Today in AI — 2 May 2026

Today's top AI news — curated links and commentary on the stories that matter for product builders.

·3 min read

Microsoft's new Copilot doesn't pick a model. It routes between Claude and GPT depending on the task, charging enterprises $99 a month for the privilege of not having to choose. That quiet architectural decision tells you more about where enterprise AI is heading than any benchmark release this quarter.

The single-model era is over

The pattern is clear: buyers are treating models like commodities, selecting on capability and policy fit rather than brand loyalty. For builders, your integration layer matters more than your model choice.

Agents that don't wait to be asked

The tension here is real: agents need to do more autonomously, but they also need to do less unnecessarily. Getting that calibration right is the actual engineering problem.

AI pushes into physical spaces

Google and Amazon are embedding AI into cars and product pages where it can prove value immediately. SoftBank's Roze IPO, for a company that hasn't shipped a single robot, has the unmistakable aroma of 2021 SPAC energy, except the cheques are bigger.

Models get cheaper and smaller

The cost of capable inference is collapsing from every direction simultaneously.

AI meets social

400K monthly active users averaging four hours a day. That engagement number is striking, and probably worth watching more closely than any enterprise deal announced this week.

When your enterprise platform routes between competing models automatically and your open-source alternative runs on a single GPU, the moat isn't the model anymore. It's the orchestration layer, the data, and the judgement about when to act and when to stay quiet.


Stay up to date

Get notified when I publish something new, and unsubscribe at any time.

More news