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Opus 4.7 Lands as Codex Expands and OpenAI Moves Into Life Sciences
Apr 17
4 min read
932 docs
OpenAI
Google DeepMind
Cursor
+17
Anthropic’s Opus 4.7 and OpenAI’s expanded Codex defined the day, while GPT-Rosalind signaled a sharper move toward domain-specific frontier models. The brief also covers Qwen’s new open model, Perplexity’s local-compute push, and a notable Pentagon AI policy development.

Top Stories

Why it matters: The biggest shift today is toward more capable work agents and more specialized frontier models.

  1. Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.7. Anthropic says it is its most capable Opus model yet, handling long-running tasks with more rigor, following instructions more precisely, and verifying its own outputs before reporting back . Pricing stays at $5 / $25 per million tokens, with availability across the API, Bedrock, Vertex AI, and Microsoft Foundry . Third-party measurements highlighted stronger coding and agentic performance, including 70% on CursorBench vs. 58% for 4.6 and 1753 on GDPval-AA at max effort . The tradeoff: Anthropic says 4.6-tuned prompts may need rework because 4.7 interprets instructions more literally, and the new tokenizer can raise token counts .

  2. OpenAI expanded Codex far beyond coding. Codex can now use apps on a Mac, open an in-app browser, generate images, remember preferences, and take on ongoing or repeatable tasks . OpenAI also added 90+ plugins, GitHub review-comment handling, and remote SSH connections to devboxes .

"Codex for (almost) everything."

This matters because OpenAI is turning Codex into a broader computer-use agent, not just a coding assistant .

  1. OpenAI launched GPT-Rosalind for life sciences. The new model is built for biology, drug discovery, and translational medicine. OpenAI says it is optimized for scientific workflows, with stronger performance in protein and chemical reasoning, genomics analysis, biochemistry knowledge, and scientific tool use. Access starts as a trusted-access research preview for qualified customers including Amgen, Moderna, the Allen Institute, and Thermo Fisher Scientific, and OpenAI is also releasing a Life Sciences plugin for Codex.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: The research signal is two-sided: open models are getting stronger, but new benchmarks still show large capability gaps.

  • Qwen3.6-35B-A3B is a new open sparse MoE model with 35B total parameters and 3B active, released under Apache 2.0 . Alibaba says it reaches agentic coding performance on par with models 10x its active size, while third-party summaries highlighted 73.4 on SWE-Bench Verified, 51.5 on Terminal-Bench 2.0, and strong vision scores despite the small active parameter count .
  • LongCoT introduced 2,500 expert-designed long-horizon reasoning problems across chemistry, math, computer science, chess, and logic . At launch, the best frontier models were still below 10% accuracy, underscoring how far long-context systems remain from robust long-horizon reasoning .
  • Google’s Auto-Diagnose shows what applied LLM tooling can look like in production: inside Google’s Critique code review system, it analyzes failure logs, summarizes relevant lines, and suggests root causes . Google reported 90.14% root-cause diagnosis accuracy on 71 real-world failures and usage across 52,635 distinct failing tests after deployment .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: New launches are increasingly about giving agents durable access to local software, media workflows, and voice interfaces.*

  • Perplexity Personal Computer integrates with the Mac app for secure orchestration across local files, browser workflows, and native apps like iMessage, Apple Mail, and Calendar. It can also run in the background on a Mac mini and be triggered from iPhone .
  • Gemini 3.1 Flash TTS landed in AI Studio, with tag-based control over vocal delivery such as pace and accent, plus a composer view for iteration and code export .
  • VOID, now live on fal.ai, brings Netflix’s video object removal model to developers, including correction of physical interactions and support for multiple objects, fast motion, and complex backgrounds.

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Big companies are now reorganizing teams, distribution, and platforms around AI-native workflows.

  • Apple is reportedly sending close to 200 Siri staffers to a multi-week coding bootcamp using AI tools such as Claude Code and Codex. The report says roughly 60 engineers stay on core development and another 60 handle evaluations and safety checks .
  • GenAI traffic is no longer a one-player market. Similarweb data shows ChatGPT at 56.72% share one month ago, Gemini at 25.46%, and Claude at 6.02%, versus 77.43%, 6.00%, and 1.40% respectively 12 months earlier .
  • Salesforce launched Headless 360, exposing Salesforce, Agentforce, and Slack as APIs, MCP, and CLI so AI agents can access workflows and data directly without the browser being the primary interface .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: Government adoption is moving from theory to contract language, and the terms matter.*

