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Grok 4.5 Breaks Into the Frontier as OpenAI Ships GPT-Live
Jul 9
4 min read
812 docs
Runway
Together AI
OpenAI
+20
xAI's Grok 4.5 posted strong frontier agent benchmarks and aggressive pricing, while OpenAI rolled out GPT-Live and retracted its support for SWE-Bench Pro as a leading coding benchmark. Also inside: Cognition's SWE-1.7, major developer launches, and new infrastructure funding moves.

Top Stories

Why it matters: today's biggest shifts were in frontier model price-performance, voice interfaces, and trust in coding benchmarks.

  • Grok 4.5 arrived with frontier-level agent results. xAI says it is its first model trained specifically for coding and agents with Cursor . Artificial Analysis ranks it #4 on the Intelligence Index and says it is on par with GPT-5.5 on the Coding Agent Index at much lower cost; pricing is $2/$6 per 1M input/output tokens with a 500k context window . It also took the #1 spot on AutomationBench-AA at 51%, ahead of Claude Fable 5 and Claude Opus 4.8, at roughly a quarter of their cost per task .

  • OpenAI rolled out GPT-Live in ChatGPT. OpenAI introduced GPT-Live as a new generation of voice models; the system is full-duplex, so it can listen and speak at the same time, and it can delegate harder work to a frontier model in the background while keeping the conversation going . It is now fully rolled out to Go, Plus, and Pro users, with free rollout in progress and API access coming soon .

  • OpenAI also challenged a benchmark many labs use to market coding models. After auditing SWE-Bench Pro, the company said 30% of tasks are broken, the eval is saturated at roughly a 70% noise ceiling, and it is retracting its prior recommendation to use the benchmark as a leading coding eval .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: the most useful technical progress today was about cheaper coding performance, better model auditing, and more realistic views of agent failure.

  • Cognition's SWE-1.7 pushed the cost/performance curve forward for coding. Cognition says the model is within a few points of the strongest frontier models at a fraction of the cost and runs at 1000 tok/s . Built on RL pipeline improvements over a Kimi K2.7 base, it scores 42.3% on FrontierCode at $1.97 per task .

  • D2D proposed a compact way to surface hidden bias. The method is designed to find biases in fine-tuned models even when the auditor does not know the target topic, by distilling the difference from a base model into a 4M-parameter "Cartridge" that preserves the most coherent signal .

  • A new Oxford-led survey mapped persistent agent failure modes. Synthesizing 27 papers across 19 benchmarks, it groups failures into six clusters, including tool-use errors, planning failures, long-horizon degradation, coordination breakdowns, safety failures, and measurement problems, and argues that failures compound nonlinearly with task length .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: launches are increasingly about turning models into usable workflows for developers, media teams, and edge applications.

  • Runway Dev launched as a new AI media platform for professional developers and enterprise teams, bundling zero-day model releases, pre-built endpoints, workflows as APIs, and real-time characters .

  • Moondream 3.1 landed on Cloudflare Workers AI, bringing image querying, captions, and object coordinates to edge inference with sub-second request times, including network round-trip time .

  • VS Code and GitHub Copilot shipped a new set of agent features, including browser agent tools for web app validation, an Agents window for parallel workflows, bring-your-own-key support, and better cost/model visibility .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: capital and infrastructure continue to move toward open-model tooling and agent-native cloud stacks.

  • Prime Intellect raised a $130M Series A to build its Open Superintelligence Stack, led by Radical Ventures with NVIDIA, Intel Capital, and Dell Capital; the company says the stack lets users train, deploy, and continuously improve their own models .

  • Modal raised a $355M Series C around an agent-native cloud pitch built on sandboxes, elastic inference, GPU snapshotting, and support for up to 100,000 RL rollouts .

  • Together Compute introduced Provisioned Throughput for frontier open models, offering reserved inference capacity, token-based pricing, a 99% uptime SLA, and initial support for MiniMax M3 and GLM-5.2 .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: concrete government actions are now shaping who gets access to large-scale training capacity.

