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Altaares Raises, Shinke Emerges, and AI Sovereignty Moves Center Stage
Jun 20
6 min read
639 docs
Newcomer
Software As a Service Companies — The Future Of Tech Businesses
SaaStr
+8
The clearest early-stage financing signal is Altaares AI's $60M Series A, but the stronger investor readthroughs come from applied hard-tech teams like Shinke and Valar, plus rising concern around AI sovereignty, infrastructure bottlenecks, and inflated growth benchmarks.

1) Funding & Deals

  • Altaares AI — $60M Series A, plus Airbus and MBDA partnerships. Nathan Benaich flagged the Airstreet portfolio company's Series A as part of a broader burst of portfolio news; the combination of fresh capital and named strategic partners makes it the clearest early-stage deal signal in this batch .

  • Project Europe — strong follow-on conversion at the cohort level. Harry Stebbings says 15 of 22 Project Europe companies raised follow-on funding in their first 12 months, and another team just signed a term sheet with a Tier One investor .

2) Emerging Teams

  • Shinke / Safe — a hard-tech operator attacking a messy, fragmented supply chain. Shinke is building a vertically integrated fish harvester and processor, deploying software, robotics, and AI from boats to plants, then taking possession of fish to sell under its own brand . Its machine-vision system identifies species, gills, and brain to generate fish-specific cutting paths, while the newer Neura sensor suite is being built to project shelf life per fish and reduce an estimated 18% spoilage loss between landing and end buyer . The founder story is unusually mission-driven, and the company relocated from New York to El Segundo to access stronger electromechanical talent and add CTO co-founder Reid .

  • Ploy — Bryant Chou is using Webflow-era product and GTM experience to build an "anti-slop" growth stack. Chou, Webflow's co-founder and CTO who also led marketing and sales, says Ploy builds bespoke websites, connects to analytics, CRM, and search console, and helps brands get found by ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Claude . Ploy says about 12% of the current YC batch is already using it . The technical wedge is brand consistency: 3,500 curated design prompts plus a deterministic "Ploy Slurper" that extracts a design system from existing sites so later generations stay on-brand .

"your company brain for how you describe your product and show it off"

  • Thomas — YC is testing the idea of an AI-native founder as a product. YC describes Thomas as a virtual human that starts, runs, and grows companies with the sole goal of making money, and says it generated $17k in its first two weeks .

3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • Valar Atomics hit criticality with Ward 250. Valar's reactor went critical in Utah, a significant milestone for a company announced a little over two years ago . The underlying approach is notable because founder Isaiah Taylor is described as working backward from market needs, making systems trade-offs for speed over efficiency, and benchmarking reactor economics against non-nuclear systems, with the stated goal of making energy 10x cheaper via mass-scale fission .

  • Valgo opened up AV human-baseline benchmarking. The company says it independently recreated Waymo's human baselines, extended them to more cities and highway trucking routes, and published the tool publicly . It is designed as a shared reference where stakeholders can adjust data sources and methodological choices for their own operating domain .

  • Midjourney Medical is pushing a compute-centric imaging concept. Midjourney's new Scanner uses "Ultrasonic CT" to create a whole-body ultrasound image and targets a scan time of no more than 60 seconds . The hardware stack includes Butterfly Network's ultrasound-on-chip technology, and the team pedigree behind it includes Leap Motion, NASA planetary imaging, and Max Planck neuroimaging work by founder David Holz . Holz says the Scanner is the first of eight major 2026 announcements .

4) Market Signals

  • AI is absorbing capital because the exit market still needs it. SaaStr says AI captured $211B of $425B in global 2025 venture funding and more than a third of total VC exit value, while many funds raised since 2018 have returned no cash to LPs . Newcomer adds that U.S. startups have taken roughly 80% of global AI VC dollars so far this year .

  • Growth expectations have reset, but investors are also warning about ARR noise. One StrictlyVC panelist used examples such as Anthropic going from "1 to 40 billion in six months in terms of revenue" and OpenArt moving from $1M to $10M in year one and $10M to $70M in year two with 20 people as evidence that compounding is changing valuation math . The same discussion argued that annualized revenue, big logos, and hot rounds are easy to overread early, and that outlier events like Cursor's $60B sale will coexist with harder reversions to the mean .

  • Sovereignty is moving from policy subtext to investment thesis. Harry Stebbings and Everett Randle argue that U.S. export restrictions on Claude based on capabilities create a sovereignty problem at the same time that world-class open-source models are scarce outside China; in that framing, many countries may end up fine-tuning Chinese open-weight models, while Mistral's reported $20B raise is being interpreted through the lens of sovereign models .

