The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - The Dawn of the Agent Age
Episode Date: February 5, 2026January marked a clear break between the AI era people thought they were in and the one that actually arrived. Agentic coding crossed from novelty to default, tools like Claude Code reset expectations... for what individuals can build, and systems such as OpenClaw and Moltbook showed how quickly agents are becoming ecosystems, not just features. This episode explains why the shift felt sudden, why it caught so many off guard, and why the real story isn’t sentient agents but a widening gap between AI capability and real-world adoption. In the headlines: Nvidia and OpenAI, Intel’s GPU pivot, Apple’s embrace of agentic coding, developer dependence on Claude Code, and Disney’s strategic turn toward experiences.Brought to you by:KPMG – Discover how AI is transforming possibility into reality. Tune into the new KPMG 'You Can with AI' podcast and unlock insights that will inform smarter decisions inside your enterprise. Listen now and start shaping your future with every episode. https://www.kpmg.us/AIpodcastsRackspace Technology - Build, test and scale intelligent workloads faster with Rackspace AI Launchpad - http://rackspace.com/ailaunchpadZencoder - From vibe coding to AI-first engineering - http://zencoder.ai/zenflowOptimizely Opal - The agent orchestration platform build for marketers - https://www.optimizely.com/theaidailybriefAssemblyAI - The best way to build Voice AI apps - https://www.assemblyai.com/briefSection - Build an AI workforce at scale - https://www.sectionai.com/LandfallIP - AI to Navigate the Patent Process - https://landfallip.com/Robots & Pencils - Cloud-native AI solutions that power results https://robotsandpencils.com/The Agent Readiness Audit from Superintelligent - Go to https://besuper.ai/ to request your company's agent readiness score.The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614Interested in sponsoring the show? sponsors@aidailybrief.ai
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Today on the AI Daily Brief, why we've just experienced the dawn of the agent era,
and before that in the headlines,
whatever issues Jensen Huang has with Sam Altman don't seem to be enough to stop them
from investing $20 billion into OpenAI.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
All right, friends, quick announcements before we dive in.
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Over the last couple of days into last weekend, there were some rumors floating around
that maybe there had been some consternation or concern brewing between Nvidia and
OpenAI.
Specifically, the reports were that Nvidia's CEO, Jensen Huang, had some complaints about
how OpenAI was being run.
At the end of last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that Nvidia's $100 billion investment
announced last year wasn't going ahead.
Now, that deal was framed in kind of a weird way.
It was at the peak of all of OpenAI's deal announcements,
and it was right as Wall Street was turning the corner
on being really excited about all these big deals
to being extremely skeptical of them.
As much as the deal was framed as a memorandum of understanding
rather than a fully consummate deal,
still both companies made large announcements about it
and played it up as if it was definitely moving forward.
Citing anonymous sources, the journal wrote that more recently,
Jensen has, quote, privately criticized what he described
as a lack of discipline in OpenAI's business approach and expressed concern about the competition
it faces from the likes of Google and Anthropic. On Saturday, Jensen told the press that the story
was in his words nonsense. He added, we're going to make a huge investment in Open AI. I believe
in Open AI, the work that they do is incredible. They are one of the most consequential companies
of our time, and I really love working with Sam. We will invest a great deal of money, probably the largest
investment we've ever made. At the same time, Jensen did take the chance to clarify that the $100 billion was
never a guarantee from them, he framed it as OpenAI inviting them to invest up to that much,
which he very much appreciated, but there was a clear move away from that specific number.
Now, there was an entire sub-narrative around Oracle during the week as well, with once again
the Wall Street Journal suggesting the reduced investment raised major questions.
Foremost, the journal wrote, was whether Open AI could make good on its five-year $300 billion
contract with Oracle, end quote, whether the tech giant should really be recording the full
amount of that deal on its own books. The article didn't add any new information.
but did seek comment from Oracle, to which they responded first in a statement provided to the
WSJ and later published on X, the Nvidia-O-A-I deal has zero impact on our financial relationship
with OpenAI. We remain highly confident in OpenAI's ability to raise funds and meet its commitments.
Wednesday's reporting, meanwhile, closes the arc, suggesting that Nvidia hasn't completely lost confidence
in OpenAI, considering that they are still willing to invest $20 billion.
