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💰 New VC funds for early-stage founders, global roundup
Let’s kick off the week with a strong batch of freshly launched venture funds, covering AI, climate, biotech, and quantum. If you’re raising or scouting partners, this is your early-stage investor radar.
🔸 Alt Capital (USA) — $275M second fund focused on AI enterprise software; early-stage, U.S. and global.
🔸 Tandem Ventures (USA) — $50M first fund (+$100M SPVs) backing B2B SaaS and vertical AI startups.
🔸 T.Rx Capital (USA) — $77.5M first fund investing in biotech and life sciences.
🔸 VoLo Earth Ventures (USA) — $135M climate tech fund targeting energy, mobility, and industry.
🔸 Archetype (USA) — >$100M third fund for crypto and decentralized infrastructure plays.
🔸 Touring Capital (USA) — $330M debut fund backing AI-driven software at the early-growth stage.
🔸 Toyota Invention Partners & Woven Capital (Japan) — $670M + $800M funds focused on AI, automation, and climate tech.
🔸 Concept Ventures (UK) — €75M second fund, now Europe’s largest pre-seed vehicle.
🔸 Better Tomorrow Ventures (USA) — $140M third fund specializing in fintech.
🔸 55North (Denmark) — €134M (first close) quantum fund targeting computing, sensing, and communications.
🔸 Wave Function Ventures (USA) — $15.1M debut deep tech fund in nuclear, robotics, and aerospace.
🔸 Sugar Free Capital (USA) — $32M fund dedicated to AI-native startups.
🔸 Crystal Venture Partners (USA) — $33M fund for AI in insurance and regulated industries.
🔸 Ascenta (USA) — $325M fund building biotech platform companies.
The early-stage market is alive and well, from quantum to climate, capital is moving fast toward deep and defensible tech.
🛡️ Fake Detail launches privacy-first identity generator
Fake Detail has introduced a privacy-focused tool that lets users create disposable digital identities, temporary data sets designed to protect personal information during sign-ups, tests, or online interactions.
🔸 Generates temporary emails, usernames, and phone numbers from selected operators for secure, one-time use.
🔸 Creates pseudonymous names and addresses, helping users mask real data in non-critical contexts.
🔸 Builds mock social media profiles (YouTube, X, TikTok) for testing or design purposes, without linking to real users.
🔸 Simulates sample chats and interactions to support app testing and UX prototyping.
The goal isn’t deception, it’s data minimalism: giving users control over what information they share online. Fake Detail turns privacy protection into a seamless, everyday habit.
⚠️ Top reasons why startups shut down.
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💡 Lumi, AI that builds full websites from a single prompt
Meet Lumi, a new AI tool that can create complete websites in seconds no coding required. Just describe your idea in chat, upload design references if you have them, and Lumi automatically generates the entire product.
🔸 Builds the full stack: interface, backend, database, login form, and analytics.
🔸 Supports real-time editing, you can tweak design or functionality directly in chat.
🔸 Works for landing pages, dashboards, or even SaaS prototypes.
🔸 Ideal for founders, marketers, or designers who want to go from concept to demo instantly.
Lumi turns the idea of “no-code” into “no-setup” shifting web development from writing code to describing intent.
🧱 KIRI Engine releases 3DGS to Mesh 2.0, turn any object into a 3D model
KIRI Engine has launched 3DGS to Mesh 2.0, a breakthrough AI model that lets anyone scan real-world objects and instantly convert them into editable 3D models. The system uses a refined pipeline that merges mesh generation, normal prediction, and reflection filtering for ultra-realistic results.
🔸 Generates high-fidelity 3D meshes with accurate lighting and textures straight from a phone camera.
🔸 Combines 3D Gaussian Splatting (3DGS) with optimized mesh reconstruction for smoother surfaces.
🔸 Models can be exported and edited in most 3D software, ideal for game devs, artists, and product designers.
🔸 The app is free to use, making high-quality 3D capture accessible to everyone, for both Android and IOS users.
AI photogrammetry just leveled up, 3D creation is becoming as simple as taking a photo.
⌨️ A viral TikTok just taught the internet how to properly delete text
A short TikTok clip went viral after revealing that pressing Ctrl + Backspace deletes entire words instead of single letters, something millions of users apparently never knew.
🔸 The video hit 30 million views in days, sparking disbelief across social media.
