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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
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Mario Zechner
cat
Claude
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
1M context just stopped being a special-case feature. Opus 4.6 and Sonnet 4.6 are now generally available at 1M context, Opus 4.6 1M is the default Claude Code model on Max, Team, and Enterprise, and the API dropped both the long-context premium and beta header requirement .
The higher-signal takeaway is what serious users do next: Boris Cherny says he has been using 1M context exclusively for months , while Charles Packer argues that bigger windows do not solve the deeper memory problem and recommends pairing a memory-specialized agent with Claude Code or Codex instead of relying on raw context alone .
🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS
- Claude Opus 4.6 / Sonnet 4.6 — 1M GA. Opus 4.6 1M is now the default Claude Code model for Max, Team, and Enterprise; Boris says Pro and Sonnet users can opt in with
/extra-usage. API-side, there is no long-context price increase, no beta header requirement, and support for up to 600 images per request . Simon Willison highlights that standard pricing now applies across the full 1M window—unlike GPT-5.4 above 272k tokens and Gemini 3.1 Pro above 200k . Docs: model config · announcement - Claude Code remote-control — mobile → laptop session spawning. Run
claude remote-controlon the laptop, then spawn a new local session from the mobile app . Rollout is for Max, Team, and Enterprise on>=2.1.74; mobile GitHub setup is still required for now . - Claw / OpenClaw — live browser control gets serious. The new beta adds live browser control from latest Chrome via
chrome://inspect#remote-debuggingplus a new user profile session . Steinberger says the MCP Chrome session feature gives full access to your browser and logged-in websites, with an extra alert to enable it . Parallel tool calling is also coming to OpenClaw, and Opus 1M has been enabled across providers .
💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS
Treat 1M context as something to steer, not just enable.
- If you are on Max, Team, or Enterprise, Opus 4.6 1M is already the default in Claude Code .
-
If compaction behavior feels wrong, tune it with
CLAUDE_CODE_AUTO_COMPACT_WINDOW. - Boris says he has been on 1M context full-time for months, which is a decent daily-driver signal .
Three Claude Code shortcuts worth memorizing.
!runs bash inline and injects the command plus output into contextCtrl+Sstashes your draft, lets you ask something else, then restores the original draft after submitCtrl+Gopens the prompt or plan in$EDITORfor bigger edits
Phone → laptop handoff is now a real workflow.
-
On the laptop, run
claude remote-control. - In the mobile app, spawn a new local session .
- Make sure you meet the plan/version requirements and have GitHub configured on mobile .
-
On the laptop, run
Use a memory agent as the control plane.
-
Letta's concrete pattern: run Claude Code, then use a hook to fire a Letta agent that curates memory into a
CLAUDE.mdfile or a dedicated memory/context repo . - The more interesting inversion is to make the memory-specialized Letta agent your main interface, then let it dispatch to Claude Code or Codex for narrow execution .
- The target is higher-level reflections, not mundane logs .
-
Letta's concrete pattern: run Claude Code, then use a hook to fire a Letta agent that curates memory into a
Use a shared channel as the control plane for multiple agents. Slack's internal pattern is a shared channel where tools like Linear, Cursor, and Claude Code can send notifications, read each other's messages, and operate with humans in the loop; the channel itself becomes a useful context boundary .
Fight AI PR flood with trust filters, not heroics.
-
Theo's setup uses
vouch.mdplus the Vouch workflow to label trusted PR authors; on T3 Code it cut the active review surface from 150 open PRs to 43 trusted ones . - His gold standard is still boring: small, explicit, issue-linked changes—often 1-5 lines.
- Add PR Stats if you want merge-rate and history context per contributor .
-
Theo's setup uses
"Please do not use clankers to add more noise to PRs. We’re working on a solution to this, and this is making my job harder."
- If agent throughput is stressing CI, remove the obvious bottleneck first. Theo switched one GitHub Actions job from
ubuntu-latestto Blacksmith's CPU runner and saw runtime drop from about 2.5 minutes to under 1 minute, while cost was cut in half; the dashboard also helped isolate flaky tests .
👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH
- Boris Cherny — high signal because he is sharing operator-level Claude Code details, not just release notes: 1M default rollout, the compaction knob, and phone-launched laptop sessions .
- Peter Steinberger (@steipete) — one of the best public follows for open coding-agent infrastructure right now: browser control, MCP permissions, parallel tool calls, and blunt maintainer feedback on PR noise .
- Charles Packer — strongest memory-first counterweight to raw model hype today; directly useful if you are designing long-lived coding-agent scaffolding .
- Theo — high-signal repo maintainer view on what breaks first when agents increase throughput: review queues, contributor triage, and CI economics .
- @_catwu — small Claude Code operator tips that pay back immediately .
🎬 WATCH & LISTEN
- 78:03-81:40 — Charles Packer on memory vs. model size. Best clip today if you are tempted to treat 1M context as the endgame. His argument: larger windows help, but durable personalization and specialization still need explicit memory structures .
34:44-37:35 — Rob Seaman on shared-channel agent orchestration. Useful pattern for teams: put multiple agents in one Slack channel so they can notify each other and humans can supervise the whole loop from one place .
