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Today: Google completes its move off the Gemini CLI, OpenAI brings health records into ChatGPT, and a reported Apple–Intel agreement reshuffles U.S. chip manufacturing. Here are the five AI developments worth knowing from the past day.

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Product & Platform

Google retires the Gemini CLI for Antigravity CLI. Google shut down the consumer Gemini CLI on June 18, completing a previously announced migration to the new, Go-based Antigravity CLI, which shares architecture with its Antigravity desktop app. Google AI Pro, Ultra, and free-tier users were moved to the new client, while enterprise Gemini Code Assist and paid API-key customers kept access to the older tool. Developers noted that the switch sharply reduced free-tier request allowances and disrupted some CI/CD pipelines built around the original CLI. (Google Developers Blog)

OpenAI launches ChatGPT Health. OpenAI introduced ChatGPT Health on June 18, a dedicated experience that lets users connect personal health information and ask questions about it inside ChatGPT, which the company says is meant to help people prepare for appointments and understand their records. OpenAI also announced expanded enterprise usage analytics and updated spend controls the same day. The company described privacy and data-handling provisions for connected health records. (OpenAI)

Industry & Infrastructure

Trump says Apple will build chips with Intel. On June 18, President Trump said Apple had agreed to work with Intel to design and manufacture chips in the United States, a statement that pushed Intel shares up roughly 10%. Reports earlier in 2026 described a preliminary arrangement in which Intel's foundry would produce processors to Apple's designs, potentially lower-end chips, reducing Apple's dependence on TSMC. Neither company has formally confirmed the deal or disclosed financial terms. (CBS News)

Nvidia and Coherent break ground on a Texas optical-interconnect plant. Nvidia and Coherent began construction on a Texas facility on June 18 to produce advanced optical networking components aimed at easing data-movement bottlenecks between AI accelerators. The project follows Nvidia's roughly $2 billion investment and supply commitment with Coherent announced earlier in 2026, and the U.S. CHIPS Program Office signed a letter of intent for up to $50 million in funding. The companies frame optical interconnects as a key constraint on scaling large AI clusters. (Tech Times)

Anthropic commits $150M to Claude Corps. Anthropic said on June 15 it will spend $150 million on Claude Corps, a program to train students and nonprofit staff to build with its Claude models, run alongside the nonprofits CodePath and Social Finance. The initiative starts with 100 fellows and is slated to scale to as many as 1,000 fellows across up to 400 nonprofits. Anthropic positioned the effort as workforce development for agentic AI tools. (The NonProfit Times)

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That's today's edition of AI Current. Reply with what you're seeing in AI, and forward this to a colleague who would find it useful. See you tomorrow.

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