  • China approved purchases of 200,000 NVIDIA H200 chips by DeepSeek, ByteDance, Alibaba, and others for training . A separate estimate put the implied spend at about $5B using $25,000 per GPU .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: a few smaller updates still sharpened the picture on model quality, open-weight progress, and multimodal tooling.

  • GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra, and Luna were added to the Codex codebase, where Sol is described as OpenAI's "most capable model yet" .
  • Google's Nano Banana 2 Lite debuted at #5 on Artificial Analysis's text-to-image leaderboard, generates 1K images in about 3.4 seconds, and costs half as much as Nano Banana 2 .
  • Z.ai's GLM-5.2 scored 152 on the Epoch Capabilities Index, the highest among open-weight models Epoch has evaluated .
  • MOSS-Transcribe-Diarize-0.9B open-sourced a single-pass model for up to ~90 minutes of multi-speaker transcription with timestamps and speaker labels .
Prime Intellect's Series A, General Intuition's World-Model Bet, and the Efficiency-First AI Stack
Jul 9
4 min read
703 docs
r/SideProject - A community for sharing side projects
Entrepreneur Ride Along
clem 🤗
+6
Prime Intellect and General Intuition lead the funding news, while emerging signals point to managed agent infrastructure, open-source inference, and efficiency-first AI infrastructure. The broader market read is shifting toward open-source model adoption, AI discoverability, and physical-stack investing across power, cooling, networking, and chips.

Funding & Deals

  • Prime Intellect — $130M Series A. The company says the round will fund its "Open Superintelligence Stack," led by Radical Ventures with participation from NVIDIA, Intel Capital, Dell Capital, and existing investors. The stack is positioned to let users train, deploy, and continuously improve their own models; Harrison Chase separately noted LangChain Labs partnership work with the team

  • General Intuition — $320M at a $2.3B valuation. Khosla Ventures led the round, with backing from Jeff Bezos, Eric Schmidt, and researchers at MIT and Google DeepMind. The technical thesis centers on embodied AI built from game-derived world-model training rather than internet text, including a claimed transfer to real-world robotics after eight minutes of fine-tuning data

Emerging Teams

  • MoClaw. A group of friends says it turned a six-month side project into its full-time business after early traction brought funding and support. The product offers dedicated cloud-hosted autonomous agents to avoid user-side hosting risk, reduce maintenance burden, and keep agents running independently 24/7

  • zml_ai. The company emerged from stealth with an inference engine integrated with Hugging Face as the storage layer, aimed at making inference for open-source models better, faster, and cheaper

  • Analyse. A solo founder launched a product that combines analytics, AI SEO content, and a data copilot that can access real events and funnels. It also ships an MCP server so users can query their data from Claude or Cursor

  • Argutum. This is a very early two-sided marketplace for AI training data: users are paid per prompt, outputs are quality-scored from 0-100, and AI labs can license consented, domain-specific datasets at $0.10-$2 per sample. The founder's thesis is that paid, quality-scored contributor data can outperform scraped generalist data for fine-tuning, but the model is still being pressure-tested on unit economics

AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • General Intuition: game-to-robotics transfer. The company says its model was pretrained on proprietary game data with action labels, then transferred to real-world navigation with eight minutes of street data. It also reports zero-shot office navigation from a front camera despite dynamic objects; the founding team includes authors of Diamond, Delta IRIS, and IRIS world-model papers

"Text fundamentally removes a lot of the information that the real world needs, particularly information around space and time."

The company also said it does not want to be part of harming humans

  • Efficiency-first AI infrastructure. One investor stack overview grouped early bets across virtual power plants built from residential solar and batteries, AI-discovered materials for cooling and conductivity, network switches that are 10-15% more power-efficient, neuromorphic chips targeting 100-1,000x better power efficiency, and AI-driven chip design that could compress development from 2-3 years and $100M to months and $1-10M

  • Waviix: multi-source, sentiment-aware trend detection. Its founder says early reliable signals come from comment velocity inside niche subreddits, not raw volume, and that durable trends usually correlate across Reddit, short-form video, and YouTube. The pipeline added sentiment and backlash filtering to distinguish interest from mockery