20:42-23:17 — Theo on Vouch and what a 'golden PR' looks like. Worth your time if your repo is getting hit with AI-generated PR volume. He shows how Vouch narrowed the working set and why mergeable PRs still need to be tiny and obvious .
📊 PROJECTS & REPOS
- Claw / OpenClaw — OpenClaw is at 200k GitHub stars, and the latest beta push is toward higher-agency browser use: live browser control via Chrome remote debugging, a new user profile session, full MCP browser access to logged-in sites, and parallel tool calling on the way .
- T3 Code — public for about five days and already dealing with 150 open PRs despite not asking for contributions; Theo also called out a >10% fork/star ratio, meaning unusually high engagement .
- Vouch — Mitchell Hashimoto's trust-management workflow is the most immediately useful OSS triage tool from today's scan:
vouch.md, workflow automation, and a public proof point on T3 Code's backlog . - PR Stats — Reese's contributor scoring surface shows merge %, PR history, and work types; a useful companion to trust filters when AI lowers the cost of sending PRs .
Editorial take: 1M context is becoming table stakes; the edge is moving to memory curation, multi-agent control planes, and keeping agent-written code reviewable .
Gary Marcus
Yann LeCun
The clearest signal today: leading researchers are arguing about what should come after today’s LLMs
The biggest theme was not a single model release, but a widening debate among top AI researchers about what kind of systems should come next—and how urgently governance needs to catch up .
LeCun lays out a world-model agenda through AMI Labs
Yann LeCun said he has left Meta and is building Paris-based AMI Labs around Advanced Machine Intelligence, arguing that the next major leap will come from systems that understand the real world through hierarchical world models, not from scaling LLMs alone . He pointed to JEPA and Video JEPA as core building blocks, saying recent self-supervised methods can surpass fully supervised systems and that Video JEPA has shown early signs of learned "intuitive physics" .
Why it matters: This is a concrete post-LLM research and company-building agenda from one of the field’s most influential researchers .
Bengio pairs “scientist AI” with a governance push
Yoshua Bengio said his nonprofit Law Zero is building a "scientist AI": systems designed for understanding rather than hidden goals, with the aim of making them trustworthy enough to veto unsafe actions from other AI systems . He said Canada is supporting the effort with funding, people, and compute, while he separately warned—through his work on the International AI Safety Report—that current harms already include deepfakes and fraud, with frontier risks extending to cyberattacks, bioweapons misuse, misalignment, and loss of control .
"The ideal is pure intelligence without any goals."
Why it matters: Bengio is making a two-part case at once: safer AI likely needs different training objectives, and the institutions around AI need to move faster too .
Hinton and Marcus, from different angles, say the governance window is still open—but narrowing
Geoffrey Hinton said AI may surpass human intelligence soon, but stressed that humans still have agency because "we're still making them" and can still change how these systems are built . Gary Marcus argued that current LLMs remain unreliable enough to threaten democracy through misinformation and deepfakes, and called for global governance, AI-generated-content labeling, public literacy, and better detection tools .
Why it matters: Even across researchers who disagree on technical direction, there is growing overlap on one point: capability progress is outrunning verification and governance .
Frontier products and infrastructure kept stretching the frontier
Anthropic makes 1M context mainstream in Claude 4.6
Anthropic made the 1 million token context window generally available for Claude Opus 4.6 and Claude Sonnet 4.6. The company also removed the API long-context price increase, dropped the beta-header requirement, made Opus 4.6 1M the default for Claude Code users on Max, Team, and Enterprise plans, and now supports up to 600 images in one request .
Why it matters: This is not just a bigger number on a benchmark card; Anthropic is trying to make extreme context cheaper and more normal in everyday developer use .
Microsoft brings NVIDIA’s Vera Rubin NVL72 into cloud validation
Microsoft said it is the first cloud to bring up an NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 system for validation, a step toward next-generation AI infrastructure . In separate remarks, Satya Nadella described the AI data-center buildout as a "token factory" whose job is to turn capital spending into return on invested capital .
"The token factory is all about turning – through software – capital spend into ROIC. That’s the job."
Why it matters: The competitive frontier is still being fought on supply, utilization, and economics—not only on model quality .
Research tools are moving from assistants toward discovery systems
Sakana AI pushes evolutionary search toward automated science
In a detailed discussion of Shinka Evolve, Sakana AI described an open-source system that uses LLMs to mutate, rewrite, and evaluate programs with a more sample-efficient evolutionary search process, including model ensembling and bandit-style selection across frontier models . The speaker said it improved on the circle-packing result shown in the AlphaEvolve paper with very few evaluations, would have ranked second on one ALE Bench programming task, and that AI Scientist V2 has already reached the point of generating workshop-level papers by shifting from linear experiment plans to agentic tree search .
Why it matters: The research frontier is inching away from AI as a coding copilot and toward AI as an iterative search-and-experiment engine .
Bottom line
Today’s mix of commentary, launches, and research points to two races running in parallel: one toward more scale, longer context, and heavier infrastructure, and another toward AI that is more grounded, causal, and governable .
