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We know that OpenAI is targeting a roughly September IPO, but according to some reports from Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, they could be filing as soon as next week for this IPO. In addition, Google AI mode has just hit 1 billion monthly users. Their usage has doubled every quarter, which is insane. And stability AI has just released stable audio 3.0. It has 6 minute long song generation as a new capability, which is really impressive. I love all of the competition in the music space. As someone that has been putting music on Spotify for almost 10 years, Iris Go has just raised $2.8 million in a seed round to build a proactive AI desktop automation agent. That sounds like a lot of words, but it's actually a very useful tool. As we're getting more and more of these kind of like Claude Cowork and other computer use things, I want to break down exactly what Iris Go is doing. In addition, more Google News and to be fair, they just did Google IO yesterday. So we have a ton of Google News that came out, but they are embedding AI generated product descriptions and inside of search ads they're doing a ton of other stuff. So we'll have kind of a Google News roundup as well at the end. I want to kick this episode off with a bit of the job markets. We have some reports that Intuit is cutting their global workforce by 17%. A lot of this is due to what they are calling AI restructuring. 17% of their global workforce is about 3,000 people and that's a bunch of officer closures in Reno, Nevada and Woodland Hills, California. Their CEO, who is Susan Coast Gudarzi, told all of the staff that the strategic reset and streamlined structure is going to help the TurboTax parent deliver better products. What a lot of people are pointing out, and I have been saying for my last two weeks of podcast episodes because I seem to cover, you know, job closures every single day almost or layoffs. What people are kind of pointing out here is that Intuit actually just had a stronger than expected third quarter earnings. They had 10% year over year growth, which lifted their forecast for the fiscal year. So financially the company's actually doing really well. Well, the reason why they're doing all this apparently is to focus on simplifying their operations and focus on AI integration. Now to be fair, I've actually used a bunch of tools. I actually run tools directly onto my like Claude Cowork, I will tell it to do things inside of my QuickBooks account and even inside of TurboTax I had Claude Cowork do a ton of work helping me with TurboTax. I actually spoke with my accountant recently and told him not to bother doing all of the classification of all of our expenses for a few of my businesses because I'll just run Cloud cowork on that. It does a great job of going and deciding what category different expenses go into. If it doesn't know what a company does, it can go and research the company and then it will be able to figure it out. It does it really quickly and I, you know, don't have to pay a person to manually do that. Now. The reason I bring that up is because I do think that there's so much happening with a company like Intuit where there are shifts going on, right? Like we're able to do a lot of stuff with AI that used to have to be manual. I think a lot of companies are going through a moment right now where they are doing layoffs, they are reprioritizing, they are perhaps making their companies more streamlined. I would predict in two or three years we're going to see moments where most of these companies are much larger than they are today. It's not like the workforce keeps getting laid off or cut down. I think we're going to see a lot of growth even in headcount, But I do think we're just at this weird moment where people have to make shifts to make a lot of these investments. Another big one that's in the news right now is that Mark Zuckerberg has actually come out and he kind of put out a memo and talk to talk to employees over at Meta about what he said are consequential AI moves that they're making right now because they're also doing a bunch of layoffs. Meta is laying off 8,000 people. It's about 10% of their workforce. I've already covered this on the podcast, but this new memo came out. I think most of the staff in like Asia and Europe got this a little bit earlier, but there's going to be about 8,000 employees that are cut or laid off. What I do appreciate for Meta is that there's an additional 7,000 employees that are going to be reallocated to AI related roles. This is what I would love to see from most startups that are saying, hey, look, we're doing layoffs to like invest in AI or focus on AI. We've even seen companies like General Motors, that is, you know, laying off 800 people in it or 600 people in it, but simultaneously they have open job roles for it people that are, quote, unquote, AI native or something like that, right? So it's like they're hiring people that are AI skilled, where at the end of the day, I love what Meta is doing here. And they're just reallocating workers, like 7,000 workers to AI related roles. Like, there's no such thing as a person that. I mean, there is such thing as a person that, you know, their job is all about AI. But I think anyone can. You can learn how to use AI in their role and can learn how to use AI to accentuate their role. So I like, I like this direction a lot more, where we're just moving. If you really are having kind of a realignment of priorities and what you think is important to AI related roles, move some of your workers over there because I think that anyone can learn it. And this is, you know, a phenomenal time to do that. You also save yourself a lot of, you know, a company would save itself a lot of money if it's not just laying off workers to save, you know, on a literal dollar amount, which