We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Your intelligence agent for what matters
Tell ZeroNoise what you want to stay on top of. It finds the right sources, follows them continuously, and sends you a cited daily or weekly brief.
Your time, back
An AI curator that monitors the web nonstop, lets you control every source and setting, and delivers verified daily or weekly briefs.
Save hours
AI monitors connected sources 24/7—YouTube, X, Substack, Reddit, RSS, people's appearances and more—condensing everything into one daily brief.
Full control over the agent
Add/remove sources. Set your agent's focus and style. Auto-embed clips from full episodes and videos. Control exactly how briefs are built.
Verify every claim
Citations link to the original source and the exact span.
Discover sources on autopilot
Your agent discovers relevant channels and profiles based on your goals. You get to decide what to keep.
Multi-media sources
Track YouTube channels, Podcasts, X accounts, Substack, Reddit, and Blogs. Plus, follow people across platforms to catch their appearances.
Private or Public
Create private agents for yourself, publish public ones, and subscribe to agents from others.
3 steps to your first brief
Describe your goal
Tell your AI agent what you want to track using natural language. Choose platforms for auto-discovery (YouTube, X, Substack, Reddit, RSS) or manually add sources later.
Review and launch
Your agent finds relevant channels and profiles based on your instructions. Review suggestions, keep what fits, remove what doesn't, add your own. Launch when ready—you can always adjust sources anytime.
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
Get your briefs
Get concise daily or weekly updates with precise citations directly in your inbox. You control the focus, style, and length.
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
Yann LeCun
Yann LeCun
1) Funding & Deals
AMI Labs: Yann LeCun recently launched AMI, focused on world models and scaling the JEPA architecture he pioneered at Meta; he said investors were receptive because many were already recognizing LLM limitations and were interested in funding next-generation AI systems. The company is headquartered in Paris with a New York office.
Healthcare AI investor demand: Jay Rughani said he wants to fund healthcare applications that deliver more care and less paperwork, citing CounselHealth, EvidenceOpen, and Tennr as examples. Andrew Chen amplified the broader behavioral shift, arguing that Dr AI is already part of how people check decisions before and after doctor visits.
Angel-readiness signal: A piano-teacher scheduling SaaS with 142 paying users and $1,280 MRR is now in conversations with two angel investors after the founder used Gamma to generate multiple deck framings and converged on the version an advisor said actually reflected the business.
2) Emerging Teams
AMI Labs: LeCun brings unusual pedigree for a seed-stage company: he shared the Turing Award and previously built FAIR before becoming Meta’s chief AI scientist. His roadmap is to demonstrate hierarchical, action-conditioned world models across video and partner datasets within roughly 12-18 months, with target use cases spanning robotics, industrial process control, and healthcare.
Montage: The founder previously led product at Booking.com’s restaurant-reservations platform across 100k+ venues. Montage’s core product lets users edit video by editing transcript text, keeps footage at full 4K on files up to 20GB, and uses brief-based clip generation that one agency tester said cut review time from about three hours to about 40 minutes per video.
AgentPhoneHQ: YC-backed AgentPhoneHQ is positioning itself as telecom infrastructure for AI agents: one API gives each agent its own phone number and a trusted identity to reach the real world. YC highlighted founders @themeetmodi and @manav2modi at launch.
Clicky: YC also surfaced Clicky, a zero-setup consumer agent product from @FarzaTV that can see the user’s screen, answer questions, make Notion docs, check Google Calendar, and create Linear tickets.
Lean operator signals: Voremi’s solo founder reports 500+ active users across India, the US, Pakistan, Brazil, Indonesia, the UK, and Nigeria with $0 ad spend for an AI voice reminder app built around fast voice input. RefundRadar is still early, but the workflow wedge is notable: it scores Shopify orders across 20+ risk signals before fulfillment and flags risky orders so merchants can hold or cancel before shipment.
3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs
World models as the post-LLM thesis: LeCun’s core argument is that agentic systems need models that predict the consequences of actions and plan via search, not autoregressive next-token prediction. JEPA-style training predicts in abstract representation space rather than pixels, and he is targeting real-world control problems where action-conditioned models can optimize complex systems.