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
Heavy Pulp
Ryan Hoover
Strongest signal: Beyond Belief
In the provided material, this is the clearest recommendation because it shows repeat engagement, not a one-off mention. Ryan Hoover said Nir Eyal had announced his new book, Beyond Belief, noted that he helped Eyal write Hooked 13 years ago and "learned way more than I contributed" , then said he pre-ordered the audiobook and later that he was listening once it released .
- Title:Beyond Belief
- Content type: Book / audiobook
- Author/creator: Nir Eyal
- Link/URL: Recommendation source posts: announcement, audiobook release
- Who recommended it: Ryan Hoover
- Key takeaway: The source material does not surface a specific lesson from the book itself. The usable signal is Hoover's follow-through from announcement to pre-order to release-day listening
- Why it matters: Hoover brings relevant context to the recommendation because he previously helped Eyal write Hooked and says he learned more than he contributed
"for the record, I learned way more than I contributed"
Another authentic pick: The Internet Is Gonna End Us (But it’s okay!)
Marc Andreessen highlighted HeavyPulp’s video by linking directly to it and calling it the "second best thing I’ve ever seen" .
- Title:The Internet Is Gonna End Us (But it’s okay!)
- Content type: Video
- Author/creator: @heavypulp
- Link/URL:https://x.com/heavypulp/status/2015921562038206851
- Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen
- Key takeaway: The source material does not include a substantive lesson from the video itself; the main signal is the intensity of Andreessen’s endorsement
- Why it matters: Even without added explanation, this stands out as a direct and unusually strong recommendation tied to a specific piece of content rather than a vague reference
"Second best thing I’ve ever seen."
What to take from this set
The pattern here is strength of endorsement over articulated lesson. Beyond Belief is the more useful signal because the recommendation is repeated and grounded in Hoover’s prior working relationship with Eyal . Andreessen’s video share is still notable, but the provided material says much less about what viewers should expect beyond his enthusiasm .
scott belsky
Tony Fadell
John Cutler
Big Ideas
1) Taste at speed is becoming a real PM advantage
Aakash Gupta’s framing is that the emerging skill is taste at speed: the ability to evaluate working software quickly, kill most of it, and ship the survivors . In that model, AI does not just speed building; it changes the bottleneck from can we build it to should we ship it. The workflow contrast is sharp: the older path runs from idea to PRD to design to engineering to QA to ship in 8-12 weeks, while the AI-era loop described here is idea → 5 prototypes → evaluate → kill 4 → spec the survivor → ship in 1-2 weeks.
“The spec didn’t disappear. It moved from step 2 to step 6.”
- Why it matters: the leverage comes from filtering, not from shipping everything faster; the cited 80% kill rate is the point .
- How to apply: for ambiguous problems, require multiple working prototypes, review them against empathy, simulation, strategy, taste, and creative execution, then spec only the winner .
2) Context and rituals are becoming the real operating leverage
John Cutler argues that the first place to inspect a product organization is its rituals: the daily and weekly interactions people have through meetings, dashboards, Slack, and other tools . The weak spot is often the layer between front lines and leadership, where information has to move fluidly across the organization . He also warns that AI makes it easy to generate documentation, but more documentation does not create intentionality . Leah Tharin makes the complementary product point: context is the real value, not the model, and a jobs lens like “I want to listen to music on the go” opens a much broader solution space than a demographic profile .
“Frameworks are models and all models are useful but wrong.”
- Why it matters: without shared context and deliberate rituals, faster output just creates faster drift. Cutler also points to a collective memory problem where teams keep re-documenting old issues because context is co-created over time .
- How to apply: build living context around recurring customer challenges, not just one-off deliverables, and deliberately design how information moves up, down, and across the org .
3) AI speed makes alignment and work-shape clarity non-negotiable
Scott Belsky argues AI creates a stronger case for talent density and far more alignment than usual because teams can now move very quickly in the wrong direction . Tony Fadell’s reminder is simpler: knowing the destination helps people self-prioritize and decide what and how to build . Cutler adds that most organizations have parallel motions at once—some work is large, coordinated, and governance-heavy, while other work is highly iterative—and pretending everything should run through one process is damaging .
- Why it matters: more prototyping capacity increases the cost of fuzzy goals and one-size-fits-all process.
- How to apply: make the destination explicit, separate high-coordination work from iterative work, and align your operating rhythm to each motion rather than forcing one template across both .
Tactical Playbook
1) Run a prototype-first decision loop
- Start with multiple working options. The model here is five fast prototypes, not one polished plan .
- Evaluate against five lenses. Check empathy, simulation, strategy, taste, and creative execution while looking at working software .
- Kill aggressively. An 80% kill rate is framed here as a feature, not a failure .
- Write the spec after you have a winner. In this flow, the spec follows the prototype, not the reverse .
- Keep a human gate before production. Anthropic still requires an engineer to approve changes before anything goes live .
- Why it matters: it compresses false certainty early and moves discussion onto concrete artifacts.
- How to apply: pilot this on one fuzzy feature before greenlighting a full PRD or roadmap commitment.
