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Claude Code’s Leak Turns Into a Blueprint for Better Coding Agents
Apr 1
7 min read
131 docs
Harrison Chase
Salvatore Sanfilippo
Kevin Hou
+18
The strongest signal today is convergence: the best coding-agent systems keep rediscovering the same primitives—filesystem-backed memory, parallel subagents, compaction, permissions, and artifact-based review. Also inside: concrete workflows from Redis, DeepAgents, Antigravity, and AI-native OSS maintenance at scale.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

The Claude Code leak mattered because it turned a black-box harness into a public design manual. Across Matthew Berman’s teardown and Theo’s local build, the same primitives keep showing up: .claude.md injected every turn, parallel subagents sharing prompt cache, aggressive compaction, preconfigured permissions, hooks, and resumable sessions .

More interesting: LangChain’s DeepAgents and Google DeepMind’s Antigravity are independently converging on the same architecture—files as the core primitive, context-isolated subagents, artifact-based monitoring, and UI surfaces for parallel agent control rather than only a command line or conversation stream .

That convergence is the real takeaway for builders .

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Claude Code, now inspectable. The leak exposed roughly 2,300 files and nearly half a million lines; a Python port is already running locally, with Berman noting the harness still pairs best with the Claude family of models .
  • What the leak actually taught. Claude Code uses CLAUDE.md as a per-turn instruction layer, 66 built-in tools split into concurrent read-only vs serialized mutating ops, three subagent execution models, five compaction strategies, permission modes including auto, hooks, and resumable or forkable sessions .
  • DeepAgents + Arcade = open agent harness stack. DeepAgents packages file tools, planning, context-isolated subagents, skills, pluggable file backends, and auto-compaction; Arcade layers delegated per-user auth, secrets, RBAC, enterprise SSO, an MCP gateway, and 8,000+ tools on top . Agent Builder exposes this as a no-code chat UI, and Harrison Chase says he now checks his email assistant instead of email directly .
  • Antigravity’s product bet. Kevin Hou and Varun Mohan describe Google DeepMind’s Antigravity as an agent-first editor where full codebase migrations without human intervention are now within reach, Agent Manager orchestrates many agents in parallel, and users inspect artifacts/documents instead of staring at chat logs .
  • New releases worth a glance. Claw beta v2026.3.31-beta.1 ships reliability and security improvements plus a new task system for more reliable subagents and crons . CodexBar beta v0.20.0-beta.1 adds experimental multi-account support for Codex . claude.ai/code now supports /web-setup to reuse local GitHub credentials on the web .
  • Codex is widening its surface area. OpenAI’s new Codex Plugins put Alchemy inside Codex for one-prompt crypto dashboards and related onchain apps . Separately, Niels Rogge says coding agents crossed a threshold in Dec 2025 where they began succeeding at porting entire models, and his Codex writeup covers porting VidEoMT into Transformers plus best practices for async architecture work .

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Claude Code operating recipe

    1. Put architecture, standards, hotspots, and team taste in .claude.md; it is loaded on every turn .
    2. Configure permissions up front in settings.json; Berman recommends auto over bypass / dangerously-skip so the model handles routine safe actions but still stops on risky ones .
    3. Use /compact before the tool does it for you. Compaction is lossy, large tool outputs already spill to disk, and session memory extracts key state to files .
    4. Resume sessions instead of starting fresh, and split read-heavy work across subagents or worktrees that share prompt cache .
  • Design the harness around files, not chat

    1. Give agents real file ops plus a persistent workspace; Harrison Chase and Sam Partee argue this is why coding agents are the foundation for general-purpose agents .
    2. Treat agent definitions as files like agent.md, skills, and mcp.json, and keep large tool outputs in files instead of bloating context .
    3. Prefer simple primitives like text and files over bespoke workflow tools when possible .
    4. Default writes to human-in-the-loop; DeepAgents and Arcade both frame write actions, verifiers, and step-up auth as harness-layer responsibilities .
  • Make your codebase agent-legible

    1. Add tests and invariants so the agent knows what must remain true after a change .
    2. Break work into atomic chunks or PR-sized tasks instead of 3,000-line asks .
    3. If the agent cannot debug or extend the code without hand-holding, treat that as a codebase warning sign, not just a model failure .
    4. Review agent-produced artifacts and documents, not just token streams .
  • High-assurance coding loop for serious systems

    1. Start with a real spec; Salvatore Sanfilippo spent a month writing an MD spec before generating code for a new Redis data type .
    2. Generate and review in small sections, then refactor with alternating human and LLM passes .
    3. Expect strength on complex local functions, but watch for whole-system conceptual errors when the full codebase is not in context .
    4. Feed failures back into a trace loop: enrich traces with evals and human feedback, turn recurring failures into test cases, validate fixes, repeat. LangChain’s guide is the cleanest short version of this pattern .
  • AI-native maintenance and security

    1. Auto-patrol easy wins on a schedule; Yegge handles docs, small fixes, bot upgrades, and other easy PRs every 2 hours .
    2. For promising-but-broken PRs, prefer fix-merge over endless request-changes; his workflow includes merge, merge-fix, fix-merge, cherry-pick, split-merge, reimplement, retire, and reject .
    3. Keep a generalist review bot running on top of specialized scanners. Devin Review caught the axios npm attack for customers within about an hour / 45 minutes after publish, while Socket says it detected the same issue in ~6 minutes .
  • Use agents for bounded search problems

    1. Predrag Gruevski’s Codex prompt was simple: get a JPEG from ~400KB to under 200KB without resizing or visible quality loss .
    2. Codex responded by setting up perceptual quality assessment, trying a few hundred flag combinations, and returning a 199KB file that looked substantially identical .
    3. Good template: if success can be scored, let the agent brute-force the search space .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Harrison Chase + Sam Partee — one of the best current architecture talks on turning coding-agent primitives into general-purpose agents, from builders actively shipping LangChain and Arcade into real enterprise environments .
  • Steve Yegge — one of the few people publishing hard ops numbers for AI-native OSS maintenance: ~50 AI-generated PRs/day, median 15-hour resolution, ~88% merge rate, and 15–20 hours/week of maintainer effort .

“help contributors get to the finish line”

  • Salvatore Sanfilippo — Redis creator, using LLMs on production Redis code with a much stricter process than vibe coding. His key caveat: frontier models beat most humans on code quality, but still lag super-experts and can miss system-level issues .
  • Niels Rogge — a firsthand, production-level Codex account from a Transformers contributor porting VidEoMT into the library. Blog: huggingface.co/blog/nielsr/contributing-to-transformers-with-codex.
  • Kent C. Dodds — useful counterweight to tool obsession. His point: AI makes spikes and experiments cheaper, so the scarcer skill is still user empathy and problem clarity .

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 9:20–11:30 — Claude Code compaction modes. Best short breakdown of micro compaction, context collapse, session memory, and why to call /compact proactively before auto-compaction drops context you care about .
  • 6:28–7:36 — DeepAgents’ file-system substrate. Harrison Chase explains the pluggable file backend idea cleanly: agents think in files even when the actual storage is a DB or remote sandbox .
  • 19:10–20:38 — A hardware founder uses Claude Code to build AWS telemetry. Sam D’Amico’s segment is worth the time because it is not an AI-tool demo guy; it is a practitioner using Sonnet + Claude Code + Cursor to ship infrastructure he had never built before .

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Beads20k stars, 5 months old. Yegge says it remains the durable substrate of the MEOW stack, with work decomposed into version-controlled, SQL-queryable orchestration steps via Dolt .
  • Gas Town13k stars, 3 months old. Community signal: 1,000+ contributors, 4k+ PRs, 2,300+ merged, 15k commits, and nearly 2,000 users in the Gas Town Hall Discord.
  • Gas City — went alpha last week, with general availability planned later in April. It is a ground-up rewrite and near-superset of Gas Town, with Gas Town itself becoming a declarative pack inside a broader orchestrator-builder .
  • Claw v2026.3.31-beta.1 — small but relevant release if you track open coding-agent infrastructure: reliability and security improvements plus a new task system for subagents and crons .
  • CodexBar v0.20.0-beta.1 — experimental multi-account support for Codex; small feature, real usefulness if you juggle multiple accounts or org contexts .

Editorial take: the durable edge right now is boring infrastructure around the model — files, tests, traces, permissions, review bots, and artifact UIs — not another clever prompt.

OpenAI’s $122B Raise, Anthropic’s Leak, and a Benchmark Reset for Multimodal AI
Apr 1
9 min read
687 docs
Chaofan Shou
Xiuyu Li
Artificial Analysis
+44
This brief covers OpenAI’s massive financing and platform push, the Claude Code leak and what it revealed about proactive agents, Stanford’s challenge to multimodal benchmarks, and key launches across video, spreadsheets, and enterprise copilots.

Top Stories

Why it matters: This cycle was defined by capital concentration, a rare agent-code leak, a challenge to multimodal benchmark validity, and stronger evidence that useful AI can run much closer to the edge.

OpenAI paired massive financing with a broader product ambition

OpenAI said it closed its latest funding round with $122 billion in committed capital at an $852B post-money valuation. The company said the funding gives it resources to lead at scale and expand AI's benefits by putting useful intelligence in people's hands early . Separate posts interpreting the announcement framed the next phase as consolidation of ChatGPT, Codex, browsing, and agents into a single AI superapp. Widely shared posts also cited steep commercialization progress, including $1B within a year of ChatGPT, $1B per quarter by end-2024, and $2B per month now.

Impact: OpenAI is pairing balance-sheet scale with a platform strategy, raising the competitive bar on both infrastructure and distribution.

The Claude Code leak exposed Anthropic's proactive-agent design

Multiple posts said Claude Code source code leaked through an npm source map . Reviews of the leaked code described KAIROS as an always-on proactive mode behind internal feature flags, with heartbeat prompts, push notifications, file delivery, pull-request subscriptions, append-only daily logs, and nightly memory consolidation via autoDream. Posts reviewing the leak also said the code referenced unreleased Anthropic model names and variants including Mythos/Capybara, Opus 4.7, and Sonnet 4.8. Anthropic then sent DMCA requests against repositories carrying the leaked code , and an official statement on the leak was reported .

"every few seconds, KAIROS gets a heartbeat. basically a prompt that says 'anything worth doing right now?'"

Impact: The leak offered a rare view into how frontier coding agents may move from reactive copilots toward background autonomy, while also highlighting the security and IP fragility of agent products.

Stanford's MIRAGE result challenged multimodal evaluation

A widely shared summary of Stanford's MIRAGE paper, co-authored by Fei-Fei Li, said leading vision-language models still scored 70-80% on six major vision benchmarks even after images were silently removed . The same summary said a 3B text-only super-guesser trained on text from chest X-ray questions ranked #1 on held-out tests, beating VLMs and radiologists . A cleanup method called B-Clean reportedly removed 74-77% of questions from existing vision benchmarks because they did not truly test vision .

Impact: If these reported results hold up, current multimodal leaderboards may be overstating visual understanding and understating shortcut exploitation—especially in medical settings .

PrismML pushed 1-bit local models into the spotlight

PrismML emerged from stealth arguing that the next AI gains will come from intelligence density rather than only parameter count . Its 1-bit Bonsai 8B model fits in 1.15GB of memory and is described as 14x smaller, 8x faster, 5x more energy efficient, and over 10x the intelligence density of its full-precision counterparts, while remaining competitive in its class; Bonsai 8B, 4B, and 1.7B were open-sourced under Apache 2.0 . PrismML says this should enable on-device agents, real-time robotics, and offline intelligence. A follow-up post said the 1-bit Bonsai family shifts the Pareto frontier of intelligence vs. size dramatically to the left , and a demo showed Bonsai 8B running locally on an M4 Pro with much lower memory use and higher throughput than a standard 16-bit 8B model .

Impact: Small local models are starting to look less like a fallback and more like a distinct product and infrastructure strategy.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: The most interesting technical work this cycle focused on better reasoning training, longer-lived agent memory, smaller useful models, and more reliable evaluation.

