Writers and others can now work with Photoshop, Adobe Express (a design and publishing tool) and Adobe Acrobat without ever leaving the ChatGPT interface.
Observes David Wadhwani, president, digital media, Adobe: “We’re thrilled to bring Photoshop, Adobe Express and Acrobat directly into ChatGPT, combining our creative innovations with the ease of ChatGPT to make creativity accessible for everyone.
“Now hundreds of millions of people can edit with Photoshop simply by using their own words, right inside a platform that’s already part of their day-to-day.”
In other news and analysis on AI writing:
*ChatGPT-Maker Study: The State of Enterprise AI: New research from OpenAI finds that everyday users of AI at work are saving about 40-60 minutes-a-day when compared to working without the tool.
Plus, the heaviest users of AI say they’re saving two hours a day with the tech.
Especially interesting: HR pros report AI is helping them spike employee engagement at their workplaces.
*ChatGPT-Maker Doubles-Down on Besting Google: Smarting from Google Gemini 3’s seizure of the crown as best overall chatbot, OpenAI is determined to grab it back.
Observes lead writer Sam Schechner: “OpenAI was founded to pursue artificial general intelligence, broadly defined as being able to outthink humans at almost all tasks.”
But for the company to survive, Sam Altman, OpenAI CEO is suggesting that the company may have to pause that quest and give the people what they want, Schechner adds.
*ChatGPT’s Minor Upgrade: More Perks for Knowledge Workers: OpenAI has put some fresh polish on the latest iteration of its wildly popular chatbot: ChatGPT-5.2.
Observes writer Igor Bonifacic: “OpenAI is touting the new model as its best yet for real-world, professional use.”
Towards that end, look for better results when using ChatGPT-5.2 for creating spreadsheets, building presentations, perceiving images, grasping in-depth contexts, handling multi-step projects and writing code, according to Bonifacic.
*For $250 Bucks/Month, You Can Go Deep with Gemini: If you truly want access to Google’s most intelligent AI available to the consumer, all you need is $250 and a dream.
That hard cash opens the doors to Gemini 3 Deep Think — advanced parallel reasoning that ideally enables you to explore multiple hypotheses simultaneously, according to writer Abner Li.
Currently, the feature is only available in Google’s top-tier consumer AI subscription, Google AI Ultra.
*Majority of New Writing on Web Forged by AI: It’s official:
Humans are also-rans when it comes to writing new content for the Web, according to a new study from Graphite.
On the plus side, humans are still better at generating articles that show up in searches from Google or ChatGPT.
Observes lead writer Jose Luis Paredes: “The quality of AI content is rapidly improving. In many cases, AI-generated content is as good or better than content written by humans.”
*pdfFiller Offers Turnkey Documents Created by AI: If you’re looking for AI that goes beyond simply churning out raw text, pdfFiller may be for you.
Essentially, the tool creates fully formatted, multi-page documents with automatic section structure, brand styling and industry specific language with just a prompt or two.
Even better: It’s powered by ChatGPT, preferred by many writers as the best overall AI for generating captivating text.
*Breaking News Gets an AI Byline at Business Insider: The next news story you read from Business Insider may be completely written by AI — and carry an AI byline.
The media outlet has announced a pilot test of a story writing algorithm that will grab a piece of breaking news and give it context by combining it with data drawn from stories in the Business Insider archive.
The only human involvement will be an editor, who will look over the finished product before it’s published.
AI Browsers: Too Easily Hacked: Writers enamored with AI-powered browsers may want to hold off using the tech until it gets better cybersecurity chops.
Market research firm Gartner warns cybersecurity guardrails on the new AI browsers are much more easily compromised than those of traditional browsers like Chrome, Edge and Firefox.
Observes writer Simon Sharwood: Analysts “think AI browsers are just too dangerous to use without first conducting risk assessments and suggest that even after that exercise you’ll likely end up with a long list of prohibited use cases.”
*AI BIG PICTURE: Agentic Journalism: A ‘Thing’ in 2026?: Journalism professor Daniel Trielli is predicting that increasing numbers of ‘journalists’ will no longer be getting their hands dirty by writing news stories next year.
Instead, their job will be limited to adding “information about an event: The five Ws, quotes, context, and links to multimedia content.” It’s something Trielli calls ‘agentic journalism.’
Or, as some might say, “Play and go fetch.”

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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.


