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Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
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Kathryn Wu
Victor M
Funding & Deals
Emergent is the clearest financing-quality signal in this batch. The company says it launched about nine months ago and has already reached roughly 8.5M users, 10M+ apps built, and more than $100M in annualized run rate . Founder Mukund previously worked at Google in the US, and the interview describes his prior company Dunzo as having reached about 10M monthly orders, nearly 1M riders, and roughly half a billion dollars raised .
Defense AI still looks like an active deal theme. YC’s 9Mothers, founded by rhs, Roman, and Bogdan, is building AI mission systems for defense; its first product, EDDA, is a small robot intended to protect soldiers and critical assets from Group 1 suicide drones, with the goal of being small and cheap enough to deploy broadly . Garry Tan’s public framing was explicit:
"This is the definition of must-have for the future drone war."
Emerging Teams
Emergent pairs distribution with technical ownership. Mukund and his twin brother Madhav say they have both been programming since age 12 . They say a 4-person team previously reached #1 on Sweepbench , and the current product relies on multi-agent orchestration, a self-learning memory system, RL/fine-tuning, and custom disk and memory snapshotting so parallel agents can work from the same state . The team says it has already rewritten the system three times in nine months as new model classes arrived .
Harness AI is a notable local-first assistant bet. The product runs entirely in-browser, uses on-device CLIP, OCR, embeddings, and a small VLM to understand screen context, and keeps cloud usage optional rather than default . It works on any OS because it is just a browser tab, with a waitlist at https://tryharness.ai.
X3D Studios points at AI-native manufacturing workflows. The solo founder says a text prompt produces a watertight, print-ready 3D model in about 100 seconds and routes it directly to an automated, solar-powered print farm for manufacturing and shipping .
Workflow and infra startups are clustering around real operator pain. SynapticAI is being built to reduce constant switching among ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, image tools, and APIs by bringing multiple AI models into one workflow . Socialmine is in beta scanning Reddit, X, LinkedIn, Facebook Groups, and Instagram daily and scoring threads for buying intent . Haki is building reusable deployment templates across SaaS backends, automation systems, web apps, AI-powered services, and full VPS environments .
AI & Tech Breakthroughs
The main technical signal this week is breadth: open weights moved across the full multimodal stack. One roundup counted 25+ notable open-weight releases spanning LLMs, image generation, audio and speech, vision, video, and world models .
Frontier-scale open LLMs are getting both larger and easier to deploy. NVIDIA’s Nemotron 3 Ultra is a 550B hybrid Mamba-MoE with 55B active parameters, 1M context, and stated MMLU 89.1 . Google’s Gemma 4 12B adds any-to-any multimodality, 256k context, 140+ languages, and mobile ONNX plus MLX packaging . Step-3.7-Flash and Liquid AI’s LFM2.5-8B-A1B push the same direction via sparse MoE and edge-efficient deployment .
The open stack is broadening well beyond text. Ideogram 4 was positioned as a leading open-weight image model . Audio and speech releases included Boson Higgs Audio v3, RedNote dots.tts, Google Magenta RealTime 2, and NVIDIA Nemotron-3.5 ASR . Vision, video, and world-model releases included PaddleOCR-VL, Baidu NAVA, NVIDIA Cosmos3-Super, JD JoyAI-Echo, and ByteDance Bernini-R .
Licensing and efficiency are now part of the product story. Many of the releases in the roundup emphasized Apache 2.0 licensing, lower active parameter counts, or edge deployment readiness rather than raw size alone .
Market Signals
- YC is still screening for user truth, not founder theater.
"The best people to fund: Plainspoken and earnest builders"
The corresponding interview heuristic is direct: "How do you know people actually want this?" YC is explicitly not optimizing for founders who can "control the room," and it treats bluffing or polished evasiveness as a negative signal .
The next AI opportunity set is shifting toward orchestration, not just another single-model front end. Founders in this batch describe the pain as fragmentation: too many separate tools for brainstorming, reasoning, images, and automation . The products responding to that pain are workflow unifiers, intent-scoring systems, and deployment layers rather than generic chat surfaces .
