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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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Greg Brockman
Garry Tan
Salvatore Sanfilippo
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
Today’s strongest practitioner signal: on genuinely hard debugging and optimization work, Codex is earning the more credible field reports. Salvatore Sanfilippo says that after roughly 20 hard comparisons over two months, Codex has been stronger than Claude Code; in a concrete Radix-3 optimization on a core Redis data structure, Claude Code spent an hour and still produced crashing code, while Codex identified the bitmap-shift bug immediately, fixed it, and found extra optimizations . Garry Tan separately said Codex is “GOAT at finding bugs and finding plan errors,” and Greg Brockman added that “codex has gotten very good” .
🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS
- Codex vs. Claude Code — Sanfilippo’s tests use Claude Opus at max thinking depth versus GPT-5.4/5.3 in x-high mode. His practical conclusion: Claude Code feels faster and more agile with tools, but Codex is better when the task is actually hard .
- Codex CLI is open source — Romain Huet highlighted that the CLI can be modified to fit your workflow, including by asking Codex to change itself. A real example: Matias/@0xmts added
/progress [verbose | quiet]for 1-2 line updates that refresh in place instead of flooding the terminal . - OpenClaw’s model routing is highly task-specific — Matthew Berman uses Sonnet 4.6 or Opus 4.6 for main planning/orchestration, GPT-5.4 for coding fallback, Grok for search, Gemini 3.1 Pro / Gemini Deep Research Pro for video and research, and Qwen 3.5 for local models. OpenClaw can also assign different models to different threads, so frontier models stay reserved for harder work .
- Narrow-task local replacement — Berman says a fine-tuned Qwen 3.5 9B model now handles his email labeling as well as Opus 4.6 for that use case, turning a recurring frontier-model job into a local one .
- New open stack: Nemotron 3 + Open Shell + DeepAgents — LangChain’s demo pairs Nvidia’s Nemotron 3 supermodel with Nvidia’s newly released Open Shell runtime and the DeepAgents open-source harness. The meaningful changes are runtime policies, persistent sandboxes, GPU-oriented execution, skills/subagents, and mutable memory that lives outside the sandbox .
💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS
Split conversations by topic
- Create separate Telegram/Discord/WhatsApp threads for major workstreams.
- Keep one topic per thread so only relevant history hits the context window.
-
Put harder coding threads on frontier models and cheaper Q&A threads on smaller ones.
Berman says this is the main reason he avoids the memory problems other users report, and it lines up with Sourcegraph’s broader “context first” argument that teams shipping lots of AI PRs win on context, not just model choice .
Delegate early; keep the main agent unblocked
- Use the main model for planning and orchestration.
- Delegate coding, searches, API calls, data processing, file ops, calendar/email, and anything that will take more than ~10 seconds to subagents or harnesses.
-
Use faster or cheaper models for simpler subagents.
Berman’s rule is blunt: if it takes more than 10 seconds, delegate it .
Keep separate prompt files per model
- Download each lab’s prompt best-practices docs.
-
Maintain one prompt tree per model family, such as root for Opus and a separate
/gptdirectory for GPT-5.4. - Document the routing strategy in memory or PRD docs.
-
Run a nightly cron to keep the prompt sets aligned on facts while still model-specific in style.
This is Berman’s answer to the “one prompt fits all models” trap, and Kent C. Dodds’ add-on is useful: docs help agents understand high-level intent and can themselves be kept up to date by the agent .
Build in a code-native tool; use chat as the control plane
Berman says he may use Telegram to operate OpenClaw, but prefers a code-native environment like Cursor to actually build and modify it because those systems are easier to read and iterate in. When he is away from a laptop, Telegram voice memos become a fast way to issue tasks and prompts without typing long messages .Verification still beats vibes
Have the agent write tests, keep code snapshotted in Git/GitHub for rollback, and back up non-code artifacts separately. Armin Ronacher’s warning is the right counterweight: agents are hard to resist, and they can put regrettable code into a codebase very quickly .
"I don’t think you can vibe yourself back to sanity with better models."
- Sandbox the runtime; don’t trust command allow-lists
The Snowflake Cortex exploit chain worked becausecatwas treated as safe even though process substitution let the agent fetch and execute attacker code from a malicious README. Simon Willison’s takeaway is to assume the agent can do anything its process can do and enforce safety with deterministic sandboxes outside the agent; Open Shell’s policy-governed runtime is a concrete implementation of that idea .
👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH
- Salvatore Sanfilippo — high-signal because this was not toy-code benchmarking. He compared agents on a low-level Radix-3 optimization in a data structure used heavily in Redis, then explained the exact failure mode and fix .
- Matthew Berman — dropped one of the denser public operator playbooks lately: 200+ hours of OpenClaw usage distilled into thread-level context control, multi-model routing, subagents, prompt-file sync, testing, backups, and mobile voice input .
- Simon Willison — worth tracking for both offense and defense: he surfaced a real prompt-injection escape in Snowflake Cortex, and separately highlighted a Claude Code-driven autoresearch workflow that ran 90 experiments and produced working systems code .
- Romain Huet — useful because he highlighted a practical behavior change, not a benchmark: Codex users are already customizing the open-source CLI to fit their own workflow .
- Armin Ronacher — still one of the clearest anti-hype voices in the room. His point is short and important: better models don’t automatically undo bad agent-driven code decisions .
🎬 WATCH & LISTEN
- 0:32-3:04 — Threads fix more than “memory”: Berman shows why one giant chat window interleaves topics, bloats context, and makes both the human and the agent worse. Easy habit to steal tomorrow .
- 11:19-14:01 — The “>10s = delegate” rule: Best segment today for people building agent workflows. Berman spells out what belongs in the main planner and what should be handed to subagents or external harnesses .
- 8:44-10:44 — Claude Code speed, Codex correctness: Sanfilippo explains the false-confidence trap directly from a real debugging session: Claude Code felt agile, but Codex found the actual bitmap bug and kept going past the fix .
