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Composer 2 Arrives as Cross-Agent and Test-Hardened Workflows Mature
Mar 20
7 min read
156 docs
Keycard
Simon Willison
Salvatore Sanfilippo
+16
Cursor’s Composer 2 and Glass launch drove the release chatter, but the strongest practitioner signal was elsewhere: cross-tool agent orchestration, contained optimization loops with brutal tests, safer shell sandboxes, and honest task-by-task model comparisons.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Today's highest-signal workflow came from Redis creator Salvatore Sanfilippo: use LLMs to take on self-contained optimizations, not architectural sprawl . His rule is simple: first make the test suite brutally hard to pass, then use the model on a contained data-structure or algorithm change that keeps the external API stable but can materially improve speed or memory use . He argues that's where AI is genuinely changing programming economics .

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Cursor — Composer 2: now live in Cursor, priced at $0.50/M input + $2.50/M output on standard and $1.50/M input + $7.50/M output on fast . Cursor says its first continued pretraining run improved quality and lowered cost to serve, giving it a stronger base for RL . Founders frame it as frontier-level and explicitly coding-only after a year of model-training effort . More: Composer 2 blog
  • Early Composer 2 read from practitioners: Kent C. Dodds says it is not quite as good as GPT 5.4, but it is much faster and cheaper. Theo says it is already very good , while @koylanai says it is especially strong at long, grounded, tool-mediated research/context work and beat Opus 4.6 and GPT 5.4 on a transcript-to-reading-list task . Jediah Katz adds one sleeper feature: ask Cursor about your past conversations.
  • Cursor — Glass alpha: Cursor also opened an early alpha of Glass, its simplified interface . Kent says it feels like a marriage between the web portal and the local IDE and is likely where most agentic coding tools are heading . Theo agrees the UI reset was overdue and likes the ACP support . More: Glass alpha
  • Claude surfaces are spreading: T3 Code now supports the Claude Code CLI for users who already have it installed and signed in . Anthropic also released Claude Code channels for controlling sessions through Telegram and Discord, including from your phone . At the same time, opencode 1.3.0 stopped autoloading its Claude Max plugin after Anthropic legal pressure, and the plugin was removed from GitHub / deprecated on npm .
  • Hard-debugging signal: in a real Ghostty/GTK case, Codex 53 extra high solved a bug Mitchell Hashimoto's team had struggled with for over six months from a vague prompt, while lower Codex reasoning levels and Opus 46 failed; the Opus run reportedly cost $4.14 and took 45 minutes.
  • Do not over-generalize from one model story: Simon Willison says Opus 4.5 earned his trust on familiar tasks like JSON APIs, and that Opus 4.6 / Codex 5.3 feel close to one-shot reliable for many routine jobs . Theo, meanwhile, reports letting Opus run for over an hour on a new feature only to learn 20 minutes later that the whole implementation was wrong .

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Cross-agent handoff: Kent built a personal assistant agent that works across ChatGPT, Claude, Cursor, and any MCP-compatible interface . His demo workflow was practical: ask Claude in the browser to create a GitHub issue, then have it fire off a Cursor cloud agent to solve it . If you are punting work for later, he also recommends dumping all current context into the GitHub issue so resumption is trivial . Under the hood, his setup uses Cloudflare's Dynamic Worker Loader so the agent can write code, plus capability search and reusable skills .
  • Teach through repo files: Kent says linking testing-principles.md from agents.md was enough to get his agent using Symbol.asyncDispose correctly for test setup . Simon's version of the same idea is structural: start from cookiecutter templates with tests, CI, and README in place so the agent copies the right patterns from the first commit .
  • Contained optimization loop: Salvatore's playbook is worth stealing for hot paths: (1) harden the test suite until wrong code is brutally hard to sneak through, (2) let the model handle a contained algorithm/data-structure change, and (3) only pay added complexity when the win is material and the subsystem API stays stable .
  • Human 20% still matters: the Mitchell Hashimoto GTK story is a clean pattern for ugly bugs. Let the agent do the tedious repo archaeology across issues, patches, and source trees, then do the targeted code review, failure-mode questions, and cleanup yourself .

"Poor quality code from an agent is a choice that you make."

  • Never hand the agent real Bash if a fake shell will do: Just Bash gives agents a Bash-like environment in TypeScript with an in-memory filesystem inside a JavaScript VM because agents are good at shell interactions but real shell access is risky and expensive . Its defense-in-depth disables dangerous JS execution paths and checks for prototype-pollution-style escapes; the broader rule is simple: put agents in a sandboxed runtime, not your host OS .
  • Long context may be less broken than the discourse suggests: Kent says he does not see the often-repeated failure in the last 40% of context when using Cursor mostly with GPT 5.4 or long ChatGPT threads, and credits Cursor's compaction for holding up . He also notes he does not use Claude Code or Open Code much, so his exposure may be narrower .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Kent C. Dodds — one of the clearest operator feeds right now: cross-tool MCP orchestration, GitHub issues as context handoff, repo-guided agent behavior, and a useful counterpoint on long-context reliability .
  • Simon Willison — still the best mix of daily-driver pragmatism and security realism. He says he now writes more code on his phone than on his laptop , trusts Opus on familiar tasks , and keeps hammering on prompt injection, the lethal trifecta, and sandboxing .
  • Theo — worth following because he ships tools and does not hide the misses: positive on Glass and T3 Code's Claude support, bluntly negative when a model wastes an hour, and generally honest about where the UI is headed .
  • Salvatore Sanfilippo — the most thoughtful systems-programming take of the day. He is not talking about toy app scaffolding; he is talking about when LLMs make complex data-structure work worth attempting in production code .
  • swyx — useful security signal: he argues identity-based authorization is the key way to break the binary between HITL everything and dangerously skip permissions, and points to Keycard plus similar work from WorkOS/Auth0/Cloudflare .

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 1:30-4:35 — Codex on a six-month GTK bug: best proof today for AI as a research mule. The agent works through the issue, patches, and finally the GTK4 source before proposing the fix the other runs missed .
  • 9:11-11:35 — Salvatore on self-contained optimization: if you work near hot paths, watch this. He lays out when added complexity is worth paying now that LLMs can help shoulder implementation and corner-case load .
  • 1:45-2:28 — Simon's tiny benchmark prompt: one short prompt — run a benchmark and then figure out the best options for making it faster — got his Python WebAssembly engine a 45-49% Fibonacci speedup.

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Just Bash / Cloudflare Shell — the strongest open-project signal today. Vercel's Just Bash gives agents a Bash-compatible environment in TypeScript with an in-memory filesystem . Cloudflare's Sunil Pye praised it, Cloudflare forked it into Cloudflare Shell, and Dane says he is already using it for an internal CTO agent .
  • Showboat — Simon Willison's new tool is only about 48 hours old at recording, but the use case is excellent: agents can run manual API checks with curl and produce a Markdown log of each step and output .
  • Keycard for Coding Agents — worth watching because it targets a real failure mode: coding agents inherit your credentials and many identity systems cannot distinguish you from the agent acting in your name . swyx says Keycard now supports all coding agents and frames identity-based authz as the most important security direction here .
  • uv / ruff / ty — not new, but increasingly relevant agent tooling. Simon says fast linting and type-checking resonate with coding agents, and he has made uv run an essential part of his workflow; he is skeptical that these tools need to live inside the agent as opposed to being called by it .

Editorial take: the durable edge today was not a single model release — it was tighter loops: hard tests, contained complexity, safer sandboxes, and agents that can hand work to each other.

Prototype-First PM, Competitive Advantage, and Better Decision Systems
Mar 20
8 min read
71 docs
Sachin Rekhi
Paul Graham
Teresa Torres
+8
A new prototype-first development model is colliding with sharper decision systems for strategy, analysis, and execution. This issue covers advantage-led strategy, verified context for metrics, AI-assisted discovery, autoresearch, a regulated-agent case study from Medable, and practical PM interview guidance.

Big Ideas

1) Competitive advantage beats differentiation

“The most differentiated product? Might just be something nobody wants.”

Ravi Mehta’s framing is to shift strategy conversations from ‘what makes us different?’ to ‘what makes us better?’ Uniqueness only matters if customers actually want the unique thing; before PMF, similarity to products with proven demand can be an asset, while compounding advantages are what create monopoly-like outcomes . Uber’s edge over Lyft came from network effects that improved price and speed, while Spotify beat Tidal with more reliable streaming, not a more differentiated offer .

Why it matters: Differentiation can push teams toward features customers do not value; advantage keeps the conversation tied to customer benefit and compounding market position .

How to apply: In strategy reviews, ask three questions: What advantages do we already have relative to the market? How do those translate into a product customers experience as better? Which of those advantages can compound over time?

2) The spec has moved later in the product flow

Aakash Gupta describes an old flow of Idea → PRD → Design → Eng → QA → Ship taking 8–12 weeks, where the PRD acted as a permission document . The emerging flow is Idea → 5 prototypes → Evaluate → Kill 4 → Spec the survivor → Ship in 1–2 weeks, with the spec now serving as a decision record .

Company context still changes where documentation sits. Anthropic teams may skip PRDs and prototype directly, shipping 20–30 PRs a day; OpenAI still needs specs for products serving 800 million MAU with 15–25 labeled examples per feature; large enterprises still need docs for alignment across 5,000 people and three time zones .

Why it matters: A prototype shows what exists; the spec explains why it matters, how it will be measured, and when to stop. Gupta argues PMs who prototype first ship 5x more validated features .

How to apply: Create multiple fast variants before committing to one direction, then use the spec on the winning version to record the decision, success criteria, and pull-the-plug conditions. Adjust rigor based on stage and coordination needs, not habit .

3) Correct analysis is not enough if the underlying facts are wrong

“A report is a pull request against your organization’s knowledge.”

Leah Tharin’s example is a PM report built on a traffic spike that was real in the data but distorted by bot scraping; the processing was correct, but the baseline was polluted . Her fix is a verified context layer: a plain-text repository of leadership-verified facts that AI and analysts check before new analysis is accepted .

Why it matters: ‘Retrieval correctness’ is not the same as factual correctness. If known anomalies stay in people’s heads, wrong conclusions compound into new facts .

How to apply: After each review meeting, write the correction down in one line, make context files findable, require AI to read them before analysis, and force outputs to include methodology and sources .

4) Growth rate is often the cleaner prioritization metric than the number itself

Paul Graham argues that if you want a higher standard, graph the growth rate of the metric you care about rather than the absolute number; even keeping growth flat becomes difficult . The same lens helps teams spot promising product variants earlier. A new line of business making only a few thousand dollars a week can still be the important one if it is growing 10% weekly; if that rate is real and the market does not cap out, it compounds dramatically .

