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✅ ChatGPT is getting its own App Store
OpenAI has opened submissions for ChatGPT apps, marking a major step toward building a full platform where third-party developers can expand the chatbot’s capabilities.
🔸 Apps are integrations that add actions and context directly in chat from ordering products to turning sketches into presentations or finding apartments, all without leaving ChatGPT.
🔸 For developers, OpenAI released a beta Apps SDK, an open-source UI component library, and detailed submission guidelines. Apps can be submitted via the OpenAI Developer Platform, with moderation status tracked. First approved apps are expected early next year.
🔸 Discovery and control: Recommendations will use conversation context, usage patterns, and user preferences. Users can disable any app at any time, instantly revoking data access.
🔸 Monetization: Initially, developers can redirect users to external sites for physical goods; support for digital products and in-app monetization is planned later.
OpenAI is clearly aiming to make ChatGPT a full ecosystem, following a path similar to Apple’s App Store.
🧬 OpenAI put GPT-5 into a real biology lab and it made DNA cloning 79× more efficient
OpenAI has run a first-of-its-kind experiment with GPT-5 operating inside a real wet lab, working in a closed loop with scientists at Red Queen Bio to optimize a core molecular biology process.
🔸 This wasn’t a simulation. GPT-5 proposed hypotheses and protocols, humans and lab robots executed them, measured real biological outcomes, and fed the results back to the model for the next iteration.
🔸 The task was Gibson Assembly, a standard DNA cloning technique taught in basic molecular biology. The optimization metric was simple and objective: the number of successful colonies.
🔸 Gibson Assembly is old, well-studied, and rarely optimized in practice, doing so is labor-intensive and usually yields only 2–3× improvements, if any.
🔸 Over multiple experimental cycles, GPT-5 achieved a 79× increase in efficiency, with results that were stable and reproducible across runs.
🔸 The key insight: GPT-5 suggested adding two known proteins, RecA and gp32 into the same reaction, a combination no one had previously tested specifically for cloning, despite both proteins being well understood individually.
🔸 This isn’t a scientific revolution or a new biological principle, more like the output of a very strong PhD student focused on a narrow, technical problem.
🔸 What is new is the role shift: GPT-5 wasn’t just generating text or running agents, it became an active participant in a physical scientific process, learning from the real world in a feedback loop.
The takeaway isn’t “AI solved biology”, it’s that language models are starting to cross the boundary between software and reality. And once that loop is open, the pace of experimentation changes dramatically.
Robots are not yet ready to completely replace humans, even in warehouses.
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✅ Google launches Gemini Agent, its first true AI assistant that acts for you
Google has rolled out Gemini Agent, a new AI system designed to operate on behalf of users directly in the browser, marking a major step toward practical, action-oriented AI assistants.
🔸 Premium and limited launch. For now, Gemini Agent is available only in the U.S. and exclusively to users on the Gemini Ultra plan, priced at $250 per month, positioning it as a high-end, early-access product.
🔸 An agent that actually does things. Unlike chat-based assistants, Gemini Agent can navigate websites, gather information, compare prices, and complete tasks such as booking hotels, rental cars, and other services, effectively acting as a digital concierge.
🔸 Built on Gemini 3. The agent is powered by Gemini 3, Google’s latest model, enabling it to understand complex instructions, reason across multiple steps, and interact with real web interfaces rather than just generating text.
🔸 Cross-platform support from day one. Gemini Agent works on desktop browsers and mobile apps, allowing users to hand off tasks seamlessly across devices.
Google is moving beyond AI that answers questions toward AI that executes workflows, a direct challenge to startups building autonomous agents and a signal that consumer AI is entering its “do the work for you” phase.
🧠 “Google’s biggest mistake was underestimating transformers” — Sergey Brin
Stanford has published a revealing Q&A with Sergey Brin, where the Google co-founder reflects on how the company that invented key AI breakthroughs still lost momentum to OpenAI.
🔸 Brin argues that OpenAI’s success wasn’t purely technical. The real edge was belief, belief in scaling models aggressively and in making chatbots a core product, not just a research demo.
🔸 Google, he says, didn’t fully commit to transformers after publishing the landmark 2017 paper “Attention Is All You Need.” The architecture existed, but the company wasn’t willing to invest billions early enough to see where scaling could lead.
