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AI Daily Briefing - May 22, 2026

Your AI morning briefing for May 22, 2026 — the top stories you need to know.

DevTools Feed Daily Briefing — May 22, 2026

AI Daily Briefing

  • AI Gets Memory: The Engine That Learns: Forget chatbots that start from scratch. Enterprise AI just got a long-term memory, and it’s already changing how operational systems learn from their own history.
  • AI Becomes CTO: Antigravity OS Builds OS in 12 Hours: Google’s Antigravity 2.0 just built an operating system live on stage in 12 hours. This wasn’t just AI coding; it was AI acting as a hyper-efficient, ego-free corporation.
  • Google AI Studio: Free Full-Stack Apps for Everyone [No CC Required]: Google’s AI Studio just lowered the barrier to entry for full-stack development. Now, deploying functional applications to the cloud is as simple as prompting an AI, no credit card or complex setup required.
  • Google Cloud’s AppLifecycle Manager Adds Feature Flags: The gap between AI-driven code generation and safe production deployment is widening. Google Cloud’s new AppLifecycle Manager Feature Flags aim to bridge that chasm with rule-based management.
  • Cloudflare CASB Adds Claude API Support for AI Governance: Enterprises grappling with the uncontrolled sprawl of AI tools like Claude are getting a much-needed dose of oversight. Cloudflare’s latest move brings its Cloud Access Security Broker into the generative AI fray, offering a crucial layer of governance where it’s desperately needed.
  • Global Warming: Earth Heats Twice As Fast?: Is Earth’s thermostat stuck on high? New research indicates global warming has significantly accelerated, potentially doubling its previous rate and bringing climate tipping points into sharper focus.
  • Vietnam App’s Cheap Eats Map: What Broke For Real Users: Forget shiny new frameworks. The real battle for indie app developers often lies in the mundane, the infrastructural. Here’s how a Vietnam-centric app navigated the pitfalls of scaling and what it means for finding your next cheap phở.
  • DuckKit Bets on Type Safety for Event Emitters and Functions: JavaScript developers often juggle string-based event listeners and ad-hoc function chains. DuckKit’s latest release, however, pushes strongly for type safety in these common patterns.
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