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Suhail’s Seed Round, Vorim’s Early Traction, and the Multi-Model Cost Shift
Jun 29
4 min read
694 docs
Software As a Service Companies — The Future Of Tech Businesses
clem 🤗
Brian Armstrong
+1
This brief tracks Suhail’s seed-backed AI research startup, early traction in agent security and workflow infrastructure, and fresh evidence that multi-model, open-weight stacks are reshaping AI economics.

1) Funding & Deals

  • Suhail’s new AI venture. Suhail said the company started with two 8xB200s, has now completed its seed round, is hiring employee #1, is building an autonomous AI scientist for new optimizations, and has already validated a basic RLVR post-training stack .

  • Vorim’s first paid user. Vorim’s cofounder described the product as a platform for AI-agent identity, trust scores, and deterministic plus non-deterministic runtime analysis via policies and security agents, and said the company has started getting users and landed its first paid user .

2) Emerging Teams

  • Vorim. The company is targeting enterprise agent security and compliance, with security agents monitoring enterprise systems for threat actors and a thesis that EU AI Act alignment will matter .

  • Standout. Standout is building an MCP server for AI coding agents that scores pages out of 100, flags generic AI-built design, and returns exact fixes to make the output client-ready; the founder says the product is still being improved through user feedback .

  • gmIdeas. gmIdeas is building a research platform that crawls communities, extracts meaningful discussions, turns them into structured insights, and links each insight back to original discussions for verification; the founder says the project is still in the very early stages and is open to contributors .

  • Workflow-first customer request automation. One founder with eight years of web-development experience is building request-workflow software rather than a chat UI, with classification, urgency detection, reply drafting, notifications, and inbox history; the planned routing stack combines business rules, source and form context, model classification, confidence scores, and human review fallback .

3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • Multi-model economics are getting more concrete. Brian Armstrong described an operating model that cut AI spend nearly in half while token usage continued to grow, using cheaper open-weight defaults such as GLM 5.2 and Kimi 2.7, AI-driven routing by task, cache-aware requests, leaner context management, and visibility instead of tighter usage caps; Clement Delangue summarized the broader direction as a multi-model future with a majority of open-source models .

“The goal isn’t to suppress usage. It’s to build the infrastructure that makes exponential growth sustainable.”

  • Autonomous optimization loops are moving from idea to implementation. Suhail said his new venture is letting an autonomous AI scientist work on new optimizations and has already validated a basic RLVR post-training stack .

  • Production AI stacks are adding explicit control layers. Vorim emphasizes runtime policies, trust scores, and deterministic plus non-deterministic analysis for enterprise agents, while the workflow-automation build above is explicitly designed around rules, confidence thresholds, and human review when intent is unclear .

4) Market Signals

  • AI infra advantage is shifting from model access to orchestration discipline. The clearest signal in this batch is that better defaults, routing, caching, and context management can lower spend even as usage rises, which fits Delangue’s view that AI demand is heading toward multi-model stacks with many open-source models in the mix .

  • Agent security is early, but not purely theoretical anymore. Vorim’s founder said many companies are still in the deployment phase rather than adopting security standards for agents, yet the company is already acquiring users and has landed a first paid user .

  • Founders are sharpening wedges away from generic AI positioning. gmIdeas says it is not building another AI web scraper but a source-linked research platform ; the workflow-automation founder says AI is one layer inside request-workflow software rather than the whole product ; and Standout is pitching a narrow infrastructure wedge for improving AI-built pages through an MCP server that scores output and prescribes fixes .

5) Worth Your Time

Grok 4.5 Beta, GLM-5.2 Momentum, and New Security Friction for Frontier AI
Jun 29
4 min read
480 docs
prinz
Gergely Orosz
Andrej Karpathy
+15
xAI outlined an aggressive Grok release cadence, GLM-5.2 intensified debate over how far open-weight models have advanced, and US cyber-risk reviews continued to shape frontier model access. This brief also covers new research on reasoning-data curation, RL stability, agent products, and enterprise AI strategy.

