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AI Week: Billion‑Dollar Deals and Policy Milestones

Key Points

  • Nvidia and Intel announced a $5 billion partnership that gives Intel access to Nvidia’s AI chip stack, paving the way for powerful local large‑language models on consumer laptops.
  • Microsoft committed an additional $4 billion to build two AI‑focused data centers in Wisconsin, underscoring its continued expansion of U.S. compute capacity despite earlier market rumors.
  • OpenAI released a new model, adding to the rapid rollout of next‑generation generative AI capabilities.
  • A new pair of smart glasses can interpret muscle‑activity signals for control but deliberately lack Wi‑Fi connectivity, highlighting selective sensor integration.
  • For the first time, a national government publicly declared it is “ready for AI,” marking a significant policy shift toward embracing the technology.

Full Transcript

# AI Week: Billion‑Dollar Deals and Policy Milestones **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImOo1BxAG7g](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImOo1BxAG7g) **Duration:** 00:16:06 ## Summary - Nvidia and Intel announced a $5 billion partnership that gives Intel access to Nvidia’s AI chip stack, paving the way for powerful local large‑language models on consumer laptops. - Microsoft committed an additional $4 billion to build two AI‑focused data centers in Wisconsin, underscoring its continued expansion of U.S. compute capacity despite earlier market rumors. - OpenAI released a new model, adding to the rapid rollout of next‑generation generative AI capabilities. - A new pair of smart glasses can interpret muscle‑activity signals for control but deliberately lack Wi‑Fi connectivity, highlighting selective sensor integration. - For the first time, a national government publicly declared it is “ready for AI,” marking a significant policy shift toward embracing the technology. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImOo1BxAG7g&t=0s) **Nvidia‑Intel $5B AI Partnership** - The excerpt highlights a $5 billion deal in which Nvidia invests in Intel to provide Intel access to Nvidia’s AI chip and firmware stack, enabling broader on‑device AI adoption while briefly touching on other headline AI developments. - [00:04:55](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImOo1BxAG7g&t=295s) **AI Race Fuels Browser and Notion Wars** - The speaker highlights Chrome's push to integrate seamless AI features to fend off emerging smart browsers, while noting Notion AI's launch of agents that automate and centralize startup workflows, signaling intensifying competition in both browser and productivity tool markets. - [00:10:44](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImOo1BxAG7g&t=644s) **GPT‑5 CodeX: Efficiency, Competition Victory** - The speaker contrasts cloud‑code platforms with GPT‑centric tools, then highlights GPT‑5 CodeX’s dynamic token allocation that boosts simple‑task efficiency by up to 94% while excelling on complex reasoning, and notes its unprecedented win over top human programmers in a collegiate coding competition. - [00:14:32](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImOo1BxAG7g&t=872s) **EU AI Market, Regulation, and Ireland Hub** - The speaker highlights Ireland as a gateway for U.S. tech giants, emphasizes the EU’s massive AI market and its regulatory sandbox as a growth avenue—especially versus China—and notes how compliance‑first strategies can enable both EU and U.S. startups to penetrate highly regulated sectors like healthcare. ## Full Transcript
0:00This week in AI news had everything. We 0:02had historic enemies becoming allies in 0:04a $5 billion deal. The world's most used 0:06browser got a brain transplant. We had a 0:09new open AI model. We had glasses that 0:11can read muscle signals but not Wi-Fi 0:13signals. And perhaps most interestingly, 0:15we had the first government that was 0:17willing to say we're ready for AI in a 0:19meaningful way. Let's get to the news 0:20and why it mattered. Eight stories for 0:22you. We're going to jump in with number 0:23one, Nvidia and Intel inking a new deal. 0:26The deal is worth $5 billion. 0:28Specifically, Nvidia is just investing 0:29in common stock with Intel at 23 bucks a 0:32share, which promptly popped. So, I'm 0:34sure Jensen took a few billion off to 0:36the bank on that one. But the the real 0:38reason this matters is that Intel will 0:40get access to Nvidia's technical stack, 0:43which allows them to bring Nvidia's 0:45chipsets and their firmware into the 0:48laptop supply chain and the rest of 0:50Intel's products. What that means is a 0:53lot more AI availability over the medium 0:56term for consumers and for businesses. 