Empower yourself with the
Power of 7,000+ AI tools
Discover, compare, and choose the best
AI tools using a single prompt.
Discover, compare, and choose the best
AI tools using a single prompt.
Showcase your AI tool to 100,000+ annual visitors actively exploring AI products.

ByteQuest Software (011BQ) Review 2026: Is This AI-First Software Development Company Worth Hiring?
3 days ago • 4 minutes 15 seconds

Best AI Agents in 2026: Autonomous AI That Gets Work Done
6 days ago • 2 minutes 42 seconds

Best Free AI Tools in 2026 — Genuinely Free, No Credit Card
6 days ago • 1 minute 56 seconds

5 Things Physicians Should Know Before Using an AI Medical Scribe
8 days ago • 4 minutes 9 seconds
Get the latest insights, Join our newsletter
Read and trusted by 50,000+ readers
Submit your Tool
PoweredByAI.app is an AI Tools Directory helping individuals, businesses, and creators discover the best AI tools for writing, coding, design, productivity, and more.
© 2026 , Product of011BQ. All rights reserved.

Samsung announced a new artificial intelligence (AI)-powered pet care solution at VivaTech 2026 in Paris on Wednesday. The feature is being developed in collaboration with startup Lifet. Part of Samsung's broader connected healthcare vision, it would allow Galaxy smartphone users to monitor health issues in their pets using just a photograph. It is claimed to be capable of analysing photos for signs of potential conditions like cataracts, dental diseases, and patellar luxation.
View

Pinterest on Wednesday announced a new experimental app called “Ask Pinterest” that will allow the company to explore a more conversational approach to shopping and product discovery that could eventually find its way to the main Pinterest app. It also introduced other AI initiatives, including Pinterest Model Context Protocol (MCP), designed for advertisers running campaigns on Pinterest’s platform, and other AI ad tools. The news comes just ahead of the adtech industry’s annual gathering at Cannes Lions, which is this year mainly focused on how AI can serve the needs of advertisers and marketers. The “Ask Pinterest” online application gives the company another way to utilize its “Taste Graph” — its internal data mapping people to their interests and aesthetics. It will initially be available in limited access, the company said. The AI-powered experience is designed to expand the visual discovery experience Pinterest is known for beyond the main app to a conversational, chatbot-like interface where consumers can ask questions using natural language to get more personalized recommendations and inspiration. It also arrives as AI chatbots are increasingly competing with traditional search engines for consumers’ attention. Google has already put AI to work tohelp online shoppersfind what they need, track prices,and check out.ChatGPT alsoexperimented with agentic shopping, as haveMeta,Shopify, and others. Rather than turning itself into a source of product recommendations that other AI services could leverage through licensing deals, Pinterest has largely focused on using its own datato train AI modelsandpower its AI products. Plus, by making Ask Pinterest a standalone app, the company has a way to experiment with the technology without disrupting the main Pinterest experience. The company explains that Ask Pinterest could work for more complex or multi-step queries that wouldn’t fit a traditional Pinterest search. For instance, you could use the app to ask for help planning a dinner party or furnishing a room over time. The idea, says Pinterest, is to test and explore how AI could better support people’s shopping experiences while retaining the user’s context across sessions. Ask Pinterestcan also leverage users’ own saved Pins and Boards to personalize its answers when users sign in. In time, these results will help Pinterest when building more AI-powered experiences for the company’s flagship app, the company believes. Pinterest’s new app was announced alongside the updates aimed at marketers, including the introduction of an AI assistant, still in beta, in its Ads Manager in the U.S. A new AI model, Performance+ creative, was also introduced globally to help advertisers pick between different ad creatives to find the one that’s likely to perform best each time the ad is shown. And the MCP infrastructure layer that Pinterest announced will allow advertisers to manage and monitor their campaigns using other third-party agentic tools in a standardized way. In anannouncementsharing the news, Pinterest’s Chief Business Officer, Lee Brown, gestured towards the changing nature of web search, remarking that, “the future of discovery won’t be driven by keywords alone. It will be shaped by context, taste, and trusted recommendations” — an area where Pinterest feels it has a “unique advantage,” Brown said. Ask Pinterest is currently available to a limited number of people via the web, both mobile and desktop, the company says.
View