Market Signals

  • Open-source and Chinese models are taking more of the token economy. One cited market read says Chinese models crossed 45% of OpenRouter token volume, versus 15.3% for Anthropic and 7.4% for OpenAI. The same post says Xiaomi now processes more AI tokens than OpenAI, and argues that open-source models are often good enough for coding and agents while offering 1M-token context windows at a fraction of GPT or Claude pricing

  • AI discoverability is becoming a separate GTM problem. One SaaS founder argues companies can rank highly in Google yet remain commercially invisible during buying decisions because AI systems recommend vendors based on semantic understanding of what they solve rather than page rank. The proposed framework is three layers: traditional SEO, Answer Engine Optimization, and an AI Discovery Layer; the practical advice is to own buyer questions rather than generic keywords

  • AI data-center investors are underwriting the physical stack. The Lightspeed discussion grouped power, cooling, networking, materials, and chip design into one data-center thesis, and extended that logic to orbital data centers, where the speaker argued the key open question is launch cost rather than whether compute can operate in space

Worth Your Time

  • Lightspeed on the AI data-center stack — Covers power aggregation, materials, networking, neuromorphic compute, chip design, and the orbital data-center argument in one conversation
Harness Discipline, Grok 4.5’s Arrival, and Claude Code’s /checkup
Jul 9
5 min read
172 docs
Ramp Labs
Peter Gostev
Romain Huet
+15
The sharpest signal today is that coding-agent leverage is coming from better harnesses and leaner context, not just new model launches. This brief covers Grok 4.5’s early real-world use, Claude Code’s new cleanup command, and concrete loops you can copy today.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Harness quality is now a real performance lever, not an implementation detail. Matei Zaharia says the simple Pi harness matched vendor harness success rates with Opus and GPT 5.5 at roughly half the cost because it sent smaller inputs . The same theme showed up across tools: Claude Code shipped /checkup for pruning unused skills/MCPs/plugins and breaking up bloated CLAUDE.md files , Ben Tossell got Claude Code's starting prompt down to 13K tokens by inspecting the payload and stripping cruft , and Jason Zhou reports Pi extensions that cut tool tokens by 80–96% .

⚡ TRY THIS

  • Audit a live launch PR against its own report(Theo on Lakebed with Grok 4.5 in Cursor). Paste the current PR plus the audit/report and ask Have we resolved them? Are there other things worth solving before launch?. When multiple numbered lists exist, prefix which list you're referring to; Theo says Grok 4.5 handled duplicate issue numbers cleanly in that setup . Then tell it which findings to ignore and which deserve separate PRs; in his run it opened two PRs, answered follow-up questions, and produced a launch to-do list in one pass . After review comments land, ask it to address both PRs and let Cursor's babysit skill monitor follow-ups; Theo also got visual fixes by pasting a screenshot of the comments .

  • Use failing tests as the task contract(LangChain/NemoClaw + Decode). Create the smallest repro you can with one missing function and a failing unit test . Start decode and paste inspect this tiny Python project, fix the failing test by making the smallest reasonable change, run the test and summarize what changed. Approve only the expected actions—here it asked to create the function and run the tests —then rerun python3 -m unittest yourself before trusting the diff . The pattern is durable: inspect workspace, make the minimal change, validate, summarize .

  • Run /checkup before blaming Claude Code for being slow or forgetful(Boris Cherny). It can clean unused skills/MCPs/plugins, dedup local vs checked-in CLAUDE.md, break a root CLAUDE.md into nested files + skills, turn off slow hooks, update Claude Code, enable auto mode, and pre-approve frequently denied read-only commands . It confirms before making changes .

  • Feed reference implementations, not style adjectives(Kent C. Dodds + Romain Huet). If you already have a canonical pattern, tell the agent Just do it like I did it in the Epic Stack instead of re-describing the architecture from scratch . Huet's Codex advice is the same at a higher level: talk to the model like a smart coworker and spend effort on giving full context, not on clever prompt magic .