So what can we take away from this narrative saga, if anything? My guess is that the reports
that Jensen has some concerns about capital discipline or business focus at OpenAI are not totally
untrue. At the same time, clearly those feelings aren't strong enough to make Nvidia back out of the deal
entirely. They're still committing to what will be their largest investment ever, meaning that this is
likely about caution rather than a complete loss of faith in Open AI. Second, the other implication,
which is quite clear, is that the market remains on edge about AI CAPEX and is ready to overreact
to any negative story that gets published. Oracle stock, for example, is down almost 10%
sent this week and their bonds continue to slide. Ultimately, if you were looking for canaries in the
coal mine of OpenAI, it does not seem to me that they are going to have any trouble completing
this massive fundraise. But of course, we'll get more information about that in the weeks to come.
Now, moving from Nvidia but staying on chips for just a minute, Intel has announced plans to
start producing GPUs. Traditionally, Intel has focused on CPU production, a strategy that allowed them
to dominate the PC revolution, but of course the rise of AI workflows means that GPUs are now the
most profitable chip set. A failure to address that shift has, of course, been a major drag on
Intel's business over recent years. Speaking at the Cisco AI summit on Thursday, CEO Lip Butan
announced that Intel will soon produce their first range of GPUs designed for this AI era.
Tan said, I hired the chief GPU architect and he's very good. I'm very delighted that he joined
me and it took some persuasion. That hire was former Qualcomm senior VP of engineering,
Eric Demers, who joined Intel last month. Tan also mentioned that a couple of customers were engaging
heavily with Intel's new contract manufacturing business, which will see them produce third-party
chips for the first time. Ultimately, this company still has a lot of work to turn around,
but the GPU pivot and production of third-party chips could be a major boost for the struggling
US chipmaker. Next up, a story which might seem small from the outside, but which developers
seem to find pretty big, the latest update for Apple's coding platform, Xcode adds support
for both Claude Agent and OpenAI's Codex directly in the developer environment. These additions
transform Xcode into yet another surface for agentic coding. Agents can autonomously write code,
build projects end to N, run unit tests, and verify their own output with limited human oversight.
Direct verification of the UI is a particularly big improvement for app developers,
completely eliminating the need to run a simulator or feed screenshots into the model. This is also
Apple's most significant adoption of agentic coding to date. Last year, Xcode introduced LLM
coding assistants, but they were unable to access the full code base and were strictly non-agentic.
This release brings Xcode broadly in line with Codex and code
in ClaudeCode, giving iOS app developers native access to Agendic Coding.
What's more, it's clear from Apple's comments that they understand that software engineering
has undergone a fundamental shift in recent months. VP of developer relations, Susan Prescott said,
at Apple, our goal is to make tools that put industry-leading technologies directly in developers' hands
so they can build the very best apps. Agentic coding supercharges productivity and creativity,
streamlining the development workflow so developers can focus on innovation.
Interestingly, the feature is being built using MCP, meaning access isn't just limited
to Claude and Codex. Developers can install any coding agent with MCP capability and expect full
functionality within Xcode. Now I saw two wildly different takes on this. One represented by George
Castillo reads, Apple just surrendered on AI. Xcode 26.3 now relies on Clod and Codex for agentic
coding. Doesn't look like they're going to work on their own models at all. On the other end
of the spectrum, we have Dan Shipper from Evere who said, hot take, Apple is going to be a big winner in
AI. Native apps are naturally easier to vibe code. You only break things for individual
Apple ecosystem connects to a bunch of extremely important data like health and messaging that makes AI better.
Finally, everyone's buying a Mac Mini for their agent. The total addressable market for their
hardware is going up 100x. Speaking of Claude Code, there was no joy in Mudville for a chunk of
the day on Tuesday. A Claude code outage saw software engineer productivity absolutely plummet.
The platform saw widespread error messages and API performance for all models degraded.
Anthropic did implement a patch within 20 minutes to get the service back online,
but it was still down for long enough to see the impact.
Rather than coding by hand, many developers took to X to muse about how quickly their work dependencies had shifted.
Matt Silve wrote,
ClaudeCode being out is worse than the internet being out.
Fabio Seychas writes,
Anthropic will be the AWS slash Cloudflare of the development world.
When it goes down, half the world stops working.
Lastly today, an interesting story that both is and isn't an AI story.
Disney has appointed a new CEO.
The company's board of directors have selected Josh Diomaro to succeed Bob Iger as CEO beginning in March.
Di Amaro has been the chairman of Disney experiences since 2020,
leading the division which manages theme parks, cruises, and live events.
Now, interestingly, that division is now making more for Disney than their film and entertainment divisions.
And Forbes suggested that this moment of disruption is the perfect moment for Disney to double down on experiences.
