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Codex Plugins Push Agents Beyond the Editor as Cursor Goes Visual
Mar 27
6 min read
161 docs
Cursor
Harrison Chase
Riley Brown
+18
Codex plugins are the big workflow unlock today, pushing coding agents into Slack, Figma, Notion, Gmail, and direct browser control. Also inside: Cursor’s new visual build loop, Theo’s anti-slop frontend routing stack, and the open-source agent frameworks actually worth tracking.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Codex plugins are the clearest workflow unlock today. OpenAI rolled out out-of-the-box integrations for Slack, Figma, Notion, Gmail, and more, and OpenAI’s Alexander Embiricos says Codex has already “completely taken over” internal technical workflows, with comms and sales now adopting it too . Tibo says he already uses it for calendar management, bug triage, company updates, and even a printed one-page morning brief, while Peter Steinberger shows the adjacent pattern: Codex can now drive a browser directly through Chrome MCP instead of relying on screenshots to guide a human .

“This is where it starts to get really interesting: Codex can now tap into the tools you already use.”

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Codex plugins. OpenAI rolled out plugins for Slack, Figma, Notion, Gmail, and more; usage limits were reset across all plans so people can actually try them. Docs: developers.openai.com/codex/plugins
  • Cursor’s new visual agent UI. Prime’s live demo of the unreleased alpha showed design mode for selecting UI and pushing exact edits into chat, plan mode for clarifying schema/UI before coding, build mode for execution with diffs, and cloud agents for isolated setup/parallelism. Cursor separately says real-time RL lets it ship improved model checkpoints every five hours .
  • Claude Code feature pack. Research-preview agent teams, built-in security scans, auto memory, /voice, scheduled tasks, /btw side chats, remote control / Telegram / Discord channels, and shareable plugins all point in the same direction: longer-running agents with more memory and lighter-touch supervision .
  • Claude model economics. Riley Brown says Opus 4.6 is 2.5x faster but 4x pricier and better at long agentic runs, while Sonnet 4.6 is cheaper and offers a 1M-token context window in beta .
  • Frontend model routing. Theo says the OpenAI model he labels “5.4” is still bad at initial UI generation; a cheaper open-weight model at roughly one-tenth the price gave cleaner minimal starts, Opus improves a lot with Anthropic’s frontend.md skill, and Gemini 3.1 is the best reroll engine when he wants style variation. He still likes GPT models for cleanup because they produce less buggy UI .
  • Stripe Projects. Dev preview from @patrickc: stripe projects add posthog/analytics provisions the account, API key, and billing from the CLI. Karpathy’s framing is the important part: the hard problem in modern app building is all the service assembly around the code, and agent-native CLIs are one concrete way to collapse that. Dev preview: projects.dev

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Cursor loop to steal. 1) Whiteboard the app first. 2) Switch to plan mode and answer the agent’s questions about schema, UI, and local/runtime constraints. 3) Let build mode execute. 4) Use design mode to click the bad UI and issue narrow fixes. 5) If the environment is messy, move the run into a cloud agent and pull the changes back locally .
  • Theo’s anti-slop frontend recipe. Inject Anthropic’s frontend.md skill via Skills.sh, hard-cap the page (1 H1, max 6 sections, 2 fonts, 1 accent color, CTA above the fold), attach screenshots or mood boards, then delete AI-added pills/stat bars and fix layout drift after generation. His routing: Opus first, Gemini when he wants more visual range, GPT for cleanup .
  • Kill browser clicking when possible. Karpathy wants agents to provision services and deploy without humans visiting docs pages or clicking UIs, and Stripe Projects is the first nice example. On the browser side, Peter Steinberger says Chrome MCP removed his old screenshot-guided loop for Microsoft Foundry—Codex now drives the session directly .
  • Eval loop that actually compounds. LangChain’s Deep Agents team says the highest-leverage sequence is: dogfood the agent, inspect traces for failure modes, adapt external benchmarks or hand-write focused tests, measure correctness plus efficiency (steps, tool calls, latency), and run tagged subsets in CI. Harrison Chase’s matching production advice: keep full prompts, responses, multi-turn context, and tool trajectories, then use online evaluators and annotation queues to turn real failures into new datasets .
  • TDD + shadow deploy still beats vibes alone. Reco’s JSONata port worked because the existing test suite made fast AI codegen viable; they then ran the old and new implementations in parallel for a week before trusting it. That’s the durable pattern for “vibe porting” production systems .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Andrej Karpathy + @patrickc. Karpathy keeps naming the bottleneck correctly—payments/auth/db/security/deployments, not just code—and Patrick’s Stripe Projects is one of the first CLI-native attempts to let agents keep going without human web clicking .
  • Harrison Chase. Useful right now because he is talking from actual deployments: harnesses over thin frameworks, traces as source of truth, two viable sandbox patterns, and “memory as files” as a practical design choice .
  • Theo. Still one of the best public stress-testers of agent UX: blunt model benchmarking for frontend work, concrete prompt/skill recipes, and firsthand product feedback like built-in terminal + one-click PR becoming core to how he uses T3 Code—even for investing due diligence .
  • ThePrimeagen + TJ. Their Cursor stream mattered because it was not a toy benchmark—just two devs live-building a local-first app and showing where plan mode, design mode, and cloud agents help or slow them down .
  • Armin Ronacher. High-signal content drop if you’re building your own agent stack: his PyAI talk is specifically about figuring out what present and future models are good at for agent construction. Slides: mitsuhiko.github.io/talks/leaning-in-to-find-out/ Recording: youtu.be/8RHYyRUxVrA

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 24:32-26:36 — Cursor plan mode on a real schema. Prime and TJ use plan mode to force clarifying questions around kid profiles, quotes, timestamps, and dialogue shape before any code gets written. Good reminder that the fastest loop still starts with one pause .
  • 10:48-15:01 — Harrison Chase on memory as the agent. Best 4 minutes today on short-term vs episodic vs semantic vs procedural memory, plus why a virtual filesystem is a sane abstraction for editable agent memory .
  • 6:32-8:33 — Theo’s anti-slop UI checklist. Fast, practical, and reusable: brand-first hero, expressive fonts, no pill clusters, fewer competing blocks. If your agent keeps outputting generic landing pages, start here .

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Deep Agents. Open-source, model-agnostic harness behind Open SWE and Fleet; LangChain also open-sourced the eval architecture used to improve it. Repo: github.com/langchain-ai/deepagents
  • GStack. Matthew Berman says Gary Tan’s prompt pack is only weeks old and already near 350k GitHub stars, with office-hours, CEO review, and role-specific agent prompts. Counter-signal: Theo’s first cross-review attempt failed to write a file four times and spent >3 minutes before it even sent the prompt to Codex .
  • Hermes Agent. 13.5k stars in just a few days, per Berman. The notable part is not “another OpenClaw clone”—it’s the built-in learning loop, curated memory, scheduler, and parallel subagents .
  • Superpowers. Around 115k stars per Berman; Claude plugin that bakes in brainstorm → design doc → worktrees → TDD/code review → finish branch. If you want more structure than raw Claude Code, this is worth a look .
  • Paperclip. Around 33k stars per Berman; Node/React orchestration layer for ticketed multi-agent companies with atomic work and token tracking. Interesting, but Berman explicitly flags it as experimental and untested by him .

Editorial take: the winning pattern right now is not one magic model—it is agents with access to your real tools, explicit plan/build/verify loops, and easy ways for humans to redirect or rewind when the run drifts.

Tim Ferriss’s AI Foresight Pick Leads Today’s Operator and History Recommendations
Mar 27
4 min read
242 docs
Tom Bilyeu
Tim Ferriss
Balaji Srinivasan
+1
Tim Ferriss provides the day’s clearest high-conviction pick with Leopold Aschenbrenner’s Situational Awareness, then rounds out the list with durable operator resources on execution, prioritization, scaling, category design, and AI workflows. Balaji Srinivasan adds two books he uses to make political and historical systems thinking more concrete.

Most compelling recommendation

Only clearly organic recommendations with enough context to be useful are included below.

  • Situational Awareness: The Decade AheadContent type: Essay / online article. Author/creator: Leopold Aschenbrenner. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Ferriss says the essay’s AI predictions have had a staggering hit rate and recommends it to people trying to understand what is coming next. Why it matters: It is the strongest-conviction recommendation in today’s set and the clearest direct pointer to an AI-foresight resource.

"the number of actual hits, predictive hits, that Leopold had, is staggering. It is just really about as close to clairvoyant as you could possibly be."

What stood out

Today’s authentic recommendations split cleanly between operator frameworks for prioritization, execution, scale, and category design, and perspective-building books that make history or lived experience more concrete.

Operator and growth picks

  • The Effective ExecutiveContent type: Book. Author/creator: Peter Drucker. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: A classic, short book with high bang-for-buck on execution. Why it matters: Ferriss presents it as a compact execution manual rather than a long management system.

  • The 80/20 Principle and Living the 80/20 WayContent type: Books. Author/creator: Richard Koch. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Ferriss says these never get old for prioritization and stresses that Koch is a practitioner, not just a theorist. Why it matters: This is a direct recommendation for better focus and decision quality from someone Ferriss says "walks the talk."

  • High Growth HandbookContent type: Book. Author/creator: Elad Gil. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: It offers frameworks for deciding what to do and not do based on company scope, scale, and ambitions, especially in venture-backed settings. Why it matters: It is today’s most targeted scaling recommendation for founders dealing with growth-stage complexity.

  • Blue Ocean StrategyContent type: Book. Author/creator: Not specified in the source material. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Avoid crowded categories when possible and create a category of one instead. Why it matters: Ferriss frames it as a practical way to make the road ahead less competitive.

  • I built an AI assistant that works while I sleepContent type: Podcast episode. Author/creator: Chris Hutchins, All the Hacks. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Hutchins explains how he built an OpenClaw-based workflow, and Ferriss adds that newer Claude desktop features now cover some of the same beginner use cases. Why it matters: It is the most concrete workflow-level AI recommendation in today’s set.

Books that widen judgment

  • Travels with CharleyContent type: Book. Author/creator: John Steinbeck. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Ferriss points to it as an example of doing interesting real-world things that rise above AI-generated analysis, and also calls it a hilarious, accurate, enjoyable ride through the U.S. Why it matters: It is today’s clearest recommendation for sharpening perspective through lived observation rather than more abstract analysis.

  • How China WorksContent type: Book. Author/creator: Not specified in the source material. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Balaji Srinivasan. Key takeaway: Balaji recommends it as a way to understand the Chinese Communist Party’s promotion system as functioning like a corporation with incentives tied to economic growth via corruption. Why it matters: It is the most directly explanatory systems book in today’s set.

