👋 Hello hello,
❗Before diving in, this is for the business owners and entrepreneurs: we're building AI automation workflow guides: step-by-step, click-by-click, tool-by-tool so the repetitive work runs itself. Tell us what you'd automate.
Google finally gave your AI Studio apps a real address instead of a random string of numbers. Anthropic, meanwhile, keeps moving Claude Fable 5's expiration date like it's negotiating a lease renewal, twice in one week now. And Claude Code just grew its own browser, so your coding agent can go read the docs itself instead of waiting for you to paste them in.
It’s going to be a busy week. Let's get into it.
🔥🔥🔥 Three Curated AI Updates
Google rolled out custom domains for anything you build and deploy inside AI Studio. Ship an app and you can now hand it a proper address like your-app-name.ai.studio, instead of the auto-generated Cloud Run link nobody wants to put on a business card. It's first-come, first-served, so obvious names will go fast.
The timing isn't a coincidence. OpenAI's ChatGPT Sites already lets you build and host a live app straight from a chat with a shareable link, and it went fully public just days before Google's announcement. Both companies are racing to make "build it in the AI, hand someone a real link" as easy as sending a text.
Anthropic extended Claude Fable 5's inclusion in paid plans again, this time through July 19. It's the second extension in about a week, the original cutoff was July 7, then July 12, now this. If you still haven’t tried Fable 5, this is your week to take out some time to experience what this model has to offer:
If you're on Pro, Max, Team, or a premium Enterprise seat, you get up to half your weekly usage limit on Fable 5 at no extra cost, and Claude Code's 50% higher weekly rate limits got the same extension. Worth knowing: that pool is shared with every other model, so if you've burned through your week on Sonnet or Opus, there's less room left for Fable 5.

Claude Code on desktop shipped an in-app browser. Your coding agent can pull up documentation, design files, or any other site, then read it, click through it, and interact with it the same way it already handles your local dev server.
It's sandboxed by default, clean profile, no saved logins or history, and you decide whether a session sticks around or resets each time. Less copy-pasting docs into chat, more Claude going and checking the source itself.
Help shape Practically AI
Tell us what's working. Your feedback shapes what lands in your inbox, and it takes less than 2 minutes.
🔥🔥 Two Things You Can Try Doing With AI
1. Teach it your shorthand for food logging
If you're tracking macros or calories, you don't need to type out a full meal every time. Teach your AI the foods you eat regularly, and a short phrase like "pb sandwich" expands into a complete nutritional log on its own. Extend the same idea to drinks, and a night out gets logged just as easily. Shorthand in, structured data out, it's exactly the kind of thing AI is quietly great at.
2. Turn a week of calls into a coaching report
If you run recurring calls, teaching, coaching, sales, whatever, Zoom's transcript feature already gives you the raw material. Save each transcript into one folder, then let something like Claude Cowork run a scheduled task that reviews everything from the week and scores it against the frameworks you actually care about. You get flagged moments, strengths, watch points, and next steps, without listening back to a single recording. Swap "classes" for "sales calls" or "1:1s" and the same setup works for basically any recurring conversation you want to get better at running.
🔥 One Tool Worth Trying Out
🧩 PlugThis
Most AI builders are built for web apps. PlugThis is built only for Chrome extensions, and it shows. Describe what you want in plain English and it generates a full Manifest v3 extension, popup, content scripts, background worker, all of it, in under two minutes.
Connect your own Supabase account and it wires up login and a database for you. Plug in an OpenAI or Gemini key and your extension can write, summarize, translate, or reply on its own. When you're done, you download the actual source code, no lock-in, and can publish straight to the Chrome Web Store.
It's a solid pick if you've got an extension idea sitting in your notes app and zero interest in learning Manifest v3.
Help shape Practically AI
Tell us what's working. Your feedback shapes what lands in your inbox, and it takes less than 2 minutes.
Don't forget to rate today's post
Until next time,
Team @PracticalyAI

