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Home » Review Week: Prplexity Labs Want to Do Your Work
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Review Week: Prplexity Labs Want to Do Your Work

userBy userMay 31, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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Welcome back to review week! This week there are plenty of stories, including ARC’s new AI-powered browser. Two hacks, not one. Gemini email overview. And more. Have a great weekend!

Google: Perplexity, an AI-powered search engine, has released Prplexity Labs. This gives Pro Subscribers the tools to create reports, spreadsheets, dashboards and more. Perplexity Labs can use tools such as web search, code execution, chart and image creation to conduct research and analysis using tools for creating reports and visualizations. In about 10 minutes. We didn’t have the opportunity to test it, and knowing the drawbacks of AI, I’m sure everything doesn’t come out perfectly. But that’s certainly pretty amazing.

Lucky’s Luck: The feud between Oculus founders Palmer Luckey and Mark Zuckerberg appears to be over. The pair announced a collaboration between Facebook and Luckey’s company Anduril, building an Augmented Reality (XR) device for the US military. The product family they are building is called Eagleeye, an ecosystem of devices.

It’s not great: I don’t know clearly whether AI is beginning to take over roles previously performed by humans. However, a recent survey by the World Economic Forum found that 40% of employers are planning to cut down staff where AI can automate tasks. That’s not a good thing.

This is TechCrunch review week, summarizing the biggest news of the week. Want to deliver this to your inbox as a newsletter every Saturday? Sign up here.

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Image credit: Browser company

Everyone is creating browsers: The browser company said this week it is considering selling or opening its ARC browser, a browser, to focus on a new AI-powered browser called DIA. And that’s not all! Opera also has built a new AI-focused browser, which has baffled the browser Comet a few months ago.

Finally: iPad users are pleased! Now you can talk to all your international friends on the new iPad-specific version of WhatsApp. According to Meta, users can take advantage of iPados multitasking features such as Stage Manager, Split View and Slide.

Ah, great: LexisNexis Risk Solutions is a data broker that uses personal information to enable businesses to spot risks and fraud, and has reported security breaches affecting over 364,000 people. A LexisNexis spokesperson said an unknown hacker accessed the company’s GitHub account and that the stolen data includes his name, date of birth, phone number, postal and email address, social security number and driver’s license number.

And one more thing: the hacker reportedly accessed the personal phone call of the White House Chief Chief Susie Wills and obtained contact information used to impersonate her and contact other senior officials. It appears that AI was used to impersonate her voice.

Can it make my meal? Gmail users no longer have to tap on options to summarise emails using AI. AI automatically summarises content as needed, without requiring user interaction. This means that if Gemini doesn’t want to summarise theirs, they should opt out.

B: General Catalyst’s billions invested $1 billion in Grammarly, a 16-year-old writing assistant startup. Grammarly uses new funds for sales and marketing efforts, freeing up existing capital for strategic acquisitions.

Heights: Tinder is testing a new feature that allows people to add “height preferences” to their love search. This is not a hard filter, Tinder says that it doesn’t actually block or exclude profiles, and instead informs you of recommendations.

One more

Image credit: Carma

Founded in 2007 by Sean O’Sullivan, founder of SOSV Ventures, Carma Technology filed a lawsuit against Uber earlier this year, claiming it infringed five patents. The lawsuit is fairly new, but the claims date back almost ten years ago.


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