Introduction
The week of December 15–19, 2025 brought a wave of strategic AI model releases, major enterprise infrastructure moves, and shifting leadership dynamics in the AI arms race. From flagship large-language model launches to significant acquisitions and executive restructurings, the AI industry continued its acceleration as 2025 draws to a close.
1. OpenAI Launches GPT-5.2: A Step Forward in Professional AI
OpenAI officially released GPT-5.2, the next flagship model in its GPT-5 series, aimed squarely at professional knowledge work and complex multi-step reasoning. GPT-5.2 introduces three variants — Instant for speed, Thinking for deep reasoning, and Pro for maximum performance — all designed to boost productivity across spreadsheets, code, document workflows, and long-context tasks. The rollout comes just days after internal acceleration efforts to stay competitive with rival models.
2. Nvidia Acquires SchedMD, Bolstering Open-Source AI Infrastructure
Nvidia announced the acquisition of SchedMD, the company behind the widely adopted Slurm workload manager used in HPC and AI data centres. The move strengthens Nvidia’s position in the open-source AI ecosystem by integrating critical scheduling technology that helps manage large-scale AI training and inference workloads — while maintaining Slurm as a vendor-neutral project.
3. Nvidia Unveils New Open-Source AI Model Family
Alongside the acquisition of SchedMD, Nvidia introduced a new suite of open-source AI models designed to be faster, more efficient, and more adaptable for developers building customised AI agents. These models aim to democratise access to performant AI infrastructure and compete with offerings from other major labs.
4. Amazon Restructures AI Leadership, Signalling Strategic Shift
Amazon announced a significant leadership transition in its AI division: long-time executive Rohit Prasad will step down, with Peter DeSantis taking the helm of a new unit focused on frontier AI models, custom silicon (including Graviton and Trainium), and quantum computing. The reorganisation also places AI research under robotics expert Pieter Abbeel — indicating AWS’s intensified push to compete with Google, Microsoft and OpenAI.
5. UK Report Reveals One-Third of Citizens Use AI for Emotional Support
A new UK study found that about one in three citizens have turned to AI systems — such as chatbots — for emotional support or social interaction, with roughly 10 % using these tools weekly and 4 % daily. The findings raise questions about AI’s role in mental wellbeing and human-machine relationships, despite safety progress in other areas.
Conclusion
This week’s AI headlines reinforce a broader shift toward enterprise readiness and professional utility — from major model improvements like GPT-5.2 to infrastructure expansions (Nvidia) and executive reorganisations (Amazon) at tech giants. At the same time, growing public engagement with AI in personal domains — such as emotional support — highlights broader cultural and ethical debates that will only intensify in 2026