At conferences, speakers are often delivering their keynote or panel discussions in languages that many attendees might not know. That leads to users scrambling for their phones and opening translation apps to capture audio from a distance, which is not always effective. Mixhalo,a real-time audio startup that solves for situations like these, is joining DeepL to boost the German startup’s translation suite to help improve these kinds of translation experiences. Mixhalo was founded in 2016 by Incubus guitarist and songwriter Mike Einziger, violinist Ann Marie Simpson-Einziger, and Vik Singh, who is now the CEO of the startup. The company’s initial pitch was to improve the listening experience for concert attendees through its platform, but over the years evolved into a company that powers real-time audio for sports and live events. The startup raised over $39 million in capital from investors including Fortress Investment, Founders Fund, Defy Partners, and Cowboy Ventures. Mixhalo’s CEO Singh said in an email that tons of voice models coming to market were beneficial to Mixhalo, as it could integrate a variety of them and compare performance. He said that the rise of voice AI didn’t directly contribute to acquisition talks, but as model companies grow big, they would “start encroaching” on the space Mixhalo operated in, making it difficult to win on pricing. Mixhalo said it already relied on DeepL as its primary translation provider, and it made sense to work closer with the company. Singh tells us: “The DeepL conversation was very organic. Mixhalo has been a long-time DeepL customer, and I attended a customer dinner and ended up seated next to Sebastian, DeepL’s CTO. We just got to talking, and the more we talked, the more obvious the overlap became across the event space, the API, and the application layer, whether that is voice for meetings, document translation, or live event.” DeepL has been a text translation player for a long time, but in the last few years, it has started making noise about its voice products. In 2024, the company launchedvoice-to-text translation capabilities in over 33 languages. This April, it launcheda voice-to-voice translation suiteto support use cases like multilingual meetings. Mixhalo’s acquisition can push DeepL into the live event space with the same suite. “For us, Mixhalo will work as a solution and also a marketing use case. The platform will allow us to show how DeepL’s tech works in real-time and in environments like conferences where people are present on the ground,” DeepL CEO Jarek Kutylowski told TechCrunch in a call. Kutylowski said that with the acquisition of Mixhalo, which is based in San Francisco, DeepL is opening an office in the Bay Area to expand its U.S. operations. Mixhalo competes with the likes ofWordly AIandSeven Seven Six-backed Palabra.
View

As global investors race to fund the infrastructure underpinning the artificial-intelligence boom, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s CPP Investments has committed up to ₹70 billion (about $741 million) to Indian data center operator CtrlS, betting on India’s growing role in the global buildout of cloud and AI infrastructure. Under the partnership announced on Wednesday, CPP Investments will invest ₹40 billion (around $423 million) to acquire an 8.2% stake in CtrlS and commit up to ₹30 billion (about $317 million) to a joint venture to develop hyperscale data center campuses across India. CPP Investments will own 48% of the joint venture, while CtrlS will hold the remaining 52%, the companies said in a joint statement. Founded in 2007, CtrlSoperates more than 15 data centersacross India. The Hyderabad-based company has been expanding its footprint to meet rising demand from cloud providers, enterprises, and AI workloads. India has become a major destination for data center and AI investments as global technology companies and investors ramp up spending to meet surging computing demand. Companies includingAmazon,Google,Microsoft,OpenAI, andUberhave announced investments in the country in recent months, while operators are rapidly expanding capacity amid a broader global race to build AI infrastructure. “As one of the world’s fastest-growing digital markets, India represents an important pillar of our global data center strategy,” said CPP Investments’ global head of real assets Max Biagosch in a statement. CPP Investments, Canada’s largest pension investor, has been investing in India since 2009 and had net assets of about $20 billion in the country as of March 31, making it one of the largest foreign institutional investors in the market. The investment builds on CPP Investments’ broader push into digital infrastructure. The pension fund said it has invested in the data center sector since 2017 and has built a portfolio of assets and joint ventures across major markets worldwide. The partnership will help CtrlS expand capacity and build infrastructure tailored for AI workloads, said CtrlS founder and chief executive Sridhar Pinnapureddy. The CPP-CtrlS deal is the latest in a string of investments targeting India’s data center sector. Earlier this month, Blackstone-backedAirTrunksaid it would invest $30 billion to build five gigawatts of data center capacity in India by 2030.Meta, meanwhile, partnered with Reliance Industries last week on a 168-megawatt AI-enabled data center in the western state of Gujarat. New Delhi has sought to position India as a global hub for digital infrastructure through a range of policy measures, includingtax exemptions for foreign cloud providerson services sold overseas through 2047, provided those workloads are run from data centers located in the country. Indian conglomerates have also accelerated expansion plans to capitalize on the opportunity.Adani GroupandTata Consultancy Servicesare among the companies that have unveiled major data center projects aimed at supporting AI and cloud workloads. In 2023, CtrlSannounced plans to invest $2 billionover six years to expand its data center footprint across India. India’s growing role in AI infrastructure has not yet been matched by similar progress in developing frontier AI models. While the country has a handful of startups building indigenous AI models, includingSarvam, much of the underlying AI technology used by Indian companiescontinues to be supplied by U.S. firms. The rapid buildout of data centers is also expected to increase pressure on electricity and water resources, highlightingsome of the challengesthat could accompany India’s ambitions to become a major AI infrastructure hub.
View