  • Reporting cited in analysis says Google is negotiating a classified Pentagon AI agreement to deploy Gemini in secure environments . The same analysis says proposed language would mirror OpenAI’s earlier Pentagon deal . Critics argue that even where red lines are stated, broad "all lawful purposes" language may leave room for wider military or surveillance use .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These smaller updates help show where momentum is building next.*

  • Stanford HAI released the 2026 AI Index, a 400+ page report covering AI performance, investment, labor, policy, and public sentiment .
  • Google DeepMind and Boston Dynamics are powering Spot with Gemini Robotics embodied reasoning models for inspection-style tasks .
  • A Cursor/UChicago study across 500 teams found developers tackled 68% more high-complexity tasks as models improved, while overall AI usage rose 44%.
  • PrismML open-sourced Ternary Bonsai, a 1.58-bit model family it says is 9x smaller than 16-bit counterparts .
The 4-Hour Workweek, Dead and Alive Players, and Systems-First AI Reads
Apr 17
3 min read
260 docs
clem 🤗
tobi lutke
Tim Ferriss
+5
Today's strongest authentic recommendations split between operator classics and AI resources focused on coordination, systems, and industry constraints. The clearest endorsement came from Brian Dean, who described using The 4-Hour Workweek as a literal playbook when he was starting from scratch.

What stood out

Only organic recommendations are included below. The strongest pattern today: the best resources were about operating systems for work—how to act, how to define the life you're building toward, how to spot truly novel companies, and how to think about AI as coordination and industry structure rather than model capability alone .

Most compelling recommendation

The 4-Hour Workweek

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Tim Ferriss
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Brian Dean, in conversation with Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Dean says the book changed what he thought was possible in 2008: while broke and living in his dad's basement, he treated it like a literal startup manual, completed the exercises before moving on, used Dreamlining, and narrowed his goal to $3K/month passive income for a Thailand backpacker lifestyle
  • Why it matters: This was the clearest proof-of-use recommendation in today's set. The endorsement came with a detailed account of implementation, not just praise

"It blew my mind."

Operator frameworks worth reopening

Ready, Fire, Aim

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Michael Masterson
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Brian Dean
  • Key takeaway: Dean recommends it to inexperienced founders because it pushes action over analysis paralysis. His test is blunt: if you finish it and still do nothing, you are probably not ready
  • Why it matters: It is a practical corrective for early founders who spend time on setup work instead of starting and learning from traction

Dead and Alive Players

  • Content type: Essay
  • Author/creator: Not specified in source material
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tobi Lütke
  • Key takeaway: Lütke uses the essay to judge companies: if an LLM could reliably predict a company's next move, it may be operating like a "dead" player; the interesting companies do something genuinely unexpected
  • Why it matters: It gives readers a compact lens for separating predictable execution from actual novelty

Systems-first AI reads

Research paper on long-horizon ML research engineering (title not specified in source material)

  • Content type: Research paper
  • Author/creator: Not specified in source material
  • Link/URL:https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.13018v1
  • Who recommended it: Sarah Guo
  • Key takeaway: Guo highlighted the paper's argument that long-horizon ML research engineering is a systems problem of coordinating specialized work over durable project state, not just a local reasoning problem
  • Why it matters: It is the cleanest single statement in today's set against the "monolithic AI" narrative and toward systems+model thinking

Stop Building Agents. Start Harnessing Goose

Dwarkesh Podcast: the Jensen Huang episode

  • Content type: Podcast / video
  • Author/creator: Dwarkesh Podcast; guest Jensen Huang
  • Link/URL: Episode link not provided in source material; the post says it is available on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify
  • Who recommended it: Clement Delangue
  • Key takeaway: Delangue strongly agreed with Huang's view that restricting AI exports would slow innovation, progress, and U.S. technology and economic leadership in pursuit of a danger that has not yet been shown to be real
  • Why it matters: The episode is framed around concrete industry questions—Nvidia supply chains, TPUs, hyperscalers, China export policy, and chip architectures—rather than generic AI commentary

Bottom line

If you only open one resource today, start with The 4-Hour Workweek for the strongest evidence that a recommendation was actually used step by step . If your focus is AI, start with Sarah Guo's paper pick, then pair it with Jack's Goose article and the Jensen Huang episode for three different angles on systems, tools, and industry constraints .

Ulysses’ Series A, Physical Intelligence’s Deployments, and New AI Infrastructure Moats
Apr 17
5 min read
535 docs
Aravind Srinivas
sarah guo
Brandon Pizzacalla
+15
A new defense-tech Series A, credible early robotics deployments, and several technical shifts reshaping AI competition stand out this cycle. The strongest read-throughs are around infrastructure concentration, hardware-specific inference economics, and a widening gap between AI-native products and incumbents shipping weak agent layers.