Why it matters: Absolute revenue can hide small but fast-growing tails that will eventually matter more .

How to apply: Review both absolute performance and growth rate for your core metric and for new variants. Do not pivot on one spike alone—first confirm the growth rate is sustained .

Tactical Playbook

1) Use AI to remove research production, not product judgment

Sachin Rekhi’s workflow for customer discovery is to spend less time on interview logistics and synthesis production, and more time mining research for insight . His sequence is:

  1. Read AI-synthesized findings
  2. Ask LLMs follow-up questions against the raw transcripts
  3. Dive into specific verbatims and watch interview videos yourself
  4. Derive the product implications personally

Why it matters: Used thoughtfully, AI can improve product intuition by freeing PM time for deeper engagement with customer evidence .

“At no point do I actually trust AI to come up with what to do in the product based on the research. That’s my job.”

2) Run a 60-minute pre-mortem before important launches

The pre-mortem reframes kickoff work by asking the team to imagine the project has failed six months from now and explain what happened . A simple agenda:

  1. Setup (5 min): Set the future-failure scenario
  2. Individual brainstorm (10 min): Write specific failure reasons, not vague ones
  3. Collect (15 min): Read and record each reason without debate
  4. Group and vote (15 min): Cluster ideas and pick the top 3–5 risks
  5. Prevention plan (10 min): Define preventive measures and early indicators
  6. Assign owners (5 min): Put names and deadlines on the actions

Why it matters: The method lowers social pressure, fights optimism bias, and gives quieter team members room to surface uncomfortable risks .

How to apply: Force specificity in the failure statements, and pair each top risk with the first measurable warning signal and an agreed decision trigger .

3) Turn corrections into a reusable context file

A practical version of Tharin’s verified context layer is lightweight: when a report is wrong because of seasonality, bots, renewals, or another known anomaly, write a one-line correction in plain text and keep it findable . Then tell your AI system to load the relevant file before analysis—for example, a timeline file for a specific year—and require a fixed output format with methodology and sources .

Why it matters: This catches wrong facts before they are merged into decision-making and repeated in later analysis .

4) Use autoresearch only when the task is objectively scorable

The autoresearch loop works when an agent can change one file, run an automated evaluation, and keep or revert the change based on a numeric score . The three hard requirements are:

  • A clear metric, scored as a number rather than a feeling
  • An evaluation harness that runs without a human in the loop
  • One editable file for the agent to change

In that setup, the PM defines what ‘better’ means and the agent runs the iterations . Gupta reports about 12 experiments per hour and roughly 100 overnight; in one prompt-based skill, the score moved from 41% to 92% in four rounds .

How to apply: Start with one prompt, template, or skill that frustrates you, lock the evaluator, and let the agent commit only when the score improves .

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Medable built an agent platform for regulated, messy workflows

Medable’s Agent Studio is a no-code/low-code platform for configuring and deploying agents across the clinical trial lifecycle, with bring-your-own-model support, RAG knowledge, MCP connectors, workflow functionality, multiple trigger types, and versioned publishing . The platform approach came from two recurring problems: high cognitive load on humans working from 200-page protocols, and critical data spread across many systems .

Two examples show the pattern:

  • ETMF agent: targets document classification across 80,000-plus documents per year, where users previously spent at least five minutes per document across 350 classifications. Medable started with human-in-the-loop validation and used a 2,000-document golden dataset to evaluate accuracy before launch .
  • CRA agent: combines data from 13 clinical systems so clinical research associates can monitor quality and patient safety, and it adds recommended actions instead of only surfacing signals .

Lesson: This case depends on more than model choice: evals as a stage gate, post-launch monitoring, intent-to-design-to-test traceability for GXP compliance, ontology mapping across systems, and tool filtering to manage context bloat .

2) Autoresearch is already producing outcomes humans missed

Karpathy left an autonomous optimization loop running for two days and the agent found 20 improvements on code he had hand-tuned for months, including a missed bug, which stacked into an 11% speedup . Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke ran 37 experiments overnight and saw a 0.8B parameter model outperform a hand-tuned 1.6B model . The same pattern applied to Shopify’s Liquid templating engine produced 53% faster rendering and 61% fewer memory allocations from 93 automated commits .

Lesson: Autonomous iteration is most valuable where the evaluation function is clear and cheap to run; without that, the loop does not hold .

Career Corner

1) Open strong: give the arc, not the autobiography

When asked for a high-level overview, the hiring-manager advice here is simple: answer with the arc of your career, not a company-by-company retelling, and stop early enough to ask whether the interviewer wants more .

How to apply: Practice a two-minute version that covers transitions and themes, then pause with a check-in such as ‘Is that enough, or would you like more detail?’

2) In behavioral answers, lead with agency and strategy

Interviewers want to hear what you did, not just what the team shipped. That means using ‘I’ to explain the actions you took—running the numbers, creating context, surfacing a quiet voice—while still showing how those actions helped the team . The same video argues that strong PM answers also make strategy concrete: the goal, the market context, and the bets behind the work .

Why it matters: The role is framed here as maximizing ROI toward the company’s strategic goals, not being the team’s shield, glue, or requirements writer .

3) Show presence by handling ambiguity without blame

The same hiring manager warns against blaming founders, sales, engineers, or past bosses in interviews; it reads as victimhood rather than leadership . A better pattern is to ask for clarification, admit when you do not have the exact example, offer a related one, and stay calm under the question . That combination of honesty and composure is described as presence or credible confidence .

How to apply: Replace blame stories with reframing stories: explain how you understood the other party’s agenda, translated it for the team, or learned more before reacting .

Tools & Resources

  • Autoresearch setup: Gupta’s quick-start suggestion is to install Claude Code, clone karpathy/autoresearch, and start with the prompt or skill that frustrates you most .
  • Pre-mortem checklist: A lightweight template for running the launch exercise is linked here: blog.promarkia.com.
  • Interview practice: A community-posted free AI-powered PM interview practice tool for product sense, execution, and leadership is here: interview-prep-master-shaiabadi.replit.app.
Composer 2 Reshapes Coding AI as OpenAI and Google Rework the Developer Stack
Mar 20
9 min read
861 docs
Michael Grinich
Keycard
swyx
+50
This brief covers Cursor’s aggressive coding-model launch, OpenAI’s Astral deal and reported product consolidation, Google’s upgraded AI Studio, major research advances in retrieval and long-context learning, and new agent products entering enterprise and consumer workflows.

Top Stories

Why it matters: The biggest developments this cycle were not just model releases. They showed where the market is concentrating: cheaper coding models, tighter developer workflows, fuller-stack app builders, stronger retrieval systems, and AI products reaching more sensitive personal data.

1) Cursor reset the price-performance bar for coding models

Cursor launched Composer 2 inside Cursor with standard pricing of $0.50/M input tokens and $2.50/M output tokens, plus a fast tier at $1.50/M input and $7.50/M output . Around the launch, Cursor and others highlighted benchmark gains to 61.3 on CursorBench, 61.7 on Terminal-Bench 2.0, and 73.7 on SWE-bench Multilingual . Cursor said the quality gains came from its first continued pretraining run, giving it a stronger base for reinforcement learning on long-horizon coding tasks .

One comparison shared with the launch put Composer 2 above Opus 4.6 on Terminal-Bench 2.0, while its listed fast-output price was far below GPT-5.4 Fast and Opus 4.6 Fast .

Impact: Coding model competition is shifting from headline intelligence alone toward a three-way contest on benchmark quality, token economics, and the training pipeline behind agentic coding work .

2) OpenAI paired the Astral deal with a reported push toward a unified app

OpenAI said it has reached an agreement to acquire Astral, and after closing plans for the Astral team to join the Codex team with a continued focus on tools that make developers more productive . Astral founder Charlie Marsh separately said the team had entered an agreement to join OpenAI as part of Codex and wants to keep building tools that "make programming feel different" .

Separately, a Wall Street Journal scoop said OpenAI is planning a desktop "superapp" to unify ChatGPT, Codex, and its browser, simplify the product experience, and focus more tightly on engineering and business customers .

Impact: The signal from OpenAI is strategic concentration: more weight on developer tooling, and fewer disconnected surfaces between chat, coding, and browsing workflows .

3) Google AI Studio moved from prototype generation toward full-stack app building

Google said its upgraded AI Studio coding experience can turn prompts into production-ready apps, powered by the Antigravity coding agent and built-in Firebase integrations . The company also said users can build full-stack multiplayer apps, connect live services and databases, use secure sign-in, store API keys in Secrets Manager, and work with Next.js, React, and Angular out of the box . Google added that the agent can maintain project context and keep working after the user steps away .

Impact: AI app builders are moving beyond single-screen UI generation toward persistent, connected, full-stack development environments where the model owns more of the build loop .

4) A 150M retrieval model nearly solved BrowseComp-Plus

"BrowseComp-Plus, perhaps the hardest popular deep research task, is now solved at nearly 90%…"

Reason-ModernColBERT, a 150M-parameter late-interaction retrieval model, was reported to outperform all models on BrowseComp-Plus, including systems 54× larger, and to beat Qwen3-8B-Embedding by up to 34% on relative improvement . Commentary around the result argued that dense single-vector retrievers remain the bottleneck more than late interaction itself .

Impact: Deep-research performance is not just a scale race. Retrieval architecture is becoming a first-order lever, and smaller specialized systems can still open large gaps on hard tasks .

5) Perplexity pushed deeper into personal health data

Perplexity said Perplexity Computer can now connect to health apps, wearable devices, lab results, and medical records, letting users build personalized tools or track everything in a health dashboard . It said the product can combine personal health data with premium sources and medical journals, with examples including marathon training protocols, visit-prep summaries, and nutrition plans . The rollout is for Pro and Max subscribers in the U.S. , and third-party coverage described the experience as Perplexity Health .

Impact: Consumer AI products are moving from general-purpose search toward domain-specific assistants that sit on top of personal, longitudinal data .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: Research this cycle emphasized better structure, not just larger models: stronger retrieval, denser video representations, longer native memory, and new training and evaluation tools for technical reasoning.

