lot of movement particularly around clawbot and open claw and people buying Mac minis and all that. I'm playing with that too. I made two separate videos just talking about that. But a lot of that is clunky. What's not clunky is claude's version of that application that is very consumerfriendly called cloth co-work. The problem with clot co-work is it tries to be this AI agent, this agentic AI assistant, but really it just misses some of the essential features, but they've been shipping some of these essential features with the biggest one coming in this week. They finally introduced a way to schedule tasks. Meaning if you get one workflow down in cloud co-work like it organizing some folder or it working with certain files or researching the internet and then placing those files in a specific location. If you get that set up once you can then tell it okay now schedule it and run it once every day or twice a day. You get the point. We gave it a quick shot because we wanted to know if this actually works well because they have this feature in chat GBT but it's terrible and it's hard for me to even recommend it. Plot did this well though as they usually do. As you can see here, we tried a simple task where Claude Co-work is going to research the web for new generative AI stories every single day. And then we scheduled it out and it actually works. It does it reliably. It produces these results. And now I could go in and improve the workflow. I could add additional steps. I could refine sources. I could give it additional tools. All of the stuff that you can do within co-work. There's a bit of a learning curve, definitely more than chatbt. But with this feature, it is starting to become worth it. And what's clear here is that Claude is gunning for this holy grail of a personal agentic assistant. I guess it was referred to as AGI in the past few years that is usable for everybody. That's what this app is supposed to do and this is probably the most essential feature to get there. One note is that this is not available on the free plan. Obviously, you need to be on the pro, max, or the enterprise plans to access this. But if you're into experimenting and trying new AI stuff, this is probably the one thing to try right now and to get comfortable with cuz this category isn't going anywhere. We'll keep an close eye on this category on the show cuz I think it's the most important one in AI for most consumers. Next up, we have a few updates from Google, but basically they're just consolidating different apps that they had individually into one product. So, if you've been following the show, we've been talking about apps like Opal and Stitch and Flow. They're all these standalone experiments where they tried it to create a really useful tool for designers or website designers or in Opal's case, I guess, u a really simple workflow builder. So, what's happening this week is all three of these apps, they got major updates. So, let me start with the simple one. Google Stitch is basically for web designers, and now they added a feature where you can kind of just click into the interface and make an edit directly in there just by pointing your mouse. It's really simple, really intuitive, just kind of a no-brainer feature that it didn't have so far and now it does. Google Opal was their no code builder, right? It was their automations for nontechnical people tool. And we featured it, we even made it the main story of a news you can use episode because it was so intuitive. It's kind of just like, okay, generate description for a post and then generate the image to go along with that description and then you're done. It was really simple, but what it lacked is a little bit of the depth that some of the more technically intricate applications provided, but now they're on that because they added a agent step which makes the workflows a bit more variable. In other words, you can use a LLM in the middle to make certain decisions for you. So you can set up multiple paths and then the agent decides which one of those paths is right for the current run making this a way more powerful tool and it's still all the way on this side on the spectrum of super consumerfriendly and super technical tools while giving you a lot of the powers that the very technical tools like nen unlock. Love to see it. And then finally Google flow. This is actually one that I know multiple people working in the creative space with design agencies or ad agencies and this was the favorite tool for a lot of them because it was really simple and it included access to Nano Banana which by the way there's a new model of Nanobanana. We're making a separate video on that Nanobanana 2. So keep an eye out for that. Should be out next week. We're collecting all the use cases for it. That's going to be really good. Back to Google Flow. It's just a really simple tool for designers to create images and video. And now they added a bunch of new functionalities but they're not really new. They're just functionalities that are available in other apps from Google and they kind of just merge them into here. So you can include collections, search and filter those. You can do much more precise video editing. You can use a little lasso to highlight a certain point that you want to change and then it only changes that. You can add or remove objects in a video. You can even control the camera motion. All of this stuff was possible in other apps, but now they're consolidating it and trying to create one studio application that is a one-stop shop for all of this stuff. Image generation is free and flow. The other stuff is paid. But yeah, those are some amazing updates. And then lastly, one more thing from Google is them releasing a new model, Gemini 3. 