30B-A3B reasoning model: A newly released 30B-A3B model reportedly reached gold-medal level on IPhO and on IMO/USAMO with test-time self-verification and refinement, using what its authors describe as a simple unified scaling recipe for proof search.
Efficient pre-training: Nous Research published Efficient Pre-Training with Token Superposition, adding another concrete efficiency-oriented research thread to watch.
Agentic software development at scale: OpenClaw described a development stack that runs roughly 100 Codex instances for PR and issue review, security checks, issue deduplication, benchmark regression reporting, meeting-driven feature work, and auto-generated PRs when new issues fit the documented product vision. The team says the automation allows it to run the project extremely lean.
4) Market Signals
Efficiency is becoming a first-class architecture theme: A detailed essay in the batch argued that the frontier-only story is more a financing narrative than a production architecture one, pointing to $112B of Q1 2026 hyperscaler capex and $650-725B in full-year guidance on one side, but Phi-4, RouteLLM, and AWS Bedrock routing savings on the other. The same piece claims 40-60% of production token budgets are wasted by defaulting to frontier models, while 37% of enterprises with production AI already run five or more models.
China’s open-source pressure is increasingly about price-performance: Bindu Reddy argued that Chinese pragmatic open-source models already handle 50% of everyday tasks at 30x lower cost, could handle most professional tasks within months, and present a catch-up challenge for US players.
Healthcare is showing both user pull and investor pull: Andrew Chen argued that consumers now routinely consult LLMs before and after seeing doctors, while Jay Rughani is actively looking to fund software that increases care delivery and reduces paperwork.
AI tools are compressing founder execution loops: One non-technical founder said ChatGPT, tutorials, documentation, and trial-and-error were enough to build a working YouTube workflow SaaS in about three months. Separately, an AI pitch-deck generator let another founder test three financing narratives in one afternoon and choose the only framing that matched the actual business.
5) Worth Your Time
- Yann LeCun on What Comes After LLMs — useful for investors tracking world models, JEPA, and real-world AI applications in robotics and industrial control.
- OpenClaw’s development thread — useful for devtools investors because it lays out a stack of roughly 100 Codex instances across review, security, benchmarking, issue handling, and meeting-driven PR creation, with the team saying the automation lets it run lean. Marc Andreessen amplified the thread.
How would we build software in the future if tokens don’t matter?
The Frontier-Only Narrative Is a Financing Story, Not an Architecture Story — useful as a compact argument for smaller models, routing, and multi-model production stacks.
30B-A3B reasoning model paper — relevant if you track test-time self-verification, refinement, and proof-search scaling.
Tibo
Salvatore Sanfilippo
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
- The big shift today is from single-agent assistance to always-on agent fleets. Peter Steinberger says OpenClaw runs ~100 Codex instances continuously across PR/issue review, commit-level security checks, issue clustering, benchmark regression reporting, and even meeting-triggered PR creation . Michael Truell says Cursor's agent requests are up 15x YoY and now exceed tab accepts; 30% of internal PRs are already built end-to-end by remote agents, and some enterprise users are at ~75% AI-generated code, so the skill to build now is orchestration and review, not typing faster .
⚡ TRY THIS
Build a specialist-agent conveyor belt. Start with four narrow lanes: (1) PR/issue reviewer + stale-issue closer, (2) commit-level security reviewer, (3) issue deduper/clusterer, (4) benchmark watchdog that reports regressions to chat. Steinberger says OpenClaw runs these continuously, and even lets one Codex propose PRs from new issues while another reviews them, which is a strong pattern for keeping autonomy modular and auditable .
Put a review loop after every agent-written change. Steinberger's workflow is simple: let Codex implement, then run
codex /reviewin a loop until no issues remain. He says pairing that with crabbox gets you close to issue-to-fix automation, but architecture still belongs to the human 'master model' and the loop burns plenty of tokens. Repo: codex-review skill.Review by feature slice, not whole repo. Install
npm install -g clawpatch, map the codebase into semantic feature slices, and let the tool review bugs and quality issues while recording explicit fix attempts plus validation. That logging and validation step is the durable pattern here: you want a reproducible audit trail, not one-shot agent commentary. Docs: https://clawpatch.ai.Route models by task cost, not ideology. In discussion on Matthew Berman's channel, one guest says technical teams increasingly route work through Cursor or OpenRouter to cheaper models when full frontier performance is not needed, pushing more routine volume to models like Sonnet and Haiku. The broader lesson: serious coding users are increasingly multi-model and care a lot about harness integration into terminal and dev workflows .
