A hub for startup news, trends, and insights, covering the global startup ecosystem for founders, investors, and innovators. Community: @startupdis Buy Ads: @strategy (this is our only account).
💻 LoadOuts: the smart PC build generator
A new tool called LoadOuts helps anyone design the perfect PC setup with zero guesswork.
🔸 Builds a full PC based on your budget and preferences.
🔸 Checks all component compatibility automatically.
🔸 Suggests cheaper or premium alternatives with side-by-side stats.
🔸 Even advises on fan placement inside your case.
🔸 Completely free to use.
From casual gamers to pro creators, LoadOuts turns PC building into a plug-and-play experience.
🎥 Kling AI 2.5 Turbo released
Chinese startup Kling has launched a new version of its video generation model with big improvements in reasoning and efficiency.
🔸 Handles complex instructions more accurately for better storytelling.
🔸 Upgraded video quality with new creative styles added.
🔸 Generation costs reduced by 30% vs. the previous version.
🔸 Available now on Fal, Freepik, and the Kling website.
By cutting costs while boosting quality, Kling is pushing AI video closer to mass adoption.
⚠️ 1,000 DIY guides for building AI agents
An AI enthusiast has compiled a massive library of 1,000 step-by-step blueprints for creating neural assistants across almost any domain.
🔸 Covers coding, writing, data analysis, medicine, education, research, and more.
🔸 Each agent comes with detailed instructions on setup and launch.
🔸 The entire collection is available for free.
From hobby projects to professional workflows, this looks like the ultimate sandbox for anyone experimenting with AI agents.
🎬 Matthew McConaughey wants a “private LLM”
In an interview, McConaughey mused:
“I want an LLM with just my favorite books, notes, and articles. It would answer only from that, and learn more about me as we talk.”
Even for the king of beasts, behaving royally isn’t enough, you still need a
large
language model.
🔮 OpenAI eyes its first hardware
OpenAI is working with suppliers to build AI-powered devices, aiming to bring its models into everyday life.
🔸 Prototypes include smart glasses, a voice recorder, a “pin,” and a smart speaker.
🔸 The company has already approached Chinese manufacturer Goertek for components.
🔸 First product could arrive in late 2026 or early 2027.
From apps to actual gadgets: OpenAI wants to move AI from the cloud to your pocket.
👓 Meta’s Ray-Ban Display glasses freeze mid-demo
Mark Zuckerberg’s live demo of Meta’s new Ray-Ban Display smart glasses hit a snag when the device froze during an incoming call. After several failed attempts, Zuck admitted: “I don’t know what to tell you.”
🔸 Glasses failed to respond during the flagship call feature.
🔸 Multiple retries on stage, no recovery.
🔸 Awkward silence left the demo unfinished.
A sharp reminder that live demos carry one guarantee: tech will break when the world is watching.
🎥 Luma AI unveils Ray3 for smarter video generation
Luma AI has released Ray3, a next-gen model that reasons through stories, respects physics, and keeps scene details consistent, while being the first to generate video in 16-bit HDR.
🔸 Generates from text prompts, images, or video inputs.
🔸 Ensures coherent narratives with stable objects and lighting.
🔸 Available across all plans, with quality caps on the free tier.
A step toward AI video that doesn’t just create clips, but tells stories.
👓 Meta unveils Ray-Ban Display AR glasses
Meta has revealed Ray-Ban Display, its first AR glasses with a built-in 600×600 pixel lens display that stays nearly invisible to others.
🔸 Classic Wayfarer design, but right lens doubles as a private screen.
🔸 Functions: messages, social feeds, calls, music, maps, Meta AI assistant.
🔸 Gesture bracelet reads muscle signals, finger bend to select, double move to hide.
🔸 Battery: 6h glasses (30h with case), 18h bracelet.
🔸 Price: $799, US launch late September; Canada, France, Italy & UK in early 2026.
Meta is betting on stylish, everyday AR, but the question is whether a single-eye micro-display can win mass adoption.
🔺 Reve launches AI-powered image editor
Reve has rolled out a new AI image editor that lets users modify uploaded or generated images through a chatbot-style dialogue.
🔸 Each request produces three image variations for users to choose from.
🔸 Editing works on both uploaded photos and AI-generated images.
🔸 Compared to mainstream editors, Reve currently enforces fewer content restrictions.
By blending conversational editing with lighter guardrails, Reve is positioning itself as a flexible alternative in the crowded AI image editing space.
🤖 Figure hits a $39B valuation in latest funding round
Figure, the humanoid robotics startup, raised over $1B in its Series C round, placing its valuation at $39 billion.
🔸 Funding led by Parkway Venture Capital, with participation from Nvidia, Intel Capital, Brookfield and others.
