AI Styling Studio — Infinite avatar looks from just 1 photo.Try it now.

BestAITools

Submit your Tool

8000+ AI tools already listed
8K+Tools
100K+/moViews
25K+/moVisitors

AI NewsHow a former DeepMind researcher raised at a $300M pre-seed valuation before launching a product

How a former DeepMind researcher raised at a $300M pre-seed valuation before launching a product

8:43 PM IST · July 16, 2026

How a former DeepMind researcher raised at a $300M pre-seed valuation before launching a product

Andrew Dai left Google DeepMind knowing visual AI was the frontier he wanted to stake his claim in. He pulled off a whirlwind fundraise that resulted in a more aggressive valuation-to-capital ratio thanThinking Machines, which raised one of the largest rounds in U.S. history. In this episode ofBuild Mode,host and Startup Battlefield lead Isabelle Johannessen sits down with Andrew Dai, founder and CEO ofElorianand former Google DeepMind researcher, to discuss how his company raised a $55 million seed round at a $300 million valuation just months after leaving Google. Drawing on more than a decade spent helping build some of the world’s most influential AI systems, including research that later informed the development of ChatGPT, Andrew explains why he believes visual AI is one of the next major frontiers in artificial intelligence. “You have models that are doing really great at math, really great at new physics ideas, and of course coding is very popular now … But one area where progress has been extremely uneven is visual understanding and visual reasoning,” said Dai. “At Elorian, we want to build models that will advance us toward visual AGI.” Andrew walks through the fundraising process from the founder’s perspective, including how he refined a highly technical vision into a compelling story investors could understand. He explains why he prioritized strategic partners like Nvidia and Menlo Ventures over even higher valuation offers, and how choosing investors who understood the realities of building frontier AI proved more valuable than simply maximizing his company’s price tag. The conversation also offers practical lessons for founders navigating today’s rapidly evolving AI landscape. Andrew shares how startups can communicate complex technical ideas without relying on jargon, why speed has become one of the biggest competitive advantages in AI, and what it takes to recruit world-class researchers away from Big Tech. Loading the player… This season on Build Mode, we’re diving into all aspects of fundraising with experts who have firsthand experience raising massive pre-seed rounds, writing the big checks, bootstrapping, going public, and navigating the unexpected market circumstances that can change everything. Subscribe to Build Mode on⁠Apple Podcasts⁠,⁠Spotify⁠, or⁠wherever you like to listen⁠. And watch the full videos on⁠YouTube⁠. New episodes of ⁠Build Mode⁠drop every Thursday.

read more

Latest AI News

View All News →
Google Rebrands NotebookLM as Gemini Notebook; Brings Cloud Computing and Search Integration

Google Rebrands NotebookLM as Gemini Notebook; Brings Cloud Computing and Search Integration

Google is rebranding NotebookLM to Gemini Notebook, the company announced on Thursday. The AI-powered research and note-taking assistant, which was originally announced as Project Tailwind at Google I/O 2023, has evolved into a standalone research platform in recent years. Google claims it is now used by more than 30 million people and over 600,000 organisations worldwide. Alongside the rebranding, the Mountain View-based tech giant announced several other upgrades, including native code execution through a secure cloud computer and deeper integration with the Gemini app and Google Search.

4 hours ago

View

Why is OpenAI selling a ChatGPT basketball?

Why is OpenAI selling a ChatGPT basketball?

You may have heard that OpenAI released its first piece of hardware this week:a $230 mini keyboard. You may not have heard that alongside this “command center for agentic work,” OpenAI also released a ChatGPT basketball. “This basketball comes from the Pause. Play. Prompt. campaign, a physical reminder that creativity doesn’t just live on our screens,” the product listing explains. I was not able to find any other mention of the “Pause. Play. Prompt.” campaign on OpenAI’s website, but I gather that this is OpenAI’s way of telling people not to spend all day on Codex. Who says tech companies aren’t thinking about our mental health? The basketball will cost you $70, or about 56 million input tokens for GPT-5. It’s a 100% rubber ball, which is a better fit for outdoor play due to its weather resistance than the more expensive leather balls you’ll find on professional basketball courts. I am pleased to know that OpenAI is envisioning a world where playing sports outside is possible, even as the generative AI boom acceleratestech companies’ carbon emissions. It’s difficult to imagine the target customer for the ChatGPT basketball. Who is this for? Wander outside the safety of an AI-pilled, tokenmaxxing Silicon Valley and one might worry about getting bullied for bringing a ChatGPT basketball to the court. You could not pay me $70 to walk onto a community court in Philadelphia with this ChatGPT basketball. (If it were free swag from a conference, it could pass as ironic — I cherish my “#FACEBOOK” tote, which is airbrushed like a2000s bar mitzvah party favor.) In defense of the ChatGPT basketball, the AI industry isn’t exactly known for its product-market fit instincts. May theHumane Ai Pinrest in peace. Alongside that $70 artifact, OpenAI is also selling a line of merch with inspirational reminders, like “Good research takes time,” which I would argue is the perfect attire for a startup founder meeting with investors who are demanding faster growth. There’s also a certainje ne sais quoito the $175quarter-zipthat says “research” in cursive. The product description says that “it features a crisp collar that reminisces on our days in academia,” which could alienate the “I never went to college because I’m a coding savant” crowd. (Also, can an object reminisce on your days in academia? Should I expect grammatically sound sentences from people who write their emails with ChatGPT?) There’s nothing wrong with a bit of company swag, though. If OpenAI is looking to commission any ceramic artists to honor company history through functional tableware, I would like to throw my hat in the ring. could an AI make this mug@TechEmailspic.twitter.com/V13lecPoSC

