
Europe Is Fed Up and Wants Its Own AI
THE SO WHAT
Europe’s push for “its own AI” is less about beating frontier labs and more about sovereignty over data, infra, and policy—especially with US political volatility in the backdrop. If you operate in the EU, plan for a world where major customers and regulators expect local models, local hosting, and explicit exit ramps from US stacks.
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Applied AIOpenAI releases three versions of GPT-5.6, called Sol, Terra, and Luna, as a limited preview to ~20 companies, with participants disclosed to the US government
Model access is now a regulated surface—if you’re in the first ~20 on GPT‑5.6, you’re implicitly part of a policy experiment as much as a technical one. Treat early access less like a feature preview and more like a compliance-heavy pilot with shifting rules of engagement.
Forget Apple. Amazon just made AI a lot more expensive.
A 20% AWS AI price hike on top of January’s 15% move means your 2026 AI infra budget assumptions are already stale. If you’re all‑in on managed AI services, treat cost optimization and potential multi-cloud or hybrid strategies as Q3 work, not a 2027 problem.
Applied AIPreviewing GPT‑5.6 Sol: a next-generation model
OpenAI’s own Sol preview is the spec sheet you’ll be benchmarked against—latency, context, tool use, and safety defaults. Use it to recalibrate your build vs. buy assumptions and to update any internal performance targets that still reference the GPT‑4 era.
Applied AIOpenAI Has New AI Models. Here’s Why You Can’t Use Them
The White House asking OpenAI to stagger GPT‑5.6 two weeks after Anthropic pulled its top models shows model rollout is now a national policy concern, not just a product decision. If you depend on frontier APIs, build contingency plans for sudden access changes driven by regulators, not vendors.