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Stateful agent runs (WebSockets), Codex on Windows, and skills-driven harnesses
Mar 5
6 min read
110 docs
Cursor
Peter Steinberger
Boris Cherny
+12
A dense brief on what’s actually moving the needle for coding agents: OpenAI’s WebSockets approach to cut tool-call overhead, Codex’s new Windows app + sandboxing, and the growing “skills + traces + evals” ecosystem that turns agents into repeatable workflows. Plus: production patterns from Anthropic’s Claude Code and hard-earned PR hygiene rules for agent-generated code.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

OpenAI’s new WebSockets API for agentic runs is a real infrastructure unlock: keep a persistent connection to the same server so you can send only new inputs (e.g., tool results) instead of resending the entire conversation history on every tool call. Theo estimates this cuts bandwidth by 90%+ and improves speed by 20–30% (and 20–40% on runs with 20+ tool calls) .

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • OpenAI — WebSockets for tool-call-heavy agents

    • Why it matters: in the typical stateless flow, every tool completion triggers a new API call that resends all prior messages/tool calls so the model can continue .
    • WebSockets are positioned as a “hit the same box” guarantee, so you don’t keep re-checking auth / reloading state / reshipping context during a single long generation .
    • Practical caveat: Theo says the benefit is not huge for typical chat, but is big when one user message spawns hundreds of tool calls.
  • OpenAI Codex app — now on Windows (native + WSL)

    • Available on Windows with a native agent sandbox and PowerShell support .
    • Runs natively and in WSL with integrated terminals (PowerShell, Command Prompt, Git Bash, WSL) .
    • Sandbox controls: blocks filesystem writes outside your working folder and blocks outbound network access unless you explicitly approve it .
    • Adds 2 Windows skills (WinUI + ASP.NET) and 7 new “Open in …” apps.
    • Download: https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9plm9xgg6vks?hl=en-US&gl=US
  • Codex (Plus/Pro) — rate-limit promo bug fixed

    • OpenAI fixed an issue where the 2× promotional limit increase wasn’t applied to an estimated 9% of Plus/Pro users; they reset rate limits for all Plus/Pro as compensation .
  • Cursor — now in JetBrains via Agent Client Protocol

  • LangChain — “skills” packages for coding agents (progressive disclosure)

    • LangChain skills: 11 skills across LangChain/LangGraph/Deep Agents, intended to be dynamically loaded only when relevant to avoid tool overload degrading performance .
    • Claimed eval bump for Claude Code on LangChain ecosystem tasks: 29% → 95%. Repo: https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain-skills
  • LangChain — LangSmith CLI + Skills

    • LangSmith CLI is described as “agent-native” for traces/datasets/experiments, designed to be used through the terminal .
    • Claimed eval bump for Claude Code (Sonnet 4.6) on LangSmith tasks: 17% → 92%.
    • CLI repo: https://github.com/langchain-ai/langsmith-cli
  • Codex 5.3 (xhigh) — notable model-level win vs Opus 4.6 (anecdote)

    • Mitchell Hashimoto reports Codex 5.3 (xhigh) fixed a bug that had resisted engineers for 6 months in 45 minutes for $4.14; he notes Opus 4.6 failed and lower Codex reasoning levels failed .
    • He says a key difference was Codex (xhigh) eventually read GTK4 source code, which other runs didn’t do .
  • Qwen 3.5 — open-weight model family (practitioner testing signal)

    • Simon Willison notes Qwen 3.5 shipped a large model (397B-A17B) plus smaller siblings down to 0.8B .
    • He reports positive results for coding from 27B/35B, and that 9B/4B/2B were “notably effective” given size .

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Run parallel “plan mode” tabs, then let the agent one-shot implementation (Anthropic / Claude Code)

    • Boris Cherny describes a workflow of running multiple Claude Code instances in parallel: start in plan mode, iterate to get the plan right, then let it implement (often “one shot”) .
    • He also leans on desktop app worktree support for environment isolation so parallel agents don’t interfere .
  • Make the agent test itself (and still keep a human approval gate)

    • Boris says Claude Code will often run tests locally and may write new tests; when they change Claude Code internally, it will even launch itself as a subprocess to test end-to-end .
    • Anthropic runs Claude Code review in CI as a first-pass reviewer, catching “maybe ~80% of bugs,” followed by a human reviewer and final human approval .
  • Cheap-but-effective codebase search: “glob + grep” beats fancy setups (per Boris)

    • Boris says their “Agentix Search” outperformed everything, and clarifies it’s basically glob and grep.
  • Use uncorrelated context windows + subagents as “test-time compute” (Agent Teams / swarms)

    • Boris explains “uncorrelated context windows” as multiple fresh contexts that don’t share the parent window (beyond the prompt), and says throwing more tokens at uncorrelated windows can yield better results—calling it a form of test-time compute.
    • Their Agent Teams release is opt-in / research preview because it uses “a ton of tokens,” and is intended for complex tasks.
  • Skills as procedural memory: keep the base prompt smaller, load expertise only when needed

    • LangChain frames skills as curated instructions/scripts/resources that are dynamically loaded through progressive disclosure (retrieve only when relevant) .
    • Their LangSmith “virtuous loop” is explicitly: add tracing → generate traces → build datasets → run evaluators → iterate based on evals + human feedback .
  • Prompting pattern: force the model to surface missing assumptions

    • Peter Steinberger treats agent use as a conversation and repeatedly asks: “Do you have any questions?” to avoid the model charging ahead with default assumptions .
    • His warning: the “agentic trap” is spending time over-optimizing your setup—it can feel productive without improving output .
  • PR hygiene: don’t dump unreviewed agent code on teammates

    • Simon Willison’s anti-pattern: opening PRs with hundreds/thousands of agent-generated lines you haven’t reviewed is delegating the real work to reviewers .
    • What “good” looks like: ensure it works (and you’re confident), keep changes reviewable (multiple small PRs), include context/links, and review the agent-written PR description too.
    • Add evidence you tested it (notes/screenshots/video) to avoid wasting reviewer time .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Theo (t3.gg) — consistently strong at turning infra changes into concrete agent cost/perf implications (his WebSockets breakdown is the clearest “why now” explainer) .
  • Boris Cherny (Anthropic / Claude Code) — high-signal production details: he claims Claude Code writes ~80% of Anthropic’s code, and describes CI review + self-testing patterns that keep velocity safe .
  • Mitchell Hashimoto — practical model comparison under real pressure: a 6‑month bug solved by Codex 5.3 (xhigh) where other settings and Opus 4.6 failed .
  • Simon Willison — the anti-pattern chapter is “social scalability” for agentic coding: ship reviewable, evidenced PRs, not agent slop .
  • Kent C. Dodds — clear framing that “pit of success” needs to be adapted for agents; he claims agents have “inhuman abilities” to understand code .

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

1) WebSockets: why stateless tool loops spam full-context payloads (Theo, ~04:33–08:29)

Hook: a crisp mental model for why every tool call resends the entire history—and why caching doesn’t fix bandwidth.

2) Agent Teams + “uncorrelated context windows” as test-time compute (Boris Cherny, ~1:15:31–1:18:00)

Hook: a practical explanation of why multiple fresh context windows + subagents can outperform “more tokens in one window,” and why Teams is opt-in (token cost).

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS


Editorial take: Today’s theme is harness > model: stateful sessions (WebSockets), skills-as-procedural-memory, and reviewable evidence are what turn “agent potential” into repeatable throughput.

GPT-5.4 “extreme reasoning” rumors, Knuth’s Claude paper, and accelerating agent-native software workflows
Mar 5
11 min read
819 docs
Ara Kharazian
马东锡 NLP
Qwen
+54
GPT-5.4 is widely rumored to be close, with reports of a 1M-token context window and a new “extreme reasoning” mode. Also: Donald Knuth publishes “Claude’s Cycles” after Claude Opus 4.6 helps resolve an open problem, and agent tooling accelerates (Codex on Windows, Symphony orchestration, and large enterprise deployments).

Top Stories

1) OpenAI’s GPT-5.4 signals a push toward long-horizon “reasoning modes” + 1M context

Why it matters: If these claims hold, GPT-5.4’s combination of very long context and an “extreme reasoning” setting points to models designed to run hours-long workflows and agent loops, not just chat completion.

What’s being reported:

  • GPT-5.4 is expected to ship with an “extreme” reasoning mode, described as using more compute for deeper thinking .
  • Multiple posts cite a ~1M token context window (reported as up from 400K in GPT-5.2) .
  • The Information-linked summaries describe better long-horizon tasks, improved memory across multi-step workflows, and use for scientific/complex problems .
  • Observers report GPT-5.4 has “landed on the Arena”, with uncertainty about which variant is live . Some posts suggest a release is “very likely” Thursday , while another claims it’s “confirmed for today” .

Source links shared via X posts:

2) Donald Knuth credits Claude Opus 4.6 with solving an open problem—then formalizes the proof

Why it matters: This is a concrete example (from a highly respected computer scientist) of an LLM contributing to new mathematical progress—paired with a human-written formal proof.

  • Donald Knuth published a paper titled “Claude’s Cycles” after Claude Opus 4.6 solved an open graph decomposition conjecture he’d been working on for weeks .
  • Knuth describes 31 explorations taking ~1 hour, after which he read the output, wrote the formal proof, and concluded: “It seems I’ll have to revise my opinions about generative AI one of these days.”
  • Another post summarizes Knuth saying Claude Opus 4.6 cracked a long-standing Hamiltonian-cycle conjecture for all odd sizes, calling it “a joy” to see solved .

Paper link (as shared): https://cs.stanford.edu/~knuth/papers/claude-cycles.pdf

3) AI and national security: claims of operational use + procurement controversy intensify

Why it matters: This is the part of the AI landscape where model capability, governance, and accountability collide—often with limited public visibility.