0:59Right now everything is running through 1:01the cloud. We have a billion people 1:02accessing AI through the cloud. I don't 1:04think that's the way it will be forever. 1:06Andre Carpathy actually called this out 1:08really effectively. I thought when he 1:10commented that we are going to see a 1:13future where everyone just has 1:15intelligence too cheap to meter that 1:17lives locally on their device and they 1:18can get other intelligence if they want 1:20it. To realize that you need a chipset 1:22change. You need a C change in what 1:24chipsets are available and this deal is 1:27the deal that unlocks that future. Intel 1:30is so ubiquitous across chipsets and 1:32consumer laptops. This deal is what 1:34enables much more powerful local LLMs to 1:37run on consumer laptops, which enables a 1:39future where you will just have a local 1:42LL running on your machine and it's 1:45local intelligence and it knows your 1:46machine really well. And yes, it can 1:47probably browse the web and do other 1:49stuff. And yes, you may call in cloud 1:51AIs as well, but it's just there to help 1:53you run your machine and run your day. 1:55The idea of a personal ondevice 1:57assistant was made real this week 2:00through this deal. Story number two, 2:02Microsoft is investing in its Wisconsin 2:06AI data center to the tune of an 2:08additional 4 billion and they are 2:10planning on bringing two data centers 2:12online there. So, there's a data center 2:15uh coming online in 2027 and another one 2:17in early 2026. And as you would expect, 2:20they're housing a ton of NVIDIA GPUs and 2:23they're basically looking to establish 2:26more compute capability for what they 2:27anticipate to be surging business demand 2:30specifically in the United States. This 2:32contradicts the narrative that was 2:35popular early in 2025 that Microsoft was 2:38scaling back its AI investments because 2:41it was feeling cautious. I don't know if 2:42you remember the brief market turmoil 2:45when Deepseek was launched, but it led 2:48to rumors circulating that Microsoft was 2:50pulling back on its AI data center 2:52investments. This investment reminds us 2:55that the long-term trajectory of 2:57investing ahead of business demand in AI 3:00remains intact. Story number three, 3:02Google Chrome got a Gemini integration 3:06and it has a bunch of features. The one 3:08that popped out to me is the idea that 3:10you can look at your email, type it into 3:13Gemini that you want to get dinner with 3:15someone and you want some ingredients 3:16and Gemini can go order from Instacart 3:18for you and get your ingredients. That 3:20stood out to me for two reasons. One, it 3:23is a classic demonstration of Aenta 3:25capability, particularly because it's 3:27tied to Instacart, which is a highly 3:29predictable interface in which you can 3:31partner with the Instacart team on to 3:32make sure you don't have mistakes. So, 3:33it's a little bit like driving on the 3:36closed course. They always tell you the 3:38stunt drivers drive on for ads. Yes, you 3:40can do this, but drive it on Instacart 3:43because that's what that's where this 3:44works. I think the reality is aentic 3:47browsers are going to feel like a 3:50gimmick until we find stable readrfaces 3:54that actually work. Now, I am the first 3:56person to say Gemini has footprint, 3:58Chrome has footprint. The fact that they 4:00felt comfortable rolling this out to the 4:03whole Chrome user base says something 4:05about how committed the team is to 4:06shipping at Google. I am sure it will 4:08get better. But init and I should add 4:11one caveat. It is rolling out to the 4:13whole world, but it's starting with US 4:14English users and global expansion will 4:16follow. So if you're in Europe, sit 4:18tight. It's coming. It integrates with 4:20calendar, YouTube, maps. That's really 4:22where the power is going to be. If 4:23you're looking down the road at what 4:25could this be, not what is this now, 4:26which I think is a great way to look at 4:28a lot of these AI stories, the 4:30trajectory for agentic browsers is how 4:34can they establish readwrite interfaces 4:36to the places that matter. Not the 4:38things that feel like made up. Because I 4:40got