1) Funding & Deals

  • Ulysses — $46M Series A led by a16z American Dynamism. Ulysses is building small, autonomous underwater vehicles aimed at outperforming incumbent systems at a fraction of the cost, with the pitch tied to undersea deterrence, contested fiber-optic cables, offshore resources, and maritime chokepoints. a16z says the company has a vertically integrated manufacturing facility and is hiring engineers and operators in San Francisco. a16z writeup

  • Gecko Materials — priced seed round. Gecko Materials said its recent priced seed was led by Kitty Hawk, with Alumni Ventures and Stanford participating. The financing follows a manufacturing breakthrough that reduced production time from 48 hours to under 15 minutes for its bio-inspired dry adhesive, which is already being used on the ISS and is being pushed toward semiconductors, automotive lines, robotics, and drones.

2) Emerging Teams

  • Physical Intelligence. PI combines unusually strong robotics pedigree with early deployment evidence: the team includes former Google Robotics members Brian, Chelsea, Sergey, and Quan Vuong, plus Locky and hardware lead Adnan from Anduril. The company says it wants a model that can control any robot for any task, and it has already shown deployments with YC companies Weave and Ultra, including laundry folding on unseen items in a real laundromat and long-duration pouch packing in a live warehouse, with a working system assembled in roughly two weeks for one task.

  • Datost. YC’s launch positions Datost as an AI data analyst inside Slack that keeps a semantic layer over business definitions, CRM data, docs, and code so it can interpret questions with company context. YC says it scored 75.2% on the hardest public text-to-SQL benchmark, versus 33% for Opus 4.6, and identified founders @maceock and @jasonhywang on the launch. Launch page

  • CompanyHelm. CompanyHelm is building an open-source control plane for remote coding-agent sessions, where each session gets its own isolated environment. The workflow is explicitly assign task, let it run, then inspect results, and early user feedback says it solves the pain of browser conflicts and port collisions while enabling parallel sessions, end-to-end testing, PR-linked demos, and adversarial reviews. GitHub

3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • Anthropic’s Mythos looks like a genuine capability jump in code-security automation. Multiple summaries describe it as autonomously finding thousands of zero-day vulnerabilities across large codebases, including bugs that had remained dormant for years, without needing prompt-by-prompt steering. Anthropic withheld public release for six months and shared it with security vendors instead.

  • Physical Intelligence’s technical stack suggests a credible robotics foundation-model path. PI says its Open Cross Embodiment / RT-X work produced a generalist model that outperformed specialist policies by 50% across 10 robot platforms. It also says it can run cloud-hosted inference inside real-time control loops via chunking and pipelining, and that π0 and π0.5 were open-sourced with the same pretrained weights used internally.

  • Gemma 4 pushes open models further onto the edge. The 2B model is described as running offline on phones, in browsers, and even on an original Nintendo Switch, while the 31B version is framed as the third-best open model and competitive with models 10-20x larger. The release also matters because it moved to an Apache 2.0 license and expanded context length to 256k.

  • ResBM is a notable infrastructure paper for low-bandwidth training. Macrocosmos describes a residual encoder-decoder bottleneck across pipeline boundaries that delivers state-of-the-art 128x activation compression without significant convergence loss, positioning it as progress for decentralized or internet-grade pipeline-parallel training. Paper

4) Market Signals

  • Capital is concentrating harder at the top while AI-native winners capture outsized value creation. In Q1 2026, 73.1% of LP capital raised went to five VC firms, and $195.6B, or about 75% of VC deal value, went to five companies. Separately, 48 gen AI unicorns created more aggregate new market cap in 2025 than the other 1,100+ unicorns combined, and the Bay Area accounts for about 91% of generative AI unicorn market cap.

  • AI infrastructure moats are shifting toward hardware-specific inference economics. Gavin Baker argues true model portability is eroding as accelerator topologies and memory systems diverge, pushing frontier labs toward co-design for specific systems such as GB300 racks, Cerebras, TPUs, and Blackwell/Rubin clusters. The reported OpenAI-Cerebras arrangement — more than $20B over three years, potentially $30B, plus warrants up to 10% of Cerebras and roughly $1B of funding — is a concrete example of that direction. Aravind Srinivas explicitly endorsed the argument as accurate.

  • Incumbent SaaS is being judged on whether agents are good enough to sell standalone. The 20VC x SaaStr discussion argues that 60%-quality agents become free features rather than revenue drivers, which leaves incumbents exposed unless they can build products customers will pay for independently. SaaStr AI Annual registration data points in the same direction: the most popular sessions are about deploying AI in real workflows, and interest is clustering around AI-native operators such as Lovable, Gamma, Replit, and Anthropic rather than theory.