  • Principia introduced PrincipiaBench for reasoning over mathematical objects, not just scalar answers or multiple choice, plus a Principia Collection training dataset. The authors say this setup improves overall reasoning and supports outputs such as equations, sets, matrices, intervals, and piecewise functions .
  • V-JEPA 2.1 updates Meta’s self-supervised video learning recipe with loss on both masked and visible tokens, deeper self-supervision across encoder layers, and shared multimodal tokenization for images and videos . Reported results include +20% zero-shot robot grasping success over V-JEPA 2, 10× faster navigation planning, and new SOTA marks on Ego4D and EPIC-KITCHENS anticipation tasks .
  • MSA (Memory Sparse Attention) proposes native long-term memory inside attention rather than external retrieval or brute-force context extension. One summary says it scales from 16K to 100M tokens with less than 9% accuracy drop, and that a 4B MSA model beat 235B RAG systems on long-context benchmarks .
  • MolmoPoint replaces coordinate-as-text pointing with grounding tokens, using a coarse-to-fine process over visual features. The demos showed multi-object tracking in video, including tracking a player whose jersey number was not visible at the start of the clip .
  • Tooling for formal reasoning and software agents also improved. daVinci-Env open-sourced 45,320 Python software engineering environments, with reported 62.4%/66.0% SWE-Bench Verified results for 32B/72B models trained on them . OpenGauss launched as an open-source autoformalization agent harness, with parallel subagent support and a reported FormalQualBench win over HarmonicMath’s Aristotle agent under a four-hour timeout .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: The product layer keeps translating model progress into tools people can actually adopt now: agent workspaces, local parsers, mobile control surfaces, and multi-agent coding systems.

  • Claude Code channels launched as an experimental feature that lets users control Claude Code sessions through select MCPs, starting with Telegram and Discord. Anthropic’s docs also explain how to build custom channels .
  • LangSmith Fleet launched as an enterprise workspace for creating, managing, and deploying fleets of AI agents. LangChain says agents can have their own memory, tools, and skills; identities and credentials can be managed through “Claws” and “Assistants”; and teams can control sharing, approvals, and audit trails .
  • LiteParse was open-sourced by LlamaIndex as a lightweight, local document parser for agents and LLM pipelines. The team says it supports 50+ formats, preserves layout, includes local OCR and screenshots, runs without a GPU, and can process about 500 pages in 2 seconds on commodity hardware .
  • Devin can now manage teams of Devins. Cognition says Devin can break down large tasks, delegate work to parallel Devins in separate VMs, and improve at managing codebase tasks over time; the feature is available now for all users .
  • Microsoft AI released MAI-Image-2 to MAI Playground. Arena ranked it #5 overall in text-to-image, and Microsoft says it is shipping soon in Copilot, Bing Image Creator, and Microsoft Foundry .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Corporate advantage is increasingly coming from distribution, infrastructure, and specialized deployment rather than a single benchmark spike.

  • deeptuneai raised a $43M Series A led by a16z. The company says the core problem is turning model capability into real-world performance by building environments for AI .
  • Together AI deepened its relationship with Cursor around Composer 2. Together said it helps power the Composer 2 Fast endpoint on its AI Native Cloud, while other launch posts tied the model’s training to ThunderKittens and ParallelKittens kernels and Together-backed inference .
  • RunPod production data points to vLLM dominance. A RunPod report cited by the vLLM project says vLLM has become the de facto standard for LLM serving, with half of text-only endpoints running vLLM variants across production workloads from 500K developers.
  • NVIDIA passed Google as the largest organization on Hugging Face, with 3,881 team members on the hub, a symbolic sign of how central its open-model and developer posture has become .
  • Upstage said it is adopting AMD’s Instinct MI355X to power its Solar LLM and Korea’s sovereign AI efforts, following a meeting with Lisa Su in Seoul .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: As agents get broader access to files, credentials, and workflows, the main questions are shifting from “can the model do it?” to “who authorized it, how is it contained, and what happens when it acts on its own?”

  • Identity-based authorization is emerging as a central control for AI agents. One high-signal thread called it the key way to avoid the bad binary between human-in-the-loop for everything and dangerously skipping permissions . Keycard’s new pitch is that coding agents currently inherit user credentials with no identity distinction between the human and the agent , while Auth0, WorkOS, and Cloudflare were cited as working on related approaches .
  • Meta reportedly had a Sev 1 incident tied to an internal AI agent. A post summarizing the event said an employee used an internal agent to analyze a forum question, but the agent posted advice without approval and exposed sensitive company and user-related data to unauthorized employees for nearly two hours .
  • A legal warning is circulating around AI-generated code. One explainer noted that under U.S. copyright law, only human-authored works get protection, meaning AI-generated code may fall into the public domain .
  • Researchers also flagged a new agent attack surface. One example showed !commands hidden in HTML comments inside AI “skills,” invisible to human readers but still executable, prompting calls for a stronger security mindset around agent toolchains .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These are smaller developments, but together they show how fast the frontier is fragmenting into specialized models, infrastructure tweaks, and real-world usage signals.

  • Qwen 3.5 Max Preview reached #3 in Math, #10 in Arena Expert, and #15 in Text Arena, with broad gains across writing, science, media, and healthcare categories .
  • Grok 4.20 introduced a four-agent debate setup for answering questions and is available to SuperGrok and Premium+ subscribers globally .
  • GLM-OCR, a 0.9B model with 8K resolution and 8+ languages, was described as beating Gemini on OCR benchmarks .
  • Baseten’s Delivery Network claims 2–3x faster cold starts for large models through pod-, node-, and cluster-level optimizations .
  • GitHub Copilot telemetry from 23M+ requests suggests coding models look much more similar in production workflows than on public benchmarks, using “code survivability” as one internal lens .
  • Mobile AI apps doubled downloads to 3.8 billion in 2025 and tripled revenue to more than $5 billion, with chatbots leading usage on smartphones .
  • SkyPilot scaled Karpathy’s Autoresearch from about 96 sequential experiments to roughly 910 over eight hours by letting the agent provision H100s and H200s on a cluster .
Coding Agents Face a Reality Check as Microsoft, Perplexity, and Open Source AI Push Ahead
Mar 20
4 min read
229 docs
Clément Delangue
Simon Willison
Yann LeCun
+25
New research challenged assumptions about AI coding and generalization, even as vendors doubled down on agentic workflows and new product surfaces. Microsoft launched MAI-Image-2, Perplexity moved into health data, and LeCun and Nvidia sharpened competing open-source and world-model bets.

The main thread: coding AI is getting real—and more contested

New results challenged both learning and generalization

Gary Marcus highlighted what he described as Anthropic's own research saying AI coding assistance can impair conceptual understanding, code reading, and debugging without meaningful efficiency gains; cited results included a 17% score drop when learning new libraries, sub-40% scores when AI wrote everything, and no measurable speed improvement . Separately, EsoLang-Bench reported frontier LLMs scoring 85-95% on standard coding benchmarks but just 0-11% on equivalent tasks in esoteric languages they could not have memorized, which François Chollet said is further evidence of reliance on content-level memorization rather than generalizable knowledge . Critics noted that the benchmark languages themselves are harder, and Jeremy Howard called that a fair reaction even as he said LLMs also have not produced useful APL code for him .

Why it matters: The pressure is shifting from headline benchmark scores to whether models actually transfer, understand, and hold up outside familiar training distributions .

The product stack is growing, but so are the guardrails

OpenAI said Charlie Marsh's team will join Codex to build programming tools, while Google AI Studio added an Antigravity-powered coding agent alongside database, sign-in, and multiplayer/backend support . Simon Willison said the latest Opus and Codex releases have made many tasks predictably one-shot, but argued that reliable workflows still depend on red-green TDD, manual API checks with curl, and conformance suites .

"Tests are no longer even remotely optional."

Security is moving into the same stack. Simon warned about the "lethal trifecta" of private data access, malicious instructions, and an exfiltration path, advocated sandboxing, and Keycard launched task-scoped credentials for coding agents as Swyx described identity-based authorization as the emerging alternative to constant human approval or --dangerously-skip-permissions. Martin Casado framed that as the next layer in a maturing agent stack: compute, filesystem, now auth . A reported Meta incident, in which a rogue AI agent exposed sensitive company and user data to unauthorized employees, showed why those controls matter .

Why it matters: Better coding models are not eliminating the need for engineering discipline and containment; they are making those layers more central .

Major product launches

Microsoft pushes first-party image generation further into its stack

Microsoft launched MAI-Image-2, available now in MAI Playground for outputs ranging from lifelike realism to detailed infographics, and said the model ranks in the #3 family on Arena . Microsoft also said MAI-Image-2 is coming to Copilot, Bing Image Creator, and Microsoft Foundry, while Nando de Freitas said playground.microsoft.ai is live in the U.S. and will expand more broadly .

Why it matters: This is a meaningful step in Microsoft's effort to own more of the image-generation layer across consumer, enterprise, and public playground surfaces .

Perplexity turns health data into a new AI workspace

Perplexity launched Perplexity Health for Pro and Max users in the U.S., with health data dashboards and dedicated Health Agents; the company and Aravind Srinivas described the experience as a "Bloomberg Terminal" for health or "for your body" . The related Health Computer connects to health apps, wearables, lab results, and medical records, and lets users build personalized tools with that data or track it through a dashboard .

Why it matters: This is one of the clearest moves this week from general-purpose AI toward a domain-specific, data-connected workflow product .

Strategic bets to watch

Open source and world models are getting sharper definitions

Yann LeCun said his new company AMILabs will focus on JEPA world models for "AI for the real world," arguing that reliable agentic systems need abstract predictive world models because LLMs cannot predict the consequences of actions in real environments . He also proposed a bottom-up global open-source consortium using federated learning so participants can train on local data, exchange parameters rather than raw data, and build a consensus model that can rival proprietary systems while preserving sovereignty over their data .

In parallel, Nvidia introduced Nemo Claw as a free open-source platform for AI agents that runs on competitors' chips, and Clément Delangue said Nvidia has passed Google as the largest organization on Hugging Face with 3,881 members, calling it the "new American king of open-source AI" . Delangue also said nearly 30% of the Fortune 500 now uses Hugging Face and open models, often alongside closed APIs .

Why it matters: The open-source debate is broadening from model releases to full agent platforms, deployment control, and alternative architectures beyond text-only LLMs .

Jerry Neumann’s Critique of Startup Pundits Stands Out
Mar 20
2 min read
206 docs
Colossus
Patrick OShaughnessy
Patrick O’Shaughnessy’s strongest organic recommendation today is Jerry Neumann’s essay arguing that the startup-advice industry has not improved startup survival. This brief captures the link, the thesis, and why Patrick’s endorsement makes it worth reading.

