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Hey {{first_name | there}},

So Elon Musk just announced that next week we’ll likely see Grok Build and Grok Computer.

This means a new competitor is entering the space alongside Claude Code, Codex, and Copilot.

Instead of just chatting, Grok will be able to:

  • Build apps

  • Write and run code

  • Execute tasks

  • Automate workflows

From early leaks, Grok Build will come with two modes: Local mode, which runs on your system and Remote mode, which runs in the cloud.

Local mode is the interesting one. It suggests Grok won’t just generate answers; it can actually use your computer to get things done.

That’s where “Grok Computer” comes in.

It’s likely a desktop app that combines chat, coding, and system access in one place.

🛠️ AI Tools Worth Checking Out 

  • Image3D.io:Turn any image into a 3D model in seconds.

  • WasItAIGenerated: Detect whether content is AI-generated across text, images, audio, and video.

  • FlashFeed: Write once and repurpose content across multiple platforms.

  • WhyIQ: Analyze your website and find exactly why visitors are dropping off.

Other AI News For Today

What’s going on: Anthropic Labs rolled out “Claude Design,” a new AI design tool powered by its latest model. It acts like a design partner where you can chat to create UI designs, wireframes, slide decks, and full prototypes. 

It can also learn your brand style like colors and fonts from your files and keep everything consistent. You can export designs or pass them directly to coding tools to build them. It’s live in preview for paid users and people are already testing it.

What to try: Start with a simple use case like generating a landing page or app UI, upload a few brand assets to see how well it matches your style, and test the handoff to code to check if the output is actually usable. Early users are saying quality is good, but limits and bugs can get in the way.

What’s going on: New data shows Gen Z is becoming more negative about AI, even as they use it more. Excitement and optimism are dropping, while frustration is rising. The issue isn’t just the tech. Schools are discouraging AI instead of teaching it, entry-level jobs are quietly disappearing as companies automate, and governments haven’t really stepped in with clear policies. 

So even though young people believe AI can create opportunities, they don’t trust the system around it to actually benefit them.

What this means: This isn’t about people rejecting AI, it’s about a growing gap between AI’s potential and real-world outcomes. If education doesn’t adapt, hiring at the entry level doesn’t recover, and policy stays slow, this frustration could turn into long-term resistance. The key thing to watch is whether institutions catch up fast enough, because right now Gen Z is being forced to figure it out on their own.

What’s going on: As AI shifts from text to voice, experts are warning this could increase mental health risks. Especially for vulnerable users. Here’s why: voice-based chatbots feel more human, more engaging, and harder to question, which can lead to deeper emotional dependency or reinforce harmful thoughts. Early research already shows people spend more time with voice AI and may experience more negative effects like reduced real-world interaction or problematic usage.

What to watch: As companies push voice AI into devices like earbuds and wearables, the key thing to pay attention to is how it affects behavior over time. Because higher engagement might sound good but could come with real psychological downsides if not handled properly.

What’s going on: Avid, the company behind major editing tools like Media Composer, is partnering with Google Cloud to bring AI directly into video editing workflows. 

With Gemini models built in, editors can now search footage using natural language, generate clips, enhance metadata, and even create things like B-roll or promos faster. The goal is to turn hours of raw footage into something searchable and “understandable,” so editors don’t have to manually dig through everything.

What to watch: Try how well this actually saves time in real editing workflows, especially for searching and organizing footage, because while AI can speed up repetitive tasks, the real question is whether it helps creativity or just pushes more generic outputs.

Best Claude Skills for UI/UX Design

  • Refactoring UI: Fix messy interfaces by improving spacing, hierarchy, colors, and overall visual balance.

  • UX Heuristics: Run a full usability audit using Nielsen’s principles to find what’s broken before shipping.

  • Hooked UX: Improve retention by analyzing your product’s habit loop and where users drop off.

  • UI/UX Pro Max: Create complete design systems including colors, typography, and UX rules for your product.

That’s all for today. See you in the next one.

- Aashish

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