🔸 Even Microsoft’s official account commented, admitting they “didn’t know” about the shortcut.
🔸 The trick works across most text editors, browsers, and messaging apps, saving seconds that now feel like years of lost time.
The internet just collectively discovered productivity’s biggest cheat code and yes, the world will never be the same.
🎧 David AI secures $50M to expand its global audio data lab
San Francisco–based David AI, a YC-backed audio data research company, has raised $50M in Series B funding led by Meritech and NVIDIA, with participation from Alt Capital, First Round, Amplify Partners, and Y Combinator. The round brings total funding to $80M.
Founded in 2024 by ex-Scale AI engineers Tomer Cohen and Ben Wiley, David AI calls itself the world’s first dedicated audio data research lab. The company builds large, diverse datasets that capture global human speech — across languages, emotions, and real-world environments — to train next-generation voice and audio AI models.
🔸 The new capital will fund research expansion, team growth, and deeper collaboration with global AI and hardware firms.
🔸 David AI’s datasets already power voice models used by top AI labs and several “Mag 7” tech giants.
🔸 The company recently surpassed an eight-figure annual revenue run rate.
🔸 Competitors include Defined.ai, PublicAI, Human Native AI, Ydata, and Syntheticus.
David AI positions itself as the data backbone for the coming wave of audio-first AI - powering the interfaces that will connect humans and machines in the physical world.
⚡️ Startups don’t buy AI they buy speed
a16z and Mercury analyzed transactions from 200,000 startups (June–August 2025) to understand how companies actually spend on AI tools, especially for note-taking, design, coding, and communication. The findings reveal a clear trend: startups aren’t chasing models or hype, they’re investing in speed and efficiency.
🔸 “For everyone” products dominate 60% of AI expenses, OpenAI, Anthropic, Perplexity, Notion, Manus. Assistants and “smart workspaces” remain a competitive, leaderless category.
🔸 The creative stack, Freepik, ElevenLabs, Canva, Photoroom, Midjourney, Descript, Opus Clip, CapCut, now defines daily work. Content creation isn’t a separate role anymore.
🔸 “Vibe-coding” tools like Replit, Cursor, Lovable, and Emergent are mainstream. Replit earns 15× more than Lovable, as companies pay for faster prototyping instead of large dev teams.
🔸 Vertical AI tools are turning into “AI employees”: Crosby Legal (law), 11x (GTM), Alma (immigration). Startups prefer automation over contractors or hires.
🔸 Nearly 70% of top AI tools began as consumer apps and scaled bottom-up, the B2C-to-B2B path now takes just 1–2 years.
AI has stopped being about futuristic tech, the only metric that matters now is how fast it delivers results.
🏠 Design your dream home no architect needed
Interior designers and soon-to-be homeowners, meet HomeByMe a 3D home design platform that lets you build and furnish your dream space just like in The Sims, but with real-world accuracy.
🔸 You can draw your home layout, add walls, doors, and windows directly in 3D.
🔸 The platform includes thousands of real furniture and décor items major brands.
🔸 Everything is drag-and-drop, so you can instantly see how your dream space looks and feels.
🔸 Projects can be shared with designers or contractors for easy collaboration.
🔸 It’s perfect for planning renovations, new homes, or even testing interior aesthetics.
It’s basically The Sims for real life,!but this time, your living room isn’t fictional.
⚙️ Booking.com, Spotify, and Figma now live inside ChatGPT
🔸 Apps work as native chat integrations no installs, no separate mode.
🔸 OpenAI also launched an Apps SDK, letting developers build custom chat-based apps.
🔸 It’s essentially the next iteration of plugins, but more stable and natively integrated.
🔸 Monetization isn’t live yet, though Altman hinted at “various ways” to earn in the future.
🔸 It’s unclear if brands will be able to pay for higher visibility or priority placement in ChatGPT results.
OpenAI is reviving the plugin dream, hoping apps inside ChatGPT succeed where plugins fizzled out.
⚛️ Harvard builds quantum machine that runs for 2 hours nonstop
Physicists at Harvard have created the first quantum computer capable of continuous operation for over two hours, shattering the previous record of just 13 seconds.
🔸 The team, led by Mikhail Lukin, solved a key challenge called atomic loss, where qubits (atoms) disappear due to heat, field errors, or gas collisions.
