AI for Business
-
Walmart Sparky Takes Over ChatGPT After In-Chat Checkout Converted 3x Worse Than Walmart.com
Walmart just pulled the plug on OpenAI’s Instant Checkout — the feature that let ChatGPT users buy products without ever leaving the chat window. The reason? Conversion rates were three times lower than when shoppers simply clicked through to Walmart’s website. Starting the week of March 25, Walmart is replacing that broken experience with Sparky,… Continue reading
-
Zoer.ai Turns a Single Sentence Into a Full-Stack App — But Can It Replace Lovable and Bolt.new?
The AI app builder space is getting crowded. Lovable, Bolt.new, Cursor, Replit — the list keeps growing. But most of these tools still leave gaps. You either get a pretty frontend with no backend, or you get code output that needs hours of manual wiring before it can accept a payment or authenticate a user.… Continue reading
-
WordPress MCP Write Capabilities: AI Agents Can Now Write, Edit, and Publish on 43% of the Web
WordPress powers 43% of all websites on the internet. On March 20, 2026, Automattic flipped a switch that lets AI agents — Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and any MCP-compatible client — not just read WordPress.com sites, but write to them. Draft blog posts. Build landing pages. Manage comments. Restructure categories. Fix SEO metadata. All through natural… Continue reading
-
ChatGPT Ads Pilot: $60 CPM, $200K Minimums, and Advertisers Already Pushing Back
OpenAI is six weeks into selling ads inside ChatGPT. The early numbers tell a conflicted story: a $60 CPM that’s roughly 3x Meta’s average, a $200,000 minimum buy-in for what’s essentially a beta test, and a rollout so slow that some of the biggest advertising agencies in the world are questioning whether they’ll get enough… Continue reading
-
TradingAgents: 33K Stars for an Open-Source Framework That Simulates an Entire Trading Firm with LLM Agents
Wall Street runs on teams. A fundamentals analyst digs through earnings reports. A sentiment specialist monitors social media chatter. A technical analyst watches RSI and MACD. A trader synthesizes it all into a position. A risk manager decides whether to let it through. TradingAgents, built by Tauric Research, takes that exact structure and rebuilds it… Continue reading
-
OpenDataLoader PDF Scores 0.90 Accuracy Across 200 Real-World PDFs — Highest Among Open-Source Parsers
Every team building a RAG pipeline hits the same wall: PDFs. The format was designed for consistent visual rendering, not for machines to extract structured data. Tables break. Reading order scrambles. Headers vanish. And suddenly your AI knowledge base is hallucinating because the ingestion layer fed it garbage. OpenDataLoader PDF, an open-source project by South… Continue reading
-
Lightfield: The $300M Startup That Killed Its Own 25M-User Product to Build a CRM
Most founders would kill for 25 million users. Keith Peiris and Henri Liriani already had them — and walked away. Their company Tome, the AI-powered presentation tool backed by $81 million from Coatue, Greylock, Lightspeed, and GV at a $300 million valuation, was one of the fastest productivity tools to reach a million users. It… Continue reading
-
Claude Dispatch Lets You Text Your Desktop AI From Anywhere — But There’s a Catch
Anthropic shipped Claude Dispatch on March 17, turning the Claude mobile app into a remote control for your Mac’s Cowork agent. Send a message from your phone, and Claude gets to work on your desktop — pulling files, querying databases, building reports. When it’s done, you get a notification. The idea is simple: your AI… Continue reading
-
Tempo Machine Payments Protocol: $500M, 100+ Partners, and a Bold Play to Own the AI Agent Economy
AI agents can write code, book flights, and analyze legal contracts. But ask one to pay for a $0.002 API call, and it falls apart. That gap — between what agents can do and what they can spend — is exactly what Tempo’s Machine Payments Protocol (MPP) is designed to close. On March 18, 2026,… Continue reading
-
Mistral Forge Wants Enterprises to Stop Renting AI and Start Building Their Own
Most enterprise AI today works like a lease agreement. You send your data to someone else’s model, get predictions back, and hope the black box does what you need. Fine-tuning helps at the margins. RAG bolts on some domain knowledge. But the foundation — the model itself — remains someone else’s product, trained on someone… Continue reading