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
- clawpatch 0.1.0 — semantic feature-slice review for bugs and quality issues, with explicit fix-attempt recording and validation. Install:
npm install -g clawpatch. Site: https://clawpatch.ai. - OpenClaw speed + QA upgrade — latest release is ~3.5x faster. Team now runs end-to-end RTT tests against every published npm release every 6 hours over real Telegram bot-to-bot channels, with runners on Blacksmith CI .
fs-safeinside OpenClaw — latest OpenClaw ships Steinberger's new TypeScript security-hardening file-system library, replacing an ad-hoc hardening stack that was hard to maintain, slow, and inconsistent; some file ops improved by up to 10x. Site: https://fs-safe.io.- Codex reliability fix — Thibault Sottiaux said the team found and fixed two issues that could explain GPT-5.5 capability degradation in Codex over the last ~48 hours; usage limits were set to reset while monitoring continues .
- CodexBar update — latest release makes API costs much easier to inspect. Site: https://codex.bar.
- Enterprise buying signal — in discussion on Matthew Berman's channel, one guest said Anthropic overtook OpenAI for new enterprise buyers in Jan 2026 largely because Claude Code landed with technical users first; that same discussion says ~80% of business AI spend is API-led and high-intensity coding users increasingly mix multiple models and tools instead of staying single-vendor .
🎬 GO DEEPER
- 06:06-07:17 — Michael Truell on the 'ghost colleagues' mental model. Best framing of the day: if agents are a new workforce, your leverage comes from delegation design, review time, and avoiding unsustainable architecture, not from squeezing a few more autocomplete wins out of the IDE .
- 05:13-05:28 — Michael Truell on 30% of PRs going end-to-end autonomous. Short clip, huge calibration point: these are not just chat copilots anymore; they are remote workers that can run for hours or days on their own machines .
- 04:58-05:14 + 06:45-09:04 — Salvatore Sanfilippo on AI rewrites at real scale. Worth watching if you are tempted to port a large codebase with agents. His claim is that 600k-line rewrites in days are now feasible, but Rust output can bloat abstractions and unsafe sections, so maintainability review still matters .
- Repo to study — codex-review skill. Tiny repo, high leverage. The pattern is the point: loop review until clean, then explicitly stop before system architecture decisions .
- Project to study — https://clawpatch.ai. Good reference for feature-slice analysis plus fix-attempt validation, which is much stronger than a generic 'review this repo' prompt .
Editorial take: the edge is moving to agent ops — specialized lanes, explicit review loops, and real-world test harnesses — not one heroic prompt .
Greg Brockman
ChatGPT
Colossus
Top Stories
Why it matters: the biggest signals today were commercial scale, cheaper frontier training, and assistants moving closer to acting on personal context.
Anthropic's reported economics jumped again. A Financial Times-linked post pegged Anthropic at a $900B valuation, up from $350B in February, and said ARR rose from $9B at the end of 2025 to $45B by the end of May. Separate interview notes this week also said Anthropic has 9 of the Fortune 10 as customers and $100B in combined compute commitments. Together, those figures point to how quickly enterprise AI spending is concentrating around a few frontier labs.
NVIDIA pushed 4-bit training from an efficiency trick toward a frontier-scale method. NVIDIA said it trained a 12B parameter LLM in NVFP4 on 10T tokens with near-zero intelligence loss, matching 8-bit baselines on MMLU, GSM8K, and coding benchmarks. The company also said NVFP4 delivers 2x-3x faster arithmetic, 50% lower memory use, and has already been used to pretrain 120B and roughly 500B Nemotron models.
ChatGPT moved deeper into personal data. OpenAI launched a personal finance experience for U.S. Pro users that lets them securely connect financial accounts, view spending, and ask GPT-5.5 questions grounded in transaction data. A follow-up post said the feature uses Plaid, cannot move money or see full account numbers, and is part of the broader push toward ChatGPT as a personal agent for home and work.