🔸 Their system uses “optical lattice conveyor belts” and “optical tweezers” to automatically replace lost qubits in real time.
🔸 New atoms instantly sync with the state of existing ones, preserving quantum information without rebooting.
🔸 The machine generates 300,000 atoms per second, maintaining about 3,000 active qubits during operation.
🔸 Researchers believe this approach could enable quantum computers with near-unlimited uptime within a few years.
Harvard’s quantum “conveyor belt” may have just solved the biggest bottleneck in making stable, practical quantum machines.
✅ Top 50 most expensive private companies today
14 of them did not exist 5 years ago.
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📞 AOL’s dial-up goes silent after 34 years, the end of an internet era
America Online has officially shut down its iconic dial-up Internet service, marking the end of a 34-year chapter that once defined how millions first logged onto the web. The final modem screech echoed this week, closing the curtain on a service that introduced the world to “You’ve got mail.”
🔸 At its peak in the late 1990s, AOL connected over 23 million users through its dial-up modems and CDs mailed to nearly every U.S. household
🔸 The shutdown ends both AOL’s Internet access and its classic AOL Dialer software, though some competitors like NetZero and Juno still offer dial-up options
🔸 The decision follows the ongoing shift toward broadband and fiber, leaving rural users and nostalgia-driven collectors as the last holdouts
🔸 AOL’s parent, Yahoo (under Apollo Global Management), said the closure reflects the company’s evolution toward modern digital media and advertising
AOL didn’t just sell Internet access, it sold the feeling of being online for the first time. Now, that sound of a modem connecting fades into history, replaced by a permanent broadband hum.
🚀 Mira Murati builds Thinking Machines, AI infrastructure for everyone
Former OpenAI CTO Mira Murati has launched Thinking Machines, a public benefit startup that raised $2B at a $12B valuation, before releasing a single product. The company aims to democratize how AI models are customized and deployed.
🔸 Focused on infrastructure for fine-tuning open models, not creating ever-larger proprietary ones
🔸 Built by a hand-picked team so loyal that engineers reportedly turned down $50M–$1.5B offers from Zuckerberg
🔸 Structured as a public benefit corporation, signaling long-term social and ethical commitments
🔸 Backed by a star roster of investors betting on Murati’s track record from OpenAI and Tesla
🔸 Aims to make AI development accessible to smaller companies, challenging the “winner-takes-all” model
Murati’s journey from Albania to Tesla to OpenAI’s helm shows how engineering rigor can outpace pedigree. Now, she’s betting that the next AI revolution won’t come from bigger models, but smarter infrastructure.
🧠 Richard Sutton vs LLMs: The Bitter Debate
In a recent interview with Dwarkesh Patel, AI pioneer and Turing Award laureate Richard Sutton surprised many by saying that large language models are still not the Bitter Lesson.
Back in 2019, Sutton’s now-legendary essay “The Bitter Lesson” argued that real AI progress comes not from hand-coded human knowledge, but from scaling computation and general learning methods. It became a cornerstone idea in modern ML thinking and LLMs were widely seen as its perfect embodiment.
So why does Sutton disagree?
🔸 He believes LLMs still rely too heavily on human-created data - data that can run out and carry biases.
🔸 Unlike humans or animals, they don’t learn through continuous real-time interaction with their environment.
🔸 In his view, true AI must be able to learn autonomously, not just be fine-tuned on curated text.
Andrej Karpathy responded with a thoughtful counterpoint. He noted that animals aren’t truly “blank slates” either, evolution preloads them with survival knowledge. In that sense, LLM pretraining could be viewed as an algorithmic version of evolution itself.
Karpathy concluded that Sutton’s ideal, a perfectly self-learning system, may be more of a philosophical north star than an attainable endpoint. Still, Sutton’s call for new paradigms is a timely reminder that scaling alone isn’t the whole story.
This exchange will likely be remembered as one of the defining moments in the ongoing debate over what “real intelligence” actually means.
🚐 Einride, the driverless future of electric logistics
Swedish startup Einride is building what might be the most complete vision of autonomous, electric transport, trucks without cabins, powered by AI, and coordinated by a digital logistics platform. Their philosophy: “You can’t go electric without going digital.”
🔸 Fully electric, cabless trucks, futuristic design increases cargo space and cuts weight.
🔸 Range up to 650 km on a single charge, with remote human intervention possible in emergencies.