  • DisunionContent type: Book. Author/creator: Not specified in the source material. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Balaji Srinivasan. Key takeaway: Balaji says it makes concrete why preserving the Union meant economies of scale, peace, prosperity, and a large free-trade zone rather than fragmentation and tariffs. Why it matters: He explicitly says the book turned an abstract historical idea into something visceral.

Evidence Ladders, Investor-Driven Product Strategy, and AI's Hard Limits
Mar 27
9 min read
68 docs
Strategyzer
One Knight in Product
Product Management
+2
This issue focuses on a practical evidence framework for product bets, how PE versus VC ownership changes PM tradeoffs, and why AI product work is being bounded by both unit economics and trust. It also includes a Honeywell case study, career advice on commercial fluency and hiring, and a short list of resources.

Big Ideas

1) Evidence should be treated as a ladder, not a binary

Strategyzer frames evidence on a 0-5 scale: level 1 is what customers say in interviews or surveys, while stronger levels come from behavior such as clicks, co-creation, purchases, or real-world use. The operating rule is to raise the evidence bar as investment rises .

Why it matters: Honeywell found that some projects that looked mature were still grounded mostly in voice-of-customer inputs. Moving toward deeper behavioral evidence helped teams stop risky projects, reduce R&D waste, and give leaders a better basis for investment conversations .

How to apply: Score evidence by hypothesis, not by enthusiasm. A large number of interviews or surveys is still light evidence if all you have is what people said .

2) The right PM playbook depends on who owns the company

PMs need strong commercial acumen because PE and VC backing create different product environments. In PE-backed companies, the owner is a financial institution with a 3-5 year exit horizon and a value creation plan, which pushes teams toward delivery speed and certainty. In VC-backed companies, founder control and a longer horizon make discovery and experimentation more acceptable .

Why it matters: Process arguments are often context arguments. A discovery-heavy motion that feels normal in one company can feel misaligned in another .

How to apply: Before introducing a framework, clarify the ownership model, time horizon, and tolerance for uncertainty. Then adapt or combine methods rather than importing them whole .

3) AI product strategy is constrained by both economics and trust

"ARPU > Average Inference Cost Per User."

Andrew Chen argues that AI-native consumer apps are still more than 10x away from broad viability in many cases, with monthly ARPU around $2-5 versus $20-50 in token costs for AI-heavy apps. He also points to global consumer economics, rising user expectations, and the need for small models or new mobile hardware as additional constraints . In parallel, Julie Zhuo says AI analysis agents are still not trustworthy enough for wide business use because the hardest 15-30% is selecting reliable metrics, adding business context, framing the problem well, and learning from prior outcomes .

Why it matters: These two notes point to a narrower near-term opportunity set: higher-ARPU use cases and workflows where humans still close the trust gap. That helps explain why many teams focus on prosumers and productivity products that can support $100s to $1000s of ARPU .

How to apply: Model inference economics early, and keep human review in any workflow where metric choice, context, or scoping determines decision quality .

4) Competitive intelligence is a differentiation input, not a copying habit

Competitive intelligence is described here as an undervalued part of the product stack. The goal is not to copy competitors but to understand what you must differentiate from, while also borrowing inspiration from adjacent categories such as using Revolut's UX patterns as reference points for a darts app .

Why it matters: Teams cannot articulate differentiated value if they only study themselves .

How to apply: Review both direct competitors and adjacent-category exemplars on a regular cadence, and log what each one teaches you about positioning, UX, and unmet gaps .

Tactical Playbook

1) Run an evidence ladder before you fund the next bet

  1. Write down the key unknowns across customer, value proposition, business model, and execution .
  2. Treat interviews and surveys as early, light evidence about what customers say.
  3. Move next to behavioral tests such as brochures or landing pages with CTAs, co-creation workshops, Wizard of Oz tests, and pre-sales .
  4. Raise the required evidence level as spending rises .
  5. End each review by naming what is still unknown before authorizing more build or GTM investment .

Why it matters: This keeps teams from confusing sample size with evidence quality. Even a large number of interviews stays in the same evidence category if nobody has done anything yet .

How to apply: Make evidence level and next experiment part of every opportunity review, not an optional appendix .

2) Replace slide theatre with artifact-based leadership reviews

  1. Give teams structured pre-work: a customer ecosystem map, customer profile, value scenes, a simple 3-year business model sketch, and a list of known unknowns .
  2. Put the work in a shared platform and comment asynchronously as teams go, rather than waiting for the end to dump feedback .
  3. Ban custom slides for the final review. Honeywell teams had 2.5 minutes to present the big idea, customer and evidence, value proposition and evidence, business model and evidence, and remaining unknowns .
  4. Have leaders question the evidence, not just the technology .

Why it matters: Honeywell said this broke work into digestible steps, reduced shadow work, sped up feedback, and created a shared language between teams and leaders .

How to apply: If portfolio reviews still revolve around polished decks, test one cycle with shared artifacts plus a time-boxed evidence review and compare the quality of discussion .

3) Build an early-warning loop for negative feedback

  1. Centralize feedback logs and meeting notes; manual pattern-finding gets slower as volume grows .
  2. Use automation to surface sentiment, recurring themes, and clearly negative alerts instead of waiting for a human to notice them .
  3. Treat those signals as proactive inputs, especially in fast-moving projects where delays affect schedules or stakeholder alignment .

Why it matters: One commenter summarized the current state bluntly: most teams catch negative feedback late unless they actively look for it .

How to apply: Even a simple workflow that flags recurring complaints and obviously negative language is better than relying only on ad hoc manual review .

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Honeywell turned growth reviews into evidence reviews

Honeywell used a playbook to prepare growth-project teams over three weeks, with async feedback on customer maps, value scenes, business model sketches, and known unknowns before a one-day symposium . At the event, teams pitched without slides and leaders pushed on customer, value proposition, business model, and supporting evidence . The reported results were stronger evidence, killed risky projects, reduced R&D waste, faster discovery, and a shared language across teams and leaders .

Key takeaway: If leaders will challenge projects anyway, give both sides a common evidence framework so the conversation does not collapse into technical detail by default .

2) Three experiments show how to match the test to the risk

American Family Insurance used a fake brochure with a CTA at a trade show to see which segment responded, then adjusted the value proposition and marketing accordingly . Fireflies used a Wizard of Oz approach - manual note-taking behind an AI facade - and after 100 meetings and enough revenue to cover rent, decided there was enough evidence to automate . Tesla moved through competitor research, mashups, landing pages, and pre-sales; the Model 3 reached 325,000 reservations with a $1,000 refundable deposit in its first week, showing a much stronger demand signal than early low-commitment tests .

Key takeaway: Choose the cheapest experiment that answers the next important uncertainty. Do not jump straight from interviews to full build when a CTA, manual service, or pre-sale can answer the question first .

3) The digital darts team chose acceleration over purity

One interim product leader chose to buy rather than build from scratch, acquiring a small company that had already solved part of the problem and speeding up the path forward . The team then grew to 12 people and stayed as one focused squad because the immediate priority was shipping a new software experience on the same timeline as hardware with long manufacturing lead times and a hard deadline . Only after that does the plan shift toward organizing around user-journey stages .

Key takeaway: Team topology should follow stage and constraints. When hardware timelines dominate, a single delivery-focused team can be more useful than a multi-squad model designed for a later stage .

Career Corner

1) The fastest career leverage may come from commercial fluency

The clearest career advice in the set is to stay close to the money: understand the P&L, balance sheet, and how your area affects the broader business . That starts with knowing who really owns the company and what they expect, which is why the PE-versus-VC distinction matters so much for PMs .

Why it matters: The further you are from the commercial conversation, the harder it is to make informed product decisions or influence major tradeoffs .

How to apply: Ask to sit in on planning or finance conversations tied to your area, and map your roadmap to the business model, not just user needs .

2) Hiring signals: framework fluency, startup scars, and domain pull

One product leader looks for book smarts and street smarts: formal exposure to good product practices plus experience figuring things out without much support . He also prefers PMs, designers, and engineers who genuinely care about the domain, arguing that passion makes it easier to feel user pain and go the extra mile .

Why it matters: Adaptability comes from being able to use frameworks without becoming trapped by them, and empathy is stronger when the team actually cares about the product space .

How to apply: If you are early in your career, build both sides deliberately: get formal training, then test yourself in messier startup or scale-up environments .

3) PM tech rounds are screening for systems thinking

A PM interview candidate reported repeatedly failing technical rounds on system design and API deep dives . The practical advice from the thread was straightforward: study the System Design Primer, read gRPC and REST docs, and practice writing fake APIs in a document; the commenter added that they had bombed five interviews before improving, and that hiring remains rough .

Why it matters: In a tougher market, PM interview prep has to cover technical fluency as well as product judgment .

How to apply: Practice explaining API behavior and system design clearly on paper before you try to do it live in an interview .

Tools & Resources

  • Strategyzer artifact stack: customer ecosystem map, customer profile, value scenes, a simple 3-year business model sketch, and a known-unknowns list. Use these as a lightweight template pack for opportunity reviews or discovery sprints .
  • How Honeywell prioritizes growth projects: a concrete walkthrough of playbooks, evidence levels, and no-slide review mechanics .
  • What it actually takes to trust AI: Julie Zhuo's linked essay on why the last stretch of trustworthy AI analysis is difficult .
  • PM tech-round study stack: System Design Primer, gRPC docs, REST docs, plus the habit of drafting fake APIs in a doc before interviews .
  • Competitor-intelligence dashboards: the standard to aim for is ongoing tracking of competitors and adjacent-category references, not one-off teardown decks; one leader cited building Outfox for this purpose .
Gemini Live Goes Global as Codex Plugins and Open Audio Models Expand AI Workflows
Mar 27
7 min read
763 docs
Financial Times
Alexander Panfilov
The Wall Street Journal
+35
Google pushed Gemini 3.1 Flash Live across Search, Gemini, and developer channels, while OpenAI broadened Codex with open-source plugins. The brief also covers open audio models, new research systems, industry partnerships, and the latest safety and compliance signals.

Top Stories

Why it matters: The biggest developments today pushed AI deeper into real-time interaction, connected workflow automation, open audio infrastructure, and operational safety.

Google turned Gemini 3.1 Flash Live into a broad real-time platform

Google rolled out Gemini 3.1 Flash Live across Gemini Live, Search Live, Google AI Studio, and Google Cloud, positioning it as a production-ready realtime model for voice and vision agents . Google said it improved quality, reliability, latency, conversation memory, and instruction-following, while Search Live is now available in more than 200 countries and territories with multilingual support . Independent benchmarking also showed a clear speed/quality tradeoff: 95.9% on Big Bench Audio at the high thinking setting with 2.98s time-to-first-audio, versus 70.5% and 0.96s on minimal thinking .