  • OpenAI on Erdős problems: OpenAI researchers said an internal model found short and elegant proofs for three further open problems due to Erdős, with the paper posted on arXiv . A separate OpenAI executive post framed the broader trend as AI solving more open problems while producing more elegant proofs as models improve .
  • Token-level RL credit assignment: Qwen Pilot introduced FIPO, which uses a GAE-style Future KL signal to assign credit to individual tokens during reasoning. The claim is that, unlike GRPO, it can reinforce helpful tokens and suppress derailing ones, producing longer and more accurate chains beyond 10k tokens with strong gains on AIME24.
  • Long-term memory for agents:GAAMA proposes a hierarchical memory system that combines RAG with knowledge graphs. The reported result is 78.9% mean reward on LoCoMo-10, outperforming HippoRAG and tuned RAG baselines . The core claim is that graph-augmented retrieval plus higher-order reflections improves multi-session recall .
  • Useful small models kept improving: Liquid AI released LFM2.5-350M, a 350M-parameter model aimed at agentic loops, reliable data extraction, and tool use . It was trained on 28T tokens with scaled RL , with reported gains from LFM2-350M in instruction following (18.20 → 40.69), data extraction (11.67 → 32.45), and tool use (22.95 → 44.11) . Quantized size is under 500MB, making it usable in constrained environments .
  • GPU kernel scheduling got more automated: Modular said it built a constraint solver in Mojo that automatically derives pipeline schedules for GPU kernels, tackling the complexity of FA4 on Blackwell with 14 ops, 5 hardware units, and 28 dependency edges. The reported outcome is simpler kernels, race conditions defined away, and more portable intra-kernel composition while keeping full hardware control .
  • Benchmark methodology is getting more careful: Google Research announced a new framework for improving benchmark reproducibility by optimizing the ratio of items to human raters per item, with the goal of better capturing human disagreement in subjective tasks .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: Vendors are turning multi-model orchestration, cheaper video generation, spreadsheet workflows, and agent interfaces into products people can actually use.

  • Microsoft pushed multi-model workflows into M365 Copilot:Council lets users run multiple models on the same prompt to compare where they align and diverge . Critique is a new multi-model deep research system that Microsoft says uses multiple models together to generate better responses and reports, with a feedback loop aimed at improving factual accuracy, analytical breadth, and presentation .
  • Veo 3.1 Lite widened access to video generation: Google made Veo 3.1 Lite available in the Gemini API and Google AI Studio for rapid prototyping and high-volume generation at $0.05/sec, or half the cost of Veo 3.1 Fast . It supports text-to-video and image-to-video, 16:9 and 9:16 output, and 4s, 6s, and 8s clips . Fal.ai also put Veo 3.1 Lite live with first-last-frame-to-video and both 720p and 1080p options .
  • OpenAI expanded practical workflow surfaces:ChatGPT for Excel is now available worldwide except EU consumer plans . Separately, the GitHub plugin in the Codex app can review issues, address feedback, commit changes, and open pull requests .
  • Google AI Studio added music tooling:Music Playground, powered by Lyria 3, launched with a Composer Mode that lets users describe music, hear it, then export the result to code and build from it .
  • Agent interfaces kept broadening: Perceptron launched an MCP server that gives agents stronger vision via Isaac at lower cost than general-purpose multimodal models . In open-source tooling, a new Hermes Agent PR added computer use on a real Mac from a phone, with no sandbox and real-time control over desktop apps .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Companies are reorganizing around agents, security, and open-model infrastructure rather than treating AI as an isolated feature.

  • OpenAI broadened its infrastructure posture: A reported partnership with Amazon would build infrastructure for AI agents on AWS, signaling a wider cloud posture around deployment .
  • Microsoft formalized its OpenClaw bet: Omar Shahine said he joined Microsoft to bring OpenClaw + personal agents to Microsoft 365, with a goal of proactive workplace assistants that take on tasks end-to-end; he also said a fully integrated Teams plugin is already deployed .
  • Perplexity moved into security research: The company launched the Secure Intelligence Institute, led by Purdue's Dr. Ninghui Li, to work with top cryptography, security, and ML teams . Its first paper responds to NIST's request for information on securing autonomous agents .
  • Open-model enterprise adoption kept strengthening: Hugging Face CEO Clement Delangue said companies including Pinterest, Airbnb, Notion, Cursor, and Intercom are finding it better, cheaper, faster to use and train open models in-house for many tasks . Hugging Face also released TRL v1 with 75+ post-training methods including SFT, DPO, GRPO, and async RL .
  • QodoAI raised more capital for AI coding infrastructure: QodoAI announced a $70M raise, with the company arguing that software development has fundamentally changed but that enterprise-grade transformation is still early .
  • Gemma's ecosystem scale kept growing: Two years after launch, Google's Gemma family of open models reached 400M downloads and 100,000 variants.

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: Formal regulation remains uneven, but the policy surface is expanding through safety partnerships, legislative proposals, legal enforcement, and geopolitical risk.

  • Australia and Anthropic signed a safety MOU: Anthropic said it signed an MOU with the Australian Government to collaborate on AI safety research and support Australia's National AI Plan.
  • US debate over AI rules intensified: Sen. Bernie Sanders said 74% of Americans believe the government is not doing enough to regulate AI and pointed to his proposed moratorium bill as a way to address AI risks and broaden who benefits . Separately, Andrew Ng said he supports the White House's proposed national AI legislative framework with federal preemption to avoid a patchwork of state-level restrictions .
  • Anthropic's leak response turned legal: After the Claude Code leak, Anthropic sent DMCA requests to shut down repositories hosting the source code .
  • Geopolitical risk to AI infrastructure rose: A cited post reported that the IRGC accused American AI companies of being 'the primary element in designing and tracking assassination targets' and threatened to treat them as 'legitimate targets' . Another post interpreted that as a threat to data centers .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These smaller signals help track where capability, adoption, and risk are moving next.

  • KAT-Coder-Pro V2 reached 44 on the Artificial Analysis Intelligence Index, matching Claude Sonnet 4.6 among non-reasoning models. Reported strengths were 49% on Terminal-Bench Hard, about 109 output tokens/sec, and $73 benchmark cost; reported weaknesses were long-context reasoning and knowledge regressions versus V1 .
  • IBM Granite 4.0-3B-Vision launched as a document-focused VLM with state-of-the-art performance for its size on tables and charts, compatibility with Transformers and vLLM, and a free license .
  • Qdrant Agent Skills positions vector search as structured, composable retrieval for agents. Qdrant's reported comparison showed 96% vs 65% pass rate, 1.8x faster execution, 13% fewer tokens, and 3x more consistency with Skills enabled .
  • OpenRouter's Model Fusion combines outputs from multiple models into one answer; OpenRouter said every Deep Research agent preferred the fused response over its own in testing, and the feature does not require a subscription .
  • LangChain added more operational guidance for teams putting agents into production, including a free course on monitoring production agents and a trace-centered agent improvement loop guide built around costs, latency, evals, prompt injection, and PII leakage .
  • Arena rankings kept shifting:Claude Opus 4.6 stayed on top of Text Arena, while Gemini-3.1 Pro, GPT-5.4 High, and Grok-4.20 (Reasoning) entered the top 10 . Grok-4.20 also landed #3 in Medicine & Healthcare and #6 across Expert Prompts, Math, and Legal & Government slices .
  • Security risk in the AI developer stack stayed elevated: A security roundup said TeamPCP poisoned tools including LiteLLM, the axios npm incident gave attackers remote control on affected machines, and AI-software pace may be amplifying classic supply-chain failures and human error .
Google’s Crypto-Quantum Paper Leads a Resource List on Mastery Learning and Tolkien
Apr 1
4 min read
178 docs
Chamath Palihapitiya
Palmer Luckey
Shane Parrish
+4
Chamath Palihapitiya's endorsement of a Google Research paper on crypto quantum risk is the clearest actionable recommendation in today's set. The rest of the list clusters around mastery-learning resources and classic books that founders are using to think about action, defense, and hidden systems of protection.

Most compelling recommendation

Today's clearest high-signal pick is the Google Research paper Chamath Palihapitiya called "quite reasonable." It stands out because he paired the recommendation with a concrete threat model and a concrete ask: if AGI/ASI arrives in the semi-near future, crypto leaders should organize a conclusive quantum-resistant roadmap within the next few years .

Safeguarding Cryptocurrency by Disclosing Quantum Vulnerabilities Responsibly

  • Content type: Research paper / blog post
  • Author/creator: Google Research
  • Link/URL:research.google/blog/safeguarding-cryptocurrency-by-disclosing-quantum-vulnerabilities-responsibly/
  • Who recommended it: Chamath Palihapitiya
  • Key takeaway: He said the paper raises important technical questions. In his framing, sufficiently capable AI would make cracking a crypto project an obvious honeypot, so the industry should treat quantum resistance as a near-term coordination problem
  • Why it matters: This is not a vague endorsement. Chamath said he had already raised the issue previously, which makes the recommendation look like a sustained concern rather than a one-off share

A dense cluster on mastery learning

The education recommendations were unusually specific. Joe Limont pointed to tools built around mastery and explicit time-to-mastery, while Shane Parrish added that watching his kids use Prodigy made him less skeptical of edtech's ability to improve both math skills and motivation .

Math Academy

  • Content type: Learning app + downloadable book
  • Author/creator: Math Academy; Justin is named in the source material as the author of the book
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Joe Limont, in the Shane Parrish interview
  • Key takeaway: He described it as a great math app, said it comes with a 500-page downloadable book on learning science, and highlighted that it publishes how many hours it takes to master material, using examples like 28 hours and 22 hours for elementary subject levels
  • Why it matters: The recommendation is unusually concrete: it combines pedagogy, curriculum design, and explicit time-to-mastery estimates in one system

Physics Graph

  • Content type: Learning app
  • Author/creator: Physics Graph
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Joe Limont, in the Shane Parrish interview
  • Key takeaway: He described it as the physics version of Math Academy and his choice for high school physics, especially the algebra-based AP track
  • Why it matters: It suggests the same mastery-learning approach is spreading from math into physics

Bloom's 2 Sigma paper

  • Content type: Paper
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Discussed favorably in the Shane Parrish interview
  • Key takeaway: The paper is described as showing that mastery-based tutoring with a human tutor produced two-sigma better performance, while also underscoring how hard it is to scale human tutoring and enforced mastery
  • Why it matters: It gives the theoretical benchmark sitting behind the mastery-learning tools recommended in the same conversation

Literary frameworks founders are reaching for

Notes from Underground

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Fyodor Dostoevsky
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen, via a reply endorsing a post about the book
  • Key takeaway: The framing he amplified contrasts the decisive "man of action" with the "man of thought," who becomes trapped by self-consciousness and overthinking
  • Why it matters: It is a compact lens on the cost of analysis paralysis

The Lord of the Rings

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: J.R.R. Tolkien
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Palmer Luckey
  • Key takeaway: Luckey argues Tolkien hated war but still believed some wars had to be fought. He uses C.S. Lewis's reading of the Shire as a "local and temporary accident" to explain how protected societies forget the powers shielding them
  • Why it matters: He treats Tolkien as a worldview resource for thinking about evil, deterrence, and the gap between frontline experience and rear-area comfort

"The terrifying discovery that the humdrum happiness of the Shire, which they had taken for granted as something normal, is in reality a sort of local and temporary accident, that its existence depends on being protected by powers which the hobbits forget, against powers which the hobbits dare not imagine."

Luckey's Tolkien fandom is not superficial; in the same conversation he also referenced The Silmarillion when discussing the Elvish roots of "Anduril" .

Security Strains the AI Stack as OpenAI Closes $122B Round
Apr 1
4 min read
220 docs
OpenAI
Scott Wu
swyx
+9
Today's digest centers on an unusually security-heavy news cycle, alongside OpenAI's huge funding round, new efficiency pushes in open and edge AI, and signs that power and policy are becoming core parts of the AI story.

What stood out today

A lot happened, but two storylines carried the day: the AI software stack showed real security fragility, and the industry's capital and infrastructure ambitions kept getting bigger.