🔸 Capital will be used to scale up its humanoid robot fleet, build infrastructure for training robots, and kick off advanced data collection.
🔸 Since its founding in 2022, Figure has raised nearly $2B in total.
Robotics is continuing its push into real-world deployment, not just lab demos. With massive funding and backing from big hardware players, humanoid robots working alongside humans in factories and warehouses are looking less sci-fi and more imminent.
🔍 AI-guided cameras enable solo surgery, a step toward surgical automation
Surgeons in Chile have used an AI-guided camera (part of the MARS robot) to perform a gallbladder removal alone, without a human assistant. The camera tracks the surgeon’s tools and adjusts angles automatically.
🔸 Combines magnetic surgical instruments with software that dynamically adjusts angles and views no external camera operator needed.
🔸 First time this has been done on a real patient, not just in animals or simulations.
🔸 Part of broader efforts: Johns Hopkins and others have already done complicated surgeries on pigs using AI-guided systems.
🔸 The global surgical robot market is large and growing: ~$15.6B in 2024, projected to reach ~$64.4B by 2034.
We’re seeing tangible moves toward surgical automation with AI not just assisting but taking a more autonomous role. But questions remain: how reliably can these systems perform in diverse, high-risk settings, and how fast will regulatory, safety, and adoption hurdles be overcome?
🎯 OpenAI launches jobs platform + certifications for the AI workforce
OpenAI rolled out a new Jobs Platform and AI Certifications program, aiming to both disrupt hiring and prepare workers for an economy reshaped by AI.
🔸 Jobs Platform uses AI to match companies with AI-skilled talent
🔸 Special focus on helping small businesses and governments access workers
🔸 Certifications span from basic AI use to prompt engineering and advanced skills
🔸 Target: certify 10M Americans by 2030, starting with a Walmart partnership
🔸 Training integrated into ChatGPT “Study mode” for easy upskilling
By fusing credentials with a hiring marketplace, OpenAI is positioning itself not just as a toolmaker — but as an infrastructure layer for the future of work.
💻 Claude quietly gains a full code interpreter
Anthropic has rolled out a sandboxed code execution environment for Claude, framed as a tool for presentations, spreadsheets, and office automation, but its capabilities go much further.
🔸 Supports Python and Node.js, with the ability to install libraries from PyPI and npm
🔸 GitHub integration available for pulling and working with repos
🔸 Limitation: file uploads/downloads capped at 30 MB
🔸 Access: already live for Max, Team, and Enterprise subscribers (enable in settings)
🔸 Pro users will gain access soon
With coding and library support built-in, Claude is edging closer to a true developer co-pilot, not just a productivity assistant.
🎼 Mozart AI debuts as a “Cursor for music”
New AI-powered music editor Mozart AI launched in beta, resembling FL Studio but with neural networks under the hood. The tool is free to use for now.
🔸 Full track editor — edit audio with AI, generate new samples on demand
🔸 Upload & process — bring your own samples and enhance them with neural models
🔸 Instant remixing — choose genre, style, or mood and get real-time variations
🔸 All-in-one DAW — traditional workflows fused with generative AI
🔸 Beta access — free during testing, available via open link
Mozart AI points to the future of DAWs: faster, more experimental, and powered by generative AI.
📼 China unveils DNA cassette tape with 36PB storage
Researchers in China have created a “DNA cassette tape” that can store 36 petabytes of data - enough to hold every song ever recorded. The innovation embeds synthetic DNA into plastic and protects it with a crystal-like armor for durability.
🔸 Developed by Xingyu Jiang’s team at Southern University of Science and Technology
🔸 Uses DNA bases (A, T, C, G) to encode data, similar to binary code
🔸 Crystal armor coating prevents degradation, enabling storage for thousands of years
🔸 Cassette design allows fast data access, mimicking rewind/fast-forward mechanics
🔸 Potential use cases: music archiving, video preservation, cultural heritage, genomic data
Though costs and read speeds remain challenges, the DNA cassette blends retro aesthetics with cutting-edge biotech, hinting at a future of ultra-dense, sustainable data storage.
✅ 200 leaders call for global AI “red lines”
At the UN General Assembly, a coalition of 10 Nobel laureates, 70 companies, and ex-heads of state including Geoffrey Hinton, Yoshua Bengio, and OpenAI’s Wojciech Zaremba, signed a demand for legally binding global limits on AI.
🔸 Seeks international “red lines” to prevent risks like mass unemployment, synthetic pandemics, and human rights abuses.
🔸 Proposed bans include weaponization, mass-scale cyberattacks, and self-replicating AI without human oversight.
🔸 Calls for a global watchdog body and an agreement on rules by end of 2026.