  • The Washington Post reports that to strike 1,000 targets in 24 hours in Iran, the U.S. military used its “most advanced AI” in warfare: Anthropic’s Claude partnered with the military’s Maven Smart System, suggesting targets and issuing precise location coordinates .
  • AI ethicist @mmitchell_ai reacted:

“People are being killed based (in part) on LLM outputs… Are there people being saved based on LLM outputs?”

  • Separately, multiple posts describe a memo attributed to Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei calling OpenAI’s Pentagon/DoD deal “safety theater” and expressing skepticism about OpenAI’s safeguards .
  • One thread claims the memo describes Palantir pitching a “classifier” approach for red-line violations and characterizes monitoring as “maybe 20% real and 80% safety theater,” with Anthropic rejecting and OpenAI accepting the package .
  • The Financial Times is cited by multiple accounts as saying Anthropic leadership is back in talks with the Pentagon about an AI deal .
  • A separate post says the U.S. State Department is switching its ‘StateChat’ from Claude to GPT 4.1.

4) Software shifts further toward “agent-native” development: Windows sandboxes + ticket orchestration + enterprise rollouts

Why it matters: Tooling is moving from “assistive coding” to operational systems that can run tasks, manage environments, and integrate into enterprise workflows.

  • Codex app on Windows: OpenAI announced the Codex app is now on Windows with a Windows-native agent sandbox and support for Windows developer environments in PowerShell. The sandbox uses OS-level controls (restricted tokens, filesystem ACLs, dedicated sandbox users) for safer execution , and OpenAI provides an open-source implementation: https://github.com/openai/codex/tree/main/codex-rs/windows-sandbox-rs.
  • A separate post highlights that the Windows sandbox is fully open source and encourages users to fork/build on it .
  • OpenAI Symphony (orchestration): described as an orchestration layer that polls project boards and spawns agents for each ticket lifecycle stage . A deeper walkthrough claims it can pull real Linear issues, create fresh workspaces per issue, and keep Codex running until tasks are done .
  • Enterprise deployment: Factory says it is partnering with EY to enable more than 10,000 engineers to ship production-grade software with autonomous agents (“Droids”) . Factory positions this as one of the largest enterprise deployments of autonomous dev agents to date , with EY reportedly throttling traffic due to rapid adoption .

5) DoubleAI claims “autonomous expert” gains in GPU kernel engineering (cuGraph)

Why it matters: GPU kernel optimization is typically a scarce-expertise domain; progress here can compound across the AI stack by improving the performance ceiling of widely used libraries.

  • DoubleAI’s WarpSpeed is claimed to have autonomously rewritten and re-optimized kernels in cuGraph across A100, L4, and A10G.
  • Reported results: 3.6× average speedup, 100% of kernels improved, and 55% seeing >2× improvement . The hyper-optimized version is released on GitHub as a drop-in replacement (no code changes required) .
  • The authors frame the work as requiring new algorithmic ideas (Diligent framework, PAC-reasoning, agentic search) for domains with scarce data, hard validation, and long decision chains .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: Several releases this cycle target the “hard middle” of AI progress: inference efficiency, multimodal training without brittle dependencies, and agent reliability (memory, evaluation, and proactive interaction).

Multimodal training: Self-Flow (Black Forest Labs)

  • Black Forest Labs previewed Self-Flow, a scalable approach for end-to-end multimodal generative training across image, video, audio, text using self-supervised flow matching (without relying on external pretrained representation models) .
  • Reported results include up to 2.8× faster convergence across modalities, improved temporal consistency in video, and sharper text rendering/typography . BFL frames it as foundational for multimodal visual intelligence .
  • Additional details shared: it combines per-timestep flow matching with dual-timestep representation learning and is presented as outperforming prior methods with promising scaling behavior .
  • Resources: https://bfl.ai/research/self-flow and code at https://github.com/black-forest-labs/Self-Flow.

Teaching models to update beliefs: “reason like Bayesians” (Google Research)

  • Google Research introduced a method to teach LLMs to “reason like Bayesians” by training them to mimic optimal probabilistic inference, improving their ability to update predictions and generalize across new domains.
  • An example task described is a flight recommendation assistant that receives user feedback each round on whether it chose correctly and what the correct answer was .

Faster inference: Speculative Speculative Decoding (Together AI)

  • Together AI researchers announced Speculative Speculative Decoding (SSD), an inference algorithm reported as up to 2× faster than the strongest inference engines .
  • A collaborator notes it applies “asynchronous machine” principles familiar from GPU kernels to speculative decoding .

Agent memory: retrieval beats “fancy writing”

  • New research introduces a diagnostic framework separating retrieval failures from utilization failures in agent memory systems .
  • Core claim: retrieval approach matters far more than writing strategy—accuracy varies ~20 percentage points across retrieval methods vs 3–8 points across writing strategies .
  • Simple raw chunking is reported to match or outperform more expensive alternatives like Mem0-style fact extraction or MemGPT-style summarization .
  • Paper link: https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.02473.

Proactive agents with implicit human state: NeuroSkill (MIT)

  • NeuroSkill is presented as a real-time agentic system integrating Brain-Computer Interface signals with foundation models to model human cognitive/emotional state, running fully offline on the edge.
  • Its NeuroLoop harness is described as enabling proactive workflows that respond to both explicit and implicit requests through tool calls .
  • Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03212.

Biology: open biological models + whole-tissue recording approaches

  • The Arc Institute announced Evo 2, described as the largest fully open biological AI model to date, published in Nature. Goodfire AI says it used interpretability tools to discover “numerous biologically relevant features” in Evo 2 .
  • A separate Nature paper summary describes GEMINI (Granularly Expanding Memory for Intracellular Narrative Integration) as a cellular recorder that encodes activity history in fluorescent “tree-ring” patterns with ~15-minute resolution . AI-based decoding tools are described as central to reading GEMINI’s output at whole-brain scale .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: The product layer is converging on agent workflows: long-running tasks, memory, multimodal generation, and “do things” interfaces (voice, browser, sandboxes).

Dev + agent tooling

  • Prism + Codex: OpenAI integrated the Codex harness into Prism (LaTeX environment) to write/compute/analyze/iterate in one place, and added version management .
  • VS Code agents: VS Code’s latest release highlights improved agent orchestration, extensibility, and continuity, including hooks, message steering/queueing, an agentic integrated browser, and shared memory . VS Code also notes it will shift from monthly to weekly shipments of main starting next week .
  • Cursor in JetBrains: Cursor is now available in JetBrains IDEs via the Agent Client Protocol .

Research + evidence workflows

Consumer/knowledge tools

  • NotebookLM Studio: introduced “Cinematic Video Overviews,” described as bespoke immersive videos from user sources, rolling out to Ultra users in English .
  • Google Search (AI Mode) Canvas: Google is making Canvas in AI Mode available to everyone in the U.S. in English; it supports multi-session planning in a side panel and adds creative writing and coding tasks .

Voice + action interfaces

  • Perplexity Computer Voice Mode: Perplexity introduced Voice Mode in Perplexity Computer so users can “just talk and do things” . The CEO framed it as “Building a kind of JARVIS” .

Generative media

  • Kling 3.0 rollout: Kling AI says Kling 3.0 / Omni / Motion Control are fully rolled out, with features like mocap-level motion control and multi-shot video generation up to 15s . A creator thread highlights improved micro-expressions and dialogue shots (a “chamber play” becoming easier) .
  • Qwen-Image-2.0: Alibaba introduced Qwen-Image-2.0 with claims including professional typography for long prompts, 2K native resolution, and unified generation/editing . Arena reports the model is in the Image Arena for comparison .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Revenue run rates, enterprise spend share, and org stability (especially in open models) increasingly determine which models and tools become “defaults” in practice.

Anthropic: growth claims + enterprise spend signals

  • Dario Amodei said Anthropic’s revenue run rate went from ~$100M two years ago to $19B now .
  • A separate post claims Anthropic is nearing a $20B annual revenue run rate, more than doubling from $9B at the end of 2025, and cites a valuation “around $380B.
  • Ramp-data commentary claims Anthropic commands the majority of U.S. business API spend and >50% of enterprise AI subscription spend (as of January), while OpenAI leads in business count .

Alibaba Qwen: leadership departures + compute tension + market reaction

  • One report says Alibaba CEO Eddie Wu held an emergency all-hands with the Qwen team, saying “I should have known about this sooner,” amid tensions on restructuring, compute allocation, and model strategy . It also cites an internal irony: external customers reportedly get smoother compute access than the internal team building Alibaba’s “most important model” .
  • A later post says Alibaba stock dropped 13.4% this week and continued falling after key Qwen leaders announced departures, with doubts about Qwen 4 remaining a frontier open-source model without them .
  • Separate commentary claims Qwen was used in 41% of 7,692 AI papers on Hugging Face in 2025–2026, and at least 30% monthly over a year (with May 2025 at 1 in 2 papers) .

Enterprise agent deployment: Factory + EY

  • Factory says its partnership with EY will enable 10,000+ engineers to ship software with autonomous agents, with adoption reportedly requiring throttling and repo restrictions .

Partnerships + funding

  • Spellbook (legal AI) raised an additional $40M (on top of $50M raised last October), and reports serving 4,000+ legal teams/law firms in 80 countries with 410 demos booked in one week .
  • Cohere x Aston Martin F1: Cohere announced a multi-year partnership; every team member gets access to Cohere’s enterprise models and agentic AI platform .

Government direction-setting

  • China’s Premier Li Qiang outlined a 2026 AI agenda including “AI+” across industries, accelerating AI agent adoption, building ultra-large compute clusters, supporting public cloud, and promoting AI open-source communities .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: Legal and governance frameworks are increasingly binding constraints on what can be deployed (and where), especially for generative outputs and government use.