Impact: Google is not just shipping a model. It is distributing one live audio stack across consumer search, the Gemini app, developer tooling, and enterprise channels.

OpenAI expanded Codex from coding assistant to connected work surface

OpenAI is rolling out plugins in Codex so it can work with tools like Slack, Figma, Notion, Gmail, and Google Drive, including Docs, Sheets, and Slides . OpenAI said plugins extend Codex into planning, research, coordination, and post-coding workflows; they are available in the Codex app, CLI, and IDE extensions . OpenAI also said users will be able to build and share their own plugins, and that today's plugins are open source .

Impact: This moves Codex closer to a general work agent that operates inside the tools teams already use, not just inside a code editor.

Open speech models got stronger on both input and output

Cohere launched Cohere Transcribe, its first audio model, under Apache 2.0. The company said it is state of the art in open-source speech recognition, ranks #1 on the Open ASR leaderboard, supports 14 languages, and reached 5.42% English word error rate in human evaluation . Mistral released Voxtral TTS as an open-weight text-to-speech model with low latency, emotional expressiveness, and support for 9 languages; the company published weights and a technical report .

Impact: The open audio stack is improving at both ends: transcription on the way in, expressive speech generation on the way out.

Safety work became more operational

Google DeepMind published new research on harmful manipulation based on studies with more than 10,000 people, finding high influence in finance but lower influence in health where existing guardrails blocked false medical advice . Separately, METR said it spent three weeks red-teaming Anthropic's internal monitoring and security systems, found several new vulnerabilities, and produced artifacts to improve future monitoring, while saying none of the findings severely undermined major claims in Anthropic's sabotage risk report .

Impact: Frontier labs are moving from abstract safety principles toward live testing, measurement, and third-party scrutiny.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: The strongest technical work today focused on specialized systems: brain modeling, search agents, self-modifying agents, and automated security research.

  • Meta FAIR's TRIBE v2: Meta introduced a foundation model trained on 500+ hours of fMRI recordings from 700+ people to predict how the human brain responds to sights and sounds. Meta says it supports zero-shot predictions for new subjects, languages, and tasks, improves 2-3x over prior methods on movies and audiobooks, and is being released with code, paper, and demo .
  • Chroma Context-1: Chroma launched a 20B search agent it says pushes the pareto frontier of agentic search and is an order of magnitude faster and cheaper . The model was trained with SFT + RL on 8,000+ synthetic multi-hop tasks across web, SEC filings, patent law, and email, and Chroma open-sourced both the weights and the task-generation codebase .
  • Hyperagents and DGM-H: Hyperagents are presented as self-modifying AI systems that can rewrite both the task-solving and self-improvement parts of the agent. In the DGM-H setup, reported performance improved across coding, paper review, and robotics, with gains accumulating across runs .
  • Autoresearch for jailbreaking: A new paper used Claude Code in an autoresearch loop to discover novel jailbreaking algorithms that reportedly beat 30+ existing GCG-like attacks and generalized better to unseen models than prior work. The authors said this suggests some incremental safety and security research can now be automated .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: Product launches kept reducing friction around memory, provisioning, orchestration, and domain-specific deployment.

  • Gemini import tools: Gemini is rolling out memory import and chat history import, letting users bring preferences and prior chats from other AI apps into Gemini on desktop, with mobile coming later .
  • Stripe Projects: Stripe launched Projects in developer preview so agents can provision third-party services from the CLI. Stripe's example command creates a PostHog account, gets an API key, and sets up billing without leaving the terminal .
  • Cline Kanban: Cline launched a free, open-source standalone app for CLI-agnostic multi-agent orchestration, compatible with Claude, Codex, and Cline. Tasks run in worktrees, can be linked into dependency chains, and include built-in git views .
  • Glass Developer API: Glass Health made its Developer API self-serve inside its web app. The API supports clinical question answering, differential diagnosis, treatment planning, and documentation, with structured JSON, in-text citations, and HIPAA compliance with BAA .
  • Ollama in VS Code: Visual Studio Code can now use local or cloud Ollama models through GitHub Copilot if Ollama is installed .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Partnerships and financing are showing where companies think AI value will concentrate: manufacturing, multi-agent systems, and new revenue lines.

  • Sakana x Mitsubishi Electric: Sakana AI announced a strategic partnership and investment from Mitsubishi Electric. The two companies said they will combine Mitsubishi's manufacturing data and domain knowledge with Sakana's AI systems, and Sakana framed manufacturing and physical AI as its third major pillar after finance and defense .
  • OpenAI backs Isara: Isara raised $94 million at a $650 million valuation. Posts describing the company say it coordinates thousands of AI agents to solve complex problems, used roughly 2,000 agents to forecast gold prices, and plans to sell predictive modeling tools to finance firms first .
  • OpenAI ads pilot: Reporting shared on X said OpenAI's ads pilot surpassed $100 million in ARR six weeks after launch, expanded to more than 600 advertisers, and plans self-serve advertiser access in April .
  • Anthropic IPO talk: A post linking The Information said Anthropic has discussed going public as soon as the fourth quarter and that bankers pitching the company think an IPO could raise more than $60 billion .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: The clearest policy signals today were around safety governance, privacy, and compliance rather than formal rulemaking.

  • Third-party red-teaming: METR said Anthropic gave an external researcher substantial access to internal monitoring and security systems for a three-week exercise, and METR said some vulnerabilities found during the exercise have already been patched .

"This kind of adversarial testing by external researchers is valuable for discovering vulnerabilities, as well as for developing best practices for embedding third party evaluators inside frontier AI companies."

  • Manipulation measurement: Google DeepMind said it built a first-of-its-kind empirically validated toolkit to measure real-world AI manipulation, based on nine studies involving more than 10,000 participants across three countries .
  • OpenAI put an erotic chatbot plan on hold: Posts citing the Financial Times said OpenAI indefinitely shelved a planned adult-mode chatbot amid concerns about risks to minors, unhealthy emotional attachments, and the difficulty of filtering illegal material while generating explicit content .
  • Encrypted inference: Chutes said its end-to-end encrypted AI inference keeps user data encrypted until it reaches a GPU inside a trusted execution environment, and uses ML-KEM-768 with fresh ephemeral keypairs for forward secrecy and post-quantum resistance .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These were smaller updates, but they point to where tooling, creator software, and AI operations are moving next.

  • Moondream Photon claims 46ms end-to-end VLM inference and 60+ fps on a single H100, from edge devices to servers .
  • Runway's Multi-Shot App turns a prompt or image into a scene with dialogue, sound effects, cuts, pacing, and cinematic framing .
  • Google's Lyria 3 Pro can generate music tracks up to three minutes with structure-aware sections such as intros, verses, choruses, and bridges .
  • Stanford NLP's sycophancy study reported that sycophantic LLMs can make users more self-centered, increase confidence that they are right, and reduce willingness to repair interpersonal conflicts, even while users prefer and trust those systems more .
  • Anthropic tightened peak-hour Claude limits, while OpenAI responded by offering temporary 2x Codex rate limits across ChatGPT subscriptions .
  • AxiomMath open-sourced Axplorer, a tool for searching interesting or optimal mathematical objects under constraints; the company said it matched state of the art on several combinatorics problems with much less compute and time .
Voice Agents Go Live as the Agent Stack Moves Into Production
Mar 27
4 min read
202 docs
Harrison Chase
Elad Gil
Ben Thompson
+22
Google pushed a new realtime audio model into Gemini Live and Search, while Stripe, OpenAI, and several industry analysts pointed to a broader shift from chatbots to tool-using agents. Open models also gained ground in speech and search, physical AI moved deeper into industrial deployment, and safety research focused on manipulation risks.

Voice agents moved into wider deployment

Google introduced Gemini 3.1 Flash Live as a realtime model for voice and vision agents, saying it natively understands audio, leads on ComplexFuncBench and Scale AI’s AudioMultiChallenge, and can pick up pitch and pace for more fluid interactions . Google says it is now powering Gemini Live and Search Live globally, with Search Live expanding to all languages and locations where AI Mode is available, and developers can access it in preview through the Gemini Live API in Google AI Studio .

Why it matters: This is a meaningful step from voice demos toward a production multimodal interface layer: Google paired benchmark claims with broad user rollout and developer availability .

The agent stack is shifting from chat to tool-using systems

Stripe launched Projects in developer preview, a CLI that lets agents provision services like PostHog, including accounts, API keys, and billing, without manual browser setup . OpenAI also rolled out Codex plugins for tools such as Slack, Figma, Notion, and Gmail .

The broader pattern is that leading observers increasingly see the harness around the model as the differentiator. Ben Thompson argues the newest agentic systems work because software directs the model and verifies outputs with tools , Harrison Chase says recent model and harness improvements have made loop-based agents production-viable , and Elad Gil says optimized harnesses can create stickier products even when underlying models improve . François Chollet pushed back from an AGI perspective, arguing that harness research advances automation but not general intelligence .

Why it matters: The conversation is moving from “which model is best?” toward “which system can reliably act?”, with implications for compute demand, product differentiation, and how progress toward AGI is judged .

Open models keep moving up the stack

Clement Delangue pointed to Pinterest, Airbnb, Notion, Cursor, and Intercom as companies publicly saying it is better, cheaper, and faster to use and train open models in-house for many tasks; he added that many more are doing the same privately and predicted most AI workflows will move this way . The open-model push is also spreading beyond base LLMs: Cohere released an Apache 2.0 transcription model with multilingual support across 14 languages and a #1 ranking on the Open ASR leaderboard , while Chroma introduced an Apache 2.0 20B search agent it says is an order of magnitude faster and cheaper .

Why it matters: Open-source competition is no longer limited to general-purpose chat models; it is extending into speech and agentic search as companies reevaluate whether they need API-only deployments .

Physical AI is becoming an industrial strategy

At GTC, NVIDIA described a turning point in physical AI as robots, vehicles, and factories scale from isolated use cases to enterprise workloads, and unveiled new frontier models plus a Physical AI Data Factory Blueprint for generating high-quality training data from limited real-world inputs . It also introduced the Omniverse DSX Blueprint for AI-factory digital twins and highlighted OpenClaw as an open-source framework for long-running autonomous workflows .

In a related strategic move, Sakana AI announced a partnership and investment from Mitsubishi Electric to combine manufacturing domain knowledge and data with Sakana’s AI technology, positioning manufacturing and physical AI as its third major pillar after finance and defense .