4 hours ago

View

Yes, you can now order DoorDash from the command line

Yes, you can now order DoorDash from the command line

Sudo make me a sandwich. The future has arrived! DoorDash just introduced a limited beta of DoorDash CLI, a command-line tool for developers that lets you order DoorDash directly from your AI agent. The tool can be used to search stores, find deals, and check out, the company says. Today we're opening up the DoorDash CLI in limited beta.`dd-cli` lets you order DoorDash directly from your agent: search stores, find the best deals, check out, and more.Early access for US/Canadian macOS developers by waitlist. Excited to see what folks build!pic.twitter.com/rSFhjJnvjJ Called “dd-cli,” the new tool is open to U.S. and Canadian macOS developers via a waitlist, said DoorDash co-founder and CTO Andy Fang ina post on X. DoorDash was asked for comment about the new feature. The announcement is getting a lot of attention because, on the face of it, it’s rather funny. Command-line tools are associated with programming, not ordering lunch. An AI agent running commands to order your salad or sandwich can initially feel somewhat absurd. But the DoorDash CLI isn’t actually a joke; it’s an example of what agentic commerce can look like. With this move, the company is exposing DoorDash’s ordering platform to AI agents, allowing developers to add functionality to their own software and services. That means instead of visiting DoorDash’s app, developers could build their own tools for ordering food, groceries, or finding local lunch deals, among other things, or use those capabilities as building blocks that are combined with other tools. DoorDash, too,has experimented with offering its servicevia iMessage and now hasits own AI chatbot, “Ask DoorDash” — offering two examples of how agentic commerce can work. It also exposes its service to AI chatbots,like OpenAI’s ChatGPTandClaude. The company’ssign-up formfor access to the new CLI tool includes a field asking developers what they would build, if allowed into the beta. The launch has a bit of humor to it, as it recalls thatold XKCD comic about programmers automating ridiculous tasks— like making a sandwich. In the comic, a programmer says “make me a sandwich,” and the other person responds, “What? Make it yourself,” so the programmer says “sudo make me a sandwich,” and the other person says “OK.” (It’s programming humor, okay?) The attached video in the X post leans into the over-engineering angle, as it reads Slack, recalls memories, parses JSON, inspects menu structures, runs Python scripts, recovers from errors, and calculates totals, just to do something as simple as ordering three salads. As the task runs, the interface reads “Flibbertigibbeting,” making the whole thing even funnier.

4 hours ago

View

Google’s AI Mode now lets you link and interact with select apps

Google’s AI Mode now lets you link and interact with select apps

Googleannouncedon Thursday that it now allows users to link and interact with some of their go-to apps right in AI Mode, the tech giant’s conversational search experience. At launch, supported apps include Instacart, Canva, and YouTube. With this new update, Google is expanding AI Mode beyond answering questions and into completing tasks across the apps they use regularly. The tech giant is also likely hoping that users will rely on AI Mode more often for things like planning and shopping. Plus, the rollout will allow Google to better compete with rivals like OpenAI’sChatGPTand Anthropic’sClaude, both of which support app integrations. In one example, Google says that if you’re planning a barbecue and using AI Mode to create a grocery list, you can connect your Instacart account to add the ingredients directly to your shopping cart and quickly check out on the Instacart app or website. Or, if you’re working on a project and need design ideas, like for a flyer, you can ask Canva to show you a selection of templates. In another example, Google says you could use AI Mode to curate a playlist for your next party and instantly save it to YouTube Music. The update is rolling out to users in the U.S. Google says it’s working with a range of partners and plans to launch support for more apps soon. Today’s announcement builds on a capability Googlelaunched earlier this yearat Google I/O that lets users connect third-party apps to the Gemini app to complete tasks faster. Supported apps include Canva, OpenTable, Spark, Instacart, and more. Since its launch in early 2025, Google has been continuously building out AI Mode with more capabilities. Most recently, the tech giant announced that AI Mode can nowhelp check whether an itemyou need is in stock at a nearby store. Google also recently added the ability for users toexplore the web side-by-side with AI Modeto do things like compare details and ask follow-up questions while preserving the context of their search. Earlier this year, Google launched“Personal Intelligence” on AI Mode, enabling it to tap into users’ Gmail and Google Photos to provide more individualized responses.

4 hours ago

View