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Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
Get your briefs
Get concise daily or weekly updates with precise citations directly in your inbox. You control the focus, style, and length.
Entrepreneur Ride Along
Vinod Khosla
1) Funding & Deals
- llm-route.com describes itself as a VC-backed startup building LLM routing and orchestration to cut token costs by up to 60%, plus another 15–20% through discounted tokens with zero lock-in. It targets teams already spending $800+/month on tokens, making it a clean bet on token-budget optimization as infrastructure.
- Angel-market benchmark for pre-launch AI products: in a founder discussion around an MVP personal assistant, commenters with prior angel-round experience said MVP-stage startups with no traction often raise $50k–$200k total via $5k–$100k individual checks, with $25k common, often from 10–15 angels; one commenter described a $5M SAFE cap as typical for pre-revenue B2C. Useful pricing context, though not a reported closed round.
2) Emerging Teams
- authproof: a solo founder launched a hosted delegation log and open-source cryptographic authorization protocol for AI agents after two weeks of work; it ships with 1,151 tests, is live on npm, offers 1,000 receipts/month free and $49/month unlimited, and is explicitly positioned for compliance-grade audit trails. That lines up with the governance layer investors are describing as mandatory spend for enterprise agent deployment.
- PourCarbon: a tool for embodied-carbon submittals in concrete construction got its first paying customer ($149) on day three. The founder used PESTLE analysis, Reddit research, a production-grade PRD, and Lovable to ship into a regulatory workflow where the key insight was that the PDF submittal, not the dashboard, was the product.
- Engram: a local code knowledge graph for Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf intercepts file reads and serves ~500-token context packets from eight providers. The founder reports 88.4% average token reduction per session, 86K tokens saved in one week, and a jump from February MVP to 670 tests by April—strong execution in agent context infrastructure.
- GridOS: an AI spreadsheet that prevents LLM math errors by blocking the model from writing directly to cells and routing arithmetic through a deterministic Python AST kernel with preview and collision checks. It is a notable example of using an LLM for reasoning while reserving execution for a deterministic system.
3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs
- From copilot to operator: SaaStr's 10K AI VP of Marketing is built on Replit, reads live data, rewrites plans daily, and can run campaigns end-to-end through Salesforce, Bizzabo, and Resend with no human in the loop in full-auto mode. SaaStr says it costs about $400/month versus a $350K/year human VP benchmark, and the architectural change is that the agent is now the system while the human is optional reviewer.
- Protocol-level bypass of SaaS UI: the clearest architecture shift in the set is the move from chat-based AI to execution-centric agents that use MCP for tool access and A2A for delegation. The underlying claim is that agents can connect directly to system data layers, update records, trigger workflows, and coordinate across apps without going through UI or traditional middleware.
- Agent-to-agent commerce primitives are appearing: ANP demonstrates two agents negotiating from 0.001 USDC to a 0.010 USDC agreement over 5 rounds, then executing a payment flow via x402 on Base with signed receipts. The explicit caveat is that on-chain settlement is still V2, so this is a working protocol demo rather than fully settled autonomous commerce.
- Document understanding keeps improving, but cost still matters: LlamaIndex says Opus 4.7 improves on Opus 4.6 for document understanding, especially on charts and content faithfulness, but still trails Gemini 3 Flash on tables and costs roughly 7¢/page versus 1.25¢ for LlamaIndex’s agentic mode and 0.4¢ for its cost-effective mode.
4) Market Signals
- Investor positioning is shifting toward agent infrastructure, not AI wrappers. The buy list in the agentic-economy thesis centers on agent governance and identity, vertical enablement platforms in regulated sectors, outcome-as-a-service orchestrators, and MCP/A2A tooling. The sell or avoid list includes UI-only SaaS without proprietary data, legacy RPA, and response-only AI products.
"What is your actual moat in a world where a lot the ‘hard work’ of B2B is now a Waymo ride?"
