AI This Week
OpenAI has launched ChatGPT Health, a new feature in the US that analyzes personal medical records. The system can also review data from health apps like Apple Health and MyFitnessPal to provide users with personalized advice. OpenAI states the new feature is not for diagnosis or treatment. The company also claims health-related conversations will be stored separately and will not be used to train its AI models. Currently available to a small group of US users via a waitlist, the feature has not been introduced in the UK or Europe, which have stricter data protection rules
OpenAI has launched an improved memory feature for ChatGPT. CEO Sam Altman announced the upgrade, which allows the AI to better recall previous conversations and user information. The feature is rolling out to Pro users first, with Plus subscribers gaining access soon. OpenAI views this as a significant step towards more personalized AI systems. Users can opt out or use temporary conversations if desired. The upgrade aims to make ChatGPT more useful by building a comprehensive understanding of each user over time.
A new artificial intelligence model can forecast a person's risk for serious diseases, including dementia and heart failure, using data from a single night of sleep. Researchers developed the system, called SleepFM, by training it on a vast library of over half a million hours of sleep studies from 65,000 individuals. The model examines complex biological signals recorded overnight, including brain waves, heart rhythms, and breathing patterns. From this single snapshot, it identifies subtle indicators of future health problems. The results are startling. SleepFM predicted all-cause mortality with a C-index of 0.84 and dementia at 0.85. It also demonstrated strong predictive performance for heart attack, stroke, and chronic kidney disease. A novel design allows it to function effectively even when a patient's sleep data is incomplete.
The world’s largest technology conference is presenting the next wave of gadgets in Las Vegas. CES 2026 is filled with advancements in artificial intelligence, from a new AI pet that physically grows as you care for it to a smart ring that records and transcribes your work meetings. Robotics also had a key presence. Boston Dynamics debuted its new Atlas robot, and Qualcomm-powered humanoids demonstrated backward-bending flexibility. Other notable reveals include LG's ultra-thin wallpaper TV, a pocket-sized lab that detects food allergens, and exoskeletons built to make hiking easier. Samsung also exhibited a creaseless foldable phone concept and a massive 130-inch television.
Amazon pushed its AI ambitions into new territory with a suite of updates that bring its advanced assistant beyond the smart speaker and into browsers, phones, and wearable tech. The company rolled out a redesigned Alexa mobile app that makes the assistant central to the experience and launched Alexa+ in web browsers, letting users chat, upload documents, control calendars and smart devices, and even book tasks. It also revealed progress on Bee, a wearable AI that transcribes conversations and offers insights. These moves signal a fresh push to catch up with popular AI rivals and leverage its huge installed device base.
Elon Musk confirmed xAI acquired a third facility, dubbed "Macrohardrr," pushing its AI training capacity toward a massive 2 gigawatts. The purchase significantly expands the company's growing data center footprint in the Memphis area, a central piece of its Colossus AI infrastructure project. xAI is financing this ambition with aggressive fundraising efforts. Recent reports indicate the company is in advanced talks to raise about $15 billion in equity funding. The expansion gains further momentum from important government contracts. The U.S. Department of War recently struck a deal to deploy xAI’s Grok models on its official defense platform, marking a key adoption of the technology.
China now mandates its chipmakers use at least 50% domestically made equipment to expand capacity in a major move to build a self-sufficient semiconductor supply chain. The undocumented rule forces companies seeking state approval for new factories to prove they meet the threshold. This policy directly advances Beijing’s goal of reducing reliance on foreign technology, especially after recent U.S. export restrictions. The directive is compelling Chinese manufacturers to select local suppliers over available foreign options. While authorities offer some flexibility for the most advanced production lines where domestic tools are scarce, the long-term objective points toward 100% domestic sourcing, significantly altering the global market.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is overhauling his leadership team in a major move to forge the company's AI strategy. The shake-up signals a dramatic pivot as the tech giant plots a course extending far beyond its deep and defining partnership with OpenAI. After investing billions to weave OpenAI's technology into products like Copilot and Bing, Microsoft is now building a new foundation. This reorganization aims to diversify its AI assets and reduce its strategic reliance on a single, vital ally, fundamentally reshaping its approach to the AI race. The changes suggest Microsoft is preparing to secure its own long-term dominance.
Meta Platforms joins the year-end AI spending frenzy, agreeing to acquire Manus, a Singaporean startup building autonomous AI agents. The price tag tops $2 billion. This deal culminates a flurry of activity from tech titans, including SoftBank's recent data-center investments and Nvidia's pact with Groq, as they scramble for dominance. Manus hit a $100 million revenue run rate with shocking speed, reshaping how consumers use AI. Analysts are already comparing the move to Meta’s landmark acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp, signaling a deep bet on the future of AI interaction. Meta plans to integrate the technology across its product lines while keeping the existing service live.
Groq and Nvidia have struck a significant non-exclusive licensing agreement for Groq's AI inference technology. The deal is designed to expand global access to high-performance, low-cost inference solutions. But this is more than just a technology pact. In a stunning move, Groq Founder Jonathan Ross, President Sunny Madra, and other key team members will join Nvidia to help scale the licensed technology. The announcement confirms Groq will continue operating as an independent company. Simon Edwards steps in as the new Chief Executive Officer. Customers can expect no service interruptions, as its GroqCloud platform will remain fully operational throughout the transition.