Security incidents exposed how fragile the AI software stack still is

The axios npm compromise was the sharpest example. Feross reported that axios@1.14.1 began pulling a newly created package, plain-crypto-js@4.2.1, which Socket classified as malware; the package deobfuscated payloads at runtime, loaded fs, os, and execSync, executed shell commands, staged files in temp and ProgramData directories, and deleted evidence afterward . Because axios sees 100M+ weekly downloads, the potential blast radius was large .

The response time was notable too: Socket said it detected the issue within ~6 minutes of publication, while Cognition said Devin Review alerted some customers 45 minutes after the attack and 1.5 hours before the public announcement . Sarah Guo broadened the frame, pointing to the TeamPCP compromise of the Trivy build system, poisoned LiteLLM, breaches at Mercor and Cisco, Anthropic's accidental exposure of Claude Code internals and documents on unreleased model "mythos" (but not model weights), and Railway exposure as part of a "very bad week in security" for the AI ecosystem .

"These aren’t failures of negligence, but what happens when systems/processes work as designed and still can’t be explained end to end. This is an industry-wide, structural problem."

Why it matters: The notes point to a familiar but sharper pattern: classic supply-chain failures are colliding with AI-accelerated software development, and AI-based defense is showing up as part of the response .

OpenAI locked in extraordinary scale

OpenAI said it closed its latest funding round with $122 billion in committed capital at an $852B post-money valuation. The company said the capital gives it resources to "lead at scale" and supports its strategy of putting useful intelligence in people's hands early so access can compound globally .

Why it matters: This was one of the clearest capital signals in today's notes, and OpenAI is explicitly framing the round around scale and wider access .

Efficiency and open tooling kept pushing AI closer to local and in-house deployment

PrismML emerged from stealth with a thesis centered on intelligence density rather than sheer parameter count, and launched 1-bit Bonsai 8B, a 1.15 GB model it says delivers over 10x the intelligence density of full-precision counterparts while being 14x smaller, 8x faster, and 5x more energy efficient on edge hardware; it also open-sourced Bonsai 8B, 4B, and 1.7B under Apache 2.0 . The company argues this changes the design space for on-device agents, real-time robotics, and offline intelligence.

On the tooling side, Hugging Face released TRL v1, a post-training library with 75+ methods including SFT, DPO, GRPO, and async RL . Clement Delangue also said companies including Pinterest, Airbnb, Notion, Cursor, and Intercom are publicly finding it better, cheaper, and faster to use and train open models themselves for many tasks rather than rely on APIs, while Gemma reached 400M downloads and 100,000 variants two years after launch .

Why it matters: The shift here is not just another open release; it's a deeper stack for training, compressing, and deploying models outside the default API path .

AI infrastructure is increasingly being designed around power, not just chips

NVIDIA and Emerald AI unveiled a model for treating AI factories as flexible grid assets rather than static loads, combining NVIDIA's Vera Rubin DSX reference design with Emerald's Conductor platform so AI factories can generate tokens while dynamically responding to grid conditions . Energy companies including AES, Constellation, Invenergy, NextEra Energy, Nscale, and Vistra are collaborating on generation strategies, including hybrid projects that use co-located power .

Jensen Huang framed the bigger arc in efficiency terms, saying NVIDIA is pushing extreme co-design to improve tokens per second per watt by orders of magnitude each year; the blog says tokens generated within the same power budget have increased by more than 1 million times from Kepler in 2012 to Vera Rubin this year .

Why it matters: Power planning is moving from background constraint to part of AI system design itself .

Governance signals continued to favor coordination over fragmentation

Anthropic said it signed an MOU with the Australian Government to collaborate on AI safety research and support Australia's National AI Plan. In the U.S., Andrew Ng said he supports the White House's proposed national legislative framework for AI, especially its federal preemption mechanism to prevent a patchwork of state rules that could limit AI development while still preserving state authority over zoning, consumer protection, and their own use of AI .

Why it matters: The common thread is a push toward more coordinated national approaches, even if the U.S. framework remains a proposal for now .

Beyond Accuracy, Better AI Workflows, and a Sharper PM Job Search
Apr 1
8 min read
59 docs
Product Management
Hiten Shah
Product Management
+6
This issue centers on practical PM frameworks: a four-part scorecard for GenAI products, a simple screen for deciding what to automate, and concrete playbooks for Claude workflows, support-to-docs loops, and narrative clarity. It also includes Amazon case metrics, growth ideas from QR codes, and sharper job-search tactics for PMs.

Big Ideas

1) Evaluate GenAI products beyond accuracy

Accuracy is a trap.

Accuracy describes model performance, but not whether users trust the product, find it useful, return to it, or whether it creates business value . The framework described in the Product School session evaluates GenAI products across trust, usefulness, adoption, and business impact. That matters because a product can be reliable but useless, useful but risky, or well-used but economically unsustainable .

How to apply

  • Make each AI feature prove itself on all four dimensions, not just model quality
  • Give each dimension concrete metrics, owners, and review cadences before launch

2) Use a two-question screen before automating PM work

Sachin Rekhi’s heuristic is simple: ask whether a workflow is worth building and possible to build with AI . It is worth building when AI has a clear advantage, such as synthesizing customer interviews faster and more comprehensively, or when the task is frequent and time-consuming, such as weekly status updates . It is possible to build when AI can access the right context, the work can be broken into discrete steps, and human judgment is limited enough that the workflow will not stall .

How to apply

  • Start with recurring PM tasks where AI already outperforms manual effort on speed or coverage
  • Reject automations that depend on hidden context or undefined judgment calls

3) QR codes are becoming a measurable offline growth channel

QR codes can connect packaging, receipts, events, and out-of-home placements to product experiences with very little friction . The more interesting shift is measurement: dynamic tools such as ME-QR let teams update links without reprinting, track sources, segment traffic, and run experiments, effectively bringing performance-style analytics into offline surfaces . The recurring failure modes are basic but important: no clear reason to scan, weak mobile UX, and no tracking .

How to apply

  • Use QR only when it clearly makes a user job easier; onboarding, retention, support, referrals, and promos are the cited use cases
  • Treat offline scans like any other channel: instrument source, segment traffic, and test destinations

Tactical Playbook

1) Roll out a GenAI evaluation system in five steps

  1. Week 1: define the top three metrics per dimension, set baselines, and choose realistic and stretch targets
  2. Weeks 2-4: instrument the product, set up dashboards, establish human evaluation, and build feedback collection into the experience
  3. Weeks 5-8: run a pilot with 50-200 users, gather quantitative and qualitative data, and iterate on the gaps
  4. Post-launch: monitor trust and safety daily, engagement weekly, business impact monthly, and review the product comprehensively each quarter
  5. Keep iterating: use A/B tests, user feedback, and updated evaluation criteria as the product changes

Why it matters: the speaker’s lesson is that pilot data should drive launch decisions, and multi-dimensional evaluation surfaces issues that accuracy alone misses .

2) Add learning, memory, and evaluation to Claude with three CLAUDE.md blocks

The Product Compass article proposes three blocks that make Claude more useful for product work: a Knowledge Architecture, a Decision Journal, and a Quality Gate.

How to apply

  1. Before each task, review domain rules and hypotheses; after each task, store learnings in /knowledge/{domain}/knowledge.md, /hypotheses.md, and /rules.md, and maintain a /knowledge/INDEX.md
  2. Promote a hypothesis to a rule only after 3+ confirmations, and demote it if new data contradicts it
  3. Before major choices, search prior decisions; if none exists, log the decision, context, alternatives, reasoning, trade-offs, and any superseded choice in /decisions/YYYY-MM-DD-{topic}.md
  4. Add explicit evaluation criteria outside the generation step, because agents tend to praise their own work even when quality is mediocre

Why it matters: after one month, the author reports Claude was automatically applying 24 project-specific rules, and the decisions with three written alternatives were right 80% of the time .

3) Turn repeated support questions into documentation work every week

A simple Friday workflow from Lenny’s Newsletter: review resolved support tickets, and if a question appeared 3+ times that week, flag it as a docs or FAQ candidate, create a Linear issue assigned to @agent, and include the standard answer as the starting point .

Why it matters: it converts recurring support questions into docs or FAQ candidates and ready-to-assign issues .

How to apply

  • Set a weekly review cadence, not an ad hoc one
  • Use the recurrence threshold to reduce noise and focus only on patterns
  • Include the existing answer so documentation starts from something already working in support

4) Pressure-test your product story in 20 minutes

Open a blank document and write down your company’s story in 200 words. What job are customers hiring you to do? Why does your approach work when others fail?

Why it matters: Hiten Shah frames this as a basic clarity test, and says most founders cannot do it in the allotted time .

How to apply

  • Limit yourself to 200 words and 20 minutes
  • Answer only two questions: the customer job and why your approach works better than alternatives
  • Use the exercise as a quick internal clarity check

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Amazon’s AI assistant companion: trust features and utility metrics moved together

In the AI assistant example, every response included source attribution, some responses included confidence scores, and human evaluation kept the hallucination rate below 2%. On usefulness and adoption, the related prompt library drove 40% faster prompt creation, about 85% thumbs-up, 3x higher engagement for manager-specific prompts, 2x retention for users with community prompt access, and 85%+ returning users within a few months .

It’s a game changer for my workflow and results.

Key takeaway: trust mechanisms such as source attribution are more valuable when they are paired with clear evidence that the product saves time and keeps users coming back .

2) Amazon’s B2B purchase guardrails: business impact was measurable quickly

The purchase guardrails example generated several millions in annualized revenue, served thousands of business customers, reduced manual budget tracking by 80%+, and reached positive ROI within 3 months.

Key takeaway: when an AI product is tied directly to completing a workflow faster and with less manual tracking, PMs can measure business impact in revenue, productivity, and ROI rather than relying on model-centric metrics alone .

3) A structured Claude workspace improved through use

The Product Compass author says that after a month, Claude had generated and was automatically applying 24 project-specific rules extracted from patterns across dozens of sessions . The same write-up says the decisions the author felt most confident about had the worst hit rate, while decisions where three alternatives were written down were right 80% of the time .

Key takeaway: persistent knowledge capture and explicit alternatives can beat confidence-based decision-making .

Career Corner

1) PM job search is shifting from volume to precision

Aakash Gupta argues that mass-applying with AI does not work. His recommendation is to apply to fewer, surgically targeted roles, stack referrals before submitting, and run the search in about 20-30 minutes a day instead of three hours .

How to apply

  • Build the referral path before the application: Gupta says cold application callback rates are around 2-4%, while warm intros are 5x higher, and every candidate he coached into a top-company offer had a referral on file before the resume went in
  • Send 25 personalized connection requests per week, rotate across target companies, follow up on days 3, 7, and 14, and ask for the referral only after context is established

2) Tailored resumes only help if they stay truthful

Gupta’s warning on AI resumes is blunt: many tools either invent experience or produce generic keyword swaps, and invented experience can backfire when interviewers check it . His recommended standard is a JD-specific resume built only from real experience .

How to apply

  • Restructure the resume around the specific job description, but only with evidence you can defend in interview
  • Treat fabrication as a risk, not a shortcut

3) Specific work products and interview prep still create separation

Gupta highlights a 90-minute work product: a one-pager analyzing the company’s product plus a working prototype of the recommendation . He also emphasizes company-specific prep, including interview formats, reported questions, and screening signals across 250 companies, plus mock interviews that identify weak areas over time . On the back end, he recommends negotiation research and counter-offer drafts because the compensation impact can be meaningful .

How to apply

  • Use a work product when a standard application is not creating enough signal, but make it specific enough that it could only have been written for that company
  • Build interview prep around the target company’s actual format and questions, not a generic PM script

Tools & Resources

1) The CLAUDE.md blocks from Product Compass

What it is: a reusable set of three blocks for learning across sessions, logging decisions, and evaluating output quality .

Use it for: ongoing product domains where patterns emerge slowly, teams re-debate the same choices, or AI output needs a separate quality bar .