🔸 The same hesitation applied to chatbots. Google avoided releasing them widely because they “sometimes talked nonsense,” prioritizing product safety and brand risk over speed and experimentation.
🔸 OpenAI took the opposite approach: ship early, iterate in public, and accept imperfections, a strategy that ultimately captured users, mindshare, and capital.
🔸 Brin’s most striking thought experiment: what if Google had kept transformers closed and poured a few billion dollars into scaling them back in 2017?
The lesson is uncomfortable but clear: having the breakthrough matters less than having the conviction to bet on it early — and publicly.
📱An iPhone case with a screen on the back and extra storage
Accessory maker Dockcase has unveiled Selfix, a case for the iPhone 17 Pro that tackles two common pain points at once: better selfies and more storage.
🔸 On the back of the case is a 1.6-inch AMOLED display (480×480), fully touch-enabled, that works as a rear viewfinder. Flip the phone around, frame yourself on the screen, and shoot selfies using the main camera system instead of the front camera.
🔸 The result is significantly higher-quality selfies, leveraging Apple’s primary sensors rather than the lower-end front-facing camera.
🔸 Selfix draws power directly from the iPhone, meaning slightly higher battery drain, but no extra charging, pairing, or setup is required, snap it on and it works. The case also doubles as a pop socket for grip.
🔸 The second feature is a microSD card slot supporting up to 2TB, offering expandable storage, something iPhones still lack natively.
🔸 Rear displays aren’t new, Android phones like the LG V10, Meizu Pro 7, and more recently Xiaomi 17 Pro have tried similar ideas but Selfix is unusual because it delivers the concept as a simple accessory, not a custom phone design.
Selfix will launch in Oat White, Blush Pink, and Midnight Black. Pricing and release timing haven’t been announced yet, but the case hints at a future where accessories meaningfully extend what phones can do without replacing them.
👓 China’s Li Auto just unveiled smart glasses that control your car
Chinese EV maker Li Auto (Lixiang) has introduced its own pair of smart glasses designed to act as a remote control and AI interface for its vehicles, expanding the company’s in-car ecosystem beyond the dashboard.
🔸 Through Li Auto’s Lixiang Livis system, users can summon their car from a parking lot, open the trunk, pre-cool or heat the cabin, and manage other vehicle functions directly from the glasses.
🔸 The glasses also double as a first-person camera, with Sony image sensors built into the frame, allowing drivers to record hands-free POV video.
🔸 An AI assistant is integrated into the device, enabling voice commands and contextual assistance while on the move.
🔸 Li Auto claims the glasses offer up to 19 hours of battery life, positioning them as an all-day wearable rather than a short-use gadget.
The launch underscores how Chinese EV makers are increasingly blending cars, AI, and wearables into a single platform, turning vehicles into extensions of personal computing rather than standalone machines.
🚀 With iOS 26.2, Apple adds new control to roll back Liquid Glass on the Lock Screen
Apple has begun rolling out iOS 26.2, a point update that gives iPhone users more control over the company’s controversial Liquid Glass design and introduces a set of functional improvements across the system.
🔸 The headline change in iOS 26.2 lets users adjust the transparency of the Lock Screen clock introduced with Liquid Glass, the translucent interface style Apple rolled out earlier this year. This new slider is part of Apple’s continued response to user feedback that some Liquid Glass effects made elements harder to read.
🔸 Beyond design tweaks, iOS 26.2 includes a variety of feature updates. Users can now create one-time AirDrop codes to share content with people not in their contacts, add alarms in the Reminders app, and view Apple Music lyrics offline. The update also brings enhancements to Podcasts, navigation refinements in Apple News, and updated sleep metrics for Apple Watch users.
🔸 The broader iOS 26 series has included iterative adjustments to Liquid Glass since its introduction, including previous opacity sliders and tinted options, as Apple balances its new design language with readability and usability concerns.
This latest release aims to refine the user experience with practical controls and feature improvements that respond to user feedback while maintaining Apple’s design direction.
✈️ Riyadh Air wants to become the world’s first fully AI-native airline built from day one
Saudi Arabia’s new national carrier, Riyadh Air, says it has been designed entirely around artificial intelligence, positioning itself as one of the most technologically ambitious airline launches in decades.
🔸 The airline is being built AI-first from scratch, rather than retrofitting legacy systems. Every employee will operate inside a personalized digital workplace centered on an AI chat interface that supports daily operations and decision-making.
