofits.
Open AI tested a confessions training method so that models could self-report hallucinations
and shortcuts.
That was a fun one to read.
Anthropic landed a $200 million snowflake deal integrating Claude 4.5 into enterprises.
Open AI acquired Neptune AI, boosting their internal training analytics infrastructure.
And Nvidia invested $2 billion in synopsis for AI chip design.
All right.
That's it for this week.
But AI doesn't sleep and we won't either.
It is the end of the year, which means a lot of us are looking back on 2025,
taking an inventory, seeing what worked, what didn't, and planning ahead towards 2026.
That's exactly what we're going to be doing here as well over the rest of December and in January.
So if you are making a concerted effort to grow with AI, to use AI more in your company, to get more of your team on board, that's exactly what we're going to be doing.
Hopefully some fun announcements here in the next week or two.
So make sure you stay tuned for that.
So I hope this is helpful.
We spend a lot of time trying to make sure you are the smartest person in AI at your company.
So if this is helpful, if you're on the podcast, please make sure to like and subscribe to the show.
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If you could also leave a rating, takes like 10 seconds.
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That's where we bring you.
Thank you for tuning in.
Hope to see you back tomorrow and every day for more everyday AI.
Thanks, y'all.
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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.