Top Stories

Why it matters: today’s clearest signals were faster model cycles, stronger open-weight competition, and deeper government involvement in frontier AI access.

  • xAI raised the tempo. Grok 4.5, built on a 1.5T V9 model with supplemental Cursor data, is in private beta at SpaceX and Tesla, with early evals said to be near or above Opus. Elon Musk also said RL is still improving the model, SpaceX will ship new from-scratch models monthly this year, and a 2T run with broader data and recipe upgrades is aimed at August; he separately forecast large gains from rewriting the stack in C/C++ and mapping it tightly to GB300 hardware .
  • GLM-5.2 became the center of the open-weight debate. Some posts said a Chinese open-weight model is now as good as currently available OpenAI and Anthropic models and called it a “second DeepSeek moment” or “open-source Claude moment”; Databricks demand was described as “astonishing,” with more companies expected to post-train and own weights. But prinzbench added GLM-5.2 at 30/99 and called it poor at logical reasoning .
  • Washington is turning frontier releases into a security workflow. Posts on the Fable 5/GPT-5.6 situation tied the embargo to dangerous cyber capabilities and fears China could acquire the models via distillation or other means, while US officials framed the AI race with China as a national-security contest where even a small lead matters .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: the strongest technical updates focused on making training, data curation, and long outputs cheaper and more stable.

  • Reasoning-data curation may get much cheaper. UCLA researchers said the opening tokens of a reasoning trace predict full-trace quality well enough to rank and filter early, turning scoring into an early-stopping problem for large SFT datasets .
  • Qwen’s GEOALIGN targets RL instability at the rollout level. The method removes samples whose geometry pushes updates in conflicting directions, offering a lower-effort alternative to repeatedly retuning KL or clipping .
  • Baidu pushed long-document OCR further inside vLLM. Unlimited-OCR uses Reference Sliding Window Attention to keep KV cache fixed during decoding, transcribe 40+ pages in one pass under 32K context, and run 35% faster than DeepSeek-OCR at 6K output tokens .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: new launches are increasingly about orchestration across models and more deployable agent interfaces.

  • Sakana Fugu moved onto Google’s Enterprise Agent Platform. Sakana describes Fugu as an AI coach that chooses models, combinations, and tactics per query; Gemini is one of the frontier models it calls dynamically, and Sakana says the service will underpin multiple products .
  • Hermes Agent got a more complete local UI. The new dashboard adds panels for chat, sessions, files, models, skills, logs, and channels, while serving a 35B MoE model through vLLM on a single DGX Spark machine .
  • Dcode emphasized cross-model continuity. The tool standardizes message formats so users can switch providers mid-thread—for example from Claude Opus to GLM 5.2—without breaking the experience .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: enterprise competition is shifting from raw model demos to workflow integration and token economics.

  • Anthropic’s enterprise push looks deeper than a chat app. Karpathy described the next UI/UX step as a persistent, asynchronous AI with org-wide tools and context, while Gergely Orosz said the real breakthrough is a cloud AI connected to internal systems that just works; one observer said Anthropic’s enterprise usage surge made it the sector’s number one player .
  • Cost pressure is reshaping coding-agent strategy. Some power users report $15k–$20k monthly token bills, and one commenter attributed Devin’s traction with banks and Fortune 100 enterprises to model-agnostic routing, cheaper tuned coding models, spend controls, and an “AI Productivity Guarantee” up to $10 million .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: frontier AI access is now being negotiated through cyber-risk benchmarks and national-security logic.

  • Posts on the Fable 5/GPT-5.6 situation say the Executive Order calls for an NSA frontier cyber-risk benchmark by early August, with Anthropic and OpenAI said to be helping define the testing rules for future approvals .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: these smaller updates still show where demand, distribution, and infrastructure are moving.