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

  • Grok 4.5 in Cursor. Cursor says it partnered with SpaceXAI to train the model; it's live now with double usage for the first week, and Composer 2.5 remains a separate weight class with more models of that size coming . Theo's firsthand use on Lakebed and a 3D game found strong multi-step orchestration/context handling and unusually good 3D spatial reasoning, but weaker sub-agent delegation than Fable 5 or GPT-5.6 . Sualeh Asif says it's the first model he personally prefers over Opus for single-agent iteration, and Jediah Katz says Ramp's internal evals found frontier-level shell discipline . Theo cites pricing at $2/M input and $6/M output plus benchmark references close to GPT-5.5/Fable, with one code-benchmark view showing 2M tokens for Grok 4.5 versus 3.5M for GPT 5.5 on medium . Read: Cursor blog.

  • Claude Code /checkup. New command for cleaning unused skills/MCPs/plugins, deduping and splitting CLAUDE.md, turning off slow hooks, updating the client, enabling auto mode, and pre-approving common read-only commands—all with confirmation before edits .

  • NemoClaw Deep Agents Blueprint. LangChain and NVIDIA introduced an open reference stack with Nemotron 3 Ultra, a Deep Agents harness layer for planning/tool use/memory/long-running tasks, and an inspectable OpenShell runtime; LangChain's pitch is enterprise ownership/customization, benchmark-leading performance, and over 10x lower inference costs . Related demos showed Decode, the open-source model-agnostic terminal agent with skills, subagents, MCP, goal mode, and LangSmith traces . Read: LangChain blog.

  • Antigravity CLI 1.1.0. New interactive execution modes, improved UI, and workspace fixes; shift+tab cycles modes and /changelog shows updates inside the terminal . Changelog: GitHub releases.

  • Pi Agent SDK public builder path. Jason Zhou says he rebuilt Posia with a core agent of roughly 15 lines, recorded a 17-minute walkthrough on extensions/hosted agents/core SDK, and highlighted extensions that cut tool tokens by 80–96%. Setup repo: AI-Builder-Club/skills.

  • Task routing is getting more specific. Tim Neutkens says GPT-5.6-Sol has spent 2+ months handling day-to-day Next.js work with short prompts, architecture-aware bug fixing, and end-to-end server refactors tied into failing tests and deployment checks, with some PRs queued until after Next.js 16.3. Peter Gostev's current split: Fable for architectural discussion/UI/writing, GPT-5.6-Sol for robustness, adherence to existing code patterns, sub-agent handling, multi-day /goal runs, and token efficiency . Riley Brown adds that GPT-5.6-Sol passed the Replit benchmark in one prompt , while Kent C. Dodds says Fable + Composer 2.5 subagents + Kody + Cursor migrated his site to Cloudflare in one PR .

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • 16:10-18:39 — Theo's Lakebed audit loop. Best practical Grok 4.5 clip today: PR + report in, launch-gate analysis out, then separate PRs for the fixes that actually matter .
  • 3:11-5:26 — Decode goal mode + long-running build. Good example of turning a loose prompt into a session contract: declare the goal, let the agent draft acceptance criteria, then inspect the generated app at localhost:8000.
  • Repo to study — AI-Builder-Club/skills. Jason Zhou published his Pi extension setup here after rebuilding Posia with a tiny core agent; worth reading if you want to shrink tool chatter instead of just model-hop .

  • Writeup to study — How to kill the bloat in Claude Code's system prompt. The useful habit here is to inspect the real payload first, then tune prompt overhead like infrastructure .

  • Tiny HITL tool — nameplate.sh. Peter Steinberger built it so agents can show humans a big contextual alert when input is needed instead of tossing no-context dialogs; nice pattern for multi-machine or screen-share-heavy workflows .

Editorial take: today's real edge was not a flashy benchmark—it's tighter harnesses, smaller inputs, and agent loops that can prove work through tests, PRs, and auditable traces.

GPT-Live Arrives, Grok 4.5 Lands, and Coding Evals Come Under Scrutiny
Jul 9
4 min read
310 docs
Latent.Space
Jensen Huang
Harrison Chase
+12
OpenAI’s full-duplex GPT-Live rollout and Grok 4.5’s release led the day’s product news. Beneath the launches, OpenAI challenged a core coding benchmark, while Anthropic, Modal, and NVIDIA signaled where safety and agent infrastructure are heading.