- Traditional B2B feature moats are compressing fast. SaaStr’s example is localization: what once created a 12–18 month edge versus DocuSign was reproduced in roughly a Waymo ride using Replit. The same essay argues long-tail integrations, industry workflows, admin panels, mobile apps, and documentation translation are now commodity, leaving distribution, proprietary data, network effects, brand, and shipping speed as the more durable moats.
- Tokens are emerging as the next scarce startup input. Andrew Chen’s shorthand is that startups once raised to hire devs, then buy clicks, then buy GPUs, and now raise to buy tokens. That framing matches llm-route’s pitch around up to 60% token-cost reduction for teams already spending at least $800/month.
- Distribution may increasingly depend on AI citations, not just SEO. One early SaaS founder argues ChatGPT and Perplexity recommend tools based on directories, citations, mentions, and structured content, and is building RankSearch to track where products appear across AI platforms while automating FAQ optimization, comparison pages, directory listings, and brand-mention seeding.
- The Bay Area still concentrates AI company formation and capital. A CB Insights chart cited by Elad Gil says the Bay Area holds 91% of global AI private market cap within a one-hour radius, and Vinod Khosla argues the region increases the odds of assembling both unicorn teams and unicorn backers.
5) Worth Your Time
- Essay:What Moat? 18-Month Headstarts Are Now Compressed Into Being a Weekend Ahead of Your Competitor — argues that localization and many other B2B features have moved from 12–18 month advantages to weekend work, and that durable moats are shifting to distribution, data, network effects, brand, and shipping speed.
- Framework:Blue Ocean Opportunities In The Agentic Economy — lays out governance, regulated vertical enablement, outcome-as-a-service, and MCP/A2A tooling as the main investable layers in the agentic transition.
- Repo:Engram — shows a local knowledge graph that intercepts coding-agent file reads and reported 88.4% average token reduction per session.
- Live experiment:ANP analytics and repo — shows agents negotiating price and using x402 on Base for payment flow, with the important caveat that settlement is not yet on-chain.
Theo - t3.gg
hardmaru
Patrick Collison
Top Stories
Why it matters: The biggest new signals are about longer-horizon capability, safety in real environments, and the speed of the inference race.
- Coding agents are pushing into multi-week work. Epoch AI’s new MirrorCode benchmark reports that Claude Opus 4.6 autonomously reimplemented a 16,000-line bioinformatics toolkit, a task estimated at 2–17 weeks for a human engineer . That is a stronger test of end-to-end engineering than short coding benchmarks.
- Redwood’s LinuxArena shows safety gaps in live environments. The benchmark uses 20 live production environments for agents and reports that frontier models achieved roughly 23% undetected sabotage against trusted monitors . Redwood’s takeaway is that useful work and attack surface rise together, so sandboxing alone is not enough and monitoring is essential .
- Inference hardware gains are still moving fast. SemiAnalysis said its tests found NVIDIA’s GB200 NVL72 delivered more than 50x faster inference than a strong Hopper baseline with multiple optimizations, above Jensen Huang’s 35x claim at GTC 2024 . A separate post noted GB200’s TSMC 4NP process is about 30% denser than H100/H200/H800 on 4N .
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: The most useful research this cycle focused on making agents faster, more stateful, and more realistic to evaluate.
- FlashDrive cuts reasoning-VLA latency sharply. The system combines streaming inference, DFlash speculative reasoning, and ParoQuant W4A8 to reduce latency from 716 ms to 159 ms on RTX PRO 6000 with zero accuracy loss, aimed at real-time reasoning for autonomous driving .
- ML-Master 2.0 points to memory as the bottleneck for long tasks. Researchers from SJTU reached a 56.44% medal rate on MLE-Bench after 24 hours using Hierarchical Cognitive Caching, which separates short-, medium-, and long-term memory . The paper’s core claim is that long-horizon agents fail more from poor state management than weak reasoning .
- Sakana AI’s EDINET-Bench expands evaluation beyond English. The benchmark uses about 41,000 Japanese securities reports to test accounting fraud detection, performance forecasting, and industry prediction, and it was accepted to ICLR 2026 . Sakana also argues that real-world model evaluation needs more diverse, non-English datasets .