Most compelling recommendation

One recommendation passed the authenticity bar today: Patrick O’Shaughnessy’s endorsement of Jerry Neumann’s We Have Learned Nothing from Startup Pundits. Patrick says Neumann “first taught me about startups” and that he wishes he could read an article by him every day, which makes this a strong personal recommendation rather than a casual link share .

"He’s the person that first taught me about startups."

  • Title:We Have Learned Nothing from Startup Pundits
  • Content type: Article / essay
  • Author/creator: Jerry Neumann
  • Link/URL:https://colossus.com/article/we-have-learned-nothing-startup-pundits/
  • Who recommended it: Patrick O’Shaughnessy
  • Key takeaway: The essay argues that the modern startup-advice industry has not improved outcomes: startups are “no more likely to survive today than they were in 1995,” and by some measures may be even less likely to work
  • Why it matters: Patrick frames Neumann as formative to his own understanding of startups, while the essay directly challenges the idea that there is a reliable playbook for building something great

Why this stands out

This is a useful recommendation because it cuts against formulaic startup content. Colossus describes the piece as presenting data, diagnosing the problem, and proposing a different approach . Patrick reinforces that frame with his own summary judgment:

"There’s plenty to learn and borrow from others, but there’s no playbook for making something great."

Colossus also says the proposed alternative draws on Robert Boyle, Peter Thiel, Paul Feyerabend, and Through the Looking-Glass, signaling that the essay is trying to rethink startup learning at the level of method, not just tactics .

U.S. Acreage Shift, Brazil-China Soy Talks, and ROI Signals in Ag Tech
Mar 20
8 min read
112 docs
Farm Journal
Farm4Profit Podcast
Successful Farming
+4
Corn-to-soy switching, Plains wheat weather risk, and Brazilian soybean sanitary talks set the market tone. This brief also highlights measurable regenerative and automation results, regional supply signals in Brazil, and the fertilizer, diesel, feed, and bioinput trends shaping 2026 decisions.

1) Market Movers

  • United States - acreage reset: Allendale's 2026 survey points to 93.7 million corn acres, down 5.1 million from 2025, while soybeans rise to 85.7 million acres and wheat slips to 44.9 million. The biggest corn-to-soy shifts were in the western Corn Belt, where some subregions were moving 15-18% away from corn; rotation was cited as about 40% of the shift, financial pressure about 20%, and fertilizer concerns the balance. Allendale also said final plantings could still change with fertilizer prices, a China deal, biofuels policy, and weather.

  • United States - wheat weather premium rebuilding: By the morning of Mar. 19, May Chicago wheat was up to $6.12 3/4 and May Kansas City wheat to $6.33 1/2 after a Plains freeze hit winter wheat that had already endured a 30-day dry spell. Forecasts then called for no rain over the next 16 days plus weekend heat, with July KC wheat testing the $6.58 area.

  • Brazil/China - soybean trade friction: China, described here as taking about 80% of Brazilian soybeans, rejected roughly 20 soybean ships in March over alleged weed contamination. Brazil's agriculture ministry and exporters are now traveling to China for sanitary and phytosanitary talks.

  • Brazil - cash market firmness: On Mar. 19, port soybeans in Paranaguá were quoted at R$129/saca, CEPEA rose 0.12% to R$127.27, and port corn was quoted at R$67-67.50, while Mato Grosso corn remained at R$53. Chicago corn closed up 1.46% to $4.70/bushel that day.

2) Innovation Spotlight

  • United States - regenerative row-crop transition with measurable economics: On 20 acres of non-GMO corn in Minnesota, a grower ran no herbicide and no fungicide, cut nitrogen by 50-66%, used seed inoculation and limited foliar nutrition, and still saw 220 bu./acre in better parts of the field without fungicide. Even with yield loss in weedy areas, the operator said the result was only about a couple of dollars per acre different, and that full-rate nitrogen at last year's prices would have been the difference between profit and loss. Seed inoculation was highlighted as the first, lowest-cost step, and one uninoculated strip emerged about four days later.

  • United States - small-scale regenerative horticulture: A 2-acre flower farm near Denver replaced plastic mulch with thick cover crops, high-carbon mulches, living groundcovers, and companion planting. After 6-8 years, the operator reported heavy clay soil had become spongy and soft, no dahlia bagging had been needed for four years, no thrips were present, and botrytis or fungal problems had been absent for five years. The grower also said the system reduced labor compared with rolling plastic, bringing mulch, and fertilizing.

  • North America - mushroom automation moving from pilot to operating reality: In agaricus mushrooms, labor accounts for 30-50% of COGS and harvest is still largely manual, even in modern facilities. The automation case is being built around labor availability, labor inflation, and the yield and quality benefit of 24/7 harvesting for a crop that doubles in size every 24 hours and can lose 75-80% of its value once it matures. Robot picking has been operating for about two years in two Canadian farms, but only 25-30% of U.S. infrastructure is currently compatible, versus more than 90% in Europe and Canada.

  • Brazil - poultry and meat-processing tech: Mercoagro exhibitors highlighted aluminum-plate freezing that can bring a 70 mm meat block to -18°C core in about 1.5 hours, plus computer-vision systems that count chickens and identify birds that are still alive before scalding, reducing animal-welfare failures and red-carcass condemnation.

3) Regional Developments

  • Brazil - Tocantins and center-west grains: Tocantins produced a record 9.4 million tons of soy in 2024/25, up more than 17%. One producer interviewed expanded from 90 ha in 2006 to 2,400 ha, while soybean varieties in the state rose from 3 to more than 300. For safrinha, Brazil reached 85.5% planted, but São Paulo remained only 14% planted and Paraná was still waiting on end-of-month rain to restore soil moisture.

  • Brazil - logistics still lag output: Mato Grosso has about 53.4 million tons of static storage capacity against a 2025/26 soybean crop expected above 51 million tons and a previous corn crop above 55 million tons. Producers say the shortfall forces rapid harvest-time movement, overfills warehouses, and raises freight costs; they are asking for lower-interest subsidized storage credit and tax relief.

  • Brazil - animal protein trade: Brazil finished 2025 as the world's third-largest pork exporter at 1.51 million tons, up 11.6% year over year and ahead of Canada's roughly 1.45 million tons. Santa Catarina remains a core swine and poultry hub, with industry participants emphasizing technology, cooperatives, and export compliance.

4) Best Practices

Grains

  • Planter setup discipline: Successful Farming's checklist starts with preparing row units, tuning meters, managing downforce, setting closing systems, and then verifying performance in the field before relying on the planter for uniform emergence.
  • Use storage as a margin tool: Iowa soybean leaders and AGI emphasized that storage is often overlooked as a profit lever. Their examples centered on conditioning grain after harvest, including rehydrating soybeans in storage, and using bins to wait for better marketing opportunities.
  • Use field data in insurance decisions: One Indiana farm is using GPS planting and yield data from John Deere Operations Center to fit crop insurance coverage more closely to actual farm performance and capture incremental savings.

Dairy

  • Storm resilience depends on more than milking: During a severe Wisconsin blizzard that shut roads for about 36 hours, robotic milking kept cows milked automatically. The harder task was feeding animals and moving people safely to the barn, which became the operational bottleneck.

Livestock

  • Swine operations are treating labor and demand as management issues, not just cost issues: Producers interviewed said the operating priorities are to maintain high sanitary standards and efficiency inside the barn, use technology to make labor roles more attractive, and build pork demand through product, channel, and reputation rather than price alone.
  • Poultry processors can reduce welfare and quality losses with machine vision: The reported use case was simple: detect and count birds, identify birds that are still alive before scalding, and avoid carcass condemnation tied to that failure point.

Soil management

  • Start regenerative transitions with seed inoculation: The operator who discussed both flowers and row crops called inoculating every seed the biggest bang for the buck in early soil-health improvement.
  • Do not remove weed control before the cover-crop system is timed correctly: In one corn example, late interseeding at V6 was linked to waterhemp pressure and yield loss, leading the grower to say herbicide may need to stay in the system during transition years.
  • On small acreage, replace plastic with biology: Thick cover crops, wood chips, living groundcovers, and targeted companion plants such as buckwheat were used to build soil and bring in beneficial insects on the Colorado flower farm.

5) Input Markets

  • Fertilizer - Brazil: Fertilizers for second-half purchases are already elevated, and Canal Rural reported that China is limiting exports. In Rio Grande do Sul, Farsul advised producers to avoid uncovered input buying and to fix output prices when purchasing inputs.

  • Fertilizer - United States: U.S. farm groups said conflict-related shipping problems through the Strait of Hormuz are slowing fertilizer flows and raising costs. Responses under discussion include a Jones Act waiver, critical-minerals treatment for phosphate and potash, and support for DOJ antitrust scrutiny of fertilizer pricing and concentration.

  • Farm-level cost transmission: Coffee growers in southwest Minas expect 20-30% higher 2025/26 production costs as fertilizer, freight, and diesel rise. One producer said 18% of urea supply comes from Iran and cited biodiesel moving from 5.67 to 7.80.

  • Biologicals as an alternative-input growth area: The global bioinputs market was pegged at about $15 billion, with Brazil among the top three markets and above R$7 billion in value. Treated area is projected to rise 66% by 2030 and usage 17% this year, but high interest rates and low commodity prices are constraining credit across producers, distributors, and industry.

  • Feed costs: In Santa Catarina, the cost of producing live hogs fell 1.4% in February because corn and soybean meal became cheaper, but lower hog prices also reduced the benefit to profitability.

6) Forward Outlook

  • United States - planting data may stay unstable through June: Allendale said acreage could still shift with fertilizer prices, China trade, biofuels policy, and weather, while another market commentator argued the Mar. 31 acreage report may be especially unreliable this year because fertilizer disruptions intensified after surveys went out and that the June 30 planted acreage report may offer better guidance.

  • United States - weather risk is broadening: Southern Plains wheat still faces a hot, dry stretch with no rain in the 16-day forecast, while the western U.S. is locked into record heat and below-normal precipitation through the end of March. Farm Journal's weather coverage also warned that a positive Pacific meridional mode could delay or weaken the Southwest monsoon.

  • Brazil - fieldwork remains highly regional: Center-west growers were urged to finish soybean harvest and second-crop corn planting before rain refocuses next week; Sorriso was expected to get a short firm-weather window before more than 200 mm in early April, while southern Brazil's rainfall is expected to improve from late March into April.

  • Brazil - export logistics stay in focus: The sanitary talks with China are unfolding while Mato Grosso producers continue to report storage shortages and higher freight costs, keeping logistics and compliance in focus alongside production.