  • Small systems choices are starting to matter as much as model choice. Sarah Guo argues long-horizon ML research engineering is a systems problem, not just a local reasoning problem. At the tooling layer, one builder said adding an llms.txt file to API docs improved agent integration success from roughly 60% to near-perfect because the model stopped wasting context on HTML navigation.

5) Worth Your Time

  • 20VC x SaaStr on Anthropic Mythos — the clearest explanation here of why autonomous vulnerability discovery changes the offense-defense balance and why the speakers think cyber budgets should rise, not fall.
Opus 4.7 Resets Coding-Agent Workflows as Codex Pushes Beyond the Terminal
Apr 17
6 min read
215 docs
Jediah Katz
Mike Krieger
Salvatore Sanfilippo
+19
Anthropic’s Opus 4.7 sparked the strongest practitioner reaction of the day: delegate bigger chunks, verify aggressively, and stop babysitting permissions. At the same time, Codex widened its surface area with computer use, plugins, and automation, while Cursor data showed developers moving into higher-complexity work.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Claude Opus 4.7 is the clearest step-function in coding agents today: Anthropic says it handles long-running, ambiguous, multi-step work better than 4.6, and early external signals point the same way—Cursor’s internal benchmark moved to 70% from 58%, while Notion saw a 14% eval lift with one-third the tool errors . The bigger takeaway is workflow, not just scores: Anthropic engineers keep repeating the same pattern—delegate a whole task, give full context, enable autonomy carefully, and require verification before trusting the result .

“The model performs best if you treat it like an engineer you’re delegating to, not a pair programmer you’re guiding line by line.”

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Claude Opus 4.7 / Claude Code: More agentic, more precise, better at long-running work, better at carrying context across sessions, and stronger on multi-file changes, ambiguous debugging, and whole-service review in one prompt . New knobs: auto mode for permission decisions, xhigh as the new default effort level, higher rate limits to offset higher token use, plus recaps and focus mode for long sessions .
  • Codex: The surface area expanded fast: computer use, in-app browser, image generation/editing, 90+ plugins, multi-terminal, SSH into devboxes, thread automations, memory, and rich document editing. Romain Huet says the models are now in a “completely different league,” with a polished Codex app for connecting tools and delegating real work to agents, and that Codex has become something he starts almost every task with .
  • Codex anniversary signals: Codex CLI hit its first birthday as an open-source local coding agent . OpenAI-side builders also reset rate limits across plans and shipped official Intel Mac support for the Codex app after a Codex CLI-driven compatibility fix .
  • Cursor: Opus 4.7 is live in Cursor, and the team describes it as more autonomous and more creative in reasoning . Separate telemetry across 500 teams suggests better models are changing task mix, not just speed: high-complexity work rose 68%, overall AI usage rose 44%, and developers started taking on harder problems only after a 4–6 week lag .
  • LangSmith / openevals v0.2.0: LangSmith now has a reusable evaluator template library with 30+ templates, including LLM-as-judge and rule-based code evaluators, plus a central Evaluators hub; the open-source openevals package added multimodal eval support for voice + image outputs .
  • Claude Code desktop app: caution flag. Anthropic’s desktop app was pitched as redesigned for parallel work and faster , but Theo’s hands-on pass found at least 40 bugs in under an hour, especially around hotkeys, permissions persistence, sidebars, and diff behavior . For now, the practical signal is mixed.

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • The new Opus 4.7 loop is: brief → autonomy → verification.

    1. Start with the full task brief: goal, constraints, acceptance criteria.
    2. Turn on auto mode when you want the agent to clear safe permission checks without babysitting .
    3. Set /effort to xhigh for most tasks; bump to max for the hardest sessions; drop lower when latency/token cost matters .
    4. Tell the agent exactly how to verify the work—put test/setup instructions in claude.md, add a /verify-app skill, or use Boris Cherny’s /go pattern: run end-to-end tests via bash/browser/computer use, then /simplify, then open a PR .
    5. Use recaps when you come back to a long session; use /focus when you only care about the final result .
  • Retune prompts when you swap models. Matthew Berman’s practical read on 4.7: it follows instructions more literally, so older prompts and harnesses can produce weird results if they relied on loose interpretation, all-caps emphasis, or lots of negative instructions. Rewrite prompts in direct, positive language and reread model-specific best practices when a new version lands .

