In partnership with

Your AI tools are only as good as your prompts.

Most people type short, lazy prompts because writing detailed ones takes forever. The result? Generic outputs.

Wispr Flow lets you speak your prompts instead of typing them. Talk through your thinking naturally - include context, constraints, examples - and Flow gives you clean text ready to paste. No filler words. No cleanup.

Works inside ChatGPT, Claude, Cursor, Windsurf, and every other AI tool you use. System-level integration means zero setup.

Millions of users worldwide. Teams at OpenAI, Vercel, and Clay use Flow daily. Now available on Mac, Windows, iPhone, and Android - free and unlimited on Android during launch.

Good morning ☀️, leader of the next generation.

Technology is reshaping how the world works.

The real question is not what it can do — but how we choose to use it.

We focus on using technology to support human evolution.

Progress works when responsibility stays human.

⚡ WHAT'S AT STAKE TODAY ⚡

  1. ⚛️🔥 Sam Altman-backed fusion startup Helion in talks to sell power to OpenAI
  2. 💻❤️ Vibe-coding startup Lovable is on the hunt for acquisitions
  3. 💻🌙 Cursor admits its new coding model was built on top of Moonshot AI's Kimi
  4. 🤖❄️ Do you want to build a robot snowman?
  5. 🏛️⚔️ Elizabeth Warren calls Pentagon's decision to bar Anthropic 'retaliation'
  6. 🍎🧠 Apple sets June date for WWDC 2026, teasing 'AI advancements'
  7. 👴😅 Bernie Sanders' AI 'gotcha' video flops, but the memes are great
  8. 💰🇪🇺 Air Street becomes one of the largest solo VCs in Europe with $232M fund
  9. 🐦💰 Littlebird raises $11M for its AI-assisted 'recall' tool that reads your computer screen

Altman steps down from Helion board amid OpenAI power talks

Sam Altman-backed fusion startup Helion in talks to sell power to OpenAI

title image

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has stepped down as board chair of fusion startup Helion as the two companies explore a potential partnership that could revolutionize how AI companies power their operations. The move comes amid early-stage negotiations for a deal that would guarantee OpenAI access to 12.5% of Helion's projected energy production.

According to reports, the proposed agreement would provide OpenAI with five gigawatts of power by 2030 and 50 gigawatts by 2035. This mirrors a similar arrangement Microsoft, OpenAI's key partner, made with Helion in 2023 to purchase power beginning in 2028.

The ambitious timeline suggests Helion expects dramatic scaling capabilities. With each reactor producing 50 megawatts, the company would need to construct and deploy 800 reactors by 2030 and an additional 7,200 by 2035 to meet these commitments. This represents an unprecedented acceleration in fusion energy deployment if achieved.

While Helion hasn't confirmed ongoing talks with OpenAI, the company acknowledged Altman's departure from the board. "Sam is stepping down from Helion's Board of Directors after more than a decade. This decision enables Helion and OpenAI to partner on future opportunities to bring zero-carbon, safe electricity to the world," said David Kirtley, Helion's co-founder and CEO.

Helion stands apart in the competitive fusion landscape through its unique approach to energy conversion. While most fusion startups plan to generate electricity through traditional steam turbines, Helion is developing technology that directly converts fusion energy to electricity using magnetic fields.

The company's innovative reactor design features an hourglass-shaped chamber where fusion fuel becomes plasma at both ends before being magnetically accelerated toward the center. When these plasma streams collide, additional magnets compress the merged plasma until fusion occurs. The resulting energy pushes against the magnets, which then convert this force directly into electricity, bypassing traditional heat-exchange systems.

Currently, Helion operates its Polaris prototype as it advances toward commercial viability. In February, the company achieved a significant milestone by generating plasma temperatures of 150 million degrees Celsius—approaching the 200 million degrees Celsius threshold believed necessary for commercial fusion operations.

If successful in meeting its 2028 commercial timeline, Helion would establish a commanding lead over competitors, most of whom target the early 2030s for commercial operations. This advantage could prove crucial as AI companies face mounting pressure to secure reliable, clean energy sources for their power-hungry data centers and computing operations.

The startup's progress has attracted substantial investment, including a $425 million funding round last year from notable investors such as Altman himself, along with Mithril, Lightspeed, and SoftBank. This financial backing underscores investor confidence in Helion's approach and timeline.

Altman's strategic positioning extends beyond Helion. Last year, he also stepped down as board chair of Oklo, a small modular nuclear reactor startup, to enable potential partnerships with AI companies, including OpenAI. This pattern suggests a deliberate strategy to position next-generation energy companies for collaboration with the AI sector.

The potential Helion-OpenAI partnership represents more than a simple power purchase agreement—it signals how AI companies are actively shaping the future energy landscape. As AI workloads demand increasingly massive amounts of electricity, these partnerships could accelerate the development and deployment of clean energy technologies while providing AI companies with the reliable power infrastructure necessary for continued growth and innovation.

🔍 Which AI Dilemma Should We Tackle First?

🧠 I’ve broken down the 5 biggest challenges we face with AI and humanity today. But now I’m curious: Which one intrigues you the most? Which rabbit hole should we explore first — together?