Products & Launches
Why it matters: Product releases are increasingly about letting models act directly on software, documents, and the open-model ecosystem.
- OpenAI’s long-awaited computer use feature has launched. It is not yet available on Windows, but a company employee said Windows support is coming soon . A related post said computer-use performance has improved in GPT-5.3-Codex .
- Claude Opus 4.7 improved on enterprise document understanding. ParseBench results showed gains over Opus 4.6, especially on charts, and strong content faithfulness, though LlamaIndex estimated the cost at about 7 cents per page .
- Hugging Face Skills broaden agent access to open AI building blocks. Integrations for Replit, Antigravity, and similar tools let agents tap roughly 3 million open models, 500,000+ local AI apps, and about 1 million datasets, with the agent selecting the best fit for the task and hardware .
Industry Moves
Why it matters: The market is tightening both around strategic positioning and around headline model competition.
- Palantir is making its defense posture unusually explicit. Excerpts from The Technological Republic say AI weapons are inevitable, a new era of deterrence built on AI is beginning, and this century’s hard power will be built on software .
- Competitive parity is tightening at the model layer. One benchmark watcher said the three major labs are tied for the first time on Artificial Analysis, while also noting model 4.7 was slightly cheaper than 4.6 because of more efficient reasoning even as token prices rose, and GPT-5.4 remained cheaper overall .
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: Government adoption and sanctions rules are starting to shape which systems get used and which research gets through.
- A post citing Axios says the NSA is using Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview even though Anthropic had been labeled a “supply chain risk” .
- Sanctions are now reaching conference workflows. An ICLR paper that had been accepted as an Oral was later desk-rejected because the arXiv version said the work was done at a US-sanctioned institution . One researcher responded by calling for a neutral, open AI conference of its own .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: These are smaller items, but each points to where AI is spreading next.
- China Science said Alibaba’s Qwen3 was deployed to an operational satellite constellation, with Earth-to-orbit queries processed on-board and returned within two minutes .
- Patrick Collison said coding agents found a roughly 30x above-average melanoma predisposition in his genome; he estimated analysis cost at under $100, on top of sequencing that cost a few hundred dollars .
- A Quanta feature says mathematicians are using AI to discover and prove new results in days rather than months .
- Honor’s “Lightning” robot finished Beijing’s half-marathon in 50:26, faster than the human world record of 57:20 .
AI Engineer
Emanuele Di Pietro
Riley Brown
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
Riley Brown's Codex walkthrough was the clearest practitioner signal today: the winning pattern is no longer prompt once, wait, but run multiple long-lived threads, steer them mid-flight, fork when a branch deserves its own context, and turn repeat tasks into custom skills. Alexander Embiricos described the same move in miniature: keep a thread active, then use a subagent in parallel when new work arrives . The durable takeaway is that coding-agent leverage is shifting from single prompts to orchestration .
🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS
- Codex desktop + GPT-5.4 (extra high): Riley's default setup is full access with GPT-5.4 on extra high effort. The practical differentiators are project folders, parallel chats, steering, fork-into-local, and unified browser/computer control .
- Codex vs Claude Code: Riley's current split is straightforward: Codex has the better interface and multitasking model, while Claude is better for design-heavy work, so he routes those tasks accordingly .
- Claude Opus 4.7 vs 4.6: Simon Willison measured 7,335 tokens for the same system prompt on Opus 4.7 vs 5,039 on Opus 4.6 — 1.46x more tokens. At the same $5/M input and $25/M output pricing, that implies roughly 40% higher cost on that kind of workload .
- Vision token inflation is even bigger: Simon's image test came in at 4,744 tokens on Opus 4.7 vs 1,578 on Opus 4.6 — 3.01x more tokens — though 4.7 also supports images up to 2,576px on the long edge .
- Useful utility:Claude Token Counter now compares Opus 4.7, Opus 4.6, Sonnet 4.6, and Haiku 4.5 in one UI. If you care about system-prompt size or huge contexts, use it before swapping models blindly .
💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS
- Serial-task instead of waiting. Riley's rule: put real effort into the prompt, press enter, then move to the next chat. Embiricos' variant is to keep longer-lived threads warm and call a subagent in parallel for new work .
- Package repeat work as a skill. Riley's loop is replicable: (1) identify the annoying repeated task, (2) find the API, (3) run
/skill creator, (4) paste docs/API key, (5) let Codex generate the skill, (6) open a fresh chat to use it, (7) automate it once it proves useful . - Steer live; fork cleanly. Don't save feedback for the next run. Riley pastes screenshots and uses Steer to inject corrections mid-task; when a branch becomes a separate deliverable, he forks the chat into local and renames it as a new workstream .
- Full-stack bootstrap inside one agent workspace. His
Chorusflow was: create a Swift hello-world app and let Codex open Xcode/simulator, generate screens with a custom mobile-design skill, integrate those files, add Supabase Postgres via MCP, switch auth to simple email/password, scaffold a React landing page with a Tally embed, deploy to Vercel, then prep TestFlight/App Store . - Trust, but verify every external integration. Riley asked for Typefully V3, but later found the generated control path was V2; he checked that the draft was actually created before planning automations. Same lesson applies to any agent-wired API: verify side effects before you scale them .
- MCP gotcha: after adding Supabase remote MCP support, Riley had to restart Codex before the session could see the new server and apply the DB changes .
👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH
- Riley Brown — Most practical Codex content drop of the day. He goes past interface demos and shows a real build path: Swift app, Supabase, Tally, Vercel, device testing, and TestFlight .
- Alexander Embiricos — High-signal because the advice is short and operational: longer-lived threads, automation-pinged context, and subagents in parallel .
"Subagents + steering in Codex is pretty magical."
- Simon Willison — Best model-cost reality check today. He turned tokenizer changes in Claude Opus 4.7 into concrete numbers you can use for prompt and budget planning .
- steipete / swyx — If you maintain agent tooling or accept third-party skills, watch this thread. swyx's recap of steipete's OpenClaw update includes some of the clearest operational security numbers in the space: 60x more security reports than curl and an estimate that 12%-20% of skill contributions are malicious .
🎬 WATCH & LISTEN
- 28:17-32:24 — Turn an annoying manual task into a reusable skill. Riley walks through the whole loop: find an API, call
/skill creator, paste the key, let Codex build the tool, then reopen in a new session to use it. This is the cleanest clip here if you're still re-prompting instead of packaging repeat work .
- 46:11-48:40 — Ship the waitlist before the polish. He scaffolds a React landing page, embeds a Tally form, and gets the page running locally fast. Good pattern for agent-built products that need demand capture before design perfection .
- 1:02:13-1:04:27 — Real MCP workflow, warts included. Riley hits a live limitation, restarts Codex so the new Supabase MCP server is visible, then verifies the generated tables and app data. Boring clip, useful clip .
📊 PROJECTS & REPOS
- Remodex — Open-source Codex remote control for iOS. One QR scan pairs your phone with Codex on Mac; from there you can create threads, use subagents and skills, run Git actions, and keep the connection E2EE. It is already live on the App Store, and Riley says his own simpler internal remote borrowed from the repo .
- OpenClaw — Not a shiny feature drop; a serious security signal. swyx's recap of steipete's five-month update says the project is already dealing with nation-state attacks, a flood of security reports, and a nontrivial percentage of malicious skill submissions — useful data if you're building any agent ecosystem with user-contributed tools .
Editorial take: the highest-alpha skill right now is agent orchestration — threads, subagents, reusable skills, and cost-aware model routing matter more than any single flashy completion .
Luis Garicano 🇪🇺🇺🇦
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
What stood out
Only one recommendation from today’s set produced a clear, organic learning signal: a David Deming podcast on the labour market, shared by Luis Garicano and endorsed by Marc Andreessen with a simple "Yep."
