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STORY 1: CREATIVE AI — THE SHAKEUP IN AI VIDEO
OpenAI is shutting down Sora on April 26th. The tool that wowed us with photorealistic video just two years ago is being retired, showing that AI progress isn't a straight line. Competition from Google Veo 3 and Adobe Firefly Video pushed Sora out of the race. Key insight: AI video production costs have collapsed 80-90%, from $1,800-4,500/min to $75-400/min. A $3,000-5,000 ad can now be made for $200-500. But quality questions remain for specific, high-stakes creative work.
STORY 2: AGENTIC AI — YOUR AI COWORKER ARRIVES
Gartner predicts 40% of enterprise apps will have AI agents by end of 2026 (up from <5%). Netcore projects AI agents will influence 20% of e-commerce transactions by 2030. Marketing teams are leading with multi-agent systems handling content, segmentation, and optimization in real-time. In software, AI coding agents now solve 79% of real GitHub issues (up from 48% two years ago). Claude Code, Cursor, and Copilot have become autonomous teammates, not just autocomplete tools.
STORY 3: MEDICAL AI — WHEN AI KNOWS BEFORE YOU DO
Brown University researchers are teaching robots to understand human pointing gestures the way dogs do, bringing us closer to home assistants for elderly/disabled people. Wysa became the first AI mental health tool to receive FDA recognition as comparable to in-person therapy, serving 2+ million users at a fraction of therapy costs. The first AI-designed drug entered Phase One clinical trials this year, compressing decade-long timelines into months.
STORY 4: THE WEIRD SIDE — AI TAKES THE STRANGE PATH
CES 2026 brought AI oddities: Lenovo's AI gaming monitor that tracks eye movements and zooms on critical game info (superhuman reflexes through a screen). VBOT, an AI robot dog designed for people who can't have real pets — companion, not utility. And an AI-powered lollipop with sensors that generates music based on tongue movements, pointing toward a future where our bodies become instruments for AI creativity.
CHALLENGE THIS WEEK: Pay attention to something AI does for you that you used to do yourself. Notice when it crosses from tool to habit. That gap is where the interesting questions are.
By CurioSTORY 1: CREATIVE AI — THE SHAKEUP IN AI VIDEO
OpenAI is shutting down Sora on April 26th. The tool that wowed us with photorealistic video just two years ago is being retired, showing that AI progress isn't a straight line. Competition from Google Veo 3 and Adobe Firefly Video pushed Sora out of the race. Key insight: AI video production costs have collapsed 80-90%, from $1,800-4,500/min to $75-400/min. A $3,000-5,000 ad can now be made for $200-500. But quality questions remain for specific, high-stakes creative work.
STORY 2: AGENTIC AI — YOUR AI COWORKER ARRIVES
Gartner predicts 40% of enterprise apps will have AI agents by end of 2026 (up from <5%). Netcore projects AI agents will influence 20% of e-commerce transactions by 2030. Marketing teams are leading with multi-agent systems handling content, segmentation, and optimization in real-time. In software, AI coding agents now solve 79% of real GitHub issues (up from 48% two years ago). Claude Code, Cursor, and Copilot have become autonomous teammates, not just autocomplete tools.
STORY 3: MEDICAL AI — WHEN AI KNOWS BEFORE YOU DO
Brown University researchers are teaching robots to understand human pointing gestures the way dogs do, bringing us closer to home assistants for elderly/disabled people. Wysa became the first AI mental health tool to receive FDA recognition as comparable to in-person therapy, serving 2+ million users at a fraction of therapy costs. The first AI-designed drug entered Phase One clinical trials this year, compressing decade-long timelines into months.
STORY 4: THE WEIRD SIDE — AI TAKES THE STRANGE PATH
CES 2026 brought AI oddities: Lenovo's AI gaming monitor that tracks eye movements and zooms on critical game info (superhuman reflexes through a screen). VBOT, an AI robot dog designed for people who can't have real pets — companion, not utility. And an AI-powered lollipop with sensors that generates music based on tongue movements, pointing toward a future where our bodies become instruments for AI creativity.
CHALLENGE THIS WEEK: Pay attention to something AI does for you that you used to do yourself. Notice when it crosses from tool to habit. That gap is where the interesting questions are.