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  • đź§  AI Can Now Text You, Track Your Health, and Build With You

đź§  AI Can Now Text You, Track Your Health, and Build With You

Today in AI: Multiplayer coding, health data dashboards, and AI you can text like a friend.

đź‘‹ Hello hello,

AI isn’t just answering questions anymore. It’s starting to stick around — building with you, tracking your patterns, even sitting in your pocket like a collaborator you can text.

This week’s updates feel less like features and more like… behavior changes. And once you notice it, you can’t unsee it.

Let’s get into it.

 đź”Ąđź”Ąđź”Ą Three Highly Curated AI Stories

Google quietly upgraded AI Studio in a big way. You can now build apps and tools together in real time, almost like Figma but for code. It supports multiplayer collaboration, which means teams can jump in and co-create instead of passing files around.

It also connects to real services, so your projects aren’t just mockups anymore. You can plug into live data and actually make things useful. Add to that persistent builds, and your work doesn’t disappear when you close the tab.

The UI upgrade matters too. With support for tools like shadcn, Framer Motion, and npm, it feels much closer to a real dev environment. This isn’t just “try AI coding.” It’s “build something real, with others, fast.”

Perplexity just introduced a new feature that connects to your health apps, wearable devices, lab results, and even medical records.

The idea is simple but powerful. Instead of scattered data across apps, you get one place to track everything and even build tools on top of your own health data.

This opens up interesting possibilities. Personalized insights, better tracking, and potentially smarter health decisions. But it also raises the obvious question: how comfortable are you handing over this level of personal data?

Would you connect your health data to an AI tool?

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Anthropic introduced “channels” for Claude Code, which means you can now control your coding sessions through apps like Telegram and Discord.

In practice, this means you don’t need to sit at your laptop to manage or interact with your code. You can message Claude Code from your phone and keep things moving.

What’s interesting is how close open-source alternatives like OpenClaw are getting. The gap between proprietary and open tools is shrinking fast.

🔥🔥 Two Pro AI Tips Worth Knowing

If you’ve ever tried making slides with AI, you already know the struggle. Every tool promises magic. Few deliver consistently.

This detailed guide breaks down how tools like Claude, Gamma, Manus, and NotebookLM actually perform when it comes to creating presentations. It covers where each one shines, where they fall short, and which one you should pick based on your use case. Perfect if you’re tired of testing everything yourself.

There’s a simple command inside Claude that most people miss.

Type “/insights” and Claude will analyze your recent conversations and give you a report on how you’ve been using it. It highlights patterns, gaps, and even suggests how you can get better outputs.

It’s a small feature, but surprisingly useful. Especially if you use Claude daily and want to improve how you prompt.

🔥 Things You Didn’t Know You Can Do With AI

Instead of rereading notes before every meeting, you can turn them into something you actually consume on the go.

Here’s how:

1. Open Microsoft Copilot.
2. Type “create a podcast about this.”
3. Paste your meeting notes, client brief, or any document.
4. Let Copilot generate a short audio summary.
5. Listen while getting ready or commuting.
6. You walk into the meeting fully prepared because you already know the context, key points, and numbers.

No last-minute scrambling.

💬 P.S. We’re launching live, role-specific workshops that show your team exactly how to use AI in their workflows — with expert trainers and measurable results.

We’re opening a limited early batch. Join the waitlist here for priority access



Until next time,
Kushank @PracticalyAI

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