  • Frontier AI safeguards: Yoshua Bengio endorsed the Human Statement and warned that frontier AI development is accelerating faster than safeguards, posing risks to democracy and society .
  • Copyright and AI authorship: A cited episode summarizes the ongoing AI/copyright debate and references Thaler v. Perlmutter as a key case in the U.S. Copyright Office’s refusal to register AI-generated works, with status noted for U.S. Supreme Court docket 25-449 (as of Feb. 25, 2026) .
  • Science funding leadership: @regardthefrost (Jim) said he was nominated by President Trump to serve as Director of the National Science Foundation, calling for rigorous, replicable science and for government to take bigger financial risks on deeper questions .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: Smaller signals often foreshadow where teams will invest next.

  • OpenAI released a new repo called Symphony: https://github.com/openai/symphony.
  • OpenAI also released a repo called Agent Plugins (no details in the shared post) .
  • BullshitBench v2 tests nonsense detection; only Claude and Qwen 3.5 are said to score meaningfully above 60%, and “think harder” reasoning variants reportedly do worse by rationalizing nonsense .
  • SWE-bench reached 1M weekly downloads, with a “big update” coming to make it easier to run and support new benchmarks built on top .
  • OpenAI deprecates SWE-Bench Verified due to contamination and flawed remaining tests, per a cited summary .
  • Together AI / SSD joins a broader inference-efficiency conversation: one researcher predicts inference compute will exceed training by decade’s end, with premiums paid for lower latency and no one-size-fits-all stack across cloud vs edge .
  • Qdrant joined Google’s Agent Development Kit integrations ecosystem for persistent semantic memory and vector search in agent workflows .
OpenClaw, “agent boxes,” and the benchmark reset signal a new phase of enterprise agents
Mar 5
5 min read
184 docs
LocalLLM
Arthur Mensch
Harrison Chase
+16
OpenAI’s reported move on OpenClaw and Box’s “every agent needs a box” framing both point to a fast-moving shift from coding agents to enterprise knowledge-work agents built around sandboxes, file systems, and observability. Meanwhile, benchmark credibility takes a hit as OpenAI deprecates SWE-Bench Verified, and new local infrastructure projects push on-device training and smaller-footprint inference forward.

Agents push deeper into “knowledge work” (and the enterprise is reorganizing around it)

OpenAI’s reported move on OpenClaw spotlights the “agent harness” race

A YouTube episode recorded “just as it’s been announced” that OpenClaw is being “accuhired or acquired” by OpenAI. In the same discussion, OpenClaw is described as a boundary-pushing agent with high autonomy and major security risk—to the point that one team “told our employees they cannot install [it] on their company laptops” .

Why it matters: the episode frames OpenClaw’s momentum as part of a broader shift toward long-running agents built on evolving “harnesses” (planning, file systems, sub-agents, skills, and code interpreters) rather than just smarter base models .

“Every agent needs a box”: file systems/sandboxes become core infrastructure

In a Latent Space conversation, Box CEO Aaron Levie argues that enterprise content (with permissions, sharing, and collaboration) becomes far more valuable when agents can continuously read and create from it, and that agents need sandboxed workspaces for doing that work . Box is cited as serving 67% of the Fortune 500 and as having record ARR exceeding $1.1B with 28% margins.

Why it matters: the “box” framing aligns with agent-harness discussions emphasizing file systems and controlled environments as the practical foundation for enterprise-grade agents.

Microsoft previews Copilot Tasks for end-to-end autonomous workflows

Satya Nadella highlighted Copilot Tasks as a preview feature that lets users assign tasks (including recurring) in “cowork mode” for end-to-end autonomous completion, then use Agent mode to refine outputs . Examples include creating/analyzing a spreadsheet in Excel and scheduling follow-on tasks , and researching a topic into a PowerPoint and iterating .

Why it matters: it’s a clear product push toward delegated work rather than chat-only assistance.

Preview: https://copilot.microsoft.com/tasks/preview

Perplexity adds Voice Mode to “Perplexity Computer”

Perplexity announced Voice Mode in Perplexity Computer, positioned as letting users “just talk and do things” . Perplexity’s CEO described the effort as “Building a kind of JARVIS” .

Why it matters: voice-first interaction is another step toward agents functioning like persistent assistants rather than text-only tools.

Evals and benchmarks: credibility resets (and “agentic” failures stay visible)

OpenAI voluntarily deprecates SWE-Bench Verified

According to a Latent Space post, OpenAI is voluntarily deprecating SWE-Bench Verified, saying new analysis found enough problems that it’s no longer worth pursuing or publicizing those numbers . Two issues are called out: contamination (frontier models can regurgitate eval data/solutions, sometimes from the Task ID alone) and bad tests (at least 60% of remaining unsolved problems “should be unsolvable” given their descriptions) .

Why it matters: it’s an unusually direct signal that a flagship benchmark can become counterproductive once saturation and leakage dominate.

Analysis link: https://latent.space/p/swe-bench-dead

A new “agentic model” cautionary tale: FoodTruckBench

A viral post summarized a test where Google’s Gemini 3 Flash—described there as Google’s “most impressive agentic model” with 89% on MMLU-Pro and 78% on SWE-bench—was given 34 tools to run a food truck but reportedly repeated “let’s go” 574 times and never ran a tool, ending in bankruptcy . Gary Marcus amplified it with a sarcastic “AI agents for the win” .

Why it matters: it’s another reminder that tool-using agent behavior can fail in ways that aren’t captured by conventional model benchmarks.

Details: https://foodtruckbench.com/blog/gemini-flash

Research + local infrastructure: on-device training and smaller-footprint acceleration

ORION: training a 110M transformer directly on the Apple Neural Engine

A /r/MachineLearning post introduces ORION, described as the first open-source end-to-end system combining direct ANE execution, a custom compiler pipeline, and stable multi-step training while bypassing CoreML limitations . The author reports training a 110M-parameter transformer on TinyStories for 1,000 steps with loss dropping from 12.29 → 6.19 and zero NaN occurrences, plus 170+ tokens/s GPT‑2 (124M) inference on an M4 Max in decode mode .

Why it matters: it’s a concrete attempt to make Apple’s on-device accelerator usable not just for inference, but for training—while documenting practical constraints like recompilation overhead for weight updates and numerous ANE programming constraints .

Repo: https://github.com/mechramc/Orion

llama.cpp: NVFP4 quantization support may be close

A /r/LocalLLM thread points to an open PR for NVFP4 support in llama.cpp GGUF, speculating it could land within hours to a week . Commenters claim NVFP4 could bring up to 2.3× speed boosts and 30–70% size savings, with the caveat that it requires Blackwell or newer GPUs.

Why it matters: if merged, this could materially change local deployment footprints for some GPU setups—especially where RAM offloading matters.

PR: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/pull/19769

Governance and sovereignty: internal accountability narratives collide with national strategy

“The OpenAI Files” recirculate—and draw high-profile reactions

A post described as a “huge repository” of information about OpenAI and Sam Altman (“The OpenAI Files”) highlighted claims including: leadership concerns attributed to senior researchers/executives , an alleged 2023 security breach that wasn’t reported for over a year , and an undisclosed change to OpenAI’s profit cap (raising it 20% annually) . Elon Musk replied “Wow” to the resurfaced thread , and Gary Marcus later posted “This clearly needs an update…” while linking back to it .

Why it matters: regardless of where readers land on the allegations, the episode shows how governance narratives keep re-entering the mainstream discourse around frontier labs.

Europe’s “AI sovereignty” case: economic, continuity, and cultural pillars

In a conversation, Mistral AI CEO Arthur Mensch lays out three pillars for AI sovereignty in Europe: economic sovereignty, business continuity for critical processes (including defense), and cultural sovereignty (reducing centralized cultural bias and supporting local languages) . He also warns that AI will be a “major source of influence” in upcoming elections and expresses concern about concentration of consumer AI .

Why it matters: it’s a clear strategic framing that links model capability directly to geopolitical dependency and continuity risk.

Quick product and industry notes

  • NotebookLM announced Cinematic Video Overviews (NotebookLM Studio), described as creating bespoke, immersive videos from user sources using a “novel combination” of advanced models, rolling out for Ultra users in English . Demis Hassabis called NotebookLM “magical” and “still super underrated” .
  • Andrew Ng announced a DeepLearning.AI short course, Build and Train an LLM with JAX, in partnership with Google, including training a 20M-parameter model and implementing a MiniGPT-style architecture with Flax/NNX . Course link: https://www.deeplearning.ai/short-courses/build-and-train-an-llm-with-jax/
  • Elon Musk said Tesla will stop Model S/X production “in a few months” to make way for an Optimus factory, urging customers to order before production stops .
AI “situational awareness,” agent-ready CLI design, and a robotics progress watchlist
Mar 5
3 min read
196 docs
Guillermo Rauch
Ivan Zhao
Reid Hoffman
+3
Today’s most high-signal picks span AI strategy, hands-on agent-ready tooling, and on-the-ground robotics progress—plus one founder’s recommendation for richly detailed, human-centered period films. The lead item is Vinod Khosla’s endorsed essay meant to sharpen “situational awareness” about the pace and impact of AI change.

Most compelling recommendation: an “AI progress is faster than businesses realize” reality check

Situational Awareness (essay) — @leopoldasch

  • Link/URL:http://situational-awareness.ai
  • Recommended by: Vinod Khosla
  • Key takeaway (as shared): Khosla says he’s “awe struck” by the pace of AI progress, expects today’s one-year-ahead expectations to “look silly,” and argues most businesses “have no clue” what’s coming as “rules of engagement will change” over the next ten years—prompting a need to rethink/transform every business . He adds he “buys” the essay’s assertion that only “a few hundred people know what is happening” .
  • Why it matters: This is a direct pointer (from an investor) to a single, named piece he treats as unusually clarifying—paired with a high-conviction claim that many organizations are underestimating what’s about to change .