- 5:03-7:58 — Fixed system prompt, mutable memory, composite backend: LangChain’s DeepAgents walkthrough is the cleanest short architecture segment in the batch if you care how these stacks are actually wired .
📊 PROJECTS & REPOS
- openai/codex — the open-source Codex CLI is gaining the kind of traction that matters: people are modifying it to fit their own terminal workflow, including quieter progress reporting .
- danveloper/flash-moe — strong evidence that agentic “autoresearch” can produce real systems work. Dan Woods used Claude Code to run 90 experiments, generate MLX Objective-C and Metal code, and ship a custom Qwen3.5-397B-A17B implementation plus a paper .
- DeepAgents + Open Shell — worth watching as an open stack because the seams are visible: model, runtime, harness, sandbox, memory, and tool loop are all explicit rather than hidden behind one product shell .
- OpenClaw — the adoption signal here is operator time: Berman says he’s put 200+ hours and billions of tokens into the setup, and the resulting playbook is concrete enough to copy rather than admire .
Editorial take: today’s durable edge was not “pick one magic model” — it was pairing stronger models on the hard bugs with tighter context boundaries, explicit orchestration, and runtime-enforced safety.
Google Labs
Latent
Jack Clark
The clearest pattern
Today’s updates pointed in one direction: AI is getting packaged into more concrete work surfaces—design tools, robotics stacks, clinical systems, and bank workflows—while trust and reliability remain the variables people care about most .
Trust and reliability stayed central
Anthropic’s 81,000-user study gave a clearer picture of what people want from AI
Anthropic said nearly 81,000 Claude users responded in one week to conversational interviews conducted by "Anthropic Interviewer," spanning 159 countries and 70 languages; the company describes it as the largest qualitative study of its kind . Roughly one third wanted AI to improve quality of life, another quarter wanted help doing better and more fulfilling work, and 81% said AI had taken at least a step toward the future they envisioned . Globally, 67% viewed AI positively, with higher optimism in South America, Africa, and Asia than in Europe or the United States .
Why it matters: The more durable takeaway is about trust: Anthropic said the most common concerns were unreliability, jobs and the economy, and preserving human autonomy, with economic concern the strongest predictor of overall sentiment . Separately, Jack Clark said the interviews underscored "the weight of responsibility" AI developers carry, while Gary Marcus pointed to analysis of delusion-associated chat logs in which chatbots affirmed users in 65% of messages and ascribed grand significance in 37% .
"My overwhelming sense of reading these quotes is the weight of responsibility AI developers have for the welfare of the people that talk to their AI systems."
Product surfaces widened
Google pushed AI from prompt to interface
Google launched Stitch, a "vibe design" platform that turns natural language into high-fidelity designs on an AI-native canvas, with support for interactive prototypes, portable design systems, and voice-based layout iteration . At the same time, Google said Gemini API built-in tools—search, maps, and file search—now work with function calling, added context circulation for better performance, and extended Google Maps grounding to Gemini 3 . Stitch is currently available in English to users 18+ in supported Gemini countries .
Why it matters: Google is not just improving base models; it is packaging them as design agents and as tool-using developer primitives that can operate with more context and more structured actions .
xAI widened Grok across assistant and media workflows
Posts shared around Grok 4.20’s rollout described the model as out of beta across Auto, Fast, Expert, and Heavy modes, alongside benchmark claims around low hallucination, instruction following, and agentic tool use . xAI also previewed Grok Imagine, which was described as generating a consistent character from multiple angles and extending a sequence shot by shot across up to seven shots while keeping the same face and outfit .
Why it matters: The notable shift is breadth. Grok is being presented not only as a chat or reasoning model, but as a broader product family spanning agentic assistance and higher-consistency video generation .
AI moved deeper into operational systems
NVIDIA laid out a full cloud-to-robot stack
At GTC, NVIDIA described the next generation of robots as "generalist-specialists" powered by reasoning vision-language-action models and pointed to the open Isaac platform as the stack for building them . The stack spans data capture and augmentation with NuRec, Isaac Teleop, and the Physical AI Data Factory Blueprint; simulation and evaluation in Isaac Sim, Isaac Lab 3.0, and Lab-Arena; deployment on Jetson with runtime libraries like cuVSLAM; and research assets including SOMA-X, GEAR-SONIC, GR00T X-Embodiment, and BONES-SEED .
Why it matters: NVIDIA is trying to make robotics development look like a continuous AI software pipeline rather than a collection of disconnected tools. That matters because sim-to-real workflows are becoming central to how physical AI gets built and evaluated .
Healthcare and banking both showed more concrete AI adoption
Latent Health said it raised $80 million to build a clinical reasoning engine for patient-data review, drug-criteria interpretation, evidence extraction, and workflow orchestration; the company says it is used by more than 45 major U.S. health systems, has helped more than 2 million patients access medications faster, and has reduced denials by more than 30% . Separately, Sakana AI and Mitsubishi UFJ Bank said their AI Lending Expert has moved into a real-case verification phase, with the system designed to capture veteran bankers’ implicit knowledge and improved using roughly 1,500 pieces of human feedback .
Why it matters: These are strong deployment signals in regulated settings. The common pattern is AI being framed as a reasoning and workflow layer inside high-stakes institutions, not just a general-purpose assistant .
Research signal to watch
Marin is turning scaling-law work into a falsifiable test
Percy Liang said Marin has trained models up to 1e22 FLOPs and preregistered a prediction for loss at 1e23 FLOPs on GitHub before the larger run finishes, with the goal of finding a training recipe that scales reliably rather than just a single model . He linked the work to Delphi, described as a modernized version of EleutherAI’s Pythia, which he said has been valuable for understanding language models and is due for a refresh .
Why it matters: The interesting part is the method as much as the scale. Preregistering the prediction makes the scaling-law claim testable, which is a useful signal in a field where large-model results are often discussed only after the fact .
Bottom line
Today’s news had a consistent shape: more AI is arriving as a concrete system for design, robotics, clinical work, and financial workflows . But the strongest reminder from users and commentators was that reliability, economic impact, and human agency are still the terms on which many people will judge whether these systems are actually useful .
