Thursday, June 11, 2026
Acosta unveils new retail metrics for fresh food success in 2026AI News & Trends

Acosta unveils new retail metrics for fresh food success in 2026

Acosta's new study suggests that retailers may start measuring success in fresh food by shopper confidence and category growth, not just profit. Key areas might include how available and fresh items are, how much waste is controlled, and how shoppers feel about quality. Early tests show that focusing on quality and customer satisfaction may reduce waste and increase loyalty, but results are still early and could change. These new ways of measuring could help stores turn their fresh departments into loyalty drivers instead of just cost centers.

MINT.ai and Uplane detail AI operational layer for marketingAI Deep Dives & Tutorials

MINT.ai and Uplane detail AI operational layer for marketing

MINT.ai and Uplane describe a framework for using AI in marketing that may help teams move from small pilot projects to everyday operations. Case studies suggest that having creative management, ad serving, and measurement on one data foundation might lead to better and faster results. The approach includes five layers: collecting data, unifying customer IDs, orchestrating workflows, AI-driven decisions, and activating plus measuring campaigns. Experts say a phase-based rollout - starting with assessment and a small pilot - could help teams scale up safely. Good governance and privacy controls appear to be important, and some reports suggest integration depth, not just the number of tools, determines success.

AI Compute Deals Pressure Margins, Shift Valuation MetricsAI Deep Dives & Tutorials

AI Compute Deals Pressure Margins, Shift Valuation Metrics

AI compute costs are rising as companies spend more on both training and using AI models. While training big models like GPT-4 may cost over $100 million, most of the long-term spending now comes from using these models (inference), which might make margins shrink if revenue growth does not keep up. Large deals to lock in chip supply can help manage risks but also create high fixed costs and reduce flexibility if demand drops or new hardware appears. Some reports suggest that missing usage targets by even a small amount may erase profits. Overall, how well these companies match their compute supply with actual usage may decide if they stay profitable.

New Report: Dairy Brands Use Texture to Justify Higher PricesInstitutional Intelligence & Tribal Knowledge

New Report: Dairy Brands Use Texture to Justify Higher Prices

Recent studies suggest that dairy brands may use texture, such as creaminess or layering, to justify higher prices for premium products. Consumers appear willing to pay more when a product feels richer or more indulgent, and texture can even be more important than flavor for some people. Research indicates that brands offering textured varieties may see increased sales and shopper interest, but they need to keep these products clearly different from cheaper options. Experts warn that if the texture does not meet expectations, customers might switch brands, so companies should make sure their texture claims are believable and shown clearly to shoppers.

Google Orders 3 Million Intel Chips Through 2028 for AIAI News & Trends

Google Orders 3 Million Intel Chips Through 2028 for AI

Google has ordered over three million chips from Intel through 2028, which may help reduce its dependence on manufacturers in Taiwan. The company appears to be continuing to use Nvidia GPUs while shifting some work to its own chips made by outside partners. Intel's new chip processes are still developing, and there are uncertainties about cost and performance. This move suggests that Google, and possibly other companies, are trying to reduce supply risks by having backup manufacturers in different regions. The final results are not certain, but having more options could help manage future disruptions.

Latest News

Supabase raises $500M Series F, values company at $10.5 billion
AI News & Trends19h ago

Supabase raises $500M Series F, values company at $10.5 billion

Supabase has raised $500 million in a Series F round, giving the company a reported value of $10.5 billion. This unusually large investment for a developer platform suggests Supabase may now be seen as an enterprise-level competitor. The new funds will reportedly go toward scaling technology, expanding security and compliance features, and rewarding early employees. Supabase might be gaining ground against competitors like Firebase, but exact sales numbers for 2026 are not given, so its growth remains an estimate. The funding and new features may indicate Supabase sees itself as a strong choice for large, regulated organizations.

DHL Explains How B2B Influencers Drive Trust, Sales
Personal Influence & Brand19h ago

DHL Explains How B2B Influencers Drive Trust, Sales

DHL says B2B influencers with special knowledge may help build trust and move buyers through complex decisions faster. They report that working with experts who share real stories or teach about products, instead of just selling, appears to be effective. Research suggests these expert influencers can drive more engagement, like more demo requests or downloads, compared to general influencers. Measurement tools are getting better, but finding the right influencers and showing clear results still might be hard. DHL suggests long-term relationships and clear rules may help, and brands seem to be testing these ideas as they adjust to longer buying cycles.

Anthropic unveils Claude Fable 5 with new safety, free until June 2026
AI News & Trends21h ago

Anthropic unveils Claude Fable 5 with new safety, free until June 2026

Anthropic has launched Claude Fable 5, a public AI model with new safety features and extra guardrails, and it will be free for most users until June 22, 2026. The company says internal tests have not found any universal jailbreaks, but warns there may be false positives with its new safety checks. Early users, like Firefox engineers, suggest the model may help fix software bugs and improve security, though broader evidence is still limited. After June 22, users will need usage credits to keep using Fable 5. Anthropic plans to share more about its safety methods after more public testing.