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: today's most interesting research updates were about stronger reasoning, better training data, and model reliability.
A new reasoning model reached Olympiad-level results. A 30B-A3B model was released with gold-medal-level performance on IPhO and on IMO/USAMO evaluations through test-time self-verification and refinement, alongside what its authors called a simple unified scaling recipe for proof search.
FrontierSmith targets the open-ended coding data bottleneck. The system mutates closed-ended coding tasks into runnable optimization environments for long-horizon agents, and its authors said FrontierSmith-trained models outperformed models trained on human-curated open-ended data on FrontierCS and ALE-bench.
A new fine-tuning result exposed a safety failure mode. Researchers found that models fine-tuned on documents discussing implausible claims - even when those documents explicitly say the claims are false - can end up believing the claims anyway, raising doubts about how robust some current control methods are.
Products & Launches
Why it matters: new launches were less about flashy chat and more about making agents useful inside real workflows.
Cohere launched Compass for search and retrieval over unstructured data, including handwritten or typed scans and other difficult documents, using a visual parsing model plus an advanced embedding stack.
Notion expanded its developer platform for agents. New additions include agent tools, webhook triggers, an External Agents API, and a Notion Agents SDK, with Notion saying the long-term aim is for users' agents to build workflows for them.
VS Code added AI-generated risk badges for terminal commands. Commands are now labeled as safe, caution, or review carefully before execution, with an experimental setting to enable the feature.
Industry Moves
Why it matters: capital, revenue, and infrastructure scale are now moving almost as fast as the models themselves.
Cognition's Devin is showing unusually fast business traction. Posts this week said Devin reached a $445M revenue run rate in its first 18 months, with usage doubling every eight weeks, customers including the US Army, Goldman Sachs, and Mercedes-Benz, and a new raise at around a $25B valuation. Cognition also said AngelList completed a troubled 14,000-dashboard migration 5.2x faster than projected using Devin.
Recursive_SI launched with a $650M raise. The company said more than a third of its team is based in the UK and described its work as contributing to UKSovereignAI goals with UK government support.
The AI buildout is becoming a capital-markets story. One analysis this week said hyperscaler capex is set to cross $600B this year, while Big Tech is spending roughly $400B/year on AI infrastructure against about $100B in AI revenue, highlighting the financing strain behind the current buildout.
Quick Takes
Why it matters: these smaller updates still help map where the ecosystem is heading next.
- xAI said its Grok V9 1.5T run is complete and looking strong even before supplemental training with Cursor data.
- Anthropic reset users' 5-hour and weekly Claude limits.
- DALL-E 3 will retire from Bing Image Creator in the coming weeks; Microsoft says it is building a dedicated replacement.
- vLLM v0.21.0 added DeepSeek V4 support, speculative decoding that respects reasoning budgets, and NVFP4/MXFP4 quantization, alongside breaking changes including a C++20 requirement.
Sarah Tavel
Bill Gurley
What stood out
The clearest recommendation today was Flow. Tomasz Tunguz did not just name the book; he used it to explain what good AI workflows should feel like: direct connection to the work, with tools fading into the background as extensions of the user . The rest of the day’s authentic picks clustered around two other themes: background material on Demis Hassabis and DeepMind, and shorter-form operator media worth reading or listening to .
Most compelling recommendation
Flow
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
- Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
- Who recommended it: Tomasz Tunguz
- Key takeaway: Tunguz described it as a book about getting into a state where, while working, you are "directly connected," and tied that idea to Heidegger’s view that well-designed tools become extensions of the self
- Why it matters: This was the strongest pick because Tunguz surfaced it in the context of AI workflows and tool design, giving the recommendation an immediate application for builders
"there’s this great book called flow ... how do you get into a place where when you’re working you’re just directly connected"
DeepMind learning stack
The Infinity Machine
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Sebastian Mallaby
- Link/URL:https://www.amazon.com/Infinity-Machine-Hassabis-DeepMind-Superintelligence/dp/0593831845
- Who recommended it: Packy McCormick
- Key takeaway: After reading Mallaby’s book on Demis Hassabis and DeepMind, McCormick said his big takeaway was that "you don’t want to bet against Sir Demis"
- Why it matters: McCormick framed it as a conviction-building read on Hassabis and DeepMind rather than a casual mention, making it a useful starting point for readers who want background on that story
The Thinking Game
- Content type: Documentary
- Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
- Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
- Who recommended it: Packy McCormick
- Key takeaway: McCormick said he had already watched it for context on DeepMind’s development of AlphaFold before reading The Infinity Machine
- Why it matters: It appears in the same learning path as Mallaby’s book, giving readers a second format for understanding DeepMind’s story
"you don’t want to bet against Sir Demis."