  • Zhipu AI’s GLM-5.2 reportedly matches top US models in some bug-finding scenarios, with 360 Security claiming its Tulongfeng tool is comparable to Anthropic’s Mythos .
  • GPT-5.6 is being integrated into Codex and Amazon Bedrock .
  • AI Engineer World’s Fair 2026 sold out, with 65 free side events still available across San Francisco .
  • vLLM-Omni posted TTS serving gains including +61.5% throughput for Qwen3-TTS and +172% for VoxCPM2 .
Codebase Q&A First, Then Let the Agent Edit
Jun 29
4 min read
59 docs
Simon Willison's Weblog
Matthew Berman
Boris Cherny
+1
Boris Cherny shares a production-tested Claude Code playbook: start with repo Q&A, pin context in `CLAUDE.md`, and force plan/verification loops before edits. Also: Claude Code's GitHub app and Hermes' self-healing, routed-agent stack.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Boris Cherny's strongest production lesson from inside Anthropic: use the coding agent as a codebase interrogator first and an editor second. He says new technical hires start with code Q&A, then gate edits with before you write code, make a plan and run it by me; this is now part of an onboarding flow that he says went from 2-3 weeks to 2-3 days, and roughly 80% of Anthropic's technical staff use Claude Code daily . Jon Udell's companion point, surfaced by Simon Willison, is the timeless framing: agentic development should stay our loop, with agents invited into a transparent human-led process rather than treated as a black box .

⚡ TRY THIS

  • Start with repo Q&A, not codegen (Boris Cherny). Open Claude Code and ask questions like how is this class instantiated?, why does this function have 15 arguments? look through git history, or what did I ship this week?. Cherny says this is the default onboarding move at Anthropic; Claude explores the repo and git history without indexing, keeps code local, and does not train on your code .

  • Force plan → verify → iterate. Use Cherny's exact opener: before you write code, make a plan and run it by me. Then give the agent a way to check itself—unit tests, Puppeteer screenshots, or iOS emulator screenshots—and let it run 2-3 feedback rounds; for UI work, you can also drag in a mock image and have Claude implement against it . If it's clearly on track, Shift+Tab moves Claude Code into auto-accept edits mode, and commit push pr will usually handle branch, commit, push, and PR creation .

  • Externalize durable context into CLAUDE.md. Put a short CLAUDE.md at the repo root and check it into git for the team; fill it with common bash/MCP commands, style guide rules, architectural decisions, and core files . Add nested CLAUDE.md files for subdirectories, keep them short so they do not waste context, and use # in-session when you want Claude to remember a new rule and fold it into the file .

  • Use the agent like a UNIX utility in ops and CI. Cherny's claude -p pattern: pass a prompt, allowed tools, and JSON or streaming JSON output, then pipe in things like git status, Sentry CLI output, or GCP logs . For parallel work, run multiple sessions via tmux or SSH and isolate them with git worktrees instead of one giant session .

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

  • Claude Code GitHub app. Anthropic announced a GitHub app that lets you mention Claude directly on any GitHub issue or PR; Cherny also says Claude Code is already used daily by roughly 80% of Anthropic's technical staff, including researchers, which is a stronger adoption signal than most launch posts .

  • Hermes is pushing a more modular agent stack. In Matthew Berman's tutorial, Hermes shows built-in coding skills plus three patterns worth stealing: self-healing when a skill hits an unseen error, siloed agent profiles instead of one bloated assistant, and per-task model routing for vision, compression, and web extraction . In the demo, a Manim skill turned make a cool video explaining how exponentials work into a 58-second animated MP4 .

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • 4:05-7:16 — Boris Cherny's Claude Code walkthrough on codebase Q&A. Best clip if you're still using coding agents mainly for edits: Cherny shows the exact class-usage, git-history, and weekly-ship prompts that made this the first-day workflow for Anthropic onboarding .
  • 12:25-13:59 — Cherny on CLAUDE.md. Strong reminder that context engineering does not need to be fancy: short repo-level instructions, nested directory-level context, and team-shared conventions beat re-explaining the same codebase every session .
  • 21:08-23:07 — Cherny on claude -p for CI and incident response. Worth watching if you want the agent outside the chat UI: JSON output, shell piping, and log triage make the CLI feel like a programmable UNIX tool .