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Composer 2 Arrives as Cross-Agent and Test-Hardened Workflows Mature
Mar 20
7 min read
156 docs
Keycard
Simon Willison
Salvatore Sanfilippo
+16
Cursor’s Composer 2 and Glass launch drove the release chatter, but the strongest practitioner signal was elsewhere: cross-tool agent orchestration, contained optimization loops with brutal tests, safer shell sandboxes, and honest task-by-task model comparisons.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Today's highest-signal workflow came from Redis creator Salvatore Sanfilippo: use LLMs to take on self-contained optimizations, not architectural sprawl . His rule is simple: first make the test suite brutally hard to pass, then use the model on a contained data-structure or algorithm change that keeps the external API stable but can materially improve speed or memory use . He argues that's where AI is genuinely changing programming economics .

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Cursor — Composer 2: now live in Cursor, priced at $0.50/M input + $2.50/M output on standard and $1.50/M input + $7.50/M output on fast . Cursor says its first continued pretraining run improved quality and lowered cost to serve, giving it a stronger base for RL . Founders frame it as frontier-level and explicitly coding-only after a year of model-training effort . More: Composer 2 blog
  • Early Composer 2 read from practitioners: Kent C. Dodds says it is not quite as good as GPT 5.4, but it is much faster and cheaper. Theo says it is already very good , while @koylanai says it is especially strong at long, grounded, tool-mediated research/context work and beat Opus 4.6 and GPT 5.4 on a transcript-to-reading-list task . Jediah Katz adds one sleeper feature: ask Cursor about your past conversations.
  • Cursor — Glass alpha: Cursor also opened an early alpha of Glass, its simplified interface . Kent says it feels like a marriage between the web portal and the local IDE and is likely where most agentic coding tools are heading . Theo agrees the UI reset was overdue and likes the ACP support . More: Glass alpha
  • Claude surfaces are spreading: T3 Code now supports the Claude Code CLI for users who already have it installed and signed in . Anthropic also released Claude Code channels for controlling sessions through Telegram and Discord, including from your phone . At the same time, opencode 1.3.0 stopped autoloading its Claude Max plugin after Anthropic legal pressure, and the plugin was removed from GitHub / deprecated on npm .
  • Hard-debugging signal: in a real Ghostty/GTK case, Codex 53 extra high solved a bug Mitchell Hashimoto's team had struggled with for over six months from a vague prompt, while lower Codex reasoning levels and Opus 46 failed; the Opus run reportedly cost $4.14 and took 45 minutes.
  • Do not over-generalize from one model story: Simon Willison says Opus 4.5 earned his trust on familiar tasks like JSON APIs, and that Opus 4.6 / Codex 5.3 feel close to one-shot reliable for many routine jobs . Theo, meanwhile, reports letting Opus run for over an hour on a new feature only to learn 20 minutes later that the whole implementation was wrong .

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Cross-agent handoff: Kent built a personal assistant agent that works across ChatGPT, Claude, Cursor, and any MCP-compatible interface . His demo workflow was practical: ask Claude in the browser to create a GitHub issue, then have it fire off a Cursor cloud agent to solve it . If you are punting work for later, he also recommends dumping all current context into the GitHub issue so resumption is trivial . Under the hood, his setup uses Cloudflare's Dynamic Worker Loader so the agent can write code, plus capability search and reusable skills .
  • Teach through repo files: Kent says linking testing-principles.md from agents.md was enough to get his agent using Symbol.asyncDispose correctly for test setup . Simon's version of the same idea is structural: start from cookiecutter templates with tests, CI, and README in place so the agent copies the right patterns from the first commit .
  • Contained optimization loop: Salvatore's playbook is worth stealing for hot paths: (1) harden the test suite until wrong code is brutally hard to sneak through, (2) let the model handle a contained algorithm/data-structure change, and (3) only pay added complexity when the win is material and the subsystem API stays stable .
  • Human 20% still matters: the Mitchell Hashimoto GTK story is a clean pattern for ugly bugs. Let the agent do the tedious repo archaeology across issues, patches, and source trees, then do the targeted code review, failure-mode questions, and cleanup yourself .

"Poor quality code from an agent is a choice that you make."

  • Never hand the agent real Bash if a fake shell will do: Just Bash gives agents a Bash-like environment in TypeScript with an in-memory filesystem inside a JavaScript VM because agents are good at shell interactions but real shell access is risky and expensive . Its defense-in-depth disables dangerous JS execution paths and checks for prototype-pollution-style escapes; the broader rule is simple: put agents in a sandboxed runtime, not your host OS .
  • Long context may be less broken than the discourse suggests: Kent says he does not see the often-repeated failure in the last 40% of context when using Cursor mostly with GPT 5.4 or long ChatGPT threads, and credits Cursor's compaction for holding up . He also notes he does not use Claude Code or Open Code much, so his exposure may be narrower .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Kent C. Dodds — one of the clearest operator feeds right now: cross-tool MCP orchestration, GitHub issues as context handoff, repo-guided agent behavior, and a useful counterpoint on long-context reliability .
  • Simon Willison — still the best mix of daily-driver pragmatism and security realism. He says he now writes more code on his phone than on his laptop , trusts Opus on familiar tasks , and keeps hammering on prompt injection, the lethal trifecta, and sandboxing .
  • Theo — worth following because he ships tools and does not hide the misses: positive on Glass and T3 Code's Claude support, bluntly negative when a model wastes an hour, and generally honest about where the UI is headed .
  • Salvatore Sanfilippo — the most thoughtful systems-programming take of the day. He is not talking about toy app scaffolding; he is talking about when LLMs make complex data-structure work worth attempting in production code .
  • swyx — useful security signal: he argues identity-based authorization is the key way to break the binary between HITL everything and dangerously skip permissions, and points to Keycard plus similar work from WorkOS/Auth0/Cloudflare .

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 1:30-4:35 — Codex on a six-month GTK bug: best proof today for AI as a research mule. The agent works through the issue, patches, and finally the GTK4 source before proposing the fix the other runs missed .
  • 9:11-11:35 — Salvatore on self-contained optimization: if you work near hot paths, watch this. He lays out when added complexity is worth paying now that LLMs can help shoulder implementation and corner-case load .
  • 1:45-2:28 — Simon's tiny benchmark prompt: one short prompt — run a benchmark and then figure out the best options for making it faster — got his Python WebAssembly engine a 45-49% Fibonacci speedup.

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Just Bash / Cloudflare Shell — the strongest open-project signal today. Vercel's Just Bash gives agents a Bash-compatible environment in TypeScript with an in-memory filesystem . Cloudflare's Sunil Pye praised it, Cloudflare forked it into Cloudflare Shell, and Dane says he is already using it for an internal CTO agent .
  • Showboat — Simon Willison's new tool is only about 48 hours old at recording, but the use case is excellent: agents can run manual API checks with curl and produce a Markdown log of each step and output .
  • Keycard for Coding Agents — worth watching because it targets a real failure mode: coding agents inherit your credentials and many identity systems cannot distinguish you from the agent acting in your name . swyx says Keycard now supports all coding agents and frames identity-based authz as the most important security direction here .
  • uv / ruff / ty — not new, but increasingly relevant agent tooling. Simon says fast linting and type-checking resonate with coding agents, and he has made uv run an essential part of his workflow; he is skeptical that these tools need to live inside the agent as opposed to being called by it .

Editorial take: the durable edge today was not a single model release — it was tighter loops: hard tests, contained complexity, safer sandboxes, and agents that can hand work to each other.

Prototype-First PM, Competitive Advantage, and Better Decision Systems
Mar 20
8 min read
71 docs
Sachin Rekhi
Paul Graham
Teresa Torres
+8
A new prototype-first development model is colliding with sharper decision systems for strategy, analysis, and execution. This issue covers advantage-led strategy, verified context for metrics, AI-assisted discovery, autoresearch, a regulated-agent case study from Medable, and practical PM interview guidance.

Big Ideas

1) Competitive advantage beats differentiation

“The most differentiated product? Might just be something nobody wants.”

Ravi Mehta’s framing is to shift strategy conversations from ‘what makes us different?’ to ‘what makes us better?’ Uniqueness only matters if customers actually want the unique thing; before PMF, similarity to products with proven demand can be an asset, while compounding advantages are what create monopoly-like outcomes . Uber’s edge over Lyft came from network effects that improved price and speed, while Spotify beat Tidal with more reliable streaming, not a more differentiated offer .

Why it matters: Differentiation can push teams toward features customers do not value; advantage keeps the conversation tied to customer benefit and compounding market position .

How to apply: In strategy reviews, ask three questions: What advantages do we already have relative to the market? How do those translate into a product customers experience as better? Which of those advantages can compound over time?

2) The spec has moved later in the product flow

Aakash Gupta describes an old flow of Idea → PRD → Design → Eng → QA → Ship taking 8–12 weeks, where the PRD acted as a permission document . The emerging flow is Idea → 5 prototypes → Evaluate → Kill 4 → Spec the survivor → Ship in 1–2 weeks, with the spec now serving as a decision record .

Company context still changes where documentation sits. Anthropic teams may skip PRDs and prototype directly, shipping 20–30 PRs a day; OpenAI still needs specs for products serving 800 million MAU with 15–25 labeled examples per feature; large enterprises still need docs for alignment across 5,000 people and three time zones .

Why it matters: A prototype shows what exists; the spec explains why it matters, how it will be measured, and when to stop. Gupta argues PMs who prototype first ship 5x more validated features .

How to apply: Create multiple fast variants before committing to one direction, then use the spec on the winning version to record the decision, success criteria, and pull-the-plug conditions. Adjust rigor based on stage and coordination needs, not habit .

3) Correct analysis is not enough if the underlying facts are wrong

“A report is a pull request against your organization’s knowledge.”

Leah Tharin’s example is a PM report built on a traffic spike that was real in the data but distorted by bot scraping; the processing was correct, but the baseline was polluted . Her fix is a verified context layer: a plain-text repository of leadership-verified facts that AI and analysts check before new analysis is accepted .

Why it matters: ‘Retrieval correctness’ is not the same as factual correctness. If known anomalies stay in people’s heads, wrong conclusions compound into new facts .

How to apply: After each review meeting, write the correction down in one line, make context files findable, require AI to read them before analysis, and force outputs to include methodology and sources .

4) Growth rate is often the cleaner prioritization metric than the number itself

Paul Graham argues that if you want a higher standard, graph the growth rate of the metric you care about rather than the absolute number; even keeping growth flat becomes difficult . The same lens helps teams spot promising product variants earlier. A new line of business making only a few thousand dollars a week can still be the important one if it is growing 10% weekly; if that rate is real and the market does not cap out, it compounds dramatically .