  • Run more than one agent, but stop polling them manually. Boris says auto mode is what makes parallel Claudes actually useful because you can leave one cooking and switch to the next . Warp is leaning into the same pattern: group sessions with branch/worktree/PR metadata, save tab layouts, and get desktop notifications only when an agent needs attention .

  • Revisit tasks you used to consider blocked. Jediah Katz’s example is concrete: lack of tmux on Windows used to kill the idea of shipping tmux integration in Cursor; with a long-running harness, he just cloned tmux for Windows instead . That lines up with Cursor’s broader telemetry: developers first do more of the same work, then start taking on harder problems once they trust the new model/harness stack .

  • For AI-assisted security work, don’t just burn more tokens. Discourse used multi-day GPT 5.4 xhigh scans and found 50 CVEs in its last monthly release . Salvatore Sanfilippo’s sharper takeaway: run multiple instances with different prompts, pipelines, and sampling to explore the codebase from different angles, and spend context window budget on likely cross-file interactions instead of brute-forcing every combination .

  • Codex is also becoming an automation surface, not just a coding chat. Riley Brown uses it for a daily Readwise workflow that turns bookmarked X posts into a topic-organized deck, and recommends the Excalidraw skill for rendering diagrams into docs . Even if you never copy that exact setup, the pattern is worth stealing: pair thread automations with narrow skills/plugins for repeatable output .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Boris Cherny + Cat Wu: Best day-one operator guidance for Opus 4.7. Both are posting from inside Anthropic’s dogfooding loop, and both focus on workflow changes—auto mode, effort tuning, full upfront context, and verification—not benchmark screenshots .
  • Romain Huet + @thsottiaux: Best signal on where Codex is heading. Their posts make clear the shift from “coding agent” to a broader computer-use agent with plugins, browser, automation, memory, and SSH/devbox workflows .
  • Theo: Useful because he is both a builder and a hostile tester. He liked 4.7’s planning more than expected on a large-codebase modernization run, but also documented misses and surfaced brutal desktop-app bugs fast .
  • Jediah Katz / Cursor team: Strongest telemetry-backed voice today. The 500-team dataset and his tmux-on-Windows example both point to the same thing: better agents expand the feasible task set, not just throughput .
  • Simon Willison: Quiet production proof beats launch copy. He says most changes in datasette 1.0a28 were implemented with Claude Code and Opus 4.7 .

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • Matthew Berman — retune-your-prompts clip (8:18–9:34). Best short explainer on why a stronger coding model can still break your old harness: 4.7 follows instructions more literally, so you need to rewrite prompts instead of blaming the model swap .
  • Theo — why Codex matters to tool builders (6:43–7:47). A crisp explanation of the Codex stack split: the app is closed source, but the Codex CLI and app server are open, which is why other UIs can plug into it so easily .

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Codex CLI / app server: One-year-old open-source local coding agent; Theo notes the open CLI + app server are what let other teams build their own UIs on top .
  • openevals v0.2.0: Open-source eval tooling from LangChain with new multimodal support for voice and image outputs—useful if your agent stack is growing beyond plain text .
  • T3 Code: Theo’s pitch is straightforward: open core, nothing hidden, built to be trusted and customized, with scaffolding that makes the codebase easy for agents to work in . Worth watching if you care about open, customizable GUI alternatives for agentic coding.

Editorial take: today’s durable edge is simple—bigger autonomous runs only help if your harness tells the agent what good looks like, how to verify it, and when to interrupt you.

Automation Boundaries, Compounding AI Skills, and Doist’s Ramble Playbook
Apr 17
11 min read
95 docs
Product Marketing
Aakash Gupta
Teresa Torres
+5
A practical framework for where AI actually helps PM teams, a detailed case study on how Doist shipped Todoist’s voice-to-task feature, and concrete guidance on launch diagnosis, discovery, and career management.

Big Ideas

1) Automate friction, not glue work

AI is most useful when a behavior is already understood and valued, but too painful or easy to deprioritize—tailoring release notes, keeping status documents current, or cross-referencing risk logs . The same framework warns that AI is a poor substitute for glue work, because the visible artifact is only part of the job; the real work includes timing, legitimacy, translation across functions, informal feedback loops, and surfacing hidden coordination problems .

Why it matters: PM teams can reduce real friction with AI, but they can also create convincing artifacts that nobody trusts or uses if they automate the output and ignore the judgment behind it .

How to apply:

  • Diagnose whether the bottleneck is capability, opportunity, or motivation before automating .
  • If the real barrier is unclear quality standards, missing ownership, or social risk, fix the system before adding AI .
  • After AI makes production easy, check the next bottleneck: who consumes the output, and who acts on it .