2) Prompt patterns from Lenny’s Newsletter

What they are: ready-made automation prompts for PLG lead qualification, recurring support-to-docs conversion, and launch management .

Use them for: workflows with clear cadence and routing rules. The examples also show when specialization helps: Sage handles course operations and reminders, while Kelly checks Linear daily, starts a branch, and opens a PR for assigned dev tasks .

3) Dynamic QR tools such as ME-QR

What it is: a way to change destinations without reprinting codes, track sources, segment traffic, and run experiments from offline touchpoints .

Use it for: packaging, receipts, events, support, referrals, and promo mechanics where you want a measurable bridge from offline to product .

4) An AI prototyping checklist from r/ProductManagement

What it covers: the integration layer between LLM APIs, vector databases, and preprocessing; state and context handoffs in RAG systems; token-cost monitoring; and the practical shift toward CLIs for Claude workflows .

Use it for: early planning before a PM-led prototype or side project so the first blockers are visible before implementation starts .

USDA Acres Reset, Fertilizer Chokepoints, and Brazil’s Delayed Harvest
Apr 1
9 min read
167 docs
Arlan Suderman
农业致富经 Agriculture And Farming
Sencer Solakoglu
+6
U.S. planting intentions, a worsening fertilizer chokepoint through the Strait of Hormuz, and Brazil’s delayed soybean harvest are resetting both price direction and farm-margin expectations. This brief pairs those market signals with quantified on-farm innovations and practical operating guidance across grains, dairy, livestock, and inputs.

Market Movers

  • United States — USDA acreage reset: USDA’s March planting intentions put corn at 95.4 million acres, down about 3.5 million from last year but above pre-report trade guesses near 94.4 million. Soybeans were reported at 84.7 million acres, up 3.5 million year over year but below pre-report guesses near 85.6 million. All wheat was 43.8 million acres, the lowest since records began in 1919. Quarterly corn stocks were just over 9 billion bushels, up 11% year over year but friendlier than some expectations, with exports and ethanol use described as strong .

  • Price reaction: Since the Strait of Hormuz closure began, one market discussion pegged wheat up about 6% and corn up about 4%, while soybeans had pulled back amid delayed U.S.-China talks after an earlier 3-5% rise . On March 31, Chicago soybeans, corn, and wheat all finished higher, with wheat up 1.85% to $6.18/bushel.

  • Fertilizer shock remains the main margin risk: The Hormuz chokepoint is physically blocking a region that accounts for about 43% of global urea exports, 27% of anhydrous ammonia, 16% of MAP/DAP phosphates, and nearly half of sulfur exports used in phosphate production . Egypt and Israel are already suspending fertilizer operations as storage fills, and analysts said 1-2 million metric tons of monthly supply can be destroyed while the route stays blocked, with little spare capacity to make it up later . U.S. direct exposure is lower—roughly 12% of urea imports and 17% of MAP/DAP—but Brazil’s 4.4 million metric tons of Gulf fertilizer imports and India’s 9.7 million metric tons mean global competition for replacement supply is intensifying .

  • Brazil — soy market stays liquid despite a big crop: Brazil is on pace for a record first quarter of roughly 23 million tons of soybean exports and 340,000 tons of imports, even with a crop above 170 million tons, because both domestic crushing demand and export demand are strong . More than 90% of imported soybeans are coming from Paraguay . Physical soy quotes on March 31 were R$124/sack in Passo Fundo and R$130-131/sack at Paranaguá, Rio Grande, and Santos ports .

  • U.S. export flow is mixed by crop: Weekly U.S. corn export inspections reached 70 million bushels, up 5.1% from the prior week and 4.1% from a year earlier, with China taking 46% of that week’s inspections . Soybean inspections fell to 22 million bushels, down 47% week over week and 28% year over year, while wheat inspections were 13 million bushels, down 21% week over week and 27% year over year . For the marketing year to date, corn shipments are up 36%, soybeans are down 27%, and wheat is up 17%.

Innovation Spotlight

  • United Kingdom — molasses as a measured milk-yield lever: On a roughly 140-cow dairy, cane molasses was added at about 1 kg/cow/day, mixed after concentrates and before silage/maize . After about two months, average milk rose from 30.6 to 32.3 liters/cow/day. The farmer put molasses cost near £300/ton; at roughly 140 kg/day, that was £42/day, and he associated the yield lift with about £88/week of added milk value .

  • United States — manure separation is becoming a fertilizer technology, not just a waste system: In swine operations, manure value was described at $3-5 per pig space, or about $20,000/year for a 4,000-head site . A separation process discussed by producers allows liquid application at about 30 gallons/acre instead of 5,000-6,000 gallons/acre, with reported yield gains of about 18 bushels. One Indiana farmer was described as willing to pay up to $1/gallon for the separated liquid under current fertilizer prices .

  • China — shade-sharing intercropping improved both yield and income: In Sichuan, farmers paired shade-loving pig-tooth konjac with climbing hanging melon. The melon canopy replaced black shade-net costs of roughly 700-800 yuan/mu, while konjac yield rose from about 3-4 tons/mu to 5 tons/mu and income moved from roughly 15,000 yuan/mu to more than 20,000 yuan/mu. On 200 mu, hanging melon seeds added more than 500,000 yuan of extra income .

Regional Developments

  • Brazil — soybean harvest remains behind schedule: Conab data put national harvest at 74.3%, 7.1 percentage points behind the same point last season . Mato Grosso is nearly finished at about 99%, but Maranhão, Santa Catarina, and Rio Grande do Sul are still below 50%, with São Paulo and Bahia running 22% and 25% behind last year, respectively . Near-term fieldwork is being helped by drier conditions in Paraná, while frequent rain in Tocantins is lifting grain moisture and delaying harvest . Forecasts also call for 70-100 mm episodes in parts of the South plus cyclone-related storm risk, hail, and stronger winds in southern and southeastern Brazil .

  • Brazil — rice margins are under pressure in Rio Grande do Sul: Harvest reached 40% of area, still about 10% behind last year . Producers reported diesel above R$8/liter—about 70% higher since harvest began—while paddy prices remain near R$60/sack and are not covering costs . The crop is projected above 7.5 million tons, but producers are holding grain and watching export channels and possible Conab PEP/PEPRO support as national rice production is expected to be about 15% lower .

  • United States — acreage shifts are spreading beyond the Corn Belt: In the Mississippi Delta, some customers are cutting cotton acres by about 50% from 2024 levels and moving to corn and grain sorghum because fertilizer and fuel prices have made cotton less attractive . About 20% of local corn may need replanting after a freeze . Farther west, a Colorado farmer said nearly 75% of his acres could go prevent-plant because irrigation allotments amount to only about 6% of normal, or 2-3 days of water for the season .

  • Brazil — financing rules are becoming a separate production risk: From April 1, a new rural-credit rule uses INPE PRODES satellite data to restrict financing where the system flags post-cutoff deforestation . Legal and producer groups said PRODES’ 20-30 meter resolution can confuse legal clearing, invasive-species removal, or pasture cleaning with illegal deforestation, while most CAR registrations still have not been validated . The FPA and CNA are seeking a postponement, warning of higher bank costs, legal uncertainty, and financing disruption in grain-heavy areas of the Legal Amazon such as Mato Grosso and Pará .

Best Practices

Grains and Soil

  • Manage by zone, not field average: Soil variability includes soil type, texture, nutrient levels, and topsoil depth, even where fields look uniform . The practical response is grid or zone soil testing focused on controllable nutrients, then variable-rate seeding and fertilizer by field zone to improve return on input dollars and environmental efficiency .

  • Validate prescriptions with planting and yield data: John Deere’s Operation Center workflow shows a useful standard for growers using precision systems: track planter performance, seed and fertilizer rate, singulation, and soil-contact time, then compare applied versus target fertilizer maps against yield maps to see whether variable-rate zones are paying .

Dairy

  • Tighten mastitis prevention at the parlor: The cited protocol starts with thorough teat cleaning using side and bottom brushes, then a white-cloth check—if a brown spot remains, cleaning was incomplete . Keep milking vacuum around 38-40 kPa, wait about 90 seconds after prep before attaching clusters, and run regular pulsator and filter checks .

  • Use objective triggers and isolate risk: Milk conductivity above 600 µS or somatic cell count above 400,000 were cited as warning levels for infection . One cow with very high SCC can degrade the entire tank, so mastitic cows’ milk should be handled separately . Nutrition and immunity also matter; vitamin/mineral balance—especially vitamin E—and vaccination were both flagged as preventive supports .

  • Treat E. coli cases conservatively unless diagnostics say otherwise: The described approach emphasized manual emptying of the udder and supportive anti-inflammatory treatment, with antibiotics chosen only after culture and antibiogram rather than used routinely .

  • If testing molasses, follow the mixing order: The cited dairy trial added about 1 kg/cow/day, after concentrates and before silage/maize, specifically to improve intake .

Livestock

  • For newly weaned pigs, the first 48 hours are decisive: Have barn temperature, ventilation, and diet ready before arrival, review health documents and expected pig weights, and spend the first two days getting pigs to water and mat-fed feed multiple times per day . If incoming pigs are smaller than expected, the wrong starter feed can set back the whole turn .

  • Treat grow-finish biosecurity as a profit center: The performance gap is large: top-decile wean-to-finish closeouts run near 3% mortality versus about 6% average and 13% for the bottom decile . Producers tied better results to basic discipline: do not move medication or tools between sites, require showers for visitors, and avoid unsupervised third-party load crews where possible . Better biosecurity was linked to lower mortality, better ADG and feed conversion, and lower medication cost .

Input Markets

  • Fertilizer availability is now a logistics problem as much as a price problem: With Hormuz physically blocked, the market is losing both finished nutrients and sulfur feedstock . Analysts said this is a different shock from 2022 because production is being interrupted at the source, not merely rerouted around sanctions, and each closed day destroys supply that cannot be fully recovered later .

  • Brazilian diesel is moving from expensive to scarce: In Rio Grande do Sul, producers reported diesel above R$8/liter and fragmented supply during harvest . Banco do Brasil is evaluating emergency credit lines and more flexible repayment terms for affected producers in regions such as Rio Grande do Sul and Paraná, as rural loan delinquencies continue to rise .

  • Biological inputs keep scaling in Brazil: Treated area reached a record 194 million hectares. Biofungicides grew to R$1.4 billion, inoculants were present on 77 million hectares—about 40% of treated area—and bio-nematicide area expanded by 16 million hectares, or about 60%, between 2024 and 2025 . For a country that still depends heavily on imported fertilizer, that makes biologicals a meaningful strategic complement rather than a niche product .

Forward Outlook

  • Treat March acres as a baseline, not an endpoint: USDA and market analysts both stressed that March 1 intentions can still change materially by June, and USDA’s first 2026-27 WASDE balance sheets arrive on May 12.

  • Corn may struggle to buy many more acres without a stronger rally: One market view said it would likely take something like $4.90-$5.00 corn to pull in meaningfully more acreage, given costs above $1,000/acre and persistent fertilizer risk .

  • Weather risk is rising on both wheat and Brazilian harvest logistics: Forecasts show upcoming rains missing much of U.S. hard red winter wheat country, while parts of the southwestern Plains remain dry enough to threaten yield if the next two weeks disappoint . In Brazil, Mato Grosso do Sul and Paraná have workable harvest windows in the near term, but Tocantins, Maranhão, and parts of the South remain vulnerable to rain-related delays .

  • If Hormuz stays blocked, expect more price support but not necessarily better farm margins: Analysts contrasted the current setup with 2022—fertilizer and fuel costs can keep rising, and crop prices may rise with them, but the revenue lift may still be smaller than the cost squeeze . Australia is also emerging as a secondary test case, with one market view calling for acreage there to fall about 6% as fertilizer availability and cost tighten .

  • For Brazil’s safrinha corn, planting date remains a high-value lever: Agronomic data presented at a John Deere event emphasized that each day earlier in the Cerrado second-crop planting window can raise corn productivity, increasing the value of faster and more precise operations immediately after soybean harvest .