Why it matters: Physical AI is showing up less as standalone robotics research and more as a combination of data infrastructure, simulation tooling, and industrial partnerships aimed at deployment in core sectors .

Safety research is concentrating on manipulation and control

Google DeepMind published new work on conversational AI misuse, studying 10,000 people and finding that model influence varied sharply by domain: finance showed high influence, while health hit guardrails that blocked false medical advice . The team says it identified red-flag tactics such as fear and built an empirically validated toolkit to measure real-world AI manipulation .

Separately, Yoshua Bengio warned that if current trends continue, autonomous agents could surpass most humans across most cognitive tasks within roughly five to ten years, while raising risks around CBRN misuse and cyberattacks, concentration of power, and eventual loss of control . He called for advanced AI to be managed as a global public good through international cooperation, shared governance, and stronger precautionary safeguards .

Why it matters: As models become more conversational and agentic, safety work is moving toward measuring concrete influence and governance failure modes rather than treating misuse as a purely hypothetical problem .

USDA Acreage Watch Meets Brazil’s Record Soy Crop and Rising Farm Costs
Mar 27
8 min read
140 docs
GrainStats 🌾
Foreign Ag Service
Successful Farming
+7
Mixed U.S. grain markets are heading into a high-stakes USDA report as Brazil posts a record soybean crop but faces rising diesel, fertilizer, and logistics pressure. The brief also highlights quantified nitrogen-management gains, new wheat and feed tools, and seasonal weather risks shaping next-step farm decisions.

Market Movers

  • United States: Mar. 26 grain trade was mixed: May corn at 467.5¢/bu, Dec corn at 494¢, May soybeans at 1172¢, Nov soybeans at 1150.5¢, May Chicago wheat at 594.75¢, May KC wheat at 617.75¢, and May spring wheat at 641.5¢. Traders were balancing strong export sales—soybeans and soymeal above expectations, with corn and wheat at the upper end of expectations—against positioning ahead of USDA quarterly stocks and planting intentions next Tuesday. Pullbacks were still being bought, and the prevailing acreage view remains lower corn and higher soybeans, though spring weather and the June report still matter for final planted area

  • U.S. wheat / global: Hard red winter wheat is carrying the clearest weather premium. Hot, dry Southern Plains conditions pushed the HRW premium to SRW to 24 cents overnight, and analysts said forecast relief needs to show up soon. Additional production risk is being watched in the EU, Russia, Ukraine, and Australia, where acreage could shift toward pulses and oilseeds

  • Soybeans — U.S./China/Brazil: Demand signals remain split. One view is that the May 14-15 U.S.-China summit and Brazil's shipments running 15-18% behind last year could open some U.S. old-crop or new-crop soybean business. Another is that China is effectively done with additional old-crop U.S. beans, has bought almost no new-crop U.S. soybeans so far, and that the U.S. may need another 4-4.5 million metric tons of sales to avoid overstating exports by roughly 140 million bushels. Brazil was also described as the cheaper origin

  • Energy and biofuels — global/U.S./Vietnam: Brent was cited up 6% to $108/barrel and WTI at $95, reinforcing the energy link to grain pricing. In the U.S., ethanol output rose to 1.12 million barrels/day with margins of $0.10-$0.35, while emergency E15 waivers run from May 1-20. In Vietnam, the move to E10 this June was framed as incremental ethanol demand and a new market opportunity for U.S. agriculture

Innovation Spotlight

  • U.S. corn nitrogen management: Sentinel Ag's in-season nitrogen system combines 3-meter satellite imagery, high- and low-N sentinel plots, weather, and nitrogen-dynamics modeling to guide sidedress timing from roughly V5 to VT and to credit non-fertilizer N sources such as cover crops and manure. Across four years in corn, the system was reported to cut N rates by 40-50 lb/acre, save $27-$40/acre in nitrogen cost, and improve average commercial profit by $59/acre, with NUE around 0.7-0.8. In one cereal rye example, mineralization held the crop in the sufficient range into July-September, avoiding extra applications

  • Brazil wheat: Embrapa's new Trigo no Brasil platform consolidates free maps, dashboards, and tables on wheat production, expansion areas, cooperatives, mills, imports, and exports. It also introduces separate estimates for irrigated and rainfed wheat, noting that the larger expansion opportunity is in rainfed areas. The platform is intended to support public and private investment decisions as Brazil tries to reduce wheat import dependence, with annual updates planned

  • Brazil poultry and swine feed: DDGS is being positioned as a dry, easier-to-store ingredient with 32% protein plus energy and fiber. Research cited no broiler performance difference up to 10% inclusion in isonutritive diets, while 15-20% showed slight declines under stricter statistical tests. In swine, researchers reported better carcass yield and recommend lower inclusion early in nursery phases, higher use in intermediate growth phases, and lower inclusion again at finishing

Regional Developments

  • Brazil: Agroconsult lifted Brazil's soybean crop estimate to a record 184.7 million tons from 49.1 million hectares, up 933,000 hectares from the prior year. Area expansion contributed about 3.5 million tons, while productivity gains in states including Mato Grosso do Sul and Rio Grande do Sul added more volume even with another crop frustration in Rio Grande do Sul. The season remained highly irregular: a dry start in central Brazil, more uniform December conditions, excess rain in the center from January to March, and drought episodes in the south

  • Brazil safrinha and northern logistics: Second-crop corn planting is nearing completion but was still 4% behind last year, with São Paulo only 20% planted and about 70% behind, while Pará has been slowed by delayed soybean harvest. Producers are also facing higher fall armyworm pressure. In Paragominas, Pará, rainfall had already reached 405 mm in March, with another 100-150 mm possible in five days and about 300 mm projected over the next 30 days, risking field delays, flooding, and logistics disruption

  • Brazil/Middle East: Brazil's agriculture ministry secured an alternative export route through Turkey to keep animal-product shipments moving without the Strait of Hormuz. The route sends cargo by sea through the Atlantic North, Gibraltar, and the Mediterranean to Turkey, then onward by rail or road to markets including Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and the UAE. The tradeoff is cost: insurance was cited up 10x and total product costs nearly 300% higher, even though Arab countries depend on imports for about 90% of their food

  • United States South: An unusually warm, dry spring has pushed Mississippi Delta planting to roughly on time or about a week early, with corn and grain sorghum nearly complete by week's end. But the pattern is also stressing acreage decisions: nearby freeze damage may force replanting on about 20% of early corn, cotton acreage is being cut by 50% versus 2024 in some operations, and more than 50% of Mississippi and 96.7% of the South were described as facing dryness

  • Brazil finance and labor: Rural groups said producer indebtedness is running 30-40% after several years of drought, heavy rain, frost, and fire, while crop insurance covers only 5-7% of farms versus 97% in the U.S. A separate Senate proposal would modernize rural labor rules by formalizing intermittent, temporary, and harvest-season contracts and by allowing more flexible work schedules

Best Practices

  • Grains/soil — U.S.: Build nitrogen plans from all sources, not just fertilizer. The guidance cited about 20-30 lb N/acre from each 1% of organic matter, 5-40+ lb/acre/year from free-living fixation in non-legume systems, around 20-60 lb/acre from grass cover crops, and 100-150+ lb/acre from legumes depending on termination timing. Corn residue and mature grass covers can create early tie-up because of high C:N ratios, while soybean-like residues release N faster

  • N loss control — U.S.: Urea loss to volatilization drops sharply when more than 0.4 inch of water incorporates it soon after application. Denitrification risk rises in saturated, warm soils, while leaching is most serious where water moves quickly through the profile

  • Feed formulation — Brazil: Use DDGS by phase rather than as a flat inclusion rate. The reported swine program starts lower in pre-starter diets, increases through initial and intermediate growth phases, and then tapers at finishing. For broilers, up to 10% inclusion showed no performance penalty in isonutritive diets; 15-20% inclusion showed slight declines

  • Livestock — U.S. Southern Plains: One Texas seedstock system uses January-March calving to avoid later summer heat, develops bulls on a no-corn ration so they hold up on grass, and relies on rotational grazing that leaves enough residual forage to reduce hay feeding. In that 25-inch rainfall environment, stocking runs about one cow per 20-30 acres

  • Forage management — U.S.: Prescribed burns can improve forage quality and cattle performance, but the guidance emphasized weather monitoring, planning, and safety controls before ignition

Input Markets

  • Fertilizer — U.S.: Nitrogen fertilizer prices have risen 10-15% since the Middle East conflict intensified, though the reported nitrogen cost-to-crop price ratio of about 6:1 remains below the historical 10:1. Nebraska is also pushing policy that encourages reduced N application to protect groundwater

  • Fuel and fertilizer — Brazil: Oil has become a direct farm-cost issue. Canal Rural cited Brent at $108 and WTI at $95, while another report said Brazil still needs more than 65% of the fertilizer volume it must import to install its 2026/27 summer crop; a separate source said the country remains about 90% dependent on imported fertilizers

  • Diesel — Mato Grosso, Brazil: During the final stage of soybean harvest, average S500 TRR diesel rose from R$5.83 to R$7.47/liter, with remote areas reporting jumps of up to 40%, including moves from about R$7.00 to R$9.50 and from R$5.67 to R$8.00. Producers said diesel adds about 30% to operating costs and freight accounts for roughly 30% of soybean pricing, prompting FAMATO to file a complaint over allegedly abusive TRR pricing

  • Crop protection — Asia: Chemical pesticide prices are also moving higher. One report tied the increase to the Iran war and rising oil-driven production costs in Asia, with double-digit price hikes in some agricultural chemicals in India and China over recent weeks

Forward Outlook

  • U.S. grains: Next Tuesday's USDA quarterly stocks and planting intentions reports are the immediate planning event. Multiple sources expect corn acres below last year and soybeans above last year, but also caution that stocks may drive the first market move more than acres and that acreage usually changes again by June

  • Brazil: The transition toward El Niño is a key second-quarter risk. Analysts flagged the possibility of an early rain cutoff hurting safrinha corn in Goiás, Minas Gerais, Tocantins, Maranhão, and Piauí, while excess rain in Rio Grande do Sul could hurt wheat quality. For the next soybean cycle, timely September-October rain regularization remains important

  • U.S. wheat and cotton: Southern Plains wheat still needs relief to arrive sooner rather than later, and continued drought across the South is already being watched for cotton acreage and irrigation demand

  • Biofuels and trade: Vietnam's shift to E10 in June is a new ethanol-demand watchpoint, while the May 14-15 U.S.-China summit remains a soybean demand variable even with conflicting signals on old-crop buying

  • Northern Brazil: In Pará, heavy ZCIT-driven rains into early April mean remaining soybean harvest and logistics still depend on short dry windows

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Codex Plugins Push Agents Beyond the Editor as Cursor Goes Visual
Mar 27
6 min read
161 docs
Cursor
Harrison Chase
Riley Brown
+18
Codex plugins are the big workflow unlock today, pushing coding agents into Slack, Figma, Notion, Gmail, and direct browser control. Also inside: Cursor’s new visual build loop, Theo’s anti-slop frontend routing stack, and the open-source agent frameworks actually worth tracking.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Codex plugins are the clearest workflow unlock today. OpenAI rolled out out-of-the-box integrations for Slack, Figma, Notion, Gmail, and more, and OpenAI’s Alexander Embiricos says Codex has already “completely taken over” internal technical workflows, with comms and sales now adopting it too . Tibo says he already uses it for calendar management, bug triage, company updates, and even a printed one-page morning brief, while Peter Steinberger shows the adjacent pattern: Codex can now drive a browser directly through Chrome MCP instead of relying on screenshots to guide a human .