2) Use challenge memory in discovery
- State the customer challenge in job terms. Prefer “listen to music on the go” over a demographic profile .
- Capture the surrounding context. Tharin’s argument is to build memory around the challenge, not just a single job statement .
- Feed better context into the system. More correct context improves the odds of better decisions and of spotting bad data early .
- Revisit old knowledge before reopening old problems. Cutler points to teams repeatedly documenting the same issue because collective memory is weak .
- Why it matters: it broadens solution space and reduces rediscovery waste.
- How to apply: keep one artifact per problem area with the job to be done, prior evidence, edge cases, and what the team already learned.
3) Repair the operating system through rituals
- Map the current rituals. Start with the daily and weekly interactions people actually have, not the official process deck .
- Design information cadence intentionally. Cutler’s advice is to get information moving up, down, and across the org deliberately; documentation alone is not enough .
- Name parallel motions. Separate large, coordinated efforts from fast iterative streams so each gets the right governance .
- Label relationships honestly. Do not force work into fake linear hierarchies when frontline teams can sometimes move business metrics directly .
- Treat new habits as repeated experiments. One kickoff meeting or spreadsheet rarely survives without sustained reps .
- Why it matters: many execution problems are really information-flow and habit-formation problems.
- How to apply: redesign one recurring meeting and one update channel before adding another template or framework.
Case Studies & Lessons
1) Anthropic’s Claude Code workflow pairs extreme speed with explicit review gates
Boris Cherny is described as shipping 20-30 PRs a day using five parallel Claude instances, with a third of his code potentially started from the iOS app and 100% of his own code written with Claude Code . This sits inside an unusually technical culture where everyone shares the title Member of Technical Staff and PMs, designers, data scientists, and even finance code . Company-wide, Claude Code writes about 80% of code, and productivity per engineer is cited as up 200% since launch even as Anthropic tripled headcount . The process is not review-free: every PR is first reviewed by Claude Code, which catches about 80% of bugs, and a human engineer still does the second pass and approves anything before production .
- Lesson: the interesting move is not just AI-assisted coding; it is AI-assisted coding plus automated review plus human approval.
- Boundary condition: Gupta notes this setup fits a small, senior team with deep shared context, where the product is the AI tool itself, though the prototype-first discipline can translate beyond Anthropic .
2) Anthropic’s product work uses volume to improve judgment, not just output
The reported iteration counts are unusually high: agent teams went through “probably hundreds of versions” before shipping; condensed file view saw about 30 prototypes followed by a month of internal dogfooding; the terminal spinner had roughly 50-100 iterations, with about 80% not shipping. One example is plugins: Daisy reportedly used a swarm of a couple hundred agents over a weekend, producing about 100 tasks and an implementation that became “pretty much the version of plugins that we shipped” .
“And it’s a filtering function, not an acceleration function. The 80% kill rate is the whole point.”
- Lesson: faster tools matter most when the team is willing to discard most versions.
3) PM hiring loops are being redesigned because old homework signals got cheaper to fake
Andrew Chen says homework has become a common interview step for PMs and other knowledge roles because it can surface real work output . His update is that, in recent weeks, these responses have been flooded with “AI slop”—long, meandering documents instead of a short, high-signal point of view . His proposed fixes are a recorded presentation, where candidates sign off on what they wrote and can be questioned later, and a true work trial reserved for the end of the funnel . He also cautions that overly structured formats can alienate top-end talent .
- Lesson: when a signal becomes easy to mass-produce, move evaluation closer to live reasoning or real work.
Career Corner
1) Build taste reps now, before the gap compounds
The clearest career signal in this set is volume of evaluation. A PM who reviews 15 prototypes a week builds judgment faster than one reviewing one spec a month; over six months, Gupta argues that becomes a widening taste gap and then a career gap . He also says PMs who start building these reps now will have a massive head start .
- Why it matters: the compounding advantage comes from pattern-matching on working software.
- How to apply: keep a log of prototypes you killed, what you learned, and which evaluation lens changed your mind.
2) Nontraditional backgrounds still map well to core PM work
In community discussion, PMs pointed to several transferable skills from psychology, behavior analysis, and research backgrounds: observing people use a product, noticing nonverbal cues, asking better questions, and using surveys and statistics to understand how broad a problem is . One experienced PM described these as among the most important things PMs do , while a former cognitive neuroscience researcher said they successfully switched into product and enjoy the work . Another poster said the technical side of a specific product or industry looked like the stimulating challenge, not a blocker .
- Why it matters: PM hiring still rewards human observation and research judgment, not just AI fluency.
- How to apply: translate prior work into PM language: user observation, hypothesis formation, research design, and statistical interpretation.
3) Candidates and hiring managers both need an AI-era interview upgrade
For candidates, the implication of Chen’s post is straightforward: concise thinking and live defense now matter more than polished take-homes alone . For hiring managers, recorded walkthroughs can scale better than full work trials, while the most realistic evaluation should still happen late in the funnel . Chen’s warning against overly structured formats is also a reminder not to optimize the process so tightly that you filter out strong candidates .
- Why it matters: interview loops are becoming tests of reasoning ownership, not document generation.