Local-first is re-emerging as a serious product stance. Harness keeps perception and reasoning on-device by default with the cloud as an opt-in layer , and several open-weight releases likewise leaned into mobile ONNX, MLX, and edge MoE packaging .
GitHub remains a useful sourcing layer for pre-company and pre-funding signals. One founder-oriented post argued that browsing repos can surface tomorrow’s startups months early, pointing to TradingAgents, HyperFrames, VoxCPM, Nango, and Cloudflare’s Agentic Inbox .
Worth Your Time
- Emergent: How Six Months of Tinkering Led To A $100M ARR Company — the clearest source in this batch on multi-agent orchestration, self-learning memory, RL/fine-tuning, and custom snapshotting for parallel agents .
Open-weight model roundup — a compact map of 25+ releases across LLMs, image, speech, video, and world models, useful for tracking where deployability is improving fastest .
YC interview heuristic thread — short and useful if you are evaluating founders who sound polished but may not have real user signal .
GitHub Repos X AI — lightweight, but a useful scouting list across TradingAgents, HyperFrames, VoxCPM, Nango, and Agentic Inbox .
Mustafa Suleyman
Clive Chan
Aravind Srinivas
Top Stories
Why it matters: today’s clearest shifts were in flagship model quality, inference economics, and alternative AI compute stacks.
Anthropic shipped Claude Opus 4.8 without raising price. The company released Claude Opus 4.8 at the same price as 4.7, with benchmark gains in coding and agentic tasks, a large reduction in unremarked code flaws, and a cheaper fast mode . Impact: Anthropic improved its top model on both quality and cost profile in one release.
Model economics are becoming a core product decision. One analysis this week argued that capability gaps between top open and closed models have narrowed faster than pricing gaps, putting estimated monthly cost for 1B input + 1B output tokens at about $105,000 for GPT-5.5 Pro, $30,000 for Claude Opus 4.8, $5,220 for DeepSeek V4 Pro, and $2,740 for DeepSeek R1 . Another post noted strong interest in model routing and cost optimization as organizations try to control spend and protect margins . A concrete example: in one code-audit test, MiniMax M3 found 13 of 17 planted bugs for $0.07, while Claude Opus 4.8 found the same 13 bugs for $1.30-$3.39. Impact: cost/performance tradeoffs are now shaping model choice task by task.
Huawei outlined a faster domestic AI-chip roadmap. Huawei said its next-generation Ascend 950DT will launch in August with native FP8 support and year-over-year updates targeting 2x gains in vector compute, memory bandwidth, and interconnect . The company said its domestic stack already supports more than 100,000 Ascend accelerators for autonomous-driving model training across 34 regions, with more than 30 automakers and suppliers working with Huawei Cloud . Impact: China’s alternative AI compute ecosystem is moving toward scaled deployment.
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: several of the most useful advances this week were about making AI systems more reliable and efficient, not just larger.
AI review assistants are strong at finding what humans miss. In a study of 2,960 review criticisms across Nature-family papers, judged by 45 scientists, AI reviewers surfaced 26% of issues humans missed, and GPT-5.2 outperformed the top human reviewer on that task . Humans still held the correctness edge overall—92.3% for the top human reviewer versus 86.2% for GPT-5.2—and remained better on field norms and long-context judgment .
A new reward-guidance fix cuts image-generation compute. Research on reward-guided diffusion and flow models found that finite-particle approximations create reward-hacking bias even with simple quadratic rewards . The proposed closed-form reward damping schedule corrects within-mode bias at zero extra compute and lets a single particle match prior 8-16 particle performance, with results extending to FLUX.1.
Agent memory still looks weaker than many claims suggest. Continual Learning Bench reported that naive in-context learning outperformed systems built specifically for memory management across six expert-validated domains, and introduced a gain metric showing many agents overfit recent observations or fail to reuse knowledge . The paper’s blunt test: if plain ICL beats a memory architecture, the architecture is adding overhead rather than learning .
Products & Launches
Why it matters: new launches kept pushing AI toward local deployment, language specialization, and tighter human-tool workflows.
