AI Tools & Apps - Page 5 of 14
Cutting-edge AI-powered tools and software products revolutionizing productivity, creativity, and innovation across industries.
Cutting-edge AI-powered tools and software products revolutionizing productivity, creativity, and innovation across industries.
Microsoft is rolling out Copilot Health as a single interface that can pull together electronic medical records, data from fitness trackers and information gathered from health agencies in half a hundred nations.
Grammarly’s decision to stop training its AI on the writings of public figures without explicit consent has reignited a debate about the boundaries of machine‑generated content.
Anthropic’s latest update lets Claude carry information from one Microsoft document into another, meaning a prompt you craft in Excel can be recalled when you switch to PowerPoint without re‑typing.
Ford is rolling out a new artificial‑intelligence add‑on aimed squarely at the logistics sector, but it isn’t limited to its own trucks.
The Iran war has become a testing ground for AI‑driven falsehoods, flooding X with posts that look polished but have no factual basis.
Google Docs now bundles a Gemini‑powered “Help Me Create” feature that can spin up full‑length drafts, tweak individual paragraphs, or overhaul entire sections on command.
Enterprise identity platforms have long been engineered around people—login screens, password policies, and multi‑factor checks that assume a human is behind every request.
Microsoft rolled out a new AI feature called Copilot Cowork, positioning it as a cloud‑driven assistant that lives inside the familiar Microsoft 365 suite.
Why are AI service providers suddenly popping up with price tags that look more like consulting contracts than SaaS subscriptions? The answer isn’t hidden in hype; it’s in the way they structure revenue.
Why do developers keep hitting the same LLM endpoint over and over? The answer is simple: many applications call large‑language‑model APIs inside loops, retries, or user‑driven workflows, and each request can cost time and money.
Grammarly’s latest rollout pushes the service beyond the familiar spell‑check and style suggestions that have defined it for years.
Six‑generation research is moving from theory to testbeds, and engineers need more than rough‑cut models to prove concepts at scale.
Regulators have zeroed in on AI‑generated deepfakes, treating them as the headline threat to public discourse. That focus makes sense; a fabricated video can spread faster than a rumor, and the visual shock value grabs headlines.
Enterprise teams that have been experimenting with Google’s Opal know the platform for its clean, drag‑and‑drop interface.
Huxe is rolling out a new service that turns your inbox and calendar into a brief, spoken briefing each morning.
Why does this matter? Most people spend hours wrestling with repetitive steps—copy‑pasting tables, sorting emails, flagging items—while their laptops grind away.
Google is rolling out the next iteration of its Nano Banana line, Nano Banana 2, and the upgrade isn’t just a cosmetic tweak.
Why does this matter now? Amazon’s latest tweak to its voice‑assistant service isn’t about new features or hardware; it’s about tone.
Why does this matter for anyone who spends hours piecing together raw footage? While most AI‑driven editing aids still leave users dragging clips into a timeline, Adobe’s latest offering promises a different workflow.
Seedance 2.0 landed on the scene with a lot of buzz, promising to push generative‑video AI past the early‑stage demos that felt more like gimmicks than tools.
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