Login or Subscribe to participate

Go from AI overwhelmed to AI savvy professional

AI will eliminate 300 million jobs in the next 5 years.

Yours doesn't have to be one of them.

Here's how to future-proof your career:

  • Join the Superhuman AI newsletter - read by 1M+ professionals

  • Learn AI skills in 3 mins a day

  • Become the AI expert on your team

Lovable seeks acquisitions to compete against AI coding rivals

Vibe-coding startup Lovable is on the hunt for acquisitions

title image

AI-powered app-building platform Lovable, valued at $6.6 billion, is actively seeking acquisitions to expand its team. CEO Anton Osika announced the company's interest in acquiring startups and teams, emphasizing their founder-friendly culture that allows autonomous operation.

The move comes as Lovable faces competition from tools like Cursor, Replit, and major AI labs including OpenAI and Anthropic. Despite competitive pressures, the company reports strong growth with $400 million ARR and over 200,000 daily projects. This follows their previous acquisition of cloud provider Molnett in November.

🎙 New Episode: Turn Views Into Revenue with Ivan Unfiltered

Ivan Unfiltered Podcast

Most businesses are posting content…
But very few are turning it into revenue.

In this episode, I sit down with Ivan Unfiltered — founder of Viral Video Labs and the force behind one of the biggest podcasts coming out of Las Vegas.

Ivan doesn’t just create content. He builds content systems that convert.

Through Viral Video Labs, he helps entrepreneurs and brands:

  • Stop the scroll
  • Capture real attention
  • Turn short-form video into leads, sales, and authority

We break down:

  • 🔥 Why most businesses fail at short-form
  • 🔥 The difference between viral and profitable
  • 🔥 How to build a repeatable content machine
  • 🔥 The future of short-form media

If you’re serious about growing your brand online — this episode is a must-watch.

👉 Explore the Supercharged Podcast

⚡ Trends for the Future

Littlebird raises $11M for its AI-assisted 'recall' tool that reads your computer screen

AI startup captures screen context through text-based reading technology.

Littlebird, a new AI startup, has secured $11 million in funding to develop its unique approach to capturing digital context. Unlike competitors such as Rewind and Microsoft Recall that store visual data or screenshots, Littlebird "reads" your computer screen and stores information in text format, making it less data-intensive and invasive.

The platform works continuously in the background, capturing context from your digital activities without requiring manual input. Users can customize which applications to exclude, and the system automatically ignores sensitive information like passwords and credit card details. Integration with Gmail, Google Calendar, and other productivity tools enhances its contextual understanding.

Key features include personalized AI prompts that adapt over time, asking questions like "What have I been doing today?" The platform also offers a meeting transcription tool similar to Granola, which creates notes and action items from system audio. A "Prep for meeting" feature leverages past conversations, emails, and even external sources like Reddit to provide comprehensive briefings.

The Routines feature allows users to set up automated workflows that run at specified intervals, such as daily briefings or weekly summaries. Founded in 2024 by Alap Shah, Naman Shah, and Alexander Green, the team brings experience from their previous successful ventures, including Sentieo, which was acquired by AlphaSense.

Co-founder Alexander Green explained that their text-based approach solves the data storage and search limitations faced by screenshot-based competitors. User data is stored in encrypted cloud storage, enabling powerful AI model processing while maintaining security. Users retain full control over their data and can remove it at any time.

The funding round was led by Lotus Studio, with participation from notable investors including Lenny Rachitsky and Scott Belsky. While the basic version is free, premium features start at $20 monthly. Investors emphasize that success will depend on identifying compelling use cases as the product evolves through user feedback.

Digital Brainstorm

⚡ Let’s Make AI Actually Useful:
What Would Move the Needle in *Your* Industry?

AI has potential — but generic advice rarely helps.

What would be genuinely valuable for AI to do in your industry right now?

• Automate a painful workflow?
• Improve decision-making?
• Replace a manual process that wastes time?
• Help your team upskill faster?

Tell us what you’d want AI to handle — or where you feel stuck.

We’re using these insights to curate **industry-specific trainings, live webinars, and practical guidance** you can actually apply.

🌡️ Use the Satisfaction Thermometer to show us how much you enjoyed The Supercharged today ;)

How did we do?

Login or Subscribe to participate

The Supercharged is aiming to be the world's #1 AI business magazine and is on a mission to empower 1,000,000 entrepreneurs worldwide by 2025, guiding them through the transition into the AI-driven creative age. We're dedicated to breaking down complex technologies, sharing actionable insights, and fostering a community that thrives on innovation, to become the ultimate resource for businesses navigating the AI revolution.

The Supercharged is the #1 AI Newsletter for Entrepreneurs, with 25,000 + readers working at the world’s leading startups and enterprises. The Supercharged is free for the readers. Main ads are typically sold out 2 weeks in advance. You can book future ad spots here.

I'm sending this email because you registered for one of our workshops or our affiliates brought you. You can unsubscribe at the bottom of each email at any time.

Reply

Avatar

or to participate

Keep Reading