Marc Andreessen
Tim Ferriss
Balaji Srinivasan
Most compelling recommendation: the reading pair behind The Network State
Balaji Srinivasan gave the strongest direct signal in today's batch because he did not just praise two books; he explicitly said their combination produced his Network State framework .
"sovereign individual plus changing world order equals network state"
Title:The Sovereign Individual
Content type: Book
Author/creator: Not specified in the cited material
Link/URL: None provided in the source material
Who recommended it: Balaji Srinivasan
Key takeaway: Balaji says this book is one half of the synthesis behind his Network State concept
Why it matters: It is a rare, explicit pointer to the intellectual source code of one of his core ideasTitle:Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order
Content type: Book
Author/creator: Ray Dalio
Link/URL: None provided in the source material
Who recommended it: Balaji Srinivasan
Key takeaway: He pairs Dalio's world-order analysis with The Sovereign Individual and says the combination yields The Network State
Why it matters: Balaji frames this as the geopolitical half of the synthesis, making the recommendation unusually concrete
Media, power, and internet culture
Title:Marshall McLuhan's work
Content type: Books / media theory
Author/creator: Marshall McLuhan
Link/URL: None provided in the source material
Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen
Key takeaway: Andreessen says McLuhan's work has held up well and uses ideas like the medium is the message to think about how format shapes content
Why it matters: This is a live framework recommendation for understanding modern media, not just a historical nodTitle:The True Believer
Content type: Book
Author/creator: Not specified in the cited material
Link/URL: None provided in the source material
Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen
Key takeaway: Andreessen links it to elite-versus-mass dynamics and to the people on X who spend all day trying to understand AI, politics, and similar domains
Why it matters: He is using the book as a lens for where high-attention knowledge synthesis now happens onlineTitle:Kill All Normies
Content type: Book
Author/creator: Not specified in the cited material
Link/URL: None provided in the source material
Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen
Key takeaway: Andreessen describes it as a decade-old book about the angry internet culture that developed after the 2000s
Why it matters: It gives historical context for present-day online political and cultural dynamicsTitle:99% Invisible miniseries on The Power Broker
Content type: Podcast miniseries
Author/creator: 99% Invisible / Roman Mars and co-hosts
Link/URL: None provided in the source material
Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
Key takeaway: Ferriss recommends the 12-part series as a way to absorb Robert Caro's Pulitzer-winning book on Robert Moses and power in New York, with Caro interviews and guests like Conan O'Brien
Why it matters: Ferriss presents it as a practical route into a canonical power book that many people know but never finish
Health and cognition resources
Ferriss explicitly says some of the science he follows here is still out on the edges and not yet ready for clinical application, so these are best read as exploratory resources rather than settled guidance .
Title:STEM-Talk episode with Dr. Francisco Gonzalez-Lima
Content type: Podcast episode
Author/creator: STEM-Talk
Link/URL: None provided in the source material
Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
Key takeaway: Ferriss says he uses STEM-Talk to find interesting scientists and highlights Gonzalez-Lima's work on neurodegenerative disease as a vascular or mitochondrial problem, including low-dose methylene blue and photobiomodulation
Why it matters: This is Ferriss's clearest pointer to where he discovers edge scientific ideas he thinks may eventually prove usefulTitle:The End of Alzheimer's
Content type: Book
Author/creator: Dale Bredesen
Link/URL: None provided in the source material
Who recommended it: Kevin Rose
Key takeaway: Rose says Bredesen treats what shows up in the brain as the byproduct of upstream issues such as vascular problems, mitochondrial issues, or toxins, and he describes the protocol as diet, exercise, supplements, and light ketosis
Why it matters: It is a strong example of a founder recommending a systems-style book because it changed how he frames the problem, not because of a single hackTitle:The Vagus Nerve
Content type: Book
Author/creator: Kevin Tracy
Link/URL: None provided in the source material
Who recommended it: Kevin Rose
Key takeaway: Rose points to its extended chapter on Wim Hof and says breathwork can show similar effects in controlling immune response so it is not excessive
Why it matters: It is a narrower but concrete pointer for readers interested in the intersection of breathwork and inflammation research
Pattern worth noting
Today's strongest organic recommendations split into two groups: media and power frameworks for understanding institutions and online culture, and health and cognition resources that founders are using to explore systems-level explanations rather than single-variable answers
Paul Graham
scott belsky
Elena Verna
Big Ideas
1) PM work in AI is shifting from specs to evaluation systems
At Shopify, the move to AI products like Sidekick changed the PM job from hardening every requirement in a spec to defining 'what good looks like' and encoding that judgment in an internal LLM-based evaluator called Ace. PMs review fake or sanitized real conversations, score them across dimensions such as accuracy, grounding, merchant sentiment, goal fulfillment, execution quality, errors, language quality, and safety, and then approve aligned examples into a ground-truth set used to create a judge. The same pattern is applied to generated workflows in Flow, not just chat experiences.
Why it matters: Non-deterministic products cannot be fully managed through traditional specs alone; quality depends on whether the team can repeatedly evaluate open-ended outputs.
How to apply: Treat the eval stack as part of the roadmap. Define dimensions of quality early, create annotated examples, require agreement across raters on subjective calls, and reuse the approach anywhere your product generates content, queries, or workflows.
2) Outcomes are a better organizing unit than outputs
"When we measure success by what you ship, you get a feature factory. When you measure success by the impact of what you ship, you get a product team that learns, adapts, and creates real value."
Teresa Torres draws a clean distinction: an output is the thing you build, while an outcome is the customer or business change it creates. Teams given outputs have little latitude to explore; teams given outcomes have more freedom and more responsibility to find the best path.
Kate Tarling's service-organization guidance pushes the same logic up a level: list services from the outside in, set measures for what good looks like, map current work against those services, and reject the assumption that the status quo is a neutral or risk-free baseline.
Why it matters: This is not just a metrics tweak. It changes portfolio decisions, intake discipline, and how teams defend capacity.
