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Anthropic’s Mythos Forces a Safety Pivot as GLM-5.1 Raises the Open-Model Bar
Apr 8
8 min read
1140 docs
Mustafa Suleyman
Jordi Ribas
Sakana AI
+31
Anthropic unveiled Project Glasswing around Claude Mythos Preview and withheld the model from general release, signaling a new release pattern for cyber-capable frontier systems. Meanwhile GLM-5.1 pushed the open-model frontier forward, and a new wave of agent, retrieval, and workflow products expanded practical AI adoption.

Top Stories

Why it matters: The biggest shift this cycle is not just better model performance. It is a sharper split between tightly controlled frontier systems and fast-improving open and productized AI tooling.

Anthropic turns Claude Mythos into a restricted cyber-defense program

Anthropic launched Project Glasswing, an initiative to secure critical software powered by Claude Mythos Preview, which it says can find software vulnerabilities better than all but the most skilled humans . Anthropic says Mythos has already found thousands of high-severity vulnerabilities, including some in every major operating system and web browser . The launch group includes AWS, Apple, Broadcom, Cisco, CrowdStrike, Google, JPMorganChase, the Linux Foundation, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and Palo Alto Networks . Anthropic is committing up to $100M in Mythos Preview usage credits for partners and more than 40 additional organizations that maintain critical software, including open-source projects .

Anthropic also says it does not plan to make Mythos Preview generally available yet. Its stated goal is to deploy Mythos-class systems safely at scale only after it has safeguards that can reliably block the most dangerous outputs, with testing set to begin on an upcoming Claude Opus model . In Anthropic employees’ descriptions, Mythos is their most reliable model to date, but also one that creates more alignment risk because its failures can have larger consequences .

"We find it alarming that the world looks on track to proceed rapidly to developing superhuman systems without stronger mechanisms in place."

Impact: Anthropic is signaling a new deployment norm for cyber-capable frontier models: narrow access, defensive partnerships, and safety gating before broad release.

GLM-5.1 raises the bar for open-weight coding models

Z.ai introduced GLM-5.1 as a new open model ranked #1 in open source and #3 globally across SWE-Bench Pro, Terminal-Bench, and NL2Repo . The official launch emphasizes long-horizon behavior: GLM-5.1 can run autonomously for 8 hours and refine strategies through thousands of iterations. In third-party benchmark comparisons included in the notes, GLM-5.1 was reported at 58.4 on SWE-Bench Pro, ahead of Claude Opus 4.6, GPT-5.4, and Gemini 3.1 Pro . The model is already available on Hugging Face, with docs live and chat rollout following .

Impact: Open-weight models are moving closer to the center of practical coding workflows, not just serving as lower-cost alternatives.

OpenAI’s internal software factory is becoming easier to see

OpenAI’s developer account said a small team steering Codex opened and merged 1,500 pull requests to ship a product used by hundreds of internal users with zero manual coding. Separately, a Latent Space episode featuring OpenAI engineer _lopopolo described a larger internal setup—Frontier and Symphony—operating at 1M lines of code, 1B tokens/day, with 0% human code and 0% human review before merge . On the adoption side, Codex has reached 3 million weekly users, and OpenAI says it will reset usage limits at every additional 1 million users until 10 million .

Impact: AI-native software engineering is moving from isolated demos to both internal production processes and mass-market developer usage.

Microsoft is treating retrieval as core AI infrastructure

Microsoft open-sourced Harrier, an embedding model ranked #1 on the multilingual MTEB-v2 leaderboard . Microsoft says Harrier supports 100+ languages, handles inputs up to 32K, and powers Bing’s next-generation semantic search and web-grounding services for AI agents . Mustafa Suleyman said better embeddings improve retrieval quality, multilingual performance, and the stability of multi-step agent behavior .

Impact: The agent stack is not just about better base models. Grounding, retrieval, and embeddings are becoming competitive layers in their own right.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: This cycle’s technical progress was not only about scale. It also showed advances in memory, inference efficiency, and autonomous discovery.

Mythos case studies point to a large cyber jump

Benchmark summaries shared after the Mythos announcement reported 93.8–93.9% on SWE-Bench Verified, 77.8% on SWE-Bench Pro, 82 on Terminal-Bench 2.0, and 181 Firefox exploit-writing successes versus 2 for Claude Opus 4.6 . Summaries of Anthropic’s technical report also highlighted a 27-year-old OpenBSD vulnerability and a 16-year-old FFmpeg bug that had survived 5 million automated tests . One explanation of the verification process said results were checked through proof-of-concept code, cross-verification by a second Mythos agent, and final review by human security experts .

MemPalace shows how local-first memory systems are maturing

MemPalace, an open-source memory system built with Claude, reported the first perfect LongMemEval score at 500/500, plus 92.9% on ConvoMem and 100% on LoCoMo . Its architecture stores conversations locally in a structured “palace,” compresses broad personal context into about 120 tokens, and includes contradiction detection . It runs locally, without cloud dependence, under an MIT license .

Flow Map Language Models target much faster text generation

A v2 update to Flow Map Language Models argues for a continuous-flow approach to language modeling that can be distilled into one-step text generation. The authors report beating discrete diffusion baselines at roughly 8x speed, plus easier inference-time control over topic, sentiment, grammaticality, and safety . Resources were published alongside the update via a blog and paper .

AI agents autonomously designed a new physical structure

In one ScienceClaw × Infinite case study, AI agents built a shared representation across 39 resonators spanning biology, metamaterials, musical instruments, and Bach chorales, identified an unexplored design gap, and generated a Hierarchical Ribbed Membrane Lattice. The best design resonated at 2.116 kHz and showed nine elastic modes in the 2–8 kHz band . The team says the mapping, gap identification, design generation, and validation were carried out without human involvement .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: Product launches are moving beyond chat interfaces toward domain workflows, agent runtime infrastructure, and better developer ergonomics.

  • Microsoft Harrier: Microsoft’s search team open-sourced Harrier, a multilingual embedding model built for semantic search and RAG-style grounding in agent workflows .
  • Cognition SWE-1.6: Cognition released SWE-1.6 in Windsurf, saying it matches its Preview model on SWE-Bench Pro while improving behavior through more parallel tool use and less looping. It is free for three months at 200 tok/s, with a 950 tok/s paid tier via Cerebras .
  • OpenAI Prism Paper Review: Prism added a workflow for reviewing technical and scientific papers, checking math, derivations, notation, units, section consistency, and whether claims are supported by results, then writing an editable LaTeX review directly into the project .
  • AWS S3 Files: AWS introduced S3 Files, which exposes S3 buckets as a high-performance file system. For agents, that means direct mounted read/write access instead of translating between object-store and file abstractions .
  • LangSmith Fleet + Arcade: LangSmith Fleet now connects to 7,500+ / 8,000+ agent-optimized tools through Arcade, giving agents secure access to systems like Salesforce, GitHub, Zendesk, and Asana .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Capital, hiring, and partnerships are clustering around a few themes: cyber defense, industrial AI, and agent ecosystems.

  • Amazon’s Project Prometheus is scaling up: Reporting summarized in the notes says Jeff Bezos is rapidly expanding Project Prometheus, hiring former OpenAI/xAI leader Kyle Kosic, targeting physical-world AI for aviation and engineering, and planning to raise tens of billions .
  • Granola raised a large Series C: Granola raised $125M at a $1.5B valuation after 250% quarterly revenue growth, with plans to push its AI meeting-notes product toward agentic task automation .
  • Frontier labs are coordinating on model-copying risk: OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google are reported to be sharing intelligence through the Frontier Model Forum to detect misuse and prevent Chinese competitors from distilling outputs from advanced models .
  • MiniMax is deepening its agent distribution: MiniMax says it is partnering with NousResearch across product and models, and both firms say MiniMax M2.7 is already one of the most-used models in Hermes Agent .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: Government involvement is becoming more operational. Labs are discussing specific offensive and defensive capabilities with states, while public-sector AI programs are moving from concept to deployment.

  • Anthropic is formalizing access controls around Mythos: Anthropic says Mythos Preview will not be generally available until safeguards can reliably block dangerous outputs, and that it will test those safeguards with an upcoming Claude Opus model . Anthropic also says it will report back on what it learns from Glasswing .
  • U.S. officials are already in the loop on advanced cyber-capable AI: Anthropic is in ongoing discussions with U.S. government officials about Mythos Preview and its offensive and defensive cyber capabilities .
  • Japan is already using AI for misinformation response: Sakana AI says it completed a Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications project to help visualize, assess, and propose countermeasures for large-scale online misinformation, and says it will continue contributing in intelligence-related AI work .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: Smaller releases still show where the market is heading: video generation, local fine-tuning, robotics, model serving, and increasingly fragmented product tiers.*

  • Dreamina Seedance 2.0 reached #1 in Video Arena for both text-to-video and image-to-video .
  • DeepSeek rolled out Fast/Expert/Vision-style chat modes, but early testers said Expert still looked closer to V3.2 with about a 128K context window than to a clearly new V4-class system .
  • Upstage Solar Pro 3 launched as a 102B MoE model with 128K context, strong instruction-following and tool-use scores, but a negative AA-Omniscience reliability result .
  • Gemma 4 is now available in the Gemini API and Google AI Studio, with support for function calling, image understanding, and Google Search grounding .
  • Unsloth says Gemma 4 fine-tuning now works locally from 8GB VRAM, with 1.5x faster training and 50% less VRAM use .
  • OpenAI Codex will retire older models for ChatGPT sign-in users on April 14 and move supported usage to newer GPT-5.4/5.3-era options .
  • Weights & Biases + OpenPI now support tracking physical-AI experiments, including fine-tuning π₀ robot foundation models on ALOHA with as little as 1 hour of data .
  • GitHub Copilot is now directly integrated into code itself .
OpenAI Frontier’s Harness Playbook, Typed Execution Layers, and Async Subagents
Apr 8
6 min read
125 docs
Morgan Lunt
Theo - t3.gg
Romain Huet
+14
OpenAI Frontier’s 1M+ LOC Codex experiment is today’s clearest practical signal: better coding-agent results are coming from harness design, not just model upgrades. Also: Deep Agents v0.5, OpenClaw’s latest release, GLM-5.1’s first real tests, and concrete workflows for specs, context hygiene, and feedback distillation.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

OpenAI Frontier just published the clearest production harness playbook yet for coding agents: Ryan Lopopolo says his team built an internal beta over five months on a 1M LOC codebase with zero human-written code and no human-reviewed code pre-merge, using Codex across thousands of PRs . The practical pattern is a harness around the model: sub-minute builds, agent-booted local stacks, markdown specs/skills/trackers, and agents that handle PR landing, CI flakes, and merge conflicts end-to-end . In Ryan’s framing, the scarce resource is now synchronous human attention—not tokens .