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Claude Code’s Leak Turns Into a Blueprint for Better Coding Agents
Apr 1
7 min read
131 docs
Harrison Chase
Salvatore Sanfilippo
Kevin Hou
+18
The strongest signal today is convergence: the best coding-agent systems keep rediscovering the same primitives—filesystem-backed memory, parallel subagents, compaction, permissions, and artifact-based review. Also inside: concrete workflows from Redis, DeepAgents, Antigravity, and AI-native OSS maintenance at scale.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

The Claude Code leak mattered because it turned a black-box harness into a public design manual. Across Matthew Berman’s teardown and Theo’s local build, the same primitives keep showing up: .claude.md injected every turn, parallel subagents sharing prompt cache, aggressive compaction, preconfigured permissions, hooks, and resumable sessions .

More interesting: LangChain’s DeepAgents and Google DeepMind’s Antigravity are independently converging on the same architecture—files as the core primitive, context-isolated subagents, artifact-based monitoring, and UI surfaces for parallel agent control rather than only a command line or conversation stream .

That convergence is the real takeaway for builders .

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Claude Code, now inspectable. The leak exposed roughly 2,300 files and nearly half a million lines; a Python port is already running locally, with Berman noting the harness still pairs best with the Claude family of models .
  • What the leak actually taught. Claude Code uses CLAUDE.md as a per-turn instruction layer, 66 built-in tools split into concurrent read-only vs serialized mutating ops, three subagent execution models, five compaction strategies, permission modes including auto, hooks, and resumable or forkable sessions .
  • DeepAgents + Arcade = open agent harness stack. DeepAgents packages file tools, planning, context-isolated subagents, skills, pluggable file backends, and auto-compaction; Arcade layers delegated per-user auth, secrets, RBAC, enterprise SSO, an MCP gateway, and 8,000+ tools on top . Agent Builder exposes this as a no-code chat UI, and Harrison Chase says he now checks his email assistant instead of email directly .
  • Antigravity’s product bet. Kevin Hou and Varun Mohan describe Google DeepMind’s Antigravity as an agent-first editor where full codebase migrations without human intervention are now within reach, Agent Manager orchestrates many agents in parallel, and users inspect artifacts/documents instead of staring at chat logs .
  • New releases worth a glance. Claw beta v2026.3.31-beta.1 ships reliability and security improvements plus a new task system for more reliable subagents and crons . CodexBar beta v0.20.0-beta.1 adds experimental multi-account support for Codex . claude.ai/code now supports /web-setup to reuse local GitHub credentials on the web .
  • Codex is widening its surface area. OpenAI’s new Codex Plugins put Alchemy inside Codex for one-prompt crypto dashboards and related onchain apps . Separately, Niels Rogge says coding agents crossed a threshold in Dec 2025 where they began succeeding at porting entire models, and his Codex writeup covers porting VidEoMT into Transformers plus best practices for async architecture work .

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Claude Code operating recipe

    1. Put architecture, standards, hotspots, and team taste in .claude.md; it is loaded on every turn .
    2. Configure permissions up front in settings.json; Berman recommends auto over bypass / dangerously-skip so the model handles routine safe actions but still stops on risky ones .
    3. Use /compact before the tool does it for you. Compaction is lossy, large tool outputs already spill to disk, and session memory extracts key state to files .
    4. Resume sessions instead of starting fresh, and split read-heavy work across subagents or worktrees that share prompt cache .
  • Design the harness around files, not chat

    1. Give agents real file ops plus a persistent workspace; Harrison Chase and Sam Partee argue this is why coding agents are the foundation for general-purpose agents .
    2. Treat agent definitions as files like agent.md, skills, and mcp.json, and keep large tool outputs in files instead of bloating context .
    3. Prefer simple primitives like text and files over bespoke workflow tools when possible .
    4. Default writes to human-in-the-loop; DeepAgents and Arcade both frame write actions, verifiers, and step-up auth as harness-layer responsibilities .
  • Make your codebase agent-legible

    1. Add tests and invariants so the agent knows what must remain true after a change .
    2. Break work into atomic chunks or PR-sized tasks instead of 3,000-line asks .
    3. If the agent cannot debug or extend the code without hand-holding, treat that as a codebase warning sign, not just a model failure .
    4. Review agent-produced artifacts and documents, not just token streams .
  • High-assurance coding loop for serious systems

    1. Start with a real spec; Salvatore Sanfilippo spent a month writing an MD spec before generating code for a new Redis data type .
    2. Generate and review in small sections, then refactor with alternating human and LLM passes .
    3. Expect strength on complex local functions, but watch for whole-system conceptual errors when the full codebase is not in context .
    4. Feed failures back into a trace loop: enrich traces with evals and human feedback, turn recurring failures into test cases, validate fixes, repeat. LangChain’s guide is the cleanest short version of this pattern .
  • AI-native maintenance and security

    1. Auto-patrol easy wins on a schedule; Yegge handles docs, small fixes, bot upgrades, and other easy PRs every 2 hours .
    2. For promising-but-broken PRs, prefer fix-merge over endless request-changes; his workflow includes merge, merge-fix, fix-merge, cherry-pick, split-merge, reimplement, retire, and reject .
    3. Keep a generalist review bot running on top of specialized scanners. Devin Review caught the axios npm attack for customers within about an hour / 45 minutes after publish, while Socket says it detected the same issue in ~6 minutes .
  • Use agents for bounded search problems

    1. Predrag Gruevski’s Codex prompt was simple: get a JPEG from ~400KB to under 200KB without resizing or visible quality loss .
    2. Codex responded by setting up perceptual quality assessment, trying a few hundred flag combinations, and returning a 199KB file that looked substantially identical .
    3. Good template: if success can be scored, let the agent brute-force the search space .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Harrison Chase + Sam Partee — one of the best current architecture talks on turning coding-agent primitives into general-purpose agents, from builders actively shipping LangChain and Arcade into real enterprise environments .
  • Steve Yegge — one of the few people publishing hard ops numbers for AI-native OSS maintenance: ~50 AI-generated PRs/day, median 15-hour resolution, ~88% merge rate, and 15–20 hours/week of maintainer effort .

“help contributors get to the finish line”

  • Salvatore Sanfilippo — Redis creator, using LLMs on production Redis code with a much stricter process than vibe coding. His key caveat: frontier models beat most humans on code quality, but still lag super-experts and can miss system-level issues .
  • Niels Rogge — a firsthand, production-level Codex account from a Transformers contributor porting VidEoMT into the library. Blog: huggingface.co/blog/nielsr/contributing-to-transformers-with-codex.
  • Kent C. Dodds — useful counterweight to tool obsession. His point: AI makes spikes and experiments cheaper, so the scarcer skill is still user empathy and problem clarity .

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 9:20–11:30 — Claude Code compaction modes. Best short breakdown of micro compaction, context collapse, session memory, and why to call /compact proactively before auto-compaction drops context you care about .
  • 6:28–7:36 — DeepAgents’ file-system substrate. Harrison Chase explains the pluggable file backend idea cleanly: agents think in files even when the actual storage is a DB or remote sandbox .
  • 19:10–20:38 — A hardware founder uses Claude Code to build AWS telemetry. Sam D’Amico’s segment is worth the time because it is not an AI-tool demo guy; it is a practitioner using Sonnet + Claude Code + Cursor to ship infrastructure he had never built before .

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Beads20k stars, 5 months old. Yegge says it remains the durable substrate of the MEOW stack, with work decomposed into version-controlled, SQL-queryable orchestration steps via Dolt .
  • Gas Town13k stars, 3 months old. Community signal: 1,000+ contributors, 4k+ PRs, 2,300+ merged, 15k commits, and nearly 2,000 users in the Gas Town Hall Discord.
  • Gas City — went alpha last week, with general availability planned later in April. It is a ground-up rewrite and near-superset of Gas Town, with Gas Town itself becoming a declarative pack inside a broader orchestrator-builder .
  • Claw v2026.3.31-beta.1 — small but relevant release if you track open coding-agent infrastructure: reliability and security improvements plus a new task system for subagents and crons .
  • CodexBar v0.20.0-beta.1 — experimental multi-account support for Codex; small feature, real usefulness if you juggle multiple accounts or org contexts .

Editorial take: the durable edge right now is boring infrastructure around the model — files, tests, traces, permissions, review bots, and artifact UIs — not another clever prompt.

OpenAI’s $122B Raise, Anthropic’s Leak, and a Benchmark Reset for Multimodal AI
Apr 1
9 min read
687 docs
Chaofan Shou
Xiuyu Li
Artificial Analysis
+44
This brief covers OpenAI’s massive financing and platform push, the Claude Code leak and what it revealed about proactive agents, Stanford’s challenge to multimodal benchmarks, and key launches across video, spreadsheets, and enterprise copilots.

Top Stories

Why it matters: This cycle was defined by capital concentration, a rare agent-code leak, a challenge to multimodal benchmark validity, and stronger evidence that useful AI can run much closer to the edge.

OpenAI paired massive financing with a broader product ambition

OpenAI said it closed its latest funding round with $122 billion in committed capital at an $852B post-money valuation. The company said the funding gives it resources to lead at scale and expand AI's benefits by putting useful intelligence in people's hands early . Separate posts interpreting the announcement framed the next phase as consolidation of ChatGPT, Codex, browsing, and agents into a single AI superapp. Widely shared posts also cited steep commercialization progress, including $1B within a year of ChatGPT, $1B per quarter by end-2024, and $2B per month now.

Impact: OpenAI is pairing balance-sheet scale with a platform strategy, raising the competitive bar on both infrastructure and distribution.

The Claude Code leak exposed Anthropic's proactive-agent design

Multiple posts said Claude Code source code leaked through an npm source map . Reviews of the leaked code described KAIROS as an always-on proactive mode behind internal feature flags, with heartbeat prompts, push notifications, file delivery, pull-request subscriptions, append-only daily logs, and nightly memory consolidation via autoDream. Posts reviewing the leak also said the code referenced unreleased Anthropic model names and variants including Mythos/Capybara, Opus 4.7, and Sonnet 4.8. Anthropic then sent DMCA requests against repositories carrying the leaked code , and an official statement on the leak was reported .

"every few seconds, KAIROS gets a heartbeat. basically a prompt that says 'anything worth doing right now?'"

Impact: The leak offered a rare view into how frontier coding agents may move from reactive copilots toward background autonomy, while also highlighting the security and IP fragility of agent products.

Stanford's MIRAGE result challenged multimodal evaluation

A widely shared summary of Stanford's MIRAGE paper, co-authored by Fei-Fei Li, said leading vision-language models still scored 70-80% on six major vision benchmarks even after images were silently removed . The same summary said a 3B text-only super-guesser trained on text from chest X-ray questions ranked #1 on held-out tests, beating VLMs and radiologists . A cleanup method called B-Clean reportedly removed 74-77% of questions from existing vision benchmarks because they did not truly test vision .

Impact: If these reported results hold up, current multimodal leaderboards may be overstating visual understanding and understating shortcut exploitation—especially in medical settings .

PrismML pushed 1-bit local models into the spotlight

PrismML emerged from stealth arguing that the next AI gains will come from intelligence density rather than only parameter count . Its 1-bit Bonsai 8B model fits in 1.15GB of memory and is described as 14x smaller, 8x faster, 5x more energy efficient, and over 10x the intelligence density of its full-precision counterparts, while remaining competitive in its class; Bonsai 8B, 4B, and 1.7B were open-sourced under Apache 2.0 . PrismML says this should enable on-device agents, real-time robotics, and offline intelligence. A follow-up post said the 1-bit Bonsai family shifts the Pareto frontier of intelligence vs. size dramatically to the left , and a demo showed Bonsai 8B running locally on an M4 Pro with much lower memory use and higher throughput than a standard 16-bit 8B model .

Impact: Small local models are starting to look less like a fallback and more like a distinct product and infrastructure strategy.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: The most interesting technical work this cycle focused on better reasoning training, longer-lived agent memory, smaller useful models, and more reliable evaluation.