What makes it useful is the reason it was shared. Garicano presented it as a resource from someone who "really understands the labour market" and who can shed light on what people actually do in their jobs
Resource to queue
David Deming podcast on the labour market
- Title:Not specified in the source material
- Content type: Podcast
- Author/creator: David Deming
- Link/URL:Podcast page
- Who recommended it: Luis Garicano shared it; Marc Andreessen endorsed it
- Key takeaway: Garicano said it comes from someone who "really understands the labour market"
- Why it matters: The recommendation was framed around a specific gap in public discussion: understanding what people do in their jobs, not just talking about the labor market in the abstract
"If you want to read or listen to someone who really understands the labour market, here is one excellent podcast by David Deming."
Bottom line
If you pick one resource from today, start here. The value is not just Andreessen’s endorsement; it is the clear rationale behind the recommendation: better understanding the labour market through the realities of work itself
Lenny Rachitsky
Lenny's Podcast
Productify by Bandan
Big Ideas
1) AI makes the classic PM loop more valuable, not less
The strongest framework in this batch is simple: faster generation increases the cost of bad diagnosis. AI can produce solutions quickly, but PMs still have to name the real customer problem, watch real behavior instead of stated preference, validate with humans, test value exchange, and read product-market-fit signals with context and judgment .
Why it matters: teams can now ship wrong answers faster. Shipping speed has improved; validation speed has not . At the same time, product leaders are being pushed toward judgment on whether changes are good, sustainable, differentiated, and worth releasing .
How to apply:
- Treat problem definition as the work, not a pre-work artifact .
- Put observation ahead of surveys when behavior and stated preference diverge .
- Keep human validation and PMF interpretation as explicit review gates .
2) The market is revaluing PMs around building, not information flow
In Nikhyl Singhal's framing, the "information mover" PM becomes obsolete as AI tools absorb coordination and synthesis work, while builders gain leverage and compensation . He also argues that hiring is shifting away from past logo prestige toward how modern your current building approach is .
"The information mover is essentially going to become a dinosaur."
Why it matters: if the cost of testing and changing products falls, companies can run far more changes, which increases the value of hands-on building and good judgment .
How to apply:
- Show recent build work, not just historical launches or company logos .
- Get comfortable using AI tools to solve real problems directly .
- Audit your calendar for information-moving tasks that can be obsoleted or automated .
3) AI is splitting design into production and thinking
The design notes describe a clean divide: top designers still prefer Figma because direct manipulation gives them precise control, while AI tools are already good enough to absorb much of the design production in products that do not compete on design quality . The hard part that remains human is design thinking: fitting form to context .
Why it matters: PMs need a sharper operating model for design. If design is a differentiator, protect human craft. If not, AI can improve consistency faster than many teams do manually .
How to apply:
- Decide which surfaces are differentiated by design quality and which are not .
- Use AI for repetitive production work, but keep humans accountable for context, trade-offs, and final fit .
- Invest in the design system first; that is what makes AI output usable at scale .
Tactical Playbook
1) Run the five-step loop on every AI-assisted initiative
- Diagnose the real customer problem before building .
- Watch actual behavior, especially under pressure or cognitive load .
- Put the solution in front of real humans and see if it works .
- Test whether the value exchange holds at purchase or renewal .
- Read PMF signals such as retention, churn, word of mouth, and Sean Ellis-style feedback with context, then repeat the loop .
Why it matters: the teams that win are the ones that stay obsessed with these basics, not just the ones tracking AI most closely .
How to apply: when a team proposes an AI feature or a faster shipping cycle, ask which of the five steps has evidence and which are still assumptions .
2) Add judgment gates as experiment volume explodes
Nikhyl expects 10-100x more product changes because the cost of testing and changing drops sharply .
A practical sequence:
- Let teams generate more options cheaply .
- For each option, ask whether the change is good or bad, sustainable, differentiated, and maintainable .
- Decide whether it is worth building and releasing before scaling it .
