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Convey lets non-technical teams build AI “teammates” by walking through processes on screen and turning them into versioned, testable programs that run reliably. a16z led Convey’s $38M Series A after its agents logged over 1.1 million work hours at NBCUniversal, TelevisaUnivision and others, freeing up hundreds of hours weekly on reporting and ad ops.
The article argues that AI will revolutionize drug discovery long before it can streamline clinical development, creating an abundance of candidate molecules but leaving patient trials as the main constraint. As discovery becomes commoditized and more assets target the same biology, real value will hinge on predictive toxicity, clinical efficacy, and strategic trial design.
Rillet’s AI-native ERP processes transactions as they happen, cutting manual month-end entries to under 1% and turning the traditional close into a daily routine. Data from 56 early adopters show nearly all entries auto-posted, though B2B and multi-entity firms still need more human judgment.
Anne Neuberger argues that U.S. national security now depends on technology and that allies want to move beyond buyer-seller deals to co-develop AI, cybersecurity, and supply chain solutions. She traces tech’s evolution from Cold War state programs to today’s fragmented, geopoliticized landscape and urges building a shared foundation with partners to counter modern threats.
Andreessen Horowitz has led a $55 million Series A round in Town, an AI-powered personal assistant that integrates with tools like email, calendar, Slack and docs to learn your workflow and proactively suggest or execute tasks. Founded by ex-Plaid/Dropbox CTO Jean-Denis Greze and ex-Google/Dropbox product lead Tony, Town aims to turn raw AI intelligence into practical leverage by holding deep, ongoing context and automating follow-ups, scheduling and other messy operational work.
The article claims AI agents can autonomously handle repetitive admin work—data entry, billing, insurance claims—for small businesses, freeing owners to serve more customers and improve work-life balance. It uses Lassie, deployed in over 700 medical practices and saving up to 190 hours of labor per month, as proof, and outlines the technical, regulatory, and go-to-market challenges in building and scaling these systems.
a16z led a $35 million Series A for Lassie, which builds AI agents to handle billing, insurance claims, payroll and other back‐office work for dental practices. The founders spent months in dental offices mapping workflows and have already onboarded 700 practices, cutting errors and saving 250,000 labor hours a year. Lassie plans to expand beyond dental into broader small-business automation.
Founders from the Department of Government Efficiency built SpecialOS, an AI-driven platform that automates tasks in Main Street service industries. Their first target is eldercare via Figure Health, where they’ve acquired a Texas provider, plan to open-source billing claims, and use efficiencies to boost nurse pay.