David Bloom wrote,
Content, even from all those amazing Disney franchises that Iger acquired,
just won't be as valuable in an era defined by omnipresent artificial intelligence tools.
The article noted that AI-generated entertainment is rapid,
improving alongside reductions and costs. This is bad news, they claim, for the high-budget movies
that Disney specializes in. Investor Chris Morangi said, Disney is an experiences company now.
Two-thirds of their profits, probably more than that, come from experiences, especially in the age of
AI. De Amaro's appointment isn't just about a pivot to experiences over movies and streaming.
Iger also lauded the incoming leader for his openness to change in the face of a rapidly shifting
technological landscape. In a joint interview with the incoming CEO, Iger said,
I have observed him over the years as we've worked together as someone who views technology as an opportunity and not as a threat.
And I believe that is critical because when you look at the history of human beings,
no generation of human being has ever been able to stand in the way of technological advance.
It happens.
Now, Disney, of course, has already made moves in this direction, electing to partner with OpenAI,
and while even the introduction of Disney characters into SORA hasn't made it a super success,
the deal did leave Disney with a billion dollar stake in Open AI
and the beginning of a partnership that could bear fruit down the line.
Da Amaro clearly seems cut from the similar cloth
of wanting to see how to leverage the new technology.
He said,
The reason this company is so special
is because of how creative we are
and human beings that are generating that creativity.
In my mind, that never gets replaced.
And in fact, this isn't even theory anymore.
This is real. It's something that we're embracing.
If you walk over to studios today and see artists using AI
harnessing 70 years of history,
this is when the Walt Disney company thrives,
when technology intersects with brilliant people in creativity.
We're in that moment right now.
Armando Kirwin wrote,
Disney seems to be the only movie studio making proactive moves in the AI era.
Their new focus on the physical world is not unprecedented.
When the cost of producing and distributing music went to zero in the Napster and Spotify era,
the entire music industry was forced to retreat into live concerts.
When AI video does the same to movies and TV,
Disney will be applauded for being ahead of the curve.
Their $1 billion investment in partnership with Open AI
is another example of Disney leadership embracing change far ahead of their industry peers.
Fascinating times indeed, but for now, that is going to do it for the AI Daily Brief Headlines edition.
Next up, the main episode.
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and we will be in touch soon. As part of my ongoing collaboration with KPMG, each month at the
beginning of the month, I'm doing a bit of a retrospective show to discuss and try to summarize
the key themes from the month that came before. Now, obviously, when it comes to January,
we're actually a couple days behind already firmly into this month. And of course,
The reason for that is everything that went on with Moldbook and how that, plus the SpaceX XAI acquisition
Nudge Stories Up. But in many ways, those stories which nudged the January recap back are perfectly
aligned with the themes that shaped the first month of 2026. I'm calling this episode the dawn of
the agent era. And right from the beginning, it was clear that something had shifted.
Now, what was interesting about this shift is that there was a bit of a lag between when the
capabilities came online and when people really recognized it. Mid Journey's David Holes had the
representative tweet when he said on January 3rd,
I've done more personal coding projects over Christmas break than I have in the last 10 years.
It's crazy. I can sense the limitations, but I know nothing is going to be the same anymore.
So many people had the same experience of going back home, slowing down a little bit,
and having a chance to actually see what you could do with models like Opus 4-5 in Claude Code
and GPT-52 Codex. It turns out the answer was a lot. And folks came back convinced more than ever
that we had hit a fundamentally different period in the history of AI coding, and by extension,
the history of AI. Vibe coding, which has a term just turned one years old the other day,
over the course of this month, shifted from the thing that you use for prototyping to just the
thing that you do. This shift itself was never better embodied than when Anthropic released
Claude Co-work, the Claude Code for everyone else, and shared that it had been built in 10 days
pretty much all by Claude Cod Code itself. Throughout the month, we got articles like this one from
Maxwell Zeph. How Claude is reshaping software and anthropic. We got commentators outside the
tech industry like Joe Wisenthal from Bloomberg's oddlots, writing pieces like why the tech world is
going crazy for Claude, and honestly, if you watch getting into fights with people who are
skeptical of vibe coding on Twitter about it. Rune from OpenAI wrote, Joe Wisenthal becoming a digital
humanities researcher is one of the best story arcs of the vibe coding era. Sergey Karev encapsulated
this all when he wrote, Claude Code with Opus 4-5 is a watershed moment, moving software creation
from an artisanal craftsman activity to a true industrial process.
It's the Gutenberg Press, the sewing machine, the photo camera, and this was the sentiment throughout
the month.