“This is where it starts to get really interesting: Codex can now tap into the tools you already use.”

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Codex plugins. OpenAI rolled out plugins for Slack, Figma, Notion, Gmail, and more; usage limits were reset across all plans so people can actually try them. Docs: developers.openai.com/codex/plugins
  • Cursor’s new visual agent UI. Prime’s live demo of the unreleased alpha showed design mode for selecting UI and pushing exact edits into chat, plan mode for clarifying schema/UI before coding, build mode for execution with diffs, and cloud agents for isolated setup/parallelism. Cursor separately says real-time RL lets it ship improved model checkpoints every five hours .
  • Claude Code feature pack. Research-preview agent teams, built-in security scans, auto memory, /voice, scheduled tasks, /btw side chats, remote control / Telegram / Discord channels, and shareable plugins all point in the same direction: longer-running agents with more memory and lighter-touch supervision .
  • Claude model economics. Riley Brown says Opus 4.6 is 2.5x faster but 4x pricier and better at long agentic runs, while Sonnet 4.6 is cheaper and offers a 1M-token context window in beta .
  • Frontend model routing. Theo says the OpenAI model he labels “5.4” is still bad at initial UI generation; a cheaper open-weight model at roughly one-tenth the price gave cleaner minimal starts, Opus improves a lot with Anthropic’s frontend.md skill, and Gemini 3.1 is the best reroll engine when he wants style variation. He still likes GPT models for cleanup because they produce less buggy UI .
  • Stripe Projects. Dev preview from @patrickc: stripe projects add posthog/analytics provisions the account, API key, and billing from the CLI. Karpathy’s framing is the important part: the hard problem in modern app building is all the service assembly around the code, and agent-native CLIs are one concrete way to collapse that. Dev preview: projects.dev

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Cursor loop to steal. 1) Whiteboard the app first. 2) Switch to plan mode and answer the agent’s questions about schema, UI, and local/runtime constraints. 3) Let build mode execute. 4) Use design mode to click the bad UI and issue narrow fixes. 5) If the environment is messy, move the run into a cloud agent and pull the changes back locally .
  • Theo’s anti-slop frontend recipe. Inject Anthropic’s frontend.md skill via Skills.sh, hard-cap the page (1 H1, max 6 sections, 2 fonts, 1 accent color, CTA above the fold), attach screenshots or mood boards, then delete AI-added pills/stat bars and fix layout drift after generation. His routing: Opus first, Gemini when he wants more visual range, GPT for cleanup .
  • Kill browser clicking when possible. Karpathy wants agents to provision services and deploy without humans visiting docs pages or clicking UIs, and Stripe Projects is the first nice example. On the browser side, Peter Steinberger says Chrome MCP removed his old screenshot-guided loop for Microsoft Foundry—Codex now drives the session directly .
  • Eval loop that actually compounds. LangChain’s Deep Agents team says the highest-leverage sequence is: dogfood the agent, inspect traces for failure modes, adapt external benchmarks or hand-write focused tests, measure correctness plus efficiency (steps, tool calls, latency), and run tagged subsets in CI. Harrison Chase’s matching production advice: keep full prompts, responses, multi-turn context, and tool trajectories, then use online evaluators and annotation queues to turn real failures into new datasets .
  • TDD + shadow deploy still beats vibes alone. Reco’s JSONata port worked because the existing test suite made fast AI codegen viable; they then ran the old and new implementations in parallel for a week before trusting it. That’s the durable pattern for “vibe porting” production systems .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Andrej Karpathy + @patrickc. Karpathy keeps naming the bottleneck correctly—payments/auth/db/security/deployments, not just code—and Patrick’s Stripe Projects is one of the first CLI-native attempts to let agents keep going without human web clicking .
  • Harrison Chase. Useful right now because he is talking from actual deployments: harnesses over thin frameworks, traces as source of truth, two viable sandbox patterns, and “memory as files” as a practical design choice .
  • Theo. Still one of the best public stress-testers of agent UX: blunt model benchmarking for frontend work, concrete prompt/skill recipes, and firsthand product feedback like built-in terminal + one-click PR becoming core to how he uses T3 Code—even for investing due diligence .
  • ThePrimeagen + TJ. Their Cursor stream mattered because it was not a toy benchmark—just two devs live-building a local-first app and showing where plan mode, design mode, and cloud agents help or slow them down .
  • Armin Ronacher. High-signal content drop if you’re building your own agent stack: his PyAI talk is specifically about figuring out what present and future models are good at for agent construction. Slides: mitsuhiko.github.io/talks/leaning-in-to-find-out/ Recording: youtu.be/8RHYyRUxVrA

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 24:32-26:36 — Cursor plan mode on a real schema. Prime and TJ use plan mode to force clarifying questions around kid profiles, quotes, timestamps, and dialogue shape before any code gets written. Good reminder that the fastest loop still starts with one pause .
  • 10:48-15:01 — Harrison Chase on memory as the agent. Best 4 minutes today on short-term vs episodic vs semantic vs procedural memory, plus why a virtual filesystem is a sane abstraction for editable agent memory .
  • 6:32-8:33 — Theo’s anti-slop UI checklist. Fast, practical, and reusable: brand-first hero, expressive fonts, no pill clusters, fewer competing blocks. If your agent keeps outputting generic landing pages, start here .

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Deep Agents. Open-source, model-agnostic harness behind Open SWE and Fleet; LangChain also open-sourced the eval architecture used to improve it. Repo: github.com/langchain-ai/deepagents
  • GStack. Matthew Berman says Gary Tan’s prompt pack is only weeks old and already near 350k GitHub stars, with office-hours, CEO review, and role-specific agent prompts. Counter-signal: Theo’s first cross-review attempt failed to write a file four times and spent >3 minutes before it even sent the prompt to Codex .
  • Hermes Agent. 13.5k stars in just a few days, per Berman. The notable part is not “another OpenClaw clone”—it’s the built-in learning loop, curated memory, scheduler, and parallel subagents .
  • Superpowers. Around 115k stars per Berman; Claude plugin that bakes in brainstorm → design doc → worktrees → TDD/code review → finish branch. If you want more structure than raw Claude Code, this is worth a look .
  • Paperclip. Around 33k stars per Berman; Node/React orchestration layer for ticketed multi-agent companies with atomic work and token tracking. Interesting, but Berman explicitly flags it as experimental and untested by him .

Editorial take: the winning pattern right now is not one magic model—it is agents with access to your real tools, explicit plan/build/verify loops, and easy ways for humans to redirect or rewind when the run drifts.

Tim Ferriss’s AI Foresight Pick Leads Today’s Operator and History Recommendations
Mar 27
4 min read
242 docs
Tom Bilyeu
Tim Ferriss
Balaji Srinivasan
+1
Tim Ferriss provides the day’s clearest high-conviction pick with Leopold Aschenbrenner’s Situational Awareness, then rounds out the list with durable operator resources on execution, prioritization, scaling, category design, and AI workflows. Balaji Srinivasan adds two books he uses to make political and historical systems thinking more concrete.

Most compelling recommendation

Only clearly organic recommendations with enough context to be useful are included below.

  • Situational Awareness: The Decade AheadContent type: Essay / online article. Author/creator: Leopold Aschenbrenner. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Ferriss says the essay’s AI predictions have had a staggering hit rate and recommends it to people trying to understand what is coming next. Why it matters: It is the strongest-conviction recommendation in today’s set and the clearest direct pointer to an AI-foresight resource.

"the number of actual hits, predictive hits, that Leopold had, is staggering. It is just really about as close to clairvoyant as you could possibly be."

What stood out

Today’s authentic recommendations split cleanly between operator frameworks for prioritization, execution, scale, and category design, and perspective-building books that make history or lived experience more concrete.

Operator and growth picks

  • The Effective ExecutiveContent type: Book. Author/creator: Peter Drucker. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: A classic, short book with high bang-for-buck on execution. Why it matters: Ferriss presents it as a compact execution manual rather than a long management system.

  • The 80/20 Principle and Living the 80/20 WayContent type: Books. Author/creator: Richard Koch. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Ferriss says these never get old for prioritization and stresses that Koch is a practitioner, not just a theorist. Why it matters: This is a direct recommendation for better focus and decision quality from someone Ferriss says "walks the talk."

  • High Growth HandbookContent type: Book. Author/creator: Elad Gil. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: It offers frameworks for deciding what to do and not do based on company scope, scale, and ambitions, especially in venture-backed settings. Why it matters: It is today’s most targeted scaling recommendation for founders dealing with growth-stage complexity.

  • Blue Ocean StrategyContent type: Book. Author/creator: Not specified in the source material. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Avoid crowded categories when possible and create a category of one instead. Why it matters: Ferriss frames it as a practical way to make the road ahead less competitive.

  • I built an AI assistant that works while I sleepContent type: Podcast episode. Author/creator: Chris Hutchins, All the Hacks. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Hutchins explains how he built an OpenClaw-based workflow, and Ferriss adds that newer Claude desktop features now cover some of the same beginner use cases. Why it matters: It is the most concrete workflow-level AI recommendation in today’s set.

Books that widen judgment

  • Travels with CharleyContent type: Book. Author/creator: John Steinbeck. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss. Key takeaway: Ferriss points to it as an example of doing interesting real-world things that rise above AI-generated analysis, and also calls it a hilarious, accurate, enjoyable ride through the U.S. Why it matters: It is today’s clearest recommendation for sharpening perspective through lived observation rather than more abstract analysis.

  • How China WorksContent type: Book. Author/creator: Not specified in the source material. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Balaji Srinivasan. Key takeaway: Balaji recommends it as a way to understand the Chinese Communist Party’s promotion system as functioning like a corporation with incentives tied to economic growth via corruption. Why it matters: It is the most directly explanatory systems book in today’s set.

