
Published on LinkedIn, Substack and AmitabhApte.com on 12th Oct, 2025
This week in AI – OpenAI DevDay & Market Slide
The past week offered a glimpse into what the next phase of AI-driven commerce might look like.
At the centre was OpenAI’s 2025 Dev Day, where the company introduced the Apps SDK and AgentKit, enabling developers to build apps and autonomous agents directly inside ChatGPT.
Early partners, Spotify, Canva, Zillow, and Mattel, showcased how everyday workflows, from designing visuals to booking homes or creating content, can now happen seamlessly within the chat experience.
This marks a shift from “AI that answers” to “AI that acts,” embedding intelligence across workflows, transactions, and creative ecosystems.
Elsewhere, Meta continued its hiring surge, adding over 50 researchers, including Andrew Tulloch, co-founder of Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab, another reminder that the race for AI talent is intensifying even as markets cool.
And markets did cool. A $770 billion slide across megacaps like Amazon, Nvidia, and others marked the Nasdaq’s worst week since April, triggered by new U.S. tariffs on China and tightening export control signals.
Cybersecurity also stayed in sharp focus, with Qantas confirming a breach impacting 5.7 million customers, a stark reminder that as intelligence scales, so must resilience.
My Takeaway This Weekend
We got a glimpse of where AI is heading next, from chat to commerce, from tools to platforms, from answering to acting. But as innovation accelerates, markets cool and cyber risks rise, reminding us that the AI future must be built on stability, security, and societal balance, not speed alone.
The next phase of AI leadership isn’t about racing ahead; it’s about scaling responsibly.
Beyond AI: My mindshare – Jane Goodall
Jane Goodall who revolutionized primatology sadly passed away this week. Her outstanding work revealing chimpanzees’ use of tools, complex emotions, and social intelligence, reshaped our understanding of human evolution.
Through the Jane Goodall Institute and Roots & Shoots, she turned empathy into action, inspiring generations to protect what they understand.
Jane Goodall didn’t just study chimpanzees, she redefined what it means to be human.
If you haven’t yet, listen to her BBC Desert Island Disc from 2000, a timeless lesson in grace, conviction, and quiet strength.