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Symphony — OpenAI open-sourced Symphony, a “ghost library” and reference Elixir implementation for multi-agent Codex orchestration . Lopopolo says Elixir was chosen because BEAM process supervision and GenServers map cleanly to task orchestration; the system was built after PR throughput jumped from ~3.5 to 5-10 PRs per engineer per day and humans became the context-switch bottleneck .
  • Deep Agents v0.5 — LangChain added remote async subagents that return a task ID immediately, stay stateful across follow-ups, and expose start/check/update/cancel/list task ops . They chose Agent Protocol over ACP/A2A for this release because it fits thread/run semantics and remote async work better right now .
  • OpenClaw + provider churn — Anthropic no longer allows third-party harnesses like OpenClaw to use Claude cloud subscriptions the old way, forcing either extra usage or another provider . Matthew Berman says swapping OpenClaw to GPT-5.4 took ~3 minutes, but he also recommends model-specific prompt files because prompts that work for Opus and GPT diverge materially . Meanwhile, OpenClaw v2026.4.7 shipped infer, session branch/restore, webhook TaskFlows, and memory-wiki.
  • GLM-5.1 — Z.ai’s new open-weight model is 754B params / 1.51TB, positioned for long-horizon tasks, with claims of #1 open-source and #3 global performance across SWE-Bench Pro, Terminal-Bench, and NL2Repo . More useful than the benchmark slide: Simon Willison ran it through llm/OpenRouter on a real SVG+animation task, then got a clean diagnosis and fix for a broken CSS/SVG transform bug on the next turn .
  • Claude Code /powerup — Small but practical: Claude Code now has an interactive onboarding flow with 10 short lessons/demos. Update with claude update, then run /powerup.

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Steal Frontier’s automation loop: 1) when the agent fails, add missing capability/context/structure instead of just re-prompting; 2) force builds under one minute; 3) let the agent boot the local stack via skills/scripts; 4) give it a landing skill that waits for reviewers/CI, fixes flakes/conflicts, and merges; 5) keep humans on release branches and smoke tests .
  • Run spec-first, fresh-thread workflows: photo the whiteboard or upload wireframes/PDFs, ask the agent clarifying questions to turn them into a spec, then open a new thread for each independent feature . Huet’s warning is concrete: giant conversations plus the wrong folder scope create context overload, blank screens, and bad commits; use GPT-5.4 for heavier scaffolding and Codex Spark for fast UI passes .
  • Stop pasting repos into context: Ryan says models “crave text,” so Frontier keeps turning more state into text and local tooling the agent can inspect . Theo’s version of the same rule: fetch the 8 relevant lines with grep instead of dumping 100k tokens into chat, because smaller deterministic retrieval beats bloated context on both cost and output quality .

“Agents are good at bash. Bash is not good for agents.”

  • Treat feedback as data, not conversation: Frontier stores session logs, PR comments, failed builds, and even Slack fixes, then feeds them back into skills/docs/tests so the whole team benefits . LangChain frames the same loop more generally: trace what the agent actually did, fix the harness, then measure whether the fix worked . When writing skills, keep them narrow, make the description explicit about when to trigger, explain why, include examples, and push bulky refs/scripts into separate files .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Ryan Lopopolo — best production download of the day. The useful specifics are sub-minute builds, ghost libraries, inline dependencies, PR automation, and markdown self-review trackers—not just the 1B-token headline .
  • Theo Browne — high-signal contrarian on execution layers. His argument: bash unlocked agents, but typed JS/TS runtimes are better long-term for permissions, isolation, approvals, and lower-context tool use; in the Cloudflare-style example he cites, token use dropped from 43.5k to 27k with better latency and a benchmark bump from 25.6 to 28.5 .
  • Romain Huet — worth tracking because he keeps the advice operational: fire parallel tasks, use worktrees, start fresh threads, generate specs from whiteboards, and reach for Spark when UI iteration speed matters more than deep reasoning .
  • Simon Willison — still the fastest reality check on both new models and security impact. He showed GLM-5.1 fixing a real SVG/CSS bug in a follow-up prompt, and separately highlighted Anthropic’s Project Glasswing plus Nicholas Carlini’s claim that frontier models are now finding real, patched vulnerabilities at scale—including a 27-year-old OpenBSD issue .
  • Peter Steinberger — still worth following if you care about the control plane around agents: same-day OpenClaw and CodexBar ships, persistent memory, TaskFlows, and spend visibility across 16 providers .

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 10:59-11:58 — “Spawn the agent first.” Ryan explains the inversion: don’t pre-bake the environment and then drop the agent in; start with Codex and give it the skills/scripts to boot the stack itself .
  • 12:39-13:42 — Markdown tables as control surfaces. Tiny scaffolds like a tech-debt tracker and quality score let the agent audit business logic against written guardrails and propose its own follow-up work .
  • 2:06-3:18 — Codex Spark for UI speed. Huet shows the fast loop: generate a simple game, pin the preview, then iterate visual changes in seconds. Good calibration on when Spark beats a heavier model loop .
  • 21:53-22:43 — Context overload in the wild. Huet diagnoses a broken session as too much thread history plus the wrong folder scope—exactly the kind of setup bug that makes agents look worse than they are .

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Symphony — OpenAI’s open-source orchestration blueprint for multi-agent Codex workflows. Adoption signal: it came out of a Frontier team working on a 1M LOC codebase, thousands of PRs, and reporting 5-10 PRs per engineer per day at peak .
  • Agent Protocol + Deep Agents v0.5 — Remote, stateful async subagents with Python/JS example servers. Useful if you want background workers instead of inline blocking subagents .
  • OpenClaw v2026.4.7 — Added infer, webhook TaskFlows, session branch/restore, and memory-wiki; the release leans hard into persistent knowledge and multi-model workflows .
  • CodexBar 0.20 — Meta-tool for the multi-provider era: 16 providers tracked, new Perplexity/OpenCode Go backends, better account switching, and cleaner cost history .
  • GLM-5.1 weights — 754B open weights positioned for long-horizon coding tasks; Simon’s real-world test was not a benchmark screenshot but a broken SVG animation that the model then diagnosed and fixed on the next turn .

Editorial take: today’s edge is coming from harness engineering, not just model shopping—tight context, fast build/feedback loops, traceable failures, and execution layers built for what agents can actually read and control .

AI Superpowers Leads Today’s Picks on China, Category Design, and Creator Craft
Apr 8
4 min read
191 docs
a16z
Tim Ferriss
Balaji Srinivasan
+1
Balaji Srinivasan's recommendation of AI Superpowers stands out because he gives a specific reason to read it: understanding the history of the Chinese tech ecosystem. Tim Ferriss's picks cluster around category creation and the kind of focused long-form media work he thinks is hard to replicate.

What stood out

Today's organic recommendations split into two useful groups: one book recommendation with a very clear use case, and a set of Tim Ferriss references centered on category creation and hard-to-copy media craft .

Exact URLs to the recommended resources were not included in the source material, so the links below point to the conversations where the recommendations were made.

Most compelling recommendation

AI Superpowers

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Kai-Fu Lee
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Balaji Srinivasan
  • Key takeaway: Balaji recommends the book for its history of the Chinese tech ecosystem and says that ecosystem can be understood as a kind of "Galapagos Islands," where similar kinds of products evolved in different forms
  • Why it matters: This is the strongest pick today because it comes with a specific reading job, not just praise: use it to build historical context for how a major tech ecosystem developed outside the US
  • Source conversation:The a16z Show

"But read Kai Fu Lee's book AI Superpowers..."

Tim Ferriss's strongest strategy and media picks

Source conversation:Daredevil Michelle Khare — How to Become a YouTube Superstar

Blue Ocean Strategy

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss ties it to the importance of owning or creating a "category of one" and calls it a good exploration of that idea
  • Why it matters: It is the clearest strategy recommendation in today's set because Ferriss connects it directly to positioning and category creation

Super Size Me

  • Content type: Not specified in the source material; referenced as a category-redefining experiment
  • Author/creator: Morgan Spurlock
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss describes it as a genre-breaking, category-redefining experiment
  • Why it matters: It appears here as a model of work that creates its own lane, which is the same broader theme Ferriss highlights with category ownership

Colin and Samir

  • Content type: Interview media
  • Author/creator: Colin and Samir
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss says they are among the best interviewers, especially on the creator economy and the practical details of making things in the current era
  • Why it matters: This is the most directly useful media recommendation today for readers who want creator-economy insight plus execution detail, not just general commentary

"Colin and Samir [are] the best interviewers out there, in my opinion, especially when it comes to creator economy and the nuts and bolts of making things in this modern era."

Acquired

  • Content type: Long-form media
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss cites Acquired as an example of excellent, highly focused long-form work
  • Why it matters: It stands out as a benchmark for depth and concentration rather than breadth or novelty alone

David Senra / Founders

  • Content type: Long-form media
  • Author/creator: David Senra
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss points to David Senra's work as highly focused long-form content that is hard to replicate because of the amount of work involved
  • Why it matters: This is a strong signal for readers who want examples of sustained research depth and disciplined format execution

Lower-context but still notable

The Year of Living Biblically

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: AJ Jacobs
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss calls it an "amazing book" and uses AJ Jacobs as a standout example
  • Why it matters: The rationale is thinner than the other picks, but it is still a direct, named recommendation from Ferriss rather than a generic mention

Bottom line

The strongest signal today is specificity. Balaji gives a concrete reason to read AI Superpowers, while Ferriss's recommendations cluster around two recurring ideas: create your own category, and study the people who execute focused long-form work at a very high level .

Anthropic’s cyber push, OpenAI’s agent stack, and a widening open-model race
Apr 8
4 min read
290 docs
Big Technology
Mustafa Suleyman
Jordi Ribas
+7
Anthropic led the day with a controlled cyber-defense rollout for Claude Mythos Preview, while new safety research underscored how fragile agent systems remain once persistent state is compromised. OpenAI offered its clearest picture yet of AI-native software development and a unified app strategy, as Microsoft and Nvidia deepened the open-model competition.

Security moved from warning to deployment

Anthropic launches Project Glasswing around Claude Mythos Preview

Anthropic said its newest frontier model, Claude Mythos Preview, can find software vulnerabilities better than all but the most skilled humans, and has already uncovered thousands of high-severity issues, including some in every major operating system and web browser . Through Project Glasswing, the company is giving controlled access to defenders instead of releasing the model generally, alongside up to $100M in usage credits and partnerships with organizations including AWS, Apple, Google, Microsoft, and the Linux Foundation .

"Rather than release Mythos Preview to general availability, we’re giving defenders early controlled access in order to find and patch vulnerabilities before Mythos-class models proliferate across the ecosystem."

Why it matters: Anthropic is explicitly treating frontier-model cyber capability as a current operational risk, and Dario Amodei described Glasswing as a possible blueprint for handling harder model risks still ahead .

New agent-safety work argues the weak point is persistent state

A safety evaluation of OpenClaw-style personal agents with access to Gmail, Stripe, and the local filesystem found baseline attack success rates of 10% to 36.7%; poisoning persistent capability, identity, or knowledge state raised success to roughly 64% to 74%, and the strongest defense still left capability attacks at about 63.8% . The paper argues these failures are structural rather than model-specific and proposes a stricter proposal -> authorization -> execution pattern, where actions are only reachable after deterministic policy checks .

Why it matters: As models gain more tool access, the center of gravity is moving from prompt-level safety toward authorization, policy, and system design around the agent .