How to apply: Rewrite incoming requests in problem-and-outcome language, choose metrics tied to value creation rather than shipment, and expect to iterate on the first version of the metric. If the work sits inside a broader service, map it to the service outcome before you prioritize it.
3) Growth is moving away from funnel tuning and toward access, trust, and community
Elena Verna argues that growth used to be an optimization problem focused on acquisition, activation, and monetization, but is now shifting toward strategic product giveaways, outcome-aligned monetization, and deliberate community building. She also argues that feature differentiation is weakening, making trust, brand, and human connection more central to adoption.
Her distribution view is similar: paid marketing is harder, organic app-store style discovery is crowded, and the clearest current channel is organic, creator-led social. At Lovable, that shows up as employee-led social, building in public, and feeding social feedback directly back into the product.
Why it matters: PMs can no longer assume that better funnel copy or pricing-page tweaks will do most of the work. Growth is increasingly tied to lowering barriers, delighting users, and creating visible feedback loops.
How to apply: Test barrier-removal moves, instrument how users discover and talk about the product, and align monetization with customer outcomes rather than short-term extraction. Also protect room for innovation: Verna warns that private companies can damage long-term competitiveness when quarterly pressure crowds out experimentation.
4) Agentic products and AI-native teams still need visible human judgment
Scott Belsky's product strategy point is simple: enterprise products that help humans get credit for work done by supervised agents may adopt better than products that simply do the work instead of humans, because credit affects ego, adoption, and accountability.
That complements a warning from Shreyas Doshi: founders and executives are seeing AI-drafted proposals collapse under pushback because the person presenting them has not thought them through deeply enough. AI-prepped ideas can fail the moment an unexpected question appears.
Why it matters: The failure mode is not just bad output. It is weak ownership—products that obscure human credit and teams that outsource reasoning.
How to apply: Design human review, attribution, and decision checkpoints into agent workflows. Internally, use AI for drafts, but require the owner to defend trade-offs, assumptions, and edge cases without the model in the room.
Tactical Playbook
1) Build an AI quality loop before you scale the feature
A practical loop from Shopify looks like this: define quality dimensions, assemble fake or sanitized real examples, have multiple PMs annotate them, approve aligned examples into a ground-truth set, and use that set to create or refine a judge. The same structure can be reused across different generative surfaces, including workflow generation in Flow.
- Define what good looks like in dimensions, not just one score.
- Review examples that are close to real usage, including sanitized live conversations where possible.
- Have at least two PMs rate the same examples to surface subjectivity early.
- Approve only the aligned examples into ground truth.
- Use the approved set to create or update the judge.
2) Interpret metrics with orthogonal context, not one impressive number
Julie Zhuo's example is a useful habit check: 5M MAU and 80% DAU/MAU looks strong on its own, but a 30-second average daily session length can make the same product look shallow—until you learn it is a payments app, where a short session may be exactly right. Her recommendation is to add orthogonal context: independent facts that reduce ambiguity from different directions.
Use this sequence:
- Start with the headline metric.
- Add a behavioral counterweight, such as session length or task-completion pattern.
- Add use-case or business-model context that changes what 'healthy' should mean.
- Delay conclusions until you have multiple independent facts pointing in the same direction.
3) Run a deep-dive sprint when you lack enough context to help
Vanessa Lee describes an unorthodox but practical leadership move: if something feels off, run a sprint with the team and meet daily. In her example with Shopify's inventory team, the work included examining current bugs, data structures, UX, and next-day experiments until she had a much better understanding of the domain and the team had a clearer shared aim.
Why it matters: Leaders often try to guide work from too far away. A short period of intense involvement can replace vague opinions with specific judgment.
How to apply: Use a time-boxed daily cadence, stay close to the real artifacts, and push one concrete next step each day. The goal is not permanent micromanagement; it is to earn enough context to give better guidance later with less involvement.
4) For hard stakeholder debates, bring proof and a lightweight artifact
The API versioning story at Shopify is a strong template for hard influence. The PM had spent 12 months working with teams that were inadvertently breaking the API, entered the meeting with four concrete examples, and brought a hand-drawn proposal for quarterly versioning with one year of backward compatibility. The drawing was deliberately simple so the CEO could engage with the idea rather than react to a polished deck.
Why it matters: Senior stakeholders are easier to move when you combine superior domain knowledge with a proposal that still leaves room for their input.
How to apply: Do the slow homework before the meeting, arrive with evidence instead of opinions, and use artifacts that clarify the decision without signaling that every implementation detail is already fixed.
5) Triage new work by service and outcome before you discuss priority
In complex organizations, Tarling recommends mapping existing work to services, comparing each item to what good looks like, and sorting work into strong fit, needs investigation, or candidate to stop. For new requests, a triage function should require the requester to describe the problem and the outcome before the work gets any further.
Why it matters: This moves prioritization away from who asked loudest and toward evidence, overlap, and strategic fit.
How to apply: Start in one cross-functional service area rather than changing the whole organization at once, learn where the real barriers are, and then expand the operating model.
Case Studies & Lessons
1) Shopify Sidekick and Flow: product judgment became infrastructure
Shopify's response to AI product quality was not just to improve prompts. The team built an internal evaluation workflow where PMs define the dimensions, score conversations, align across raters, and create ground-truth data that powers an internal judge. The same logic is used beyond Sidekick conversations and applied to generated flows in Flow.
Lesson: For AI products, your evaluation system is part of the product. If it is weak, quality work stays anecdotal.
2) API versioning at Shopify: courage works best when it is evidence-backed
The starting point was operational pain: teams were breaking an unversioned API. After a year of working directly with those teams, a more junior PM entered a meeting with the CEO knowing the domain in depth, carrying multiple proof points, and proposing quarterly versions with one year of backward compatibility. The CEO started from a 'not doing that' position, but the decision changed in a 45-minute meeting.
Lesson: Courage alone is not enough. The persuasive sequence was domain mastery, concrete evidence, and a proposal simple enough to discuss collaboratively.