This marks the broadest push yet for binding AI governance, but without a clear rulebook, the hard part will be turning consensus into enforceable law.
⚠️ Collected list of “hacker” gadgets for awareness and education only
Twitter users rounded up common devices that can be (and are) repurposed for interception, network attacks, access testing, and hardware cloning, useful to know about for defenders, but dangerous in the wrong hands.
🔸 HackRF One — a software-defined radio for sniffing and experimenting with radio signals.
🔸 LAN Turtle — a covert access gadget used to maintain remote connections on a compromised network.
🔸 USB Rubber Ducky — a USB device that emulates a keyboard to run automated input sequences.
🔸 Flipper Zero — a popular multi-protocol gadget for interacting with RF, NFC, and IR devices; hobbyist tool that can be misused.
🔸 WiFi Pineapple — a specialized appliance used for Wi-Fi network testing and auditing.
🔸 Deauther Watch — a wearable tool that can force devices off Wi-Fi networks (used for testing or abuse).
🔸 Alfa (high-gain adapters) — powerful Wi-Fi/network adapters that extend range for testing wireless links.
🔸 GSM Jammer — a radio jammer that disrupts cellular signals (illegal in many jurisdictions).
🔸 MagSpoof — hardware that can emulate magnetic stripe data for research into payment security.
🔸 Raspberry Pi — tiny programmable computers often repurposed as inexpensive testing rigs or to script network activity.
🔸 Proxmark3 — a professional RFID/NFC research tool used to read, analyze, and test access-card systems.
This list is for awareness, defensive research, and legal security testing only. Possession or use of some of these devices can be illegal depending on jurisdiction and intent. If you’re curious about security, learn through legal channels: certified courses, CTFs, sanctioned labs, and bug-bounty programs. Don’t handle or use these tools for unauthorized activity.
😮 Meizu & Pandaer unveil a “self-healing” phone case
Yes, Meizu still exists, and together with Pandaer, it just launched a regenerating case that repairs scratches on its own.
🔸 Made of PET plastic with a Healing+ coating that melts slightly under phone heat to close scratches.
🔸 Claimed to survive even copper-brush pressure tests, though that sounds like marketing overreach.
🔸 Priced at ~120 yuan ($16), available for Meizu 22 and iPhone 17 models (except Air), with multiple designs.
🔸 Raises the ironic problem: how do you sell new cases if the old ones never wear out?
From chasing Apple in phones to selling sci-fi accessories, Meizu’s reinvention is as strange as it is creative.
⚠️ xAI’s biggest division now run by a 19-year-old
Remember when Musk axed 500 annotators at xAI overnight? Turns out the drama didn’t stop there.
🔸 Another 100 were cut, leaving 900 employees, still the startup’s largest team, and crucial for training Grok.
🔸 The new boss? Diego Pazini, a 19-year-old who just finished high school in 2023 and is now at UPenn.
🔸 He’s been at xAI for less than a year, replacing a Tesla veteran with a decade of leadership experience.
🔸 Diego already wields hiring and firing power, and reportedly let go of two employees who questioned him in Slack.
From freshman to division head in under a year. Who said juniors don’t get opportunities?
🎮 Learn algorithms through video games
A new interactive service makes algorithm learning visual and fun, using examples from video games to explain concepts step by step.
🔸 Clear guides with game-inspired examples for sorting, pathfinding, and more.
🔸 Adjustable parameters let you tweak inputs and instantly see different outcomes.
🔸 Designed for quick learning, no heavy math background required.
A playful way to master algorithms: change the rules, watch the game adapt, and learn by doing.
🗣️ Sam Altman: “If your product has any retention at all, you’re actually in really good shape”
Sam reflects on the first group of users that tested ChatGPT:
“This was back when the model was really bad. Very few of the users actually stuck with it. Retention was atrocious. But for the users that did retain, their usage increased over time.”
“If you have a product that has any retention at all, you’re actually in really good shape. If it’s 5%, that can be totally fine. The default is almost all the way down in a straight line to zero. But I didn’t quite understand that as intuitively at the time.”
📚 OpenAI shares 100 best student prompts
OpenAI just released a curated list of the top 100 chats and prompts for students, covering everything from essay help to interview prep.
🔸 Compiled and tested by real students for real use cases.
🔸 Organized into 3 clear categories: Study, Career, Life.
🔸 Covers essays, research, exam prep, job applications, and daily productivity.
A ready-made playbook that turns ChatGPT into a must-have study partner.
💻 Slimmed-down Windows 11 build released at just 2.3 GB
A stripped version of Windows 11 is making waves: it weighs only 2.3 GB and is designed to run smoothly even on older PCs.
🔸 Removed: Xbox Hub, Windows Update Center, and Windows Defender.