Two launches set the tone

OpenAI rolls out GPT-Live in ChatGPT

OpenAI launched GPT-Live, a new generation of voice models rolling out in ChatGPT across iOS, Android, and web, with API access coming soon . The company said its full-duplex architecture lets the model listen and speak at the same time, handle interruptions more naturally, maintain better time awareness, and perform live translation . For harder tasks, GPT-Live can delegate web search and deeper reasoning to frontier models behind the scenes; the launch video specifically described GPT 5.5 doing that work in parallel while the conversation continues, and OpenAI later said the product was fully rolled out to Go, Plus, and Pro users, with free rollout still in progress .

"i have always preferred typing to talking to an AI, now i think that’s going to shift."

Why it matters: This is more than a voice refresh. OpenAI is positioning spoken interaction as a primary interface, not just a voice layer on top of turn-based chat .

Grok 4.5 arrives with a coding-first pitch

Grok 4.5 was presented as a model for real-world engineering, and by later in the day it was available in Cursor and to all Vercel customers . The model runs on V9, a 1.5 trillion-parameter foundation model, is priced at $2/$6 per 1M input/output tokens, and Musk said its context window will upgrade to 1M next week . Artificial Analysis placed it #4 on its Intelligence Index and GDPval-AA v2, and said it scores 76 on the Coding Agent Index at lower cost and token use than several peers .

Why it matters: The launch reinforces a competitive lane centered on coding agents, speed, and cost efficiency rather than a general-purpose consumer assistant pitch .

Under the surface, measurement and safety shifted

OpenAI retracts SWE-Bench Pro as a leading frontier coding eval

OpenAI said SWE-Bench Pro is saturated at roughly a 70% noise ceiling; in a later post, it said about 30% of tasks are broken, and it is retracting its earlier recommendation that the field use the benchmark as a leading coding eval . The company said hidden requirements, contradictory instructions, overly strict tests, and incomplete grading criteria distort results, and that its audit combined model-based investigator agents with reviews from five independent experienced software engineers . OpenAI said stronger coding models now require harder, fairer, and more trustworthy evaluations .

Why it matters: Benchmark scores are increasingly central to model launches, so a public downgrade of one of the best-known coding evals should make leaderboard comparisons easier to question .

Anthropic backs a modular safety approach

Anthropic said it collaborated with AE Studio on GRAM, a training method that places dual-use capabilities such as virology into removable modules . Anthropic linked to a research note with more detail on "off-switch" dual-use capabilities .

Why it matters: The work points toward a safety strategy based on isolating and selectively disabling risky capabilities, rather than treating all behavior as one inseparable model package .

The agent stack kept getting more concrete

Modal raises $355M and shifts from DX to AX

Modal disclosed a $355 million Series C and described itself as building an "agent cloud," with internal focus shifting from developer experience to agent experience . The company highlighted elastic inference for custom models, sandboxes that can scale to 100,000 instances for rollouts, and production features such as private networking, multi-node training, and observability . It said its capacity pool spans 17 cloud providers and that it wants to be a specialized sandbox provider rather than a managed-agent layer .

Why it matters: This is a sizable funding signal that control over runtime, scaling, and observability is becoming a core part of the agent platform battle .

NVIDIA and LangChain package an open enterprise agent stack

NVIDIA said LangChain tuned its Deep Agents harness for Nemotron 3 Ultra, yielding the highest accuracy among open models, more completed tasks at higher throughput, and 10x lower inference cost per run than leading closed models . NVIDIA also said Nemotron 3 Ultra reached business-task parity with the highest-scoring closed models without retraining, and that NemoClaw packages Deep Agents, Nemotron 3 Ultra, and the OpenShell secure runtime into an enterprise blueprint . Jensen Huang framed the broader goal as enabling enterprises to build domain-specific, proprietary AI systems they can control and improve over time .

Why it matters: The emphasis is moving beyond frontier-model access alone toward owning the harness, runtime, and domain context around specialized agents .

Faster Build Loops Raise the Bar for PM Judgment
Jul 9
4 min read
65 docs
Product Management
The community for ventures designed to scale rapidly | Read our rules before posting ❤️
Paul Graham
+6
A compact PM brief on the AI-era shift from feature output to faster learning loops, plus practical guidance for narrowing pilots, improving stakeholder execution, and studying two instructive cases from Gusto and Axon.