"We have a crisis of open-source models in the Western world."

  • The "below AI" infrastructure thesis is showing up in bottom-up developer pain. Investors on the same panel said they are looking at agent-ready databases and even GitHub alternatives built for agents . Separately, a founder building with Claude, GPT, and DeepSeek described the friction of maintaining multiple API keys, billing systems, and custom routing logic just to call the best model for a job .

  • AI-search / AEO is becoming a real buying behavior, not just a buzzword. Ploy is explicitly building to help businesses get found by ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Claude and to surface nightly traffic, SEO, and pipeline insights . Sonar, a separate tool from a consulting firm, says businesses and agencies want exactly this AI-visibility readout, and that one report helped close a $125k consulting engagement .

  • Some funds are narrowing both founder profile and market selection. M13 says it has gravitated toward repeat unicorn founders because they can attract capital, talent, and attention, and it continues to like regulated, friction-heavy sectors such as 911 call centers and healthcare as moats big tech may enter later .

5) Worth Your Time

  • Foundation Capital & Cerebras at NASDAQ — the best clip in this set on how Foundation Capital underwrote a very hard AI-silicon bet. It covers the 2015 workload thesis, why wafer-scale integration mattered, and the non-obvious systems problems beyond the chip itself .

"this was five startups in one"

Persistent Coding Agents, Goal Loops, and Codex Handoffs
Jun 20
5 min read
102 docs
Addy Osmani
Boris Cherny
Thibault Sottiaux
+14
The strongest signal today is persistence: coding agents that keep reviewing, fixing, and shipping while you step away. This brief covers copyable loop prompts, Codex local-to-remote handoffs, Anthropic’s production benchmarks, and a practical Sourcegraph update.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

The biggest practical shift today: coding agents are turning into persistent background workers, not just chat sessions. Boris Cherny says roughly 30% of his code is now written by loops that handle code review and turn user feedback into PRs every 5–10 minutes, while Codex now hands threads between local and remote hosts and users are already running nearly 300 subagents for more than a day . Matthew Berman and Addy Osmani show the repeatable pattern behind that shift: define a clear goal, let the agent self-correct for hours or days, and keep humans out of the hot path until review time .

⚡ TRY THIS

  • Start with a deterministic loop, not an open-ended feature request. Matthew Berman’s template is: choose a trigger (manual, scheduled, or action-based), write a goal the agent can verify, paste the prompt into Codex or Claude Code, then append /goal so it runs until the condition is met .

    "Continue optimizing the code for speed after each significant change. Measure page load performance across every page under the same repeatable test conditions. Continue until every page loads in under 50 milliseconds."

    Avoid vague "build X" loops at first; Berman says loops get brittle when the model has to judge taste, and they can get expensive fast .

  • Put repo maintenance on a timer. Boris Cherny’s production pattern: run a loop for code review, or poll user feedback every 5–10 minutes and open PRs for fixes . Good starter jobs from his own setup: scan for flaky or useless tests, find duplicated abstractions, and keep improving architecture in the background . If you want a nightly variant, Berman’s “Production Error sweep” is equally copyable: review logs, trace root cause, fix, verify, open PR, then ping Slack with the result . If agents are the main reader, Robert C. Martin’s rule of thumb is slightly larger functions and more comments; Kent C. Dodds surfaced that as explicit “refactor to agent standards” advice .

  • Make long runs portable instead of babysitting them. In Codex, start locally, hand the thread to a remote host before closing your laptop, then pull it back later; the handoff can be orchestrated automatically . On the Claude Code side, Boris says auto mode routes permission prompts to a model, which is what made multi-hour and multi-day runs practical for him .

  • Route models by job shape, not brand loyalty. Geoffrey Huntley’s pattern for high-precision work: use Gemini or another gap-filling model to generate the prompt, then feed that prompt into GLM for the actual precise task; his variation is to register the secondary model as a tool inside GLM itself for prompt generation and other quality-of-life help . The underlying rule is timeless: let the creative model specify the work, and the precision model execute it .

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

  • Codex handoff — local↔remote thread handoff is now live. Start on laptop, send to a remote box, resume later; Mark Chen called it a “game changer.” Demo: https://x.com/guinnesschen/status/2068062280345162047.