  • OpenAI on Erdős problems: OpenAI researchers said an internal model found short and elegant proofs for three further open problems due to Erdős, with the paper posted on arXiv . A separate OpenAI executive post framed the broader trend as AI solving more open problems while producing more elegant proofs as models improve .
  • Token-level RL credit assignment: Qwen Pilot introduced FIPO, which uses a GAE-style Future KL signal to assign credit to individual tokens during reasoning. The claim is that, unlike GRPO, it can reinforce helpful tokens and suppress derailing ones, producing longer and more accurate chains beyond 10k tokens with strong gains on AIME24.
  • Long-term memory for agents:GAAMA proposes a hierarchical memory system that combines RAG with knowledge graphs. The reported result is 78.9% mean reward on LoCoMo-10, outperforming HippoRAG and tuned RAG baselines . The core claim is that graph-augmented retrieval plus higher-order reflections improves multi-session recall .
  • Useful small models kept improving: Liquid AI released LFM2.5-350M, a 350M-parameter model aimed at agentic loops, reliable data extraction, and tool use . It was trained on 28T tokens with scaled RL , with reported gains from LFM2-350M in instruction following (18.20 → 40.69), data extraction (11.67 → 32.45), and tool use (22.95 → 44.11) . Quantized size is under 500MB, making it usable in constrained environments .
  • GPU kernel scheduling got more automated: Modular said it built a constraint solver in Mojo that automatically derives pipeline schedules for GPU kernels, tackling the complexity of FA4 on Blackwell with 14 ops, 5 hardware units, and 28 dependency edges. The reported outcome is simpler kernels, race conditions defined away, and more portable intra-kernel composition while keeping full hardware control .
  • Benchmark methodology is getting more careful: Google Research announced a new framework for improving benchmark reproducibility by optimizing the ratio of items to human raters per item, with the goal of better capturing human disagreement in subjective tasks .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: Vendors are turning multi-model orchestration, cheaper video generation, spreadsheet workflows, and agent interfaces into products people can actually use.

  • Microsoft pushed multi-model workflows into M365 Copilot:Council lets users run multiple models on the same prompt to compare where they align and diverge . Critique is a new multi-model deep research system that Microsoft says uses multiple models together to generate better responses and reports, with a feedback loop aimed at improving factual accuracy, analytical breadth, and presentation .
  • Veo 3.1 Lite widened access to video generation: Google made Veo 3.1 Lite available in the Gemini API and Google AI Studio for rapid prototyping and high-volume generation at $0.05/sec, or half the cost of Veo 3.1 Fast . It supports text-to-video and image-to-video, 16:9 and 9:16 output, and 4s, 6s, and 8s clips . Fal.ai also put Veo 3.1 Lite live with first-last-frame-to-video and both 720p and 1080p options .
  • OpenAI expanded practical workflow surfaces:ChatGPT for Excel is now available worldwide except EU consumer plans . Separately, the GitHub plugin in the Codex app can review issues, address feedback, commit changes, and open pull requests .
  • Google AI Studio added music tooling:Music Playground, powered by Lyria 3, launched with a Composer Mode that lets users describe music, hear it, then export the result to code and build from it .
  • Agent interfaces kept broadening: Perceptron launched an MCP server that gives agents stronger vision via Isaac at lower cost than general-purpose multimodal models . In open-source tooling, a new Hermes Agent PR added computer use on a real Mac from a phone, with no sandbox and real-time control over desktop apps .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Companies are reorganizing around agents, security, and open-model infrastructure rather than treating AI as an isolated feature.

  • OpenAI broadened its infrastructure posture: A reported partnership with Amazon would build infrastructure for AI agents on AWS, signaling a wider cloud posture around deployment .
  • Microsoft formalized its OpenClaw bet: Omar Shahine said he joined Microsoft to bring OpenClaw + personal agents to Microsoft 365, with a goal of proactive workplace assistants that take on tasks end-to-end; he also said a fully integrated Teams plugin is already deployed .
  • Perplexity moved into security research: The company launched the Secure Intelligence Institute, led by Purdue's Dr. Ninghui Li, to work with top cryptography, security, and ML teams . Its first paper responds to NIST's request for information on securing autonomous agents .
  • Open-model enterprise adoption kept strengthening: Hugging Face CEO Clement Delangue said companies including Pinterest, Airbnb, Notion, Cursor, and Intercom are finding it better, cheaper, faster to use and train open models in-house for many tasks . Hugging Face also released TRL v1 with 75+ post-training methods including SFT, DPO, GRPO, and async RL .
  • QodoAI raised more capital for AI coding infrastructure: QodoAI announced a $70M raise, with the company arguing that software development has fundamentally changed but that enterprise-grade transformation is still early .
  • Gemma's ecosystem scale kept growing: Two years after launch, Google's Gemma family of open models reached 400M downloads and 100,000 variants.

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: Formal regulation remains uneven, but the policy surface is expanding through safety partnerships, legislative proposals, legal enforcement, and geopolitical risk.

  • Australia and Anthropic signed a safety MOU: Anthropic said it signed an MOU with the Australian Government to collaborate on AI safety research and support Australia's National AI Plan.
  • US debate over AI rules intensified: Sen. Bernie Sanders said 74% of Americans believe the government is not doing enough to regulate AI and pointed to his proposed moratorium bill as a way to address AI risks and broaden who benefits . Separately, Andrew Ng said he supports the White House's proposed national AI legislative framework with federal preemption to avoid a patchwork of state-level restrictions .
  • Anthropic's leak response turned legal: After the Claude Code leak, Anthropic sent DMCA requests to shut down repositories hosting the source code .
  • Geopolitical risk to AI infrastructure rose: A cited post reported that the IRGC accused American AI companies of being 'the primary element in designing and tracking assassination targets' and threatened to treat them as 'legitimate targets' . Another post interpreted that as a threat to data centers .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These smaller signals help track where capability, adoption, and risk are moving next.

  • KAT-Coder-Pro V2 reached 44 on the Artificial Analysis Intelligence Index, matching Claude Sonnet 4.6 among non-reasoning models. Reported strengths were 49% on Terminal-Bench Hard, about 109 output tokens/sec, and $73 benchmark cost; reported weaknesses were long-context reasoning and knowledge regressions versus V1 .
  • IBM Granite 4.0-3B-Vision launched as a document-focused VLM with state-of-the-art performance for its size on tables and charts, compatibility with Transformers and vLLM, and a free license .
  • Qdrant Agent Skills positions vector search as structured, composable retrieval for agents. Qdrant's reported comparison showed 96% vs 65% pass rate, 1.8x faster execution, 13% fewer tokens, and 3x more consistency with Skills enabled .
  • OpenRouter's Model Fusion combines outputs from multiple models into one answer; OpenRouter said every Deep Research agent preferred the fused response over its own in testing, and the feature does not require a subscription .
  • LangChain added more operational guidance for teams putting agents into production, including a free course on monitoring production agents and a trace-centered agent improvement loop guide built around costs, latency, evals, prompt injection, and PII leakage .
  • Arena rankings kept shifting:Claude Opus 4.6 stayed on top of Text Arena, while Gemini-3.1 Pro, GPT-5.4 High, and Grok-4.20 (Reasoning) entered the top 10 . Grok-4.20 also landed #3 in Medicine & Healthcare and #6 across Expert Prompts, Math, and Legal & Government slices .
  • Security risk in the AI developer stack stayed elevated: A security roundup said TeamPCP poisoned tools including LiteLLM, the axios npm incident gave attackers remote control on affected machines, and AI-software pace may be amplifying classic supply-chain failures and human error .
Google’s Crypto-Quantum Paper Leads a Resource List on Mastery Learning and Tolkien
Apr 1
4 min read
178 docs
Chamath Palihapitiya
Palmer Luckey
Shane Parrish
+4
Chamath Palihapitiya's endorsement of a Google Research paper on crypto quantum risk is the clearest actionable recommendation in today's set. The rest of the list clusters around mastery-learning resources and classic books that founders are using to think about action, defense, and hidden systems of protection.

Most compelling recommendation

Today's clearest high-signal pick is the Google Research paper Chamath Palihapitiya called "quite reasonable." It stands out because he paired the recommendation with a concrete threat model and a concrete ask: if AGI/ASI arrives in the semi-near future, crypto leaders should organize a conclusive quantum-resistant roadmap within the next few years .

Safeguarding Cryptocurrency by Disclosing Quantum Vulnerabilities Responsibly

  • Content type: Research paper / blog post
  • Author/creator: Google Research
  • Link/URL:research.google/blog/safeguarding-cryptocurrency-by-disclosing-quantum-vulnerabilities-responsibly/
  • Who recommended it: Chamath Palihapitiya
  • Key takeaway: He said the paper raises important technical questions. In his framing, sufficiently capable AI would make cracking a crypto project an obvious honeypot, so the industry should treat quantum resistance as a near-term coordination problem
  • Why it matters: This is not a vague endorsement. Chamath said he had already raised the issue previously, which makes the recommendation look like a sustained concern rather than a one-off share

A dense cluster on mastery learning

The education recommendations were unusually specific. Joe Limont pointed to tools built around mastery and explicit time-to-mastery, while Shane Parrish added that watching his kids use Prodigy made him less skeptical of edtech's ability to improve both math skills and motivation .

Math Academy

  • Content type: Learning app + downloadable book
  • Author/creator: Math Academy; Justin is named in the source material as the author of the book
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Joe Limont, in the Shane Parrish interview
  • Key takeaway: He described it as a great math app, said it comes with a 500-page downloadable book on learning science, and highlighted that it publishes how many hours it takes to master material, using examples like 28 hours and 22 hours for elementary subject levels
  • Why it matters: The recommendation is unusually concrete: it combines pedagogy, curriculum design, and explicit time-to-mastery estimates in one system

Physics Graph

  • Content type: Learning app
  • Author/creator: Physics Graph
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Joe Limont, in the Shane Parrish interview
  • Key takeaway: He described it as the physics version of Math Academy and his choice for high school physics, especially the algebra-based AP track
  • Why it matters: It suggests the same mastery-learning approach is spreading from math into physics

Bloom's 2 Sigma paper

  • Content type: Paper
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Discussed favorably in the Shane Parrish interview
  • Key takeaway: The paper is described as showing that mastery-based tutoring with a human tutor produced two-sigma better performance, while also underscoring how hard it is to scale human tutoring and enforced mastery
  • Why it matters: It gives the theoretical benchmark sitting behind the mastery-learning tools recommended in the same conversation

Literary frameworks founders are reaching for

Notes from Underground

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Fyodor Dostoevsky
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen, via a reply endorsing a post about the book
  • Key takeaway: The framing he amplified contrasts the decisive "man of action" with the "man of thought," who becomes trapped by self-consciousness and overthinking
  • Why it matters: It is a compact lens on the cost of analysis paralysis

The Lord of the Rings

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: J.R.R. Tolkien
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
  • Who recommended it: Palmer Luckey
  • Key takeaway: Luckey argues Tolkien hated war but still believed some wars had to be fought. He uses C.S. Lewis's reading of the Shire as a "local and temporary accident" to explain how protected societies forget the powers shielding them
  • Why it matters: He treats Tolkien as a worldview resource for thinking about evil, deterrence, and the gap between frontline experience and rear-area comfort

"The terrifying discovery that the humdrum happiness of the Shire, which they had taken for granted as something normal, is in reality a sort of local and temporary accident, that its existence depends on being protected by powers which the hobbits forget, against powers which the hobbits dare not imagine."

Luckey's Tolkien fandom is not superficial; in the same conversation he also referenced The Silmarillion when discussing the Elvish roots of "Anduril" .

Security Strains the AI Stack as OpenAI Closes $122B Round
Apr 1
4 min read
220 docs
OpenAI
Scott Wu
swyx
+9
Today's digest centers on an unusually security-heavy news cycle, alongside OpenAI's huge funding round, new efficiency pushes in open and edge AI, and signs that power and policy are becoming core parts of the AI story.

What stood out today

A lot happened, but two storylines carried the day: the AI software stack showed real security fragility, and the industry's capital and infrastructure ambitions kept getting bigger.