OpenAI made its agent stack more legible

Frontier’s internal coding experiment makes the harness the story

OpenAI's Frontier team said a five-month experiment produced an internal beta with more than 1 million lines of code and thousands of pull requests using zero human-written code, with no human review before merge . The setup relied on what Ryan Lopopolo describes as harness engineering: sub-minute build loops, observability, specs, skills, and the Symphony orchestration layer for supervising large numbers of coding agents across tickets and repositories; he also cautioned that the work happened in a greenfield repository .

Why it matters: The emphasis here is not just on a stronger coding model; it is on the surrounding build system, context, and control layer that make autonomous agent work practical .

Brockman says OpenAI is consolidating around a unified app

Greg Brockman said OpenAI is moving focus away from video generation as a separate branch and toward the GPT/reasoning stack, with top priorities now a personal assistant and an AI that can solve hard problems under tight compute constraints . He described a unified app that brings together ChatGPT, Codex, browsing, and computer use, to be rolled out incrementally over the next few months; separately, Sam Altman said Codex has reached 3 million weekly users and that usage limits will reset at each additional million up to 10 million .

Why it matters: OpenAI is now describing the model, memory, harness, and action layer as one product surface rather than separate tools .

The open-model contest widened beyond chat

Microsoft pushed the retrieval layer forward with Harrier

Microsoft's Bing team open-sourced Harrier, an embedding model that it says ranks #1 on the multilingual MTEB-v2 benchmark, ahead of models based on Gemini, Gemma, Llama, and Qwen . Microsoft says Harrier supports more than 100 languages and 32K inputs, and is built for Bing semantic search and the web-grounding service that powers nearly every major AI chatbot; the company also argues better embeddings improve answer accuracy and make agents more stable across multi-step tasks .

Why it matters: Competition is moving deeper into the retrieval and grounding layer that agent products depend on, not just the assistant on top .

Nvidia paired a fully open 120B model with a detailed training recipe

Nvidia released Nemotron-3 120B, a fully open model trained on 25 trillion tokens that, according to the notes, roughly matches top closed frontier models from about 18 months ago . The release comes with a 51-page paper detailing the training process and dataset, plus inference techniques including NVFP4 quantization, multi-token prediction, member layers, and stochastic rounding; the NVFP4 version is described as 3.5x faster than Nvidia's BF16 variant and up to 7x faster than comparable open models with similar accuracy .

Why it matters: This is a notable signal in the open-model race: major vendors are releasing not just weights, but more of the recipe for how to train and serve them efficiently .

Team OS, Builder PMs, and the Control Layer Behind Enterprise AI
Apr 8
11 min read
69 docs
Product School
Product Management
Tony Fadell
+3
This brief covers three major shifts shaping PM work right now: Team OS design for AI-native teams, the move from PRD-heavy workflows to hands-on prototyping, and the infrastructure choices that make enterprise AI agents usable. It also includes practical playbooks for strategy docs, architecture reviews, cross-functional planning, and career development.

Big Ideas

1) Team OS turns PM knowledge from a bottleneck into team infrastructure

"As a PM, you are the human router. Every question goes through you. Every answer lives in your head or in a doc no one can find."

The Team OS idea is a shared GitHub repo where product, analytics, engineering, and team knowledge are checked in so agents can traverse it and teammates can self-serve before asking the PM . In the example discussed, a customer query used only 3% of the context window because Claude navigated directly to the right files instead of scanning the whole repo .

  • Why it matters: This is a way to scale PM impact across functions and time zones, including moments when an engineer needs dashboards, queries, and schemas at 2 AM and the PM and analyst are offline .
  • How to apply: Put work from every function into one shared structure, assign clear folder owners, and optimize the system for repeat self-serve questions rather than one-off searches .

2) The PM role is moving closer to prototypes, code, and high-agency technical partners

Aakash Gupta’s Postman note says PMs are building APIs and prototyping in Claude instead of writing PRDs, which collapses the loop from idea to working artifact from weeks to hours . The same note says designers are shipping PRs through Cursor, reducing the gap between intended design and production reality, while staff engineers with broad agency become the PM’s closest partners on projects .

  • Why it matters: The role described here asks for taste, technical instinct, and the ability to build a prototype that is good enough to learn from.
  • How to apply: Use prototypes to learn before formal handoff, but keep the classic PM strengths too; another PM thread emphasized that influence, psychology, and political alignment still matter, with data and frameworks supporting the narrative rather than replacing it .

3) Enterprise AI agents win on data access and control, not model choice alone

The Product School interview frames production-grade agents as three-layer systems: model, integrations, and control. It also makes a blunt product point: an agent without data access is “expensive autocomplete,” and the real differentiator is proprietary customer data the competition cannot replicate . For execution, the source separates live MCP calls for real-time actions from synced, normalized data for analysis across large datasets .

  • Why it matters: Enterprise adoption depends on permissions, governance, and observability, not just an impressive demo .
  • How to apply: Decide whether the job is an action workflow or an analysis workflow, normalize data across vendors early, and build human-in-the-loop guardrails before promising autonomy .

4) Strategy is stronger when assumptions are tested live across functions

One PM thread described the strongest strategy process as a small group across product, engineering, design, and data working together over time, with the PM driving process and coordination . The practical advice was to run live working sessions early, because async comments on a PM doc can create the appearance of alignment while teams carry different assumptions into execution . There was also a useful constraint: in more hierarchical organizations, strategy may still be set by founders or executives, while PMs influence and operationalize it .

  • Why it matters: The alternative described in the thread was wasted resources, low morale, and adjacent work happening without awareness .
  • How to apply: Bring the core group together before kickoff, use transparent boards and channels, and be explicit about who owns the process versus who owns the final decision .

Tactical Playbook

1) Build a Team OS that preserves thinking room

  1. Create a root CLAUDE.md with only three things: a doc index, team roster, and key channels. Keep it short enough to load every session cheaply .
  2. Give every major folder its own CLAUDE.md as a navigation map with a doc index and a small amount of key context .
  3. Split operational knowledge by use case. In analytics, separate metrics.md, queries/, and schemas/ so the model loads only what the question requires .
  4. Default to summaries before transcripts. The example compares a one-hour customer call of 10,000+ tokens with a structured summary of about 500 tokens.
  5. Assign ownership by function: the data scientist owns analytics, engineers own bugs and RFCs, the PM owns product context, and strategy partners own customer calls .
  6. Make repo updates a launch gate. The recommendation is that a feature is not launched until metric definitions, verified queries, schemas, dashboards, and playbooks are checked in; if you still use PRDs, include that repo work in the PRD itself .

Why this works: It keeps context targeted, preserves reasoning space, and avoids the three failure modes called out in the source: flat repos, overloaded root files, and transcript bloat .

2) Plan important AI-written documents before asking for a draft

  1. Use a basic prompt only for quick lookups; the source calls it too unpredictable for strategy docs .
  2. For ambiguous work, ask for a proposal first so you can correct direction before execution starts .
  3. For complex documents, use full plan mode so the system loads context, asks clarifying questions, and proposes a section-by-section structure before writing .
  4. Ask it to challenge your thinking before drafting; the example prompt explicitly tells Claude to push on assumptions and consider other angles .
  5. For long documents, split work across parallel agents, have each write to a temp file, and let an orchestrating agent compile the result .
  6. Save good plan files into the repo, because native plan files can disappear after 24-72 hours and saved plans make recurring work reusable .

Why this works: The source’s core claim is simple: better planning before generation produces better output than trying to repair a bad first draft afterward .

3) Get more value from architecture reviews without learning to code first

  1. Learn the five building blocks that cover most architecture discussions: client-server communication, databases, caching, load balancing, and message queues .
  2. Draw simple diagrams of the system so you understand how the pieces connect .
  3. Ask trade-off questions instead of prescribing solutions, such as SQL versus NoSQL in a given case .
  4. Ask reliability questions. The clearest example from the thread was: “What happens when X fails?”.
  5. Aim to be technical enough to ask good questions, not technical enough to do everyone else’s job .

Why this works: In the thread, the turning point was not learning to code; it was learning how the system’s parts fit together .

4) Run a real cross-functional strategy process before kickoff

  1. Start with a small shaping group across product, engineering, design, and data, with marketing or research brought in as needed .
  2. Hold live working sessions early to pressure-test the problem, the user need, and the constraints before formal documentation .
  3. Keep assumptions visible through shared boards, stand-ups, and Slack channels while the work is still easy to change .
  4. Check alignment before kickoff. If the team is still debating “why this” after kickoff, the process was probably not truly cross-functional .
  5. In hierarchical orgs, separate PM-led shaping from final executive decision-making so everyone knows where authority sits .

Why this works: The thread contrasted this with a broken state of duplicated effort, lost velocity, and low agency across teams .

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Nest found the product’s core interaction by watching real behavior

Tony Fadell said the Nest team initially believed the product’s “magic” was in sensors, software, and machine learning, but early testing in real homes showed users kept reaching for the dial .

"People kept reaching for the dial!"

The team then obsessed over the dial’s turn, click, and feel because those details made the product feel alive .

  • Lesson: Real-world testing can overturn the team’s theory of what matters most .
  • Apply it: Put prototypes in the user’s actual environment and watch for repeated behaviors, especially the ones your roadmap does not currently center .

2) Team OS made self-serve work concrete

The Team OS example is grounded in a practical failure mode: an engineer on call at 2 AM needs a dashboard, a churn-by-segment query, and the relevant schema, but the people who know where everything lives are asleep . In the same set of examples, one customer query used only 3% of the context window, and a non-technical strategy partner who had never opened GitHub two months earlier was now putting up PRs every day .

  • Lesson: Shared structure and ownership can both reduce PM dependency and widen participation .
  • Apply it: Design documentation and automations for recurring operational moments such as on-call debugging, weekly research synthesis, and routine analytics checks .

3) Two enterprise agent examples show that integrations and compliance are product features

Telnix, a conversational AI platform, reportedly faced months of engineering time before it could ship even a first connector across CRM, ticketing, ATS, and related systems; after switching approaches, those integrations went live in days. Mistral used a unified API so customers could connect systems like Google Drive, OneDrive, SharePoint, and Box once, which let its agents search across them, launch faster than planned, and pass enterprise security reviews with a private and compliant story .

  • Lesson: Time-to-integration and compliance readiness are part of the product, not just implementation details .
  • Apply it: When prioritizing an agent roadmap, treat normalized data access and governed actions as first-order requirements .

Career Corner

1) Prototype skill is becoming more valuable, but it does not replace core PM influence skills

Aakash Gupta’s reporting on Postman argues that PMs are moving closer to code and product through prototyping, while designers ship PRs and staff engineers take on broader problem ownership . The same note says the harder version of the PM job now requires taste, technical instinct, and the ability to build a prototype that is good enough to learn from .

  • Why it matters: Faster prototyping changes what “good PM leverage” looks like .
  • How to apply: Build small artifacts yourself, use them to learn faster, and pair that with the enduring PM skill of influence without authority, which another PM thread said still sits at the center of the job .

2) “Technical enough” is a realistic target

One PM thread argued that the gap between “not technical” and “technical enough” is smaller than many PMs think because the real goal is to ask better questions, not to match engineering depth .

  • Why it matters: This turns technical fluency into a trainable skill instead of a fixed identity .
  • How to apply: Pick one system you work on, diagram it, and go into your next review ready with trade-off and failure-mode questions .