  • DisunionContent type: Book. Author/creator: Not specified in the source material. Link/URL: Not provided in the source material. Who recommended it: Balaji Srinivasan. Key takeaway: Balaji says it makes concrete why preserving the Union meant economies of scale, peace, prosperity, and a large free-trade zone rather than fragmentation and tariffs. Why it matters: He explicitly says the book turned an abstract historical idea into something visceral.

Evidence Ladders, Investor-Driven Product Strategy, and AI's Hard Limits
Mar 27
9 min read
68 docs
Strategyzer
One Knight in Product
Product Management
+2
This issue focuses on a practical evidence framework for product bets, how PE versus VC ownership changes PM tradeoffs, and why AI product work is being bounded by both unit economics and trust. It also includes a Honeywell case study, career advice on commercial fluency and hiring, and a short list of resources.

Big Ideas

1) Evidence should be treated as a ladder, not a binary

Strategyzer frames evidence on a 0-5 scale: level 1 is what customers say in interviews or surveys, while stronger levels come from behavior such as clicks, co-creation, purchases, or real-world use. The operating rule is to raise the evidence bar as investment rises .

Why it matters: Honeywell found that some projects that looked mature were still grounded mostly in voice-of-customer inputs. Moving toward deeper behavioral evidence helped teams stop risky projects, reduce R&D waste, and give leaders a better basis for investment conversations .

How to apply: Score evidence by hypothesis, not by enthusiasm. A large number of interviews or surveys is still light evidence if all you have is what people said .

2) The right PM playbook depends on who owns the company

PMs need strong commercial acumen because PE and VC backing create different product environments. In PE-backed companies, the owner is a financial institution with a 3-5 year exit horizon and a value creation plan, which pushes teams toward delivery speed and certainty. In VC-backed companies, founder control and a longer horizon make discovery and experimentation more acceptable .

Why it matters: Process arguments are often context arguments. A discovery-heavy motion that feels normal in one company can feel misaligned in another .

How to apply: Before introducing a framework, clarify the ownership model, time horizon, and tolerance for uncertainty. Then adapt or combine methods rather than importing them whole .

3) AI product strategy is constrained by both economics and trust

"ARPU > Average Inference Cost Per User."

Andrew Chen argues that AI-native consumer apps are still more than 10x away from broad viability in many cases, with monthly ARPU around $2-5 versus $20-50 in token costs for AI-heavy apps. He also points to global consumer economics, rising user expectations, and the need for small models or new mobile hardware as additional constraints . In parallel, Julie Zhuo says AI analysis agents are still not trustworthy enough for wide business use because the hardest 15-30% is selecting reliable metrics, adding business context, framing the problem well, and learning from prior outcomes .

Why it matters: These two notes point to a narrower near-term opportunity set: higher-ARPU use cases and workflows where humans still close the trust gap. That helps explain why many teams focus on prosumers and productivity products that can support $100s to $1000s of ARPU .

How to apply: Model inference economics early, and keep human review in any workflow where metric choice, context, or scoping determines decision quality .

4) Competitive intelligence is a differentiation input, not a copying habit

Competitive intelligence is described here as an undervalued part of the product stack. The goal is not to copy competitors but to understand what you must differentiate from, while also borrowing inspiration from adjacent categories such as using Revolut's UX patterns as reference points for a darts app .

Why it matters: Teams cannot articulate differentiated value if they only study themselves .

How to apply: Review both direct competitors and adjacent-category exemplars on a regular cadence, and log what each one teaches you about positioning, UX, and unmet gaps .

Tactical Playbook

1) Run an evidence ladder before you fund the next bet

  1. Write down the key unknowns across customer, value proposition, business model, and execution .
  2. Treat interviews and surveys as early, light evidence about what customers say.
  3. Move next to behavioral tests such as brochures or landing pages with CTAs, co-creation workshops, Wizard of Oz tests, and pre-sales .
  4. Raise the required evidence level as spending rises .
  5. End each review by naming what is still unknown before authorizing more build or GTM investment .

Why it matters: This keeps teams from confusing sample size with evidence quality. Even a large number of interviews stays in the same evidence category if nobody has done anything yet .

How to apply: Make evidence level and next experiment part of every opportunity review, not an optional appendix .

2) Replace slide theatre with artifact-based leadership reviews

  1. Give teams structured pre-work: a customer ecosystem map, customer profile, value scenes, a simple 3-year business model sketch, and a list of known unknowns .
  2. Put the work in a shared platform and comment asynchronously as teams go, rather than waiting for the end to dump feedback .
  3. Ban custom slides for the final review. Honeywell teams had 2.5 minutes to present the big idea, customer and evidence, value proposition and evidence, business model and evidence, and remaining unknowns .
  4. Have leaders question the evidence, not just the technology .

Why it matters: Honeywell said this broke work into digestible steps, reduced shadow work, sped up feedback, and created a shared language between teams and leaders .

How to apply: If portfolio reviews still revolve around polished decks, test one cycle with shared artifacts plus a time-boxed evidence review and compare the quality of discussion .

3) Build an early-warning loop for negative feedback

  1. Centralize feedback logs and meeting notes; manual pattern-finding gets slower as volume grows .
  2. Use automation to surface sentiment, recurring themes, and clearly negative alerts instead of waiting for a human to notice them .
  3. Treat those signals as proactive inputs, especially in fast-moving projects where delays affect schedules or stakeholder alignment .

Why it matters: One commenter summarized the current state bluntly: most teams catch negative feedback late unless they actively look for it .

How to apply: Even a simple workflow that flags recurring complaints and obviously negative language is better than relying only on ad hoc manual review .

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Honeywell turned growth reviews into evidence reviews

Honeywell used a playbook to prepare growth-project teams over three weeks, with async feedback on customer maps, value scenes, business model sketches, and known unknowns before a one-day symposium . At the event, teams pitched without slides and leaders pushed on customer, value proposition, business model, and supporting evidence . The reported results were stronger evidence, killed risky projects, reduced R&D waste, faster discovery, and a shared language across teams and leaders .

Key takeaway: If leaders will challenge projects anyway, give both sides a common evidence framework so the conversation does not collapse into technical detail by default .

2) Three experiments show how to match the test to the risk

American Family Insurance used a fake brochure with a CTA at a trade show to see which segment responded, then adjusted the value proposition and marketing accordingly . Fireflies used a Wizard of Oz approach - manual note-taking behind an AI facade - and after 100 meetings and enough revenue to cover rent, decided there was enough evidence to automate . Tesla moved through competitor research, mashups, landing pages, and pre-sales; the Model 3 reached 325,000 reservations with a $1,000 refundable deposit in its first week, showing a much stronger demand signal than early low-commitment tests .

Key takeaway: Choose the cheapest experiment that answers the next important uncertainty. Do not jump straight from interviews to full build when a CTA, manual service, or pre-sale can answer the question first .

3) The digital darts team chose acceleration over purity

One interim product leader chose to buy rather than build from scratch, acquiring a small company that had already solved part of the problem and speeding up the path forward . The team then grew to 12 people and stayed as one focused squad because the immediate priority was shipping a new software experience on the same timeline as hardware with long manufacturing lead times and a hard deadline . Only after that does the plan shift toward organizing around user-journey stages .

Key takeaway: Team topology should follow stage and constraints. When hardware timelines dominate, a single delivery-focused team can be more useful than a multi-squad model designed for a later stage .

Career Corner

1) The fastest career leverage may come from commercial fluency

The clearest career advice in the set is to stay close to the money: understand the P&L, balance sheet, and how your area affects the broader business . That starts with knowing who really owns the company and what they expect, which is why the PE-versus-VC distinction matters so much for PMs .

Why it matters: The further you are from the commercial conversation, the harder it is to make informed product decisions or influence major tradeoffs .

How to apply: Ask to sit in on planning or finance conversations tied to your area, and map your roadmap to the business model, not just user needs .

2) Hiring signals: framework fluency, startup scars, and domain pull

One product leader looks for book smarts and street smarts: formal exposure to good product practices plus experience figuring things out without much support . He also prefers PMs, designers, and engineers who genuinely care about the domain, arguing that passion makes it easier to feel user pain and go the extra mile .

Why it matters: Adaptability comes from being able to use frameworks without becoming trapped by them, and empathy is stronger when the team actually cares about the product space .

How to apply: If you are early in your career, build both sides deliberately: get formal training, then test yourself in messier startup or scale-up environments .

3) PM tech rounds are screening for systems thinking

A PM interview candidate reported repeatedly failing technical rounds on system design and API deep dives . The practical advice from the thread was straightforward: study the System Design Primer, read gRPC and REST docs, and practice writing fake APIs in a document; the commenter added that they had bombed five interviews before improving, and that hiring remains rough .

Why it matters: In a tougher market, PM interview prep has to cover technical fluency as well as product judgment .

How to apply: Practice explaining API behavior and system design clearly on paper before you try to do it live in an interview .

Tools & Resources

  • Strategyzer artifact stack: customer ecosystem map, customer profile, value scenes, a simple 3-year business model sketch, and a known-unknowns list. Use these as a lightweight template pack for opportunity reviews or discovery sprints .
  • How Honeywell prioritizes growth projects: a concrete walkthrough of playbooks, evidence levels, and no-slide review mechanics .
  • What it actually takes to trust AI: Julie Zhuo's linked essay on why the last stretch of trustworthy AI analysis is difficult .
  • PM tech-round study stack: System Design Primer, gRPC docs, REST docs, plus the habit of drafting fake APIs in a doc before interviews .
  • Competitor-intelligence dashboards: the standard to aim for is ongoing tracking of competitors and adjacent-category references, not one-off teardown decks; one leader cited building Outfox for this purpose .
Gemini Live Goes Global as Codex Plugins and Open Audio Models Expand AI Workflows
Mar 27
7 min read
763 docs
Financial Times
Alexander Panfilov
The Wall Street Journal
+35
Google pushed Gemini 3.1 Flash Live across Search, Gemini, and developer channels, while OpenAI broadened Codex with open-source plugins. The brief also covers open audio models, new research systems, industry partnerships, and the latest safety and compliance signals.

Top Stories

Why it matters: The biggest developments today pushed AI deeper into real-time interaction, connected workflow automation, open audio infrastructure, and operational safety.

Google turned Gemini 3.1 Flash Live into a broad real-time platform

Google rolled out Gemini 3.1 Flash Live across Gemini Live, Search Live, Google AI Studio, and Google Cloud, positioning it as a production-ready realtime model for voice and vision agents . Google said it improved quality, reliability, latency, conversation memory, and instruction-following, while Search Live is now available in more than 200 countries and territories with multilingual support . Independent benchmarking also showed a clear speed/quality tradeoff: 95.9% on Big Bench Audio at the high thinking setting with 2.98s time-to-first-audio, versus 70.5% and 0.96s on minimal thinking .