🔸 Gone: Weather, Office, Solitaire, and other bundled apps.
🔸 Streamlined: non-essential drivers stripped out, only core ones remain.
🔸 Browsers cut: both Microsoft Edge and Internet Explorer removed.
This ultra-light build trades Microsoft’s ecosystem for raw speed and simplicity, appealing to power users, but with major trade-offs in security and official support.
🎬 YouTube adds Veo 3 Fast for AI-powered Shorts
YouTube has launched Veo 3 Fast, a text-to-video generator that creates short clips with sound for its Shorts section.
🔸 Converts text prompts into videos; animation, style selection, and editing tools are on the way.
🔸 Free access now available to creators in the U.S., UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
🔸 Alongside, YouTube rolled out Lyria 2, a model that can generate songs from phrases and dialogue in videos.
By embedding AI video and music tools directly into its platform, YouTube is arming creators with new ways to produce content and keeping the pressure on TikTok and emerging AI-native rivals.
🎨 Meshy 6: a breakthrough in 3D model generation
Meshy has released Meshy 6, a next-gen tool for generating high-quality 3D assets directly from images raising the bar for 3D creation.
🔸 Delivers unmatched detail across geometry, textures, and overall fidelity.
🔸 Simplifies workflow with one-click export to game engines and modeling tools.
🔸 Requires only a single input image to produce ready-to-use 3D models.
🔸 Outperforms existing 3D generators in both quality and ease of use.
The launch sets a new standard: 3D model generation is no longer a niche experiment? it’s becoming a mainstream creative tool.
🚀 Apex raises $200M to scale satellite bus production capacity
Apex, the LA-based spacecraft company, just closed a $200 million Series D round led by Interlagos, pushing its valuation past $1 billion. The raise will supercharge its manufacturing, tech, and global reach.
🔸 Will use funds to expand production throughput and deepen technical capabilities
🔸 Also building out engineering teams, mission services, and new global sales channels
🔸 Co-founders Ian Cinnamon & Max Benassi bring experience from Synapse, SpaceX, and Astra; mission: reliable, standard satellite platforms for constellation scale
🔸 Apex claims a record: clean-sheet design to flight-ready satellite in under a year
🔸 Growth includes vertical integration (e.g. avionic, power, propulsion), expanding real estate (100,000+ ft²) to boost output ~50% plus room for R&D and payload integration.
If Apex delivers, it could help shift the bottleneck in space from launches to spacecraft platforms — enabling more rapid and reliable constellation deployment worldwide.
🔸 60 prompts for Nano Banana
Many interesting ways to use Nano Banana have been collected on GitHub. A few examples:
🔸 Place on the map
draw what the red arrow sees
/
draw the real world view from the red circle in the direction of the arrow.
Help me turn the character into a white outline sticker similar to Figure 2. The character needs to be transformed into a web illustration style, and add a playful white outline short phrase describing Figure 1.
Change the pose of the person in Figure 1 to that of Figure 2, and shoot in a professional studio
Apply the design from Image 1 to the can in Image 2, and place it in a minimalist design setting, professional photography
🧠 Thinking Machines Lab takes aim at randomness in AI answers
Mira Murati’s new startup, Thinking Machines Lab, has raised $2B and built a team of ex-OpenAI researchers. For the first time, it revealed its mission: making large language model outputs stable and predictable, not random.
🔸 Problem: today’s LLMs often give different answers to the same question
🔸 Hypothesis: unpredictability stems from how Nvidia GPU cores interact during inference
🔸 Approach: controlling that GPU-level process to reduce variability in outputs
🔸 First product: expected in the coming months, aimed at researchers and startups
🔸 Strategic goal: establish reliability as a core differentiator in model development
If successful, Thinking Machines could shift the baseline for AI — from “creative randomness” to trustworthy consistency.
📚 Ex-Spotify exec launches Oboe - an AI that can teach you anything
Former Spotify VP has released Oboe, a free AI platform that builds fully personalized study programs — positioned as a serious alternative to online courses.
🔸 One prompt gives you an hour of structured learning on any topic, from physics to nutrition
🔸 Generates summaries, podcasts, illustrated articles, flashcards, and quizzes
🔸 Designed to adapt content to your learning style, not just dump information
🔸 Already drawing comparisons as a stronger rival to Google’s NotebookLM
Oboe turns self-education into a tailored experience, hinting at a future where AI tutors could replace traditional e-learning.
🕹 Google launches free AI quest game
Google has rolled out a full-fledged interactive game designed to teach the basics of AI. The project comes with cutscenes, tasks, and real-world case studies straight from the tech giant.
A clever move: learning neural networks feels less like study and more like an adventure.