Security incidents exposed how fragile the AI software stack still is

The axios npm compromise was the sharpest example. Feross reported that axios@1.14.1 began pulling a newly created package, plain-crypto-js@4.2.1, which Socket classified as malware; the package deobfuscated payloads at runtime, loaded fs, os, and execSync, executed shell commands, staged files in temp and ProgramData directories, and deleted evidence afterward . Because axios sees 100M+ weekly downloads, the potential blast radius was large .

The response time was notable too: Socket said it detected the issue within ~6 minutes of publication, while Cognition said Devin Review alerted some customers 45 minutes after the attack and 1.5 hours before the public announcement . Sarah Guo broadened the frame, pointing to the TeamPCP compromise of the Trivy build system, poisoned LiteLLM, breaches at Mercor and Cisco, Anthropic's accidental exposure of Claude Code internals and documents on unreleased model "mythos" (but not model weights), and Railway exposure as part of a "very bad week in security" for the AI ecosystem .

"These aren’t failures of negligence, but what happens when systems/processes work as designed and still can’t be explained end to end. This is an industry-wide, structural problem."

Why it matters: The notes point to a familiar but sharper pattern: classic supply-chain failures are colliding with AI-accelerated software development, and AI-based defense is showing up as part of the response .

OpenAI locked in extraordinary scale

OpenAI said it closed its latest funding round with $122 billion in committed capital at an $852B post-money valuation. The company said the capital gives it resources to "lead at scale" and supports its strategy of putting useful intelligence in people's hands early so access can compound globally .

Why it matters: This was one of the clearest capital signals in today's notes, and OpenAI is explicitly framing the round around scale and wider access .

Efficiency and open tooling kept pushing AI closer to local and in-house deployment

PrismML emerged from stealth with a thesis centered on intelligence density rather than sheer parameter count, and launched 1-bit Bonsai 8B, a 1.15 GB model it says delivers over 10x the intelligence density of full-precision counterparts while being 14x smaller, 8x faster, and 5x more energy efficient on edge hardware; it also open-sourced Bonsai 8B, 4B, and 1.7B under Apache 2.0 . The company argues this changes the design space for on-device agents, real-time robotics, and offline intelligence.

On the tooling side, Hugging Face released TRL v1, a post-training library with 75+ methods including SFT, DPO, GRPO, and async RL . Clement Delangue also said companies including Pinterest, Airbnb, Notion, Cursor, and Intercom are publicly finding it better, cheaper, and faster to use and train open models themselves for many tasks rather than rely on APIs, while Gemma reached 400M downloads and 100,000 variants two years after launch .

Why it matters: The shift here is not just another open release; it's a deeper stack for training, compressing, and deploying models outside the default API path .

AI infrastructure is increasingly being designed around power, not just chips

NVIDIA and Emerald AI unveiled a model for treating AI factories as flexible grid assets rather than static loads, combining NVIDIA's Vera Rubin DSX reference design with Emerald's Conductor platform so AI factories can generate tokens while dynamically responding to grid conditions . Energy companies including AES, Constellation, Invenergy, NextEra Energy, Nscale, and Vistra are collaborating on generation strategies, including hybrid projects that use co-located power .

Jensen Huang framed the bigger arc in efficiency terms, saying NVIDIA is pushing extreme co-design to improve tokens per second per watt by orders of magnitude each year; the blog says tokens generated within the same power budget have increased by more than 1 million times from Kepler in 2012 to Vera Rubin this year .

Why it matters: Power planning is moving from background constraint to part of AI system design itself .

Governance signals continued to favor coordination over fragmentation

Anthropic said it signed an MOU with the Australian Government to collaborate on AI safety research and support Australia's National AI Plan. In the U.S., Andrew Ng said he supports the White House's proposed national legislative framework for AI, especially its federal preemption mechanism to prevent a patchwork of state rules that could limit AI development while still preserving state authority over zoning, consumer protection, and their own use of AI .

Why it matters: The common thread is a push toward more coordinated national approaches, even if the U.S. framework remains a proposal for now .

Beyond Accuracy, Better AI Workflows, and a Sharper PM Job Search
Apr 1
8 min read
59 docs
Product Management
Hiten Shah
Product Management
+6
This issue centers on practical PM frameworks: a four-part scorecard for GenAI products, a simple screen for deciding what to automate, and concrete playbooks for Claude workflows, support-to-docs loops, and narrative clarity. It also includes Amazon case metrics, growth ideas from QR codes, and sharper job-search tactics for PMs.

Big Ideas

1) Evaluate GenAI products beyond accuracy

Accuracy is a trap.

Accuracy describes model performance, but not whether users trust the product, find it useful, return to it, or whether it creates business value . The framework described in the Product School session evaluates GenAI products across trust, usefulness, adoption, and business impact. That matters because a product can be reliable but useless, useful but risky, or well-used but economically unsustainable .

How to apply

  • Make each AI feature prove itself on all four dimensions, not just model quality
  • Give each dimension concrete metrics, owners, and review cadences before launch

2) Use a two-question screen before automating PM work

Sachin Rekhi’s heuristic is simple: ask whether a workflow is worth building and possible to build with AI . It is worth building when AI has a clear advantage, such as synthesizing customer interviews faster and more comprehensively, or when the task is frequent and time-consuming, such as weekly status updates . It is possible to build when AI can access the right context, the work can be broken into discrete steps, and human judgment is limited enough that the workflow will not stall .

How to apply

  • Start with recurring PM tasks where AI already outperforms manual effort on speed or coverage
  • Reject automations that depend on hidden context or undefined judgment calls

3) QR codes are becoming a measurable offline growth channel

QR codes can connect packaging, receipts, events, and out-of-home placements to product experiences with very little friction . The more interesting shift is measurement: dynamic tools such as ME-QR let teams update links without reprinting, track sources, segment traffic, and run experiments, effectively bringing performance-style analytics into offline surfaces . The recurring failure modes are basic but important: no clear reason to scan, weak mobile UX, and no tracking .

How to apply

  • Use QR only when it clearly makes a user job easier; onboarding, retention, support, referrals, and promos are the cited use cases
  • Treat offline scans like any other channel: instrument source, segment traffic, and test destinations

Tactical Playbook

1) Roll out a GenAI evaluation system in five steps

  1. Week 1: define the top three metrics per dimension, set baselines, and choose realistic and stretch targets
  2. Weeks 2-4: instrument the product, set up dashboards, establish human evaluation, and build feedback collection into the experience
  3. Weeks 5-8: run a pilot with 50-200 users, gather quantitative and qualitative data, and iterate on the gaps
  4. Post-launch: monitor trust and safety daily, engagement weekly, business impact monthly, and review the product comprehensively each quarter
  5. Keep iterating: use A/B tests, user feedback, and updated evaluation criteria as the product changes

Why it matters: the speaker’s lesson is that pilot data should drive launch decisions, and multi-dimensional evaluation surfaces issues that accuracy alone misses .

2) Add learning, memory, and evaluation to Claude with three CLAUDE.md blocks

The Product Compass article proposes three blocks that make Claude more useful for product work: a Knowledge Architecture, a Decision Journal, and a Quality Gate.

How to apply

  1. Before each task, review domain rules and hypotheses; after each task, store learnings in /knowledge/{domain}/knowledge.md, /hypotheses.md, and /rules.md, and maintain a /knowledge/INDEX.md
  2. Promote a hypothesis to a rule only after 3+ confirmations, and demote it if new data contradicts it
  3. Before major choices, search prior decisions; if none exists, log the decision, context, alternatives, reasoning, trade-offs, and any superseded choice in /decisions/YYYY-MM-DD-{topic}.md
  4. Add explicit evaluation criteria outside the generation step, because agents tend to praise their own work even when quality is mediocre

Why it matters: after one month, the author reports Claude was automatically applying 24 project-specific rules, and the decisions with three written alternatives were right 80% of the time .

3) Turn repeated support questions into documentation work every week

A simple Friday workflow from Lenny’s Newsletter: review resolved support tickets, and if a question appeared 3+ times that week, flag it as a docs or FAQ candidate, create a Linear issue assigned to @agent, and include the standard answer as the starting point .

Why it matters: it converts recurring support questions into docs or FAQ candidates and ready-to-assign issues .

How to apply

  • Set a weekly review cadence, not an ad hoc one
  • Use the recurrence threshold to reduce noise and focus only on patterns
  • Include the existing answer so documentation starts from something already working in support

4) Pressure-test your product story in 20 minutes

Open a blank document and write down your company’s story in 200 words. What job are customers hiring you to do? Why does your approach work when others fail?

Why it matters: Hiten Shah frames this as a basic clarity test, and says most founders cannot do it in the allotted time .

How to apply

  • Limit yourself to 200 words and 20 minutes
  • Answer only two questions: the customer job and why your approach works better than alternatives
  • Use the exercise as a quick internal clarity check

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Amazon’s AI assistant companion: trust features and utility metrics moved together

In the AI assistant example, every response included source attribution, some responses included confidence scores, and human evaluation kept the hallucination rate below 2%. On usefulness and adoption, the related prompt library drove 40% faster prompt creation, about 85% thumbs-up, 3x higher engagement for manager-specific prompts, 2x retention for users with community prompt access, and 85%+ returning users within a few months .

It’s a game changer for my workflow and results.

Key takeaway: trust mechanisms such as source attribution are more valuable when they are paired with clear evidence that the product saves time and keeps users coming back .

2) Amazon’s B2B purchase guardrails: business impact was measurable quickly

The purchase guardrails example generated several millions in annualized revenue, served thousands of business customers, reduced manual budget tracking by 80%+, and reached positive ROI within 3 months.

Key takeaway: when an AI product is tied directly to completing a workflow faster and with less manual tracking, PMs can measure business impact in revenue, productivity, and ROI rather than relying on model-centric metrics alone .

3) A structured Claude workspace improved through use

The Product Compass author says that after a month, Claude had generated and was automatically applying 24 project-specific rules extracted from patterns across dozens of sessions . The same write-up says the decisions the author felt most confident about had the worst hit rate, while decisions where three alternatives were written down were right 80% of the time .

Key takeaway: persistent knowledge capture and explicit alternatives can beat confidence-based decision-making .

Career Corner

1) PM job search is shifting from volume to precision

Aakash Gupta argues that mass-applying with AI does not work. His recommendation is to apply to fewer, surgically targeted roles, stack referrals before submitting, and run the search in about 20-30 minutes a day instead of three hours .

How to apply

  • Build the referral path before the application: Gupta says cold application callback rates are around 2-4%, while warm intros are 5x higher, and every candidate he coached into a top-company offer had a referral on file before the resume went in
  • Send 25 personalized connection requests per week, rotate across target companies, follow up on days 3, 7, and 14, and ask for the referral only after context is established

2) Tailored resumes only help if they stay truthful

Gupta’s warning on AI resumes is blunt: many tools either invent experience or produce generic keyword swaps, and invented experience can backfire when interviewers check it . His recommended standard is a JD-specific resume built only from real experience .

How to apply

  • Restructure the resume around the specific job description, but only with evidence you can defend in interview
  • Treat fabrication as a risk, not a shortcut

3) Specific work products and interview prep still create separation

Gupta highlights a 90-minute work product: a one-pager analyzing the company’s product plus a working prototype of the recommendation . He also emphasizes company-specific prep, including interview formats, reported questions, and screening signals across 250 companies, plus mock interviews that identify weak areas over time . On the back end, he recommends negotiation research and counter-offer drafts because the compensation impact can be meaningful .

How to apply

  • Use a work product when a standard application is not creating enough signal, but make it specific enough that it could only have been written for that company
  • Build interview prep around the target company’s actual format and questions, not a generic PM script

Tools & Resources

1) The CLAUDE.md blocks from Product Compass

What it is: a reusable set of three blocks for learning across sessions, logging decisions, and evaluating output quality .

Use it for: ongoing product domains where patterns emerge slowly, teams re-debate the same choices, or AI output needs a separate quality bar .