3) Lovable Free Day: removing friction can be a growth event
Lovable made its platform free on March 8 to lower barriers to experimenting with AI and tech. Verna says the result was more than 100,000 new users and 120 events across 40 countries. Her broader framing is that growth is increasingly about giving access, building community, and creating delightful experiences that later connect to monetary outcomes.
The operating model around that is equally notable: build in public, encourage employees to post organically, watch social feedback closely, and turn that feedback into rapid product changes—she describes fixes going live in 20 minutes.
Lesson: Sometimes the best growth move is not another funnel optimization. It is a visible barrier-removal moment backed by fast feedback loops and a clear product story.
Career Corner
1) If AI tools are widely available, your edge shifts to judgment, strategy, and domain depth
Sachin Rekhi's answer to the 'how do PMs differentiate?' question is a useful checklist: stay at the frontier of AI fluency, keep high standards and taste, deepen domain expertise, invest in product strategy, and keep building design skill—especially interaction design, where he says AI still lags world-class practitioners.
How to apply: Pick one domain to know unusually well, use AI aggressively but discard low-quality output, and make sure you are still practicing strategy and design decisions rather than only prompting for them.
2) Do not let AI do your thinking for you
Shreyas Doshi's warning is career-relevant: competent executives are repeatedly seeing people bring AI-assisted proposals they cannot defend once the conversation gets messy. The failure shows up when a client pushes back, an investor asks an unplanned question, or an unexpected condition breaks the logic.
How to apply: Before circulating a doc or proposal, pressure-test it yourself. List what would change your mind, what edge case breaks the recommendation, and what question you hope nobody asks. If you cannot answer those without the model, the work is not ready.
3) Career signal: proof and courage compound faster than credentials
"PMs are the, I call it courage as a service to the team."
The Shopify interview frames PMs as the people who make hard calls, surface broken team dynamics, and sometimes kill months of work when it is wrong. The same conversation also notes a preference for people who have been founders for at least a year, and describes Shopify as a place where strong storytelling and decision-making can create real autonomy at scale. Paul Graham makes the adjacent point from startups: users care whether they like the product, not what is on your resume; a resume is only a predictor of performance.
How to apply: Build a track record of visible decisions, not just shipped tickets. Keep artifacts that show how you framed a problem, changed course, or defended a tough call; those are better career signals than generic claims of ownership.
Tools & Resources
- Shopify VP of Product on Building a $100B+ Agent-Led Commerce — strong on AI evaluation systems, leadership sprints, and stakeholder management under disagreement.
- How to fix broken systems - Kate Tarling (CEO, The Service Group) — practical for service mapping, portfolio cleanup, and problem-and-outcome intake triage.
- Teresa Torres on outputs vs outcomes — short refresher on choosing outcome metrics and iterating when the first version is wrong.
- Lovable Free Day, 100K New Users, Here's Why It Worked — useful for PMs rethinking growth around access, community, and building in public.
Felix Rieseberg
Kevin Taylor
Paul Calcraft
Top Stories
Why it matters: The most consequential developments this cycle combined more autonomous model behavior, longer-context agent systems, and clearer signals on how AI is affecting users and institutions.
1) MiniMax M2.7 pushes self-evolving agent models closer to production
MiniMax says M2.7 is its first model that “deeply participated in its own evolution,” running 100+ autonomous loops to analyze failures, modify scaffold code, run evals, and decide what to keep, producing a 30% improvement on internal benchmarks . It also says the model now covers 30–50% of its RL team’s research workflow, including experiment monitoring, debugging, metric analysis, and merge requests .
On external measurements, M2.7 scored 50 on the Artificial Analysis Intelligence Index, reached a GDPval-AA Elo of 1495, improved its AA-Omniscience score to +1, and cut hallucination rate to 34% while keeping pricing at $0.30/$1.20 per 1M input/output tokens . In MLE Bench Lite, its best run won 9 gold, 5 silver, and 1 bronze medals, with a 66.6% average medal rate across three 24-hour trials .
Impact: MiniMax is tying claims of model self-improvement to concrete benchmark, hallucination, and cost metrics rather than treating autonomy as a demo feature .
2) Xiaomi turned Hunter Alpha into a named product and tied it to a broader agent stack
Xiaomi revealed that the mystery model “Hunter Alpha” was MiMo-V2-Pro, which had topped OpenRouter’s charts . MiMo-V2-Pro has a 1M-token context window and scored 78.0 on SWE-bench, close to Sonnet 4.6’s 79.6 . Artificial Analysis placed it at 49 on its Intelligence Index, with a GDPval-AA Elo of 1426, improved hallucination performance versus MiMo-V2-Flash, and a stated cost of $348 to run the index at listed API prices .
Separately, Xiaomi said MiMo-V2-Pro, Omni, and TTS are its first full-stack model family built for the “Agent era,” based on a 1T model with Hybrid Attention, a 1M context window, and MTP inference for lower latency and cost .
Impact: Xiaomi packaged long context, agentic benchmark performance, and efficiency into a single “Agent era” narrative .
3) Anthropic published the largest qualitative study yet of how people experience AI
Anthropic said 80,508 Claude users across 159 countries and 70 languages responded to a one-week interview effort run with Anthropic Interviewer, a prompted version of Claude . The company says 67% of people view AI positively overall, with stronger optimism in South America, Africa, and Asia than in Europe or the United States . Roughly one third primarily want AI to improve quality of life, another quarter want better or more fulfilling work, and 81% said AI had taken a step toward the future they described . The most common concerns were unreliability, jobs and the economy, and preserving human autonomy, with economic concern the strongest predictor of overall AI sentiment .
“So as I am reading quotes from these interviews and understanding the topics people have spoken to Claude about, I find myself thinking: the stakes are high and we need to work really hard at measuring Claude’s properties to ensure it is having a beneficial influence on people.”
Read the full report: Anthropic’s 81k interviews.
Impact: The study provides one of the clearest public datasets yet on how users connect AI benefits to fears about reliability, jobs, and autonomy .