I am awe struck at the rate of progress of AI on all fronts… It’s time to rethink/transform every business in the next decade.

Signal boost: Khosla later reaffirmed the recommendation with “Still true two years later” .


Other standout recommendations (practical + concrete)

“Rewrite your CLI for AI Agents” (blog post) — Justin Poehnelt

  • Link/URL:https://justin.poehnelt.com/posts/rewrite-your-cli-for-ai-agents/
  • Recommended by: Guillermo Rauch
  • Key takeaway (as shared): Rauch praises the CLI described as “very well implemented” and “thorough,” noting it dynamically registers commands, is designed for a browser-wielding agent to automate setup steps, and can start an MCP daemon .
  • Why it matters: It’s a concrete, implementation-level recommendation for building tooling that’s agent-operable (not just human-friendly), with specific features called out as evidence of quality .

Watching list (physical AI / robotics)

“China dominates the physical AI race” (article with videos) — Time (author not specified in source)

  • Link/URL:https://time.com/7382151/china-dominates-the-physical-ai-race/
  • Recommended by: Eric Schmidt
  • Key takeaway (as shared): Schmidt urges readers to “watch the videos,” saying “China is moving very fast in robots” .
  • Why it matters: A direct prompt to look at the evidence (via the included videos) rather than rely on secondhand summaries—useful if you’re tracking real-world progress in robotics/“physical AI” .

Offbeat (but deliberate) rec: detailed, human historical films

Merchant Ivory films (filmography / production company) — Merchant Ivory

  • Link/URL (where it was recommended):https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hYWMyXMkZmE
  • Recommended by: Ivan Zhao (Notion co-founder)
  • Key takeaway (as shared): Zhao says he recently discovered Merchant Ivory and recommends exploring their films—mostly period, adapted novels with meticulous detail, “beautifully shot,” and focused on “very human” dynamics between groups of people in historical settings (he mentions A Room with a View and Death in Venice) .
  • Why it matters: A founder’s explicit recommendation for work that’s craft-focused and “very human”—a different kind of input than tech/media analysis, but suggested as highly worth discovering .

Pattern across today’s picks

A cluster of recommendations point at AI showing up in more places, faster—from strategic “situational awareness” framing to agent-ready developer tooling details to “physical AI” progress you can watch directly .

Product Sense moats, AI-native operating loops, and the return of disciplined discovery
Mar 5
9 min read
51 docs
Shreyas Doshi's Product Almanac | Substack
Sachin Rekhi
John Cutler
+7
This edition synthesizes new frameworks and real-world examples on what differentiates PMs in the AI age (Product Sense), how AI-native loops are reshaping delivery and operating models, and how to avoid feature-factory failure modes through stakeholder evidence and minimally viable consistency. It also includes practical playbooks for focus, accessibility, and career signaling (GitHub), plus concrete case studies across B2B SaaS, gaming, and consumer marketplaces.

Big Ideas

1) In an AI-commoditized world, Product Sense becomes the career moat

Shreyas Doshi argues that as AI becomes embedded across product work (discovery, design, prototyping, coding, testing, deployment, analytics, feedback, competitive analysis, GTM, etc.) , the specific tools you use will matter less over time—tools “commoditize,” and tool choice won’t be a durable personal advantage .

The differentiator shifts to the human judgment applied on top of AI outputs—what he labels Product Sense. He breaks Product Sense into five component skills:

  • Strong empathy (needs beyond what AI has already analyzed)
  • Excellent simulation skills (future possibilities based on domain/tech/competition/customers/users)
  • Stellar strategic thinking (segments + differentiators)
  • Great taste (choose what’s optimal and explain why)
  • Creative execution (conceive unique solutions competitors won’t)

He frames this as a high bar that many product people may struggle to meet .

Why it matters: If AI equalizes execution throughput, advantage concentrates in judgment: picking the right problems, seeing tradeoffs, and improving AI-generated inputs/outputs .

How to apply (weekly loop):

  1. Pick one recurring decision type (e.g., prioritization, positioning, UX tradeoffs).
  2. Use AI to generate options (not decisions), then explicitly practice the five skills: empathize, simulate, strategize, choose (taste), and propose a distinctive execution path .
  3. Write down what you improved beyond the AI output (your judgment delta) .

2) AI is compressing delivery cycles—PM work risks becoming the bottleneck

Björn Schotte highlights a “paradox”: engineering has become “10x faster” (2019–2025) while product management only “1.2x,” making PMs the bottleneck . He also describes a landscape split: 70–75% traditional, 20–25% hybrid, and 4–5% AI-native teams .

He argues AI-native teams connect discovery, validation, and delivery into a continuous loop (AI generating tests, deploying, measuring, reporting) .

Why it matters: If building gets radically faster, the failure mode becomes “shipping the wrong stuff faster” (see Torres below) rather than being blocked by implementation.

How to apply (start small):

  1. Pick one workflow where signals already exist (errors, user signals, customer emails, competitor monitoring).
  2. Create a daily or weekly AI-generated briefing that aggregates these signals into a short ranked list for human review .
  3. Make the human step explicit: review, reject, label, and sequence work (don’t auto-ship decisions) .

3) Operating models: aim for minimally viable consistency, not blanket standardization

John Cutler frames operating models as doing “8 jobs” regardless of context (value architecture, discover/prioritize, align capacity, route escalations, support execution, assess impact, circulate insights, provide financial/operational oversight, shape capacity) .

In parallel, his Substack post argues for Minimally Viable Consistency (MVC): the fewest consistent concepts/terms needed to operate, while preserving beneficial local variation . He warns that widely known frameworks (e.g., OKRs) often hide wildly different implementations—and that variation isn’t inherently bad .

Why it matters: AI adoption can tempt orgs into adding more process (or “consistency mechanisms”) to manage speed and change—but embedded rules rarely disappear .

How to apply (design MVC like a scaffold):

  1. Identify what risk you’re trying to reduce if something isn’t consistent (be specific) .
  2. Prefer lighter nudges (templates, defaults, shared artifacts) before mandates .
  3. Add an explicit reassessment date; plan how you’d remove the rule later .

4) AI can push teams back into “feature factory” mode—counter with discovery and alignment

Teresa Torres warns that “AI features dominating roadmaps” can lead teams back to feature factory behavior:

“All we are doing is shipping the wrong stuff faster.”

She argues you can’t win opinion battles with stakeholders; you can bring information they don’t have (customer interview insights, assumption-test data, patterns in the opportunity space) .

Hiten Shah offers a drift diagnostic: if you ask five leaders what the company does and get five different answers, the company is drifting—and roadmap debates turn into arguments .

Why it matters: Faster delivery increases the cost of misalignment and weak discovery.

How to apply:

  1. Start roadmap discussions with shared outcomes (not solutions) .
  2. Continuously “show your work” so decisions are less about opinions and more about evidence and reasoning .
  3. Use drift checks: periodically ask leaders to explain what the company does; treat divergence as an upstream problem to fix before prioritization fights .

5) Accessibility is both a product quality discipline and a go-to-market requirement

Konstantin Tieber frames disability as a mismatch between individual capacities and environmental demands , and highlights categories of impairments (visual, auditory, motor, cognitive) including situational/temporary constraints . He points to WCAG’s four principles (Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, Robust) as a practical compliance checklist .

He also connects accessibility to sales: enterprise buyers may require a VPAT/ACR (Accessibility Conformance Report) documenting WCAG conformance .

Why it matters: Accessibility expands reachable users and reduces exclusion by default; it’s also increasingly tied to procurement expectations and compliance workflows .

How to apply:

  1. “Shift left”: challenge UI concepts early (e.g., drag-and-drop) with “How do I operate this with a keyboard?” .
  2. Build with semantic HTML (avoid divs-as-buttons) .
  3. Test with keyboard + screen readers (e.g., VoiceOver) as part of release validation .

Tactical Playbook

1) A stakeholder-management workflow that replaces opinion battles with evidence

Torres’ tactics are structured and repeatable:

  1. Start with shared outcomes (not solutions) .
  2. Use an opportunity solution tree as a stakeholder-management tool (to visualize options and assumptions) .
  3. Invite contribution with: “Did we miss anything?” .
  4. Share assumption tests and results, not only conclusions .
  5. Show your work continuously—avoid “big reveals” .

Why it works: It turns stakeholder conversations into joint sense-making, anchored in information stakeholders typically don’t have direct access to .


2) Use AI where it reduces collaboration overhead—protect high-context collaboration

Cutler’s heuristic: some work is “transactional” but forced into collaboration (meetings that should have been a doc review), and AI can help by sharing context and reducing friction . But there’s also work that should be collaborative and becomes transactional due to busyness; freeing time via AI should make room for deliberate collaboration .

He also warns that AI is weaker for certain research question types: it can be strong for definitional questions but tends to produce explanations too eagerly for explanatory questions (“it wants to please you”) .

Step-by-step:

  1. List your team’s recurring collaborative moments.
  2. Tag each as either (a) transactional-but-collaborative or (b) truly high-context collaboration .
  3. Automate (a) first (e.g., segment-specific release note reframes) so time returns to (b) .

3) Speed without sloppiness: apply rigor to wins, not just losses

Cutler flags a common management trap: people over-index on “good news,” stop applying rigor to wins, and start relying on luck .

Step-by-step:

  1. After a “win,” run the same review you’d run after a miss: what worked, what was luck, what to repeat .
  2. Capture learnings into a lightweight shared artifact (so you don’t lose the insight in celebration mode) .

4) If you’re overwhelmed, design “lanes” (vectors for meaningful hard work)

Cutler’s “lanes” concept: teams need viable lanes with the right challenge/progress balance; when passionate people have “no vectors for hard work,” they invent work .