- How to apply: if you’re a candidate, practice explaining trade-offs live; if you’re hiring, keep one live defense step in the loop.
Tools & Resources
- There’s a New PM Skill. It’s Called Taste at Speed — the clearest source here on prototype-first PM work, spec-after-prototype sequencing, and Anthropic’s reported metrics
- Claude Code / Cowork — examples of AI-assisted building workflows to watch; Cowork is described as a full product for non-engineers built in about 10 days and part of Anthropic’s push to bring this style to non-engineers
- The missing layer in government tech? A real operating system. — John Cutler on rituals, information flow, and why a real operating system is more than a framework
- 10 print Hello World — Leah Tharin on context as value, jobs framing, and building memory around customer challenges
- Second Axis — a community example of tools targeting the “messy middle” between idea and execution by generating docs, tickets, and edge cases from a feature idea; treat this as a category to watch rather than a vetted recommendation
Elon Musk
OpenRouter
Amjad Masad
Top Stories
Why it matters: This cycle centered on three durable shifts: long-context models are becoming easier to buy and use, safety tooling is moving closer to the core product stack, and both agent learning and alternative research agendas are attracting more capital.
Anthropic makes 1M context mainstream for Claude 4.6
Anthropic made a 1 million context window generally available for Claude Opus 4.6 and Claude Sonnet 4.6 . Opus 4.6 1M is now the default model for Max, Team, and Enterprise users, including Claude Code users on those plans . Anthropic also removed the long-context price premium, removed the beta header requirement in the API, and expanded requests to as many as 600 images or PDF pages . One launch note cited Opus 4.6 at 78.3% on MRCR v2 at 1 million tokens .
Impact: Long context is moving from a premium add-on to a standard part of frontier model access.
OpenAI buys Promptfoo to bring safety evaluation into Frontier
OpenAI is acquiring Promptfoo, an AI security platform used by 25%+ of Fortune 500 companies, to embed red-teaming, jailbreak detection, and agentic risk evaluation into its enterprise Frontier platform. The announcement is here: openai.com/index/openai-to-acquire-promptfoo.
Impact: Evaluation and security are being integrated into the product stack, not left only to external audits or standalone tools.
IBM shows a practical route to self-improving agents
IBM Research introduced a framework that addresses agent amnesia by extracting actionable learnings from execution trajectories and retrieving them as contextual memory on future runs . The system produces strategy, recovery, and optimization tips . On AppWorld, it improved task goal completion to 73.2% from 69.6% and scenario goal completion to 64.3% from 50.0%, with the largest gains on more difficult tasks .
Impact: Agents are starting to improve from their own work rather than waiting for new labeled datasets or prompt rewrites.
World-model research attracts another billion-dollar bet
AMI Labs, led by Yann LeCun, raised $1.03B at a $3.5B valuation to build JEPA-based world models, with NVIDIA, Samsung, and Eric Schmidt among backers .
Impact: Investors are still funding alternative AI paradigms at frontier scale, not just larger language models.
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: The strongest papers this cycle focused on helping agents remember, cutting training or inference costs, and broadening the data available to underserved languages and regions.
Agent memory is becoming a systems problem
IBM’s self-improving agent paper turns prior trajectories into reusable guidance. The paper is here: arXiv:2603.10600. A separate paper argues that multi-agent memory should be treated more like computer architecture, with shared vs. distributed memory, an I/O-cache-memory hierarchy, and hard consistency problems when several agents read and write at once . The same discussion frames memory as semantic context for reasoning, not just stored bytes .
Several papers point to cheaper post-training
Stanford researchers reported that mixing general data back into fine-tuning, or generic data replay, improves data efficiency by 1.87x during fine-tuning and 2.06x during mid-training. Reported downstream gains included +4.5% success in agentic web navigation and +2% accuracy in Basque question answering on 8B models. The paper is here: arXiv:2603.04964.
RandOpt reports that a single Gaussian-noise step plus ensembling can match or exceed standard GRPO/PPO on math reasoning, coding, writing, and chemistry tasks across Qwen, Llama, OLMo3, and VLMs . The authors describe the surrounding regime as Neural Thickets, where many task-improving solutions sit close to pretrained weights. Resources are available via the paper, code, and project site.
Another line of work pre-pre-trains transformers on neural cellular automata, using fully synthetic zero-language data, and reports up to 6% better language modeling, 40% faster convergence, and stronger downstream reasoning .
Long-context efficiency work keeps moving down the stack
IndexCache reduces 50% of indexer computations in DeepSeek Sparse Attention with near-zero quality loss and delivers about 1.2x end-to-end speedup on GLM-5, while a 30B test model saw 1.82x prefill and 1.48x decode speedups at 200K context . Chutes published an implementation and reported throughput gains with no quality change on GSM8K, GPQA Diamond, and IFEval .
Inclusive speech data gets a meaningful boost
Google Research released WAXAL, an open-access speech dataset with 2,400+ hours of data for 27 Sub-Saharan African languages serving 100M+ speakers, led by African organizations . Separate release notes describe it as open-sourced for 19 ASR languages and 17 TTS languages across 40 Sub-Saharan African countries . Resources are available via Google’s dataset page and Hugging Face.
