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Claude Fable 5 is back, and it's a big deal for anyone building with AI
Quick heads up. Fable 5 came out on June 9, got pulled two days later when the US put export controls on it, and as of this week it's live again for everyone. If you're on Pro, Max, or Team, you get it for up to half your weekly usage through July 7, then it runs on usage credits after that. So this is basically a free week to test the most capable model Anthropic has shipped. Here's why it matters for us. This is the model you point at a messy job and walk away from. Drop it into Claude Code or Cowork and it will plan the work, break it into stages, hand pieces off to sub-agents, and check its own output over hours or even days. You're not sitting there babysitting a chatbot. If you've been putting off a project because it felt too big to start, this is the week to throw it at Fable 5 while the usage is cheap. What's the first thing you're going to test it on? Drop it in the comments.
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Adobe just put Photoshop and Premiere inside Claude and ChatGPT
Two things landed from Adobe this week and both matter if you make anything visual. First, Photoshop, Premiere, Illustrator, InDesign, and Frame.io now have an AI assistant built in. You describe what you want and it does the grunt work: rough cuts, swapping backgrounds, resizing for every platform, batch renaming clips, tidying up layers. It is public beta right now, so it handles the boring production steps while you keep the creative calls. After Effects is still private beta. Second, and this is the part most people are skipping past: Adobe's tools now run inside Claude and ChatGPT directly. You can kick off Adobe work from the same chat you already use, without opening the app. Gemini and Slack are next. The direction is the real story. The tool you think in is turning into the front door for the tools you make in. Less app hopping, more describing what you want and getting it back. If you have a Creative Cloud plan, go switch the assistant on and hand it one task you usually dread. That is the fastest way to feel the shift. What is the first job you would offload to it? Drop it below.
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A free AI just beat a top paid one (and anyone can use it)
Quick one that matters if you ever worry about AI getting too expensive. A new model called GLM-5.2 was just released for free. Anyone can use it, and companies can even run it on their own computers at no license cost. The interesting part: on certain coding tasks it scored higher than GPT-5.5, one of the big paid models, while costing roughly one sixth as much to run. In plain terms, the free and open side of AI is catching up fast to the expensive paid side. That is good news for normal people. More competition usually means better tools and lower prices for everyone. You do not need to switch anything today. The takeaway is simpler: you are not stuck paying premium prices to get strong AI. The cheap and free options are getting genuinely good. Have you tried any free AI tools that surprised you with how good they were? Tell us which one below.
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SpaceX just bought an AI coding tool for 60 billion dollars
Here is a headline almost nobody saw coming. SpaceX, the rocket company, has agreed to buy an AI coding tool called Cursor for 60 billion dollars. Cursor is a program that writes and fixes computer code for you. You type what you want in plain English and it builds it. A lot of developers swear by it. So why would a rocket company want it? The short version: every big company now wants AI building things in house instead of renting it from someone else. Owning the tool means owning the speed. This is one of the largest deals ever in the AI world, and it landed just days after SpaceX went public on the stock market. The bigger picture for the rest of us: the everyday tools people use are becoming so valuable that the biggest companies on earth will pay a fortune to own them. What is the one AI tool you would be sad to lose if it vanished tomorrow? Drop it in the comments.
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Jeff Bezos just bet 12 billion dollars on an AI that does engineering
Jeff Bezos is backing a new AI company called Prometheus. It just raised 12 billion dollars, which values the company at around 41 billion. That makes it one of the largest funding rounds an AI startup has ever pulled in. Here is what makes it different from the AI most of us use day to day. Prometheus is not trying to build a better chatbot. The team calls their goal an artificial general engineer. The idea is an AI that can design real, physical things, the kind of work human engineers do. Think machines, factory parts, even new medicines. Most AI you have heard about lives on a screen and works with words and pictures. This is a bet that the next wave of AI will design objects in the real world, not just talk about them. Worth a reality check. A giant funding round is a promise, not a product. Nobody has seen what this can actually build yet. But the size of the bet, and the name behind it, is why it got so much attention this week. When you picture AI five years from now, do you see it mostly on your screen, or out building things in the real world? Tell me in the comments.
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