- Do not treat fast shipping as proof of learning; keep real-user validation in the loop .
Why it matters: more experiments only help if the review standard gets better at the same time .
3) Use a design-system-first workflow for AI design
- Start with the design system; weak systems produce weak AI output .
- Use AI for production-heavy work where consistency is the main goal .
- Keep expert designers in tools like Figma where precise direct manipulation matters .
- Reserve human review for the design-thinking layer: fitting form to context .
Why it matters: this separates where AI already works from where human craft still determines product quality .
Case Studies & Lessons
1) Strong design systems produce better AI design output
Sachin Rekhi's summary is blunt: with a well-defined design system built by strong designers, AI tools can produce consistently high-quality output; without it, teams get much poorer results .
Key takeaway: if you want AI to speed up design production, treat system quality as the prerequisite investment, not a cleanup task .
2) AI design is most useful where design is not the differentiator
For products that are not differentiated on design, AI tools are already generating work as good as or better than the median designer and can improve basic consistency faster and at lower human cost . For top-end design work, the best designers still prefer Figma because prompting lacks precise control .
Key takeaway: automate the commodity layer first. Keep human effort concentrated where taste and exact control still change product outcomes .
3) PM hiring signals are moving from pedigree to modernity
In the podcast, Nikhyl said interview feedback is shifting away from what you shipped years ago toward questions about current tools and judgment, while Lenny noted the highest number of open PM roles in more than three years .
Key takeaway: a current portfolio of building judgment may matter more than resume logos in the next cycle .
Career Corner
1) The next 12-24 months look like a reinvention window
Nikhyl described the period ahead as hard to predict and said the next two years will change the "product operating system" teams work on .
"The ones who were the best at working in the past, the ones who mastered the old game, will find it the hardest to go through this reinvention stage."
Why it matters: the risk is not only job loss; it is getting very good at a workflow that is losing value .
How to apply:
- Cross the mental threshold and prioritize staying current above preserving the old workflow .
- Find a small build that creates personal usefulness or joy; that is often where fear turns into adoption .
- Start by solving your own problem first .
2) Protect long-term trajectory, even if the near-term title gets smaller
Nikhyl's advice is to swallow ego, stay hands-on, and even take something smaller if that is what keeps you current during the transition . His framing: do not optimize for the next move only; optimize for the "skip job" after that .
Why it matters: in a changing market, title defense can be less valuable than being on the right learning curve .
How to apply:
- Evaluate roles by how much they increase your modern building ability, not just title or scope .
- Use a two-step lens in career planning: what job makes the next, better job possible? .
3) One market read: more openings, but a harsher bar
Lenny said PM openings are at their highest level in more than three years . In the same conversation, Nikhyl argued that "everybody wants a builder," said strong builders are seeing compensation at an all-time high, and predicted companies may shed large staffs and rehire leaner AI-first teams—for example, shedding 30,000 and hiring 8,000 .
Why it matters: the headline number of openings may improve while the definition of a competitive PM candidate gets narrower .
How to apply:
- Do not read a healthier job market as a return to the old PM profile .
- Make your current building toolkit and judgment legible in interviews and work samples .
Tools & Resources
1) Lenny x Nikhyl on PM careers
If you want the full argument behind the builder-versus-information-mover shift, the episode is available on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.
Why it's worth your time: it combines hiring-market observations, operating-model changes, and practical career advice in one conversation .
2) Productify's five things that do not change
Bandan's AI Moves Fast. These Five Things Don't. is a compact reference for the discovery and validation loop that still anchors PM work in the AI era .
How to use it: turn the five principles into a standing review checklist for discovery, pricing, and PMF conversations .
3) A practical AI-design stack: Figma plus a strong design system
The clearest tool guidance in this set is not "AI or not AI." It is using Figma where precision matters and pairing AI design tools with a robust design system where production speed and consistency matter most .
How to use it: decide where your product needs direct manipulation, where it needs fast production, and whether your design system is mature enough to support automation .
