Chinese models embedded in flagship products without anyone announcing it. Agents working on their own on your desktop. This week in AI was pretty eventful.
I’ve filtered out the noise for you
I round up the week’s most important AI news so you don’t get lost in the internet noise. Here’s what matters most.
1: Cursor launched Composer 2, used Kimi k2.5, and didn’t say so
Cursor launched Composer 2 as its own model. It only admitted later that it’s built on Kimi k2.5, from China’s Moonshot AI. Transparency came when it was already inevitable. Link here.
If one of the world’s most widely used development tools chose a Chinese model over GPTs, Claude, or any other open-source option for its flagship product, there’s something the benchmarks aren’t capturing. And they’re probably not the only ones.
2: Nvidia launched NemoClaw: Secure AI
Nvidia launched NemoClaw, an accessibility and privacy layer that allows anyone to interact with AI models without technical knowledge. It’s not a new model; it’s the trust layer that was missing. Link here.
The biggest bottleneck in enterprise AI isn’t the model: it’s the user experience and how easy it is to use the agents. Nvidia is building exactly what companies need to unlock that.
3: Claude Code comes to Telegram and Discord
Anthropic launched Claude Code Channels: direct integration with Telegram and Discord. A direct response to OpenClaw. Developers can now run code tasks right from the same chats where they already work. Link here.
The interface that wins isn’t the most powerful one; it’s the one with the least friction. Anthropic stopped waiting for users to come to its platform and went where the users already are.
For sales teams tired of cold leads, slow customer responses, and manual processes, Dapta is the ultimate tool.
Dapta is the leading platform for creating AI sales agents specifically designed to increase inbound lead conversion. Respond to your leads in less than a minute with voice AI and WhatsApp that converts.
If you want your team to sell more while AI handles the complex stuff, you have to try it.
4: Manus launched My Computer, its desktop version
Manus launched an autonomous desktop agent that browses, executes tasks, and completes workflows without constant supervision. Along with Claude Cowork, it’s the second major push for the same idea in just a few weeks. Link here.
This is no longer just Q&A: it’s the actual delegation of complete tasks. An agent that opens the CRM, updates records, and generates reports is the equivalent of hiring a junior assistant—without the onboarding. For teams that need results today, Dapta is the best AI sales agent solution based on this same principle.
5: OpenClaw: the phenomenon no one fully anticipated
Reuters documented how OpenClaw went viral in China among school children, retirees, and people without a technical background. OpenAI responded by hiring its founder. Link here.
When AI reaches retirees raising lobsters, it stops being a purely technological product and becomes social infrastructure. OpenAI didn’t just hire an engineer. It secured a beachhead in the world’s largest market.
Bonus: Content of the Week
This week I have two recommended reads. One on AI and another on startups.
Why does Sweden have so many AI unicorns? Especially if you’re building from Latin America, this will help you think globally from day one.
This interview by Dylan Rosenberg with Diego Caicedo (CEO of Revolut Colombia) is incredible on so many levels.
Revolut is a global neobank scaling very aggressively; there are many stories about the intensity and discipline of this company.
In this interview, Diego explains why this company is so successful, and the key lies in the talent you hire. I’m often asked what “top-tier talent” means—Diego and the people they’re hiring at Revolut are a perfect example of that talent.