3) Treat language improvement like a product problem

One non-native English PM improved working English by setting a clear goal—passing PM interviews and working in English daily—and then focusing only on PM-specific language instead of general English . The routine was 15-minute daily sessions, a PM vocabulary list, PM Reddit reading, and daily spoken recaps with ChatGPT . The reported result was visible progress within one month and much more confidence speaking .

  • Why it matters: Clear scope and short daily reps can outperform vague improvement plans .
  • How to apply: Define one communication goal, narrow practice to the language you actually use at work, and keep the loop small enough to repeat every day .

4) In a hard market, an adjacent role can be a bridge into PM

In one career thread, a commenter argued that many teams already have data-literate PMs, so going deeper into the data stack is not always the main differentiator for product roles . The suggested move was a “strategic detour”: take an adjacent role close to product development, prove value as a partner, learn PM-relevant AI workflows on the side, and use that path for an internal pivot where possible .

  • Why it matters: Product proximity can matter more than stacking more adjacent technical credentials in isolation .
  • How to apply: Look for roles with ownership, cross-functional exposure, and a credible path to influencing roadmap decisions .

Tools & Resources

1) Team OS example repo

  • Why it matters: It gives a concrete starting point for the shared-repo model rather than leaving the idea abstract .
  • How to use it: Copy the directory pattern, then adapt owners, folder names, and automations to your own team structure .

2) Root CLAUDE.md template

  • Why it matters: The source calls this the most important file because it loads every session and determines whether the system navigates directly or wastes tokens exploring .
  • How to use it: Keep only a doc index, team roster with Slack/GitHub handles, and key channels .

3) Folder-level CLAUDE.md template

  • Why it matters: These files act as navigation maps and were part of how one customer query stayed at 3% of the context window .
  • How to use it: For each major folder, add a short doc index and 1-2 sentences of context needed in most sessions .

4) Shared customer-call summary skill

  • Why it matters: Standardized summaries make cross-customer analysis easier and avoid transcript bloat .
  • How to use it: Put a shared customer-call-summary.md skill in .claude/ and make summaries the default artifact after every call .

5) Saved plan files

  • Why it matters: Native plan files can disappear after 24-72 hours, so saving them turns planning into a reusable team asset .
  • How to use it: For recurring work, keep approved plan files in the repo so the next run starts closer to 80% complete instead of from scratch .
Corn Export Strength, Brazil Margin Pressure, and New Dairy/AgTech Playbooks
Apr 8
7 min read
167 docs
Ag PhD
Dept. of Agriculture
Successful Farming
+7
U.S. grain markets are balancing strong corn export demand against weather-driven wheat weakness and fertilizer-sensitive acreage decisions, while Brazil posts record soybean output with tighter margins and mixed regional weather. The brief also highlights practical agtech, dairy, soil, and biosecurity tools with measurable field relevance.

Market Movers

  • United States — grains: May corn traded at $4.505/bu, May soybeans at $11.655/bu, May Chicago wheat at $5.903/bu, May Kansas City wheat at $6.015/bu, and May spring wheat at $6.385/bu on April 7. Wheat weakened as rain forecasts returned to the Plains .
  • United States — wheat weather vs. crop stress: U.S. winter wheat was rated just 35% good/excellent, below the five-year average of 43%. Hard red winter states remain weak: Kansas 38%, Oklahoma 12%, Texas 17%, Colorado 12%, Nebraska 19% good/excellent. Forecasts call for rain in the southern and eastern Plains late in the week, while western areas remain less certain .
  • United States — export demand: For the week ending April 2, U.S. corn export inspections reached 79 million bushels (+6.5% w/w, +24% y/y), soybeans 29 million bushels (+12% w/w, -4.6% y/y), and wheat 12 million bushels (-14% w/w). Corn was described as running at a record-season pace .

"Everything about US corn exports is very, very good. We're on pace for a record season."

  • United States / global oilseeds: Market commentary said the market has not fully priced potential corn-acre losses from higher fertilizer costs, while soybean pricing is still drawing support from biofuel policy and crude-linked bean oil strength. Old-crop U.S. beans remain about $1 above Brazil, limiting the need for nearby China business .
  • Brazil — cash markets: Brazilian soybean prices at ports were reported around R$130 per 60kg sack, while Mato Grosso corn was reported around R$51-52 per sack, with Sorriso at R$45.

Innovation Spotlight

  • United States — public agtech validation: USDA launched the National Proving Grounds Network for AgTech to test precision agriculture tools under real farm conditions, with stated goals of cutting input costs, reducing risk, boosting productivity, and giving producers trusted data. More at usda.gov/agtech.
  • Brazil — dryland restoration technology: Embrapa Semiárido reported that native Caatinga seedlings can be produced with brackish water common in the semi-arid region. Some species germinated at salinity levels near seawater, seedlings grew similarly to those irrigated with treated water, and the method carries low additional soil-salinization risk because irrigation is applied in substrate, not directly to field soil .
  • Brazil — field tools with measurable returns: At Tecnoshow, Embrapa’s soy-grass integration system was presented as a way to establish pasture without reducing soybean grain yield while adding 3-5 arrobas of off-season beef carcass. Comigo also presented a quick phosphorus-check tool to compare delivered fertilizer against a reference product and flag possible deficits or fraud .
  • Paraguay / Brazil — equipment and advisory efficiency: John Deere said repositioned maintenance points cut basic maintenance downtime by 30% on S300/S400 harvesters . In Paraguay’s dairy sector, Lácteos La Fortuna said credit lines, technical support, and AI-based management improved milk hygiene, fat, protein, and solids, while supporting 10-12% natural farm growth, with many producers growing 18% annually.

Regional Developments

  • Brazil — Mato Grosso: The state harvested a record soybean crop of more than 51 million tons, with average productivity of 66 sacks/ha, nearly 10% above initial forecasts. The production story, however, is separating from the margin story: local reporting said lower prices and higher costs are leaving profitability under pressure, especially for higher-cost or rented-land operations .
  • Brazil — local soybean losses and safrinha dependence: In Boa Esperança do Norte, one Mato Grosso producer reported losses of about 20,000 sacks on 1,840 hectares, with soybean yield dropping from an expected 70 sacks/ha to 52 sacks/ha and production cost near 60 sacks/ha. A neighboring municipality was estimated at 58-60 sacks/ha, down 15-20 sacks/ha. Producers are now relying on second-crop corn for financial recovery, even after planting delays from rain .
  • Brazil — harvest and weather: Brazil’s soybean harvest was reported around 82-82.4% complete, while safrinha corn planting is complete and second-crop areas received 96% of normal rainfall over the last 30 days, with 111% of normal forecast over the next 14 days. The near-term weather risk is in the South: Santa Maria recorded 87.2 mm in 24 hours, Santiago recorded 60 mm plus hail on already saturated soils, and conditions were expected to ease later in the week .
  • Brazil — export logistics: A rail operator in Goiás said it moved about 5.7 million tons in 2025 and is investing to reduce transit time to Santos by improving train speeds and wagon turnover. The network has expanded from Rio Verde and São Simão into Gurupi, Alvorada, and Porangatu, with an eye on serving more grain from Goiás and Tocantins .

Best Practices

Grains and soils

  • Cold starts: For northern U.S. corn, use cold germination scores for soils in the 40s-50s°F rather than relying only on the standard 77°F germination test, and pair that with strong seed treatment where cold, damp planting windows are common .
  • Stick to placement plans: Iowa advisers stressed watching soil temperature and field fitness more than the calendar, and keeping pre-season hybrid placement plans intact instead of moving seed to whichever field dries first .
  • Residue management: Burning residue can speed spring warm-up, but it costs about 100% of residue nitrogen, 75% of sulfur, 35% of potassium, and 25% of phosphorus from above-ground plant material. The same source said burning is usually reserved for flood-piled residue or ditch-edge cleanup, not routine field management .
  • Balanced fertility: In Paraguay, advisers emphasized managing the chemical, physical, and biological pillars together—paying attention to Ca, Mg, S, B, Zn, Fe, and Cu, not just NPK .

Dairy

  • Pre-fresh calcium strategy: Clinical milk fever still runs about 1-5% on many farms and subclinical cases about 25-45%. Standard prevention focuses on the 20-25 days before calving: negative DCAD diets improve blood calcium but can reduce intake, while Zeolite A binds phosphorus, allows higher-potassium forages, and should be fed at a rate matched to dietary phosphorus .
  • Down-cow response: Treat down cows as urgent cases. Roll them side-to-side if they have been down for a while, give calcium slowly IV while monitoring the heart, consider phosphorus and magnesium status, and expect recovery to take 30-60 minutes rather than seconds .
  • Research-stage additions: One dairy research program reported that intravaginal probiotics reduced uterine infections by 50-60% and increased milk yield by 4-6 liters/day for the first 60 days.

Poultry and swine

  • Salmonella control: Use continuous sampling and monitoring across breeder farms, hatcheries, feed mills, and slaughter plants; apply HACCP and good agricultural practices at every stage; and avoid assigning control to a single person or department .

Input Markets

  • Fertilizer / Brazil: Brazil still imports about 85% of its fertilizers, leaving pricing and availability exposed to Middle East shipping risk. Canal Rural reported global urea up by as much as $300/t since late February, with prices around $820/t in Egypt, $630/t in Iran, and $745/t in Brazil .
  • Corn acreage response / United States: U.S. advisers said fertilizer prices are weighing on corn seed plantings, the market is increasingly baking in more soybean acres, and late seed orders show producers still making last-minute adjustments .
  • Margins / Brazil: In Mato Grosso, rising nitrogen and diesel costs tied to geopolitics have stalled 2027/28 fertilizer negotiations. Separate reporting from producers said the end of PIS/COFINS incentives raised uncertainty, lifted some seed costs by 5-27%, and cut corn sale premiums by R$4-5/sack.
  • Crop protection pipeline / Brazil: Tecnoshow 2026 featured a new soybean target spot fungicide combining a triazole with a new strobilurin, plus a corn stunting-control technology developed over five years beyond vector-only control .

Forward Outlook

  • Next scheduled market catalyst: The April WASDE report is due Thursday, April 9, giving the trade an updated read on U.S. corn, soybean, and wheat balance sheets .
  • U.S. spring planning: Planting remains early—corn 3%, spring wheat 2%—and parts of Nebraska and Iowa are still facing wintry weather. In that setup, cold germination scores, seed treatment, and field fitness matter more than simply matching last year’s pace .
  • Brazil safrinha watch: Brazil’s second corn crop currently has a supportive moisture profile, but the South remains exposed to flood and hail risk while rains begin shifting toward Mato Grosso do Sul, Mato Grosso, São Paulo, and parts of the Northeast later in April .
  • Agtech buying criteria: Current signals favor technologies that are validated under farm conditions and fit existing channels. USDA’s proving-grounds model is explicitly built around real-field testing, while a recent agtech discussion pointed to Monarch Tractor’s shutdown after nearly $250M raised as a reminder that EV, autonomy, and data features still need a clear operational payoff; the same discussion said biologicals and OEM-partnered models are gaining more traction .
  • Brazil export flow: Goiás rail operators are targeting shorter transit time to Santos after moving 5.7 million tons in 2025; if that improves, it could ease one of producers’ main logistics constraints heading into the next export cycle .