  • Codex is escaping the terminal fast — Thibault Sottiaux says the app is already on macOS and Windows, works even on the free ChatGPT plan, and equivalent agent capability is coming to mobile and web ChatGPT; he also says Codex now writes the majority of code at OpenAI . Separately, one user reported nearly 300 subagents running for more than a day via lazycodex, and Greg Brockman’s summary was blunt: “Codex app is very good” .

  • Anthropic’s production benchmark is getting harder to ignore — Boris Cherny says 100% of his code since Opus 4.5 has been written by Claude Code, Anthropic has seen an 8x increase in code per engineer this year, Claude Code Review catches and fixes roughly 98–99% of bugs before human review, Claude Security runs weekly autonomous scans/fixes, and one dynamic workflow run produced four PRs that cut CI time by 50%.

  • Sourcegraph Deep Search — auto-compaction for longer uninterrupted conversations, a new Finder subagent for token-efficient file discovery, and smart hover summaries are now GA. Watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJU01Y_LtDI.

  • Notable speed/quality tradeoff — Theo used Cursor Agent + Composer 2.5 while Claude Code ran in parallel; the dumber/cheaper/faster model deployed 10 apps from scratch in ~8 minutes, while Claude Code was slower. The apps included real-time sync and one-click Google sign-in without manual glue work .

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • 10:24–11:33 — Boris Cherny on “agents prompting agents.” This is the cleanest short clip in today’s batch on the shift from manual code review to looping reviewers and feedback readers that open PRs every 5–10 minutes .
  • 3:04–3:58 and 4:34–5:00 — Matthew Berman on loop anatomy. Watch this if you want the most copyable starter pattern: concrete goal, repeatable measurement, then /goal until done .

  • 4:02–10:19 — Addy Osmani’s 3D video-store build. Worth studying because the agent had to survive a full chain of dependent failures: Draco export, GLTF compression, texture resizing, lighting/material fixes, and browser lazy loading from a 156 MB Blender starting point .

  • Study the handoff demohttps://x.com/guinnesschen/status/2068062280345162047. This is the clearest short demo in today’s feed of local→remote thread migration without rolling your own orchestration layer .

  • Watch the Sourcegraph changeloghttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJU01Y_LtDI. Useful if you’re comparing agent IDEs on search ergonomics and context handling, not just model brand .

Editorial take: the winning pattern right now is persistence — agents that survive time, device changes, and verification loops are compounding faster than agents that only shine in one-shot demos.

Anthropic Lands John Jumper as Export Controls and GLM-5.2 Reframe the AI Race
Jun 20
4 min read
659 docs
John Jumper
Jeremy Howard
Design Arena
+22
Anthropic landed one of DeepMind’s most prominent scientists, GLM-5.2 kept narrowing the gap with closed models, and U.S. export controls reshaped access to Anthropic’s frontier systems. The brief also covers new research on memory and transparency, notable product launches, and key industry infrastructure moves.

Top Stories

Why it matters: today’s biggest shifts were in talent, open-model capability, and who controls access to frontier systems.

  • Anthropic hired John Jumper from Google DeepMind. Jumper, who shared the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Demis Hassabis for AlphaFold, said he is leaving DeepMind after nearly nine years to join Anthropic . Hassabis said AlphaFold changed the world and showed what AI could do for science and medicine .
  • GLM-5.2 kept gaining ground as an open-weight alternative. Design Arena moved it to #1 at 1360 Elo ahead of the now-unavailable Claude Fable 5, and one observer noted it is the first non-multimodal model to lead the design category . Jeremy Howard said it was at least as good as Opus 4.8 and GPT-5.5, while being fast, inexpensive, nuanced, and strong on long context .
  • Export controls are now directly shaping model availability. Andrew Ng said U.S. Commerce restrictions on Anthropic’s Mythos and Fable require licenses for any foreign national, including Anthropic employees, which led Anthropic to disable Fable worldwide . He added that the move is already pushing more countries to think seriously about AI sovereignty and open-source alternatives .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: the strongest technical updates focused on memory, transparency, and training agents on richer feedback.

  • AtomMem stores small atomic facts instead of coarse summaries, organizes them into hierarchical event structures and temporal user profiles, and uses an associative memory graph at retrieval time . The paper reports state-of-the-art results on the LoCoMo multi-session benchmark while staying cheap enough to deploy .
  • A transparency audit of DiffusionGemma found that, although text diffusion models are harder to inspect than today’s LLMs, their intermediate states remain interpretable and recover many benefits of chain-of-thought monitoring for safety work .
  • Recent agentic RL work is pushing past action masking. Posts summarizing ECHO and PaW argue that models should train on both action tokens and environment feedback tokens; the setup uses RL on actions and SFT on tool responses, with reported large performance gains .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: shipping products are getting more multimodal, more open, and more useful in production workflows.