2) The compounding AI skill for PMs is question volume

“I will ask Claude about anything I don’t understand and ask it to teach it to me.”

Aakash Gupta’s takeaway from Hannah Stulberg’s 1,500 hours in Claude Code is that task-based AI usage plateaus, while using AI for unknowns compounds . The differentiator is not prompt cleverness; it is how often you reach for the tool when you hit something you do not understand . He also notes that many PMs quit too early, while the compounding starts around hour 20 rather than day one .

Why it matters: In technical product roles, self-serve learning can change your slope faster than another prompt template.

How to apply:

  • Ask AI to review recent chats and identify your prompting blind spots .
  • Use Socratic teaching for technical systems you use but do not fully understand .
  • Stress-test a PRD by asking for skeptical engineering pushback before the real review .

3) AI shortens the middle of the work and raises the bar on taste

Andrew Chen’s observation is that AI-assisted workflows reduce time spent on the middle 80% of the work and push more of the saved time to the first 10% and last 10%—idea generation, validation, and iteration . PMs in technical domains describe the same pattern in practice: using AI for rapid prototypes and diagrams to validate customer feedback the same day, debating why a strategy will or will not work, and translating technical concepts into plain language for GTM and enablement audiences .

Why it matters: Faster execution does not reduce the need for product judgment; it concentrates it at the beginning and end of the workflow .

How to apply: Spend less effort on first-draft production, and more on framing the problem, validating the output, and adapting the story for different stakeholders .

Tactical Playbook

1) Run a pre-automation checklist before handing work to AI

  1. Start with the behavior, not the tool: what should be happening today that usually does not?
  2. Ask whether people actually know what good looks like. If not, it is a capability problem .
  3. Ask whether the workflow, incentives, and ownership support the behavior. If not, it is an opportunity problem .
  4. Ask whether people believe in the behavior or identify with doing it. If not, motivation is the constraint .
  5. Respect the iceberg: the visible artifact may be only 20% of the underlying work .
  6. Before declaring success, identify the next wall after generation becomes cheap .

Why it matters: This sequence helps PMs separate work that AI can legitimately accelerate from work that still depends on human judgment and organizational design.

2) Diagnose a weak launch by connecting six signals

When a launch underperforms, practitioners point to six signal sources: sales calls, win/loss notes, support tickets, customer success conversations, product usage, and scattered internal feedback.

A practical sequence:

  1. Pull all six signals into one view .
  2. Decide who owns connecting them .
  3. Explicitly rank which signals you trust most .
  4. Ask where the truth usually gets lost .
  5. Ask how long it takes before you feel confident in the real cause .
  6. If you are PLG/self-serve, use instrumentation to locate the drop in success metrics like activation .
  7. If you are sales-led, separate usage vs. adoption vs. exposure, then use qualitative research to learn why .

Why it matters: Product usage rarely explains a weak launch on its own; the diagnosis often lives in the gaps between signals .

3) Design natural-language features for correction, not perfection

Doist’s Ramble offers a clear execution pattern for AI capture workflows:

  1. Keep the model’s toolset narrow: add task, edit task, delete task.
  2. Process input while the user is still speaking so partial results appear immediately .
  3. Let users correct the output in real time, instead of waiting for a perfect final pass .
  4. Use non-verbal confirmation cues for low-attention contexts like driving .
  5. Inject the current date and user context such as projects and labels, rather than expecting the model to infer account-specific state .
  6. Test across languages, accents, and recording conditions, then use the evals mainly to catch regressions .

Why it matters: Natural-language interfaces will make mistakes. A product that is easy to correct can still feel trustworthy.

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Doist’s Ramble is a strong example of constrained AI product design

Doist describes Ramble as Todoist’s first pure AI feature, but it was built on an older product strength: fast task capture and years of natural-language parsing . The team did not start with a fixed Ramble feature. It ran a two-to-three month AI exploration, then converged on Ramble after research exposed a real behavior: some users brainstorm tasks on paper or with ChatGPT voice before committing them to Todoist . Ramble emerged because it solved that brain-dump use case, not because the team wanted AI in the product for its own sake .

On the product side, the architecture stayed narrow. The app streams raw microphone audio to a backend service, forwards it through Google Vertex, and lets the model make real-time tool calls while the user is still speaking. There is no conversational text or audio response from the model—only task actions surfaced in the UI . For project and label matching, Doist found that directly injecting the user’s project list into the prompt worked well enough and avoided the latency and complexity of extra calls or a RAG pipeline .

