Morning Digest, June 19, 2026
4 newsletters, 2 overlapping stories
Top Stories
Midjourney pivots to medical hardware with a full-body ultrasound scanner
(3 newsletters)
Image-generation startup Midjourney unveiled its first hardware product, the Midjourney Scanner, a full-body ultrasound machine that lowers users through a ring of underwater ultrasonic sensors to map the body in about 60 seconds. Founder David Holz claims it rivals an MRI’s detail in a fraction of the time and was built with ultrasound-chip maker Butterfly Network, though notably the scanners themselves use no AI. The company plans a fleet of 50,000 units and will house the first roughly 10 inside a “Midjourney Spa” opening in San Francisco’s Union Square in 2027, paired with saunas and cold plunges.
Amazon aims to challenge Nvidia by selling its Trainium AI chips
(2 newsletters)
AWS is in talks to sell its in-house Trainium AI chips to other companies for use in their data centers, which could become one of the most direct challenges yet to Nvidia’s dominance. Amazon has resisted this until now because compute capacity on its current chips is already sold out, so opening sales to outside buyers risks leaving existing customers waiting unless Amazon can ramp up manufacturing.
Also Worth Knowing
- NASA picks Eric Schmidt’s Relativity Space for a Mars mission. Relativity will build and fly the Aeolus spacecraft, carrying four instruments to image Mars dust, winds, and temperatures from orbit, with a 2028 launch target.
- OpenAI poaches transformer pioneer Noam Shazeer from Google. The “Attention Is All You Need” co-author and former Gemini co-lead jumps to OpenAI just two years after Google reportedly paid $2.7B to win him back from Character.AI.
- Biogen to acquire RayThera for up to $1 billion. The biotech is buying the San Diego startup developing small-molecule anti-inflammatory therapies, with the deal expected to close in Q3 2026.
- OpenAI adds usage analytics and spend controls for ChatGPT Enterprise. New tools help enterprise clients manage costs and track credit usage.
- Meta exec leading the internal AI overhaul departs after two months. Emily Dalton Smith will stay on to work with Andrew Bosworth until a replacement is found.
- Etsy counters Amazon Prime Day with a “Shop Other Jeffs” campaign. The campaign spotlights its 5,000-plus sellers named Jeff to position human, direct sellers against Amazon.
Quick Hits
- Mom-and-pop SaaS era: As AI drops the cost of building software, domain experts and local operators are expected to launch niche products, expanding the market rather than just shifting demand. Link
- AI doctor on the horizon: The Rundown’s Rowan Cheung relays that DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis has “hardened” his confidence that all disease could be curable in 10 to 20 years, and argues the smart move now is collecting years of personal health data.
- The infinite workweek: Coding agents were supposed to free up time, but some developers report the opposite, since fleets of agents still need constant human oversight. Link
- Meter pricing tests AI economics: A growing shift to usage-based AI pricing is forcing businesses to confront actual spend and return on investment, and may push more selective use of the tech.
- Adobe and Databricks go agentic: Adobe extended its Firefly creative agent into public beta across Photoshop, Premiere, Illustrator, InDesign, and Frame, while Databricks launched LTAP and an AI-run customer data platform called CustomerLake at its Data + AI Summit.
- Intel surges on Apple tie-up: Intel shares jumped after Trump and Apple announced an agreement to design and build chips with the company in the US.