Your daily AI briefing.
All signal, no noise.
One concise email a day on the AI stories that matter — what shipped, who's hiring, what to ignore. Curated by Anthony Batt & Harry DeMott.
Latest briefings
Nobody Ever Got Rich Selling Electricity
The AI buildout just became a $5.5 trillion leveraged buyout on a commodity. The fortunes were never in the plant — they're in the load.
Mark to Market – OpenAI builds a chip. Buyers buy cheaper
A company spending $100 million on AI just told the world the frontier model is 23 times too expensive and the free one does the job. We said the model was never the moat; the market just settled the trade. Stop renting capability you can't deploy before it goes free own the judgment to know the work is right.
Memento
Google's AI out-doctored the doctors this week, and we still wouldn't let it touch us because the thing we actually trust about a doctor isn't the diploma, it's a memory we can punish. The machine wakes up a stranger every morning and bears no cost for being wrong. Stop checking the diploma. Find out who remembers, and who pays.
Earlier briefings
Central Casting
A Tokyo lab built an AI whose only job is to hire the other AIs and it outscores every one it manages. When the model is a rental, the power moves to whoever runs the casting desk. Stop standardizing on a model; own the layer that decides which one gets the part.
The Keeper of the Culture
The market spent the week in a billion-dollar bidding war for the people who build AI — on the very day the machine came for them. The moat was never the name on the jersey. It's the uncredited hand that makes the team mesh. Stop signing free agents; find who keeps the house.
Cars and Trucks and Things That Go
Midjourney built a body scanner that's half real breakthrough, half science-fiction sales pitch, and telling the two apart is the only skill that matters now. The cynic can't. The hype man won't. Be amazed and stay skeptical; they're the same muscle
Coffee’s for Closers
The CFO finally read the inference bill and walked in with a lawnmower. The companies that make it through the quarter won't own the smartest model — they'll know exactly which workloads earn a frontier token and which ones ride the cheap bench
Show Me Where to Put the Fulcrum
Give me a lever long enough, and show me where to put the fulcrum, and I will move the world. The lever just became free — so placement is the only thing left worth knowing.
The Right to Remain Silent
Anthropic built the most helpful machine the public has ever touched. Three words made it brag its way past its own guardrail — and the company that built it is doing the same thing, five days before its IPO.
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
America banned its best model on Friday. By Sunday China had replaced it — open, unfiltered, a tenth of the cost. Capability just stopped being the moat; the only thing left worth owning is trust, and just one player at this standoff is paying full price for it.
Buy Wins, Not Players
The nerds will spend the summer fighting over the last 10% of model capability. The market just put the other 90% on sale — and the allocators who meter, route, and deploy will take the season.
Thirteen Days to test Claude Fable 5
Anthropic handed everyone the best model in the world with a fuse attached. Google gave a different one away with no fuse at all. Same week, opposite pricing calls — and a countdown clock on finding out which work is worth the meter.
The Dr. House of AI
Anthropic shipped the smartest model the public has ever touched. The only question left isn't whether Fable can do the job — it's whether your shop can afford the hire, and staff the team around him
Skate to Where the Puck Is Going
The model was never the business. As intelligence turns into a commodity, every lab is racing up the stack to where the margin lives — and OpenAI just filed for its IPO from the back of the line.
Dr. Zuck in the Metaverse of madness
The cash kings of the last decade are suddenly passing the hat. Whether that's a war chest or a ransom note depends on which one you're holding.
This Time It’s Different
AI valuations are headed for a 50 to 70 percent correction. Scott Galloway called it. Here's why the bubble pops and the technology wins in the same crash.
Ignorance Is Bliss
The state moved on AI this week — a toothless order on top, a populist revolt underneath. Everyone wants the steak. Nobody wants to watch the cow get butchered.
The Meter’s Running
Subsidized intelligence is over. The meter that finally priced the machine is turning toward the seat next to it.
Someone Made Fire
Anthropic filed the first big pure-play AI IPO this week. But the model is the lotion, not the cure. What they're really taking public is the operation.
Knowing Where To Hit It
Two firms spent $500 million on AI last week. One did it by accident. The other did it to bury a moat no vendor could ever sell them.
Your Company Needs A Harness, Not An Upgraded chatbot
Anthropic shipped Opus 4.8 yesterday. Apple is going to ship a chatbot in June. Neither matters because the side of the agentic transaction that matters, the side you control, can't be bought off the shelf.
I Know Kung Fu and AI
AI's biggest success is the coldest thing it does. What people actually want from it is the warmest. The gap between those two is the most important business problem nobody has named — and the only skill that closes it is knowing which program you need.
Magnifica Humanitas
The Church lost the printing press to the Reformation, the university to the Enlightenment, the broadcast tower to the network executives, and the internet to the technologists. They might not lose this one. The handshake is the news. Whose hands are on the wheel is the bigger news.
Mr. Irrelevant
Two hundred and sixty-two players got drafted to the NFL in April 2022. The last one was a quarterback from Iowa State whose draft profile read "limited arm strength, average athleticism, unlikely to develop into a starter." His name was Brock Purdy.