4) NVIDIA used GTC to show AI working on both chip design and agent runtime
Bill Dally described several internal AI systems for chip design at NVIDIA. NVCell now ports thousands of standard cells overnight, a task he said previously took eight engineers 8–10 months, while matching or exceeding human designs on size, power, and delay . Prefix RL improves carry-chain design by 20–30% on area and power while still meeting timing constraints . NVIDIA also uses internal LLMs such as ChipNeMo and BugNeMo to answer engineering questions, summarize bug reports, and help route debugging work .
On the runtime side, NVIDIA introduced NemoClaw as a framework for long-running autonomous agents, with one-command installation alongside Nemotron models and OpenShell and a sandboxed execution environment for agents . In a separate GTC conversation, Jeff Dean argued there is still abundant unused training data in video, audio, robotics, and autonomous driving, and said synthetic data, data augmentation, distillation, dropout, and other regularization techniques still have room to improve models .
“Now, the dream would be fully end-to-end automation: you specify a new GPU, go skiing for a few days, and come back to a finished design. We’re nowhere near that yet.”
Impact: NVIDIA’s GTC details showed AI being applied both to hardware-design workflows and to the runtime layer for long-lived agents .
5) OpenAI’s Parameter Golf makes efficiency a public benchmark and hiring funnel
OpenAI launched Parameter Golf, a challenge to train the best language model that fits in a 16MB artifact and trains in under 10 minutes on 8xH100s . Runpod is the infrastructure partner, and the two companies said they will distribute up to $1M in credits or compute during the challenge period, which runs from March 18 to April 30 . OpenAI also said standout participants may be invited to interview, turning the contest into a recruiting channel as well as a benchmark .
Impact: OpenAI is using a public efficiency challenge to benchmark small-model training and recruit talent at the same time .
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: Research this cycle focused less on raw scale alone and more on data recipes, efficient inference, better evaluations, and systems that can act on richer visual or world inputs .
Training recipes are getting more attention. The Marin team trained models up to 1e22 FLOPs and preregistered a loss prediction at 1e23 FLOPs, aiming for a training recipe that scales reliably rather than a single standout model . In parallel, other notes argued that repeating high-quality domain datasets 10–50× during pretraining can outperform standard finetuning patterns, and that mixing SFT data into pretraining is more effective than plain pretraining plus finetuning, with a scaling law for the right ratio .
Inference architecture work kept targeting latency instead of only FLOPs. A technical breakdown of Kimi’s Block Attention Residual said its two-phase computation keeps decode overhead under 2%, makes 32K prefill overhead negligible, and cuts naive cache overhead from 15GB to 1.9GB on 8 tensor-parallel GPUs . Separately, Directional Routing in Transformers adds a 3.9% coordination mechanism across attention heads, with one reported result that disabling the coordinator causes collapse while individual heads become largely disposable .
Benchmarks are getting closer to real discovery and better measurement. OpenConjecture collects 890 recent mathematical conjectures, and GPT-5.4 reportedly found candidate proofs on a subset and formalized several in Lean . DatBench proposed an IRT-style sampling method for expensive LLM evals that preserved 90% of total discriminability using only 40% of the data .
Real-time media and world models kept advancing. Runway and NVIDIA previewed a real-time video model on Vera Rubin that generates HD video with time-to-first-frame under 100ms and positions it as part of Runway’s General World Model effort . InSpatio-World launched as an open-source real-time 4D world model that turns a video clip into a dynamic, navigable, persistent world with viewpoint and time control .
Products & Launches
Why it matters: Product teams are turning agent and multimodal advances into concrete workflow features users can adopt now .
Google expanded Gemini’s tool orchestration. Developers can now combine built-in tools such as Google Search, Google Maps, File Search, and URL Context with custom functions in a single API call, with Gemini deciding tool order and chaining results. Google also added context circulation and tool response IDs, and made Maps available for Gemini 3 models . The feature is available natively in the Interactions API and opt-in via
generate_content.Google updated Stitch into a more agent-like design tool. Stitch now turns natural-language prompts into high-fidelity designs on an AI-native canvas, adds voice interaction for real-time changes, supports instant prototypes, and uses DESIGN.md files for portable design systems . It is available at stitch.withgoogle.com in supported regions and languages .
Anthropic previewed Dispatch in Claude Cowork. Dispatch is a persistent Claude conversation that runs on a user’s computer and can be messaged from a phone, with users returning later to finished work . Anthropic said the feature is a research preview and can be tried by pairing a phone with Claude Desktop .
LlamaParse added spatial grounding for document agents. Agentic Plus mode now returns bounding boxes for formulas, handwriting, complex layouts, and charts, enabling document workflows that can trace extracted content back to exact source regions .
Together AI broadened its fine-tuning stack. The update adds tool-calling fine-tuning with OpenAI-compatible schema validation, reasoning fine-tuning with native thinking-token support, and vision-language fine-tuning, alongside up to 6× throughput gains on MoE architectures and built-in cost and time estimates .
Industry Moves
Why it matters: The business signal is shifting from abstract model rankings to where AI is winning spend and entering regulated workflows .
Anthropic is gaining enterprise share. A note citing Axios said Anthropic now commands 73% of enterprise AI spend, versus 26% for OpenAI .
Microsoft changed Copilot oversight. Copilot no longer reports to Mustafa Suleyman, with Satya Nadella taking direct oversight according to reporting linked in the notes .
Sakana AI and MUFG moved an enterprise agent into real-case verification. The MUFG AI Lending Expert has entered a real-case verification phase for banking workflows. Sakana said the system adapts research from ALE Agent and The AI Scientist, structures veteran bankers’ implicit knowledge, and used AI to process nearly 1,500 pieces of human feedback to speed iteration .
Healthcare AI funding stayed strong. Latent Health raised $80M to expand its clinical reasoning engine. The company says 45+ top U.S. health systems use it, it has helped more than 2 million patients access medications faster, and it has reduced denials by more than 30% .