The UX was built around confirmation and correction. Tasks appear live on screen, users can edit as they go, and audio cues confirm adds and edits for people using the feature while driving . The team explicitly chose not to use text-to-speech because of latency and multilingual complexity .

“We don’t want the model to try to be overly smart. It just needs to fit within the boundaries that we are setting.”

That constraint showed up in the prompt work. The team tuned temperature and instructions so Ramble would capture tasks literally, avoid inventing plans or subtasks, but still make tasks actionable by adding verbs when helpful . Date handling was another major source of complexity: they injected the current date, pushed the model to express dates in days rather than months or weeks, and had it output dates in English for parser compatibility .

Quality assurance became part of the product system. Doist built an LLM-judge eval setup, collected recordings in 20+ languages from 100+ employees across 35 countries, and used the system to replay sessions, assess tool-call quality, and catch regressions . Even with that system, quality still varied significantly by language . User feedback inside the experience drove ongoing prompt iteration . The feature moved from prototype to launch, and Doist is now extending task capture to text, files, and images in beta, along with work on assignees, automations, and integrations such as meeting notes . The team also reports that model upgrades improved speed and task understanding over time .

Key takeaway: The most convincing AI case studies in product right now are not the most open-ended ones. They are the ones with a clear behavior to support, a narrow action surface, and a fast correction loop.

2) Put customer experience first, then invite hard feedback

One product-development view in this batch argues for betting on the approach that best reduces customer pain, even if it requires a strategic leap. In this case, the bet was on a cloud model because maintaining back versions and multiple ports wasted innovation and led to shelfware and misuse; the belief was that better customer experience should come first and the business model would follow .

The same source argues for recruiting the hardest, smartest customers as design partners. Tough feedback is treated as a gift, and if early customers will not become references, that itself is a signal to investigate .

“Feedback’s a gift. And when you don’t get hard feedback is when you actually need to worry.”

Key takeaway: Friendly customers are easy to please. Demanding customers are more useful when the goal is to harden a product and earn peer advocacy.

Career Corner

1) If the remit sounds impossible, rewrite the timeline before the company does it for you

One PM candidate who applied for a senior role but was offered a director-level seat was told to, within the first month, improve GTM efficiency, speed delivery with near-immediate MRR impact, and understand platform limits; by month two, extend the roadmap to six months without adding headcount, improve internal and external communication, and draft vision, mission, and strategy . The same candidate also learned that tracking was weak and the feedback system was flawed .

The strongest community advice was not to accept those dates literally. Instead:

  • Build a reasonable timeline around the goals, then discuss it with leadership .
  • Start with a month of listening and understanding .
  • Own expectations through a 30-60-90 readout covering what was expected, what you learned, the deltas, and what you are doing next .
  • Treat sudden role inflation and compressed timelines as a possible org-risk signal, and keep other options open .

Why it matters: Scope negotiation is part of product leadership, not a side conversation.

2) PM-owned research looks normal; full UX design still reads as role compression

In a discussion about PMs doing UX work, several practitioners said it is already normal for PMs—especially in startups or FAANG-adjacent environments—to own research and at least some wireframing, and that mid-level PMs should be comfortable designing and running formal or ad hoc studies . The sharper objection was to full UI/UX design responsibility, which one respondent described as a specialized discipline and effectively two employees for one . The question arose in the context of a UI-heavy redesign role asking the PM to do research plus screens and prototypes using a weak design system and AI .

Why it matters: AI may blur workflows, but it does not erase the difference between product judgment, research craft, and design craft.

How to apply: Treat PM-owned research as a normal skill expectation, and scrutinize roles that want a PM to absorb deep design execution without design support .

3) A long-tenured PM should expect a temporary drop in confidence after switching companies

A PM moving to a new Group PdM role after 10 years in one company asked how to make a strong start . The most grounded advice was to give yourself slack, assume you will need runway before you feel as effective as before, and spend the first week or two learning how the new company’s machine really works through informal 1:1s .

Why it matters: Domain experience transfers; org-specific pattern recognition does not.

Tools & Resources

1) Claude or Claude Code as a PM learning environment

The most concrete pattern in this batch is not document drafting. It is using Claude as a structured tutor and reviewer:

  • Teach me anything I don’t understand
  • Show me patterns in how I prompt badly
  • Teach me a technical concept Socratically, one question at a time
  • Review my PRD like a skeptical staff engineer

Why it’s worth exploring: This turns AI into a compounding skill tool rather than a one-off drafting assistant .

