This week, the AI news cycle was dominated by tech giants fighting over government regulations and billion-dollar valuations. I ignored all of that to focus on something much more practical: the quiet updates coming to the tools you already rely on. Here's what changed, why it matters, and what you can do.
— MICHAEL
What changed this week
Apple finally turned Siri into a capable assistant that understands your business context.
After years of lagging behind, Apple announced a massive update that lets Siri pull information directly from your emails, messages, and photos. It can now do things like find a specific receipt from last month or summarize a long text thread on the fly.
Source · What's Up in AI
Canva and ChatGPT teamed up to make editing AI-generated images seamless.
You can now turn an image generated inside ChatGPT directly into an editable Canva design without ever leaving the chat. This connects the best brainstorming tool with the design software you probably already use. Why it matters: This means your shop can draft a social media post and create the exact graphic to match in one smooth motion, saving you from wrestling with clunky downloads and uploads.
Google launched a real-time voice translator that doesn't wait for you to stop speaking.
Gemini 3.5 Live Translate is a new feature that listens to someone speaking in another language and streams the translation continuously, preserving their tone and pace. It works across more than seventy languages and is rolling out to the Google Translate app. Why it matters: If you manage a multilingual crew or serve a diverse neighborhood, you can now hold natural, flowing conversations without those awkward pauses while a machine catches up.
Why it matters
Big tech companies are finally baking AI directly into the software you use every day, rather than forcing you to visit a separate website to chat with a bot. This shifts AI from a novelty you have to remember to use into a quiet feature that just makes your phone, your design software, and your translation apps work better.
I know I waste hours hunting for a specific invoice photo, an old client text, or a buried email. Apple's new approach means you can just ask your phone to find the context for you, turning disorganized digital clutter into instant answers.
Creating a flyer or a social media post used to require moving between three different apps. With ChatGPT and Canva talking to each other, you can go from an idea to a finished, branded graphic in minutes, keeping your marketing consistent without hiring outside help.
You can use this week
Map out a multilingual customer experience.5 min
Download the Google Translate app and try having a short conversation with someone in another language using the new real-time feature. Think about how this could change the way you greet walk-in customers or train new hires.
Connect your ChatGPT and Canva accounts.10 min
The next time you need a graphic for a promotion, ask ChatGPT to generate the image, then click the new Canva button to add your logo and text directly on top of it.
This week's tip
For long documents use Claude
Claude swallows 30-page contracts, multi-hour call transcripts, and entire PDFs without choking. Paste the whole thing and ask I run a [bakery / law office / consulting shop]. What in this matters to me? Skip the rest.
Rise Above pick
OpenAI Academy's "Applying AI at Work"
OpenAI just launched a few new, free courses specifically designed to help you apply AI to your daily work. I took a look, and they are wonderfully practical, skipping the thick technical theory to focus on getting real tasks done. If you feel like you are only scratching the surface of what ChatGPT can do for your business, this is the best place to spend a lunch break.
Open it →One thing to think about
If your phone could instantly find and summarize any conversation or document from the last five years, which of your daily administrative headaches would completely disappear?
Michael Browne
Founder · Rise Above Partners · Viroqua, WI
Want a thought partner on any of this? I read every reply. Or grab 15 minutes on my calendar — no pitch, just useful.