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Anthropic’s Mythos Forces a Safety Pivot as GLM-5.1 Raises the Open-Model Bar
Apr 8
8 min read
1140 docs
Mustafa Suleyman
Jordi Ribas
Sakana AI
+31
Anthropic unveiled Project Glasswing around Claude Mythos Preview and withheld the model from general release, signaling a new release pattern for cyber-capable frontier systems. Meanwhile GLM-5.1 pushed the open-model frontier forward, and a new wave of agent, retrieval, and workflow products expanded practical AI adoption.

Top Stories

Why it matters: The biggest shift this cycle is not just better model performance. It is a sharper split between tightly controlled frontier systems and fast-improving open and productized AI tooling.

Anthropic turns Claude Mythos into a restricted cyber-defense program

Anthropic launched Project Glasswing, an initiative to secure critical software powered by Claude Mythos Preview, which it says can find software vulnerabilities better than all but the most skilled humans . Anthropic says Mythos has already found thousands of high-severity vulnerabilities, including some in every major operating system and web browser . The launch group includes AWS, Apple, Broadcom, Cisco, CrowdStrike, Google, JPMorganChase, the Linux Foundation, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and Palo Alto Networks . Anthropic is committing up to $100M in Mythos Preview usage credits for partners and more than 40 additional organizations that maintain critical software, including open-source projects .

Anthropic also says it does not plan to make Mythos Preview generally available yet. Its stated goal is to deploy Mythos-class systems safely at scale only after it has safeguards that can reliably block the most dangerous outputs, with testing set to begin on an upcoming Claude Opus model . In Anthropic employees’ descriptions, Mythos is their most reliable model to date, but also one that creates more alignment risk because its failures can have larger consequences .

"We find it alarming that the world looks on track to proceed rapidly to developing superhuman systems without stronger mechanisms in place."

Impact: Anthropic is signaling a new deployment norm for cyber-capable frontier models: narrow access, defensive partnerships, and safety gating before broad release.

GLM-5.1 raises the bar for open-weight coding models

Z.ai introduced GLM-5.1 as a new open model ranked #1 in open source and #3 globally across SWE-Bench Pro, Terminal-Bench, and NL2Repo . The official launch emphasizes long-horizon behavior: GLM-5.1 can run autonomously for 8 hours and refine strategies through thousands of iterations. In third-party benchmark comparisons included in the notes, GLM-5.1 was reported at 58.4 on SWE-Bench Pro, ahead of Claude Opus 4.6, GPT-5.4, and Gemini 3.1 Pro . The model is already available on Hugging Face, with docs live and chat rollout following .

Impact: Open-weight models are moving closer to the center of practical coding workflows, not just serving as lower-cost alternatives.

OpenAI’s internal software factory is becoming easier to see

OpenAI’s developer account said a small team steering Codex opened and merged 1,500 pull requests to ship a product used by hundreds of internal users with zero manual coding. Separately, a Latent Space episode featuring OpenAI engineer _lopopolo described a larger internal setup—Frontier and Symphony—operating at 1M lines of code, 1B tokens/day, with 0% human code and 0% human review before merge . On the adoption side, Codex has reached 3 million weekly users, and OpenAI says it will reset usage limits at every additional 1 million users until 10 million .

Impact: AI-native software engineering is moving from isolated demos to both internal production processes and mass-market developer usage.

Microsoft is treating retrieval as core AI infrastructure

Microsoft open-sourced Harrier, an embedding model ranked #1 on the multilingual MTEB-v2 leaderboard . Microsoft says Harrier supports 100+ languages, handles inputs up to 32K, and powers Bing’s next-generation semantic search and web-grounding services for AI agents . Mustafa Suleyman said better embeddings improve retrieval quality, multilingual performance, and the stability of multi-step agent behavior .

Impact: The agent stack is not just about better base models. Grounding, retrieval, and embeddings are becoming competitive layers in their own right.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: This cycle’s technical progress was not only about scale. It also showed advances in memory, inference efficiency, and autonomous discovery.

Mythos case studies point to a large cyber jump

Benchmark summaries shared after the Mythos announcement reported 93.8–93.9% on SWE-Bench Verified, 77.8% on SWE-Bench Pro, 82 on Terminal-Bench 2.0, and 181 Firefox exploit-writing successes versus 2 for Claude Opus 4.6 . Summaries of Anthropic’s technical report also highlighted a 27-year-old OpenBSD vulnerability and a 16-year-old FFmpeg bug that had survived 5 million automated tests . One explanation of the verification process said results were checked through proof-of-concept code, cross-verification by a second Mythos agent, and final review by human security experts .

MemPalace shows how local-first memory systems are maturing

MemPalace, an open-source memory system built with Claude, reported the first perfect LongMemEval score at 500/500, plus 92.9% on ConvoMem and 100% on LoCoMo . Its architecture stores conversations locally in a structured “palace,” compresses broad personal context into about 120 tokens, and includes contradiction detection . It runs locally, without cloud dependence, under an MIT license .

Flow Map Language Models target much faster text generation

A v2 update to Flow Map Language Models argues for a continuous-flow approach to language modeling that can be distilled into one-step text generation. The authors report beating discrete diffusion baselines at roughly 8x speed, plus easier inference-time control over topic, sentiment, grammaticality, and safety . Resources were published alongside the update via a blog and paper .

AI agents autonomously designed a new physical structure

In one ScienceClaw × Infinite case study, AI agents built a shared representation across 39 resonators spanning biology, metamaterials, musical instruments, and Bach chorales, identified an unexplored design gap, and generated a Hierarchical Ribbed Membrane Lattice. The best design resonated at 2.116 kHz and showed nine elastic modes in the 2–8 kHz band . The team says the mapping, gap identification, design generation, and validation were carried out without human involvement .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: Product launches are moving beyond chat interfaces toward domain workflows, agent runtime infrastructure, and better developer ergonomics.

  • Microsoft Harrier: Microsoft’s search team open-sourced Harrier, a multilingual embedding model built for semantic search and RAG-style grounding in agent workflows .
  • Cognition SWE-1.6: Cognition released SWE-1.6 in Windsurf, saying it matches its Preview model on SWE-Bench Pro while improving behavior through more parallel tool use and less looping. It is free for three months at 200 tok/s, with a 950 tok/s paid tier via Cerebras .
  • OpenAI Prism Paper Review: Prism added a workflow for reviewing technical and scientific papers, checking math, derivations, notation, units, section consistency, and whether claims are supported by results, then writing an editable LaTeX review directly into the project .
  • AWS S3 Files: AWS introduced S3 Files, which exposes S3 buckets as a high-performance file system. For agents, that means direct mounted read/write access instead of translating between object-store and file abstractions .
  • LangSmith Fleet + Arcade: LangSmith Fleet now connects to 7,500+ / 8,000+ agent-optimized tools through Arcade, giving agents secure access to systems like Salesforce, GitHub, Zendesk, and Asana .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Capital, hiring, and partnerships are clustering around a few themes: cyber defense, industrial AI, and agent ecosystems.

  • Amazon’s Project Prometheus is scaling up: Reporting summarized in the notes says Jeff Bezos is rapidly expanding Project Prometheus, hiring former OpenAI/xAI leader Kyle Kosic, targeting physical-world AI for aviation and engineering, and planning to raise tens of billions .
  • Granola raised a large Series C: Granola raised $125M at a $1.5B valuation after 250% quarterly revenue growth, with plans to push its AI meeting-notes product toward agentic task automation .
  • Frontier labs are coordinating on model-copying risk: OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google are reported to be sharing intelligence through the Frontier Model Forum to detect misuse and prevent Chinese competitors from distilling outputs from advanced models .
  • MiniMax is deepening its agent distribution: MiniMax says it is partnering with NousResearch across product and models, and both firms say MiniMax M2.7 is already one of the most-used models in Hermes Agent .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: Government involvement is becoming more operational. Labs are discussing specific offensive and defensive capabilities with states, while public-sector AI programs are moving from concept to deployment.

  • Anthropic is formalizing access controls around Mythos: Anthropic says Mythos Preview will not be generally available until safeguards can reliably block dangerous outputs, and that it will test those safeguards with an upcoming Claude Opus model . Anthropic also says it will report back on what it learns from Glasswing .
  • U.S. officials are already in the loop on advanced cyber-capable AI: Anthropic is in ongoing discussions with U.S. government officials about Mythos Preview and its offensive and defensive cyber capabilities .
  • Japan is already using AI for misinformation response: Sakana AI says it completed a Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications project to help visualize, assess, and propose countermeasures for large-scale online misinformation, and says it will continue contributing in intelligence-related AI work .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: Smaller releases still show where the market is heading: video generation, local fine-tuning, robotics, model serving, and increasingly fragmented product tiers.*

  • Dreamina Seedance 2.0 reached #1 in Video Arena for both text-to-video and image-to-video .
  • DeepSeek rolled out Fast/Expert/Vision-style chat modes, but early testers said Expert still looked closer to V3.2 with about a 128K context window than to a clearly new V4-class system .
  • Upstage Solar Pro 3 launched as a 102B MoE model with 128K context, strong instruction-following and tool-use scores, but a negative AA-Omniscience reliability result .
  • Gemma 4 is now available in the Gemini API and Google AI Studio, with support for function calling, image understanding, and Google Search grounding .
  • Unsloth says Gemma 4 fine-tuning now works locally from 8GB VRAM, with 1.5x faster training and 50% less VRAM use .
  • OpenAI Codex will retire older models for ChatGPT sign-in users on April 14 and move supported usage to newer GPT-5.4/5.3-era options .
  • Weights & Biases + OpenPI now support tracking physical-AI experiments, including fine-tuning π₀ robot foundation models on ALOHA with as little as 1 hour of data .
  • GitHub Copilot is now directly integrated into code itself .
OpenAI Frontier’s Harness Playbook, Typed Execution Layers, and Async Subagents
Apr 8
6 min read
125 docs
Morgan Lunt
Theo - t3.gg
Romain Huet
+14
OpenAI Frontier’s 1M+ LOC Codex experiment is today’s clearest practical signal: better coding-agent results are coming from harness design, not just model upgrades. Also: Deep Agents v0.5, OpenClaw’s latest release, GLM-5.1’s first real tests, and concrete workflows for specs, context hygiene, and feedback distillation.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

OpenAI Frontier just published the clearest production harness playbook yet for coding agents: Ryan Lopopolo says his team built an internal beta over five months on a 1M LOC codebase with zero human-written code and no human-reviewed code pre-merge, using Codex across thousands of PRs . The practical pattern is a harness around the model: sub-minute builds, agent-booted local stacks, markdown specs/skills/trackers, and agents that handle PR landing, CI flakes, and merge conflicts end-to-end . In Ryan’s framing, the scarce resource is now synchronous human attention—not tokens .