🔸 For flight crews, AI systems will deliver real-time insights into passenger preferences, enabling more tailored onboard service. Voice control, automated planning, budgeting, and live demand forecasting are already embedded across operations.
🔸 Riyadh Air says initial flights have already begun, with full commercial service planned for early 2026. By 2030, the airline aims to connect 100+ destinations worldwide, aligning with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 aviation push.
🔸 The project took three years to develop with IBM Consulting and integrates 59 core workflows across more than 60 technology partners, including Adobe, Apple, FLYR, and Microsoft.
If it executes as planned, Riyadh Air won’t just be a new airline, it could become a real-world test of whether AI-native operations can outperform traditional aviation models at global scale.
🥸 What your browser secretly leaks and the tools to uncover it
A handful of inspection tools can show exactly what information your browser exposes every time you load a webpage from fingerprints to tracking vectors you didn’t know existed.
🔸 Browserleaks gives a full snapshot of everything your browser reveals by default, from IP metadata to canvas fingerprints.
🔸 CreepJS evaluates how uniquely identifiable your setup is, showing how easy it is to track you across sessions.
🔸 Cover Your Tracks tests how well your browser resists fingerprinting and whether privacy protections are actually working.
🔸 FingerprintJS demonstrates how websites identify visitors and highlights the specific attributes your browser leaks.
🔸 WebBrowserTools offers a suite of lightweight tests for checking privacy, fingerprint resistance, and general security posture.
Use these tools and you’ll know exactly what slips through, before anyone else does.
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⚡ Track your internet connection 24/7 and prove any issues to your provider
A powerful monitoring tool runs in the background, constantly checking your connection and saving the results for easy access.
🔸 It performs regular speed tests without overloading your computer.
🔸 All results are stored in a clean, separate dashboard for quick review.
🔸 Detailed metrics are available, including speed, ping, jitter, and packet loss.
🔸 Notifications alert you instantly if your connection drops or slows down.
🔸 You can export all data to support claims or disputes with your internet provider.
Your connection is always being checked, and now you have a tool that tracks it automatically so you have proof whenever you need it.
🤖 How AI subscriptions turned from “optional” to “essential”
🕔 2.5 years ago a $20 GPT subscription felt like a fun upgrade. Nothing critical.
⏲ 1.5 years ago people jumped from GPT to Claude and back as soon as a new model appeared.
🕘 0.5 years ago many dropped a $200 Claude Code plan to switch to GPT Pro.
🕔 Now it feels impossible to function without Gemini or NanoBanana plus Claude Code plus GPT Pro. Personal life and work depend on these tools.
🔸 The products keep getting stronger
🔸 They cover more tasks than any human can keep in focus
🔸 They blend into workflows until they feel like part of the mind
🔸 Each upgrade shifts the baseline of what “normal” work looks like
The tools are becoming irreplaceable and we are turning into something closer to cyborgs. The line between human effort and machine support gets thinner every month.
👓 Google plans Gemini-powered smart glasses for 2026
Google is preparing two models of AI-enabled glasses powered by Gemini.
🔸 The first model, coming in 2026, looks like regular glasses. It has speakers, cameras, and microphones but no display. Paired with a smartphone, Gemini observes your surroundings, answers questions, and translates speech in real time.
🔸 The second model will include displays and augmented reality features, though Google has not yet shared a release date.
These glasses mark Google’s next step in wearable AI, blending real-world awareness with assistant capabilities with AR integration coming later.
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⚙️ A new swarm of AI agents now scans the entire internet for you, automatically and for free
A team of autonomous AI crawlers has launched that can watch any corner of the web and deliver instant summaries of what’s new.
🔸 They monitor selected sites on a schedule, vacancies, trends, discounts, breaking news, anything you choose.
🔸 Each update comes as a clean, concise summary so you never miss important changes.
🔸 Every tweak on the network, from a new job posting to a product drop gets flagged instantly.
🔸 And the entire system is free to use.
In short: the internet updates nonstop, and now you have agents that keep up with all of it so you don’t have to.
🧠 A 4-month-old startup just cracked 9 of 12 problems on the Putnam, one of the hardest math contests on Earth
Axiom, a little-known newcomer in the AI research world, says its system AxiomProver solved 9 out of 12 problems from this weekend’s William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition, a notoriously brutal exam where the average human score is usually 0–1 points out of 120.