Editorial take: the highest-signal agent workflows still look human-owned—ask better questions, pin context to files, require a plan, and give the model a way to prove its work.

Grok Speeds Up as Open Models Broaden and Compute Constraints Stay Central
Jun 29
5 min read
214 docs
Thomas Wolf
Brian Armstrong
Azeem Azhar
+10
Musk outlined a fast-moving Grok roadmap, open-model releases kept broadening across the industry, and new data underscored both the scale of AI spending and the continued bottlenecks around compute, power, and regulatory structure.

Model race

xAI lays out an aggressive Grok roadmap

Musk said Grok 4.5—built on a 1.5T V9 foundation model with supplemental Cursor data—is now in private beta at SpaceX and Tesla, with early evals showing performance close to or possibly above Opus. He also said RL is still driving meaningful gains, while separately clarifying that the v9 foundation model should be viewed as a solid workhorse in Opus territory rather than something dramatically beyond the field .

Across several follow-up posts, Musk described a very fast roadmap: SpaceX releasing new models trained from scratch every month this year, a new 2T run finishing in late July for an August release, Cursor contributing engineering work to v9 SFT and RL, top Starlink and Starship engineers shifting time to AI, and a planned C/C++ rewrite of the training and inference stack mapped tightly to GB300 hardware .

Why it matters: These posts tie model ambitions directly to release cadence, data partnerships, engineering staffing, and hardware-software co-design .

Open-model breadth keeps expanding

Interconnects argues the open-model ecosystem is becoming more diverse after being dominated a year ago by a small set of mostly Chinese players, with momentum now coming from three camps: pure model makers, Big Tech, and product companies training specialized models . The latest batch it highlights includes NVIDIA's Nemotron 3 Ultra under OpenMDW, Cohere's Apache 2.0 Command A+, GLM-5.2 from zai-org, Zyphra's AMD-trained ZAYA1-74B-preview, and Poolside's Apache 2.0 Laguna-M.1 plus an ongoing commitment to open releases .

Nathan Lambert separately pointed to 30 open-model releases across May and June from companies ranging from NVIDIA, Google, and Microsoft to JetBrains, Ideogram, Krea, and Photoroom, calling the breadth a reminder that a lot of open-model value sits outside the shadow of the biggest frontier labs .

Why it matters: Open releases are now coming from a wider mix of company types and geographies than they were a year ago .

Economics, infrastructure, and policy

The AI economy looks large already, but cost discipline is rising with it

New research shared by Azeem Azhar and highlighted by Thomas Wolf estimates that the genAI economy generated $110 billion in sales over the last 12 months and is already running above $175 billion on an annualized basis. The authors describe it as the first bottom-up, deduplicated measure of consumer and enterprise AI spending across the full stack .

At the operating level, Brian Armstrong said his team is trying to keep AI spend flat while token usage grows by defaulting more work to open-weight models such as GLM 5.2 and Kimi 2.7, routing tasks to the best-fit model, and improving cache hit rates from 5% to 60%; he said those changes cut AI spend nearly in half . Gary Marcus, looking at the broader market, argued it is hard to see how anyone makes much money from AI in the long run, comparing the economics to airlines with small margins and big expenses .

Why it matters: Growth is not removing cost pressure; model choice, routing, caching, and margin structure are all moving closer to the center of AI strategy .

Compute scarcity is still shaping who gets access

Compute bottlenecks remain a live competitive constraint. One widely shared report said Google limited Meta's use of Gemini because of a shortage of compute resources, with the blunt takeaway that compute remains power and AI's scarcest resource .

Andreessen also amplified analysis arguing that AI and general automation could push electricity demand beyond demographic ceilings, that the world may need to double electricity production from 30,000TWh per year to 60,000TWh over the next 20 years, and that datacenter buildout is becoming a gating issue .