to tell you, when was the last time 4:41I wrote a friend and was like, let's 4:42have dinner and went to Instacart? Not 4:44very frequently, but when was the last 4:46time I went to Google Maps? All the 4:48time. When was the last time I went to 4:50YouTube? All the time. When was the last 4:51time I went to Calendar? all the time. 4:53So those kinds of concrete use cases, if 4:55they can make them feel seamless, have 4:57the potential to really build 4:58stickiness. And it's also a move that 5:01indicates that just like the rest of 5:03Google, the Chrome team is aware that 5:05they need to play catch-up here. There 5:07are smart browsers on the market that 5:09are already out there already delivering 5:11aic readr experiences. Chrome doesn't 5:13want to lose market share to those other 5:15browsers. So watch this space. I think 5:17it's going to be a really, really 5:18interesting browser war heating up here. 5:20For those of you who remember the really 5:21old browser wars in the early 2000s, 5:23this is like the 2.0 version. It's going 5:25to be really fun to watch. Next story, 5:27Notion AI launches agents. This is part 5:30of their so-called 3.0 launch where they 5:33launched the idea at the Make It With 5:35Notion event. And Notion's value 5:37proposition is very clear. They 5:38basically want to centralize all of the 5:41tool stack that goes with running a 5:44modern startup and put it into one tool. 5:47So, you don't have to worry about CRM as 5:49much. You don't have to worry about 5:50email as much. You don't have to worry 5:51about publishing a website. Everything 5:53comes in under notion. Agents make all 5:55of that easier in that product strategy 5:57because agents enable you to take the 5:58friction out of all the work you need to 6:00do. You don't need to learn Notion to do 6:02stuff in Notion anymore. If agents can 6:04create and update pages, agents can 6:06update databases. Agents can search 6:08connected tools. You get the idea. So, 6:10this features editable profile pages for 6:12customizing your agents behavior. And it 6:14enables you to store a dynamic memory or 6:16user preference. I will be really 6:18curious to see how people start to 6:20actually use this in the wild. To me, 6:24this feels like a power user feature for 6:26notion where if you're in the notion 6:28ecosystem, this is going to be a huge 6:29help. In fact, I had someone email me 6:31today and say, I am going to have to 6:33double down on my notion investment 6:35because this is going to really really 6:37help me and I can cut down on other 6:38tools, which is exactly what the notion 6:40team wants. It integrates with Slack, it 6:42integrates with email, with Google 6:43Drive, with Zenrest, with GitHub. You 6:45you get the idea. You can also plug in 6:47MCPs to it. Now, if you think about it, 6:50this is a another case where there's an 6:53arms race going on because notion is 6:55playing in a multifront battle between 6:59the sort of tool sets of the world for 7:02B2B SAS like the CRM teams, the email 7:04teams, etc. And they have like 7:06competition across all of those fronts. 7:08But they're also now at a point where 7:10they're playing with people who are 7:12using Chad GPT projects, people who are 7:14using claude projects. So the big model 7:16makers and Notion has picked the goal of 7:20being a hub which has made them a target 7:22for all of those companies. It's a 7:24really tricky place to be and it's not 7:26surprising to me that notion has seen 7:28their gross revenue uh profitability 7:32decline. I should have said that better. 7:34their gross profitability declined from 7:36a 90% profit margin to an 80% profit 7:40margin over the last year because 7:42they've had to invest so much in AI 7:44tooling to stay competitive. So watch 7:46this space. I'm really curious to see 7:48how power users actually level up with 7:50notion using AI agents. Next, Ray-B band 7:54display glasses. It was not a good 7:56launch, people. So they launched it with 7:58an aggressive price point at $799. The 8:01idea is that this is the first fully 8:03functional pair of glasses. I got to 8:04say, I've heard it before, but this one 8:06looks like the best yet, right? It has a 8:07600 by 600 pixel fullcolor display. It 8:10refreshes at 90 Hz. It is bright enough 8:13that it looks like you can read it in 8:15daylight, but it does not have light 8:17leakage, so other people can't see what 8:19you're seeing. And it looks like it's 8:20small enough