  • Together AI added OpenAI’s GPT Image 2 to Serverless Inference, with 95%+ multilingual text rendering, support for up to 16 reference images, and native 1K, 2K, and 4K outputs for design, marketing, e-commerce, and editorial use cases .
  • Magnitude launched as a coding agent that runs entirely on open models; its launch post claims 60% lower cost than Claude Code with no drop in performance .
  • LiteParse v2.1 was released as an Apache 2.0, model-free PDF-to-markdown parser that its creators say is faster and more accurate than other open-source parsers on three benchmarks, while staying competitive with some frontier VLMs on text- and table-heavy documents .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: competition is spreading beyond model quality into recruiting, large-scale deployment, and inference speed.

  • The talent market stayed unusually fluid. Posts this week tracked Noam Shazeer’s move from Google DeepMind to OpenAI, John Jumper’s move to Anthropic, and Barret Zoph leaving OpenAI again . François Fleuret argued that this kind of turnover has helped keep information flowing and competition high across the sector .
  • Shopify said one internal AI/ML team is clustering billions of products for agentic commerce, and that its ICML lineup will cover search, recommendations, Sidekick, SimGym, Flow, ads, financial services, and the global product catalog . Mikhail Parakhin added that the company is serving 2.2 trillion requests while improving SimGym .
  • Modal and Z Lab co-released six DFlash speculators for Alibaba Qwen 3.x, claiming over 1,000 output tokens per second for Qwen 3.5 122B-A10B on a B200 .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: government rules are now directly shaping access to frontier AI systems.

  • Access restrictions remain uneven after the U.S. order. Separate posts said roughly 200 organizations still retain access to Claude Mythos, and that early users kept access mainly through Project Glasswing . Trump later said he no longer viewed Anthropic or Dario Amodei as a national security threat and that the company had responded responsibly to the administration’s request .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: these smaller updates still point to where capability is improving fastest.

  • Ai2 released MolmoMotion, a language-guided model for forecasting object 3D point trajectories from video that beats prior methods on motion forecasting, robot planning, and video generation .
  • Datalab open-sourced lift, a 9B document-extraction model that scored 90.2% on its benchmark versus 91.3% for Gemini 3.5 Flash .
  • OpenAI Codex can now hand off threads between local and remote hosts so work can move off a laptop and resume later .
  • Figure said robots now outnumber humans at the company .
Anthropic Shutdown Puts AI Sovereignty and Open Weights at Center Stage
Jun 20
4 min read
202 docs
Thomas Wolf
Jack Clark
Aidan Gomez
+10
U.S. export controls forced Anthropic to disable Fable worldwide, turning abstract debates about sovereignty and open weights into immediate operating questions. The day also brought a notable Anthropic talent win, a fresh compute-vs-application market split, and a promising multi-agent research result.

The main signal

Today’s clearest shift was about control over frontier AI access, not just model quality.

Washington forced Anthropic to disable Fable worldwide

The U.S. government used Commerce Department authority to restrict exports of Mythos and Fable, requiring licenses for use by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the U.S., including Anthropic employees. Anthropic then disabled Fable access for all users worldwide after earlier instructions that foreign-national access had to be suspended and could not be cleanly separated from the broader user base .

Anthropic had already drawn criticism for restricting Fable’s use in competing LLM research and initially weakening outputs for some researchers without notifying them, before moving to a more transparent approach . Interconnects described the foreign-national prohibition as part of a broader Washington push that already includes an executive order reviewing AI models and draft legislation for further AI regulation .

Why it matters: A frontier model was removed from general availability through policy action rather than an internal product decision, which changes how developers and governments will think about dependence on U.S. providers.

Sovereignty and open weights became more concrete

Andrew Ng said the sudden ability of U.S. companies and the U.S. government to cut off access has already accelerated AI sovereignty discussions in many capitals, increasing incentives to invest in alternatives such as open source . Cohere CEO Aidan Gomez described the company’s on-prem deployments and its Aleph Alpha deal plus Canada-Germany digital alliance as a blueprint for sovereign AI that customers fully control and that the vendor cannot switch off .

“Turns out open weights create markets, not kingdoms.”