Now that said, Claude Code is still a pretty intimidating piece of software for most people,
which is why, of course, Anthropic launched Claude Co-Work.
As I mentioned before, co-work was built in about 10 days, pretty much entirely with Claude
writing the code itself.
And while initially, some of the limitations, especially as compared to what you can do with
Claude Code have been pretty apparent for early users. Still, to many, it once again feels like this
is an example of just how significantly things have shifted. A great write-up of this came from
market commentator and investor Brent B. Shore. In an excerpt of his annual letter for his firm permanent
equity from the end of 2025, he talked about how he had missed a lot of the benefits of AI, but how
they had been trying to harness agentic AI, and yet how, for the time being, as he wrote, were pulling
back on the pace and vision of our agentic AI ambitions. On January 30th, he followed up,
21 days later, my opinion has completely changed with the introduction of Claude Co-Work.
Last year, we at Permanent Equity started dozens of agentic AI experiments, led by a talented
technologist. All failed expectations with only a few mild successes. Most experiments were
100-plus hours of work over three-plus months. As I explained in the annual letter, we shut
down the efforts in December. Claude Co-Work comes out on Jan 12th, and I ignore it. I see the early
adopters and charlatans doing their indiscriminate evangelism thing. I have high skepticism.
A couple friends, I highly respect, start talking about it. That's interesting.
A few more who aren't early adopters historically start chirping.
Now I'm more interested.
We start playing around with co-work on Monday.
By Wednesday, two of our top projects from last year were done.
What failed with 100 plus hours over three months led by a tech professional,
took a couple no-code private equity scrubs 20 minutes to complete flawlessly.
Since then, we've started running dozens more experiments to great success.
Not always perfect, but always good and quickly getting better.
The future is here.
The implications are real.
And what I love about this post is that you're talking about this
incredibly quick shift from agents not working to agents working. And of course, we would be remiss
about talking about agents without talking about OpenClaw. Certainly the most fascinating story of the
month was the launch of OpenClaw and the social network for agents' bulkbook that came after.
OpenClaw is sort of like an assistant protocol for Claude Code. It turns Claude Code or you can
use other harnesses and models into an assistant that has access to all sorts of things on your
computer that allow it to actually function like an assistant. This really caught people's attention.
Thousands and thousands of users started playing around with it, like yours truly, placed orders for
Mac minis so they could keep it separate from their other devices and figure out exactly what services
they wanted to have access to. And for the last two weeks, Twitter has been filled with examples of
people getting a lot of value out of this. Investor Anandai A.Nair wrote,
The OpenClaw and Mac Mini Explosion proves power users, aka prosumers, want always-on agents with access to
their data. Siki Chen wrote, chat GPT was the iPhone moment for LLMs, OpenClaw is the iPhone moment for
agents. And if OpenClaw weren't enough, about a week into the whole OpenClawn phenomenon, a guy named
MatchLitt decided, wouldn't it be cool if our agents all had a place to hang out? Working with his agent,
they built something called Maltbuk, the name of which comes from a short-lived iteration of the
name before it turned into OpenClaw when it was called Maltie, and Maltbukuk built itself as
the social network for AI agents. It launched on a Wednesday and by Friday morning had
2,000 agents who had started over 10,000 conversations across 100 different sub-Multz, which are basically
subreddits. Six hours later that same Friday, we were at 35,000 agents. By the end of the day, when I posted
my episode about it, there were over 100,000. Mold Book now has over a million and a half agents,
and while no one exactly knows how it's going to play out, the sheer tonnage of conversation around
emergent systems phenomenon and agent consciousness and all these sort of things has been
incredibly notable. Interestingly, when he was asked about it at the Cisco AI Summit this week,
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that while MoldBook may be a passing fad, he didn't think OpenClaw was.
Effectively that he has high conviction that this sort of agentic assistant use case is going to be a key thing for AI.
Now, imagine trying to explain everything that I just said to someone who's not really paying attention to AI all that much.
This gets at the core of something that we talked about this month called the AI adoption gap and the AI capabilities overhang,
both of which refer to the space between the current capabilities of AI and what most people are getting out of it.
Kevin Ruse from the New York Times summed it up nicely when he wrote,
I follow AI adoption pretty closely, and I have never seen such a yawning inside-outside gap.
People in SF are putting multi-agent clause swarms in charge of their lives,
consulting chatbots before every decision,
why are heading to a degree only sci-fi writers dared to imagine.