Step-by-step:

  1. Define 1–3 lanes per team (not per person) with clear boundaries and intended outcomes .
  2. Audit current work: remove or downgrade initiatives that don’t fit a lane.
  3. Re-check lane viability monthly—adjust challenge level and clarity.

Case Studies & Lessons

1) When the environment drives the outcome more than the product: an Airbnb analogy

A Reddit post describes two similar Airbnb listings (photos, reviews, price) with different booking outcomes; the winner was surrounded by 15–20 nearby restaurants/cafes/bars, while the other was in a quiet residential area . The host can optimize the listing, but not the surrounding ecosystem, even if the interface looks identical .

Takeaway: Sometimes your “product” competes on the broader experience system—not just on-screen features.


2) Retention dropped because value and pricing didn’t match (mobile gaming)

Laura Teclemariam describes launching a “Modifications” feature (microtransactions ~$1–$5) and seeing retention drop after v2 because the feature’s pricing didn’t match the value it delivered . She adjusted pricing structures to better align value and price .

Takeaway: Retention problems can be value-to-price mismatches, not just UX issues .


3) “High-quality MVPs” and pixel-level rigor in animation production

Teclemariam compares animation development to product development: storyboards as prototypes, animatics as MVPs, with a higher quality bar at the MVP stage (less tolerance for “ugly baby” shipping) . She also highlights editorial rigor over details (every moment/pixel) as analogous to PM obsession with craft .

Takeaway: Speed isn’t the only lever—some domains require higher minimum quality to learn effectively.


4) Accessibility failure after heavy investment: Bild Zeitung’s readout feature

A cautionary example: Bild Zeitung launched a readout feature after significant engineering investment, then asked an accessibility influencer to test it; the trigger button wasn’t accessible via screen readers .

Takeaway: “Shift accessibility left”—validate operability (keyboard/screen reader) before launch .


5) Translating dry WCAG reports into stories (with a warning about false confidence)

A ProductTank Cologne talk describes using synthetic personas (data-driven archetypes that can “act and speak”) to translate technical WCAG accessibility reports into experiential narratives via RAG (accessibility report + site metadata + persona data) . They found AI stories can significantly foster empathy and urgency for accessibility measures .

However, they caution synthetic personas can create false confidence and should complement, not replace, real user research (“there are no stereotypes”) .


Career Corner

1) A practical AI-era career hedge: build Product Sense (and treat it as upstream)

Doshi’s framing is that the durable advantage isn’t tool mastery; it’s your ability to improve AI outputs through empathy, simulation, strategy, taste, and creative execution .

Career action: pick one of the five skills and deliberately practice it with real artifacts (PRDs, prototypes, research plans), not just prompts.


2) GitHub as proof-of-skill for PMs (especially AI PM roles)

Aakash Gupta reports that when he interviewed 10+ AI PM hiring managers, they said they will check a linked GitHub—and only 24% of PM candidates have one . He adds that inbound recruiter outreach converts to offers at 37% vs 22% for outbound applicants; a strong GitHub can shift you toward inbound .

He recommends treating pinned repos as a portfolio (“two good ones is the MVP”) with clear READMEs and meaningful contribution activity . He also warns against copy-pasted AI code without tradeoffs sections and empty commit “farms” .

“Your resume says you can do the job. Your GitHub proves it.”


3) Staying effective amid chaos: focus via operating model + lanes

A mid-level PM asks how senior Staff/Principal folks maintain focus as the role gets more chaotic . One concrete response across sources is to make focus structural: define lanes and a lightweight operating model rather than relying on personal heroics .


Tools & Resources

  • Claude Code for Product Managers (video): Sachin Rekhi shared a recording link : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsAAaY8a63Q
  • Claude Code workflows (agentic capabilities): Rekhi describes autonomous workflows, local markdown artifacts, custom tool calls (e.g., transcription), and code-writing to accomplish tasks .
  • Product Sense course reference: Doshi links to a mindmap he created for a Product Sense course (link as provided): https://preview.kit-mail3.com/click/dpheh0hzhm/aHR0cHM6Ly9tYXZlbi5jb20vc2hyZXlhcy1kb3NoaS9wcm9kdWN0LXNlbnNl
  • Accessibility testing basics: keyboard + screen readers (including VoiceOver) and automated tooling like axe DevTools are listed as practical testing approaches .
  • Operating model prompts for “temporary consistency”: use expiration dates and plan removals for new rules added during strategic shifts .
Fertilizer and diesel spikes reshape spring budgets as Brazil’s safrinha window tightens
Mar 5
8 min read
93 docs
Ag PhD
Market Minute LLC
Successful Farming
+6
Input markets dominated the week: nitrogen fertilizer and diesel both surged on Middle East logistics risk, raising near-term uncertainty for spring budgets and 2026 acreage decisions. This brief also highlights actionable agronomy and livestock practices, plus Brazil’s safrinha pace and production outlook as weather compresses planting windows.

1) Market Movers

Fertilizer and fuel: the biggest near-term shock to spring input budgets (U.S. + global)

  • Fertilizer prices have surged since early December 2025. In one market discussion, urea was described as 70% higher than December 4, while corn prices were noted as up only $0.08 in the same span . Gulf urea was cited moving from $350/ton (Dec 4) to $600/ton over ~90 days .
  • Retail tightness is showing up in availability, not just price. One update described U.S. retail nitrogen offers at $700/ton or more (if available at all), with some retailers saying they’re not selling due to tight supply .
  • Diesel also spiked on the same conflict channel. Nationwide diesel was cited at $3.89/gal (up $0.12 from Monday) and $3.88/gal Tuesday per EIA (up $0.26 YoY) . The Strait of Hormuz disruption was described as halting refined product movement, including diesel .

Grains: prices mixed, with timing risk and export demand still in focus (U.S.)

  • Market open levels (U.S. futures, one recap): May corn $4.45¾ (down ¾¢), May soybeans $11.72½ (up 2¢), May Chicago wheat $5.70 (down 4¢), May KC wheat $5.75 (down 3¼¢), May spring wheat $6.12½ (down ¾¢) .
  • Wheat pressure from near-term weather forecasts: wheat futures were reported lower overnight on forecasts for rain in the southern Plains, while Kansas wheat conditions were said to have declined month-over-month .
  • New-crop corn seasonality watch: a market note flagged that new-crop corn posted a new high “yesterday,” and also stated that since 2004, new-crop corn has never posted its highest price of the year in March.

Livestock: boxed beef strength and hog recovery (U.S.)

  • One report cited Choice boxed beef up $6.71 to $388.05, with Select up to $378.58.
  • In the same update, live cattle were cited $0.40 to $1.00 higher and feeders ranged $0.12 lower to $0.62 higher.

2) Innovation Spotlight

Low-CI corn and 45Z: turning practices into documentation (U.S.)

  • Practices named as trackable low-CI criteria: nitrogen stabilizers, no-till/rotations in and out of soybeans, and cover crops.
  • The bottleneck is recordkeeping. Tracking/recording low-CI practices was described as time-consuming—up to 10 hours for one field—with BASF pointing to its Xarvio Field Manager “Bioenergy” application as a way to package information for retailers and ethanol plants to digest and align with 45Z guidance .
  • A related BASF segment framed 45Z as a potential income add, while noting the payout rate was not yet known; it also cited survey results implying participation rises from ~18–19% without retail help to ~80% with retailer help.

Fungicide performance claims under stress conditions (U.S.)

  • BASF described 2025 demo participation of 1,800+ growers and 300 retailers and said growers saw 20–60 bushel differences in corn in areas hit hard by tar spot and southern rust using Veltyma/Revytech/Revilock fungicides, with “similar percentage” soybean gains when it turned dry later in the season .

Crop protection/regulatory updates tied to 2026 access (U.S.)

  • Dicamba (over-the-top): Bayer said its dicamba product for over-the-top use on XtendFlex cotton/soybeans was approved the first week of February, describing positive farmer response and 2026 season access . A separate BASF interview also described dicamba over-the-top label progress after a two-year effort with EPA and noted state registrations filtering through .
  • Waterhemp/pigweed tool pipeline: Bayer highlighted diflufenican as an active ingredient it believes can be a strong technical solution for waterhemp and pigweed, while emphasizing the need for timely EPA approval (with timing a challenge for spring 2026 access) .

New equipment (U.S.)

  • Fendt unveiled 800 Vario Gen5 tractors (models 826, 829, 832) with a new AGCO Power Core80 8-liter engine described as maintaining high torque at low RPMs for low fuel consumption .

3) Regional Developments

Brazil: safrinha corn window, soybean harvest pace, and demand growth

  • Production outlook: Beyond Agro projected total corn production at 137.5M metric tons, down from 141M last season , with the second crop potentially down up to 3.5M tons while demand was said to rise 8M tons. Demand growth was linked to corn ethanol and the animal protein sector .
  • Planting window risk: Canal Rural noted that in key producing states the ideal window ends in the second half of February, and delays raise the risk of hitting dry periods during grain filling.
  • Progress and delays: one national update said Brazil had planted nearly 65% of intended safrinha area , with soybean harvest around 42% complete (behind the prior year’s pace) . State-level snapshots included Mato Grosso ~85% planted for safrinha, while Paraná was cited as about 20% behind last year; São Paulo was described as not yet started in that segment due to waiting for more rain .

Middle East conflict: fertilizer supply risk framing (global)

  • StoneX analysis emphasized the region accounts for 41% of global urea exports (with relevant ammonia and DAP share as well), and said shortage risk depends heavily on whether the conflict is short-lived vs. prolonged—with the Strait of Hormuz a key logistics factor .
  • Current market behavior described included urea sellers withholding offers due to price uncertainty and producers cutting output due to export bottlenecks and storage issues .

U.S.: wildfire losses (Southwest Kansas)

  • A report highlighted recovery efforts for a rancher in Southwest Kansas after a wildfire burned 35,000 acres and killed around 200 cattle.