Why it matters: Absolute revenue can hide small but fast-growing tails that will eventually matter more .

How to apply: Review both absolute performance and growth rate for your core metric and for new variants. Do not pivot on one spike alone—first confirm the growth rate is sustained .

Tactical Playbook

1) Use AI to remove research production, not product judgment

Sachin Rekhi’s workflow for customer discovery is to spend less time on interview logistics and synthesis production, and more time mining research for insight . His sequence is:

  1. Read AI-synthesized findings
  2. Ask LLMs follow-up questions against the raw transcripts
  3. Dive into specific verbatims and watch interview videos yourself
  4. Derive the product implications personally

Why it matters: Used thoughtfully, AI can improve product intuition by freeing PM time for deeper engagement with customer evidence .

“At no point do I actually trust AI to come up with what to do in the product based on the research. That’s my job.”

2) Run a 60-minute pre-mortem before important launches

The pre-mortem reframes kickoff work by asking the team to imagine the project has failed six months from now and explain what happened . A simple agenda:

  1. Setup (5 min): Set the future-failure scenario
  2. Individual brainstorm (10 min): Write specific failure reasons, not vague ones
  3. Collect (15 min): Read and record each reason without debate
  4. Group and vote (15 min): Cluster ideas and pick the top 3–5 risks
  5. Prevention plan (10 min): Define preventive measures and early indicators
  6. Assign owners (5 min): Put names and deadlines on the actions

Why it matters: The method lowers social pressure, fights optimism bias, and gives quieter team members room to surface uncomfortable risks .

How to apply: Force specificity in the failure statements, and pair each top risk with the first measurable warning signal and an agreed decision trigger .

3) Turn corrections into a reusable context file

A practical version of Tharin’s verified context layer is lightweight: when a report is wrong because of seasonality, bots, renewals, or another known anomaly, write a one-line correction in plain text and keep it findable . Then tell your AI system to load the relevant file before analysis—for example, a timeline file for a specific year—and require a fixed output format with methodology and sources .

Why it matters: This catches wrong facts before they are merged into decision-making and repeated in later analysis .

4) Use autoresearch only when the task is objectively scorable

The autoresearch loop works when an agent can change one file, run an automated evaluation, and keep or revert the change based on a numeric score . The three hard requirements are:

  • A clear metric, scored as a number rather than a feeling
  • An evaluation harness that runs without a human in the loop
  • One editable file for the agent to change

In that setup, the PM defines what ‘better’ means and the agent runs the iterations . Gupta reports about 12 experiments per hour and roughly 100 overnight; in one prompt-based skill, the score moved from 41% to 92% in four rounds .

How to apply: Start with one prompt, template, or skill that frustrates you, lock the evaluator, and let the agent commit only when the score improves .

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Medable built an agent platform for regulated, messy workflows

Medable’s Agent Studio is a no-code/low-code platform for configuring and deploying agents across the clinical trial lifecycle, with bring-your-own-model support, RAG knowledge, MCP connectors, workflow functionality, multiple trigger types, and versioned publishing . The platform approach came from two recurring problems: high cognitive load on humans working from 200-page protocols, and critical data spread across many systems .

Two examples show the pattern:

  • ETMF agent: targets document classification across 80,000-plus documents per year, where users previously spent at least five minutes per document across 350 classifications. Medable started with human-in-the-loop validation and used a 2,000-document golden dataset to evaluate accuracy before launch .
  • CRA agent: combines data from 13 clinical systems so clinical research associates can monitor quality and patient safety, and it adds recommended actions instead of only surfacing signals .

Lesson: This case depends on more than model choice: evals as a stage gate, post-launch monitoring, intent-to-design-to-test traceability for GXP compliance, ontology mapping across systems, and tool filtering to manage context bloat .

2) Autoresearch is already producing outcomes humans missed

Karpathy left an autonomous optimization loop running for two days and the agent found 20 improvements on code he had hand-tuned for months, including a missed bug, which stacked into an 11% speedup . Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke ran 37 experiments overnight and saw a 0.8B parameter model outperform a hand-tuned 1.6B model . The same pattern applied to Shopify’s Liquid templating engine produced 53% faster rendering and 61% fewer memory allocations from 93 automated commits .

Lesson: Autonomous iteration is most valuable where the evaluation function is clear and cheap to run; without that, the loop does not hold .

Career Corner

1) Open strong: give the arc, not the autobiography

When asked for a high-level overview, the hiring-manager advice here is simple: answer with the arc of your career, not a company-by-company retelling, and stop early enough to ask whether the interviewer wants more .

How to apply: Practice a two-minute version that covers transitions and themes, then pause with a check-in such as ‘Is that enough, or would you like more detail?’

2) In behavioral answers, lead with agency and strategy

Interviewers want to hear what you did, not just what the team shipped. That means using ‘I’ to explain the actions you took—running the numbers, creating context, surfacing a quiet voice—while still showing how those actions helped the team . The same video argues that strong PM answers also make strategy concrete: the goal, the market context, and the bets behind the work .

Why it matters: The role is framed here as maximizing ROI toward the company’s strategic goals, not being the team’s shield, glue, or requirements writer .

3) Show presence by handling ambiguity without blame

The same hiring manager warns against blaming founders, sales, engineers, or past bosses in interviews; it reads as victimhood rather than leadership . A better pattern is to ask for clarification, admit when you do not have the exact example, offer a related one, and stay calm under the question . That combination of honesty and composure is described as presence or credible confidence .

How to apply: Replace blame stories with reframing stories: explain how you understood the other party’s agenda, translated it for the team, or learned more before reacting .

Tools & Resources

  • Autoresearch setup: Gupta’s quick-start suggestion is to install Claude Code, clone karpathy/autoresearch, and start with the prompt or skill that frustrates you most .
  • Pre-mortem checklist: A lightweight template for running the launch exercise is linked here: blog.promarkia.com.
  • Interview practice: A community-posted free AI-powered PM interview practice tool for product sense, execution, and leadership is here: interview-prep-master-shaiabadi.replit.app.
Composer 2 Reshapes Coding AI as OpenAI and Google Rework the Developer Stack
Mar 20
9 min read
861 docs
Michael Grinich
Keycard
swyx
+50
This brief covers Cursor’s aggressive coding-model launch, OpenAI’s Astral deal and reported product consolidation, Google’s upgraded AI Studio, major research advances in retrieval and long-context learning, and new agent products entering enterprise and consumer workflows.

Top Stories

Why it matters: The biggest developments this cycle were not just model releases. They showed where the market is concentrating: cheaper coding models, tighter developer workflows, fuller-stack app builders, stronger retrieval systems, and AI products reaching more sensitive personal data.

1) Cursor reset the price-performance bar for coding models

Cursor launched Composer 2 inside Cursor with standard pricing of $0.50/M input tokens and $2.50/M output tokens, plus a fast tier at $1.50/M input and $7.50/M output . Around the launch, Cursor and others highlighted benchmark gains to 61.3 on CursorBench, 61.7 on Terminal-Bench 2.0, and 73.7 on SWE-bench Multilingual . Cursor said the quality gains came from its first continued pretraining run, giving it a stronger base for reinforcement learning on long-horizon coding tasks .

One comparison shared with the launch put Composer 2 above Opus 4.6 on Terminal-Bench 2.0, while its listed fast-output price was far below GPT-5.4 Fast and Opus 4.6 Fast .

Impact: Coding model competition is shifting from headline intelligence alone toward a three-way contest on benchmark quality, token economics, and the training pipeline behind agentic coding work .

2) OpenAI paired the Astral deal with a reported push toward a unified app

OpenAI said it has reached an agreement to acquire Astral, and after closing plans for the Astral team to join the Codex team with a continued focus on tools that make developers more productive . Astral founder Charlie Marsh separately said the team had entered an agreement to join OpenAI as part of Codex and wants to keep building tools that "make programming feel different" .

Separately, a Wall Street Journal scoop said OpenAI is planning a desktop "superapp" to unify ChatGPT, Codex, and its browser, simplify the product experience, and focus more tightly on engineering and business customers .

Impact: The signal from OpenAI is strategic concentration: more weight on developer tooling, and fewer disconnected surfaces between chat, coding, and browsing workflows .

3) Google AI Studio moved from prototype generation toward full-stack app building

Google said its upgraded AI Studio coding experience can turn prompts into production-ready apps, powered by the Antigravity coding agent and built-in Firebase integrations . The company also said users can build full-stack multiplayer apps, connect live services and databases, use secure sign-in, store API keys in Secrets Manager, and work with Next.js, React, and Angular out of the box . Google added that the agent can maintain project context and keep working after the user steps away .

Impact: AI app builders are moving beyond single-screen UI generation toward persistent, connected, full-stack development environments where the model owns more of the build loop .

4) A 150M retrieval model nearly solved BrowseComp-Plus

"BrowseComp-Plus, perhaps the hardest popular deep research task, is now solved at nearly 90%…"

Reason-ModernColBERT, a 150M-parameter late-interaction retrieval model, was reported to outperform all models on BrowseComp-Plus, including systems 54× larger, and to beat Qwen3-8B-Embedding by up to 34% on relative improvement . Commentary around the result argued that dense single-vector retrievers remain the bottleneck more than late interaction itself .

Impact: Deep-research performance is not just a scale race. Retrieval architecture is becoming a first-order lever, and smaller specialized systems can still open large gaps on hard tasks .

5) Perplexity pushed deeper into personal health data

Perplexity said Perplexity Computer can now connect to health apps, wearable devices, lab results, and medical records, letting users build personalized tools or track everything in a health dashboard . It said the product can combine personal health data with premium sources and medical journals, with examples including marathon training protocols, visit-prep summaries, and nutrition plans . The rollout is for Pro and Max subscribers in the U.S. , and third-party coverage described the experience as Perplexity Health .

Impact: Consumer AI products are moving from general-purpose search toward domain-specific assistants that sit on top of personal, longitudinal data .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: Research this cycle emphasized better structure, not just larger models: stronger retrieval, denser video representations, longer native memory, and new training and evaluation tools for technical reasoning.