Liquid AI released two Japanese models. The company launched LFM2.5-Audio-1.5B-JP, described as its first Japanese end-to-end audio model combining ASR and TTS in one model, and LFM2.5-1.2B-JP-202606, an updated Japanese language model that the company says reaches SOTA on benchmarks including JMMLU, M-IFEval, and GSM8K . Both are available on Hugging Face .
Google’s BlazeEdit targets mobile image editing. Google Research presented BlazeEdit as a generalist image-to-image diffusion model tailored for on-device deployment, with demos showing interactive outpainting and relighting on mobile devices .
MagicPath became an official Codex plugin. The product gives Codex an “infinite multiplayer canvas” for design and iteration, and the team said the launch pushed Codex usage “through the roof,” causing temporary scaling issues in the app .
Industry Moves
Why it matters: competition is increasingly about chips, geography, and where top researchers choose to build.
Anthropic’s hardware ambitions look more serious. Anthropic is weighing building its own AI chips, and this week hired Clive, an early OpenAI custom-chip engineer who spent 2.4 years on that program and previously worked on Tesla Dojo .
More U.S.-trained researchers are returning to China. Examples cited this week include Tencent chief AI scientist Yao Shunyu, Moonshot AI leader Yang Zhilin, ByteDance Seed research head Wu Yonghui, and Alibaba Qwen researcher Hao Zhou. Posts attributed the shift to U.S. immigration uncertainty, China’s increased research spending, and large domestic deployment opportunities across manufacturing, internet, and infrastructure .
Intel and Perplexity are pushing hybrid local AI PCs. Intel used Computex 2026 to describe a strategy spanning PCs, edge, data centers, and “intelligence centers,” while Perplexity said it is working with Intel to bring local models and hybrid inference to Ultra Series 3 laptops .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: a few smaller updates added useful signal on where AI performance and adoption are moving.
- Figure said it raised humanoid production from 1 robot per day to 1 per hour in 120 days, with demos of jogging, stair climbing, and terrain navigation .
- MAI-Transcribe-1.5 was described as “in a league of its own” on an Artificial Analysis chart .
- MAMMA reported markerless motion capture within 0.86mm of marker-based ground truth and said it can run on as few as four iPhones .
- The Supervision computer-vision library reached 40,000 GitHub stars and now powers more than 6.5k open-source CV projects .
LocalLLM
Greg Brockman
Elad Gil
The main shift
The clearest story today was a redistribution of advantage across the AI stack: reported large-scale GPU leasing, Microsoft’s emphasis on private evals and traces, a widening open-weight ecosystem, and continued evidence that raw model capability still needs strong harnesses and verification to become useful work .
Reported SpaceX GPU deals suggest frontier compute is becoming a tradable market
A market post reported that Google agreed to pay SpaceX $920 million per month for access to 110,000 Nvidia GPUs from October 2026 through June 2029 as “bridge capacity” for Gemini Enterprise demand, and said Anthropic signed a separate $1.25 billion-per-month deal for the Colossus 1 facility. The same post said both contracts include 90-day cancellation clauses after December 2026 .
Why it matters: Gary Marcus argued that the bigger signal is not just the contract size, but the appearance of leasable “excess compute” at all—a marked change from last year’s hoarding mindset. His further claim that these deals imply xAI/SpaceX is monetizing infrastructure rather than leading the frontier-model race is commentary, but it captures how quickly compute is becoming a market in its own right .
Nadella says enterprise AI moats will come from private evals, traces, and open harnesses
In a Build 2026 conversation, Satya Nadella said Microsoft’s MAI strategy centers on clean pre-training lineage and then helping companies build specialists through scaffolds, collected traces, and private evals rather than public benchmark chasing. He also described enterprise “harnesses” as multimodel systems that combine tools, data, and carefully prepared context layers, with the GitHub harness being opened for custom training with private data and tools .
"If you can, then you’re in control. If you can’t, you’re not in control."
Why it matters: That framing shifts the enterprise moat from generic model access to proprietary workflows and evaluation loops. Nadella extended the argument to business model and org design as well, saying value is created when tokens, agents, humans, and their traces compound into company-specific intelligence that can keep hill-climbing over time .
