Listen to today’s podcast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-nqwUyvLDEvs7bV985k-gQ
AI Daily Podcast — November 24, 2025
Today’s podcast episode was created from the following stories:
How Google is disrupting itself to beat OpenAI
Author: Hugh Langley | Date: November 23, 2025
Business Insider details how Google has retooled its organization and products to compete in generative AI, culminating in the launch of Gemini 3 directly inside Search. The piece explores whether AI Overviews and an AI-first Search can sustain Google’s ad business as analysts forecast its search ad share dipping below 50% by 2026. It also raises a bigger question: can Google balance instant AI answers with the health of the broader web ecosystem that supplies them?
MCP apps: extending servers with interactive user interfaces
Authors: Anton Pidkuiko, Olivier Chafik, Ido Salomon, Liad Yosef, Nick Cooper, Sean Strong, Jerome Swannack, Alexi Christakis, Bryan Ashley | Date: November 21, 2025
The Model Context Protocol community proposes a standardized “MCP Apps” extension so servers can deliver interactive UIs to hosts, not just text. Key choices include pre-declared HTML templates in sandboxed iframes, JSON-RPC messaging over MCP transport, and security-first design with auditable communication and user consent. It’s backward-compatible and aims to prevent ecosystem fragmentation while enabling richer, more usable agent experiences.
OpenAIが「ChatGPT for Teachers」を発表。生徒と教師、両者がAIを
Author: AJ Dellinger(翻訳:岩田リョウコ) | Date: November 23, 2025
Gizmodo Japan reports OpenAI’s “ChatGPT for Teachers” will support K–12 educators, aligning with FERPA and remaining free through June 2027. The article captures mounting concerns about AI dependency in schools even as tech firms race to lock in education markets with free trials and campus programs. The core tension: can AI help teachers and students without eroding critical thinking and genuine learning?
Google Nest Doorbell Cam (2025) review: I’m so tired of subscriptions
Author: Wes Davis | Date: November 23, 2025
Gizmodo’s review finds Google’s third‑gen wired Nest Doorbell looks great and integrates well with Google Home, but its most touted AI features require pricey subscriptions and remain inconsistent. With no local storage and unreliable AI summaries and notifications, the value proposition skews toward those already deep in Google’s ecosystem. For everyone else, cheaper, more local-first competitors may be the smarter buy.
I thought Google Keep was enough, then I paired it with Gemini
Author: Parth Shah | Date: November 23, 2025
Android Police shows how enabling the Google Workspace extension in Gemini turns simple Keep notes into a searchable, actionable knowledge base. From pulling inventory lists to surfacing forgotten links, the workflow speeds retrieval and summaries—though it has limitations (like date-based queries) and privacy trade-offs. It’s a practical way to supercharge tools you already use without migrating to heavier apps.