Big Ideas

  • The PM edge is moving to loop speed. A Mind the Product talk framed three moves for AI-era PMs: out hunt early signals in open source and GitHub, bend the system by redesigning workflows around AI rather than bolting on tools, and prove impact with real usage data and customer validation . Why it matters: if building gets cheaper, advantage shifts to how quickly your team can spot a signal, ship, and learn—not to the biggest roadmap .

“When building gets cheap, the question stops being, can we build it? And becomes, should this even exist?”

  • Cheap prototyping increases the need for focus. Gusto found more leverage by moving away from a generic CRUD app builder toward automations for recurring payroll, time, and HR workflows using data it already had about customers and their routines . The team’s lesson: AI gives you more things to say no to, so compare concrete implementations in code and keep the shipped surface area disciplined .

Tactical Playbook

  1. Scope AI products around one recurring job.

    • Start with a workflow customers already repeat every week, not a blank-canvas agent experience .
    • Use existing customer context and behavioral data to pre-shape the solution instead of asking users to invent it from scratch .
    • If enterprise interest arrives early, frame it as a design-partner / paid-pilot: define what works today vs. what is still alpha, then narrow to one workflow, one success metric, one timeline, and one internal champion.
    • Protect the roadmap: the goal is to learn what customers will pay for without letting them rewrite the product .
  2. Turn stakeholder friction into operating discipline.

    • If engineering is rigid, assume it may be scar tissue from earlier scope changes or deadline misses .
    • Write things down: requirements, decisions, and process notes. Community advice was blunt—documentation is a large part of the PM job, and it creates subtle influence .
    • Hold backlog grooming with engineering, design, and your EM to discuss tradeoffs together .
    • The PM still makes the MVP call based on customer need and product sense .
    • For execution cadence, one example from Stoke Space: monthly updates listed planned deliverables, then crossed off completed items in the next update, with a new ETA when something slipped .
  3. Make product descriptions reproducible, not inspirational.

“The test of a description of a product is how much closer I am after hearing it to being able to reproduce it.”

Use that test on PRDs, strategy docs, and positioning. If a description gives no starting point for implementation, it is probably too vague .

Case Studies & Lessons

  • Gusto AI Co-Founder: the initial prototype was built solo during a 5-hour airport layover using AI coding tools . It later became a 5-person, 10-week effort that shipped a tier-1 launch with no meetings, specs, Figma, Jira, or formal docs—just a persistent Zoom and rapid pull requests for a zero-to-one effort . Customers immediately understood weekly automation for tasks like payroll prep because those jobs already lived on their calendars, and SMS or Slack approvals made the value obvious . Takeaway: ship inside an existing habit loop, but keep the scope tight.

  • Axon: its CPTO described a hybrid org where product GMs own lines of business while engineering and AI leaders provide functional depth . The company embeds external ethics advisors into relevant product work , builds first-party models only where differentiation requires it—such as real-time license plate detection at high speed—and uses foundation LLMs elsewhere . It also set a 10-year goal of reducing gun-related deaths between police and the public by more than 50%, and previously held a 6-year public moratorium on facial recognition before narrower evaluated use cases . Takeaway: ambitious AI programs need explicit ethics inputs, selective build-vs.-buy choices, and a measurable north-star outcome.

Career Corner

  • There is no universal PM job. PM community guidance emphasized that company context shapes this role more than most others . In practice, much of the work is still stakeholder management and bringing order to chaos—not executing a textbook process .
  • The durable skill is judgment. In an AI-heavy environment, feature discovery and deciding what deserves to exist become more valuable, not less .

Tools & Resources

  • GitHub as market radar: one PM example used nightly scans of trending repos, license checks, and auto-generated briefs to surface open-source signals before they became obvious product categories .
  • Reading:Why Product Sense Is the Only Product Skill
Edge Data Flywheels Thesis Leads Today's Small Set of Learning Picks
Jul 9
2 min read
144 docs
Michael Mignano
scott belsky
andrew chen
Scott Belsky's recommendation of a Rebecca Kaden/USV post on edge data flywheels was the clearest signal in a sparse set of authentic recommendations. Andrew Chen added a book signal with *Skunk Works*, praising its account of the F-117's development.