Shorter-form operator picks
Bill Gurley on sophisticated executives using open source in creative ways
- Content type: Blog post
- Author/creator: Bill Gurley
- Link/URL:https://substack.com/home/post/p-197032865?source=queue
- Who recommended it: Sarah Tavel
- Key takeaway: Tavel called Gurley’s piece "worth the read"; Gurley framed it around how sophisticated executives are using open source in "super creative ways"
- Why it matters: The combination of a concrete operator topic and an independent endorsement from another investor made this a stronger signal than author self-announcement alone
Social Radars
- Content type: Podcast
- Author/creator: Jessica and CLevy
- Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
- Who recommended it: Paul Graham
- Key takeaway: Graham described hearing the hosts as "reassuring" and "like having the proverbial voice of sanity as background music"
- Why it matters: This was a strong quality signal from Graham for the show’s tone and judgment, even without a specific episode recommendation
"It’s like having the proverbial voice of sanity as background music."
Bottom line
If you only pick one item from today’s set, Flow had the clearest practical use case because Tunguz mapped it directly onto AI tool design . If you want broader context on Demis Hassabis and DeepMind, Packy’s book-plus-documentary stack is the best follow-on path . For shorter consumption, Sarah Tavel’s Bill Gurley link and Paul Graham’s Social Radars nod were the cleanest operator-media recommendations .
Gary Marcus
Yann LeCun
The shape of the day
Several of the day’s biggest AI stories pointed the same way: influential researchers are openly looking beyond pure LLM scaling, agent products are turning into real businesses, and leading voices are getting more specific about who will control AI and who benefits from it.
Beyond pure LLM scaling
Yann LeCun starts AMI Labs around world models
Yann LeCun said he left Meta after it became clear the company was entirely focused on LLMs, and launched AMI Labs to push AI for the real world through scaled JEPA-based world models. His argument is that LLMs are valuable for language and code, but not for predicting the consequences of actions or doing the search-based planning needed for agentic intelligence.
LeCun said the near-term targets are industrial process control, robotics, and some healthcare use cases, with action-conditioned world model demonstrations expected within roughly a year to 18 months.
Why it matters: This is a concrete organizational bet on a different roadmap, complete with a technical architecture, industrial use cases, and a development timeline.
Reasoning work is leaning on search, verification, and symbolic scaffolding
A newly released 30B-A3B reasoning model was described as reaching gold-medal level on IPhO and on IMO/USAMO-style math evaluations via test-time self-verification and refinement, alongside what its authors called a simple unified scaling recipe for proof search.
Separately, Gary Marcus argued that much of the last two years of progress has come from symbolic harnesses around LLMs, including loops, conditionals, and Python interpreters, rather than pure scaling. He pointed to Claude Code as a neurosymbolic example and argued that pure LLMs still break on abstraction and out-of-distribution generalization tasks such as Tower of Hanoi variants.
Why it matters: Across both the new paper and the critique, the common idea is that stronger reasoning is being framed less as bigger autoregressive models and more as search, verification, planning, or symbolic structure layered around base models.
Agent products are posting real business signals
Anthropic describes breakout traction for agentic software
Dario Amodei said Anthropic's revenue moved from roughly $100 million in 2023 to roughly $1 billion in 2024 and roughly $10 billion in 2025, tracking a smooth exponential curve alongside capability gains. He tied the current inflection to Claude Opus 4.5 and to Claude Co-work, a non-coding agentic interface built in about a week and a half using Opus.