Impact: Google is not just shipping a model. It is distributing one live audio stack across consumer search, the Gemini app, developer tooling, and enterprise channels.

OpenAI expanded Codex from coding assistant to connected work surface

OpenAI is rolling out plugins in Codex so it can work with tools like Slack, Figma, Notion, Gmail, and Google Drive, including Docs, Sheets, and Slides . OpenAI said plugins extend Codex into planning, research, coordination, and post-coding workflows; they are available in the Codex app, CLI, and IDE extensions . OpenAI also said users will be able to build and share their own plugins, and that today's plugins are open source .

Impact: This moves Codex closer to a general work agent that operates inside the tools teams already use, not just inside a code editor.

Open speech models got stronger on both input and output

Cohere launched Cohere Transcribe, its first audio model, under Apache 2.0. The company said it is state of the art in open-source speech recognition, ranks #1 on the Open ASR leaderboard, supports 14 languages, and reached 5.42% English word error rate in human evaluation . Mistral released Voxtral TTS as an open-weight text-to-speech model with low latency, emotional expressiveness, and support for 9 languages; the company published weights and a technical report .

Impact: The open audio stack is improving at both ends: transcription on the way in, expressive speech generation on the way out.

Safety work became more operational

Google DeepMind published new research on harmful manipulation based on studies with more than 10,000 people, finding high influence in finance but lower influence in health where existing guardrails blocked false medical advice . Separately, METR said it spent three weeks red-teaming Anthropic's internal monitoring and security systems, found several new vulnerabilities, and produced artifacts to improve future monitoring, while saying none of the findings severely undermined major claims in Anthropic's sabotage risk report .

Impact: Frontier labs are moving from abstract safety principles toward live testing, measurement, and third-party scrutiny.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: The strongest technical work today focused on specialized systems: brain modeling, search agents, self-modifying agents, and automated security research.

  • Meta FAIR's TRIBE v2: Meta introduced a foundation model trained on 500+ hours of fMRI recordings from 700+ people to predict how the human brain responds to sights and sounds. Meta says it supports zero-shot predictions for new subjects, languages, and tasks, improves 2-3x over prior methods on movies and audiobooks, and is being released with code, paper, and demo .
  • Chroma Context-1: Chroma launched a 20B search agent it says pushes the pareto frontier of agentic search and is an order of magnitude faster and cheaper . The model was trained with SFT + RL on 8,000+ synthetic multi-hop tasks across web, SEC filings, patent law, and email, and Chroma open-sourced both the weights and the task-generation codebase .
  • Hyperagents and DGM-H: Hyperagents are presented as self-modifying AI systems that can rewrite both the task-solving and self-improvement parts of the agent. In the DGM-H setup, reported performance improved across coding, paper review, and robotics, with gains accumulating across runs .
  • Autoresearch for jailbreaking: A new paper used Claude Code in an autoresearch loop to discover novel jailbreaking algorithms that reportedly beat 30+ existing GCG-like attacks and generalized better to unseen models than prior work. The authors said this suggests some incremental safety and security research can now be automated .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: Product launches kept reducing friction around memory, provisioning, orchestration, and domain-specific deployment.

  • Gemini import tools: Gemini is rolling out memory import and chat history import, letting users bring preferences and prior chats from other AI apps into Gemini on desktop, with mobile coming later .
  • Stripe Projects: Stripe launched Projects in developer preview so agents can provision third-party services from the CLI. Stripe's example command creates a PostHog account, gets an API key, and sets up billing without leaving the terminal .
  • Cline Kanban: Cline launched a free, open-source standalone app for CLI-agnostic multi-agent orchestration, compatible with Claude, Codex, and Cline. Tasks run in worktrees, can be linked into dependency chains, and include built-in git views .
  • Glass Developer API: Glass Health made its Developer API self-serve inside its web app. The API supports clinical question answering, differential diagnosis, treatment planning, and documentation, with structured JSON, in-text citations, and HIPAA compliance with BAA .
  • Ollama in VS Code: Visual Studio Code can now use local or cloud Ollama models through GitHub Copilot if Ollama is installed .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Partnerships and financing are showing where companies think AI value will concentrate: manufacturing, multi-agent systems, and new revenue lines.

  • Sakana x Mitsubishi Electric: Sakana AI announced a strategic partnership and investment from Mitsubishi Electric. The two companies said they will combine Mitsubishi's manufacturing data and domain knowledge with Sakana's AI systems, and Sakana framed manufacturing and physical AI as its third major pillar after finance and defense .
  • OpenAI backs Isara: Isara raised $94 million at a $650 million valuation. Posts describing the company say it coordinates thousands of AI agents to solve complex problems, used roughly 2,000 agents to forecast gold prices, and plans to sell predictive modeling tools to finance firms first .
  • OpenAI ads pilot: Reporting shared on X said OpenAI's ads pilot surpassed $100 million in ARR six weeks after launch, expanded to more than 600 advertisers, and plans self-serve advertiser access in April .
  • Anthropic IPO talk: A post linking The Information said Anthropic has discussed going public as soon as the fourth quarter and that bankers pitching the company think an IPO could raise more than $60 billion .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: The clearest policy signals today were around safety governance, privacy, and compliance rather than formal rulemaking.

  • Third-party red-teaming: METR said Anthropic gave an external researcher substantial access to internal monitoring and security systems for a three-week exercise, and METR said some vulnerabilities found during the exercise have already been patched .

"This kind of adversarial testing by external researchers is valuable for discovering vulnerabilities, as well as for developing best practices for embedding third party evaluators inside frontier AI companies."

  • Manipulation measurement: Google DeepMind said it built a first-of-its-kind empirically validated toolkit to measure real-world AI manipulation, based on nine studies involving more than 10,000 participants across three countries .
  • OpenAI put an erotic chatbot plan on hold: Posts citing the Financial Times said OpenAI indefinitely shelved a planned adult-mode chatbot amid concerns about risks to minors, unhealthy emotional attachments, and the difficulty of filtering illegal material while generating explicit content .
  • Encrypted inference: Chutes said its end-to-end encrypted AI inference keeps user data encrypted until it reaches a GPU inside a trusted execution environment, and uses ML-KEM-768 with fresh ephemeral keypairs for forward secrecy and post-quantum resistance .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These were smaller updates, but they point to where tooling, creator software, and AI operations are moving next.

  • Moondream Photon claims 46ms end-to-end VLM inference and 60+ fps on a single H100, from edge devices to servers .
  • Runway's Multi-Shot App turns a prompt or image into a scene with dialogue, sound effects, cuts, pacing, and cinematic framing .
  • Google's Lyria 3 Pro can generate music tracks up to three minutes with structure-aware sections such as intros, verses, choruses, and bridges .
  • Stanford NLP's sycophancy study reported that sycophantic LLMs can make users more self-centered, increase confidence that they are right, and reduce willingness to repair interpersonal conflicts, even while users prefer and trust those systems more .
  • Anthropic tightened peak-hour Claude limits, while OpenAI responded by offering temporary 2x Codex rate limits across ChatGPT subscriptions .
  • AxiomMath open-sourced Axplorer, a tool for searching interesting or optimal mathematical objects under constraints; the company said it matched state of the art on several combinatorics problems with much less compute and time .
Voice Agents Go Live as the Agent Stack Moves Into Production
Mar 27
4 min read
202 docs
Harrison Chase
Elad Gil
Ben Thompson
+22
Google pushed a new realtime audio model into Gemini Live and Search, while Stripe, OpenAI, and several industry analysts pointed to a broader shift from chatbots to tool-using agents. Open models also gained ground in speech and search, physical AI moved deeper into industrial deployment, and safety research focused on manipulation risks.

Voice agents moved into wider deployment

Google introduced Gemini 3.1 Flash Live as a realtime model for voice and vision agents, saying it natively understands audio, leads on ComplexFuncBench and Scale AI’s AudioMultiChallenge, and can pick up pitch and pace for more fluid interactions . Google says it is now powering Gemini Live and Search Live globally, with Search Live expanding to all languages and locations where AI Mode is available, and developers can access it in preview through the Gemini Live API in Google AI Studio .

Why it matters: This is a meaningful step from voice demos toward a production multimodal interface layer: Google paired benchmark claims with broad user rollout and developer availability .

The agent stack is shifting from chat to tool-using systems

Stripe launched Projects in developer preview, a CLI that lets agents provision services like PostHog, including accounts, API keys, and billing, without manual browser setup . OpenAI also rolled out Codex plugins for tools such as Slack, Figma, Notion, and Gmail .

The broader pattern is that leading observers increasingly see the harness around the model as the differentiator. Ben Thompson argues the newest agentic systems work because software directs the model and verifies outputs with tools , Harrison Chase says recent model and harness improvements have made loop-based agents production-viable , and Elad Gil says optimized harnesses can create stickier products even when underlying models improve . François Chollet pushed back from an AGI perspective, arguing that harness research advances automation but not general intelligence .

Why it matters: The conversation is moving from “which model is best?” toward “which system can reliably act?”, with implications for compute demand, product differentiation, and how progress toward AGI is judged .

Open models keep moving up the stack

Clement Delangue pointed to Pinterest, Airbnb, Notion, Cursor, and Intercom as companies publicly saying it is better, cheaper, and faster to use and train open models in-house for many tasks; he added that many more are doing the same privately and predicted most AI workflows will move this way . The open-model push is also spreading beyond base LLMs: Cohere released an Apache 2.0 transcription model with multilingual support across 14 languages and a #1 ranking on the Open ASR leaderboard , while Chroma introduced an Apache 2.0 20B search agent it says is an order of magnitude faster and cheaper .

Why it matters: Open-source competition is no longer limited to general-purpose chat models; it is extending into speech and agentic search as companies reevaluate whether they need API-only deployments .

Physical AI is becoming an industrial strategy

At GTC, NVIDIA described a turning point in physical AI as robots, vehicles, and factories scale from isolated use cases to enterprise workloads, and unveiled new frontier models plus a Physical AI Data Factory Blueprint for generating high-quality training data from limited real-world inputs . It also introduced the Omniverse DSX Blueprint for AI-factory digital twins and highlighted OpenClaw as an open-source framework for long-running autonomous workflows .

In a related strategic move, Sakana AI announced a partnership and investment from Mitsubishi Electric to combine manufacturing domain knowledge and data with Sakana’s AI technology, positioning manufacturing and physical AI as its third major pillar after finance and defense .