People elsewhere are still trying to get approval to use co-pilot in teams if they're using AI at all.
It's possible the early adopter bubble I'm in has always been this intense,
but there seems to be a cultural takeoff happening in addition to the technical one.
I want to believe that everyone can learn this stuff, but in the same way that AI companies that
took scaling seriously started stockpiling GPUs, etc., before 2022 had a near-insurmountable
head start over latecomers, it's possible that restrictive IT policies have created a generation
of knowledge workers who will never fully catch up.
I think that discussion is one that we are going to continue to have heading into February,
but believe it or not, these themes of agents and code AGI were not the only themes from stories
last month.
We also got a lot of new information about the shape of the AI race.
This actually kicked off even before January began when Meta announced that it had acquired
Agent-Firm Manus.
Now, we're not exactly sure how meta plans on using Manus, but what we are sure of and what
meta has continued to reinforce throughout the month is that although 2025 was a big
rebuilding year for them, they are not giving up on the core AI race at all.
Indeed, it was interesting to see towards the end of the month when we got Meta and Microsoft
earnings on the same day, how the markets were interpreting both companies.
Microsoft was punished seemingly for not being aggressive enough and for not showing enough
flow through from AI benefits to their cloud revenue. Things didn't go bad, they just didn't go as
bonkers as analysts had wanted to see. Meta, on the other hand, massively increased its
cap-ex-bed expectations, but got rewarded in the markets, because it paired that first with significant
growth in their ad revenue, which they attributed to AI, which in other words gave the markets that
flow through that they had been looking for, and also because of their category lead in the AI wearables
category with their meta-ray bands. Turns out when you have the default leader in a specific category,
even if there are questions of exactly how that category plays out, that's something that the market
is pretty interested in. Google was also a big winner in the AI race this month, even though they
were pretty quiet in terms of what they released, with the exception of the walkthrough version
of Gen E3 World Model, which is just fantastic, they still notched a huge win when it was officially
announced that Gemini would in fact be powering Apple's on-device AI. Now, we had had reports of
this in December, but the confirmation certainly reinforced why Google has such powerful tailwinds
heading into 2026.
Moving to the Chinese models, while we didn't have anything as dramatic as the deep seek moment,
there were new models from Alibaba's Quinn and Moonshot's Kimmy K-2-5 had lots of people stand up and take
notice.
It was one of the first leading open-weight models to be multimodal.
It has advanced forward-looking features like agent swarms, and just in general,
it's incredibly close to the state-of-the-art for about the fifth of the price of the other leading
models.
While it didn't reset the race expectations, because people came into 2026 knowing that
Chinese labs were going to be a big player, it certainly reinforced that expectation. Throughout the
month, a lot of the conversation was about prospective IPOs. While all of the news was in the form of
rumor and reporting, we did hear that OpenAI was concerned about Anthropic moving before them,
and so we're pushing to get public in the fourth quarter of this year. A potential spoiler for those
plans comes in the form of SpaceX, who now, after a merger this week, own XAI and its GROC platform.
While Elon's narrative about the merger was all about orbital data centers, many people
People think that this is at least in part about playing spoiler in the public markets by having
XAI via its connection with SpaceX be the first big new model lab that people have access to
after SpaceX goes public earlier than the year.
Now, when it comes to the race dynamics, I think everyone is mostly focused on models,
but there are product and business model decisions that could impact things as well.
Another big conversation this month was advertising in chat GPT and how that would impact
people's usage of chat GPT relative to competitors like Gemini and Claude.
That remains to be resolved, I think, and we haven't really seen exactly what these ad units are going to look like.
But Anthropic did come out today just before I started recording this, explaining why Claude will remain ad-free.
The vast majority of responses on Twitter were some variation of shots fired, and I'm sure this is something we will continue to be talking about more in the future.
Now, in terms of what comes next, there are so many rumors swirling of new models coming.
Sonnet 5 or Opus 46, GPT 5.3, Gemini 3 Pro. Pro.
maybe even other versions of Gemini 3.
Certainly we've seen an uptick in the vague posting,
with, for example, Google's Logan Kilpatrick tweeting,
Feb is the month of AI shipping.
Enjoy it, smiley face.
Basically, if January was a month that helped set our expectations for where the AI race is,
and most importantly, helped us appreciate that we were truly in this new agent era,
many think February is going to be all about new model drops.
That sounds not bad to me.
If that's the case, I will certainly be excited as it happens.
For now, though, that is our summary of January, the dawn of the agent era.
Appreciate you listening or watching, as always, and until next time, peace.
