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⏱ 4-min read

This issue: AI moved into the field.

A satellite identified objects from orbit. AMD launched a local AI workstation. Sarvam raised $234M for India-focused AI. NewCore is building identity systems for AI agents.

The shift is simple: AI is moving from tools you use to systems that work around you.

AI Just Taught a Satellite to Find Things on Its Own

For the first time, an Earth observation satellite identified what it was looking for in orbit without waiting for human analysts on the ground.

The demo happened on Loft Orbital’s Yam-9 spacecraft, using NASA JPL software and Google DeepMind’s Gemma 3 vision-language model to analyze satellite imagery from space.

Image source: ChatGPT

Highlights

  • A satellite used a vision-language model in orbit for the first reported time

  • NASA JPL’s NAVI-Orbital software helped run the AI system onboard

  • Google DeepMind’s Gemma 3 processed visual data on limited space hardware

  • The satellite responded to natural-language search tasks, like finding infrastructure near railway hubs

  • Loft Orbital says this could lead to always-on satellite monitoring layers

Why it matters: Debugging usually involves switching between code, browser, and devtools. Codex can now autonomously monitor the network tab, read the console, and trace slowdowns to address issues directly.

Scale Your IRL Campaigns Like Digital Ads

Out Of Home advertising has long been effective but hard to scale—until now. AdQuick makes it simple to plan, deploy, and measure campaigns with the same efficiency and insight you expect from online marketing tools.

Marketers agree: OOH is powerful for brand growth, driving new customers, and reinforcing messaging. AdQuick makes it easy, intuitive, and data-driven—so you can treat real-world campaigns like any other digital channel.

Your Next Nurse Might Not Be Human

Taiwan is putting $1.5 billion behind an AI-native hospital system, with NVIDIA and Foxconn deploying AI agents and nursing robots across major medical centers. One robot already handles 75–80 tasks a day and cuts nursing workload by about 30%.

The latest AIHealthTech Insider also covers Yale moving 700,000 radiology exams into AI-assisted reporting, Philips finding AI saves clinicians 16 working days a year, and a new warning around glucosamine — all circling one uncomfortable question: when AI starts running hospital work, who is trained enough to supervise it?

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🔥Big News in AI

Image source: Grok

🔹Sarvam Just Became India’s Newest AI Unicorn

Sarvam raised $234 million at a $1.5 billion valuation, led by HCLTech. The Bengaluru startup is building Indian-language AI models, inference infrastructure, and enterprise AI apps for sectors like banking, insurance, government, and defense. That means India’s AI race is moving from “use global models” to “build sovereign AI for local languages and local needs.”

🔹Grok Build Just Made Terminal Math Easier

Grok Build now supports native LaTeX and math rendering inside the terminal. Developers can view equations, formulas, and technical output directly in their coding workflow without copying them into a separate viewer. That means AI coding agents are getting better at handling not just code, but research-heavy and math-heavy work too.

🔹AMD Just Built a Local AI Monster for Windows

AMD launched Ryzen AI Halo, a $3,999 compact AI workstation with 128GB unified memory, Windows 11 Pro and Linux support, and the Ryzen AI Max+ 395 chip. It’s built to run large AI models locally instead of sending every task to the cloud. That means the local AI race is moving from “AI PCs for small tasks” to serious desktop machines for developers, agents, and private inference.

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NewCore wants to give AI agents employee IDs

NewCore emerged from stealth with $66 million in funding at a $300 million valuation, led by Cyberstarts with participation from Index Ventures and Evolution Equity Partners. The startup is building identity infrastructure for AI agents, so companies can authenticate, govern, and control them like digital employees.

Image source: ChatGPT

As AI agents move from simple assistants to workplace participants, companies need a way to manage what they can access, who approves them, and when their permissions should be revoked. NewCore’s bet is that traditional identity systems were built for humans and apps — not fleets of AI agents acting across enterprise software. The key question is whether companies will adopt new identity layers before agent access becomes the next big security mess.

One Prompt Can Now Turn Into a Full Content Campaign

Pippit by CapCut takes one idea and turns it into videos, product photos, avatar clips, talking photos, ads, and social creatives. It is built less like an editor and more like a small AI production team for entrepreneurs who need content but do not want to spend hours editing.

The workflow covers how to use Agent Mode, avatar video, AI talking photos, product showcases, and the new simplified prompt interface — plus why the latest Seedance 2.0 Mini update makes it faster for high-volume creators.

One idea. Multiple assets. No editing marathon.

Don't be the one behind at standup

Your team is already talking about the launch you missed. TLDR is the 5-minute daily brief that keeps you ahead, curated by ex-Google and Anthropic engineers. Free, and read by 7M+ subscribers.

Anthropic Just Put $350M Behind the AI Job Shift

Anthropic is funding a $200M Economic Futures Research Fund and a $150M Claude Corps fellowship — a clear signal that AI job disruption is no longer theoretical. At the same time, Google’s free 5-day AI Agents Intensive is back, with 1.5M past learners and a new focus on vibe coding.

This Sunday Special shows where to move next — two open hackathons, free AI courses, a no-code legal app built in 30 minutes, and six AI career opportunities. The ladder is changing fast, but the new openings are still visible if you start building now.

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