Welcome to The Daily AI Briefing, your daily dose of artificial intelligence news. I'm Marc, and here are today's headlines. Today, we're covering major developments from industry leaders: GitHub's Copilot expansion, OpenAI's venture into chip manufacturing, ElevenLabs' new voice creation features, breakthrough AI in drug development, and Meta's latest audio tool. Let's dive into these stories. First up, GitHub is making waves by opening its Copilot platform to rival AI models. In a significant shift from its OpenAI exclusivity, developers can now choose between Anthropic's Claude and Google's Gemini models. The platform also introduced Spark for natural language application building and reached a milestone of over one million paying subscribers. This move signals a more competitive and diverse AI coding assistant landscape. In hardware news, OpenAI is taking a bold step into chip development. The company is partnering with Broadcom and TSMC to create its first custom AI semiconductor, targeted for 2026. With a team of 20 engineers, including former Google TPU designers, this initiative aims to address the company's growing compute costs. OpenAI is also diversifying its chip suppliers by adding AMD's MI300X processors to its infrastructure, a strategic move given their reported $5B losses this year. Moving to voice technology, ElevenLabs has unveiled its Voice Design feature. This innovative tool enables users to create customized AI voices with specific accents, emotions, and speaking styles. Users can now generate unique voices by providing detailed descriptions, making it easier for creators to find the perfect voice for their projects. In the biotech sector, Iambic Therapeutics has introduced Enchant, a groundbreaking AI platform for drug development. This multimodal system combines laboratory and clinical data to predict drug candidates' performance in human trials, achieving an impressive 74% correlation accuracy. What's particularly remarkable is its ability to make reliable predictions after analyzing just five drug molecules. Lastly, Meta has released NotebookLlama, their answer to Google's NotebookLM podcast feature. While the tool shows promise in converting text into podcast-style content, it still faces challenges with robotic output and content accuracy. This development highlights both the potential and current limitations of AI in audio content creation. That concludes today's AI Briefing. From expanded coding assistants to custom chips, and from voice generation to drug discovery, we're seeing AI push boundaries across multiple sectors. I'm Marc, and I'll be back tomorrow with more AI news and developments. Thank you for listening.
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