đź§  Robots, Apps, and Anti-Aging Drugs

From laundry-folding bots to Gemini overtaking ChatGPT to a drug that could reverse Alzheimer’s, this week shows AI and biotech aren’t slowing down.

This week’s updates aren’t just hype. They’re real.

Robots are folding laundry for paying customers. Google Gemini just unseated ChatGPT with 23 million new users. And Sam Altman–backed Retro is about to test a drug that could reverse cognitive decline.

Here’s what matters right now 👇

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đź§µ In today's edition:

  1.  đź§ş Robots Are Now Folding Your Laundry

  2.  đ꓏ Google Gemini Just Overtook ChatGPT

  3. đź§  Sam Altman Wants to Reverse Aging

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1.đź§ş Robots Are Now Folding Your Laundry

Weave Robotics isn’t just running lab demos. It’s folding laundry for paying customers in San Francisco.

Partnering with Tumble Laundry, their bots are tackling piles of clothes every day—testing speed, reliability, and whether people actually like robot-folded laundry.

This isn’t a test run. It’s one of the first real-world cases of general-purpose robots doing paid household work.

Would you pay extra to have a robot fold your clothes?

2.📸 Google Gemini Just Overtook ChatGPT

Google’s Gemini app just knocked ChatGPT off the top spot as the #1 free app, thanks to a new feature called Nano Banana.

In just weeks, it’s brought in 23 million new users and powered over 500 million image edits. The tool can keep character details consistent, blend multiple photos, and even style-transfer—while letting you chat your way through edits.

Free users get 100 edits a day, while paid subscribers unlock up to 1,000.

This isn’t a quiet update. It’s Gemini going head-to-head with ChatGPT in the consumer spotlight.

Would you switch for smarter AI image editing?

3.đź§  Sam Altman Wants to Reverse Aging

Retro Biosciences, backed by Sam Altman, is about to test a new Alzheimer’s drug in Australia.

The medicine, called RTR242, revives the body’s cell-recycling system—autophagy—to clear out toxic brain buildup. The goal isn’t just to slow decline but to reverse it.

If it works, it could mark one of the biggest shifts in how we think about aging—not just fighting wrinkles, but turning back the clock on the brain itself.

Would you take a drug that claims to reverse aging in your cells?
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