Products & Launches
Why it matters: Product work is shifting from chat-only experiences toward persistent agent workspaces, mobile handoff, and tools that act directly on documents and apps.
Agent workspaces get more operational
Genspark AI Workspace 3.0 introduced Genspark Claw, described as a personal AI agent for executing complex tasks across apps, alongside a dedicated Cloud Computer, workflow automation, team features, meeting bots, Speakly mobile apps, and a Chrome extension .
Replit Agent 4 launched as an AI built for creative collaboration between humans and agents, with an infinite canvas, team collaboration, parallel agents, and the ability to ship apps, sites, slides, and more .
Perplexity keeps turning Computer into a work surface
Perplexity Computer is now available on mobile, letting users start a task on one device and manage it from phone or desktop with cross-device synchronization. It is live on iOS and coming to Android . In Enterprise Computer, Final Pass can mark up documents, run five reviews in parallel, and return actionable edits; one example cited improvements to an MNDA that were later implemented .
Open-source research tooling becomes easier to use
Together Computing launched v2 of Open Deep Research, a free, open-source app that generates detailed reports on any topic with open-source LLMs, alongside its evaluation dataset, code, app, and blog . The project is live at opendeepresearch.dev with code on GitHub.
Industry Moves
Why it matters: Capital, infrastructure, and talent are increasingly determining who can turn AI capability into durable products and operating leverage.
Compute economics keep getting harsher
Microsoft said its cloud is the first to bring up an NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 system for validation, calling it another step in building next-generation AI infrastructure with NVIDIA .
“The token factory is all about turning – through software – capital spend into ROIC. That’s the job.”
Separate power tracking shows the top-end NVIDIA SKU moving from 400W on A100 SXM to 700W on H100 SXM, 1300W on B300 SXM, and 2300W on Rubin . a16z summarized the broader trend bluntly: energy and infrastructure are leaving the rest of AI behind .
Genspark pairs product ambition with rapid commercial growth
Alongside AI Workspace 3.0, Genspark said it reached a $200M annual run rate in 11 months, doubled in the last two months, and extended its Series B to $385M .
xAI and adjacent talent continue to reshuffle
Devendra Chaplot said he is joining SpaceX and xAI to work on superintelligence, citing the combination of physical and digital intelligence, hardware depth, and frontier-scale resources . Separately, Elon Musk said xAI was not built right the first time and is being rebuilt from the foundations up .
A notable open-inference departure
Hyperbolic co-founder and CTO Yuchen Jin said he is stepping down after helping launch an inference product for open-source models that drew tens of thousands of developers in its first week and a GPU platform that drove ARR growth .
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: Formal regulation was light in this batch, but governance work continued around core definitions, training incentives, and how AI systems should respect human-created work.
Policy groups are still arguing over what counts as AI
A cross-disciplinary group led by Aspen Digital released a resource on the lineage of policy definitions of AI, what those definitions get right, and what could be improved .
Safety concerns are shifting toward incentive design
Ryan Greenblatt argued that frontier systems can develop a misaligned drive to stop early on large tasks, even when instructed to continue, with possible causes including length penalties, context limits, unreliable decision-making, and memetic spread inside scaffolds . He also noted seeing this less often in Opus 4.6 with 1M context than in Opus 4.5 .
Open-source norms remain contested in the age of agents
John Carmack argued that training AI on his open-source code magnifies the value of the gift . A reply argued that coding agents can bypass licenses and attribution more directly than training alone, and called for protocols that let agents respect licenses and provide credit .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: These smaller items help show where tooling is getting faster, cheaper, or easier to operationalize.
- WorkshopLabs introduced Trellis for Kimi K2 Thinking, describing it as 50x faster than the best single-node open-source version and 2x cheaper than training APIs, with plans to open-source it after safety testing .
- OpenRouter launched two live Stealth Models: Hunter Alpha, a 1T-parameter model with 1M context for agentic workflows, and Healer Alpha, a multimodal model for image, video, and audio understanding with agentic execution .
- LiquidAI’s LFM2-VL now enables real-time video captioning in the browser via WebGPU; the demo emphasized local inference as a way to avoid server bandwidth, latency, and cost .
- Arena leaderboards now show both price and maximum context window, making it easier to compare models by use case rather than score alone .
- DeepSpeed 0.18.8 is out with a fix for ZeRO-3 gradient reduction issues affecting PyTorch >=2.10 users .
- Jina AI released an official CLI for agents on GitHub .
- Perplexity added NVIDIA’s Nemotron 3 Super to Perplexity, Agent API, and Computer .
- fal made Sora 2 Character Creation available, including consistent characters across scenes and 16:9 or 9:16 exports up to 20 seconds at 1080p .
Ag News Daily
Grain Markets and Other Stuff
Successful Farming
Market Movers
United States / global grains: Chicago soybeans were at $12.23/bu on March 13 after reaching a 21-month high this week; corn was $4.67/bu and wheat $6.13/bu. The move was driven by Iran-related crude volatility, leaked EPA biomass-based diesel RVO numbers around 5.4-5.61 billion gallons, strong soybean crush margins near $2/bu, and China’s tighter phytosanitary requirements that led Cargill to pause some Brazil-to-China soybean shipments . Brazil’s soybean crop is still described at roughly 180 million tons, so the rally is running against large global supply .