4) Best Practices

Corn: early planting success in cold soils (U.S.)

Ag PhD’s guidance for early corn planting in 40°F soils centered on:

  • Start only when soil is dry and no earlier than the first crop insurance date.
  • Run a cold germination test (commonly at 50°F) because the warm germ score on the seed tag is done at 77°F and may be less informative for early planting conditions .
  • Consider strong seed treatments (or biological packages) and added protection such as Xyway fungicide, in-furrow insecticide, and pop-up fertility for cold stress .

Input procurement and risk management: increase conversations, avoid “all at once” decisions (U.S.)

"You need to talk to [your supplier]... have those conversations... quit letting emotion dictate it... Do a layer... on the grain side... on the fertilizer... on the chem."

A separate segment emphasized not facing stress alone:

"Make sure you've got a friend, a family member, somebody you can talk to... This is a very tough time."

Livestock management under extreme seasonal conditions (Brazil – Pantanal)

  • A Pantanal cattle segment described using timed AI (IATF) to target calving in Aug–Oct, followed by early weaning (Jan–Feb) and moving calves to higher-ground farms because calves tolerate flood conditions poorly compared with cows .
  • The same operation emphasized selection for rusticity, using semen from improved Nelore bulls (and Angus crossing for weaker cows) .

Soil amendment at small scale: biochar methods shared by practitioners (homestead)

  • One approach recommended a trench method described as low-cost and suitable for limbs/brush . Another described using a cauldron + lid approach to create coals for compost while functioning as a fire pit .

5) Input Markets

Nitrogen fertilizer: import dependence + logistics timing (U.S.)

  • A fertilizer discussion described the U.S. as a net-importer market with pricing tied to global replacement values; it cited urea imports around 5.1–5.2 million tons this year .
  • Another segment framed spring timing risk: even if a vessel is loaded quickly, the product may not reach the farmer until early May due to ocean transit plus inland movement .

Diesel: spring demand timing problem (U.S.)

  • The diesel spike was described as arriving “at one of the worst times” given higher diesel demand during spring planting . One source also noted it was a tough time to lock in fuel costs in early March and said many farmers missed seasonal lows in December/early January .

On-farm operational risk: grid reliability for poultry (Brazil – Paraná)

  • A producer in Paraná reported losing over 20,000 birds during repeated power failures, estimating losses around R$150,000. She also described equipment damage from voltage swings—including five solar inverters—despite having generator and solar backup . Another segment cited infrastructure concerns such as ~50-year-old cables.

6) Forward Outlook

2026 acreage and pricing: inputs vs. margins (U.S.)

  • One market breakdown estimated nitrogen as 10–20% of a corn grower’s total production costs; a 40% nitrogen price spike was described as potentially raising total production costs 4–8%.
  • A fertilizer-focused discussion suggested elevated input costs could shift acreage expectations: while some market talk referenced higher corn acreage, one analyst said they continued using 93M corn acres as a conservative approach and expressed uncertainty it would be that high .
  • Another market show framed acreage as the “big swing” variable into the end of March (ahead of planting intentions), with fertilizer more of a yield variable among many others .

Key calendar items to monitor

  • A market note flagged a USDA report on Tuesday.
  • Trade expectations remain a swing factor: one markets segment referenced upcoming U.S.–China meetings, including a mid-month USTR/Vice Premier meeting and a planned trip to Beijing later in the month .

Brazil seasonal planning: rainfall timing and harvest/planting execution

  • Canal Rural’s weather discussion warned that safrinha corn needs ~60 rainy days and that broad “rain cut” typically begins late April/early May; it also emphasized that the most problematic scenario would be both delayed planting and an earlier-than-normal rain cutoff (which was said not to be expected in that segment) .

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Stateful agent runs (WebSockets), Codex on Windows, and skills-driven harnesses
Mar 5
6 min read
110 docs
Cursor
Peter Steinberger
Boris Cherny
+12
A dense brief on what’s actually moving the needle for coding agents: OpenAI’s WebSockets approach to cut tool-call overhead, Codex’s new Windows app + sandboxing, and the growing “skills + traces + evals” ecosystem that turns agents into repeatable workflows. Plus: production patterns from Anthropic’s Claude Code and hard-earned PR hygiene rules for agent-generated code.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

OpenAI’s new WebSockets API for agentic runs is a real infrastructure unlock: keep a persistent connection to the same server so you can send only new inputs (e.g., tool results) instead of resending the entire conversation history on every tool call. Theo estimates this cuts bandwidth by 90%+ and improves speed by 20–30% (and 20–40% on runs with 20+ tool calls) .

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • OpenAI — WebSockets for tool-call-heavy agents

    • Why it matters: in the typical stateless flow, every tool completion triggers a new API call that resends all prior messages/tool calls so the model can continue .
    • WebSockets are positioned as a “hit the same box” guarantee, so you don’t keep re-checking auth / reloading state / reshipping context during a single long generation .
    • Practical caveat: Theo says the benefit is not huge for typical chat, but is big when one user message spawns hundreds of tool calls.
  • OpenAI Codex app — now on Windows (native + WSL)

    • Available on Windows with a native agent sandbox and PowerShell support .
    • Runs natively and in WSL with integrated terminals (PowerShell, Command Prompt, Git Bash, WSL) .
    • Sandbox controls: blocks filesystem writes outside your working folder and blocks outbound network access unless you explicitly approve it .
    • Adds 2 Windows skills (WinUI + ASP.NET) and 7 new “Open in …” apps.
    • Download: https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9plm9xgg6vks?hl=en-US&gl=US
  • Codex (Plus/Pro) — rate-limit promo bug fixed

    • OpenAI fixed an issue where the 2× promotional limit increase wasn’t applied to an estimated 9% of Plus/Pro users; they reset rate limits for all Plus/Pro as compensation .
  • Cursor — now in JetBrains via Agent Client Protocol

  • LangChain — “skills” packages for coding agents (progressive disclosure)

    • LangChain skills: 11 skills across LangChain/LangGraph/Deep Agents, intended to be dynamically loaded only when relevant to avoid tool overload degrading performance .
    • Claimed eval bump for Claude Code on LangChain ecosystem tasks: 29% → 95%. Repo: https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain-skills
  • LangChain — LangSmith CLI + Skills

    • LangSmith CLI is described as “agent-native” for traces/datasets/experiments, designed to be used through the terminal .
    • Claimed eval bump for Claude Code (Sonnet 4.6) on LangSmith tasks: 17% → 92%.
    • CLI repo: https://github.com/langchain-ai/langsmith-cli
  • Codex 5.3 (xhigh) — notable model-level win vs Opus 4.6 (anecdote)

    • Mitchell Hashimoto reports Codex 5.3 (xhigh) fixed a bug that had resisted engineers for 6 months in 45 minutes for $4.14; he notes Opus 4.6 failed and lower Codex reasoning levels failed .
    • He says a key difference was Codex (xhigh) eventually read GTK4 source code, which other runs didn’t do .
  • Qwen 3.5 — open-weight model family (practitioner testing signal)

    • Simon Willison notes Qwen 3.5 shipped a large model (397B-A17B) plus smaller siblings down to 0.8B .
    • He reports positive results for coding from 27B/35B, and that 9B/4B/2B were “notably effective” given size .

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Run parallel “plan mode” tabs, then let the agent one-shot implementation (Anthropic / Claude Code)

    • Boris Cherny describes a workflow of running multiple Claude Code instances in parallel: start in plan mode, iterate to get the plan right, then let it implement (often “one shot”) .
    • He also leans on desktop app worktree support for environment isolation so parallel agents don’t interfere .
  • Make the agent test itself (and still keep a human approval gate)

    • Boris says Claude Code will often run tests locally and may write new tests; when they change Claude Code internally, it will even launch itself as a subprocess to test end-to-end .
    • Anthropic runs Claude Code review in CI as a first-pass reviewer, catching “maybe ~80% of bugs,” followed by a human reviewer and final human approval .
  • Cheap-but-effective codebase search: “glob + grep” beats fancy setups (per Boris)

    • Boris says their “Agentix Search” outperformed everything, and clarifies it’s basically glob and grep.
  • Use uncorrelated context windows + subagents as “test-time compute” (Agent Teams / swarms)

    • Boris explains “uncorrelated context windows” as multiple fresh contexts that don’t share the parent window (beyond the prompt), and says throwing more tokens at uncorrelated windows can yield better results—calling it a form of test-time compute.
    • Their Agent Teams release is opt-in / research preview because it uses “a ton of tokens,” and is intended for complex tasks.
  • Skills as procedural memory: keep the base prompt smaller, load expertise only when needed

    • LangChain frames skills as curated instructions/scripts/resources that are dynamically loaded through progressive disclosure (retrieve only when relevant) .
    • Their LangSmith “virtuous loop” is explicitly: add tracing → generate traces → build datasets → run evaluators → iterate based on evals + human feedback .
  • Prompting pattern: force the model to surface missing assumptions

    • Peter Steinberger treats agent use as a conversation and repeatedly asks: “Do you have any questions?” to avoid the model charging ahead with default assumptions .
    • His warning: the “agentic trap” is spending time over-optimizing your setup—it can feel productive without improving output .
  • PR hygiene: don’t dump unreviewed agent code on teammates

    • Simon Willison’s anti-pattern: opening PRs with hundreds/thousands of agent-generated lines you haven’t reviewed is delegating the real work to reviewers .
    • What “good” looks like: ensure it works (and you’re confident), keep changes reviewable (multiple small PRs), include context/links, and review the agent-written PR description too.
    • Add evidence you tested it (notes/screenshots/video) to avoid wasting reviewer time .