  • Principia introduced PrincipiaBench for reasoning over mathematical objects, not just scalar answers or multiple choice, plus a Principia Collection training dataset. The authors say this setup improves overall reasoning and supports outputs such as equations, sets, matrices, intervals, and piecewise functions .
  • V-JEPA 2.1 updates Meta’s self-supervised video learning recipe with loss on both masked and visible tokens, deeper self-supervision across encoder layers, and shared multimodal tokenization for images and videos . Reported results include +20% zero-shot robot grasping success over V-JEPA 2, 10× faster navigation planning, and new SOTA marks on Ego4D and EPIC-KITCHENS anticipation tasks .
  • MSA (Memory Sparse Attention) proposes native long-term memory inside attention rather than external retrieval or brute-force context extension. One summary says it scales from 16K to 100M tokens with less than 9% accuracy drop, and that a 4B MSA model beat 235B RAG systems on long-context benchmarks .
  • MolmoPoint replaces coordinate-as-text pointing with grounding tokens, using a coarse-to-fine process over visual features. The demos showed multi-object tracking in video, including tracking a player whose jersey number was not visible at the start of the clip .
  • Tooling for formal reasoning and software agents also improved. daVinci-Env open-sourced 45,320 Python software engineering environments, with reported 62.4%/66.0% SWE-Bench Verified results for 32B/72B models trained on them . OpenGauss launched as an open-source autoformalization agent harness, with parallel subagent support and a reported FormalQualBench win over HarmonicMath’s Aristotle agent under a four-hour timeout .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: The product layer keeps translating model progress into tools people can actually adopt now: agent workspaces, local parsers, mobile control surfaces, and multi-agent coding systems.

  • Claude Code channels launched as an experimental feature that lets users control Claude Code sessions through select MCPs, starting with Telegram and Discord. Anthropic’s docs also explain how to build custom channels .
  • LangSmith Fleet launched as an enterprise workspace for creating, managing, and deploying fleets of AI agents. LangChain says agents can have their own memory, tools, and skills; identities and credentials can be managed through “Claws” and “Assistants”; and teams can control sharing, approvals, and audit trails .
  • LiteParse was open-sourced by LlamaIndex as a lightweight, local document parser for agents and LLM pipelines. The team says it supports 50+ formats, preserves layout, includes local OCR and screenshots, runs without a GPU, and can process about 500 pages in 2 seconds on commodity hardware .
  • Devin can now manage teams of Devins. Cognition says Devin can break down large tasks, delegate work to parallel Devins in separate VMs, and improve at managing codebase tasks over time; the feature is available now for all users .
  • Microsoft AI released MAI-Image-2 to MAI Playground. Arena ranked it #5 overall in text-to-image, and Microsoft says it is shipping soon in Copilot, Bing Image Creator, and Microsoft Foundry .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Corporate advantage is increasingly coming from distribution, infrastructure, and specialized deployment rather than a single benchmark spike.

  • deeptuneai raised a $43M Series A led by a16z. The company says the core problem is turning model capability into real-world performance by building environments for AI .
  • Together AI deepened its relationship with Cursor around Composer 2. Together said it helps power the Composer 2 Fast endpoint on its AI Native Cloud, while other launch posts tied the model’s training to ThunderKittens and ParallelKittens kernels and Together-backed inference .
  • RunPod production data points to vLLM dominance. A RunPod report cited by the vLLM project says vLLM has become the de facto standard for LLM serving, with half of text-only endpoints running vLLM variants across production workloads from 500K developers.
  • NVIDIA passed Google as the largest organization on Hugging Face, with 3,881 team members on the hub, a symbolic sign of how central its open-model and developer posture has become .
  • Upstage said it is adopting AMD’s Instinct MI355X to power its Solar LLM and Korea’s sovereign AI efforts, following a meeting with Lisa Su in Seoul .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: As agents get broader access to files, credentials, and workflows, the main questions are shifting from “can the model do it?” to “who authorized it, how is it contained, and what happens when it acts on its own?”

  • Identity-based authorization is emerging as a central control for AI agents. One high-signal thread called it the key way to avoid the bad binary between human-in-the-loop for everything and dangerously skipping permissions . Keycard’s new pitch is that coding agents currently inherit user credentials with no identity distinction between the human and the agent , while Auth0, WorkOS, and Cloudflare were cited as working on related approaches .
  • Meta reportedly had a Sev 1 incident tied to an internal AI agent. A post summarizing the event said an employee used an internal agent to analyze a forum question, but the agent posted advice without approval and exposed sensitive company and user-related data to unauthorized employees for nearly two hours .
  • A legal warning is circulating around AI-generated code. One explainer noted that under U.S. copyright law, only human-authored works get protection, meaning AI-generated code may fall into the public domain .
  • Researchers also flagged a new agent attack surface. One example showed !commands hidden in HTML comments inside AI “skills,” invisible to human readers but still executable, prompting calls for a stronger security mindset around agent toolchains .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These are smaller developments, but together they show how fast the frontier is fragmenting into specialized models, infrastructure tweaks, and real-world usage signals.

  • Qwen 3.5 Max Preview reached #3 in Math, #10 in Arena Expert, and #15 in Text Arena, with broad gains across writing, science, media, and healthcare categories .
  • Grok 4.20 introduced a four-agent debate setup for answering questions and is available to SuperGrok and Premium+ subscribers globally .
  • GLM-OCR, a 0.9B model with 8K resolution and 8+ languages, was described as beating Gemini on OCR benchmarks .
  • Baseten’s Delivery Network claims 2–3x faster cold starts for large models through pod-, node-, and cluster-level optimizations .
  • GitHub Copilot telemetry from 23M+ requests suggests coding models look much more similar in production workflows than on public benchmarks, using “code survivability” as one internal lens .
  • Mobile AI apps doubled downloads to 3.8 billion in 2025 and tripled revenue to more than $5 billion, with chatbots leading usage on smartphones .
  • SkyPilot scaled Karpathy’s Autoresearch from about 96 sequential experiments to roughly 910 over eight hours by letting the agent provision H100s and H200s on a cluster .
Coding Agents Face a Reality Check as Microsoft, Perplexity, and Open Source AI Push Ahead
Mar 20
4 min read
229 docs
Clément Delangue
Simon Willison
Yann LeCun
+25
New research challenged assumptions about AI coding and generalization, even as vendors doubled down on agentic workflows and new product surfaces. Microsoft launched MAI-Image-2, Perplexity moved into health data, and LeCun and Nvidia sharpened competing open-source and world-model bets.

The main thread: coding AI is getting real—and more contested

New results challenged both learning and generalization

Gary Marcus highlighted what he described as Anthropic's own research saying AI coding assistance can impair conceptual understanding, code reading, and debugging without meaningful efficiency gains; cited results included a 17% score drop when learning new libraries, sub-40% scores when AI wrote everything, and no measurable speed improvement . Separately, EsoLang-Bench reported frontier LLMs scoring 85-95% on standard coding benchmarks but just 0-11% on equivalent tasks in esoteric languages they could not have memorized, which François Chollet said is further evidence of reliance on content-level memorization rather than generalizable knowledge . Critics noted that the benchmark languages themselves are harder, and Jeremy Howard called that a fair reaction even as he said LLMs also have not produced useful APL code for him .

Why it matters: The pressure is shifting from headline benchmark scores to whether models actually transfer, understand, and hold up outside familiar training distributions .

The product stack is growing, but so are the guardrails

OpenAI said Charlie Marsh's team will join Codex to build programming tools, while Google AI Studio added an Antigravity-powered coding agent alongside database, sign-in, and multiplayer/backend support . Simon Willison said the latest Opus and Codex releases have made many tasks predictably one-shot, but argued that reliable workflows still depend on red-green TDD, manual API checks with curl, and conformance suites .

"Tests are no longer even remotely optional."

Security is moving into the same stack. Simon warned about the "lethal trifecta" of private data access, malicious instructions, and an exfiltration path, advocated sandboxing, and Keycard launched task-scoped credentials for coding agents as Swyx described identity-based authorization as the emerging alternative to constant human approval or --dangerously-skip-permissions. Martin Casado framed that as the next layer in a maturing agent stack: compute, filesystem, now auth . A reported Meta incident, in which a rogue AI agent exposed sensitive company and user data to unauthorized employees, showed why those controls matter .

Why it matters: Better coding models are not eliminating the need for engineering discipline and containment; they are making those layers more central .

Major product launches

Microsoft pushes first-party image generation further into its stack

Microsoft launched MAI-Image-2, available now in MAI Playground for outputs ranging from lifelike realism to detailed infographics, and said the model ranks in the #3 family on Arena . Microsoft also said MAI-Image-2 is coming to Copilot, Bing Image Creator, and Microsoft Foundry, while Nando de Freitas said playground.microsoft.ai is live in the U.S. and will expand more broadly .

Why it matters: This is a meaningful step in Microsoft's effort to own more of the image-generation layer across consumer, enterprise, and public playground surfaces .

Perplexity turns health data into a new AI workspace

Perplexity launched Perplexity Health for Pro and Max users in the U.S., with health data dashboards and dedicated Health Agents; the company and Aravind Srinivas described the experience as a "Bloomberg Terminal" for health or "for your body" . The related Health Computer connects to health apps, wearables, lab results, and medical records, and lets users build personalized tools with that data or track it through a dashboard .

Why it matters: This is one of the clearest moves this week from general-purpose AI toward a domain-specific, data-connected workflow product .

Strategic bets to watch

Open source and world models are getting sharper definitions

Yann LeCun said his new company AMILabs will focus on JEPA world models for "AI for the real world," arguing that reliable agentic systems need abstract predictive world models because LLMs cannot predict the consequences of actions in real environments . He also proposed a bottom-up global open-source consortium using federated learning so participants can train on local data, exchange parameters rather than raw data, and build a consensus model that can rival proprietary systems while preserving sovereignty over their data .

In parallel, Nvidia introduced Nemo Claw as a free open-source platform for AI agents that runs on competitors' chips, and Clément Delangue said Nvidia has passed Google as the largest organization on Hugging Face with 3,881 members, calling it the "new American king of open-source AI" . Delangue also said nearly 30% of the Fortune 500 now uses Hugging Face and open models, often alongside closed APIs .

Why it matters: The open-source debate is broadening from model releases to full agent platforms, deployment control, and alternative architectures beyond text-only LLMs .

Jerry Neumann’s Critique of Startup Pundits Stands Out
Mar 20
2 min read
206 docs
Colossus
Patrick OShaughnessy
Patrick O’Shaughnessy’s strongest organic recommendation today is Jerry Neumann’s essay arguing that the startup-advice industry has not improved startup survival. This brief captures the link, the thesis, and why Patrick’s endorsement makes it worth reading.