1 flashlight. This is really something mostly interesting to developers. It's just a model that is smarter than the ones before while being extremely competitive on the pricing side. So compared to 2. 5 flashlight, which is the predecessor, it costs 25 cents for a million output tokens instead of 10. But the quality is like way higher than the model that cost 30 cents per million tokens before. So, in other words, it got cheaper than the best model before at this level of speed and it's more capable. AI progress is not stopping anytime soon. And next up, all the quick hits we have prepared for this week. These are quick stories that I want you to be aware of, but maybe we don't need to speak about it for multiple minutes. Starting with a Chinese model, Quen 3. 5. Again, this is something more developer focused, but it's kind of the first model that can run on phones or older laptops and you get intelligence at the level of Lama 70B if you're familiar with those models. So nowhere close to some of the best models out of Google Anik or OpenAI, but actually decent performance like usable. Obviously, it's going to be slow, but people were really shocked by this because even a semidecent level of quality that runs on old computers and you know the newest iPhones, it's unbelievable. Again, AI keeps progressing. Then we have the Pentagon story where basically Enthropic rejected the US government's demands to use entropic models to support the defense department of the US and the president tweeted really aggressively to push back on that and then one day later OpenAI comes in and actually fills that spot and helps them out. So a lot of people had really strong feelings about what this means for the US and for the AI space and for AI safety. As you know, we're not the channel covering that. We're really here for the consumer use cases, but I figured this was important enough to actually mention here. Next up is a story that interested me initially, but it's a dumpster fire. Adobe Firefly Quick Cut. I was so excited when I saw this. It's supposed to be a AI video editing tool that makes editing quicker. Give it a roll and it cuts it up and adds B-roll. In practice, it just doesn't work as you want it, like at all. We tried it multiple times and it's just nowhere close to being worth using. Nothing. — Again, this is a first iteration. Fair enough. but not something we can recommend at this point in time. We'll keep an eye on this category. Then we have Proplexity Computer, which is interesting in theory. Like they're pulling together all of these different models. So, you ask a question and they throw it out to like up to 19 models. They get the different answers and then you get the best of those answers. I think there's potential in this category. I haven't seen or heard of anybody getting real value from this approach yet, though. But maybe you're watching this and you're like, "No, Eager, this is amazing. " In that case, I would love for you to leave a comment like what do you use this on where it really upgrades your experience with LLMs. It's an interesting approach. They're trying to differentiate themselves. They kind of accepted that they're not going to make the best model. Maybe they can create these user interfaces that are unique and combine different models. I don't know. Would love to hear if anybody disagrees with my takes here always. Then we have notion custom agents. Basically, I looked at this and kind of figured that they brought some features available in a lot of other apps now into notion. So now you can do things like look through your notion docs and set up a agent inside of your Slack that answers questions or they even had one example where it kind of auto routes developer feedback to the right sources and assigns the right people. But really I think they just built in some automations that people have been using already that are in this world right into notion made it a bit more user friendly. It's cool but nothing I see myself using week to week. Again if you disagree I would love to hear your take. And then finally, there was a study showing how teens use AI. And basically, it says that virtually every teen uses it to cheat on homework and that, you know, teachers and parents are really upset about this. But my take would be that, hey, they're just using these tools, right? So, I remember in school they tried to make us learn several rivers and mountains in Austria by heart. Like, we had to know every single river and every single mountain by heart. And then they quizzed us on that. But then now looking back, I would kind of question that approach, especially with the existence of Google. like I just have access to that information at all time. And with access to AI being a thing now, that's not going away ever again. Like you realize that, right? We need to rethink how homework is done. I don't think it's the fault of the students that they just use available technology to be more efficient. I think it's on the educational system to design assignments that work with the available technology. And that's pretty much everything we have for this week's episode of News You Can Use. I would love to hear which one of these was your favorite. And other than that, I hope you have a wonderful rest of the week. My name is Igor and I will see you very soon.