Thank you, everyone, for subscribing to this newsletter and motivating me to push myself to stay updated in Data & AI. The goal of this newsletter is to present AI news and updates in simple terms.
Google’s Gemini AI adds Scheduled Actions
Google's Gemini AI just got way more useful with "Scheduled Actions" - but only if you're paying for AI Pro or Ultra. Now you can tell Gemini to do stuff automatically, like "summarize my emails every morning at 7 AM" or "give me my team's scores after games."
It's pretty neat for staying organized without constantly checking apps. You can get daily calendar roundups, sports updates, or custom email summaries. Everything gets managed through your Gemini app settings. Basically, Google's trying to make Gemini more like a personal assistant that actually anticipates what you need instead of just answering questions.
Anthropic just launched Claude Gov
Anthropic just launched Claude Gov - a special version of their AI made specifically for U.S. defense and intelligence agencies. It's already being used at "the highest level of national security."
The big difference? Claude Gov won't refuse to work with classified information like regular AI models do. It's built to understand defense documents, analyze cybersecurity threats, and handle languages important for national security.
Think of it as Claude's secret agent cousin - same safety standards, but designed to actually help with the sensitive stuff that regular AI won't touch. It's deployed on secure government networks only.
Mistral’s Vibe coding tool
Mistral AI just dropped their own coding assistant called Mistral Code, and they're going after the enterprise market hard. Unlike GitHub Copilot or Cursor, this thing is built for companies worried about security.
The cool part? It uses four different AI models working together - one for code completion, another for searching your codebase with plain English, plus conversational help. But the real selling point is you can run it completely offline on your own servers so your code never leaves the building.
It's currently in private beta and supports 80+ programming languages. Definitely targeting the "we can't use cloud AI tools" crowd.