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Theo (t3.gg) — consistently strong at turning infra changes into concrete agent cost/perf implications (his WebSockets breakdown is the clearest “why now” explainer) .
  • Boris Cherny (Anthropic / Claude Code) — high-signal production details: he claims Claude Code writes ~80% of Anthropic’s code, and describes CI review + self-testing patterns that keep velocity safe .
  • Mitchell Hashimoto — practical model comparison under real pressure: a 6‑month bug solved by Codex 5.3 (xhigh) where other settings and Opus 4.6 failed .
  • Simon Willison — the anti-pattern chapter is “social scalability” for agentic coding: ship reviewable, evidenced PRs, not agent slop .
  • Kent C. Dodds — clear framing that “pit of success” needs to be adapted for agents; he claims agents have “inhuman abilities” to understand code .

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

1) WebSockets: why stateless tool loops spam full-context payloads (Theo, ~04:33–08:29)

Hook: a crisp mental model for why every tool call resends the entire history—and why caching doesn’t fix bandwidth.

2) Agent Teams + “uncorrelated context windows” as test-time compute (Boris Cherny, ~1:15:31–1:18:00)

Hook: a practical explanation of why multiple fresh context windows + subagents can outperform “more tokens in one window,” and why Teams is opt-in (token cost).

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS


Editorial take: Today’s theme is harness > model: stateful sessions (WebSockets), skills-as-procedural-memory, and reviewable evidence are what turn “agent potential” into repeatable throughput.

GPT-5.4 “extreme reasoning” rumors, Knuth’s Claude paper, and accelerating agent-native software workflows
Mar 5
11 min read
819 docs
Ara Kharazian
马东锡 NLP
Qwen
+54
GPT-5.4 is widely rumored to be close, with reports of a 1M-token context window and a new “extreme reasoning” mode. Also: Donald Knuth publishes “Claude’s Cycles” after Claude Opus 4.6 helps resolve an open problem, and agent tooling accelerates (Codex on Windows, Symphony orchestration, and large enterprise deployments).

Top Stories

1) OpenAI’s GPT-5.4 signals a push toward long-horizon “reasoning modes” + 1M context

Why it matters: If these claims hold, GPT-5.4’s combination of very long context and an “extreme reasoning” setting points to models designed to run hours-long workflows and agent loops, not just chat completion.

What’s being reported:

  • GPT-5.4 is expected to ship with an “extreme” reasoning mode, described as using more compute for deeper thinking .
  • Multiple posts cite a ~1M token context window (reported as up from 400K in GPT-5.2) .
  • The Information-linked summaries describe better long-horizon tasks, improved memory across multi-step workflows, and use for scientific/complex problems .
  • Observers report GPT-5.4 has “landed on the Arena”, with uncertainty about which variant is live . Some posts suggest a release is “very likely” Thursday , while another claims it’s “confirmed for today” .

Source links shared via X posts:

2) Donald Knuth credits Claude Opus 4.6 with solving an open problem—then formalizes the proof

Why it matters: This is a concrete example (from a highly respected computer scientist) of an LLM contributing to new mathematical progress—paired with a human-written formal proof.

  • Donald Knuth published a paper titled “Claude’s Cycles” after Claude Opus 4.6 solved an open graph decomposition conjecture he’d been working on for weeks .
  • Knuth describes 31 explorations taking ~1 hour, after which he read the output, wrote the formal proof, and concluded: “It seems I’ll have to revise my opinions about generative AI one of these days.”
  • Another post summarizes Knuth saying Claude Opus 4.6 cracked a long-standing Hamiltonian-cycle conjecture for all odd sizes, calling it “a joy” to see solved .

Paper link (as shared): https://cs.stanford.edu/~knuth/papers/claude-cycles.pdf

3) AI and national security: claims of operational use + procurement controversy intensify

Why it matters: This is the part of the AI landscape where model capability, governance, and accountability collide—often with limited public visibility.

  • The Washington Post reports that to strike 1,000 targets in 24 hours in Iran, the U.S. military used its “most advanced AI” in warfare: Anthropic’s Claude partnered with the military’s Maven Smart System, suggesting targets and issuing precise location coordinates .
  • AI ethicist @mmitchell_ai reacted:

“People are being killed based (in part) on LLM outputs… Are there people being saved based on LLM outputs?”

  • Separately, multiple posts describe a memo attributed to Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei calling OpenAI’s Pentagon/DoD deal “safety theater” and expressing skepticism about OpenAI’s safeguards .
  • One thread claims the memo describes Palantir pitching a “classifier” approach for red-line violations and characterizes monitoring as “maybe 20% real and 80% safety theater,” with Anthropic rejecting and OpenAI accepting the package .
  • The Financial Times is cited by multiple accounts as saying Anthropic leadership is back in talks with the Pentagon about an AI deal .
  • A separate post says the U.S. State Department is switching its ‘StateChat’ from Claude to GPT 4.1.

4) Software shifts further toward “agent-native” development: Windows sandboxes + ticket orchestration + enterprise rollouts

Why it matters: Tooling is moving from “assistive coding” to operational systems that can run tasks, manage environments, and integrate into enterprise workflows.

  • Codex app on Windows: OpenAI announced the Codex app is now on Windows with a Windows-native agent sandbox and support for Windows developer environments in PowerShell. The sandbox uses OS-level controls (restricted tokens, filesystem ACLs, dedicated sandbox users) for safer execution , and OpenAI provides an open-source implementation: https://github.com/openai/codex/tree/main/codex-rs/windows-sandbox-rs.
  • A separate post highlights that the Windows sandbox is fully open source and encourages users to fork/build on it .
  • OpenAI Symphony (orchestration): described as an orchestration layer that polls project boards and spawns agents for each ticket lifecycle stage . A deeper walkthrough claims it can pull real Linear issues, create fresh workspaces per issue, and keep Codex running until tasks are done .
  • Enterprise deployment: Factory says it is partnering with EY to enable more than 10,000 engineers to ship production-grade software with autonomous agents (“Droids”) . Factory positions this as one of the largest enterprise deployments of autonomous dev agents to date , with EY reportedly throttling traffic due to rapid adoption .

5) DoubleAI claims “autonomous expert” gains in GPU kernel engineering (cuGraph)

Why it matters: GPU kernel optimization is typically a scarce-expertise domain; progress here can compound across the AI stack by improving the performance ceiling of widely used libraries.

  • DoubleAI’s WarpSpeed is claimed to have autonomously rewritten and re-optimized kernels in cuGraph across A100, L4, and A10G.
  • Reported results: 3.6× average speedup, 100% of kernels improved, and 55% seeing >2× improvement . The hyper-optimized version is released on GitHub as a drop-in replacement (no code changes required) .
  • The authors frame the work as requiring new algorithmic ideas (Diligent framework, PAC-reasoning, agentic search) for domains with scarce data, hard validation, and long decision chains .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: Several releases this cycle target the “hard middle” of AI progress: inference efficiency, multimodal training without brittle dependencies, and agent reliability (memory, evaluation, and proactive interaction).

Multimodal training: Self-Flow (Black Forest Labs)

  • Black Forest Labs previewed Self-Flow, a scalable approach for end-to-end multimodal generative training across image, video, audio, text using self-supervised flow matching (without relying on external pretrained representation models) .
  • Reported results include up to 2.8× faster convergence across modalities, improved temporal consistency in video, and sharper text rendering/typography . BFL frames it as foundational for multimodal visual intelligence .
  • Additional details shared: it combines per-timestep flow matching with dual-timestep representation learning and is presented as outperforming prior methods with promising scaling behavior .
  • Resources: https://bfl.ai/research/self-flow and code at https://github.com/black-forest-labs/Self-Flow.

Teaching models to update beliefs: “reason like Bayesians” (Google Research)

  • Google Research introduced a method to teach LLMs to “reason like Bayesians” by training them to mimic optimal probabilistic inference, improving their ability to update predictions and generalize across new domains.
  • An example task described is a flight recommendation assistant that receives user feedback each round on whether it chose correctly and what the correct answer was .

Faster inference: Speculative Speculative Decoding (Together AI)

  • Together AI researchers announced Speculative Speculative Decoding (SSD), an inference algorithm reported as up to 2× faster than the strongest inference engines .
  • A collaborator notes it applies “asynchronous machine” principles familiar from GPU kernels to speculative decoding .

Agent memory: retrieval beats “fancy writing”

  • New research introduces a diagnostic framework separating retrieval failures from utilization failures in agent memory systems .
  • Core claim: retrieval approach matters far more than writing strategy—accuracy varies ~20 percentage points across retrieval methods vs 3–8 points across writing strategies .
  • Simple raw chunking is reported to match or outperform more expensive alternatives like Mem0-style fact extraction or MemGPT-style summarization .
  • Paper link: https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.02473.

Proactive agents with implicit human state: NeuroSkill (MIT)

  • NeuroSkill is presented as a real-time agentic system integrating Brain-Computer Interface signals with foundation models to model human cognitive/emotional state, running fully offline on the edge.
  • Its NeuroLoop harness is described as enabling proactive workflows that respond to both explicit and implicit requests through tool calls .
  • Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03212.

Biology: open biological models + whole-tissue recording approaches

  • The Arc Institute announced Evo 2, described as the largest fully open biological AI model to date, published in Nature. Goodfire AI says it used interpretability tools to discover “numerous biologically relevant features” in Evo 2 .
  • A separate Nature paper summary describes GEMINI (Granularly Expanding Memory for Intracellular Narrative Integration) as a cellular recorder that encodes activity history in fluorescent “tree-ring” patterns with ~15-minute resolution . AI-based decoding tools are described as central to reading GEMINI’s output at whole-brain scale .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: The product layer is converging on agent workflows: long-running tasks, memory, multimodal generation, and “do things” interfaces (voice, browser, sandboxes).