Why it matters: AI capacity is still being shaped by chips, power, and datacenter construction—not just model quality .

A sharper policy split is forming between frontier APIs and open weights

Clement Delangue argued it is rational to regulate frontier API models for government transparency without regulating open-source AI . He framed frontier APIs as secretive black boxes controlled by a few profit-driven megacorps and distributed at massive scale, while arguing open-weight models are easier to analyze, currently less capable of misuse, and equally available to defenders and attackers .

Delangue also argued the cost-benefit is different: API regulation is relatively easy and mostly lands on large incumbents, while open-source regulation would hurt startups, researchers, universities, nonprofits, and competition . In the same discussion, Nathan Lambert called the idea of getting regulated for being too dangerous a horrible consequence of "vibe regulation," echoing Delangue's point that danger labeling can function as enterprise marketing .

Why it matters: This is a more specific governance split than generic calls for AI regulation: frontier API access and open-weight distribution are being treated as different policy problems .

One hardware idea to watch

Normal Computing says its thermodynamic chip has reached silicon

Machine Learning Street Talk featured Normal Computing's thermodynamic-chip approach, which uses inherent chip noise for probabilistic computation by implementing stochastic differential equations directly in hardware . The company's first chip, CN101, has reached silicon and is aimed at narrow probabilistic workloads including Bayesian inference, MCMC, and diffusion models .

The noise is the computation.

The team also said it used swarms of AI agents to generate a Verilog simulator with more than 500,000 lines of code as an alternative to commercial EDA software that can cost about $10,000 per CPU core .

Why it matters: It is a concrete example of AI-adjacent hardware exploration aimed at probabilistic workloads rather than general-purpose model serving .

Loops, Taste, and Trust in AI-Era Product Work
Jun 29
4 min read
45 docs
Lenny Rachitsky
ProductManagementJobs
Aakash Gupta
+2
This brief focuses on three shifts in PM work: moving from prompts to loops, treating taste and curation as the new bottleneck when implementation is cheap, and using trust-based leadership to speed decisions without increasing surprises. It also covers model-timing lessons from OpenAI Codex and practical advice for B2B PMs targeting B2C roles.

Big Ideas

  • Prompting is giving way to loop engineering. Aakash Gupta summarizes a shift from prompts to reusable skills to loops: a trigger, agent action, proof against the previous version, memory of the winner, and a stop condition when evidence is thin or human review is needed. He cites Boris from Claude Code as someone who now writes loops that prompt for him. Why it matters: loops expose drift that otherwise hides inside slowly decaying skills. How to apply: start where evidence is abundant—product ops—not in strategy.

  • As implementation gets cheap, PM leverage shifts to taste, curation, and medium choice. Andrew Ambrosino describes an inversion of product process: many teams can stand up features quickly, so the expensive work becomes deciding what is good, how it fits, and whether a document or prototype is the right artifact for the point being made. Use docs for product clarity in vague areas; use prototypes to stress-test interaction patterns.

"When anybody can build anything, the taste to know what to build becomes the whole game."

Tactical Playbook

  1. Set up one weekly product-ops loop.

    • Trigger: a fixed cadence such as every Friday, or after a batch of new customer calls arrives.
    • Action: have the agent read calls, support tickets, sales notes, and experiment results.
    • Proof: compare the memo with last week’s output and correct misses.
    • Memory: keep the better version and revert the weaker one.
    • Stop: allow the loop to flag thin evidence or ask for human review.
      Why it matters: this creates a reusable signal-vs-noise memo instead of ad hoc synthesis. How to apply: run it for a few weeks and use your corrections as the training signal.
  2. Plan in two clocks. Keep near-term plans detailed, but treat 9-month plans as intentionally hazy to avoid false precision. Maintain a list of ideas, prototype them, ship what is ready now, and re-test the rest when model capability changes. Why it matters: in AI products, feature viability can change when the model changes.

