Weekly AI Pulse #100, Alibaba's Qwen, GPT-5 Rumors and %30 Celebration Discount!
Your Best Friend to Catch Up AI News
Today, we’re excited to publish the 100th edition of the Weekly AI Pulse!
To celebrate, we’re offering a 30% discount on all subscriptions(Until 1st August).
And we’re upgrading the Weekly AI Pulse!
It now includes:
AI Tools of the Week
Prompts of the Week
AI Rumors of the Week
Of course, you’ll still get:
The top 3 AI news summaries with voice memos
3 hand-picked links, each with a voice memo summary — just like always.
Prompt of the Week
This week, I’ve found multiple prompt tricks. Do you know that by using TL;DR, you can summarize anything, like that?
Let’s use one AI news from our platform.
TL;DR: [pasted article]
Here is the output.
AI Tools of the Week
Alibaba released a compelling AI model called Qwen. And this model is more potent than a flagship model!
Yesterday I tested it and I was amazed! First, it is free, and second, if you see what it can do, you will be surprised!
I created a Tetris game and published it in just two minutes for free! Sign up from here.
AI Rumor of the Week - GPT 5
OpenAI is preparing to launch GPT-5 silently. It has been waiting for millions, and this model will combine the best parts of earlier versions, reasoning + multimodality, and tool use into a single system.
Sam Altman recently shared a moment where GPT-5 solved something he couldn’t.
Its release is expected in early August; let’s see if it’s really that great.
ChatGPT Agent is Finally Available To All Users!
ChatGPT rolled out Agents last week, but just for the selected few people in the US. But not, agents are available to all users.
Here are interesting use cases that I saw on the X.
Schedule an appointment with the barber
Do Deep research to create complete reports
Build Retirement Plan in 20 Minutes
ChatGPT Found Giving Satanic Ritual and Encouraging Self-Harm
This week, The Atlantic has shared an interesting article. Based on this article, ChatGPT offered users explicit instructions on self-harm, ritual bloodletting, and even murder, including steps for creating offerings to Molech and invocations to Satan.
Despite OpenAI’s policy against enabling self-harm, these prompts bypassed safeguards. One example included ChatGPT instructing a user on how to cut themselves and how to prepare emotionally—other examples involved killing rituals, altar setups, and printable PDFs for demonic ceremonies. In several cases, ChatGPT responded supportively even when users showed hesitation or distress.
It is interesting to see how far ChatGPT has gone, and I wonder what OpenAI would do related to this. Here is the link to this story.
Wedding vows but written by AI.
CNN featured Jen Glantz, founder of Bridesmaid for Hire, who advocates for using AI to help couples write wedding vows and speeches. She argues that not everyone is a skilled writer, and AI tools can write your vows for you.
As she told us, unlike other chatbots, hers is trained on hundreds of personalized vows and speeches she has written over the years.
While the tool looks good, do you use it to write your wedding vows, and if so, how can you explain this story to your loved ones?
From best man speeches to seating charts, Glantz says over 100 AI tools on her site can now help plan entire weddings. Still, she cautions against using AI for serious emotional or therapeutic conversations, stressing the need for human professionals in those cases.
Recommended Articles
Google's new AI feature lets you virtually try on clothes | TechCrunch
Job listings looking for people with AI skills are rising fast - CBS News
Gaps in our knowledge of ancient Rome could be filled by AI - BBC
Final Thoughts
Thanks for reading or listening to this week’s AI News.
See you next week!














