Welcome to OHMO AI. Meta just stripped the Ray-Ban badge off its smart glasses and dropped the price to $299, betting its own name is enough to finally put AI on everyone's face. Meanwhile the heavy machinery behind AI keeps shifting, with Samsung handing the tech to its entire workforce and China quietly seizing the supercomputer crown.

In today’s newsletter:

  • Meta drops the Ray-Ban name and the price on its new AI glasses

  • Samsung rolls ChatGPT and Codex out to staff worldwide

  • China takes the world's fastest supercomputer crown

  • Anthropic rethinks how AI agents get access on a team

LATEST IN AI
META

Meta launches $299 AI glasses and drops the Ray-Ban name

Image source: Meta

OHMO AI: Meta has launched Meta Glasses, its first smart glasses sold under its own name instead of Ray-Ban or Oakley. Built with EssilorLuxottica and starting at $299, the lineup comes in three frame styles aimed at a wider range of tastes and budgets.

The details:

  • Two base models, the Adventurer and the Fury, both start at $299, while a slimmer Starfire model designed with Kylie Jenner sits at $399.

  • All three carry the same core hardware, a 12 MP camera, open-ear audio, and an action button for Meta AI, and work with prescription lenses.

  • Live translation now covers 20 languages, and pedestrian navigation has come down from Meta's pricier display glasses to these camera-equipped pairs.

Why it matters: Price has been the wall keeping smart glasses out of everyday pockets. Dropping the Ray-Ban badge and undercutting the old entry point is Meta betting that its own name is enough.

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Type the problem in Slack. Viktor writes the code, deploys to your subdomain, posts the URL, and starts using it on your next request. No specs, no Jira, no kickoff. Founders are running entire companies this way.

OPENAI

Samsung rolls ChatGPT and Codex out to employees worldwide

Image source: OHMOAI

OHMO AI: Samsung Electronics is deploying ChatGPT Enterprise and Codex across its workforce in one of OpenAI's largest enterprise launches yet. Every Samsung employee in Korea gets access, along with all staff worldwide in its Device eXperience division.

The details:

  • Samsung plans to use the tools across software development, marketing, product development, and manufacturing, for both technical and non-technical work.

  • More than 5 million people now use Codex every week, and weekly active users in Korea have grown nearly 800% since February 1, 2026.

  • The two companies already work together on AI infrastructure, with Samsung supplying advanced memory chips, so this extends the relationship into workforce transformation.

Why it matters: When a manufacturing giant hands AI to its whole staff rather than a pilot team, the technology stops being an experiment. This is what mass corporate adoption actually looks like, and it sets a template other big employers will study closely.

CHINA

China takes the world's fastest supercomputer crown

Image source: OHMOAI

OHMO AI: A Chinese machine called LineShine has topped the global TOP500 ranking of supercomputers, the first time since 2017 that a Chinese system has held the number one spot. It displaced the US El Capitan computer, pushing Germany's Jupiter system down to fifth.

The details:

  • LineShine, based in Shenzhen, hit 2.198 exaflops, meaning more than 2 quintillion calculations per second.

  • It runs entirely on conventional CPUs rather than the GPUs usually favoured for AI work, drawing roughly 42.2 megawatts of power.

  • Four European supercomputers sit in the top 10, with Italy, Switzerland, and Japan also represented.

Why it matters: Supercomputers are quietly the engine room of AI, key to building and training the models everyone talks about. A shift at the very top is a marker of where computing muscle, and the AI ambition behind it, is heading next.

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ANTHROPIC

Anthropic gives its AI agents their own identity at work

Image source: Anthropic

OHMO AI: Anthropic has detailed a new access model for Claude Tag, the version of Claude that sits inside shared team channels. Instead of borrowing a single person's logins, Claude now gets its own accounts, set up by an admin and tied to the workspace.

The details:

  • Claude acts as itself, posting in Slack as the Claude app and opening pull requests as the Claude GitHub App, so a shared channel never becomes a back door into someone's private files.

  • Admins set a baseline identity at the workspace level, then tighten or widen access channel by channel.

  • Every action made with those credentials is logged, and revoking the identity cuts off Claude's access everywhere at once.

Why it matters: As AI agents start doing longer jobs on their own, the old question of "what can this user do" stops fitting. Giving agents their own identity is an early attempt at answering who an AI is, and what it's allowed to touch, once it's a teammate rather than a tool.

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COMMUNITY

Featured Reader

Every newsletter, we feature how a reader is using AI to work smarter, save time, or make life easier.

Today's reader is Noah T. from Wellington, New Zealand:

Right, so I'm the world's most disorganised beekeeper. 16 hives, full-time job, and a brain like a dropped jigsaw. The thing that was killing me was knowing when each hive needed checking, because if you miss a swarm you lose half your bees and your neighbour's washing line becomes a crime scene. So here's what I do now. After every inspection I just ramble into my phone, hive 7, lots of bees, found the queen, 2 frames of capped brood, bit of bad temper today. AI takes my nonsense and turns it into a proper logbook entry with the date sorted. Then it cross-references the lot and tells me which hives are trending toward swarming based on the brood pattern and how stroppy they've been, and it flags the ones I haven't opened in a while. It even worked out one hive was probably queenless before I'd properly twigged, just from me moaning about no eggs 3 visits running. Last spring I'd have called that a lucky guess. Now it's basically a tiny bee detective living in my pocket. The bees have no idea how close they came to chaos.”

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