Open models are widening the practical menu across text, image, audio, and world models
A broad set of releases expanded the open ecosystem: NVIDIA’s Nemotron 3 Ultra pushed to 550B parameters with 1M context, Google’s Gemma 4 12B shipped as a fully open any-to-any multimodal model, and additional open systems appeared from StepFun, Liquid AI, and JetBrains for VLM, edge, and coding workloads. On the generative side, Ideogram 4 released its first open weights, while new open audio, OCR, video, 3D, and world-model systems arrived from Boson Higgs, RedNote, Google Magenta, NVIDIA, PaddleOCR, Baidu, JD, and ByteDance .
Why it matters: The shift here is breadth. Open releases are now spanning far more than text chat, which gives builders a much larger set of options across multimodal assistants, image generation, speech, document parsing, video, and physical-AI workloads .
Local and hybrid inference keep getting more plausible
Perplexity said it is collaborating with Intel to bring local models and hybrid inference to Intel Ultra Series 3 laptops . In parallel, an open-source project called turbovec claimed it can shrink RAM needs for a 10 million-document corpus from 31 GB to 4 GB while searching faster than FAISS, with code published on GitHub .
Why it matters: Official PC partnerships and lower-memory retrieval tooling both point in the same direction: more useful AI work moving onto everyday machines. Gary Marcus said he could not verify turbovec’s specific numbers, but argued that this category of efficiency gain is likely sooner or later and could upend assumptions behind current data-infrastructure spending .
There is still a large gap between raw capability and trustworthy autonomy
Greg Brockman said that when he skips using Codex, it is usually because context is missing, a custom skill is needed, or he simply did not think to use it—not because the task is beyond the model—so the current “capability overhang” feels large . But a very different data point came from Allen Institute’s CodeScientist effort: after generating 19 papers from 50 ideas, detailed human review suggested only about 30% represented real discoveries, and current top models still miss about 20% of fourth-grade science tasks while struggling badly on master’s- and PhD-level science environments .
Why it matters: That combination is a useful reality check. The upside from better context, tools, and workflow design may be substantial, but high-trust autonomous work still depends on verification, evaluation, and human review rather than model output alone; that caution also matches commentary pointing to more agentic output without clear adoption gains, and to the simpler point that code volume is not the same as productivity .
Greg Brockman
Riley Brown
Boris Cherny
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
The bottleneck has moved above the model. Boris Cherny says his Claude Code workflow went from direct prompting to running 5-10 agents in parallel, and now to writing orchestration loops that do the prompting for him . Greg Brockman describes the same overhang from the Codex side: when he does not use Codex, it is usually because context is missing, a skill has not been written, or he forgot to use it—not because the task exceeds model capability . Theo's Lakebed pitch is the infra version of that insight: agents are decent at writing code but bad at navigating dashboards, so the opportunity is giving them code-native primitives they already know how to use .
"My job is to write loops."
⚡ TRY THIS
Boris Cherny (Anthropic) — parallelize the agent, then abstract one layer up. Start by opening multiple Claude Code sessions in parallel—Cherny says he was already running 5-10 at once—then move repeated coordination into your own loops or scripts so the agent does the prompting and task selection for you .
Use the agent as the repo onboarding surface. At Anthropic, new engineers ramp in about two days by running Claude Code inside the codebase and asking it questions that used to require hunting through docs or internal tribal knowledge; Cherny's example is database access itself: instead of explaining how to query it, have Claude do the query from repo context .
Riley Brown — turn a prompt into a team-only internal tool, then add a shared backend skill. In Codex, use the Sites plugin and connected apps like Gmail and Slack, then try:
"Please build a dashboard of the most important emails and Slack updates from this week."