2) AI workflows PM peers say are actually moving the needle

Practitioners in technically complex domains described a set of uses beyond PRDs and meeting summaries:

  • Rapid prototyping and diagramming to validate customer feedback the same day
  • Strategy debate, market and competitive research, and strategy report generation
  • Translating technical concepts into plain language for presentations and GTM or enablement
  • A personal assistant to track, prioritize, and cross-correlate inbound asks across meetings, Slack, and documents
  • An analyst agent that remembers team-specific data quirks such as time zones, field names, and odd joins

Why it’s worth exploring: These are closer to leverage multipliers than generic content-generation tasks.

3) A reusable launch-diagnosis template for PM and PMM teams

If a release misses, use this prompt set as a working template:

  • Which signals do we have: sales, win/loss, support, customer success, usage, internal feedback?
  • Who owns connecting them?
  • Which signals do we trust most?
  • Where does the truth get lost?
  • How long until we are confident in the real reason?

Why it’s worth exploring: It gives teams a concrete path from underperformance to an evidence-backed diagnosis.

Codex Broadens, GPT-Rosalind Targets Biology, and Fairwater Comes Online
Apr 17
3 min read
260 docs
Sam Altman
Greg Brockman
Aidan Gomez
+5
OpenAI dominated the day with a major Codex expansion and a new life-sciences model, while Microsoft and Google DeepMind offered fresh evidence that AI deployment is accelerating in datacenters and robots.

OpenAI leads the day

Codex moves further beyond coding

OpenAI said major Codex desktop updates are rolling out starting today, adding macOS computer use, persistent automations, image generation, and support for 90+ plugins . It says Codex can use Mac apps in the background with its own cursor, learn from previous actions, remember work preferences, and handle ongoing or repeatable tasks . Sam Altman also highlighted an in-app browser and described computer use as more useful than he expected because it can work across Mac apps in parallel without interrupting the user .

Why it matters: The update combines app control, memory, scheduling, image generation, and tool integrations in one release, extending Codex into broader desktop workflows .

GPT-Rosalind targets biology with gated deployment

OpenAI introduced GPT-Rosalind as a frontier reasoning model for biology, drug discovery, and translational medicine . The company said the life sciences series is optimized for protein and chemical reasoning, genomics analysis, biochemistry knowledge, and scientific tool use, and is being delivered through ChatGPT, Codex, the API, and a life sciences research plugin with more than 50 templated skills . The research preview starts with qualified customers including Amgen, Moderna, the Allen Institute, and Thermo Fisher, while OpenAI says deployment is being handled carefully with differentiated access for verified researchers in light of dual-use risk .

Why it matters: OpenAI is pairing domain-specific scientific capabilities with workflow tooling and restricted access in a high-stakes area .

The physical AI stack keeps scaling

Microsoft says Fairwater is live ahead of schedule

Satya Nadella said Microsoft’s Fairwater datacenter in Wisconsin is going live ahead of schedule, bringing together hundreds of thousands of NVIDIA GB200s in a single seamless cluster . Microsoft said the site is designed as an integrated datacenter, GPU fleet, and network system for exponential-scale training and inference jobs, with claimed 10x performance versus the world’s fastest supercomputer today . The company also said Fairwater uses a liquid-cooled closed-loop system that requires zero water for operations after construction, matches consumed energy with renewable sources, and is one of several similar sites under construction alongside AI infrastructure in more than 100 datacenters worldwide .

Why it matters: The buildout shows how frontier AI competition is now being expressed through power, cooling, networking, and inference capacity as much as through model announcements .

DeepMind and Boston Dynamics put Gemini reasoning on Spot

Google DeepMind said it partnered with Boston Dynamics to power Spot with Gemini Robotics embodied reasoning models . DeepMind said Spot can better understand its surroundings, identify objects, follow simple commands such as tidying a room, and interact through plain English instead of complex code . It also said the system bridges Gemini Robotics ER to Spot’s tools for movement, photography, and grasping so the robot can carry out more complex tasks .

Why it matters: This is a concrete deployment example of language-guided robot control moving onto a commercial platform .

One enterprise signal worth noting

Cohere says enterprise AI adoption broke out

Cohere CEO Aidan Gomez said the past year was the company’s breakout year for enterprise AI adoption, with revenue growing 6x last year and expected to post another large multiple this year . He described North as infrastructure for agents in high-security environments, including on-prem and air-gapped deployments for manufacturing, public sector, finance, and energy, with enterprise controls and support for non-coders building automations . Gomez also emphasized privacy, sovereignty, and cloud-agnostic deployment as core to Cohere’s positioning .

Why it matters: The comments add a rare revenue datapoint and reinforce how much enterprise demand is concentrating around secure deployments .

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