🔸 Proprietary Saga platform manages routes, charging, and optimization across fleets.
🔸 Network expanding across Europe, the U.S., and Benelux, with clients including PepsiCo, Lidl, Carlsberg, and AB InBev.
🔸 Sales doubled in 2024, fleet size now exceeds 150 vehicles.
Einride isn’t just electrifying trucks, it’s re-engineering the logistics stack from wheels to cloud. The only question left: are we ready to go driverless before we go fully electric?
🤖 AI won’t replace you. But someone who knows how to use it will.
Most people open ChatGPT, type something random, and hope for magic.
They waste hours because they don’t know how to ask.
👉 This book fixes that. 👈
It gives you 100 proven prompts that make ChatGPT useful from day one — for work, business, learning, creativity, and daily life.
Here’s what you’ll find inside:
🔸 7 sections — Productivity, Creativity, Business, Learning, Finance, Lifestyle, and tools for Pro-Users.
🔸 100 proven prompts with examples and pro tips
🔸 Step-by-step methods for building better prompts
🔸 Real tools to save time, generate ideas, and automate routine
Plan your week. Write faster. Find better ideas. Automate boring stuff.
All with simple copy-paste prompts that actually work.
For everyone tired of AI that sounds clever but helps none.Читать полностью…
🛸 The 2025 State of AI Report: from static models to autonomous agents
A new State of AI report has been released, not entirely “fresh,” since by the time it’s compiled, the field has already moved on. But it offers a powerful retrospective on how much has changed in just one year.
🔸 Mathematical breakthroughs: several models have now become gold medalists in real math olympiads, a clear, binary benchmark of progress.
🔸 Continuous learning trend: the shift from static pretraining to models that learn continuously is gaining momentum.
🔸 Creative autonomy: AlphaZero proved that AI trained without human input can invent new strategies later studied by humans, dismantling the claim that “AI can’t create anything new.”
🔸 China’s open-model dominance: Chinese labs are now leading the West in open-source AI development.
🔸 Agents as collaborators: the paradigm is evolving from humans using tools to humans partnering with autonomous AI agents.
🔸 AI-first advantage: companies built around AI from inception are outperforming traditional firms in both revenue and growth.
Among the bold forecasts for the next 12 months:
• One major retailer will see 5% of offline purchases made by AI agents.
• A generative real-time video game will break Twitch viewership records.
• A film co-created with AI will resonate with audiences, and spark backlash from creators.
The report spans 300+ pages, full of insights, contradictions, and bold predictions. But one thing is clear: AI is shifting from a tool to an autonomous economic force.
⚙️ n8n raises $180M to become the orchestration layer for AI automation
n8n has closed a $180 million round at a $2.5 billion valuation, cementing its position as one of the leading infrastructure players in the emerging agent economy. Originally launched as an open-source alternative to Zapier, n8n has evolved into a hybrid AI orchestration platform, giving companies fine-grained control over how their automation agents think and act.
🔸 Founded in 2019 by Jan Oberhauser, n8n started as a visual workflow builder and has grown into a default tool across AI developer communities.
🔸 The platform offers configurable autonomy, allowing users to define when logic is manual, semi-automated, or AI-driven.
🔸 Supports 1,000+ integrations with SaaS and enterprise systems, bridging human workflows with AI agents.
🔸 Combines no-code simplicity with code-level extensibility, enabling both developers and business teams to collaborate in real time.
🔸 Backed by Accel, Salesforce Ventures, Felicis, and Sequoia, and powered by a strong open-source ecosystem.
As OpenAI pushes its GPT Agents ecosystem, n8n stands out as the neutral, open orchestration layer, a system that works with AI models rather than being locked into any single one.
n8n is betting that the future of automation will not be defined by closed ecosystems, but by flexible orchestration platforms that keep enterprises in control of their AI workflows.
🔔 Google launches AI fitting room for virtual shoe try-ons
Google has rolled out a new AI-powered shoe try-on feature, letting users see how sneakers look on their own feet before buying. Just tap “Try on” on a product card and upload a full-length photo, Google’s model then generates a realistic preview.
🔸 Available for now in the U.S., Australia, Canada, and Japan, with plans to expand to more regions.
🔸 The tool uses generative AI and pose-estimation to match shoes to your body type and lighting.
