
Welcome back to our weekly roundup of happenings from XR and AI realms. Let’s dive in…
The Lede
Jeff Bezos returned to an active operating role this week as co-chief executive of Project Prometheus, an AI company emerging from stealth with more than six billion dollars in early funding. The startup focuses on applying advanced models to engineering and manufacturing across computers, vehicles, and spacecraft. Early reports note a team of nearly one hundred people, many from OpenAI, DeepMind, and Meta. Bezos shares the top job with Vik Bajaj, a scientist who previously worked at Google X. This move places Bezos directly inside the race to build industrial-scale AI systems that connect software to physical production.
Feeling Spatial
HaptX’s decade-long effort to build high-fidelity VR haptics has finally been realized with the introduction of its full-body free-roaming system, the 1HMX. The new platform combines the company’s microfluidic gloves with whole-body tracking and integrated locomotion hardware, creating a unified system for industrial training, simulation, and robotics. Early plans suggested the user might be suspended in midair. The current architecture uses a modified dish system from Virtuix. The 1HMX is a modular, floor-based, and designed for multi-hour sessions inside complex virtual environments.
Matters of State
The European Commission introduced a package that softens last year’s AI Act and delays its strictest provisions. High-risk systems in biometrics, health, and public services could receive up to eighteen additional months before compliance is fully enforced. The proposal also updates data protection and ePrivacy rules to allow broader data reuse for AI training and to reduce cookie pop-up requirements. Officials argue that the changes lower administrative costs for businesses and consumers. Civil society groups describe the package as a significant retreat from the protections adopted in 2024. The debate will shape how AI companies approach the European market.
The White House is reviewing an executive order that would centralize AI regulation at the federal level and prevent states from creating their own rules. A draft describes an AI Litigation Task Force within the Department of Justice that could challenge state laws that conflict with national policy. The order would also link certain categories of federal funding to cooperation with federal standards. Supporters say companies need clear rules across all fifty states. Critics argue the move reduces local authority and narrows public oversight. If adopted, the order would reshape the legal environment for AI systems across the United States.
Follow the Money
Stuut raised $29.5 million dollars in a Series A led by Andreessen Horowitz to automate accounts receivable for large enterprises. The company uses AI agents to connect with ERP systems and handle collections, cash application, disputes, credits, and payments. Stuut says customers can achieve faster collection times and reduce manual labor that slows revenue operations. It is one of several venture-backed companies pursuing automation in the financial back office. The funding allows Stuut to expand integrations with major ERP providers and address the routine record-keeping work that frequently drains staff time in large organizations.
Albatross launched from stealth with $12.5 million dollars in funding to build a real-time product discovery engine. The founders previously worked on large-scale personalization systems at Amazon. They argue that static recommendation models miss what users want at the moment. Their platform observes session-level behavior and updates results continuously instead of relying on historical profiles. Investors describe it as a shift toward sequential models that interpret context and intent as users navigate online. Retailers testing the system say it can surface relevant items faster than traditional methods.
Creative Juices
Warner Music Group has settled its copyright infringement lawsuit with Udio and entered a licensing deal to launch a new AI-powered music-creation platform in 2026. The platform will allow users to generate remixes, covers or new songs using voices and compositions of WMG artists who opt in; WMG says the agreement will create “new revenue streams for artists and songwriters while ensuring their work remains protected.” This move follows a similar settlement between Universal Music Group and Udio.
Native Foreign continued its push into AI-assisted production with Beta Earth, a science fiction comedy created with writer-producer Ryan Walls. The studio used a hybrid pipeline that mixes traditional story development with AI-generated animation to produce a trailer that premiered at Adobe Max. Director Nik Kleverov says a team of about twenty people worked on the project, with headcount shifting as assets moved between departments. The company’s earlier short Critterz helped establish its approach to AI character work and continues production as a feature in London. Beta Earth marks another step in Native Foreign’s evolving workflow.
Spatial Audio
For more spatial commentary & insights, check out the AI/XR Podcast, hosted by the author of this column, Charlie Fink, and Ted Schilowitz, former studio executive and futurist for Paramount and Fox, and Rony Abovitz, founder of Magic Leap. This week’s guest is journalist and podcaster Kent Bye, of the Voices of VR Podcast. You can find it on podcasting platforms Spotify, iTunes, and YouTube.
Header image credit: Pawel Czerwinski on Unsplash
Charlie Fink is an author and futurist focused on spatial computing. See his books here. Spatial Beats contains insights and inputs from Fink’s collaborators, including Paramount Pictures futurist Ted Shilowitz.
