Morning Digest, June 22, 2026

19 newsletters, 8 overlapping stories


Top Stories

Google keeps losing star researchers to OpenAI and Anthropic

(4 newsletters)

Nobel laureate John Jumper, the DeepMind scientist who co-created AlphaFold, is leaving Google for Anthropic, landing just days after Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer departed for IPO-bound OpenAI. The one-two punch is being read as a sign that DeepMind’s long-held edge in scientific research is now at risk, with the two hottest AI startups out-recruiting the lab that defined much of modern AI. Jumper said he will recharge before joining ahead of an Anthropic science event at the end of June.

Midjourney pivots into medical hardware with a full-body ultrasonic scanner

(2 newsletters)

In one of the more unexpected moves in tech, the AI image startup unveiled the Midjourney Scanner, which submerges a person in water and uses roughly half a million grain-of-sand-sized ultrasonic sensors to build a detailed 3D body map in under 60 seconds, compared with the 60 to 90 minutes a standard MRI takes. The company plans to open its first Midjourney Spa in San Francisco next year to house the machines. It is a striking signal that frontier AI labs see room to move into physical, regulated domains like diagnostics.

Claude Code adds shareable Artifacts

(2 newsletters)

Anthropic rolled out Artifacts for Claude Code, which turn a coding session into a live web page built from full context including the codebase, connectors, and conversation. The pages update in real time as Claude works and are aimed at PR walkthroughs, dashboards, and incident timelines, letting a team see the same view without a separate status update. Everything stays private to the org, and the feature is in beta for Team and Enterprise plans.

Microsoft Copilot Cowork hits general availability

(2 newsletters)

Copilot Cowork, Microsoft’s agent for long-running, multi-tool tasks, is now generally available to Microsoft 365 Copilot subscribers. You define the work and Cowork runs it end to end, returning a finished result. Microsoft claims its cost per prompt runs 30 to 40 percent below Anthropic’s Claude Cowork, positioning it as the cheaper option in the workplace-agent race.

Snap’s $2,195 AR Specs land with a thud on Wall Street

(2 newsletters)

Snap unveiled Specs, its long-developed standalone AR glasses, and the stock slid in the high single digits to about 10 percent immediately after. The chunky frames run all computing on-device, unlike competitors, which CEO Evan Spiegel argued justifies pricing the product more like a high-end computer. Separately, Snap is spinning its costly internal AI video team into a new company called Dotmo.

Perplexity gives its agents persistent memory with Brain

(2 newsletters)

Perplexity Brain builds a persistent context graph across tasks, projects, decisions, files, and sources so agents start with relevant context rather than from scratch. It links every memory to its original source, reorganizes knowledge over time, and is pitched as improving answer accuracy while cutting task costs through better retrieval and reuse. It is part of a broader week of agent-memory launches across the industry.

Framer 3.0 ships AI agents that build full pages

(2 newsletters)

Framer’s major release adds AI agents that can design full pages, handle breakpoints, build components, write code, and connect to a CMS, all on the canvas. Large teams get Branching to iterate safely alongside agents, and a new Community platform lets creators share and earn. It is part of a wave of design tools racing to embed agents directly where the real site or product lives.

Google DeepMind publishes its AI Control Roadmap

(2 newsletters)

DeepMind laid out a roadmap for securing AI agents that assumes internal agents may be misaligned and adds system-level defenses such as sandboxing, endpoint security, and prompt-injection resistance on top of alignment work. The framing matters as projections put the economic value of AI agents in the US at roughly $2.9 trillion by 2030, raising the stakes on containment and control rather than alignment alone.


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