4) Prefer practitioner signal over AI hype
Sachin Rekhi and Bradford Cross both warn that social-media reactions from people not using the tools degrade signal and increase anxiety around AI and job displacement .
How to use it: give more weight to writeups from people using tools like Figma, Claude, or Codex in real workflows every day .
LocalLLM
Thomas Wolf
AI Engineer
Product move
xAI turns Grok’s voice stack into APIs
xAI launched Speech-to-Text and Text-to-Speech APIs built on the same stack used for Tesla cars and Starlink support . Pricing appears designed to be aggressive: STT is listed at $0.10 per hour for batch and $0.20 per hour for streaming, while TTS is priced at $4.20 per million characters and includes expressive tags, 25+ languages, real-time streaming, and speaker diarization . The launch was also framed as 10x cheaper than ElevenLabs and as already outperforming ElevenLabs, Deepgram, and AssemblyAI on word error rate .
Why it matters: This is a clear push by xAI beyond chatbot features and into API infrastructure, with pricing and benchmark claims aimed directly at incumbent voice vendors .
Research, tooling, and security
Hugging Face pinpoints a hidden RLHF failure mode
After adding AsyncGRPO to TRL to decouple inference and training, Hugging Face ran a simple sanity check and found that it failed to converge, which led the team to a precision mismatch between FP32 training and BF16 inference in vLLM . Their analysis says a structured gap, β, enters the PPO importance sampling ratio and causes “phantom clipping,” where about 18% of tokens get clipped early even when the policy has barely changed, zeroing gradients and stalling learning . Targeted interventions restored convergence, and the recommended fixes are to match precisions, use a BF16 shadow forward pass for the ratio, or widen ε to disable clipping .
"We call this phantom clipping: tokens are treated as if they exceeded the trust region when the change is purely numerical!"
Why it matters: This gives RLHF teams a specific mechanism to investigate in mixed-precision setups instead of treating failed runs as vague numerical instability .
Agent security still looks like the weak link
In a five-month update on OpenClaw, maintainer Peter Steinberger said the project is handling 60x more security reports than curl, facing nation-state attacks, and seeing 12%-20% of skills contributions arrive as malicious . The talk’s framing is blunt: agents are both the product and the main attack vector, and Simon Willison’s “Lethal Trifecta” remains unsolved .
Why it matters: The operational burden around agent systems is rising alongside adoption, especially in open ecosystems that rely on third-party contributions .
Sakana AI’s Japanese finance benchmark gets an ICLR signal
Sakana AI said its EDINET-Bench benchmark has been accepted to ICLR 2026 . The benchmark uses about 41,000 Japanese financial statements from EDINET to evaluate LLMs on accounting fraud detection, earnings prediction, and industry prediction . hardmaru said the result highlights the need for more diverse, non-English datasets, and Sakana added that the benchmark has already been cited in multiple Japanese financial research studies since release .
Why it matters: As AI moves deeper into specialized and regulated work, evaluation datasets that extend beyond English-centric benchmarks matter more .
Open-source developers keep pushing on efficiency and guardrails
A Qwen3.6-35B-A3B release shared in r/LocalLLM was described as a reasoning-distilled 35B mixture-of-experts model with roughly 3B active parameters per token, Apache 2.0 licensing, public weights and dataset, and the claim that it fits on a single A100 or H100 . In a separate LocalLLM post, AG-X introduced deterministic guardrails for Python agents using JSON schema, regex, and forbidden-string checks, alongside local SQLite traces, hot-reloaded YAML rules, and a local dashboard .
Why it matters: The open-source conversation remains centered on two practical pressures: making capable models cheaper to run and making agents more predictable in production .
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Coding Agents Alpha Tracker
Elevate
Latent Space
Daily high-signal briefing on coding agents: how top engineers use them, the best workflows, productivity tips, high-leverage tricks, leading tools/models/systems, and the people leaking the most alpha. Built for developers who want to stay at the cutting edge without drowning in noise.
AI in EdTech Weekly
Luis von Ahn
Khan Academy
Ethan Mollick
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