The deployment. How the AI labs verticallyintegrated into the serviceslayer — the Palantir modelat scale.

Major AI labs have adopted Palantir’s forward-deployed engineer model to embed models into enterprise operations, aiming to control the deployment and revenue stream.

Quiet GPUs for Local AI: Acoustic and Thermal Roundup

A comprehensive review of the quietest, coolest GPUs for local AI in 2026, focusing on acoustics, thermal performance, and ideal use cases across tiers.

$965B and Climbing: Anthropic’s Series H Is Really a Compute Bet

Anthropic announced a $65 billion Series H funding round at a $965 billion valuation, emphasizing a focus on compute infrastructure over valuation alone.

One upload in. A whole channel’s worth of content out.

ChannelHelm’s latest v1.5 update enables creators to convert one video into a complete multi-platform content package, learning and improving over time.

When a Content Network Starts Publishing to Itself

A large automated content network is publishing content to its own sites, causing imbalance and potential SEO risks. The causes and implications are still unfolding.

DeepSWE – The benchmark that made the models spread out again

DeepSWE, released May 26, 2026, shows wider performance gaps among AI coding models, exposing flaws in previous benchmarks and redefining model capabilities.

Opus 4.8 Lands, and the Quiet Headline Is Honesty

Anthropic releases Claude Opus 4.8, focusing on honesty and reduced flaws, amid improved benchmarks and strategic transparency in its capabilities.

The 4.8 Staircase: What the Market Actually Believes About Claude’s Next Release

Market sentiment suggests a likely release of Claude 4.8 by late June or July, but no official confirmation has been announced by Anthropic yet.

When a Content Network Starts Publishing to Itself

A major shift in digital publishing sees content networks increasingly publishing to their own properties, boosting engagement and control but raising new risks.

Phone-based injury-risk movement screening for hiring

A new phone-based movement screening tool for hiring physical-labor workers is being tested, aiming to reduce injury risk and cut costs for employers.