Amazon Wants to Be Your Doctor Now
Amazon just launched a Health AI agent that gives Prime members free 24/7 access to personalized health guidance. We're talking answering health questions, reading your lab results, managing prescription renewals, booking appointments. The whole thing.
Now look, I'm not going to pretend this is going to replace your actual physician. It's not. But here's the thing a lot of people are missing: most Americans don't have easy access to a doctor at 2am on a Tuesday when their kid has a fever and they're trying to figure out whether it's urgent. This fills that gap in a real way.
The part that makes me cautious is the data. Amazon already knows what you buy, what you watch, and what you search for. Handing them your health history on top of that is a big ask. I'm not saying don't use it. I'm saying know what you're signing up for.
MiniMax Dropped a Model That Improves Itself
MiniMax released M2.7, an open-source agent model with short-term memory, self-feedback, and self-optimization. The big deal here is that it can iterate on its own performance over a 24-hour window. It learns from what it gets wrong and adjusts.
This is the kind of thing that sounds like science fiction until it's running on your laptop. Open-source self-evolving agents are not a toy problem. If this scales even halfway decently, the gap between what everyday developers can build and what frontier labs are doing gets a whole lot smaller.
I'd rather see this kind of capability in the hands of a lot of people than locked up behind an API with a per-token bill. Releasing it open-source was the right call.
Disney Is All In and There Is No Going Back
The Walt Disney Company officially moved generative AI from "pilot project" to "fundamental business operation" across its entire organization. That's a line you don't walk back from easily.
Disney has one of the most valuable content libraries on earth. The fact that they're weaving AI into core operations, not just experimenting with it, tells you something about where the big media players think the next five years go.
What I'll be watching: whether this shows up as creative output that feels different, or whether it's mostly cost-cutting dressed up as innovation. Those are two very different outcomes for audiences and for the people who work there.
Either way, the "wait and see" era for major corporations is clearly over. The question now is execution.