  3. If you empower early, manage for fewer surprises. Leah Tharin’s advice: give people room to decide before they have fully “earned” it, but expect clarity in return. Good managing up starts with repeating the assignment in your own words, outlining the first 10 minutes of your approach, and working the problem just long enough to understand scope before coming back with feedback. Strong performers reduce surprises rather than create them.

Case Studies & Lessons

  • OpenAI Codex shows how much launch timing now depends on model readiness. Lenny’s summary of Andrew Ambrosino’s interview says the Codex app would have flopped if shipped in November instead of February, even though the product was the same and only the model changed. Inside the team, the response is broad exploration plus “zone defense”: PMs spread out for coverage, roles overlap, and designers and PMs both write code. The lesson is to keep exploration wide, but commit precision only where capability changes are well understood.

Career Corner

  • For a B2B PM moving to B2C, transferable skill alone may not be enough. One practitioner who moved from B2B fintech to B2C travel tech recommends heavy networking to get interviews, then using the interview process to sell transferable product skills. The same advice highlights B2C’s emphasis on data fluency: analysis, SQL, and tools such as PowerBI or BigQuery. How to apply: network intentionally and be ready to show data fluency in interviews.

  • For new managers, trust early—but don’t protect ambiguity. Servant leadership here means giving people room to act and make mistakes right away, not waiting for trust to be earned in tiny increments. The upside is faster learning about who can handle ownership; the boundary is that you do not punish failure, but you also do not let difficult issues linger at the team’s expense.

Tools & Resources

  • Codex-style scheduled tasks are becoming a practical PM tool. Ambrosino describes using the Codex app for a daily brief across roughly 3,000 Slack channels, automated status gathering from PRs and Slack, research synthesis, and recurring tasks that can be coached over time when early runs miss important signals. How to apply: define the channels and categories you care about, then refine the brief by telling the agent what it under- or over-emphasized.

  • Worth watching:OpenAI Codex lead on the new shape of product work for a grounded discussion of taste, role overlap, planning horizons, and AI-assisted PM workflows .

Keith Rabois's Pick for Building an Iconic Company in the Age of AI
Jun 29
1 min read
116 docs
Jaya Gupta
Keith Rabois
Only one resource cleared the authenticity filter in this batch: Keith Rabois's direct recommendation of JayaGup10's post/article on building an iconic company in the age of AI. This brief captures the exact links and the reason the endorsement stands out.

Single resource worth saving

Only one recommendation cleared the authenticity filter in this batch. Keith Rabois highlighted a post by JayaGup10 and described it as the best post on the topic of building an iconic company in the age of AI . The source material includes both the X post URL and the linked article URL .

JayaGup10's post/article on building an iconic company in the age of AI

  • Title: Formal title not provided in the source notes
  • Content type: X post with linked article
  • Author/creator: JayaGup10
  • Link/URL:X post; article
  • Who recommended it: Keith Rabois
  • Key takeaway: Rabois ranked it as the best post on this specific company-building topic
  • Why it matters: This was a direct recommendation to another creator's work, with an unusually strong endorsement tied to a clear founder question

"Best post on the topic of building an iconic company in the age of AIz"

Why this leads the batch

There were no other authentic resource recommendations in the provided notes. This one stands out because Rabois did more than share a link; he explicitly singled it out as the top resource on the topic .

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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
+106

Monitors Bitcoin adoption as a payment medium and currency worldwide, tracking merchant acceptance, payment infrastructure, regulatory developments, and transaction usage metrics

AI News Digest avatar

AI News Digest

Daily · Tracks 114 sources
Google DeepMind
OpenAI
Anthropic
+111

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

Global Agricultural Developments avatar

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

Recommended Reading from Tech Founders avatar

Recommended Reading from Tech Founders

Daily · Tracks 137 sources
Paul Graham
David Perell
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
+134

Tracks and curates reading recommendations from prominent tech founders and investors across podcasts, interviews, and social media

PM Daily Digest avatar

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

AI High Signal Digest avatar

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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