Future Bytes
Magnus Oxenwaldt
#056 AI News for business - week 22
In this episode of Future Bytes, the host explores a significant shift in the artificial intelligence landscape, noting that the industry focus has moved from model capability to cost-efficiency and agent orchestration. The discussion centers on recent announcements from Google, specifically the launch of the Gemini 3.5 Flash model. By offering high performance at a fraction of the cost and speed of previous versions, this release transforms the business case for AI, turning expensive pilot programs into viable, large-scale deployments. The episode highlights how major players like Google, Anthropic, and Salesforce are now competing to provide the underlying infrastructure for autonomous agents. This transition suggests that businesses are no longer just choosing a model, but are instead committing to long-term orchestration platforms, which creates deeper vendor lock-in. Furthermore, the host advises business leaders to re-evaluate their AI budget models, consider the volatility of the compute supply chain, and prioritize price-performance metrics over raw intelligence. With AI becoming more integrated into enterprise workflows, the episode emphasizes that the most critical question for leadership has evolved from asking if technology is good enough to measuring the operational savings it can drive.
Updated Jun 1, 2026
About This Episode
At Google I/O, the AI story changed subject — from capability to price. Gemini 3.5 Flash beats last year's flagship at under half the cost, and this week's Future Bytes News unpacks what that means for every pilot still waiting to become a rollout.
Highlights from the world of AI this week:
- Gemini 3.5 Flash outperforms last generation's flagship at under half the price — the cost-to-deploy calculation just changed.
- Google launched a complete agent stack at I/O: desktop orchestration, developer tools, personal assistant, and $190B in infrastructure.
- Agent platform lock-in is replacing model lock-in — Google, Anthropic, and Salesforce all shipped agent infrastructure in the same five days.
- Anthropic is closing a $30B funding round, making it the most valuable AI startup in the world.
- The AI roadmap question shifted this week: not "is it good enough?" but "how much will we save when we move?"
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