🔸 Initially supports major brands on Google Shopping, with apparel integration expected next.
🔸 Builds on Google’s earlier AI try-on for clothing, expanding into full-body visualization for retail.
E-commerce is entering its AR moment, and Google wants to own the virtual dressing room.
🤖 Figure unveils “Figure 03”, its first humanoid ready for mass production
Figure AI has introduced Figure 03, a next-generation humanoid robot designed as a versatile assistant for both homes and businesses. It can handle everyday tasks like doing laundry or greeting guests at a hotel reception, marking Figure’s shift from prototypes to production-ready robotics.
🔸 The robot features a textile suit and soft protective inserts to make human interaction safer and more natural.
🔸 It adds new sensors, cameras in its hands, an upgraded battery, and wireless charging, all powered by Figure’s in-house Helix neural network.
🔸 Figure 03 is optimized for large-scale manufacturing, with the first line capable of producing up to 12,000 units per year.
🔸 Pricing and launch details remain undisclosed, but the design suggests a move toward commercial deployment.
With Figure 03, the company is signaling that humanoid robotics is moving out of the lab, and into real-world service.
🔘Founders map the next AI winners at AI Challenges
The AI Challenges online conference gathered visionary founders to outline the unsolved problems that will decide which AI startups survive the next decade, from data access and inference costs to human alignment and product feedback loops. Here’s a concise, investor-facing digest.
🔸 “Data Freedom” confidential, siloed data is the biggest blocker; secure, auditable data pipes will unlock healthcare, legal, and enterprise verticals.
🔸 Inference & LM-training costs, fine-tuning and per-query inference are inefficient and expensive; parameter-efficient adaptation and hybrid edge/cloud designs are prime infra bets.
🔸 The AI Dealmaker: an agent for VCs that automates sourcing, diligence, and portfolio monitoring; retention hinges on measurable time-saved.
🔸 Turning LLM feedback into product outcomes: teams need SDKs and control planes to convert user signals into reliable model and UX improvements.
🔸 AI-native economy: autonomous agents will create new marketplaces (agent payroll, billing, reputation) and reshape how work is exchanged.
🔸 The Future of Human-AI Relationship: empathy, trust, and explainability are now product features, not optional extras.
🔸 Pitch session: five strong AI-native startups presented (themes: agent platforms, data-vaults, feedback control planes, vertical AI employees, cost-efficient inference).
🔸 Online afterparty hosted by venture investor DJ Mak.
A clear signal for investors: bet on speed + trust + economics products that prove time-saved, keep customer data in control, and make inference affordable will act like profitable, accountable “AI employees.”
🧠 Neuralink patient controls robotic arm with his thoughts
Nick Ray, who suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), has become the first Neuralink patient to control a robotic arm purely through thought. Implanted with Neuralink’s brain interface in July 2025, he recently connected it to Tesla’s Optimus robot, and the results are stunning.
🔸 Nick reports that the delay between his thoughts and the arm’s movement is “almost unnoticeable.”
🔸 For the first time in years, he was able to put on a cap, heat up nuggets in the microwave, and eat by himself.
🔸 He’s also learned to slowly control his wheelchair through the same neural interface.
🔸 The experiment marks the first integration of Neuralink’s implant with a humanoid robot, showing early progress toward mind-controlled assistive machines.
A powerful glimpse into the future, where human thought could directly control the tools that restore independence.
⚛️ Quantum pioneers win the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics
The Nobel Committee awarded this year’s Physics Prize to John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis for experiments that showed quantum mechanics at work in everyday electronic circuits a breakthrough that paved the way for today’s quantum computers.
🔸 In the 1980s, their superconducting circuits proved that quantum effects can appear in macroscopic systems.
🔸 Their discoveries laid the foundation for quantum processors, sensors, and encryption technologies.
🔸 Devoret is now chief scientist at Google Quantum AI, while Martinis once led the Google Quantum Lab.
🔸 Clarke, based at UC Berkeley, helped design early quantum devices that bridge physics and engineering.
🔸 The trio will share the 11 million SEK ($1.2M) prize.
Quantum theory finally leaves the lab and the engineers who made it practical are getting their due.
🎥 Sora Watermark Remover lets TikTokers clean videos
A new tool called Sora Watermark Remover allows creators to remove watermarks from Sora 2 videos while keeping 100% of the original quality.