🔸 Eight problems were solved during the live contest window and another immediately afterward, giving the system a result that would have ranked #1 overall last year, well within Putnam Fellow territory, a distinction normally reserved for the top undergraduates across the U.S. and Canada.
🔸 What’s striking is how AxiomProver solved them: it didn’t just write natural-language solutions but produced fully formalized Lean proofs, meaning the answers are machine-verifiable and free of the hand-waving typical in human-written solutions.
🔸 The announcement now raises a bigger question: if a four-month-old startup can hit Putnam-level performance, did giants like Google or OpenAI quietly participate as well and if not, how long until they respond?
Axiom may have just delivered a signal moment in automated reasoning and it puts the entire frontier-model race on notice.
⚡️ Google launches Gemini 3 Flash
Google has introduced Gemini 3 Flash, positioning it as a frontier-level model optimized for speed, cost, and low latency, aimed at real production workloads rather than showcase demos.
🔸 Google claims fast reasoning and strong coding performance, with full multimodality designed for day-to-day deployment, not experimental use.
🔸 On GPQA Diamond and Humanity’s Last Exam, benchmarks targeting PhD-level reasoning, Gemini 3 Flash performs confidently, signaling parity with higher-end models on hard academic tasks.
🔸 On MMMU Pro, a challenging multimodal benchmark, Flash nearly matches Gemini 3 Pro, despite being positioned as a lighter, faster model.
🔸 In efficiency terms, Flash is significantly faster than Gemini 2.5 Pro, while also consuming fewer tokens, improving both latency and cost.
🔸 On SWE-bench Verified, Gemini 3 Flash outperforms not only the entire 2.5 series but also Gemini 3 Pro, highlighting its strength in real-world software engineering tasks.
Gemini 3 Flash is about making frontier-level intelligence cheap, fast, and deployable, which is where the real competition is shifting.
✅ OpenAI responds to Nano Banana with GPT Images
OpenAI has unveiled GPT Images, its new image generation and editing model, positioning it as a direct answer to fast-moving competitors like Nano Banana.
🔸 OpenAI promises photorealistic output and much stronger instruction following, especially for complex prompts where small details actually matter.
🔸 A major focus is high-quality image editing including multi-step edits where faces, identities, or specific elements must remain unchanged across revisions.
🔸 Image generation is now up to 4× faster, signaling a push toward real-time creative and agentic workflows rather than slow, batch-style generation.
🔸 In ChatGPT Images, the model is already available to all users, including free users (usage limits exist, but haven’t been clearly disclosed yet).
🔸 For developers, OpenAI has released GPT Image 1.5 in the API, positioning it as a production-ready image model rather than a demo toy.
OpenAI is clearly treating image generation as core infrastructure, not a side feature.
🔐 A popular VPN extension was secretly collecting AI chats
A security investigation by Koi Security revealed that the Urban VPN browser extension has been silently collecting users’ conversations with AI tools, raising serious privacy concerns around browser add-ons marketed as “free” and “secure.”
🔸 Millions of users may be affected. Urban VPN has over 6 million installs on Chrome, and together with related extensions from the same publisher, the total reach exceeds 8 million users across Chrome and Edge.
🔸 AI conversations were fully captured. The extension intercepted entire AI chats, including user prompts, AI responses, timestamps, and metadata. Affected platforms reportedly include ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Copilot, Perplexity, Grok, and Meta AI.
🔸 The data capture was deeply embedded. Researchers found that the extension injected hidden scripts into AI websites, overriding core browser functions like fetch() and XMLHttpRequest() allowing it to read conversations before they appeared on screen.
🔸 “AI protection” claims were misleading. While Urban VPN promoted an “AI protection” feature, the investigation found that data harvesting ran continuously in the background and could not be disabled without uninstalling the extension entirely.
🔸 Updates rolled out silently. The behavior was introduced in a July 2025 update and automatically deployed to users, meaning many had no idea their AI conversations were being collected.
🔸 The data was monetized. According to the report, captured conversations were shared with a data broker affiliate and used for analytics and commercial purposes.
Free VPNs and browser extensions can come with hidden costs and in the AI era, your private conversations may be far more exposed than you think.