that it doesn't look weird 8:23to wear. The drawback, as we all saw on 8:27the demo, is that it is a little bit 8:29sensitive. And so it seems like the team 8:32had some Wi-Fi issues in the room at the 8:34time. They're trying to say that this 8:35was all a function of dev servers and 8:37the Wi-Fi. My view is we will see how 8:40reliable the AI is. Once we get people 8:43out in the wild who are able to wear 8:46this and actually interact while they're 8:49at the park or, you know, while they're 8:51taking the kids for a walk. My suspicion 8:53is that some of the issues that came up 8:55in the demo are actually not just Wi-Fi 8:58issues. It sounded to me when I watched 9:00the demo like the AI actually heard 9:02queries and got mixed up. Put a pin in 9:04this one. There's an ongoing debate, 9:07ongoing battle between Apple and Meta 9:09over who is going to be able to convince 9:11people to get into wearables for 9:12glasses. Nobody has really gotten 9:14something that everybody's wearing on 9:16the street yet. And that is the bar, 9:17right? That is the iPhone bar. And I 9:19think that to get there, you have to 9:21make something that feels not just 9:24unobtrusive, but actively cool. And that 9:27was the bar that the iPhone was able to 9:29cross to drive adoption. And that's 9:31something that I know Meta wants to get 9:33to with their partnership with Rayban. I 9:35don't know that they got there with this 9:36one, but they probably got closer than 9:38anyone has before. Next, we have 9:40OpenAI's GPT5 codeex release. This is 9:43the new model from GPT5 from the the 9:47OpenAI family. This model is designed 9:50specifically to help with the 9:51nonlinearity of coding tasks and it 9:54follows the ongoing trajectory of the 9:57codeex team. It's shipping really, 9:59really quickly. One of the things I've 10:01been most impressed by is how quickly 10:03the codeex team has been shipping. So 10:05much of what you buy in AI is not the 10:07capability today. It is the trajectory 10:10of the team building the product. And 10:12Codeex has been outshipping cloud code 10:14lately. I noticed that a lot of claude's 10:16recent releases in the last few weeks 10:18have been productivity tool oriented but 10:20not cloud code oriented. And Codex has 10:22been catching up and according to some 10:24developers surpassing cloud code. Now my 10:27view is that it is a little bit like 10:29apples and oranges and it's going to 10:31depend on your developer use case what 10:32matters. Codeex seems to be positioned 10:35more for larger teams that have more PRs 10:38hitting GitHub at the same time and you 10:40need something to sort of pre-review. 10:42But on the other hand, Anthropic claims 10:44that's what their cloud code does 10:45internally. And so I don't think it's 10:47that cloud code can't do that. It's just 10:49that there are people who have got 10:50stacks that are oriented around cloud 10:52code, which certainly can scale from the 10:54individual terminal on up. And then 10:55there are folks who are used to the GPT 10:57ecosystem and they just want Chad GPT 10:59all the way down. To me, it is almost 11:01feeling like the Windows versus Mac wars 11:03of the '9s where people have a brand 11:05affiliation and that drives a lot of the 11:08downstream product choices. Anyway, from 11:10a capability perspective, this new GPT5 11:14codeex model adjusts thinking time based 11:16on task complexity, which makes it much 11:19much more efficient, up to 94% more 11:22efficient on simple tasks while 11:23allocating a ton more tokens to very 11:26complex reasoning tasks. What that means 11:28to me is that they got better at parsing 11:30prompts, which is a huge deal. The other 11:33thing to notice about GPT5 codecs is 11:35that this is the model that later won a 11:38collegiate coding competition with a top 11:40score better than the best human in the 11:43competition, which is a new watermark 11:45for AI because previous high water marks 11:48for AI, AI has been slightly below or 11:50equal to the best humans in a particular 11:52technical competition. As far as I know, 11:54this is the first time an LLM has been 11:57better than a human unambiguously at a 12:00top technical competition. So, I am 12:02really curious to see where we go from 12:05here. Couple more stories for you to 12:06round out our day. OpenAI and Microsoft 12:09finally cut a deal. If you recall, 12:11they've been debating back and forth 12:13about their previous deal that they