Thomas Wolf argued that open-weight models create price competition, allow local or regional deployment, and can be fine-tuned without permission . The timing is notable because Z.ai’s new GLM-5.2 combines a 1M-token context window, MIT license, and strong coding and agent results at lower cost than leading closed models , while Nathan Lambert argued that banning open-source AI would sacrifice transparency, innovation, and education .

Why it matters: The open-vs-closed debate is shifting from ideology to continuity, control, and geopolitical dependence.

Competition and market structure

Anthropic picked up a high-profile science hire

John Jumper said he is leaving Google DeepMind after nearly nine years to join Anthropic. Demis Hassabis thanked him for their collaboration and said AlphaFold showed what AI could do for science and medicine .

Why it matters: Even in the middle of policy turbulence, frontier labs are still competing hard for senior research talent.

The industry keeps splitting between compute moats and applied-layer value

Greg Brockman said long-run advantage may go to the lab with the most compute because demand will outstrip supply, noting current agent usage is only on the order of 10–20 million users and that OpenAI’s $122 billion raise is largely aimed at the infrastructure needed for broader agentic AI . Aaron Levie offered a different market read: as open-weight models close the gap, enterprises may reserve the most powerful models for reviewing and managing work, with more value shifting to the applied layer .

Why it matters: One side of the market is racing to secure scarce compute; the other is preparing for a world where model capability is more available and differentiation moves to workflow, deployment, and cost control.

Research and operating signals

A new multi-agent method cut coordination costs sharply

Research highlighted by Two Minute Papers replaces text exchange between agents with raw latent-state transfer, letting agents pass undecoded internal representations instead of natural language . On competition-level math problems with sub-10B models, accuracy rose from 73% to 86%, token use fell 75%, and the reported training cost was $4; the code and models were released for free .

Why it matters: If the approach scales, it could make multi-agent systems much cheaper. For now, the main caveat is that the tests were limited to smaller models, and it is still unclear how well the result carries upward .

Anthropic says AI is already reshaping its own engineering workflow

Jack Clark said Anthropic engineers are writing about 8x as much code as they did in 2021–2024, with some colleagues no longer programming directly and instead dispatching code agents; the volume was high enough to strain the company’s continuous integration system . He also said Anthropic’s analysis of Claude usage points to labor productivity growth rising by 1.8 percentage points annually over the next decade if current usage patterns and capabilities diffuse through the economy .

He paired that with a policy view: third-party testing should validate national-security-relevant model properties, and KYC-style or deployment-specific controls may be needed to limit proliferation of capabilities such as bioweapons or cyber misuse while still allowing beneficial access .

Why it matters: This is a useful inside-the-lab signal: the same companies pushing for stronger access controls are also seeing substantial day-to-day gains from code agents and broader productivity effects.

AI Reliability, Guardrail-Based Shipping, and Stronger Product Intuition
Jun 20
4 min read
49 docs
Shreyas Doshi
Y Combinator
Aakash Gupta
+2
This brief covers the latest PM shifts from AI model management and vendor risk to practical routines for customer closeness, positioning, stakeholder influence, and burnout prevention.

Big Ideas

  • AI reliability is becoming PM work, not just engineering work. One Mind the Product discussion argues that model deprecations belong on the product roadmap, with explicit tests, acceptance criteria, and sign-off. It also recommends abstraction layers between features and model APIs, plus prompt stress tests on replacement models before retirement deadlines. In the example discussed, OpenAI gave teams 30 days to migrate, and a cited survey said 16% of companies have no contingency plan if key AI vendors become unavailable . Why it matters: model changes can alter user-facing behavior, not just infrastructure. How to apply: add model version management, fallback routing, and migration sign-off to your roadmap.

  • The practical AI question is guardrails, not bravado. Aakash Gupta’s framing is to match PM shipping scope to the level your org can safely support—from no code access in regulated environments to full shipping in AI-native companies. The failure mode is operating above the level your review system can catch. His operating habits are to prototype before specs, decide in front of working software, and keep team context in a shared system agents can query . Why it matters: teams can raise AI leverage without normalizing slop. How to apply: define your current shipping level, the guardrails it requires, and what still needs human review.

Tactical Playbook

  1. Turn product intuition into a recurring habit. Julie Zhuo’s checklist starts with using the product daily, watching research or replay sessions, and checking key metrics, then expands into weekly customer outreach, feedback review, user-behavior analysis, competitor use, sales exposure, and reading on customer psychology. Doing the full list takes about 10-15% of working hours; half is closer to 5% . Why it matters: stronger intuition improves prioritization and conviction. How to apply: start with one daily ritual and two weekly rituals before expanding.