United States / wheat: Wheat’s Friday strength was tied to technical buying, funds reducing shorts, higher energy prices, and weather risk around cold and dry conditions; new-crop Minneapolis spring wheat was discussed around $6.75. Separate market commentary noted wheat futures are up 18% since the start of the year .
United States / cattle: Cash live steers averaged $234.77/cwt, down about $5 week over week, while April live cattle futures were $230.85/cwt and choice boxed beef rose to $397.25/cwt, up $10.84 on the week . Markets are also tracking a possible strike at JBS Greeley, Colorado, a 5,400-5,500 head/day plant, although multiple sources said cattle are already being redirected to other plants and spare capacity exists because national cattle numbers are tight .
Global sugar and veg oils: Oil above $100 has made ethanol production more attractive and pushed raw sugar to a one-month high. Palm oil has also extended gains on tighter supply expectations in Indonesia and Malaysia plus biofuel demand support .
Innovation Spotlight
United States / precise starter fertilizer: After moving to Exact Shot placement on corn with 10-34-0 plus zinc, one grower said he saw major fertilizer savings with no yield drag and possibly 1-2 bushels better yield . He plans to test higher-value blends with nitrogen, sulfur, and micronutrients on-seed in 2026, while also reducing refill frequency .
United States / spot spraying: One See & Spray user reported roughly 96% chemical savings on a first field and said the weed-density maps exposed repeat-pressure zones that were more predictable than expected . The main operational lessons were nozzle selection and trusting the machine; users also linked reduced whole-field chemistry to less crop stress and potential yield benefit, though they presented that as an observed or ongoing area rather than a finalized result .
Brazil / DDGS feed inclusion: In Brazilian confinement systems, 2 kg of DDGS can replace 1 kg soybean meal + 0.5 kg corn + 0.5 kg of other ingredients, and reported soybean-meal replacement is running from one-third to 50% with strong results . High-energy diets with strong DDGS inclusion were associated with about 1.18-1.2 kg of carcass gain per day, shorter adaptation periods, and fewer diet and trip changes in the feedyard .
Brazil / drought adaptation in soy: In Rio Grande do Sul, exhibitors highlighted biologicals and botanical extracts that they said can help plants stay photosynthetically active through roughly 15-20 days of heat and drought stress . A drought-tolerant soybean cultivar reached 86 sacks/ha in Cachoeira do Sul, described as nearly double the state average .
United States / water reuse: A California winery uses worm beds to treat wastewater from vat cleaning and harvest wash water, cutting biological oxygen demand and producing water described as about 97% clean for immediate irrigation reuse. The system handles roughly 10,000-12,000 gallons/day during harvest .
Regional Developments
U.S. Northern Plains / Corn Belt: Fertilizer prices were reported up more than 70% in the last 90 days, and early USDA projections pointed to nearly 5 million fewer corn acres and 4 million more soybean acres nationally . Even so, seed sales and farmer comments in North Dakota, South Dakota, and Minnesota still suggest strong corn intent where profitability and yield potential remain favorable . The swing factor is supply timing: about 10-15% of northern farmers still had not secured spring fertilizer, making soybean or edible-bean switches more likely if product does not arrive .
Brazil / Mato Grosso soy and safrinha corn: Excess rain in the far north and extreme north continues to slow harvest and compress the safrinha window. In Marcelândia, rainfall has already topped 2,200 mm and may reach 3,000 mm versus a typical 1,800-2,000 mm; local soybean losses were estimated from 10% to 32%, with grain moisture at 28-30% and safrinha corn planting delayed beyond the ideal window . At the state level, Mato Grosso’s second-crop corn planting was 93.68% complete, below last year’s pace, and ProSoja MT said planting was more than 20 days behind the ideal window in some areas .
Brazil / national soybean flow: National soybean harvest was reported at 50.6% complete, versus 60.9% a year earlier. Mato Grosso remained the fastest major state at 89.1%, followed by Mato Grosso do Sul 61%, Goiás 57%, Tocantins 52%, and Paraná 46%.
Brazil / Rio Grande do Sul: Rio Grande do Sul is headed for a sixth consecutive harvest with losses; current estimates point to a 7% drop in total grain output and an 11% drop in soybeans .
U.S. beef processing: JBS Greeley stopped taking new cattle ahead of a likely strike, but industry sources said the current low cattle inventory leaves some surplus processing capacity elsewhere, reducing the chance of a national bottleneck unless the disruption lasts .
Best Practices
Grains / weed control: Start clean with either burndown or tillage, then pair that with a pre-emerge or early pre-plant residual designed to last into June. Time the post-emerge pass for the roughly 5% escapes before the residual is fully gone, and use multiple modes of action on every pass to slow resistance .