made 12:15and there have been questions around the 12:17equity stake that would be taken. And 12:18there have been questions around that 12:19definition of AGI clause that was 12:21famously there where OpenAI could void a 12:24lot of the terms with Microsoft if they 12:25declared AGI. Fundamentally, what was 12:28going on is that Open AI had grown up 12:30and Microsoft needed to readjust their 12:33relationship with Open AI. Well, they 12:34have now. uh the nonprofit arm of 12:37OpenAI, I you I can't believe they're 12:39still a nonprofit, but that's a separate 12:41story, received a hundred billion dollar 12:42equity stake in the for-profit OpenAI 12:46company as part of a comprehensive 12:49reorganization that Microsoft approved. 12:51Open AAI will then share only 8% of its 12:54revenue with Microsoft and other 12:56commercial partners by 2030, down from 12:59the current 20. So essentially, Open AI 13:02successfully made the case to Microsoft 13:04that they'd grown up enough, that they'd 13:06scaled the business enough, that 8% of 13:08their projected revenue through 2030 was 13:11bigger than 20% would have been when 13:14they were at a smaller scale and a 13:15smaller run rate. What that says is that 13:18everybody in the room making that deal 13:20thinks the demand picture for AI over 13:22the next 5 years is even bigger than 13:24they thought a couple of years ago to 13:26the point where they are willing to take 13:28significant dilution on revenue share. 13:30Last story, Ireland EU AI act. It might 13:33sound boring, but it's not. Ireland 13:35designated 15 different authorities to 13:37enforce the EU AI Act, including their 13:39central bank, a data protection 13:41commission, a health products regulatory 13:43agency. And they established a single 13:45point of contact within the Department 13:47of Enterprise, Trade and Employment to 13:48coordinate with EU bodies, member 13:50states, stakeholders, etc. You care 13:52about this because they're actually 13:54putting in place the regulatory 13:56environment and framework to enforce the 13:58EU AI act. This is going to create a 14:00national AI office in Ireland by August 14:032nd of 2026, which will centralize 14:06coordination, host regulatory sandboxes, 14:08drive AI innovation, etc. This will 14:11enable controlled AI testing under 14:12compliance safeguards inside the EU, 14:15which I know EU entrepreneurs are 14:17excited about because one of the things 14:18they've sort of complained about is that 14:20the new EU AI act is going to hamper 14:22European AI innovation. Other companies 14:25like American companies care about this 14:26because they are doiciled in Ireland. 14:29And so where Ireland goes, there goes 14:32the headquarters of many of the most 14:33prominent US mega corps. There are a 14:36number that have offices there. Amazon 14:37has offices there. Apple has offices 14:40there. And there are others as well. You 14:42want to be paying attention to this 14:44because the EU 500 million member market 14:48is probably the second biggest market 14:51for US AI companies after the US itself. 14:55With the divergence with China in terms 14:57of both chipsets where China is saying 14:59no to Nvidia chipsets now and now also 15:02sort of a divergence around purchasing 15:04patterns and consumer patterns and the 15:06divergence in internet behavior. US 15:09technology companies selling AI are not 15:12going to get very far in China right 15:13now. There are too many open source 15:15models. It's a different ecosystem, but 15:17they will have a chance to market in the 15:19EU. And conversely, EU companies that 15:22come up and are able to use this 15:23regulatory authority sandbox get better. 15:26Maybe Mistl comes to mind are going to 15:28have an option to bring a compliance 15:30first perspective with AI to the US if 15:33they want. And it's it's still valuable 15:35to have a compliance first perspective 15:37in the US. There are a lot of highly 15:39regulated industries in the US where AI 15:42is being slowwalked because no one can 15:44explain how to do it safely. Healthcare 15:46comes to mind. How do you make sure that 15:48you roll out across the gigantic 15:49healthcare industry HIPPA compliant AI 15:52workflows? There's a whole forest of US 15:54startups on that, but there's no reason 15:56why EU startups can't compete there, 15:58too. So, that's the stories for the 16:00week. It's been a busy week. We will see 16:02what next week's holds. Cheers.