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  • v0 plus Figma plus Cursor: interactive prototype shipped in one afternoon
    Jun 25 2026
    v0 built a contacts table with search and a modal in three minutes flat, then took fifty more to wire up anything that actually makes it a product. That ratio is the whole game: AI scaffolding is instant, but brand decisions, interaction bugs, and demo-path triage do not compress at the same rate. The founders closing rooms on Monday are the ones who made their design decisions before the first prompt, not the ones who delegated them to the tools and tried to recover later.
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    11 Min.
  • ElevenLabs v3 vs Cartesia: where narrator grade breaks in long form
    Jun 18 2026
    ElevenLabs v3 vs Cartesia Sonic 3.5 is the AI voice showdown every podcast producer needs to know about right now, and the timing could not be more lopsided: one model has three months of real creative testing behind it, the other launched two days ago. For a ten-minute two-voice episode, v3 wins today because its inline Audio Tags and Text to Dialogue API actually solve the character differentiation problem at the script level, but Sonic 3.5 has one specific threat: if its voice drift fix holds for narrative audio the way it holds for outbound call centers, the gap closes fast. Neither tool survives paragraph four of grief, and any producer who does not know that going in is going to find out the hard way at the edit stage.
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    12 Min.
  • Fundamental: $255M For AI That Actually Understands Numbers
    Jun 15 2026
    A startup called Fundamental Technologies spent sixteen months in total silence, raised two hundred and twenty-five million dollars, hit a one-point-four billion dollar valuation, and signed Fortune 100 customers at seven-figure contracts before most people even knew it existed. Their argument is brutal and specific: every transformer-based AI model ever built, GPT-4, Claude, Gemini, all of them, is architecturally wrong for the structured tabular data that actually runs enterprise decision-making, because a tokenizer built for language cannot understand a number, a column, or a relational row. The CEOs of Perplexity, Datadog, Brex, and the guy who just sold his company to Google for thirty-two billion dollars all personally wrote checks, which is the kind of signal that is worth paying very close attention to.
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    12 Min.
  • ComfyUI wins the character consistency test: Krea can't hold a face
    Jun 11 2026
    Krea just shipped native LoRA training inside the browser on June 1, and suddenly the tool everyone wrote off as a vibe-check platform can actually lock a character's face across a full pose series without touching a single command line. ComfyUI still wins if you need a portable, reproducible pipeline that lives in a JSON file and runs on your own hardware forever, but Krea now gets you to a usable character in hours instead of the days it takes to wire a ComfyUI graph from scratch. The real tell is one line buried in the breakdown: Krea does not let you export your trained LoRA, which means if you build your whole character pipeline there, you do not own it.
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    11 Min.
  • How Goodfire Found Alzheimer's Clues Inside AI Weights
    Jun 8 2026
    A company just cracked open an AI model trained on biological data and found a new class of potential Alzheimer's biomarkers hiding inside the weights — something no researcher had written down or gone looking for. Goodfire built the tool that made that possible: a platform that reverse-engineers what neural networks actually learned, down to individual concepts, and lets engineers edit behavior with surgical precision instead of guessing in the dark. The same technique that once taught a grandmaster chess concepts no human had ever articulated is now being pointed at medicine — and the first result came back pointing straight at one of the hardest diseases on earth.
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    12 Min.
  • Suno v4 vs Udio v2: which clears for broadcast
    Jun 4 2026
    Udio makes genuinely better-sounding AI music than Suno in 2026, especially on vocals, but it does not let you download the files you create, which means it literally cannot complete a sync licensing job. Suno v5.5 gives paid users exportable WAV and MP3 files, cleared commercial rights, and new structural tools like Warp Markers that help you actually build a 60-second brand spot instead of just hoping one generates correctly. If you need to hand a music supervisor a deliverable today, only one of these tools can do it, and it is not the one with the better voice model.
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    10 Min.
  • humans&: The $480M Bet Against Solo AI
    Jun 1 2026
    A startup called humans& just raised 480 million dollars at a 4.48 billion dollar valuation with 20 employees, no product, and three months of existence — and the money is not a fluke. The founders are ex-xAI, ex-Anthropic, and Stanford AI royalty, and they left those labs specifically because they believe every major AI company is building for one person at a time when the hardest, most valuable work has always been done by teams. Google employee number seven, Jeff Bezos, and Nvidia just personally bankrolled the argument that the entire industry is solving the wrong problem.
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    11 Min.
  • ASML Just Bet €1.7B on Mistral AI's European Answer
    May 25 2026
    The company that holds a total global monopoly on the machines that make AI chips just took an 11% stake in a two-year-old French startup — and that startup was founded by two of the people who literally invented open-weight AI models at Meta. Mistral AI is quietly building the thing nobody thought Europe could pull off: a sovereign AI stack where your data never touches an American server, not because of a contract, but because of physics. The US and China are the only countries with frontier AI right now, and Mistral is the most serious attempt anyone has made to change that number to three.
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    11 Min.