Brown's follow-on pattern: store the tool's data in Convex, create a
/Kanabanskill, and let any chat thread—or even another agent on another platform—append items to the same board .Theo — hide cloud plumbing behind agent-friendly commands. Lakebed's demo flow is unusually copyable:
-
Run
npx lakebed newto create a project -
Run
npx lakebed deployto get a live app with database, auth, and sync - In Cursor Composer Fast, prompt:
"Make this app a real kanban with a live chat that shows users names when done deploy with NPX lakebed deploy"
The agent edits the app and updates the live deployment in place . Theo's broader lesson: agents are better with TypeScript/Vite-style primitives than dashboard clicking .
-
Run
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
- Claude Cowork — Boris Cherny says Anthropic shipped a non-terminal surface for Claude Code; the team built it in roughly 8-9 days and 100% with Claude Code itself, aimed at users who want Claude Code's power without terminal setup .
- Codex Sites +
build iOS appsplugin — Riley Brown shows Sites deploying generated apps as internal, team-only web tools with connected data, while the iOS plugin renders generated Swift apps live in the Codex sidebar/browser . - Lakebed (in progress) — Theo demoed an agent-first cloud layer where agents build and deploy full apps through code rather than dashboards or bespoke config; today's signal is the live
npxscaffold-to-deploy workflow . - Hermes Desktop — Riley Brown describes Hermes moving from a terminal-first install to a desktop app with agents, skills, messaging/channel connections, artifacts/files, and model switching across Anthropic, OpenAI, DeepSeek, and others .
- Model/adoption signal: DeepSeek v4 Pro — Brown cites Lindy.ai switching 100% of traffic for agentic workloads to DeepSeek v4 Pro, with reported gains on core tasks at $1.3/M tokens—23x cheaper than Opus 4.8 and almost 27x cheaper than GPT 5.5 .
- Anthropic model signal — Cherny says the biggest Claude Code jumps lined up with Sonnet 4 / Opus 4 and later Opus 4.5; Anthropic's last public figure was about 3x more code per engineer, and he says it is higher now .
- Codex app vs CLI is still split — scaling01 says five Codex CLI tabs beat the app for parallel multi-project work, while Theo says the app wins because threads stay sorted by project .
🎬 GO DEEPER
- 11:35-11:53 — Boris Cherny on the next abstraction layer. Short but high-signal: multiple Claude Code sessions in parallel, then one more layer up where the human stops prompting and starts writing loops .
- 23:28-24:43 — Theo's Lakebed demo from blank project to live kanban. Watch the exact command-and-prompt flow that turns an
npxscaffold into a deployed collaborative app, then ask whether your infra is equally usable by an agent .
- 2:32-4:02 — Riley Brown's
/Kanabanpattern. Good example of a reusable agent skill sitting in front of a shared backend: once the skill exists, any chat or agent can update the same board without reopening the original app .
- 0:38-1:49 — Codex Sites as internal-tool generator. Useful if you want the simplest mental model for the new Sites feature: connect company data, write one prompt, and get a team-only web app back .
Editorial take: the highest leverage right now is packaging model capability into loops, skills, and deploy surfaces—not asking the same chat box for longer answers.
sarah guo
Bill Gurley
Crossing The River
Most compelling recommendation
Seeing Like a State — James C. Scott
Sarah Guo's recommendation stands out because it came with a specific lens for reading it. She shared a free PDF after noting Scott had passed, and the surrounding thread centered on legibility and mētis as the key ideas to extract from the book .
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: James C. Scott
- Link/URL:files.libcom.org/files/Seeing%20Like%20a%20State%20-%20James%20C.%20Scott.pdf
- Who recommended it: Sarah Guo
- Key takeaway: The thread frames the book around a core tension: legibility as a central problem in statecraft, with mētis as the counterweight of local expertise
- Why it matters: Guo's post explicitly suggests the framework still travels well to present-day debates, calling it "interesting in 2026 too"
"legibility is a central problem in statecraft... mētis is the counter concept, the value of local expertise"
Another useful pick
A Look at the Government's Increasing Role — Crossing River
Bill Gurley shared this as a timely read on government funds in Chinese venture capital, emphasizing that the picture is more detailed and complex than many readers may realize .