Amodei said Co-work was created after Anthropic saw non-technical users push through the command line to get agentic work done anyway, and that early release metrics were about four times higher than anything the company had previously launched. Separately, a Colossus post said Cognition's Devin had reached a $445 million revenue run rate in its first 18 months, with usage doubling every eight weeks and customers including the US Army, Goldman Sachs, and Mercedes-Benz. Ramp data cited this week also put Anthropic at 34.4% business adoption versus OpenAI at 32.3%.
Why it matters: The signal here is not just better models. Agentic tools are moving into broader business use with large revenue claims, expanding customer footprints, and direct adoption competition between major vendors.
The next interface race is multimodal and action-oriented
Thinking Machines Labs, founded by OpenAI's former CTO, showed a preview model handling real-time translation, interruption-aware conversation, time awareness, and simultaneous tool use such as web search and UI generation. The company said it plans a limited research preview in coming months, with a wider release later this year.
Google, at its Android event, showed Gemini using live page context to prepare bookings, reserve parking, fill forms, and operate inside a new Google Book experience through pointing and speaking rather than typed prompts.
Why it matters: Product competition is moving beyond chat quality toward systems that can stay in context, take actions across software, and feel more like ongoing assistants than one-shot bots.
Governance questions are getting sharper
Bengio and Amodei focus on concentration, jobs, and public capacity
Yoshua Bengio warned that advanced AI is currently concentrated in two countries and roughly ten companies, and argued that democracies risk keeping formal institutions while losing real agency unless they build shared public infrastructure and coordinate internationally. He said public awareness is the key ingredient that could push governments to treat advanced AI more as a public-good project than a purely market outcome.
If you're not at the table, you are on the menu.
Bengio used that line to argue for coalitions of like-minded governments developing sovereign, ethically aligned AI together. Amodei, from a different angle, warned that AI could pair very high GDP growth with high unemployment and inequality, said policy needs real-time measurement through the Anthropic Economic Index, and argued both for mechanistic interpretability as a route to safer models and for targeted chip policies to limit autocratic surveillance and repression.
Why it matters: As models and agents commercialize quickly, the governance discussion is getting more concrete about power concentration, labor-market disruption, and the institutions needed to shape deployment.
Sachin Rekhi
scott belsky
Marty Cagan
Big Ideas
1) Empowerment is an operating model, not a slogan
Marty Cagan argues top product companies win less because of unusual talent and more because they treat technology as a profit center, push decisions to teams closest to customers and technology, and give those teams strategy and vision context rather than top-down control . Strong product culture also elevates engineers, expects respectful disagreement, and assumes most ideas need testing .
- Why it matters: Empowerment fails without context, coaching, and experimentation.
- How to apply: Share a persuasive multi-year vision, use data-driven strategy, and evaluate managers on coaching and talent development—not just delivery output .
2) AI increases the value of constraints
General Magic had abundant funding and talent but no clear sense of what not to do, and its product became incoherent . Pixar countered creative drift with rules like forcing directors to pitch three ideas and making trade-offs visible with “popsicle sticks” that represented one animator-week of work . In AI rollouts, the failure mode looks similar: sprawling implementation that creates “work slop” unless teams define the problem first and map tools to jobs-to-be-done .
“More startups die of indigestion than starvation”
- Why it matters: AI makes starting easier; PM discipline still decides what deserves finishing.
- How to apply: Define the problem narrowly, force multiple options, and make resource trade-offs explicit before scaling an AI initiative .
Tactical Playbook
1) Keep AI-generated requirements aligned with explicit state
A practical community pattern is to move a feature through clear states—raw idea, validated brief, structured spec, delivery-ready stories—rather than relying on isolated prompts . Pair that with a written prediction about what should happen, separate structural validation from product judgment, and preserve traceability from Feature → Scenario → Story → Delivery .
- Why it matters: As one PM put it, generation is not the hard part; preserving alignment and intent is .
- How to apply: Add artifact states, reviewers, and trace links before adding more model calls.
2) Use written narratives and early constraint reviews
For major decisions, Cagan points to Amazon’s six-pager: situation, data, recommendation, reasoning, and anticipated objections before the meeting . He also describes earning stakeholder trust at eBay by learning legal and tax constraints early enough to shape ideas before escalation .