🔥 Red Bull made the biggest Tetris in the world
The finalists of the Tetris tournament played on 2,800 drones, which displayed falling figures in real time
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⚛️ Google is building nuclear data centers and AI is the reason
Artificial intelligence needs power, enormous amounts of it and Big Tech is increasingly turning to nuclear energy as the only realistic long-term solution. Google is now making that bet explicit.
🔸 Google announced a major expansion of its partnership with NextEra Energy, one of North America’s largest power producers, to build gigawatt-scale data center campuses across the US. The first three sites are already under active development.
🔸 The partnership isn’t new. About 3.5 GW of generation capacity is already operating or under contract, and the companies recently agreed to add 600 megawatts of clean energy to the Oklahoma grid to support Google’s growing infrastructure.
🔸 The most notable shift is the planned restart of the Duane Arnold Energy Center nuclear plant in Iowa. NextEra has filed with FERC to regain grid connection rights, a sharp reversal from earlier plans to replace the site with solar generation.
🔸 Beyond power generation, Google Cloud will support NextEra’s digital transformation, deploying AI models like TimesFM 2.5 for time-series forecasting and WeatherNext 2 for weather prediction to optimize grid operations and reduce failure risks.
🔸 The first commercial product from this collaboration is expected to launch on the Google Cloud Marketplace by mid-2026, signaling that energy optimization itself is becoming a cloud software business.
Renewables alone can’t keep up with AI, and nuclear is quietly re-emerging as the backbone of next-generation data centers.
🌐 A browser that builds apps instead of showing links
Instead of returning a list of blue links, Disco turns your search query into a working mini-app, generating tools, maps, and calculators on the fly based on what you’re trying to do.
🔸 Ask Disco to plan a trip to Japan, and it creates an interactive route map with attractions. Say you’re moving cities, and it assembles a weight calculator and carrier price comparison tailored to your move.
🔸 Disco is an experimental browser from the Chrome team, born out of an internal Google hackathon and now rolling out publicly through Chrome Labs.
🔸 The browser is built around GenTabs, a concept where the Gemini AI interprets your request, opens relevant websites in the background, and stitches their information into a personalized, task-specific app.
🔸 The system works both ways: if you open a hotel or article in a neighboring tab, GenTab pulls that data in automatically and updates your plan.
🔸 Early versions struggled because users ignored links shown inside chat and kept talking to the bot. The team fixed this by having the browser itself open sources, nudging users to actually explore the web and early data suggests it worked.
🔸 Big questions remain unanswered, including whether GenTabs can be saved, shared, or exported to tools like Google Docs. Even the team admits these decisions haven’t been made yet.
Disco isn’t meant to replace Chrome, it’s a standalone experiment testing whether the future of the web lies in temporary, AI-assembled apps built for a single task, then discarded.
🔒Google Translate will add real-time translation for wireless headphones
Google is preparing a major update to Google Translate that will enable real-time speech translation through wireless headphones, bringing hands-free, conversational translation to everyday use.
🔸 The feature will work similarly to Apple’s live translation tools, instantly playing translated speech in the user’s headphones as another person speaks a different language.
🔸 Powering the upgrade is Google’s Gemini model, which can understand and translate up to 70 languages, including Russian.
🔸 Unlike some competing solutions, Google’s implementation will not require dedicated or branded hardware. The company says the feature will work with any wireless headphones.
🔸 Google plans to roll out the real-time headphone translation feature in 2026.
The move positions Google Translate for more natural, real-world conversations and could significantly expand how people use translation tools in travel, work, and daily communication.
🚀 ChatGPT-5.2 is now available for free and here’s what’s included
The latest and most powerful version of ChatGPT, GPT-5.2, has already been introduced on LMArena, giving users open access without the usual paywalls or limits.
🔸 Completely free access: All core features are available with no usage restrictions.
🔸 Built-in Canvas: Users can generate websites, full applications, and even games directly inside an interactive workspace.
🔸 No VPN required: The model is accessible out of the box, with no regional workarounds or technical tricks needed.
If this rollout holds, LMArena has effectively turned GPT-5.2 into one of the most accessible high-end AI tools currently available, lowering the barrier for developers, creators, and experimenters worldwide.
📚 A massive set of 500 curated prompts from Nano Banana Pro is now available
A new collection of 500 hand-picked prompts has dropped, a large, structured table covering ideas, workflows, and shortcuts for nearly every creative or technical task.