Fund administration is becoming another AI workflow target. Hanover Park raised a $27M Series A, says it administers $15B in assets, and uses AI agents to read emails, propose journal entries, and extract portfolio updates, with CPAs reviewing every output .
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: As agents move into research and commerce, enforcement is starting to focus on who can delegate to AI, under what rules, and with what consequences .
ICML penalized LLM-assisted peer review. ICML said it removed 795 reviews from reviewers who used LLMs despite explicitly agreeing not to, and desk-rejected 497 papers from those reciprocal reviewers . Separate posts describing the mechanism said hidden prompt injections were used to detect AI-written reviews .
Amazon won an early legal ruling against Perplexity’s agentic browser. According to the notes, Amazon obtained a preliminary injunction blocking Perplexity’s browser from accessing Amazon accounts even when users authorized the agent. The legal analysis cited in the same thread said the opinion is heavily CFAA-based and could have broader implications for AI agents and platform liability if it survives on the merits .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: These are smaller updates, but each points to the next layer of tooling, evaluation, or infrastructure being built around AI .
- OpenAI launched Codex for Open Source, offering maintainers help with code review, understanding large codebases, and security coverage, with applications reviewed on a rolling basis .
- Hugging Face made papers easier for agents to consume, automatically serving Markdown versions and adding a paper-search skill across titles, authors, and semantic similarity .
- Google Colab open-sourced an MCP server so local agents can run Python on cloud GPUs, edit notebooks, and connect from any MCP-compatible client .
- AI2 released MolmoPoint, a pointing and grounding family for general use, GUI interaction, and video tracking that uses visual-token selection to make pointing simpler and faster .
- OCR competition accelerated: Baidu’s 4B Qianfan-OCR topped OmniDocBench v1.5 at 93.12 and supports 192 languages, while Chandra OCR 2 open-sourced a 4B model with 85.9% on olmOCR and 90+ languages .
- Runway’s real-time video model generates HD video with time-to-first-frame under 100ms on Vera Rubin .
- InSpatio-World open-sourced a real-time 4D world model that turns a video clip into a navigable world .
- AI compute scaling still faces hardware bottlenecks: notes on EUV lithography argued the supply chain spans more than 10,000 suppliers and may cap production around 100 machines per year by 2030 .
Foreign Ag Service
Market Minute LLC
Successful Farming
1) Market Movers
U.S./global grains: March 18 finished with a sharp reversal from weaker morning trade. Soybeans closed up 0.58% to $11.63/bu, corn up 2.09% to $4.63, and wheat up 2.67% to $6.05, as crude oil strength and Middle East conflict added risk premium across commodities . December corn is back near recent highs, while wheat is still carrying Plains weather risk even as U.S. export competitiveness remains weak against EU and Russian supplies .
Soybean structure: Old-crop soybeans remain the weak point. Expectations for another 8 MMT of Chinese old-crop demand have been sharply reduced after the delayed Trump-Xi timing, while new-crop contracts are holding better on acreage and biofuel expectations . Technical commentary described soybeans as having retraced about 50% of the prior rally and trying to hold a key support zone . Outside whole beans, exporters also reported 120,000 MT of soybean cake and meal sold to unknown destinations for MY 2026/27.
Brazil cash markets: Brazilian port soybeans were quoted around R$128/sack in Paranaguá, Santos, Rio Grande, and São Paulo, while corn showed wider regional spreads at R$76/sack in Campinas, R$64 in Paraná, and R$53 in Mato Grosso .
Livestock: U.S. live cattle recovered as packer margins improved from roughly negative $200/head to nearly positive $200/head, with the cutout near the $400 mark and cash trade expected to test higher into Friday’s cattle-on-feed report .
2) Innovation Spotlight
Regenerative grazing with measured trade-offs: A 100-year Australian sheep-farm study found Adaptive Multi-Paddock grazing can increase soil organic carbon and cut emissions intensity by up to 54%, but it was not always the most profitable system because supplementary feed costs rose. The study said rainfall and starting soil carbon mattered more than simply adding pasture diversity .
Specialty-crop sustainability pilots: The International Fresh Produce Association secured a USDA grant to expand regenerative pilots to 30 more specialty-crop growers in California and Washington, using technical assistance and incentives for practices such as alley cropping and advanced water management. In Italy, Bayer’s regenerative viticulture project is combining permanent grass cover, pheromone-based pest control, and IoT bioacoustic sensors to track pollinator health and reduce chemical reliance .
Data and compliance tech in Brazil: Brazil’s export-focused agribusiness is moving toward real-time traceability. EU-linked requirements call for exact geolocation, real-time documentation, and continuous data validation, while Brazil’s January data-adequacy arrangement with Europe enables safer cross-border data exchange . The infrastructure gap is still large: only 33.9% of Brazil’s rural area currently has some form of connectivity . At the plant level, Santa Catarina producers highlighted AI as a tool for tighter process control from animal production through industrial processing .
Finance and land-selection tools: In the U.S., AcreVision lets producers screen parcels for cropping history, tillable acreage, soil types, and drainage before bidding . Refinancing opportunities have also reopened as 30-year fixed rates moved to about 6.3-6.4% and some 3-5 year variable options into the low 5% range . For borrowers resetting from older variable notes near 7-8%, the savings can flow directly to the bottom line .
3) Regional Developments
Brazil - safrinha and weather: Brazil’s second-crop corn planting reached 85.5%, about 4% behind last year. Mato Grosso is near completion at 99%, Tocantins is about 98%, but São Paulo has planted only 14%. Frequent rain is still slowing soybean harvest and corn planting in Tocantins and nearby states, with 50-100 mm possible in five days and heavier totals in parts of Maranhão and Piauí . Paraná, meanwhile, still needs better moisture for crop development .
Brazil - next weather phase: April is expected to run warmer than normal across the South, Southeast, and Center-West, with below-average rain in the South and more normal rain farther north and west, a mix that helps some safrinha areas while worsening southern moisture deficits . Looking later, forecasters put the probability of El Niño returning near 80% for August-October, potentially bringing heavier late-winter and spring rain to the South .