Most compelling recommendation

Scott Belsky provided the clearest explicit recommendation in today's notes: a Rebecca Kaden/USV post on edge data flywheels. He called it a "good post" and singled out its core thesis that "out of reach / edge data flywheels" will distinguish the businesses that have them .

  • Title: Rebecca Kaden/USV post on edge data flywheels
  • Content type: X post
  • Author/creator: Rebecca Kaden and USV crew
  • Link/URL:https://x.com/rebeccakaden/status/2074862363874844903
  • Who recommended it: Scott Belsky
  • Key takeaway: The central argument Belsky highlighted is that "out of reach / edge data flywheels" will distinguish the businesses that have them .
  • Why it matters: Belsky did not just praise the post; he surfaced the specific idea he found valuable .

"out of reach / edge data flywheels…will distinguish the businesses that have them"

Additional book signal

Andrew Chen mentioned he is reading Skunk Works and pointed specifically to its long section on the F-117 Nighthawk's development, describing the engineering as remarkable .

  • Title:Skunk Works
  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Not specified in source notes
  • Link/URL: Exact book URL was not provided in source notes
  • Who recommended it: Andrew Chen
  • Key takeaway: Chen highlighted the book's account of the F-117 Nighthawk's development and the engineering behind it .
  • Why it matters: He attached the book to a specific section and a specific reason it stood out, rather than dropping the title without context .

Read on today's signal

Today's set was small but clean: one explicit strategy recommendation centered on edge data as a business differentiator, and one book signal grounded in admiration for a detailed engineering story .

Start with signal

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Coding Agents Alpha Tracker avatar

Coding Agents Alpha Tracker

Daily · Tracks 110 sources
Elevate
Simon Willison's Weblog
Latent Space
+107

Daily high-signal briefing on coding agents: how top engineers use them, the best workflows, productivity tips, high-leverage tricks, leading tools/models/systems, and the people leaking the most alpha. Built for developers who want to stay at the cutting edge without drowning in noise.

AI in EdTech Weekly avatar

AI in EdTech Weekly

Weekly · Tracks 92 sources
Luis von Ahn
Khan Academy
Ethan Mollick
+89

Weekly intelligence briefing on how artificial intelligence and technology are transforming education and learning - covering AI tutors, adaptive learning, online platforms, policy developments, and the researchers shaping how people learn.

VC Tech Radar avatar

VC Tech Radar

Daily · Tracks 120 sources
a16z
Stanford eCorner
Greylock
+117

Daily AI news, startup funding, and emerging teams shaping the future

Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker avatar

Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker

Daily · Tracks 109 sources
BTCPay Server
Nicolas Burtey
Roy Sheinbaum
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Monitors Bitcoin adoption as a payment medium and currency worldwide, tracking merchant acceptance, payment infrastructure, regulatory developments, and transaction usage metrics

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AI News Digest

Daily · Tracks 114 sources
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OpenAI
Anthropic
+111

Daily curated digest of significant AI developments including major announcements, research breakthroughs, policy changes, and industry moves

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Global Agricultural Developments

Daily · Tracks 86 sources
RDO Equipment Co.
Ag PhD
Precision Farming Dealer
+83

Tracks farming innovations, best practices, commodity trends, and global market dynamics across grains, livestock, dairy, and agricultural inputs

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Recommended Reading from Tech Founders

Daily · Tracks 137 sources
Paul Graham
David Perell
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
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Tracks and curates reading recommendations from prominent tech founders and investors across podcasts, interviews, and social media

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PM Daily Digest

Daily · Tracks 100 sources
Shreyas Doshi
Gibson Biddle
Teresa Torres
+97

Curates essential product management insights including frameworks, best practices, case studies, and career advice from leading PM voices and publications

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AI High Signal Digest

Daily · Tracks 1 source
AI High Signal

Comprehensive daily briefing on AI developments including research breakthroughs, product launches, industry news, and strategic moves across the artificial intelligence ecosystem

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