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Symphony — OpenAI open-sourced Symphony, a “ghost library” and reference Elixir implementation for multi-agent Codex orchestration . Lopopolo says Elixir was chosen because BEAM process supervision and GenServers map cleanly to task orchestration; the system was built after PR throughput jumped from ~3.5 to 5-10 PRs per engineer per day and humans became the context-switch bottleneck .
  • Deep Agents v0.5 — LangChain added remote async subagents that return a task ID immediately, stay stateful across follow-ups, and expose start/check/update/cancel/list task ops . They chose Agent Protocol over ACP/A2A for this release because it fits thread/run semantics and remote async work better right now .
  • OpenClaw + provider churn — Anthropic no longer allows third-party harnesses like OpenClaw to use Claude cloud subscriptions the old way, forcing either extra usage or another provider . Matthew Berman says swapping OpenClaw to GPT-5.4 took ~3 minutes, but he also recommends model-specific prompt files because prompts that work for Opus and GPT diverge materially . Meanwhile, OpenClaw v2026.4.7 shipped infer, session branch/restore, webhook TaskFlows, and memory-wiki.
  • GLM-5.1 — Z.ai’s new open-weight model is 754B params / 1.51TB, positioned for long-horizon tasks, with claims of #1 open-source and #3 global performance across SWE-Bench Pro, Terminal-Bench, and NL2Repo . More useful than the benchmark slide: Simon Willison ran it through llm/OpenRouter on a real SVG+animation task, then got a clean diagnosis and fix for a broken CSS/SVG transform bug on the next turn .
  • Claude Code /powerup — Small but practical: Claude Code now has an interactive onboarding flow with 10 short lessons/demos. Update with claude update, then run /powerup.

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Steal Frontier’s automation loop: 1) when the agent fails, add missing capability/context/structure instead of just re-prompting; 2) force builds under one minute; 3) let the agent boot the local stack via skills/scripts; 4) give it a landing skill that waits for reviewers/CI, fixes flakes/conflicts, and merges; 5) keep humans on release branches and smoke tests .
  • Run spec-first, fresh-thread workflows: photo the whiteboard or upload wireframes/PDFs, ask the agent clarifying questions to turn them into a spec, then open a new thread for each independent feature . Huet’s warning is concrete: giant conversations plus the wrong folder scope create context overload, blank screens, and bad commits; use GPT-5.4 for heavier scaffolding and Codex Spark for fast UI passes .
  • Stop pasting repos into context: Ryan says models “crave text,” so Frontier keeps turning more state into text and local tooling the agent can inspect . Theo’s version of the same rule: fetch the 8 relevant lines with grep instead of dumping 100k tokens into chat, because smaller deterministic retrieval beats bloated context on both cost and output quality .

“Agents are good at bash. Bash is not good for agents.”

  • Treat feedback as data, not conversation: Frontier stores session logs, PR comments, failed builds, and even Slack fixes, then feeds them back into skills/docs/tests so the whole team benefits . LangChain frames the same loop more generally: trace what the agent actually did, fix the harness, then measure whether the fix worked . When writing skills, keep them narrow, make the description explicit about when to trigger, explain why, include examples, and push bulky refs/scripts into separate files .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Ryan Lopopolo — best production download of the day. The useful specifics are sub-minute builds, ghost libraries, inline dependencies, PR automation, and markdown self-review trackers—not just the 1B-token headline .
  • Theo Browne — high-signal contrarian on execution layers. His argument: bash unlocked agents, but typed JS/TS runtimes are better long-term for permissions, isolation, approvals, and lower-context tool use; in the Cloudflare-style example he cites, token use dropped from 43.5k to 27k with better latency and a benchmark bump from 25.6 to 28.5 .
  • Romain Huet — worth tracking because he keeps the advice operational: fire parallel tasks, use worktrees, start fresh threads, generate specs from whiteboards, and reach for Spark when UI iteration speed matters more than deep reasoning .
  • Simon Willison — still the fastest reality check on both new models and security impact. He showed GLM-5.1 fixing a real SVG/CSS bug in a follow-up prompt, and separately highlighted Anthropic’s Project Glasswing plus Nicholas Carlini’s claim that frontier models are now finding real, patched vulnerabilities at scale—including a 27-year-old OpenBSD issue .
  • Peter Steinberger — still worth following if you care about the control plane around agents: same-day OpenClaw and CodexBar ships, persistent memory, TaskFlows, and spend visibility across 16 providers .

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 10:59-11:58 — “Spawn the agent first.” Ryan explains the inversion: don’t pre-bake the environment and then drop the agent in; start with Codex and give it the skills/scripts to boot the stack itself .
  • 12:39-13:42 — Markdown tables as control surfaces. Tiny scaffolds like a tech-debt tracker and quality score let the agent audit business logic against written guardrails and propose its own follow-up work .
  • 2:06-3:18 — Codex Spark for UI speed. Huet shows the fast loop: generate a simple game, pin the preview, then iterate visual changes in seconds. Good calibration on when Spark beats a heavier model loop .
  • 21:53-22:43 — Context overload in the wild. Huet diagnoses a broken session as too much thread history plus the wrong folder scope—exactly the kind of setup bug that makes agents look worse than they are .

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Symphony — OpenAI’s open-source orchestration blueprint for multi-agent Codex workflows. Adoption signal: it came out of a Frontier team working on a 1M LOC codebase, thousands of PRs, and reporting 5-10 PRs per engineer per day at peak .
  • Agent Protocol + Deep Agents v0.5 — Remote, stateful async subagents with Python/JS example servers. Useful if you want background workers instead of inline blocking subagents .
  • OpenClaw v2026.4.7 — Added infer, webhook TaskFlows, session branch/restore, and memory-wiki; the release leans hard into persistent knowledge and multi-model workflows .
  • CodexBar 0.20 — Meta-tool for the multi-provider era: 16 providers tracked, new Perplexity/OpenCode Go backends, better account switching, and cleaner cost history .
  • GLM-5.1 weights — 754B open weights positioned for long-horizon coding tasks; Simon’s real-world test was not a benchmark screenshot but a broken SVG animation that the model then diagnosed and fixed on the next turn .

Editorial take: today’s edge is coming from harness engineering, not just model shopping—tight context, fast build/feedback loops, traceable failures, and execution layers built for what agents can actually read and control .

AI Superpowers Leads Today’s Picks on China, Category Design, and Creator Craft
Apr 8
4 min read
191 docs
a16z
Tim Ferriss
Balaji Srinivasan
+1
Balaji Srinivasan's recommendation of AI Superpowers stands out because he gives a specific reason to read it: understanding the history of the Chinese tech ecosystem. Tim Ferriss's picks cluster around category creation and the kind of focused long-form media work he thinks is hard to replicate.

What stood out

Today's organic recommendations split into two useful groups: one book recommendation with a very clear use case, and a set of Tim Ferriss references centered on category creation and hard-to-copy media craft .

Exact URLs to the recommended resources were not included in the source material, so the links below point to the conversations where the recommendations were made.

Most compelling recommendation

AI Superpowers

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Kai-Fu Lee
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Balaji Srinivasan
  • Key takeaway: Balaji recommends the book for its history of the Chinese tech ecosystem and says that ecosystem can be understood as a kind of "Galapagos Islands," where similar kinds of products evolved in different forms
  • Why it matters: This is the strongest pick today because it comes with a specific reading job, not just praise: use it to build historical context for how a major tech ecosystem developed outside the US
  • Source conversation:The a16z Show

"But read Kai Fu Lee's book AI Superpowers..."

Tim Ferriss's strongest strategy and media picks

Source conversation:Daredevil Michelle Khare — How to Become a YouTube Superstar

Blue Ocean Strategy

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss ties it to the importance of owning or creating a "category of one" and calls it a good exploration of that idea
  • Why it matters: It is the clearest strategy recommendation in today's set because Ferriss connects it directly to positioning and category creation

Super Size Me

  • Content type: Not specified in the source material; referenced as a category-redefining experiment
  • Author/creator: Morgan Spurlock
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss describes it as a genre-breaking, category-redefining experiment
  • Why it matters: It appears here as a model of work that creates its own lane, which is the same broader theme Ferriss highlights with category ownership

Colin and Samir

  • Content type: Interview media
  • Author/creator: Colin and Samir
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss says they are among the best interviewers, especially on the creator economy and the practical details of making things in the current era
  • Why it matters: This is the most directly useful media recommendation today for readers who want creator-economy insight plus execution detail, not just general commentary

"Colin and Samir [are] the best interviewers out there, in my opinion, especially when it comes to creator economy and the nuts and bolts of making things in this modern era."

Acquired

  • Content type: Long-form media
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss cites Acquired as an example of excellent, highly focused long-form work
  • Why it matters: It stands out as a benchmark for depth and concentration rather than breadth or novelty alone

David Senra / Founders

  • Content type: Long-form media
  • Author/creator: David Senra
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss points to David Senra's work as highly focused long-form content that is hard to replicate because of the amount of work involved
  • Why it matters: This is a strong signal for readers who want examples of sustained research depth and disciplined format execution

Lower-context but still notable

The Year of Living Biblically

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: AJ Jacobs
  • Link/URL: Not provided in source material
  • Who recommended it: Tim Ferriss
  • Key takeaway: Ferriss calls it an "amazing book" and uses AJ Jacobs as a standout example
  • Why it matters: The rationale is thinner than the other picks, but it is still a direct, named recommendation from Ferriss rather than a generic mention

Bottom line

The strongest signal today is specificity. Balaji gives a concrete reason to read AI Superpowers, while Ferriss's recommendations cluster around two recurring ideas: create your own category, and study the people who execute focused long-form work at a very high level .

Anthropic’s cyber push, OpenAI’s agent stack, and a widening open-model race
Apr 8
4 min read
290 docs
Big Technology
Mustafa Suleyman
Jordi Ribas
+7
Anthropic led the day with a controlled cyber-defense rollout for Claude Mythos Preview, while new safety research underscored how fragile agent systems remain once persistent state is compromised. OpenAI offered its clearest picture yet of AI-native software development and a unified app strategy, as Microsoft and Nvidia deepened the open-model competition.

Security moved from warning to deployment

Anthropic launches Project Glasswing around Claude Mythos Preview

Anthropic said its newest frontier model, Claude Mythos Preview, can find software vulnerabilities better than all but the most skilled humans, and has already uncovered thousands of high-severity issues, including some in every major operating system and web browser . Through Project Glasswing, the company is giving controlled access to defenders instead of releasing the model generally, alongside up to $100M in usage credits and partnerships with organizations including AWS, Apple, Google, Microsoft, and the Linux Foundation .

"Rather than release Mythos Preview to general availability, we’re giving defenders early controlled access in order to find and patch vulnerabilities before Mythos-class models proliferate across the ecosystem."

Why it matters: Anthropic is explicitly treating frontier-model cyber capability as a current operational risk, and Dario Amodei described Glasswing as a possible blueprint for handling harder model risks still ahead .

New agent-safety work argues the weak point is persistent state

A safety evaluation of OpenClaw-style personal agents with access to Gmail, Stripe, and the local filesystem found baseline attack success rates of 10% to 36.7%; poisoning persistent capability, identity, or knowledge state raised success to roughly 64% to 74%, and the strongest defense still left capability attacks at about 63.8% . The paper argues these failures are structural rather than model-specific and proposes a stricter proposal -> authorization -> execution pattern, where actions are only reachable after deterministic policy checks .

Why it matters: As models gain more tool access, the center of gravity is moving from prompt-level safety toward authorization, policy, and system design around the agent .