- Why it matters: Better decisions come from shared context, not slide decks or last-minute stakeholder surprises.
- How to apply: Replace status decks with short written decision docs, then pre-wire legal, tax, finance, or go-to-market constraints early.
Case Studies & Lessons
1) Bolt won a recent PM prototyping bakeoff
Aakash Gupta compared Bolt, v0, Lovable, and Replit on a Yelp conversational search feature and a PM portfolio page . Bolt finished fastest at about three minutes, preserved Yelp brand details, and carried an unprompted data-trust signal—Verified / Verify before going—through later iterations . v0 was minimal and generic . Lovable had the warmest copy but collapsed required sections . Replit felt more data-rich but introduced duplicate content and off-brief brand changes that persisted .
- Lesson: Evaluate AI prototyping tools on spec fidelity and iteration stability, not just first-pass aesthetics.
- How to apply: Use Bolt for fast full-stack iteration, v0 for front-end polish, Lovable for non-technical PMs, and Replit for internal tools with persistent data and auth .
2) Pixar beat General Magic by knowing what not to do
Both pursued ambitious futures, but Pixar used guardrails while General Magic optimized for total freedom . Trade-off visibility kept Pixar from over-investing in the “beautifully shaded penny,” while General Magic kept building every good idea it had .
- Why it matters: Creative teams need limits to prioritize well.
- How to apply: Ask for three options and attach explicit capacity costs before picking one.
Career Corner
Manager-makers are back—but stay off the critical path
Julie Zhuo says senior managers are increasingly expected to build with AI, but they should avoid critical-path product work . Better targets are internal efficiency tools, quality-of-life fixes, celebration artifacts, or vision pieces . Scott Belsky describes the broader shift as the rise of “leader makers” . That does not erase the value of long-cycle learning: judgment, relationships, and domain expertise still compound, and Andrew Chen argues the next wave of hardware, robotics, and deeptech will need different assumptions than the classic fast-shipping SaaS playbook .
- Why it matters: Hands-on AI work can increase credibility and leverage, but only if it does not compromise leadership.
- How to apply: Pick one non-critical project that reduces friction for your team or makes the future tangible.
Tools & Resources
- Reforge Build for product teams that want prototypes aligned to real customers, product context, and design systems .
- Claude Artifacts for fast one-off mockups you can share in seconds .
- Teresa Torres’ Product Discovery Fundamentals runs June 4–July 9 and focuses on a structured, sustainable continuous discovery practice .
- Claude Code: Show and Tell is a lighter-weight session for sharing workflows and tactics .
Start with signal
Each agent already tracks a curated set of sources. Subscribe for free and start getting cited updates right away.
Coding Agents Alpha Tracker
Elevate
Latent Space
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
Luis von Ahn
Khan Academy
Ethan Mollick
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
a16z
Stanford eCorner
Greylock
Daily AI news, startup funding, and emerging teams shaping the future
Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker
BTCPay Server
Nicolas Burtey
Roy Sheinbaum
Monitors Bitcoin adoption as a payment medium and currency worldwide, tracking merchant acceptance, payment infrastructure, regulatory developments, and transaction usage metrics
AI News Digest
Google DeepMind
OpenAI
Anthropic
Daily curated digest of significant AI developments including major announcements, research breakthroughs, policy changes, and industry moves
Global Agricultural Developments
RDO Equipment Co.
Ag PhD
Precision Farming Dealer
Tracks farming innovations, best practices, commodity trends, and global market dynamics across grains, livestock, dairy, and agricultural inputs
Recommended Reading from Tech Founders
Paul Graham
David Perell
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
Tracks and curates reading recommendations from prominent tech founders and investors across podcasts, interviews, and social media
PM Daily Digest
Shreyas Doshi
Gibson Biddle
Teresa Torres
Curates essential product management insights including frameworks, best practices, case studies, and career advice from leading PM voices and publications
AI High Signal Digest
AI High Signal
Comprehensive daily briefing on AI developments including research breakthroughs, product launches, industry news, and strategic moves across the artificial intelligence ecosystem
Frequently asked questions
Choose the setup that fits how you work
Free
Follow public agents at no cost.
No monthly fee