Sponsorship | Go Pro | Accreditations
TOGETHER WITH ZAPIER
Thursday’s top story: OpenAI is in talks with Venture Capitalist firms to raise the biggest amount of funding in over a year, with a valuation of $1B.
💸 OpenAI’s desperate funding race
⚡ How to learn about AI and automation
🤖 Google launches custom GPT alternative!
📽️ How to create engaging video guides in under one hour
🧑🤝🧑 How to create a community on Facebook using ChatGPT
🎉 Google’s image-generator is back!
📌 New AI pin: Better than Humane’s?
Read Time: 5 minutes
👇 AI stocks slid lower during Wednesday’s session as the market prepared for NVIDIA’s Q2 earnings release. NVIDIA beat analysts’ predictions and reported 122% revenue growth due to surging demand for data center chips. Despite this, the stock is currently trading 4.61% lower during the after-hours session. Learn more.
Our Report: OpenAI is in talks with Venture Capitalist (VC) firms to raise the largest amount of capital in over a year, valuing the company at $1B.
🔑 Key Points:
VC firm, Thrive Capital, will (reportedly) invest $1B and Microsoft is expected to participate, with OpenAI’s previous backers—Khosla Ventures, Infosys, and Y Combinator—also expected to chip in.
If successful, this will be the biggest injection of capital OpenAI has seen since January 2023, when Microsoft—who holds a 43% stake in the company—invested $10B, making it a total of $13B since 2019.
The $1B valuation is substantially higher than February’s valuation—when sales of employee shares showed that OpenAI was privately valued at $86B—and is the highest valuation of any AI start-up, to date.
🤔 Why you should care: If rumors are true, OpenAI has been in discussions to raise this capital since December 2023, because—with an annualized revenue of around $3.4B—it's dangerously on track to drop $5B by the end of this year (having spent $8.5B on AI training and staff), with experts describing its business model as “untenable,” and warning that if it wants to make it to 2026, it will need to raise more funds than any start-up ever has.
Together with Zapier
Zapier is hosting its annual virtual user conference on September 26, 2024.
Four content tracks, including a special keynote, will offer insights on AI and automation you will not want to miss.
Why attend?
Learn how AI and automation work together to help you revolutionize your workflows.
Join Zapier CEO Wade Foster and HubSpot CTO Dharmesh Shah for a must-see keynote digging into AI and the future of work.
Get insider details from automation experts and industry leaders on the latest advancements, including updates to Zapier’s powerful automation suite.
Meco is a distraction-free space for reading and discovering newsletters, separate from the inbox.
AI Video Cut transforms long videos into viral shorts with AI
MakeMyAnime creates anime animations with AI
AI Ease creates professional AI headshots
VoiceGen generates realistic AI voices
Our Report: Google has announced it's days away from allowing its paying users to build Gems—custom Gemini chatbots, that can be tailored to specific tasks, like being a gym buddy or a cooking partner, for example—a concept it first introduced in May, at their I/O developer conference.
🔑 Key Points:
Creating a Gem is similar to building a custom GPT: Users describe what they need and instruct it to complete specific tasks, which it will remember, so they don’t have to re-type prompts, it will remain bespoke.
Google is offering those who don’t want to build a custom chatbot from scratch, premade Gems, which include a learning coach, a brainstormer, a career guide, a coding partner, and a writing editor.
The ability to create Gems, or use the premade versions, will be available to Gemini Advanced, Gemini Business, and Gemini Enterprise users in over 150 countries and “most” languages “over the coming days.”
🤔 Why you should care: With the launch of Gems, Google has followed (quite far behind) the footsteps of OpenAI, which launched its custom GPT chatbot feature in November last year, although OpenAI has gone a step further by letting its users share their custom GPTs in the ChatGPT store.
FAQs, training materials, onboarding docs, how-to guides, and feature notes take weeks to write. They always need updating, are often off-brand, and take whole teams of people to create.
But no one reads them.
What if you could create, edit, publish, and update brand-consistent, engaging video guides in less than one hour?
Welcome to Guidde, your all-in-one AI platform for effortless video guide creation for any organization, big or small.
Our easy-to-use features mean you can:
Quickly whip up videos (with no skills needed)
Edit in real-time
Share with anyone, anywhere
Type this prompt into ChatGPT:
Results: After typing this prompt, you will get copy that you can post on Facebook to foster a sense of community and encourage your ideal customers to engage with your brand.
P.S. Use the Prompt Engineer GPT by AI Tool report to 10x your prompts.
Imagine an AI assistant that optimizes your team's schedule, predicts project risks, and keeps everyone in sync. With tools like Motion and Wrike, this is now a reality.
Motion uses AI to create efficient schedules based on tasks and preferences, while Wrike's risk estimation tool predicts potential roadblocks before they derail your project.
Explore how AI can help you meet deadlines consistently.
Subscribe to The AI Report for the full story and more premium insights and tactics!
Over the “coming days”, Google will release an updated version of its Gemini-powered text-to-image generator—Imagen 3—in English, to Gemini Advanced, Business, and Enterprise users.
It originally released the image generator in February, but swiftly pulled it after users reported it was generating historically inaccurate images, and since then it's been testing its capabilities through its AI Test Kitchen.
The updated model “performs favorably compared to other image generation models,” and has additional safeguards that prevent users from creating images of public figures, minors, or anything involving violence.
Plaud (creator of GPT-4o-powered wearable voice recorder, Plaud Note) is launching an AI Pin—NotePin—which records meetings, takes notes, and handles “tasks so you can concentrate on what drives value.”
The pill-shaped wearable—which has taken inspiration from early Fitbits—can be worn as a pendant, pin, or watch, can continuously record for up to 20hrs, and is designed to “reshape the professional landscape”.
It costs $169, is available for pre-order, and given the success of Plaud Note—which has shipped 200,000 units since April—is expected to outperform competitor wearables from the likes of Humane and Friend.
👍 Yes: Transparency is a must within the AI industry, so they will follow suit to remain competitive: 80.69%
“Transparency is better. If hackers want to play with AI they will find the way regardless of what we do to prevent them.”
👎 No: This is playing into the hands of hackers, so publishing this information is irresponsible: 19.31%
“I think other firms will say certain things to make it seem like they're playing along, or they will announce some sort of new "keep humans safe" initiative" to make it sound like they're following along while keeping their prompts secret.”
Hit reply and tell us what you want more of!
Until next time, Martin & Liam.
P.S. Don’t forget, you can unsubscribe if you don’t want us to land in your inbox anymore.