I feel like is basically what a lot of these companies are doing. They just don't want to say it out loud. But if that's not the case, then just move them there. You're not going to have to pay severance and you're not going to have to pay all of the money to recruiters to hire people. So, anyways, I appreciate that coming from what Meta is doing. Zuckerberg, I mean, the whole thing was like a lot of drama. I think I'm just calling out one positive silver lining here. But in the memo that Zuckerberg put out, he called AI, quote, the most consequential technology of our lifetimes. And he said that it will, quote, define the next generation. So we're seeing this from a lot of people. We're seeing a lot of shifts. I'm preaching to the choir if you're listening to this podcast, but we are seeing a lot of changes and things happening there. All right, let's get into what's going on with the OpenAI IPO. We know that they've been working with Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, have reported on this a couple times. Apparently they're going to be filing this paperwork within the next week, week or weeks. This is going to put them in direct, basically a race with SpaceX, because SpaceX now owns Elon Musk's Xai and they are also trying to get this filed as soon as possible. I actually got a really great comment When I was posting about Elon Musk and SpaceX and Elon Musk's lawsuit of OpenAI and how he, quote, unquote, like, lost the lawsuit or whatever, I got a really great comment from someone named Raphael Straffanello Ghislaini over on LinkedIn. And so I appreciate this comment. But he said, talking about, you know, the quote unquote, Musk losing, he said the verdict is irrelevant. Musk already won. His goal was never to win the case. It was to delay OpenAI's for profit conversion long enough to clear the Runway for SpaceX's June IPO. With Nasdaq's new fast tracked rule, SpaceX enters the Nasdaq 100 after 15 trading days, forcing index funds to buy regardless of valuation. That force passive inflow is worth far more if it isn't competing with another trillion dollar AI IPO in the same wind. He said the lawsuit achieved its purpose the moment it was filed. The procedural knockout changes nothing. So I actually thought that was a really interesting perspective I hadn't thought of before as far as trying to get SpaceX and their IPO to be as successful as possible. And that seems to be perhaps the strategy that Elon Musk was playing at when he did the lawsuit against OpenAI. Because at the end of the day, while some people would have defended his lawsuit on quote, unquote moral grounds, it was outside of the statute of limitations. That's ultimately why it was struck down. And, and so it's just he had, you know, if he really cared about it that much or if he really wanted that outcome, he should have filed the lawsuit much sooner when OpenAI made these kind of intentions clear. And then potentially he would have been successful in doing that, but because he didn't, they're just kind of throwing it out. So bringing it back to OpenAI's IPO that they're looking at, apparently they have just crossed $3.8 billion in annualized revenue. They did that in Q4 of last year. Most of that was API sales and ChatGPT subscriptions. They didn't say how profitable they were, so we'll find that out very soon. The SpaceX IPO filing are expected as soon as today. So we have a lot of AI news, a lot of stuff happening today and around this time. And one of the big announcements we've also got today is that Google AI mode has just hit 1 billion monthly active users. Their usage has doubled quarterly, which is really impressive. As of this month, every quarter since they launched, their usage has actually Doubled. So apparently right now they are overhauling search. I've seen our friend of the podcast, Logan Kilpatrick, posting about it on LinkedIn, showing what they, what they've done. He said this is the most, you know, the biggest change they've made to search in 25 years. So I think Google has a lot of messaging around that. There's going to be a completely redesigned search box, AI overviews on most queries, and they're going to have agentic features launching this summer that are going to generate custom apps and a bunch of dashboards instead of traditional web links, which is a really interesting concept to see where they're going to go there. This is a pretty big and controversial move. Essentially what's going to be happening is you get the AI overview at the top and below that used to have the blue link. So it was kind of like they were, they're, you know, keeping the legacy Google results. And they were had that. But now they're actually going to have an AI overview box that is going to sit right below the AI overview, like a chat box, which is basically going to make it so you can't see the top organic results as much. It's going to be steering people away from these kind of traditional web listings that we are so used to. So things are really going to be shifting quite a lot. We have some news that Stability AI has just released stable audio 3.0. And what's interesting here is we had a really cool music release a while back from 11 labs. And when it came out I was like, guys is basically nothing because 11 labs let out, you know, let you create music, but it could only be 30 seconds long. And I'm like, this is basically useless. Stability has let has come out and you can actually create songs that are up to six minutes and 20 seconds long. That's more than double the three minute limit that they had in last year's version and much higher than something like 11 labs. So apparently they've trained all of this on license data from Warner Music Group and Universal Music Group. They basically sidestepped the entire lawsuit, you know, fiasco that is currently hammering. I think Suno and Udo are both getting hit with