- NATURAL 20
- Posts
- OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Atlas: AI Now Built Into Your Browser
OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Atlas: AI Now Built Into Your Browser
PLUS: Alibaba’s Qwen Turns AI Reports into Instant Web Pages & Podcasts, Google Launches “Google Skills” With 3,000+ Free AI & Tech Courses and more.

How Canva, Perplexity and Notion turn feedback chaos into actionable customer intelligence
Support tickets, reviews, and survey responses pile up faster than you can read.
Enterpret unifies all feedback, auto-tags themes, and ties insights to revenue, CSAT, and NPS, helping product teams find high-impact opportunities.
→ Canva: created VoC dashboards that aligned all teams on top issues.
→ Perplexity: set up an AI agent that caught revenue‑impacting issues, cutting diagnosis time by hours.
→ Notion: generated monthly user insights reports 70% faster.
Stop manually tagging feedback in spreadsheets. Keep all customer interactions in one hub and turn them into clear priorities that drive roadmap, retention, and revenue.
Today:
OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Atlas: AI Now Built Into Your Browser
Google’s AI Studio Lets Anyone Prompt, Preview, and Deploy Live Apps
Anthropic & Google Eye Multibillion-Dollar Cloud Expansion
Alibaba’s Qwen Turns AI Reports into Instant Web Pages & Podcasts
Google Launches “Google Skills” With 3,000+ Free AI & Tech Courses
OpenAI has launched ChatGPT Atlas, a web browser with ChatGPT built in. It helps users get things done directly in the browser—like research, shopping, and planning—using memory, agent tools, and privacy controls. It’s now available on macOS, with more platforms coming soon.
KEY POINTS
AI-Powered Browser: Atlas brings ChatGPT directly into the browser, helping with tasks like research, shopping, and document analysis without switching tabs.
Agent Mode & Memory: Agent mode automates actions like filling carts or summarizing trends, while optional memory recalls sites and chats for personalized help.
Privacy & Control: Users decide what ChatGPT can see, with incognito mode, memory toggles, and content training opt-outs for safety and transparency.
Why it matters
This marks a big shift in how people can use the web. Instead of jumping between tabs or apps, ChatGPT Atlas lets you get help and automate tasks right where you are. It can save time, reduce effort, and keep your info private and under your control.
Google AI Studio now lets anyone build and deploy working web apps in minutes—no coding skills needed. Its redesigned interface, “I’m Feeling Lucky” generator, and real-time AI suggestions make app creation fun, fast, and accessible. It's free to start, with advanced options available.
KEY POINTS
Prompt-to-App Simplicity: Users describe what they want, and AI Studio builds a working app using tools like Gemini 2.5, Veo, and Imagine—no coding required.
Creative Features: “I’m Feeling Lucky” offers random app ideas; real-time editing, smart file suggestions, and live preview support quick iteration.
Accessible & Scalable: Free to use with optional paid upgrades for advanced tools; suitable for beginners and developers alike.
Why it matters
This update makes AI app development possible for nearly anyone. Whether you’re a beginner with an idea or a developer testing a prototype, you can build, edit, and launch live apps easily. It lowers barriers, speeds up creativity, and opens AI to everyone.
Anthropic is in talks with Google for a cloud computing deal worth tens of billions of dollars. If finalized, Google would provide massive infrastructure support, strengthening its existing ties as both an investor and cloud provider. The deal remains under negotiation and unconfirmed.
KEY POINTS
Massive Cloud Investment: Google may supply Anthropic with computing power valued in the high tens of billions.
Existing Relationship: Google is already an investor and cloud partner for Anthropic’s AI operations.
Negotiations Ongoing: The deal is not yet finalized and remains private.
Why it matters
This potential deal shows just how expensive and critical cloud power is in the AI arms race. Companies like Anthropic rely on huge infrastructure to train and run large AI models—and Big Tech players like Google are competing hard to supply it.
🧠RESEARCH
OmniVinci is an open-source AI model that understands and connects audio, video, and robotic data better than its rivals. Using smarter design and just a fraction of the training data, it beats Qwen2.5-Omni in key benchmarks. It's built to improve real-world uses in healthcare, robotics, and smart factories.
Nano3D is a new tool for editing 3D objects without training or masks. It makes quick, precise changes using front-view images while keeping the rest of the object intact. It avoids common errors and works better than older methods. The team also released a large dataset to help future research.
PICABench is a new benchmark that tests how well AI image editors handle real-world physics—like removing an object and its shadow. It shows that current tools often miss these details. With a new dataset and evaluation method, the study pushes for more realistic, physics-aware image editing models in the future.
🛠️TOP TOOLS
Each listing includes a hands-on tutorial so you can get started right away, whether you’re a beginner or a pro.
Jukebox – AI Music Generator - Hugging Face Space that turns a short text description into a 5–30 second music clip
Slazzer – AI Image Editor / Background Remover - AI-powered photo editing suite best known for automatic background removal
StudyMonkey – AI Study Assistant / AI Homework Helper - AI‑powered homework helper and on‑demand tutor
📲SOCIAL MEDIA
I’ve spent the last few days testing the performance of Apple Vision Pro with M5 — here’s how it stacks up against the original.
It’s 35% quicker when booting up, widgets appear almost instantaneously, Safari is noticeably more responsive, and creating Spatial Scenes also feels
— Phil Traut ᯅ (@spatiallyme)
5:00 PM • Oct 21, 2025
🗞️MORE NEWS
Alibaba’s Qwen Deep Research tool now lets users instantly turn AI-generated reports into live web pages and podcast episodes, offering a fast, multi-format way to share research without any tech setup.
Google launched Google Skills, a free platform with 3,000+ courses on AI and tech. It offers hands-on labs, gamified learning, certifications, and employer pathways — aiming to close the AI skills gap across all experience levels.
Samsung is adding Perplexity AI to its latest smart TVs, joining Copilot and its own assistant as voice-activated options. It marks a new front in the AI race — the shared living room screen.
YouTube is rolling out an AI-powered tool that helps creators detect and report deepfake videos using their face. Initially for Partner Program members, the system flags possible misuse and allows takedown requests.
OpenAI is training its AI to automate junior bankers’ tasks like financial modeling, using insights from over 100 former Wall Street analysts. The secretive “Project Mercury” aims to make GPT tools more valuable for business use.
Leaked documents reveal Amazon aims to replace over 600,000 U.S. jobs with robots by 2033 to cut costs by $12.6 billion. The company is quietly automating operations while managing public backlash over job losses.
Meta hired top AI researcher Tim Brooks from Google DeepMind, signaling a shift toward pixel-based “world models” for AGI. His move challenges Meta’s earlier stance and weakens Yann LeCun’s influence within the company.
LangChain, the open-source agent framework startup, raised $125M at a $1.25B valuation. Backed by IVP, Sequoia, and others, it also launched major updates to LangChain, LangGraph, and LangSmith, expanding its agentic AI platform.
What'd you think of today's edition? |


Reply