OpenAI made its agent stack more legible

Frontier’s internal coding experiment makes the harness the story

OpenAI's Frontier team said a five-month experiment produced an internal beta with more than 1 million lines of code and thousands of pull requests using zero human-written code, with no human review before merge . The setup relied on what Ryan Lopopolo describes as harness engineering: sub-minute build loops, observability, specs, skills, and the Symphony orchestration layer for supervising large numbers of coding agents across tickets and repositories; he also cautioned that the work happened in a greenfield repository .

Why it matters: The emphasis here is not just on a stronger coding model; it is on the surrounding build system, context, and control layer that make autonomous agent work practical .

Brockman says OpenAI is consolidating around a unified app

Greg Brockman said OpenAI is moving focus away from video generation as a separate branch and toward the GPT/reasoning stack, with top priorities now a personal assistant and an AI that can solve hard problems under tight compute constraints . He described a unified app that brings together ChatGPT, Codex, browsing, and computer use, to be rolled out incrementally over the next few months; separately, Sam Altman said Codex has reached 3 million weekly users and that usage limits will reset at each additional million up to 10 million .

Why it matters: OpenAI is now describing the model, memory, harness, and action layer as one product surface rather than separate tools .

The open-model contest widened beyond chat

Microsoft pushed the retrieval layer forward with Harrier

Microsoft's Bing team open-sourced Harrier, an embedding model that it says ranks #1 on the multilingual MTEB-v2 benchmark, ahead of models based on Gemini, Gemma, Llama, and Qwen . Microsoft says Harrier supports more than 100 languages and 32K inputs, and is built for Bing semantic search and the web-grounding service that powers nearly every major AI chatbot; the company also argues better embeddings improve answer accuracy and make agents more stable across multi-step tasks .

Why it matters: Competition is moving deeper into the retrieval and grounding layer that agent products depend on, not just the assistant on top .

Nvidia paired a fully open 120B model with a detailed training recipe

Nvidia released Nemotron-3 120B, a fully open model trained on 25 trillion tokens that, according to the notes, roughly matches top closed frontier models from about 18 months ago . The release comes with a 51-page paper detailing the training process and dataset, plus inference techniques including NVFP4 quantization, multi-token prediction, member layers, and stochastic rounding; the NVFP4 version is described as 3.5x faster than Nvidia's BF16 variant and up to 7x faster than comparable open models with similar accuracy .

Why it matters: This is a notable signal in the open-model race: major vendors are releasing not just weights, but more of the recipe for how to train and serve them efficiently .

Team OS, Builder PMs, and the Control Layer Behind Enterprise AI
Apr 8
11 min read
69 docs
Product School
Product Management
Tony Fadell
+3
This brief covers three major shifts shaping PM work right now: Team OS design for AI-native teams, the move from PRD-heavy workflows to hands-on prototyping, and the infrastructure choices that make enterprise AI agents usable. It also includes practical playbooks for strategy docs, architecture reviews, cross-functional planning, and career development.

Big Ideas

1) Team OS turns PM knowledge from a bottleneck into team infrastructure

"As a PM, you are the human router. Every question goes through you. Every answer lives in your head or in a doc no one can find."

The Team OS idea is a shared GitHub repo where product, analytics, engineering, and team knowledge are checked in so agents can traverse it and teammates can self-serve before asking the PM . In the example discussed, a customer query used only 3% of the context window because Claude navigated directly to the right files instead of scanning the whole repo .

  • Why it matters: This is a way to scale PM impact across functions and time zones, including moments when an engineer needs dashboards, queries, and schemas at 2 AM and the PM and analyst are offline .
  • How to apply: Put work from every function into one shared structure, assign clear folder owners, and optimize the system for repeat self-serve questions rather than one-off searches .

2) The PM role is moving closer to prototypes, code, and high-agency technical partners

Aakash Gupta’s Postman note says PMs are building APIs and prototyping in Claude instead of writing PRDs, which collapses the loop from idea to working artifact from weeks to hours . The same note says designers are shipping PRs through Cursor, reducing the gap between intended design and production reality, while staff engineers with broad agency become the PM’s closest partners on projects .

  • Why it matters: The role described here asks for taste, technical instinct, and the ability to build a prototype that is good enough to learn from.
  • How to apply: Use prototypes to learn before formal handoff, but keep the classic PM strengths too; another PM thread emphasized that influence, psychology, and political alignment still matter, with data and frameworks supporting the narrative rather than replacing it .

3) Enterprise AI agents win on data access and control, not model choice alone

The Product School interview frames production-grade agents as three-layer systems: model, integrations, and control. It also makes a blunt product point: an agent without data access is “expensive autocomplete,” and the real differentiator is proprietary customer data the competition cannot replicate . For execution, the source separates live MCP calls for real-time actions from synced, normalized data for analysis across large datasets .

  • Why it matters: Enterprise adoption depends on permissions, governance, and observability, not just an impressive demo .
  • How to apply: Decide whether the job is an action workflow or an analysis workflow, normalize data across vendors early, and build human-in-the-loop guardrails before promising autonomy .

4) Strategy is stronger when assumptions are tested live across functions

One PM thread described the strongest strategy process as a small group across product, engineering, design, and data working together over time, with the PM driving process and coordination . The practical advice was to run live working sessions early, because async comments on a PM doc can create the appearance of alignment while teams carry different assumptions into execution . There was also a useful constraint: in more hierarchical organizations, strategy may still be set by founders or executives, while PMs influence and operationalize it .

  • Why it matters: The alternative described in the thread was wasted resources, low morale, and adjacent work happening without awareness .
  • How to apply: Bring the core group together before kickoff, use transparent boards and channels, and be explicit about who owns the process versus who owns the final decision .

Tactical Playbook

1) Build a Team OS that preserves thinking room

  1. Create a root CLAUDE.md with only three things: a doc index, team roster, and key channels. Keep it short enough to load every session cheaply .
  2. Give every major folder its own CLAUDE.md as a navigation map with a doc index and a small amount of key context .
  3. Split operational knowledge by use case. In analytics, separate metrics.md, queries/, and schemas/ so the model loads only what the question requires .
  4. Default to summaries before transcripts. The example compares a one-hour customer call of 10,000+ tokens with a structured summary of about 500 tokens.
  5. Assign ownership by function: the data scientist owns analytics, engineers own bugs and RFCs, the PM owns product context, and strategy partners own customer calls .
  6. Make repo updates a launch gate. The recommendation is that a feature is not launched until metric definitions, verified queries, schemas, dashboards, and playbooks are checked in; if you still use PRDs, include that repo work in the PRD itself .

Why this works: It keeps context targeted, preserves reasoning space, and avoids the three failure modes called out in the source: flat repos, overloaded root files, and transcript bloat .

2) Plan important AI-written documents before asking for a draft

  1. Use a basic prompt only for quick lookups; the source calls it too unpredictable for strategy docs .
  2. For ambiguous work, ask for a proposal first so you can correct direction before execution starts .
  3. For complex documents, use full plan mode so the system loads context, asks clarifying questions, and proposes a section-by-section structure before writing .
  4. Ask it to challenge your thinking before drafting; the example prompt explicitly tells Claude to push on assumptions and consider other angles .
  5. For long documents, split work across parallel agents, have each write to a temp file, and let an orchestrating agent compile the result .
  6. Save good plan files into the repo, because native plan files can disappear after 24-72 hours and saved plans make recurring work reusable .

Why this works: The source’s core claim is simple: better planning before generation produces better output than trying to repair a bad first draft afterward .

3) Get more value from architecture reviews without learning to code first

  1. Learn the five building blocks that cover most architecture discussions: client-server communication, databases, caching, load balancing, and message queues .
  2. Draw simple diagrams of the system so you understand how the pieces connect .
  3. Ask trade-off questions instead of prescribing solutions, such as SQL versus NoSQL in a given case .
  4. Ask reliability questions. The clearest example from the thread was: “What happens when X fails?”.
  5. Aim to be technical enough to ask good questions, not technical enough to do everyone else’s job .

Why this works: In the thread, the turning point was not learning to code; it was learning how the system’s parts fit together .

4) Run a real cross-functional strategy process before kickoff

  1. Start with a small shaping group across product, engineering, design, and data, with marketing or research brought in as needed .
  2. Hold live working sessions early to pressure-test the problem, the user need, and the constraints before formal documentation .
  3. Keep assumptions visible through shared boards, stand-ups, and Slack channels while the work is still easy to change .
  4. Check alignment before kickoff. If the team is still debating “why this” after kickoff, the process was probably not truly cross-functional .
  5. In hierarchical orgs, separate PM-led shaping from final executive decision-making so everyone knows where authority sits .

Why this works: The thread contrasted this with a broken state of duplicated effort, lost velocity, and low agency across teams .

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Nest found the product’s core interaction by watching real behavior

Tony Fadell said the Nest team initially believed the product’s “magic” was in sensors, software, and machine learning, but early testing in real homes showed users kept reaching for the dial .

"People kept reaching for the dial!"

The team then obsessed over the dial’s turn, click, and feel because those details made the product feel alive .

  • Lesson: Real-world testing can overturn the team’s theory of what matters most .
  • Apply it: Put prototypes in the user’s actual environment and watch for repeated behaviors, especially the ones your roadmap does not currently center .

2) Team OS made self-serve work concrete

The Team OS example is grounded in a practical failure mode: an engineer on call at 2 AM needs a dashboard, a churn-by-segment query, and the relevant schema, but the people who know where everything lives are asleep . In the same set of examples, one customer query used only 3% of the context window, and a non-technical strategy partner who had never opened GitHub two months earlier was now putting up PRs every day .

  • Lesson: Shared structure and ownership can both reduce PM dependency and widen participation .
  • Apply it: Design documentation and automations for recurring operational moments such as on-call debugging, weekly research synthesis, and routine analytics checks .

3) Two enterprise agent examples show that integrations and compliance are product features

Telnix, a conversational AI platform, reportedly faced months of engineering time before it could ship even a first connector across CRM, ticketing, ATS, and related systems; after switching approaches, those integrations went live in days. Mistral used a unified API so customers could connect systems like Google Drive, OneDrive, SharePoint, and Box once, which let its agents search across them, launch faster than planned, and pass enterprise security reviews with a private and compliant story .

  • Lesson: Time-to-integration and compliance readiness are part of the product, not just implementation details .
  • Apply it: When prioritizing an agent roadmap, treat normalized data access and governed actions as first-order requirements .

Career Corner

1) Prototype skill is becoming more valuable, but it does not replace core PM influence skills

Aakash Gupta’s reporting on Postman argues that PMs are moving closer to code and product through prototyping, while designers ship PRs and staff engineers take on broader problem ownership . The same note says the harder version of the PM job now requires taste, technical instinct, and the ability to build a prototype that is good enough to learn from .

  • Why it matters: Faster prototyping changes what “good PM leverage” looks like .
  • How to apply: Build small artifacts yourself, use them to learn faster, and pair that with the enduring PM skill of influence without authority, which another PM thread said still sits at the center of the job .

2) “Technical enough” is a realistic target

One PM thread argued that the gap between “not technical” and “technical enough” is smaller than many PMs think because the real goal is to ask better questions, not to match engineering depth .

  • Why it matters: This turns technical fluency into a trainable skill instead of a fixed identity .
  • How to apply: Pick one system you work on, diagram it, and go into your next review ready with trade-off and failure-mode questions .