this and so they got around that by just going directly and getting the licensing. So big kudos to stability. They have four models released at 459 million, 1.4 billion and 2.7 billion parameters. The small medium versions are shipping with open weights for commercial use, under a million dollars in revenue. So if you have under a million Dollars in revenue. You could be using this with open weights for commercial use, which is really impressive. The large model is available only on their paid API or self hosting. They have enterprise licenses that are going to be required for companies that are making above a million dollars in annual revenue. I actually love how they're doing this. Right. Small companies are going to get a benefit. If you make a lot of money, you gotta pay for it. This is like a lot of open source software. But I do, yeah, I really do appreciate this. For smaller companies, this is gonna be phenomenal. They're. They recently hired Ethan Kaplan, who is the former chief digital officer at Universal Audio and Fender, and he's leading the professional music product suite around this new model right off the bat. I'm really impressed by the way that they are currently doing their licensing. All right, so a company called Iris Go has just raised $2.8 million in a seed round, and they're doing this to build a proactive AI desktop automation agent. Okay, sounds like a big mouthful, but this is backed by Andrew McGee's AI fund, and they're going to build a desktop agent that learns workflows by watching you perform a task once, and then it's going to automate it forever. And you don't have to write a prompt. This is actually literally something my wife was telling me. She's. She's vibe coding. She's completely redoing the first app we ever created. It's called Self Pause. It's an AI affirmation recorder. You can record yourself saying affirmations and you can put all like these sounds in the background, like meditation sounds. You can make like a mix and listen to them. Some people like to listen to their, you know, personally recorded affirmations in the morning or listen to them all night. Anyways, this is the first product we ever made out of college. We grew it to about 150,000 users. And then I kind of have been working on AI Box and this podcast for the last three years and haven't really put any time or attention on that startup. But it continues to chug along and, you know, I think every month we get over 300,000 listens to audio on that, on that platform, on that, on that app. And in any case, my wife has been recently using Claude Code and Cloud cowork to completely basically redo the whole thing, add all the features she ever wanted, build it native in Swift. So it's like a native iOS app because before we had it on React, which is kind of both. Anyways, she's rebuilding the whole thing. It took us years to make it and we spent hundreds of thousands of dollars and now she's, you know, being able to recreate it in a couple of weeks. Vibe coding. She did study computer science so she you. She's pretty good at this kind of stuff, but still it's phenomenal. And just recently she was telling me, she's like, man, I wish I could just do this task and have Cowork watch me do it and then do it for me so I don't have to tell it to do xyz. Like a lot of the things I think she's recently like redesigning all of the icons inside of the app and she was using ChatGPT to help her redesign all the icons. But she gotta like crap out the backgrounds and put them on a black box and whatever. She has this whole workflow right, she's got a hundred icons and she was getting Cowork to do it, but she had to do this really descriptive prompts. Anyways, this is exactly what Iris Go is going to solve and I love this. The co founder is Jeffrey Lai. He built the Chinese version of Siri at Apple and then he basically demonstrated the system ordering a coffee by recording one transaction and then it repeated it autonomously. I think a lot of processing for this is going to be happening on device for privacy, which is amazing. The cloud tasks are going to require the user to actually authorize it. There's going to be end to end encryption. There's going to be. I mean basically I think this is a big differentiator against a lot of cloud heavy competitors. They shipped their beta macOS and Windows apps and they secured a pre install agreement with Acer to distribute the Agent on new devices. So they're not going to have to spend any money acquiring users with that particular deal. So all in all, I think this is a really cool tool. They already have some good distribution, they've raised some money. I'm excited to see what happens with Iris Go and I'm sure my wife will be their biggest fan once this thing rolls out. If you want to get an email version of this podcast straight to your inbox every day, go check out AI box daily.com it's my new news site where I cover all of these different stories. I have in depth articles that go into more detail on the stories and there's a big subscribe button in the top right hand corner. If you click that there is a newsletter page you can subscribe to and you'll get all of These news stories in a beautifully designed newsletter that gets sent to you every day, where I cover all of these different stories and you can skim them and keep up to date along with a bunch of other stories that are happening and quick links and some interesting info. So if you want the deep dive and you want to subscribe to get this for free, go check out aichatdaily.com that's kind of my website that goes along with this podcast. And go subscribe to the newsletter over there and also get all the deep dives on the articles. Okay. Google has embedded AI generated product descriptions inside of the search ad. This is kind of one of the big things that came out of Google I.O. they've been talking about. I just wanted