Writers looking for AI preconceived to write brilliantly may want to check-out a new AI engine from China.
Dubbed Kimi K2 Thinking, the new tool promises the ability to navigate hundreds of steps on its way to auto-generating writing that is “shockingly good,” according to writer Grant Harvey.
Observes Harvey: “We co-wrote a YA novel called “The Salt Circus”—and the AI actually revised itself, scrapped bad ideas and showed genuine creative judgment.”
In other news and analysis on AI writing:
*Major Web Host Promises ‘Hour-a-Day’ Savings with AI-Powered Email: Hostinger is out with a new AI-powered email suite designed to save you serious time each day with your email.
Key features of the email suite include:
–AI email writer
–Automated smart email replies
–AI email summarizer
–AI writing stylizer
Warning: AI forged in China is often coded with the ability to forward the data you input to the Chinese Communist Party.
For more on saving time — while boosting writing prowess — with AI, check-out “Bringing in ChatGPT for Email,” by Joe Dysart.
*Use AI or You’re Fired: In another sign that the days of ‘AI is Your Buddy’ are fading fast, increasing numbers of businesses have turned to strong-arming employees when it comes to AI.
Observes Wall Street Journal writer Lindsay Ellis: “Rank-and-file employees across corporate America have grown worried over the past few years about being replaced by AI.
“Something else is happening now: AI is costing workers their jobs if their bosses believe they aren’t embracing the technology fast enough.”
*Auto-Write a Non-Fiction Book in an Hour: AI startup StoryOne says it has cracked-the-code on using AI to crank-out a full-length non-fiction book in about an hour.
StoryOne promises that anyone can use its software to transform ideas, podcasts, interviews, research or draft manuscripts into a high-quality, fact-based, non-fiction book in about an hour.
The software has been endorsed by Michael Reinartz, chief innovation officer, Vodafone Germany.
*ChatGPT-Maker Books One Millionth Business Customer: OpenAI recently booked its one millionth customer – making it the fastest-growing business app in history, according to the company.
Observes writer Mike Moore: “This goes along with its 800 million weekly users using ChatGPT in some form — which has helped make the platform synonymous with the constantly growing appetite for AI in our daily lives.
“The company has revealed a host of new tools in recent months to help boost adoption, including ‘company knowledge,’ where ChatGPT can reason across tools like Slack, SharePoint, Google Drive, GitHub and more to get answers.”
*AI Has a Hit Song: While AI’s ability to write and record songs has been an ongoing nag for music creators, the stakes just got much higher: AI now has its own hit song.
Dubbed “How Was I Supposed to Know?” the tune is currently charting at number thirty on Billboard’s Adult R&B Airplay Survey.
The powerhouse singer behind the hit is also AI-generated: Xania Monet, who was ‘signed’ as an artist at Hallwood Media.
*Microsoft Copilot Gets an AI Research Boost: Writers looking for yet another new option in AI research may want to check-out ‘Researcher with Computer Use.’
It’s a new feature embedded in Microsoft’s answer to ChatGPT – Copilot.
The new tool includes an AI agent that uses a secure, virtual computer to navigate public, gated and interactive Web content.
Plus, users also have the option to green-light the tool to access databases inside their enterprises as well.
*Study: AI Agents Virtually Useless at Completing Freelance Assignments: New research finds that much-ballyhooed AI agents are literally horrible at completing everyday assignments that are found on freelance brokerage sites like Fiverr and Upwork.
Observes writer Frank Landymore: “The top performer, they found, was an AI agent from the Chinese startup Manus with an automation rate of just 2.5 percent — meaning it was only able to complete 2.5 percent of the projects it was assigned at a level that would be acceptable as commissioned work in a real-world freelancing job, the researchers said.
“Second place was a tie, at 2.1 percent, between Elon Musk’s Grok 4 and Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet 4.5.”
*AI’s New Gig: Writing Official Quarterly and Annual Reports: Writer Mark Maurer reports that increasing numbers of official financial reports from public companies are being written in large part by AI.
Observes Maurer: “The efforts are the latest sign of finance executives’ growing ease with AI for public-facing work that was long handled solely by humans.”
*AI BIG PICTURE: Fed Chairman Confirms: AI is Eating Jobs: U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell just made it official: AI is often sucking up jobs at businesses where the new technology has been embraced.
Observes writer Mike Kaput: “At a recent press conference, Powell noted that once you strip-out statistical over-counting, job creation is pretty close to zero.
“He then confirmed what many CEOs are now openly telling the Fed and investors: AI is allowing them to do more work with fewer people.”

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–Joe Dysart is editor of RobotWritersAI.com and a tech journalist with 20+ years experience. His work has appeared in 150+ publications, including The New York Times and the Financial Times of London.
The post China’s Out With a New Killer AI Creative Writer appeared first on Robot Writers AI.