🔸 The library spans writing, coding, research, design, productivity, and niche use cases, making it a quick reference for anyone looking to boost prompt quality or spark new ideas.
🔸 Each entry includes a link to the original prompt author’s profile, offering an easy way to explore more of their work and discover additional templates, tools, and inspiration.
🔸 The table is designed for fast scanning: clear categories, examples, and ready-to-copy formulations that work across different models and tools.
For anyone building with AI daily, this looks like one of the strongest prompt collections released so far, both as a resource hub and a gateway to new creators.
⚡️ OpenAI releases GPT-5.2 with major gains in reasoning and coding
OpenAI has launched GPT-5.2, an upgraded model that delivers substantial improvements in coding, mathematics, long-context reasoning, and image understanding.
🔸 On benchmarks, GPT-5.2 hits 100% on AIME 2025 (up from 94% in GPT-5.1) and reaches 80% on SWE-bench Verified (versus 76.3% for 5.1), marking some of the model’s strongest performance jumps to date.
🔸 OpenAI continues to compare its new model only to earlier internal versions not rivals but based on public metrics, GPT-5.2 appears to edge ahead of Google’s Gemini 3 Pro in several categories.
🔸 In ChatGPT, GPT-5.2 Instant, Thinking, and Pro begin rolling out today, with the API already available. Pricing has increased slightly from GPT-5.1 and GPT-5.
GPT-5.2 signals a real competitive push from OpenAI, the kind of leap that only intense pressure from peers can produce.
🔔 Perplexity just got supercharged with a free all-in-one extension
With a single free extension, Perplexity now comes packed with over 25 plugins, bringing in the best features of competing AI tools and expanding what the platform can do.
Key upgrades include:
🔸 Lightning-fast model switching for seamless experimentation
🔸 In-browser code testing, no external tools required
🔸 Export all chats from Perplexity for easy record-keeping
🔸 Customizable chat interface to tailor the experience to your workflow
With these additions, Perplexity transforms from a standard AI assistant into a fully featured, flexible productivity hub, all without paying a dime.
This is how AI fights weeds: the LaserWeeder G2 scans fields, identifies unwanted plants, and zaps them with a laser.
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🔸 Claude Code is coming to Slack and it could quietly reshape developer workflows
Anthropic is bringing its coding assistant Claude Code directly into Slack, letting teams trigger code generation, bug fixes, or feature implementations straight from chat threads.
🔸 Once enabled, developers can tag @Claude in a conversation and the assistant will analyze the thread, pull context, choose the right repo, and start working including creating branches, writing code, and posting updates as it progresses.
🔸 Unlike traditional coding assistants that sit inside an editor, Claude Code in Slack moves the entire workflow to where teams already discuss bugs and features, reducing context switching and speeding up decision-to-implementation cycles.
🔸 The integration arrives as a beta, but Anthropic says it aims to turn Slack into a central automation hub where code reviews, pull requests, and task execution originate directly from team chat.
If this model sticks, Slack could become the place where software planning, discussion, and actual code execution merge into one continuous loop.
❄️ Winter Demo Day by EasyMM x InnMind is coming!
Exclusive virtual Demo Day connecting TGE-ready Web3 projects with top investors, launchpads and exchanges actively deploying capital in Q4 2025 – Q1 2026.
⏰ December 10th · 17:00–18:00 CET
🎞 Fully virtual (Zoom) + restream on YouTube and X 👇
🤖 Elon Musk’s Optimus is getting roasted online again
A new clip from Tesla’s Miami event is going viral after someone accidentally recorded Optimus wiping out mid-demo, reigniting scrutiny over how autonomous the robot actually is.
🔸 In the video, Optimus makes a very human-like hand motion almost identical to someone taking off a VR headset right before it topples over, fueling speculation that a remote operator was still connected.
🔸 This contradicts Musk’s earlier public claims that Optimus was performing “fully autonomously” in previous demos, sparking another round of memes and criticism across social platforms.
🔸 The incident adds to the growing skepticism around Tesla’s robotics program, which many argue still relies on teleoperation despite Musk’s promises of imminent autonomy.
Optimus keeps being pitched as the future but moments like this keep reminding the internet that it’s not quite out of the training wheels phase yet.