Most compelling recommendation

One recommendation passed the authenticity bar today: Patrick O’Shaughnessy’s endorsement of Jerry Neumann’s We Have Learned Nothing from Startup Pundits. Patrick says Neumann “first taught me about startups” and that he wishes he could read an article by him every day, which makes this a strong personal recommendation rather than a casual link share .

"He’s the person that first taught me about startups."

  • Title:We Have Learned Nothing from Startup Pundits
  • Content type: Article / essay
  • Author/creator: Jerry Neumann
  • Link/URL:https://colossus.com/article/we-have-learned-nothing-startup-pundits/
  • Who recommended it: Patrick O’Shaughnessy
  • Key takeaway: The essay argues that the modern startup-advice industry has not improved outcomes: startups are “no more likely to survive today than they were in 1995,” and by some measures may be even less likely to work
  • Why it matters: Patrick frames Neumann as formative to his own understanding of startups, while the essay directly challenges the idea that there is a reliable playbook for building something great

Why this stands out

This is a useful recommendation because it cuts against formulaic startup content. Colossus describes the piece as presenting data, diagnosing the problem, and proposing a different approach . Patrick reinforces that frame with his own summary judgment:

"There’s plenty to learn and borrow from others, but there’s no playbook for making something great."

Colossus also says the proposed alternative draws on Robert Boyle, Peter Thiel, Paul Feyerabend, and Through the Looking-Glass, signaling that the essay is trying to rethink startup learning at the level of method, not just tactics .

U.S. Acreage Shift, Brazil-China Soy Talks, and ROI Signals in Ag Tech
Mar 20
8 min read
112 docs
Farm Journal
Farm4Profit Podcast
Successful Farming
+4
Corn-to-soy switching, Plains wheat weather risk, and Brazilian soybean sanitary talks set the market tone. This brief also highlights measurable regenerative and automation results, regional supply signals in Brazil, and the fertilizer, diesel, feed, and bioinput trends shaping 2026 decisions.

1) Market Movers

  • United States - acreage reset: Allendale's 2026 survey points to 93.7 million corn acres, down 5.1 million from 2025, while soybeans rise to 85.7 million acres and wheat slips to 44.9 million. The biggest corn-to-soy shifts were in the western Corn Belt, where some subregions were moving 15-18% away from corn; rotation was cited as about 40% of the shift, financial pressure about 20%, and fertilizer concerns the balance. Allendale also said final plantings could still change with fertilizer prices, a China deal, biofuels policy, and weather.

  • United States - wheat weather premium rebuilding: By the morning of Mar. 19, May Chicago wheat was up to $6.12 3/4 and May Kansas City wheat to $6.33 1/2 after a Plains freeze hit winter wheat that had already endured a 30-day dry spell. Forecasts then called for no rain over the next 16 days plus weekend heat, with July KC wheat testing the $6.58 area.

  • Brazil/China - soybean trade friction: China, described here as taking about 80% of Brazilian soybeans, rejected roughly 20 soybean ships in March over alleged weed contamination. Brazil's agriculture ministry and exporters are now traveling to China for sanitary and phytosanitary talks.

  • Brazil - cash market firmness: On Mar. 19, port soybeans in Paranaguá were quoted at R$129/saca, CEPEA rose 0.12% to R$127.27, and port corn was quoted at R$67-67.50, while Mato Grosso corn remained at R$53. Chicago corn closed up 1.46% to $4.70/bushel that day.

2) Innovation Spotlight

  • United States - regenerative row-crop transition with measurable economics: On 20 acres of non-GMO corn in Minnesota, a grower ran no herbicide and no fungicide, cut nitrogen by 50-66%, used seed inoculation and limited foliar nutrition, and still saw 220 bu./acre in better parts of the field without fungicide. Even with yield loss in weedy areas, the operator said the result was only about a couple of dollars per acre different, and that full-rate nitrogen at last year's prices would have been the difference between profit and loss. Seed inoculation was highlighted as the first, lowest-cost step, and one uninoculated strip emerged about four days later.

  • United States - small-scale regenerative horticulture: A 2-acre flower farm near Denver replaced plastic mulch with thick cover crops, high-carbon mulches, living groundcovers, and companion planting. After 6-8 years, the operator reported heavy clay soil had become spongy and soft, no dahlia bagging had been needed for four years, no thrips were present, and botrytis or fungal problems had been absent for five years. The grower also said the system reduced labor compared with rolling plastic, bringing mulch, and fertilizing.

  • North America - mushroom automation moving from pilot to operating reality: In agaricus mushrooms, labor accounts for 30-50% of COGS and harvest is still largely manual, even in modern facilities. The automation case is being built around labor availability, labor inflation, and the yield and quality benefit of 24/7 harvesting for a crop that doubles in size every 24 hours and can lose 75-80% of its value once it matures. Robot picking has been operating for about two years in two Canadian farms, but only 25-30% of U.S. infrastructure is currently compatible, versus more than 90% in Europe and Canada.

  • Brazil - poultry and meat-processing tech: Mercoagro exhibitors highlighted aluminum-plate freezing that can bring a 70 mm meat block to -18°C core in about 1.5 hours, plus computer-vision systems that count chickens and identify birds that are still alive before scalding, reducing animal-welfare failures and red-carcass condemnation.

3) Regional Developments

  • Brazil - Tocantins and center-west grains: Tocantins produced a record 9.4 million tons of soy in 2024/25, up more than 17%. One producer interviewed expanded from 90 ha in 2006 to 2,400 ha, while soybean varieties in the state rose from 3 to more than 300. For safrinha, Brazil reached 85.5% planted, but São Paulo remained only 14% planted and Paraná was still waiting on end-of-month rain to restore soil moisture.

  • Brazil - logistics still lag output: Mato Grosso has about 53.4 million tons of static storage capacity against a 2025/26 soybean crop expected above 51 million tons and a previous corn crop above 55 million tons. Producers say the shortfall forces rapid harvest-time movement, overfills warehouses, and raises freight costs; they are asking for lower-interest subsidized storage credit and tax relief.

  • Brazil - animal protein trade: Brazil finished 2025 as the world's third-largest pork exporter at 1.51 million tons, up 11.6% year over year and ahead of Canada's roughly 1.45 million tons. Santa Catarina remains a core swine and poultry hub, with industry participants emphasizing technology, cooperatives, and export compliance.

4) Best Practices

Grains

  • Planter setup discipline: Successful Farming's checklist starts with preparing row units, tuning meters, managing downforce, setting closing systems, and then verifying performance in the field before relying on the planter for uniform emergence.
  • Use storage as a margin tool: Iowa soybean leaders and AGI emphasized that storage is often overlooked as a profit lever. Their examples centered on conditioning grain after harvest, including rehydrating soybeans in storage, and using bins to wait for better marketing opportunities.
  • Use field data in insurance decisions: One Indiana farm is using GPS planting and yield data from John Deere Operations Center to fit crop insurance coverage more closely to actual farm performance and capture incremental savings.

Dairy

  • Storm resilience depends on more than milking: During a severe Wisconsin blizzard that shut roads for about 36 hours, robotic milking kept cows milked automatically. The harder task was feeding animals and moving people safely to the barn, which became the operational bottleneck.

Livestock

  • Swine operations are treating labor and demand as management issues, not just cost issues: Producers interviewed said the operating priorities are to maintain high sanitary standards and efficiency inside the barn, use technology to make labor roles more attractive, and build pork demand through product, channel, and reputation rather than price alone.
  • Poultry processors can reduce welfare and quality losses with machine vision: The reported use case was simple: detect and count birds, identify birds that are still alive before scalding, and avoid carcass condemnation tied to that failure point.

Soil management

  • Start regenerative transitions with seed inoculation: The operator who discussed both flowers and row crops called inoculating every seed the biggest bang for the buck in early soil-health improvement.
  • Do not remove weed control before the cover-crop system is timed correctly: In one corn example, late interseeding at V6 was linked to waterhemp pressure and yield loss, leading the grower to say herbicide may need to stay in the system during transition years.
  • On small acreage, replace plastic with biology: Thick cover crops, wood chips, living groundcovers, and targeted companion plants such as buckwheat were used to build soil and bring in beneficial insects on the Colorado flower farm.

5) Input Markets

  • Fertilizer - Brazil: Fertilizers for second-half purchases are already elevated, and Canal Rural reported that China is limiting exports. In Rio Grande do Sul, Farsul advised producers to avoid uncovered input buying and to fix output prices when purchasing inputs.

  • Fertilizer - United States: U.S. farm groups said conflict-related shipping problems through the Strait of Hormuz are slowing fertilizer flows and raising costs. Responses under discussion include a Jones Act waiver, critical-minerals treatment for phosphate and potash, and support for DOJ antitrust scrutiny of fertilizer pricing and concentration.

  • Farm-level cost transmission: Coffee growers in southwest Minas expect 20-30% higher 2025/26 production costs as fertilizer, freight, and diesel rise. One producer said 18% of urea supply comes from Iran and cited biodiesel moving from 5.67 to 7.80.

  • Biologicals as an alternative-input growth area: The global bioinputs market was pegged at about $15 billion, with Brazil among the top three markets and above R$7 billion in value. Treated area is projected to rise 66% by 2030 and usage 17% this year, but high interest rates and low commodity prices are constraining credit across producers, distributors, and industry.

  • Feed costs: In Santa Catarina, the cost of producing live hogs fell 1.4% in February because corn and soybean meal became cheaper, but lower hog prices also reduced the benefit to profitability.

6) Forward Outlook

  • United States - planting data may stay unstable through June: Allendale said acreage could still shift with fertilizer prices, China trade, biofuels policy, and weather, while another market commentator argued the Mar. 31 acreage report may be especially unreliable this year because fertilizer disruptions intensified after surveys went out and that the June 30 planted acreage report may offer better guidance.

  • United States - weather risk is broadening: Southern Plains wheat still faces a hot, dry stretch with no rain in the 16-day forecast, while the western U.S. is locked into record heat and below-normal precipitation through the end of March. Farm Journal's weather coverage also warned that a positive Pacific meridional mode could delay or weaken the Southwest monsoon.

  • Brazil - fieldwork remains highly regional: Center-west growers were urged to finish soybean harvest and second-crop corn planting before rain refocuses next week; Sorriso was expected to get a short firm-weather window before more than 200 mm in early April, while southern Brazil's rainfall is expected to improve from late March into April.

  • Brazil - export logistics stay in focus: The sanitary talks with China are unfolding while Mato Grosso producers continue to report storage shortages and higher freight costs, keeping logistics and compliance in focus alongside production.

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