to cover it quick on the podcast. But basically Google's now using Gemini to write custom product descriptions for ads inside search results. They're going to be embedding sponsor items directly into the conversational AI mode responses. So I think right now the AI mode is taking over more of Google's screen. It's going to be kind of blocking out the traditional search results. And because of that, they, you know, they still make money. So they're putting ads directly inside of their responses, which to be fair, is exactly what ChatGPT is doing. So, you know, Google is the ad ad king of the entire market. If they weren't putting ads in their AI model and ChatGPT was, I'd think that was pretty strange. And basically all that expanded ad real estate is going to, you know, get them more views beyond just whatever the traditional sidebar ads that are now appearing. I think this is good. I think the ads are going to be more specific. I know maybe some people will complain like, oh no, I don't want to, you know, ads inside of my, inside of my AI results. Well, of course, you could go and pay 20amonth for Claude or chat GBT or probably Gemini too, and not get those ads. So that's one option. Or if you want to use all this stuff for free, you're just going to get ads. I mean, that's just how the Internet works. You, you pay or you get ads. And so I'm, you know, I'm not too mad about this. And I think they'll be quite specific. Again, people come back, be concerned about privacy. But with everything that Google and Facebook already do for targeting ads, I mean, you can. Anyone that's complaining about it today has been complaining about it for the last 20 years. So not too much has changed in that. That's the show for today. But if you guys want to know a very strange number, it is that this show over on Spotify has 286 reviews, and on Apple, it only has 160. What's crazy is Apple accounts for about 70% of all of the listeners on the podcast. So of the 70% of listeners over on Apple, a way smaller percentage has dropped a review. Which means that if you're listening and you're on Apple, this is a special request. If you could leave a review. We gotta keep up with the Spotify folks. They're putting us to shame. I listen on Apple podcasts, but. And so. And I don't drop reviews on every show. But if you drop only one review on only one show, make it this one. Spotify's got 286 and we gotta catch up. So if you haven't left a review, you're listening on Apple podcasts, do it. If you're on Spotify, you can just keep destroying the number. But actually, maybe if you're on Spotify, don't. We don't want the, you know, we don't want it to look too bad. Right. We don't want Spotify to. To beat us too bad. So if you're listening on Apple and you could leave a review that help out a ton, let's catch up to Spotify. All right, talk to you guys all later.
Date: May 20, 2026
Host: Latent Space AI
This episode dives into the escalating race between OpenAI and SpaceX to be the first to launch a major IPO in the burgeoning AI sector. The host explores key industry news including massive workforce shifts driven by AI adoption, Google AI’s explosive growth and its impact on search, competitive breakthroughs in AI-powered music creation, and the emergence of new automation tools like Iris Go. With firsthand anecdotes and expert commentary, the discussion delivers a comprehensive snapshot of how AI is disrupting tech, business, and employment.
“I like this direction a lot more, where... If you really are having kind of a realignment of priorities... move some of your workers over... anyone can learn it.”
— Host at [10:25]
OpenAI’s IPO Imminent
SpaceX/Elon Musk’s Strategy
“His goal was never to win the case. It was to delay OpenAI’s for-profit conversion long enough to clear the runway for SpaceX’s June IPO.”
— [Rafael Straffanello Ghislaini], via LinkedIn, paraphrased by host at [13:13]
“The lawsuit achieved its purpose the moment it was filed. The procedural knockout changes nothing.”
— [13:47]
“There’s going to be a completely redesigned search box, AI overviews on most queries, and they’re going to have agentic features launching this summer… A pretty big and controversial move.”
— Host at [19:15]
“They basically sidestepped the entire lawsuit fiasco... by just going directly and getting the licensing. So big kudos to Stability.”
— Host at [22:32]
“This is exactly what Iris Go is going to solve and I love this... I’m excited to see what happens with Iris Go and I’m sure my wife will be their biggest fan once this thing rolls out.”
— Host at [28:49]
“If you want to use all this stuff for free, you’re just going to get ads. I mean, that’s just how the internet works. You pay or get ads.”
— Host at [33:18]
On AI-induced layoffs and future prospects
“I would predict in two or three years we’re going to see moments where most of these companies are much larger than they are today... I think we’re just at this weird moment where people have to make shifts to make a lot of these investments.”
— Host, [08:35]
Mark Zuckerberg’s Vision
“AI [is] the most consequential technology of our lifetimes... it will define the next generation.”
— Mark Zuckerberg, cited by host at [12:32]
Strategy Behind Musk’s Lawsuit
“The verdict is irrelevant. Musk already won... The lawsuit achieved its purpose the moment it was filed.”
— Rafael Straffanello Ghislaini, via host at [13:13] and [13:47]
AI’s Disruptive Force in Search
“This is the most... the biggest change they’ve made to search in 25 years.”
— Host, quoting friend Logan Kilpatrick at [17:56]
This episode delivers a snapshot of an AI industry in hypergrowth and flux—where IPO races, corporate strategy, workforce transitions, and product innovation are upending tech norms. The host blends market headlines with personal experience and industry insight, making it a useful primer on today's most urgent AI themes.