Morning Digest, July 6, 2026

18 newsletters, 8 overlapping stories


Top Stories

Meta teases ‘Watermelon’ model on par with GPT-5.5

(2 newsletters)

Meta superintelligence chief Alexandr Wang reportedly told employees that Watermelon, the model the company is currently training, has matched OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 on closely watched benchmarks. The model runs on roughly 10x the compute of Muse Spark, its April predecessor that launched well beneath the field, and Wang teased an Opus-level coding model coming “pretty soon.” The catch is that the frontier keeps moving, with Mythos and Fable already out and OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 series (Sol, Terra, Luna) rolling into preview this week.

OpenAI floats giving the US government a 5% stake

(2 newsletters)

OpenAI has held early talks about voluntarily handing Washington a 5% equity stake, worth roughly $42.6 billion at its $852B valuation, routed through an Alaska-style public wealth fund that would pay returns to ordinary Americans. Sam Altman has raised the idea with President Trump and cabinet officials, and the proposal envisions rival labs including Anthropic, Google, and Meta each contributing a similar slice. No other lab has signaled it would participate, and Senator Bernie Sanders called the offer too small against his bill seeking 50% public ownership. The move comes just weeks after the government briefly banned a frontier model, marking a shift in the Washington-lab relationship from enforcement to equity.

Anthropic in early talks with Samsung on a custom chip

(2 newsletters)

Anthropic reportedly discussed co-developing a custom AI chip with Samsung as it looks to diversify its compute stack. The talks land a week after OpenAI debuted its own Broadcom-built inference chip, part of a broader race among AI labs to design custom silicon and loosen Nvidia’s grip. Anthropic declined to confirm, pointing to its existing hardware strategy across Nvidia, Google, and Amazon.

Amazon deploys enough satellites to launch Leo service this year

(2 newsletters)

Amazon’s Leo constellation now has more than 390 satellites in orbit, enough to begin serving customers, after a recent Atlas V launch of 29 more. The company began an enterprise preview for select businesses last year, and commercial service will likely start in certain geographic regions later this year. It is Amazon’s clearest step yet toward challenging Starlink.

Apple plans five new iPhones through 2027, if it can find the chips

(2 newsletters)

Apple has told suppliers to prepare about 10 million foldable iPhones this year, up from earlier estimates, as part of at least five new models planned between late 2026 and mid-2027. The foldable iPhone Ultra is pegged at around $2,500, the most expensive iPhone ever, and Apple is also readying new iPad Pro, MacBook, and M7 chip refreshes. The push runs straight into an AI-driven memory shortage that has nearly quadrupled prices in three quarters and reportedly has Apple hunting chips even from blacklisted Chinese suppliers.

Apple ships a Safari MCP server for AI agents

(2 newsletters)

Safari Technology Preview 247 introduces a Model Context Protocol server that lets AI coding agents connect directly to a local Safari window to inspect the DOM, console, network, screenshots, performance, and accessibility. It is aimed at faster web development and debugging, giving agents a first-party view of what users actually see in the browser.

Better models, worse tools

(2 newsletters)

A widely shared post argues that newer Anthropic models solve tasks correctly but increasingly fail stricter tool schemas by adding invalid fields, likely because they are overfit to Claude Code’s forgiving tool format. The takeaway for builders is that agent harnesses now need stronger guarantees, either tighter schema validation or constrained tool calls, rather than trusting the model to emit clean structured output.


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