3) Treat language improvement like a product problem

One non-native English PM improved working English by setting a clear goal—passing PM interviews and working in English daily—and then focusing only on PM-specific language instead of general English . The routine was 15-minute daily sessions, a PM vocabulary list, PM Reddit reading, and daily spoken recaps with ChatGPT . The reported result was visible progress within one month and much more confidence speaking .

  • Why it matters: Clear scope and short daily reps can outperform vague improvement plans .
  • How to apply: Define one communication goal, narrow practice to the language you actually use at work, and keep the loop small enough to repeat every day .

4) In a hard market, an adjacent role can be a bridge into PM

In one career thread, a commenter argued that many teams already have data-literate PMs, so going deeper into the data stack is not always the main differentiator for product roles . The suggested move was a “strategic detour”: take an adjacent role close to product development, prove value as a partner, learn PM-relevant AI workflows on the side, and use that path for an internal pivot where possible .

  • Why it matters: Product proximity can matter more than stacking more adjacent technical credentials in isolation .
  • How to apply: Look for roles with ownership, cross-functional exposure, and a credible path to influencing roadmap decisions .

Tools & Resources

1) Team OS example repo

  • Why it matters: It gives a concrete starting point for the shared-repo model rather than leaving the idea abstract .
  • How to use it: Copy the directory pattern, then adapt owners, folder names, and automations to your own team structure .

2) Root CLAUDE.md template

  • Why it matters: The source calls this the most important file because it loads every session and determines whether the system navigates directly or wastes tokens exploring .
  • How to use it: Keep only a doc index, team roster with Slack/GitHub handles, and key channels .

3) Folder-level CLAUDE.md template

  • Why it matters: These files act as navigation maps and were part of how one customer query stayed at 3% of the context window .
  • How to use it: For each major folder, add a short doc index and 1-2 sentences of context needed in most sessions .

4) Shared customer-call summary skill

  • Why it matters: Standardized summaries make cross-customer analysis easier and avoid transcript bloat .
  • How to use it: Put a shared customer-call-summary.md skill in .claude/ and make summaries the default artifact after every call .

5) Saved plan files

  • Why it matters: Native plan files can disappear after 24-72 hours, so saving them turns planning into a reusable team asset .
  • How to use it: For recurring work, keep approved plan files in the repo so the next run starts closer to 80% complete instead of from scratch .
Corn Export Strength, Brazil Margin Pressure, and New Dairy/AgTech Playbooks
Apr 8
7 min read
167 docs
Ag PhD
Dept. of Agriculture
Successful Farming
+7
U.S. grain markets are balancing strong corn export demand against weather-driven wheat weakness and fertilizer-sensitive acreage decisions, while Brazil posts record soybean output with tighter margins and mixed regional weather. The brief also highlights practical agtech, dairy, soil, and biosecurity tools with measurable field relevance.

Market Movers

  • United States — grains: May corn traded at $4.505/bu, May soybeans at $11.655/bu, May Chicago wheat at $5.903/bu, May Kansas City wheat at $6.015/bu, and May spring wheat at $6.385/bu on April 7. Wheat weakened as rain forecasts returned to the Plains .
  • United States — wheat weather vs. crop stress: U.S. winter wheat was rated just 35% good/excellent, below the five-year average of 43%. Hard red winter states remain weak: Kansas 38%, Oklahoma 12%, Texas 17%, Colorado 12%, Nebraska 19% good/excellent. Forecasts call for rain in the southern and eastern Plains late in the week, while western areas remain less certain .
  • United States — export demand: For the week ending April 2, U.S. corn export inspections reached 79 million bushels (+6.5% w/w, +24% y/y), soybeans 29 million bushels (+12% w/w, -4.6% y/y), and wheat 12 million bushels (-14% w/w). Corn was described as running at a record-season pace .

"Everything about US corn exports is very, very good. We're on pace for a record season."

  • United States / global oilseeds: Market commentary said the market has not fully priced potential corn-acre losses from higher fertilizer costs, while soybean pricing is still drawing support from biofuel policy and crude-linked bean oil strength. Old-crop U.S. beans remain about $1 above Brazil, limiting the need for nearby China business .
  • Brazil — cash markets: Brazilian soybean prices at ports were reported around R$130 per 60kg sack, while Mato Grosso corn was reported around R$51-52 per sack, with Sorriso at R$45.

Innovation Spotlight

  • United States — public agtech validation: USDA launched the National Proving Grounds Network for AgTech to test precision agriculture tools under real farm conditions, with stated goals of cutting input costs, reducing risk, boosting productivity, and giving producers trusted data. More at usda.gov/agtech.
  • Brazil — dryland restoration technology: Embrapa Semiárido reported that native Caatinga seedlings can be produced with brackish water common in the semi-arid region. Some species germinated at salinity levels near seawater, seedlings grew similarly to those irrigated with treated water, and the method carries low additional soil-salinization risk because irrigation is applied in substrate, not directly to field soil .
  • Brazil — field tools with measurable returns: At Tecnoshow, Embrapa’s soy-grass integration system was presented as a way to establish pasture without reducing soybean grain yield while adding 3-5 arrobas of off-season beef carcass. Comigo also presented a quick phosphorus-check tool to compare delivered fertilizer against a reference product and flag possible deficits or fraud .
  • Paraguay / Brazil — equipment and advisory efficiency: John Deere said repositioned maintenance points cut basic maintenance downtime by 30% on S300/S400 harvesters . In Paraguay’s dairy sector, Lácteos La Fortuna said credit lines, technical support, and AI-based management improved milk hygiene, fat, protein, and solids, while supporting 10-12% natural farm growth, with many producers growing 18% annually.

Regional Developments

  • Brazil — Mato Grosso: The state harvested a record soybean crop of more than 51 million tons, with average productivity of 66 sacks/ha, nearly 10% above initial forecasts. The production story, however, is separating from the margin story: local reporting said lower prices and higher costs are leaving profitability under pressure, especially for higher-cost or rented-land operations .
  • Brazil — local soybean losses and safrinha dependence: In Boa Esperança do Norte, one Mato Grosso producer reported losses of about 20,000 sacks on 1,840 hectares, with soybean yield dropping from an expected 70 sacks/ha to 52 sacks/ha and production cost near 60 sacks/ha. A neighboring municipality was estimated at 58-60 sacks/ha, down 15-20 sacks/ha. Producers are now relying on second-crop corn for financial recovery, even after planting delays from rain .
  • Brazil — harvest and weather: Brazil’s soybean harvest was reported around 82-82.4% complete, while safrinha corn planting is complete and second-crop areas received 96% of normal rainfall over the last 30 days, with 111% of normal forecast over the next 14 days. The near-term weather risk is in the South: Santa Maria recorded 87.2 mm in 24 hours, Santiago recorded 60 mm plus hail on already saturated soils, and conditions were expected to ease later in the week .
  • Brazil — export logistics: A rail operator in Goiás said it moved about 5.7 million tons in 2025 and is investing to reduce transit time to Santos by improving train speeds and wagon turnover. The network has expanded from Rio Verde and São Simão into Gurupi, Alvorada, and Porangatu, with an eye on serving more grain from Goiás and Tocantins .

Best Practices

Grains and soils

  • Cold starts: For northern U.S. corn, use cold germination scores for soils in the 40s-50s°F rather than relying only on the standard 77°F germination test, and pair that with strong seed treatment where cold, damp planting windows are common .
  • Stick to placement plans: Iowa advisers stressed watching soil temperature and field fitness more than the calendar, and keeping pre-season hybrid placement plans intact instead of moving seed to whichever field dries first .
  • Residue management: Burning residue can speed spring warm-up, but it costs about 100% of residue nitrogen, 75% of sulfur, 35% of potassium, and 25% of phosphorus from above-ground plant material. The same source said burning is usually reserved for flood-piled residue or ditch-edge cleanup, not routine field management .
  • Balanced fertility: In Paraguay, advisers emphasized managing the chemical, physical, and biological pillars together—paying attention to Ca, Mg, S, B, Zn, Fe, and Cu, not just NPK .

Dairy

  • Pre-fresh calcium strategy: Clinical milk fever still runs about 1-5% on many farms and subclinical cases about 25-45%. Standard prevention focuses on the 20-25 days before calving: negative DCAD diets improve blood calcium but can reduce intake, while Zeolite A binds phosphorus, allows higher-potassium forages, and should be fed at a rate matched to dietary phosphorus .
  • Down-cow response: Treat down cows as urgent cases. Roll them side-to-side if they have been down for a while, give calcium slowly IV while monitoring the heart, consider phosphorus and magnesium status, and expect recovery to take 30-60 minutes rather than seconds .
  • Research-stage additions: One dairy research program reported that intravaginal probiotics reduced uterine infections by 50-60% and increased milk yield by 4-6 liters/day for the first 60 days.

Poultry and swine

  • Salmonella control: Use continuous sampling and monitoring across breeder farms, hatcheries, feed mills, and slaughter plants; apply HACCP and good agricultural practices at every stage; and avoid assigning control to a single person or department .

Input Markets

  • Fertilizer / Brazil: Brazil still imports about 85% of its fertilizers, leaving pricing and availability exposed to Middle East shipping risk. Canal Rural reported global urea up by as much as $300/t since late February, with prices around $820/t in Egypt, $630/t in Iran, and $745/t in Brazil .
  • Corn acreage response / United States: U.S. advisers said fertilizer prices are weighing on corn seed plantings, the market is increasingly baking in more soybean acres, and late seed orders show producers still making last-minute adjustments .
  • Margins / Brazil: In Mato Grosso, rising nitrogen and diesel costs tied to geopolitics have stalled 2027/28 fertilizer negotiations. Separate reporting from producers said the end of PIS/COFINS incentives raised uncertainty, lifted some seed costs by 5-27%, and cut corn sale premiums by R$4-5/sack.
  • Crop protection pipeline / Brazil: Tecnoshow 2026 featured a new soybean target spot fungicide combining a triazole with a new strobilurin, plus a corn stunting-control technology developed over five years beyond vector-only control .

Forward Outlook

  • Next scheduled market catalyst: The April WASDE report is due Thursday, April 9, giving the trade an updated read on U.S. corn, soybean, and wheat balance sheets .
  • U.S. spring planning: Planting remains early—corn 3%, spring wheat 2%—and parts of Nebraska and Iowa are still facing wintry weather. In that setup, cold germination scores, seed treatment, and field fitness matter more than simply matching last year’s pace .
  • Brazil safrinha watch: Brazil’s second corn crop currently has a supportive moisture profile, but the South remains exposed to flood and hail risk while rains begin shifting toward Mato Grosso do Sul, Mato Grosso, São Paulo, and parts of the Northeast later in April .
  • Agtech buying criteria: Current signals favor technologies that are validated under farm conditions and fit existing channels. USDA’s proving-grounds model is explicitly built around real-field testing, while a recent agtech discussion pointed to Monarch Tractor’s shutdown after nearly $250M raised as a reminder that EV, autonomy, and data features still need a clear operational payoff; the same discussion said biologicals and OEM-partnered models are gaining more traction .
  • Brazil export flow: Goiás rail operators are targeting shorter transit time to Santos after moving 5.7 million tons in 2025; if that improves, it could ease one of producers’ main logistics constraints heading into the next export cycle .

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