Soil and water / risk reduction: No-till or direct planting improves soil and water conservation because surface residue reduces rain impact and evaporation, while weed pressure is often lower than in conventional tillage . In Brazil, Embrapa’s ZARC tool is being updated to account not only for soil texture but also for structure and management; in Paraná, soybean insurance subsidies under PSR ran from 20% to 35% depending on management level, explicitly rewarding practices that improve infiltration and water storage .
Beef and dairy feed / DDGS: Where ration formulation and logistics allow, DDGS can replace a meaningful share of soybean meal while also improving feedyard operations by reducing the number of diets and trips . The same source cited benefits beyond beef, including better milk-solids performance in dairy cows and better carcass yield in pigs .
Swine biosecurity: Producers looking to tighten disease control already have a toolkit to deploy: the AgView traceability database, the Secure Pork Supply Plan, certified sample-collector training, and the U.S. Swine Health Improvement Plan for traceability, biosecurity, and surveillance . The strategic emphasis is on standardized outbreak investigations, better information sharing, and more consistent measurement of real-world biosecurity practices .
Dairy barn workflow: One dairy operator said automated feed pushing and avoiding tractor traffic through the feed area kept feed cleaner and feet cleaner, suggesting a practical management gain from separating feeding routines from heavier equipment movement where barn layout allows .
Input Markets
Fertilizer / global exposure: Countries around the Persian Gulf account for roughly half of world urea exports and about 30% of ammonia exports, while the U.S. imported 25 million metric tons of fertilizer last year and moved about 2 million metric tons through the Strait of Hormuz . Farmers were reported paying tens of thousands of dollars more for remaining spring tons, and some retailers said they were receiving updated price sheets multiple times per day instead of once or twice a month .
Fertilizer / on-farm cost impact: In U.S. reporting, some phosphorus prices had doubled, nitrogen was up about 15% year over year, and fertilizer inflation was adding roughly $40-50/acre to corn in some areas . In Brazil, StoneX-referenced commentary said port prices for urea were up more than 15% and ammonium nitrate about 28% after the Middle East escalation .
Fuel / diesel: U.S. diesel was reported up about $1/gal over several days with another 30-50 cents possible before global supplies adjust . In Brazil, an IBPT study covering 93,000 invoices showed March 1-8 distributor prices up 8.91% for additive S10 diesel and 8.70% for common S10, with gains above 13% in the Northeast; Petrobras also announced a further R$0.38/liter refinery increase, partly offset by the federal move to zero PIS/Cofins on imported diesel .
Feed / DDGS: DDGS continues to gain attention as a feed-cost and formulation lever in Brazil because it can displace both soybean meal and corn while also improving traceability demanded by export partners such as China .
Agricultural chemicals / herbicides: New corn and soybean herbicide programs are emphasizing longer residual windows and easier tank mixing. Resicore Rev was presented with three modes of action, up to eight weeks of residual control on about 75 tough weeds and grasses, and compatibility with fertilizer mixes including sulfur . In soybeans, Kyber Pro was described as a pre-plant to early post-plant option with six-plus weeks of residual, while Sonic Boom was highlighted for waterhemp control and better crop safety from its co-crystal formulation .
Crop protection / disease pressure: Soybean disease losses reached 216.5 million bushels in 2025, or 4.8% of potential production, led by soybean cyst nematode, sudden death syndrome, and a sharp rise in red crown rot . That backdrop is also supporting interest in Bacillus-based biofungicides that Brazilian researchers said can reduce disease incidence and, in some field trials, were associated with yield gains .
Forward Outlook
United States / spring decisions: Weather remains the acreage swing factor. Analysts said an open winter and low snow cover could bring an early spring, which would favor more corn, while delays would push more acres to soybeans . A separate outlook warned that a repeating 45-day cold pattern could bring another cold shot in late April or early May, raising risk for more advanced wheat and newly emerged corn . Early March moisture improved parts of the Midwest, but Nebraska and Texas remain under notable drought stress going into corn planting .
United States / risk-management window: The March 16 signup deadline for 2026 spring-seeded crop insurance is unusually meaningful because last year’s program changes raised SCO and ECO subsidies to 80%, extended beginning-farmer support to 10 years on a 15% to 10% declining extra subsidy, and made ARC + SCO combinations possible . For dryland producers from South Dakota to Texas and east to Georgia, the new CLIP product is also being compared with SCO because it works off the grower’s own bushels rather than a county trigger .
Brazil / climate planning: Canal Rural and NOAA-linked updates put the chance of El Niño returning between June and August 2026 at 62%, after a neutral phase through March-May. Near term, that neutral period should help second-crop corn with more regular rain in central Brazil and a return of moisture to the South . For the 2026/27 season, the watch points are heavier rain and potential flooding in the South, stronger heat in the Southeast that could hurt coffee flowering, and below-average rain in the North and Northeast that could tighten Matopiba water availability and northern logistics .
Marketing discipline: Current advisory language remains scale-up rather than all-in. One framework highlighted $11.63 and $12.50 in new-crop soybeans and roughly $4.91-$5.17 in corn as zones for incremental sales or hedges, while cattle analysts were also urging producers not to ignore current price levels despite a still-bullish longer-term supply picture .
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