🔸 OpenAI’s Sora 2 is freely available, but videos come with watermarks that can be annoying for social sharing.
🔸 The service simply requires uploading the video, it automatically cleans the watermark.
🔸 This is especially useful for TikTokers and other social creators who want polished AI-generated content without branding distractions.
Now Sora 2 videos can look professional without the watermark hassle.
🤖 Mercor hits record growth, and rewrites the AI playbook
In just 17 months, Mercor rocketed from $1M to $500M in revenue, becoming the fastest-growing company in AI history. What began as a remote engineer marketplace is now critical AI infrastructure connecting labs with domain experts who help train and evaluate models.
🔸 From freelance coders to scientists, doctors, and lawyers, Mercor turned expert knowledge into AI training fuel.
🔸 Now partners with OpenAI, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, and Nvidia.
🔸 Raised $100M at a $2B valuation, now targeting $10B in its next round.
🔸 Already profitable with $6M net profit in the first half of the year.
🔸 Boasts 1600% net retention and zero churn, an almost impossible metric.
🔸 Founded by Thiel Fellows aged just 22–23, now building tools for RL and AI expert marketplaces.
Mercor scaled faster than any AI startup ever, but with OpenAI launching a rival hiring platform, the next round might be a fight for the ecosystem itself.
🎤 NeuTTS-Air kills ElevenLabs’ moat, open-source voice cloning for everyone
A new open-source model called NeuTTS-Air is going viral for cloning any voice locally, no cloud, no paywalls, and total privacy. It can run on a PC or even a smartphone, using just a 3-second audio sample to generate natural, high-quality speech.
🔸 748M-parameter model, fine-tuned for speed and realism, rivals ElevenLabs and OpenAI’s Voice Engine
🔸 Works fully offline, ensuring voice data never leaves your device
🔸 Can generate entire podcasts, narrations, or dialogues from a single short recording
🔸 Released under an open-source license, meaning anyone can build apps, chatbots, or AI creators on top
If ElevenLabs dominated with convenience and polish, NeuTTS-Air is betting on freedom and decentralization, the future of voice AI may no longer need a server.
🎓 Stanford drops free AI lectures from Andrew Ng
Stanford has begun releasing a new open series of AI lectures led by Andrew Ng, the Coursera founder and pioneer of modern machine learning education.
🔸 Covers neural network training, AI agent design, and career-building in AI
🔸 Taught by Andrew Ng himself, returning to his Stanford teaching roots
🔸 Includes hands-on examples and practical labs using current AI frameworks
🔸 Designed for both beginners and professionals seeking to deepen ML foundations
🔸 Available free online, part of Stanford’s push to make AI education globally accessible
Decade after decade, Andrew Ng keeps doing what AI models can’t: teaching humans how to think like machines.
👩🎨 Google introduces PASTA - an AI agent for iterative image generation
Google Research has unveiled PASTA, a Preference Adaptive and Sequential Text-to-image Agent that interacts with users step by step, refining visuals through dialogue instead of raw prompt tweaking.
Unlike traditional models, PASTA learns from user sessions rather than isolated “prompt–image” pairs. It studies how prompts evolve and which images people ultimately choose - effectively learning from the creative process itself.
🔸 The team released the dataset of these real user sessions in open source.
🔸 Two auxiliary models were trained: one predicts user satisfaction with generated images, the other estimates which image the user would select.
🔸 Using these simulators, researchers produced 30K additional synthetic sessions to train the main agent.
🔸 Training used Implicit Q-Learning (IQL), with the goal of maximizing total user satisfaction over multiple iterations.
The result is a genuine text2image agent, not just a generator - one that learns to collaborate. It’s still research-only, but the dataset is available for exploration on Kaggle.
⚙️ Stapply: Your AI job agent
A new AI tool called Stapply promises to make job hunting effortless by acting as a personal AI recruiter, finding, ranking, and even applying to roles for you.
🔸 Indexes all existing vacancies for your search across multiple sources in real time.
🔸 Ranks results based on your preferences and career goals.
🔸 Automatically fills out application forms and attaches your resume.
🔸 Sends the applications directly, eliminating tedious manual steps.
🔸 Works as a personal assistant that adapts to your job-hunting style.
By taking over both the search and application process, Stapply could turn the often frustrating task of job hunting into a seamless, AI-powered matchmaking experience.