2) Prompt patterns from Lenny’s Newsletter

What they are: ready-made automation prompts for PLG lead qualification, recurring support-to-docs conversion, and launch management .

Use them for: workflows with clear cadence and routing rules. The examples also show when specialization helps: Sage handles course operations and reminders, while Kelly checks Linear daily, starts a branch, and opens a PR for assigned dev tasks .

3) Dynamic QR tools such as ME-QR

What it is: a way to change destinations without reprinting codes, track sources, segment traffic, and run experiments from offline touchpoints .

Use it for: packaging, receipts, events, support, referrals, and promo mechanics where you want a measurable bridge from offline to product .

4) An AI prototyping checklist from r/ProductManagement

What it covers: the integration layer between LLM APIs, vector databases, and preprocessing; state and context handoffs in RAG systems; token-cost monitoring; and the practical shift toward CLIs for Claude workflows .

Use it for: early planning before a PM-led prototype or side project so the first blockers are visible before implementation starts .

USDA Acres Reset, Fertilizer Chokepoints, and Brazil’s Delayed Harvest
Apr 1
9 min read
167 docs
Arlan Suderman
农业致富经 Agriculture And Farming
Sencer Solakoglu
+6
U.S. planting intentions, a worsening fertilizer chokepoint through the Strait of Hormuz, and Brazil’s delayed soybean harvest are resetting both price direction and farm-margin expectations. This brief pairs those market signals with quantified on-farm innovations and practical operating guidance across grains, dairy, livestock, and inputs.

Market Movers

  • United States — USDA acreage reset: USDA’s March planting intentions put corn at 95.4 million acres, down about 3.5 million from last year but above pre-report trade guesses near 94.4 million. Soybeans were reported at 84.7 million acres, up 3.5 million year over year but below pre-report guesses near 85.6 million. All wheat was 43.8 million acres, the lowest since records began in 1919. Quarterly corn stocks were just over 9 billion bushels, up 11% year over year but friendlier than some expectations, with exports and ethanol use described as strong .

  • Price reaction: Since the Strait of Hormuz closure began, one market discussion pegged wheat up about 6% and corn up about 4%, while soybeans had pulled back amid delayed U.S.-China talks after an earlier 3-5% rise . On March 31, Chicago soybeans, corn, and wheat all finished higher, with wheat up 1.85% to $6.18/bushel.

  • Fertilizer shock remains the main margin risk: The Hormuz chokepoint is physically blocking a region that accounts for about 43% of global urea exports, 27% of anhydrous ammonia, 16% of MAP/DAP phosphates, and nearly half of sulfur exports used in phosphate production . Egypt and Israel are already suspending fertilizer operations as storage fills, and analysts said 1-2 million metric tons of monthly supply can be destroyed while the route stays blocked, with little spare capacity to make it up later . U.S. direct exposure is lower—roughly 12% of urea imports and 17% of MAP/DAP—but Brazil’s 4.4 million metric tons of Gulf fertilizer imports and India’s 9.7 million metric tons mean global competition for replacement supply is intensifying .

  • Brazil — soy market stays liquid despite a big crop: Brazil is on pace for a record first quarter of roughly 23 million tons of soybean exports and 340,000 tons of imports, even with a crop above 170 million tons, because both domestic crushing demand and export demand are strong . More than 90% of imported soybeans are coming from Paraguay . Physical soy quotes on March 31 were R$124/sack in Passo Fundo and R$130-131/sack at Paranaguá, Rio Grande, and Santos ports .

  • U.S. export flow is mixed by crop: Weekly U.S. corn export inspections reached 70 million bushels, up 5.1% from the prior week and 4.1% from a year earlier, with China taking 46% of that week’s inspections . Soybean inspections fell to 22 million bushels, down 47% week over week and 28% year over year, while wheat inspections were 13 million bushels, down 21% week over week and 27% year over year . For the marketing year to date, corn shipments are up 36%, soybeans are down 27%, and wheat is up 17%.

Innovation Spotlight

  • United Kingdom — molasses as a measured milk-yield lever: On a roughly 140-cow dairy, cane molasses was added at about 1 kg/cow/day, mixed after concentrates and before silage/maize . After about two months, average milk rose from 30.6 to 32.3 liters/cow/day. The farmer put molasses cost near £300/ton; at roughly 140 kg/day, that was £42/day, and he associated the yield lift with about £88/week of added milk value .

  • United States — manure separation is becoming a fertilizer technology, not just a waste system: In swine operations, manure value was described at $3-5 per pig space, or about $20,000/year for a 4,000-head site . A separation process discussed by producers allows liquid application at about 30 gallons/acre instead of 5,000-6,000 gallons/acre, with reported yield gains of about 18 bushels. One Indiana farmer was described as willing to pay up to $1/gallon for the separated liquid under current fertilizer prices .

  • China — shade-sharing intercropping improved both yield and income: In Sichuan, farmers paired shade-loving pig-tooth konjac with climbing hanging melon. The melon canopy replaced black shade-net costs of roughly 700-800 yuan/mu, while konjac yield rose from about 3-4 tons/mu to 5 tons/mu and income moved from roughly 15,000 yuan/mu to more than 20,000 yuan/mu. On 200 mu, hanging melon seeds added more than 500,000 yuan of extra income .

Regional Developments

  • Brazil — soybean harvest remains behind schedule: Conab data put national harvest at 74.3%, 7.1 percentage points behind the same point last season . Mato Grosso is nearly finished at about 99%, but Maranhão, Santa Catarina, and Rio Grande do Sul are still below 50%, with São Paulo and Bahia running 22% and 25% behind last year, respectively . Near-term fieldwork is being helped by drier conditions in Paraná, while frequent rain in Tocantins is lifting grain moisture and delaying harvest . Forecasts also call for 70-100 mm episodes in parts of the South plus cyclone-related storm risk, hail, and stronger winds in southern and southeastern Brazil .

  • Brazil — rice margins are under pressure in Rio Grande do Sul: Harvest reached 40% of area, still about 10% behind last year . Producers reported diesel above R$8/liter—about 70% higher since harvest began—while paddy prices remain near R$60/sack and are not covering costs . The crop is projected above 7.5 million tons, but producers are holding grain and watching export channels and possible Conab PEP/PEPRO support as national rice production is expected to be about 15% lower .

  • United States — acreage shifts are spreading beyond the Corn Belt: In the Mississippi Delta, some customers are cutting cotton acres by about 50% from 2024 levels and moving to corn and grain sorghum because fertilizer and fuel prices have made cotton less attractive . About 20% of local corn may need replanting after a freeze . Farther west, a Colorado farmer said nearly 75% of his acres could go prevent-plant because irrigation allotments amount to only about 6% of normal, or 2-3 days of water for the season .

  • Brazil — financing rules are becoming a separate production risk: From April 1, a new rural-credit rule uses INPE PRODES satellite data to restrict financing where the system flags post-cutoff deforestation . Legal and producer groups said PRODES’ 20-30 meter resolution can confuse legal clearing, invasive-species removal, or pasture cleaning with illegal deforestation, while most CAR registrations still have not been validated . The FPA and CNA are seeking a postponement, warning of higher bank costs, legal uncertainty, and financing disruption in grain-heavy areas of the Legal Amazon such as Mato Grosso and Pará .

Best Practices

Grains and Soil

  • Manage by zone, not field average: Soil variability includes soil type, texture, nutrient levels, and topsoil depth, even where fields look uniform . The practical response is grid or zone soil testing focused on controllable nutrients, then variable-rate seeding and fertilizer by field zone to improve return on input dollars and environmental efficiency .

  • Validate prescriptions with planting and yield data: John Deere’s Operation Center workflow shows a useful standard for growers using precision systems: track planter performance, seed and fertilizer rate, singulation, and soil-contact time, then compare applied versus target fertilizer maps against yield maps to see whether variable-rate zones are paying .

Dairy

  • Tighten mastitis prevention at the parlor: The cited protocol starts with thorough teat cleaning using side and bottom brushes, then a white-cloth check—if a brown spot remains, cleaning was incomplete . Keep milking vacuum around 38-40 kPa, wait about 90 seconds after prep before attaching clusters, and run regular pulsator and filter checks .

  • Use objective triggers and isolate risk: Milk conductivity above 600 µS or somatic cell count above 400,000 were cited as warning levels for infection . One cow with very high SCC can degrade the entire tank, so mastitic cows’ milk should be handled separately . Nutrition and immunity also matter; vitamin/mineral balance—especially vitamin E—and vaccination were both flagged as preventive supports .

  • Treat E. coli cases conservatively unless diagnostics say otherwise: The described approach emphasized manual emptying of the udder and supportive anti-inflammatory treatment, with antibiotics chosen only after culture and antibiogram rather than used routinely .

  • If testing molasses, follow the mixing order: The cited dairy trial added about 1 kg/cow/day, after concentrates and before silage/maize, specifically to improve intake .

Livestock

  • For newly weaned pigs, the first 48 hours are decisive: Have barn temperature, ventilation, and diet ready before arrival, review health documents and expected pig weights, and spend the first two days getting pigs to water and mat-fed feed multiple times per day . If incoming pigs are smaller than expected, the wrong starter feed can set back the whole turn .

  • Treat grow-finish biosecurity as a profit center: The performance gap is large: top-decile wean-to-finish closeouts run near 3% mortality versus about 6% average and 13% for the bottom decile . Producers tied better results to basic discipline: do not move medication or tools between sites, require showers for visitors, and avoid unsupervised third-party load crews where possible . Better biosecurity was linked to lower mortality, better ADG and feed conversion, and lower medication cost .

Input Markets

  • Fertilizer availability is now a logistics problem as much as a price problem: With Hormuz physically blocked, the market is losing both finished nutrients and sulfur feedstock . Analysts said this is a different shock from 2022 because production is being interrupted at the source, not merely rerouted around sanctions, and each closed day destroys supply that cannot be fully recovered later .

  • Brazilian diesel is moving from expensive to scarce: In Rio Grande do Sul, producers reported diesel above R$8/liter and fragmented supply during harvest . Banco do Brasil is evaluating emergency credit lines and more flexible repayment terms for affected producers in regions such as Rio Grande do Sul and Paraná, as rural loan delinquencies continue to rise .

  • Biological inputs keep scaling in Brazil: Treated area reached a record 194 million hectares. Biofungicides grew to R$1.4 billion, inoculants were present on 77 million hectares—about 40% of treated area—and bio-nematicide area expanded by 16 million hectares, or about 60%, between 2024 and 2025 . For a country that still depends heavily on imported fertilizer, that makes biologicals a meaningful strategic complement rather than a niche product .

Forward Outlook

  • Treat March acres as a baseline, not an endpoint: USDA and market analysts both stressed that March 1 intentions can still change materially by June, and USDA’s first 2026-27 WASDE balance sheets arrive on May 12.

  • Corn may struggle to buy many more acres without a stronger rally: One market view said it would likely take something like $4.90-$5.00 corn to pull in meaningfully more acreage, given costs above $1,000/acre and persistent fertilizer risk .

  • Weather risk is rising on both wheat and Brazilian harvest logistics: Forecasts show upcoming rains missing much of U.S. hard red winter wheat country, while parts of the southwestern Plains remain dry enough to threaten yield if the next two weeks disappoint . In Brazil, Mato Grosso do Sul and Paraná have workable harvest windows in the near term, but Tocantins, Maranhão, and parts of the South remain vulnerable to rain-related delays .

  • If Hormuz stays blocked, expect more price support but not necessarily better farm margins: Analysts contrasted the current setup with 2022—fertilizer and fuel costs can keep rising, and crop prices may rise with them, but the revenue lift may still be smaller than the cost squeeze . Australia is also emerging as a secondary test case, with one market view calling for acreage there to fall about 6% as fertilizer availability and cost tighten .

  • For Brazil’s safrinha corn, planting date remains a high-value lever: Agronomic data presented at a John Deere event emphasized that each day earlier in the Cerrado second-crop planting window can raise corn productivity, increasing the value of faster and more precise operations immediately after soybean harvest .

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