  2. Use positioning to simplify roadmap debates. Shreyas Doshi’s lens is to ask what you are really selling—taste, convenience, utility, deep care, answers, and so on . A YC discussion makes this operational: the homepage is the product’s “face” and source of truth, and it should clearly state what the product is while staying focused on a specific customer pain point . How to apply: write your product promise in plain language, make sure the homepage says it clearly, and use that promise to filter decisions.

  3. Treat stakeholder management like internal discovery. Lindsey Jayne recommends meeting people where they are, getting curious about what they care about, and mapping stakeholders by influence and interest so high-influence, low-interest people do not sideswipe the work . She pairs that with a simple credibility loop for leadership: “This is what we said we would do. This is what we did.” How to apply: keep a 2x2 stakeholder map and a recurring proof-of-delivery update.

Case Studies & Lessons

  • Microsoft’s MAI Code One Flash is a platform-hedging signal. Mind the Product highlights Microsoft’s stated goal of reducing reliance on OpenAI while lowering developer costs, in an ecosystem where major AI players are partnering, competing, and hedging at the same time . Lesson: if your product is deeply tied to one provider’s API, model family, or toolchain, treat that as concentration risk and test real fallbacks, not theoretical ones .

  • Strong AI products are still built around sharp focus and opinionated packaging. In a YC discussion, founders described solving a true pain point first and wrapping models in infrastructure customers do not want to manage themselves, such as databases, MCPs, or agent wiring . The same conversation argues experienced builders still have an edge in steering AI toward world-class output . Lesson: model access alone is not the product; focus and packaging still matter.

Career Corner

"You don't have to die on every hill"

PMs carry accountability without direct authority, so influence and resilience are core operating skills, not side skills . Lindsey Jayne’s advice is to treat the role as a marathon, watch for unsustainable patterns like off-hours Slack behavior, use regular surveys to spot burnout, and remember that half the job is shipping while the other half is landing it through communication . How to apply: choose fewer battles, monitor energy as seriously as output, and invest in the communication that helps work land.

Tools & Resources

  • Stakeholder 2x2: map people by influence and interest to tailor communication and spot hidden blockers .
  • Peon-style pulse surveys: a lightweight way to track resilience across larger teams .
  • Zhuo’s product-intuition checklist: a strong template for building customer closeness into the week .
An ASML Book for EUV Context, and *Vibe* Reframed for the AI Era
Jun 20
2 min read
80 docs
Elad Gil
sarah guo
Two organic book recommendations stood out today. Sarah Guo shared a book on ASML for readers who want more EUV background, while Elad Gil resurfaced *Vibe* as a 20-year-old book that still feels relevant to the current AI moment.

What stood out

Today’s authentic recommendations were both books, but they served different purposes: Sarah Guo pointed readers to an ASML book for concrete EUV background, while Elad Gil resurfaced Vibe as a surprisingly apt read for the current AI moment . There was no overlap across recommenders, so today’s signal comes from the specificity of each recommendation rather than repeat endorsement .

Most compelling recommendation

Book on ASML for EUV background

  • Title: Not specified in the source notes; described as a book on ASML
  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source notes
  • Link/URL:https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CW1FLCD4
  • Who recommended it: Sarah Guo
  • Key takeaway: Guo recommended it specifically for readers looking for more background on EUV and said she liked it
  • Why it matters: This had the clearest practical learning use case in today’s set: it was recommended to help readers build background on a specific enabling technology, EUV

"if anyone is looking for more background on EUV, I liked this book on ASML"

Also worth saving

Vibe

  • Title:Vibe
  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source notes
  • Link/URL:https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0441014151?ref_=dbs_m_mng_rwt_calw_tmmp_2&storeType=ebooks
  • Who recommended it: Elad Gil
  • Key takeaway: Gil said the book, though written 20 years ago, feels aligned with a new AI era in which "every 6 months is a big step going forward"
  • Why it matters: It stands out as an older book Gil thinks still fits the pace and mood of the current AI cycle

"Feels like the AI world is hitting a new era. Every 6 months is a big step going forward"

If you only pick one

Start with the ASML recommendation if your goal is to sharpen your technical context around EUV. Save Vibe if you want the book Elad Gil sees as unexpectedly resonant with the current AI moment .

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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.

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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

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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

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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

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

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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

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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