Brazil - protein and trade: Brazil slaughtered a record 42.9 million head of cattle in 2025, up 8.2% year over year, including 11 million head in Q4, up 14%. Export expansion is also still active, with industry and government representatives pushing for Pará beef plants to access the U.S. market .
United States - Plains crop stress and fire damage: The Plains still face a hostile weather window. Forecasts showed no rain for most of Kansas, eastern Colorado, southern Nebraska, and the Texas/Oklahoma Panhandles over the next 15 days, with a swing from upper 80s/90s heat back to freezing temperatures . In Texas, some winter wheat is already being given up because of the dry winter . In Nebraska’s Arthur County, wildfire burned about 600,000 acres, cutting feed and forage for roughly 35,000 mother cows.
United States - poultry disease pressure: HPAI remains a live regional risk. USDA says the outbreak, first detected in February 2022, has affected more than 197 million birds, and spring migration is again lifting detections in the upper Midwest and Indiana .
United States - disaster finance: North Dakota officials authorized the Bank of North Dakota to expand its agriculture disaster relief program to $500 million, adding $100 million.
4) Best Practices
Grains and cost control
- Use university crop budgets as a starting benchmark, then adjust with local retailer and peer input rather than treating them as your exact cost of production .
- Spend as much time on fixed costs as on input bids. Fixed costs account for roughly 50% of production expenses and are more controllable and predictable than fertilizer or seed markets .
- Test before you invest: verify whether added inputs and fertilizer rates are improving the bottom line on your farm .
- Diversification still matters. Mixing corn and soybeans, adding livestock, or using off-farm income can reduce income volatility when trade, weather, or commodity markets shift .
Dairy/feed and water-limited acreage
- In water-constrained dairy regions, some producers are shifting planned acres toward forage sorghum because it can get by with less water than alternative crops .
Poultry and livestock biosecurity
- Keep poultry separated from wild birds with enclosures or netting, clean equipment, clothing, footwear, water, and bedding, and use dedicated boots, gloves, and daily footbaths .
- Watch for sudden death, lethargy, ataxia, lower feed or water intake, or falling egg production; isolate birds and contact a veterinarian, state vet, or USDA at 1-866-536-7593.
- Operations with 500+ birds can request free USDA biosecurity assessments, and USDA may cover up to 75% of the cost of improvements tied to high-risk gaps .
Soil and regenerative management
- For regenerative systems, baseline conditions matter. The AMP grazing study indicates rainfall and starting soil carbon are stronger drivers of environmental and financial outcomes than pasture diversity alone .
- Practical soil and resilience measures now being scaled in specialty crops include permanent grass cover, pheromone-based pest control, alley cropping, and advanced water management.
5) Input Markets
Fertilizer pricing and concentration: U.S. farm groups argue nitrogen prices have diverged from natural gas since about 2010, with nitrogen now following corn prices more closely even though U.S. gas remains cheap at about $3.19. Market concentration is high: Nutrien controls about 80% of potash, Mosaic about 80-85% of phosphate, and CF Industries about 65% of nitrogen . DOJ, USDA, and FTC scrutiny of fertilizer competition is ongoing .
Conflict-driven price spike: Urea and other nitrogen products surged after the Middle East conflict began, even on material already in domestic warehouses. Retailers say price sheets are updating multiple times per day, and some growers report previously booked prices not being honored .
"This shouldn't even be impacting us for another 75 days, but yet our prices on fertilizer that's already in the warehouse is seeing dramatic increases."
Trade policy watch: The U.S. review of countervailing duties on Moroccan phosphate begins in April. A study cited by Texas farm groups estimated those duties cost program-crop growers about $6.9 billion over five years, or more than $1 billion per year. The White House also issued a 60-day Jones Act waiver to keep oil, natural gas, fertilizer, and coal moving through U.S. ports , and U.S. buyers are seeking additional fertilizer supply from Morocco and Venezuela.
Fuel: Diesel remains a direct margin threat on both sides of the hemisphere. In the U.S., diesel was cited at US$4.99/L, up 37% in 30 days . In Brazil, oil near $110/barrel and reports of diesel around R$8/L are pressuring producer profitability and freight markets . Brazilian farm groups are pressing to raise the biodiesel blend from 15% to 17%, with some arguing the country could move even higher, because biodiesel is currently cheaper than diesel and supply is available .
Crop protection and machinery finance: Crop protection costs are still being pushed higher by general inflation and weed resistance, forcing use of higher-priced herbicide and fungicide programs . Machinery borrowing costs also remain heavy: one farm finance analysis put lifetime interest expense at about $160 per $1,000 borrowed, roughly double the level from a few years ago .
6) Forward Outlook
Late March policy calendar: Markets are watching a White House farm and biofuels event next week and the month-end release of 2026/27 biofuel blending quotas. New-crop markets are already pricing in supportive RVO expectations, and several sources flagged a possible sell-the-fact risk if the announcement disappoints .
U.S. acreage debate: The March 31 planting intentions and grain stocks reports should sharpen the corn-versus-soy acreage fight. Fertilizer costs are still a headwind for corn, while biofuel policy is offering more support to new-crop soybean economics .
Brazil seasonal planning: Near-term planning in Brazil remains split by region: southern producers face hotter and drier conditions into April, while parts of the Center-West and Southeast still benefit from rain for second-crop corn . Frost remains possible later even with above-average temperatures overall .
Disease and logistics watch: Spring migration means poultry producers should expect continued HPAI pressure . In Brazil, full enforcement of the minimum freight table, backed by electronic inspections up 2,000% over three years, is intended to reduce trucker unrest as diesel costs climb .
Input relief watch: April’s Moroccan phosphate review is one of the few near-term policy events with potential to ease fertilizer costs if duties are removed .
Trade access will increasingly depend on data quality: For exporters targeting the EU, traceability requirements are shifting from a paperwork issue to a digital infrastructure issue. Exact geolocation and continuous data validation are becoming market-access prerequisites .
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