AI chip deals convert variable spend into fixed cost for buyers
AI Deep Dives & Tutorials21h ago

AI chip deals convert variable spend into fixed cost for buyers

AI chip deals may turn what used to be unpredictable, variable spending into a fixed cost for buyers. Even though the unit price for running AI models (inference) has dropped sharply, total spending keeps rising because use is growing even faster. Some sources suggest that inference now accounts for most of the lifetime cost of running AI, and using chips efficiently becomes crucial for profits. Long-term chip contracts might help buyers by securing supply but can also create financial risks if actual usage falls short. The overall impact on companies depends on whether they can keep their chip usage high enough to justify the fixed costs.

OpenAI expects to burn $100B before 2030 free cash flow
AI News & Trends21h ago

OpenAI expects to burn $100B before 2030 free cash flow

OpenAI expects to spend over $100 billion before it might start making more money than it spends around 2030. The company's own models suggest it will have negative free cash flow until then, and this forecast has been revised upward from earlier estimates. Most of the costs appear to be for powerful computer chips, including a deal for over $20 billion with Cerebras. Analysts warn that more years of losing money could lead to more investors owning pieces of OpenAI, which may create risks. There is still uncertainty if OpenAI's possible large profits in 2030 will be enough to balance out years of high spending.

OpenAI files confidential S-1 for IPO, eyes $852B valuation
AI News & Trends21h ago

OpenAI files confidential S-1 for IPO, eyes $852B valuation

OpenAI has confidentially filed an S-1 with the SEC, which may lead to a future IPO and includes a planned pre-IPO employee tender offer at a $852 billion valuation. The company says there is no set timetable for going public, and the process could take a while as the SEC reviews the draft statement. OpenAI also plans to let employees sell shares before the IPO, but details are not yet clear. The filing might reshape how AI companies raise money and report information, though some experts warn the high valuation may bring extra scrutiny and questions. The move could lead to greater oversight and transparency for OpenAI and the broader AI industry.

Intel Expands Foundry Roadmap as Companies Seek Backup Chipmakers
Institutional Intelligence & Tribal Knowledge21h ago

Intel Expands Foundry Roadmap as Companies Seek Backup Chipmakers

Companies are looking for backup chipmakers like Intel because recent shortages and global tensions have shown that relying on one factory can be risky. Most advanced chip factories are in East Asia, and any problems there might cause big delays and losses for electronics makers. Government programs such as the U.S. CHIPS Act are making it easier and cheaper for companies to use more than one chip supplier. Intel is working on new chip technology and packaging, and some experts believe its U.S. factories may help shorten wait times for new designs. Many companies may use Intel as a backup supplier to make sure they have enough chips, even if it is not always the fastest or most advanced option.

Ramp Data: Top AI Spenders See 5x Faster Revenue Growth
AI News & Trends23h ago

Ramp Data: Top AI Spenders See 5x Faster Revenue Growth

Ramp data suggests that U.S. companies spending the most on AI are seeing revenue grow about five times faster than the overall economy, but it is not certain that AI spending alone is the cause. Heavy AI investors reportedly had about 12 percent annual revenue growth, while those spending little on AI were nearly flat. Outside research shows mixed results on whether AI spending directly causes higher performance, and the growth may depend on other factors like strong management. Ramp's sample may be biased toward tech-focused companies, and experts advise careful tracking and testing before making big AI investments. Overall, spending more on AI may help companies grow faster, but the results vary and depend on how the money is managed.

OpenAI Unveils 2028 Plan For Steerable AI Researchers, Economic Shift
AI News & Trends1d ago

OpenAI Unveils 2028 Plan For Steerable AI Researchers, Economic Shift

OpenAI has announced a plan to create a steerable AI researcher by March 2028, which may help reshape the economy and make advanced AI more available and safe. The company says its goals include building an automated AI researcher, boosting economic growth, and giving everyone a personal AGI, while keeping systems under human control. Analysts suggest that, by 2028, AI might mostly shift tasks rather than replace entire jobs, with some uncertainty about exactly how much work will change. Regulators in the EU and US are preparing new rules for these advanced AI systems, and business leaders are watching how OpenAI meets its targets and how governments handle safety and oversight. OpenAI's leaders also say they do not want to fully automate everything, so it is not clear how much power AI will get.

Pentagon adds Alibaba, Baidu to China military list; stocks fall
Institutional Intelligence & Tribal Knowledge1d ago

Pentagon adds Alibaba, Baidu to China military list; stocks fall

The U.S. Department of Defense added Alibaba, Baidu, and other Chinese firms to a list of 'Chinese Military Companies' on June 9, 2026. This move may impact their business with the U.S. government, as direct contracting bans will start on June 30, 2026, and broader rules on supply chains may follow a year later. Stock prices for these companies dropped after the news, but analysts suggest this is more of a warning than a sign of immediate financial loss. The companies deny any links to the Chinese military and may challenge the decision in court, though this process could take months. Experts note that these rules might make companies outside of defense think carefully about working with the listed firms.