- Content type: Article / Substack post
- Author/creator: Crossing River
- Link/URL:crossingriver.substack.com/p/a-look-at-the-governments-increasing
- Who recommended it: Bill Gurley
- Key takeaway: Gurley highlighted it as a deep look at how government funds operate in China, including municipal funds, while the linked post says those funds have become a huge part of VC dollars deployed into startups
- Why it matters: He framed it as especially relevant while people discuss whether the US government should invest in or own stakes in large LLM companies
Why these are worth saving
This was a small but high-signal set. Guo pointed readers to a durable framework about legibility and local knowledge, while Gurley pointed readers to a current analysis of how government capital shapes startup funding in China .
Product Management
The community for ventures designed to scale rapidly | Read our rules before posting ❤️
Sachin Rekhi
Big Ideas
- Distribution is tightening as AI makes building easier. Lenny Rachitsky summarized the shift as: “distribution is the new moat” . Sachin Rekhi pointed to a specific pattern in iOS apps: AI has increased app supply without a matching increase in demand, leaving each app with less attention, and concluded that distribution is getting harder as building gets easier . The channels called out were straightforward: own an audience, pay for acquisition, or find creative guerilla-style distribution . Why it matters: product advantage is not just about shipping faster anymore. Apply it: pair each roadmap bet with an explicit distribution path before calling it complete.
Tactical Playbook
Design partnerships
- Pick a small set of teams with the exact problem. The advice was 3-5 teams, not a broad partner program .
- Define one painful workflow and one success bar. Treat the engagement as a narrow learning contract, not vague unpaid consulting .
- Charge something, even if discounted. The payment matters less than the signal that the customer will commit budget, time, and real data .
- Time-box the pilot. A 30-60 day pilot with a conversion decision at the end was the recommended structure .
- If nobody commits, shrink the solution. The fallback suggested was a smaller concierge or manual version, not a full product build .
Why it matters: this separates real demand from polite interest, while avoiding the trap of building custom work that does not generalize .
Turning messy inputs into a usable spec
A PM offering free help described a practical four-pass workflow:
- Turn rough notes or call transcripts into a feature outline with problem, goals, user stories, acceptance criteria, and priorities.
- Cluster interview notes into themes and pull quotes.
- Tighten half-written PRDs by filling gaps, vague ACs, and missing edge cases.
- Reduce broad feedback into one focused MVP scope.
Why it matters: it reduces ambiguity before engineering starts. Apply it: use the same sequence whenever discovery is spread across calls, Slack threads, support data, or scattered notes .
Case Studies & Lessons
- AI prototype hype can make architecture work harder to defend. One PM with a technical background described inheriting a project with bad architecture, weak standards, and major infrastructure issues, then pushing microservices, event-driven architecture, observability, and tech-debt reduction; support tickets dropped significantly as a result . Despite that, the CEO kept weekly reviews focused on feature output and pointed to a one-day Lovable prototype as evidence the team should move faster . The PM said they started slipping architecture tasks into the roadmap because explicitly labeling them led to pushback .
"The AI boom has made a lot of people who know nothing about software think they suddenly understand software."
Lesson: architecture improvements may not speak for themselves in a feature-only review cadence. Apply it: bring operational outcomes already visible to the business—here, support-ticket reduction—into the same discussion as feature delivery .
Career Corner
- PM learning still looks mostly apprenticeship-based. In one discussion, a commenter described a 70/20/10 model: 70% on-the-job, 20% from colleagues or mentors, 10% from reading, courses, and certifications . Others echoed the same direction more bluntly: upskilling comes from doing the job and solving problems you do not yet fully know how to solve . Several commenters were skeptical of generic “how to PM” content, arguing that theory without live application is low-value, while suggesting a better loop: try one idea from social media at work, or use AI agents to surface relevant news with links during work hours .
Why it matters: skill growth appears to come more from applied reps and feedback than passive consumption. Apply it: pick one live problem, test one new method this week, and review the result with a colleague or mentor.
Tools & Resources
- Underlying paper on AI-era app attention:https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6843118
- Reusable spec checklist: problem, goals, user stories, acceptance criteria, priorities, themes, pull quotes, edge cases, and a focused MVP scope
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