Step Inside the Kitchen →
Hey, Hunter here. We’re looking at a fresh batch of AI goodies today, from DoorDash turning your photos into dinner to a massive new “AI for good” initiative. Let's chow down! 🍽️
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🤯 MYSTERY AI LINK 🤯
This link leads to one of the most interesting things I’ve seen in AI recently.
🛠️ NEW AI TOOLS 🛠️
What’s cookin’? DoorDash is testing a new AI chatbot called Ask DoorDash that lets customers order food, shop for groceries, and eventually book restaurant reservations using simple prompts or photos. Instead of scrolling through menus or building a grocery cart item by item, users can type what they want or upload a picture, and the AI helps turn that into an order. The tool is launching first in select markets, with more cities and reservation features coming soon. This comes as DoorDash, Uber, and Instacart all race to make their apps feel more like personal assistants.
🤔 Hunter’s take: This is bigger than a slightly easier way to order tacos. DoorDash is trying to own the moment before you know exactly what you want. If AI becomes the front door for restaurants, the company that understands your hunger, habits, and budget first gets a huge advantage.
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What’s cookin’? Anthropic is launching Claude Corps, a national fellowship program meant to bring AI help directly into nonprofits across the U.S. The company will train 1,000 early-career fellows to use Claude, then place them full-time inside nonprofit organizations for a year. Fellows will earn $85,000 plus benefits, receive ongoing training, and help groups use AI for real work, like improving operations, analyzing data, building tools, and serving communities more effectively. Anthropic is putting an initial $150 million behind the effort, with partners CodePath and Social Finance helping run and measure the program.
🤔 Hunter’s take: This is one of the more interesting “AI for good” ideas because it is not just donating software and hoping people figure it out. It puts trained people inside organizations that usually lack technical capacity. That matters because AI’s benefits will not spread evenly unless someone does the boring, hands-on work of making it usable.
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💬 Need better prompts?
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✍️ Meet the Author:

Hi — I’m Hunter, a PhD candidate whose work has appeared in major academic journals and popular tech outlets. I founded FryAI to make staying ahead of AI clear, accessible, and fun.






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