Why it matters: Physical AI is showing up less as standalone robotics research and more as a combination of data infrastructure, simulation tooling, and industrial partnerships aimed at deployment in core sectors .

Safety research is concentrating on manipulation and control

Google DeepMind published new work on conversational AI misuse, studying 10,000 people and finding that model influence varied sharply by domain: finance showed high influence, while health hit guardrails that blocked false medical advice . The team says it identified red-flag tactics such as fear and built an empirically validated toolkit to measure real-world AI manipulation .

Separately, Yoshua Bengio warned that if current trends continue, autonomous agents could surpass most humans across most cognitive tasks within roughly five to ten years, while raising risks around CBRN misuse and cyberattacks, concentration of power, and eventual loss of control . He called for advanced AI to be managed as a global public good through international cooperation, shared governance, and stronger precautionary safeguards .

Why it matters: As models become more conversational and agentic, safety work is moving toward measuring concrete influence and governance failure modes rather than treating misuse as a purely hypothetical problem .

USDA Acreage Watch Meets Brazil’s Record Soy Crop and Rising Farm Costs
Mar 27
8 min read
140 docs
GrainStats 🌾
Foreign Ag Service
Successful Farming
+7
Mixed U.S. grain markets are heading into a high-stakes USDA report as Brazil posts a record soybean crop but faces rising diesel, fertilizer, and logistics pressure. The brief also highlights quantified nitrogen-management gains, new wheat and feed tools, and seasonal weather risks shaping next-step farm decisions.

Market Movers

  • United States: Mar. 26 grain trade was mixed: May corn at 467.5¢/bu, Dec corn at 494¢, May soybeans at 1172¢, Nov soybeans at 1150.5¢, May Chicago wheat at 594.75¢, May KC wheat at 617.75¢, and May spring wheat at 641.5¢. Traders were balancing strong export sales—soybeans and soymeal above expectations, with corn and wheat at the upper end of expectations—against positioning ahead of USDA quarterly stocks and planting intentions next Tuesday. Pullbacks were still being bought, and the prevailing acreage view remains lower corn and higher soybeans, though spring weather and the June report still matter for final planted area

  • U.S. wheat / global: Hard red winter wheat is carrying the clearest weather premium. Hot, dry Southern Plains conditions pushed the HRW premium to SRW to 24 cents overnight, and analysts said forecast relief needs to show up soon. Additional production risk is being watched in the EU, Russia, Ukraine, and Australia, where acreage could shift toward pulses and oilseeds

  • Soybeans — U.S./China/Brazil: Demand signals remain split. One view is that the May 14-15 U.S.-China summit and Brazil's shipments running 15-18% behind last year could open some U.S. old-crop or new-crop soybean business. Another is that China is effectively done with additional old-crop U.S. beans, has bought almost no new-crop U.S. soybeans so far, and that the U.S. may need another 4-4.5 million metric tons of sales to avoid overstating exports by roughly 140 million bushels. Brazil was also described as the cheaper origin

  • Energy and biofuels — global/U.S./Vietnam: Brent was cited up 6% to $108/barrel and WTI at $95, reinforcing the energy link to grain pricing. In the U.S., ethanol output rose to 1.12 million barrels/day with margins of $0.10-$0.35, while emergency E15 waivers run from May 1-20. In Vietnam, the move to E10 this June was framed as incremental ethanol demand and a new market opportunity for U.S. agriculture

Innovation Spotlight

  • U.S. corn nitrogen management: Sentinel Ag's in-season nitrogen system combines 3-meter satellite imagery, high- and low-N sentinel plots, weather, and nitrogen-dynamics modeling to guide sidedress timing from roughly V5 to VT and to credit non-fertilizer N sources such as cover crops and manure. Across four years in corn, the system was reported to cut N rates by 40-50 lb/acre, save $27-$40/acre in nitrogen cost, and improve average commercial profit by $59/acre, with NUE around 0.7-0.8. In one cereal rye example, mineralization held the crop in the sufficient range into July-September, avoiding extra applications

  • Brazil wheat: Embrapa's new Trigo no Brasil platform consolidates free maps, dashboards, and tables on wheat production, expansion areas, cooperatives, mills, imports, and exports. It also introduces separate estimates for irrigated and rainfed wheat, noting that the larger expansion opportunity is in rainfed areas. The platform is intended to support public and private investment decisions as Brazil tries to reduce wheat import dependence, with annual updates planned

  • Brazil poultry and swine feed: DDGS is being positioned as a dry, easier-to-store ingredient with 32% protein plus energy and fiber. Research cited no broiler performance difference up to 10% inclusion in isonutritive diets, while 15-20% showed slight declines under stricter statistical tests. In swine, researchers reported better carcass yield and recommend lower inclusion early in nursery phases, higher use in intermediate growth phases, and lower inclusion again at finishing

Regional Developments

  • Brazil: Agroconsult lifted Brazil's soybean crop estimate to a record 184.7 million tons from 49.1 million hectares, up 933,000 hectares from the prior year. Area expansion contributed about 3.5 million tons, while productivity gains in states including Mato Grosso do Sul and Rio Grande do Sul added more volume even with another crop frustration in Rio Grande do Sul. The season remained highly irregular: a dry start in central Brazil, more uniform December conditions, excess rain in the center from January to March, and drought episodes in the south

  • Brazil safrinha and northern logistics: Second-crop corn planting is nearing completion but was still 4% behind last year, with São Paulo only 20% planted and about 70% behind, while Pará has been slowed by delayed soybean harvest. Producers are also facing higher fall armyworm pressure. In Paragominas, Pará, rainfall had already reached 405 mm in March, with another 100-150 mm possible in five days and about 300 mm projected over the next 30 days, risking field delays, flooding, and logistics disruption

  • Brazil/Middle East: Brazil's agriculture ministry secured an alternative export route through Turkey to keep animal-product shipments moving without the Strait of Hormuz. The route sends cargo by sea through the Atlantic North, Gibraltar, and the Mediterranean to Turkey, then onward by rail or road to markets including Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and the UAE. The tradeoff is cost: insurance was cited up 10x and total product costs nearly 300% higher, even though Arab countries depend on imports for about 90% of their food

  • United States South: An unusually warm, dry spring has pushed Mississippi Delta planting to roughly on time or about a week early, with corn and grain sorghum nearly complete by week's end. But the pattern is also stressing acreage decisions: nearby freeze damage may force replanting on about 20% of early corn, cotton acreage is being cut by 50% versus 2024 in some operations, and more than 50% of Mississippi and 96.7% of the South were described as facing dryness

  • Brazil finance and labor: Rural groups said producer indebtedness is running 30-40% after several years of drought, heavy rain, frost, and fire, while crop insurance covers only 5-7% of farms versus 97% in the U.S. A separate Senate proposal would modernize rural labor rules by formalizing intermittent, temporary, and harvest-season contracts and by allowing more flexible work schedules

Best Practices

  • Grains/soil — U.S.: Build nitrogen plans from all sources, not just fertilizer. The guidance cited about 20-30 lb N/acre from each 1% of organic matter, 5-40+ lb/acre/year from free-living fixation in non-legume systems, around 20-60 lb/acre from grass cover crops, and 100-150+ lb/acre from legumes depending on termination timing. Corn residue and mature grass covers can create early tie-up because of high C:N ratios, while soybean-like residues release N faster

  • N loss control — U.S.: Urea loss to volatilization drops sharply when more than 0.4 inch of water incorporates it soon after application. Denitrification risk rises in saturated, warm soils, while leaching is most serious where water moves quickly through the profile

  • Feed formulation — Brazil: Use DDGS by phase rather than as a flat inclusion rate. The reported swine program starts lower in pre-starter diets, increases through initial and intermediate growth phases, and then tapers at finishing. For broilers, up to 10% inclusion showed no performance penalty in isonutritive diets; 15-20% inclusion showed slight declines

  • Livestock — U.S. Southern Plains: One Texas seedstock system uses January-March calving to avoid later summer heat, develops bulls on a no-corn ration so they hold up on grass, and relies on rotational grazing that leaves enough residual forage to reduce hay feeding. In that 25-inch rainfall environment, stocking runs about one cow per 20-30 acres

  • Forage management — U.S.: Prescribed burns can improve forage quality and cattle performance, but the guidance emphasized weather monitoring, planning, and safety controls before ignition

Input Markets

  • Fertilizer — U.S.: Nitrogen fertilizer prices have risen 10-15% since the Middle East conflict intensified, though the reported nitrogen cost-to-crop price ratio of about 6:1 remains below the historical 10:1. Nebraska is also pushing policy that encourages reduced N application to protect groundwater

  • Fuel and fertilizer — Brazil: Oil has become a direct farm-cost issue. Canal Rural cited Brent at $108 and WTI at $95, while another report said Brazil still needs more than 65% of the fertilizer volume it must import to install its 2026/27 summer crop; a separate source said the country remains about 90% dependent on imported fertilizers

  • Diesel — Mato Grosso, Brazil: During the final stage of soybean harvest, average S500 TRR diesel rose from R$5.83 to R$7.47/liter, with remote areas reporting jumps of up to 40%, including moves from about R$7.00 to R$9.50 and from R$5.67 to R$8.00. Producers said diesel adds about 30% to operating costs and freight accounts for roughly 30% of soybean pricing, prompting FAMATO to file a complaint over allegedly abusive TRR pricing

  • Crop protection — Asia: Chemical pesticide prices are also moving higher. One report tied the increase to the Iran war and rising oil-driven production costs in Asia, with double-digit price hikes in some agricultural chemicals in India and China over recent weeks

Forward Outlook

  • U.S. grains: Next Tuesday's USDA quarterly stocks and planting intentions reports are the immediate planning event. Multiple sources expect corn acres below last year and soybeans above last year, but also caution that stocks may drive the first market move more than acres and that acreage usually changes again by June

  • Brazil: The transition toward El Niño is a key second-quarter risk. Analysts flagged the possibility of an early rain cutoff hurting safrinha corn in Goiás, Minas Gerais, Tocantins, Maranhão, and Piauí, while excess rain in Rio Grande do Sul could hurt wheat quality. For the next soybean cycle, timely September-October rain regularization remains important

  • U.S. wheat and cotton: Southern Plains wheat still needs relief to arrive sooner rather than later, and continued drought across the South is already being watched for cotton acreage and irrigation demand

  • Biofuels and trade: Vietnam's shift to E10 in June is a new ethanol-demand watchpoint, while the May 14-15 U.S.-China summit remains a soybean demand variable even with conflicting signals on old-crop buying

  • Northern Brazil: In Pará, heavy ZCIT-driven rains into early April mean remaining soybean harvest and logistics still depend on short dry windows

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