Dev + agent tooling

  • Prism + Codex: OpenAI integrated the Codex harness into Prism (LaTeX environment) to write/compute/analyze/iterate in one place, and added version management .
  • VS Code agents: VS Code’s latest release highlights improved agent orchestration, extensibility, and continuity, including hooks, message steering/queueing, an agentic integrated browser, and shared memory . VS Code also notes it will shift from monthly to weekly shipments of main starting next week .
  • Cursor in JetBrains: Cursor is now available in JetBrains IDEs via the Agent Client Protocol .

Research + evidence workflows

Consumer/knowledge tools

  • NotebookLM Studio: introduced “Cinematic Video Overviews,” described as bespoke immersive videos from user sources, rolling out to Ultra users in English .
  • Google Search (AI Mode) Canvas: Google is making Canvas in AI Mode available to everyone in the U.S. in English; it supports multi-session planning in a side panel and adds creative writing and coding tasks .

Voice + action interfaces

  • Perplexity Computer Voice Mode: Perplexity introduced Voice Mode in Perplexity Computer so users can “just talk and do things” . The CEO framed it as “Building a kind of JARVIS” .

Generative media

  • Kling 3.0 rollout: Kling AI says Kling 3.0 / Omni / Motion Control are fully rolled out, with features like mocap-level motion control and multi-shot video generation up to 15s . A creator thread highlights improved micro-expressions and dialogue shots (a “chamber play” becoming easier) .
  • Qwen-Image-2.0: Alibaba introduced Qwen-Image-2.0 with claims including professional typography for long prompts, 2K native resolution, and unified generation/editing . Arena reports the model is in the Image Arena for comparison .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Revenue run rates, enterprise spend share, and org stability (especially in open models) increasingly determine which models and tools become “defaults” in practice.

Anthropic: growth claims + enterprise spend signals

  • Dario Amodei said Anthropic’s revenue run rate went from ~$100M two years ago to $19B now .
  • A separate post claims Anthropic is nearing a $20B annual revenue run rate, more than doubling from $9B at the end of 2025, and cites a valuation “around $380B.
  • Ramp-data commentary claims Anthropic commands the majority of U.S. business API spend and >50% of enterprise AI subscription spend (as of January), while OpenAI leads in business count .

Alibaba Qwen: leadership departures + compute tension + market reaction

  • One report says Alibaba CEO Eddie Wu held an emergency all-hands with the Qwen team, saying “I should have known about this sooner,” amid tensions on restructuring, compute allocation, and model strategy . It also cites an internal irony: external customers reportedly get smoother compute access than the internal team building Alibaba’s “most important model” .
  • A later post says Alibaba stock dropped 13.4% this week and continued falling after key Qwen leaders announced departures, with doubts about Qwen 4 remaining a frontier open-source model without them .
  • Separate commentary claims Qwen was used in 41% of 7,692 AI papers on Hugging Face in 2025–2026, and at least 30% monthly over a year (with May 2025 at 1 in 2 papers) .

Enterprise agent deployment: Factory + EY

  • Factory says its partnership with EY will enable 10,000+ engineers to ship software with autonomous agents, with adoption reportedly requiring throttling and repo restrictions .

Partnerships + funding

  • Spellbook (legal AI) raised an additional $40M (on top of $50M raised last October), and reports serving 4,000+ legal teams/law firms in 80 countries with 410 demos booked in one week .
  • Cohere x Aston Martin F1: Cohere announced a multi-year partnership; every team member gets access to Cohere’s enterprise models and agentic AI platform .

Government direction-setting

  • China’s Premier Li Qiang outlined a 2026 AI agenda including “AI+” across industries, accelerating AI agent adoption, building ultra-large compute clusters, supporting public cloud, and promoting AI open-source communities .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: Legal and governance frameworks are increasingly binding constraints on what can be deployed (and where), especially for generative outputs and government use.

  • Frontier AI safeguards: Yoshua Bengio endorsed the Human Statement and warned that frontier AI development is accelerating faster than safeguards, posing risks to democracy and society .
  • Copyright and AI authorship: A cited episode summarizes the ongoing AI/copyright debate and references Thaler v. Perlmutter as a key case in the U.S. Copyright Office’s refusal to register AI-generated works, with status noted for U.S. Supreme Court docket 25-449 (as of Feb. 25, 2026) .
  • Science funding leadership: @regardthefrost (Jim) said he was nominated by President Trump to serve as Director of the National Science Foundation, calling for rigorous, replicable science and for government to take bigger financial risks on deeper questions .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: Smaller signals often foreshadow where teams will invest next.

  • OpenAI released a new repo called Symphony: https://github.com/openai/symphony.
  • OpenAI also released a repo called Agent Plugins (no details in the shared post) .
  • BullshitBench v2 tests nonsense detection; only Claude and Qwen 3.5 are said to score meaningfully above 60%, and “think harder” reasoning variants reportedly do worse by rationalizing nonsense .
  • SWE-bench reached 1M weekly downloads, with a “big update” coming to make it easier to run and support new benchmarks built on top .
  • OpenAI deprecates SWE-Bench Verified due to contamination and flawed remaining tests, per a cited summary .
  • Together AI / SSD joins a broader inference-efficiency conversation: one researcher predicts inference compute will exceed training by decade’s end, with premiums paid for lower latency and no one-size-fits-all stack across cloud vs edge .
  • Qdrant joined Google’s Agent Development Kit integrations ecosystem for persistent semantic memory and vector search in agent workflows .
OpenClaw, “agent boxes,” and the benchmark reset signal a new phase of enterprise agents
Mar 5
5 min read
184 docs
LocalLLM
Arthur Mensch
Harrison Chase
+16
OpenAI’s reported move on OpenClaw and Box’s “every agent needs a box” framing both point to a fast-moving shift from coding agents to enterprise knowledge-work agents built around sandboxes, file systems, and observability. Meanwhile, benchmark credibility takes a hit as OpenAI deprecates SWE-Bench Verified, and new local infrastructure projects push on-device training and smaller-footprint inference forward.

Agents push deeper into “knowledge work” (and the enterprise is reorganizing around it)

OpenAI’s reported move on OpenClaw spotlights the “agent harness” race

A YouTube episode recorded “just as it’s been announced” that OpenClaw is being “accuhired or acquired” by OpenAI. In the same discussion, OpenClaw is described as a boundary-pushing agent with high autonomy and major security risk—to the point that one team “told our employees they cannot install [it] on their company laptops” .

Why it matters: the episode frames OpenClaw’s momentum as part of a broader shift toward long-running agents built on evolving “harnesses” (planning, file systems, sub-agents, skills, and code interpreters) rather than just smarter base models .

“Every agent needs a box”: file systems/sandboxes become core infrastructure

In a Latent Space conversation, Box CEO Aaron Levie argues that enterprise content (with permissions, sharing, and collaboration) becomes far more valuable when agents can continuously read and create from it, and that agents need sandboxed workspaces for doing that work . Box is cited as serving 67% of the Fortune 500 and as having record ARR exceeding $1.1B with 28% margins.

Why it matters: the “box” framing aligns with agent-harness discussions emphasizing file systems and controlled environments as the practical foundation for enterprise-grade agents.

Microsoft previews Copilot Tasks for end-to-end autonomous workflows

Satya Nadella highlighted Copilot Tasks as a preview feature that lets users assign tasks (including recurring) in “cowork mode” for end-to-end autonomous completion, then use Agent mode to refine outputs . Examples include creating/analyzing a spreadsheet in Excel and scheduling follow-on tasks , and researching a topic into a PowerPoint and iterating .

Why it matters: it’s a clear product push toward delegated work rather than chat-only assistance.

Preview: https://copilot.microsoft.com/tasks/preview

Perplexity adds Voice Mode to “Perplexity Computer”

Perplexity announced Voice Mode in Perplexity Computer, positioned as letting users “just talk and do things” . Perplexity’s CEO described the effort as “Building a kind of JARVIS” .

Why it matters: voice-first interaction is another step toward agents functioning like persistent assistants rather than text-only tools.

Evals and benchmarks: credibility resets (and “agentic” failures stay visible)

OpenAI voluntarily deprecates SWE-Bench Verified

According to a Latent Space post, OpenAI is voluntarily deprecating SWE-Bench Verified, saying new analysis found enough problems that it’s no longer worth pursuing or publicizing those numbers . Two issues are called out: contamination (frontier models can regurgitate eval data/solutions, sometimes from the Task ID alone) and bad tests (at least 60% of remaining unsolved problems “should be unsolvable” given their descriptions) .

Why it matters: it’s an unusually direct signal that a flagship benchmark can become counterproductive once saturation and leakage dominate.

Analysis link: https://latent.space/p/swe-bench-dead

A new “agentic model” cautionary tale: FoodTruckBench

A viral post summarized a test where Google’s Gemini 3 Flash—described there as Google’s “most impressive agentic model” with 89% on MMLU-Pro and 78% on SWE-bench—was given 34 tools to run a food truck but reportedly repeated “let’s go” 574 times and never ran a tool, ending in bankruptcy . Gary Marcus amplified it with a sarcastic “AI agents for the win” .

Why it matters: it’s another reminder that tool-using agent behavior can fail in ways that aren’t captured by conventional model benchmarks.

Details: https://foodtruckbench.com/blog/gemini-flash

Research + local infrastructure: on-device training and smaller-footprint acceleration

ORION: training a 110M transformer directly on the Apple Neural Engine

A /r/MachineLearning post introduces ORION, described as the first open-source end-to-end system combining direct ANE execution, a custom compiler pipeline, and stable multi-step training while bypassing CoreML limitations . The author reports training a 110M-parameter transformer on TinyStories for 1,000 steps with loss dropping from 12.29 → 6.19 and zero NaN occurrences, plus 170+ tokens/s GPT‑2 (124M) inference on an M4 Max in decode mode .

Why it matters: it’s a concrete attempt to make Apple’s on-device accelerator usable not just for inference, but for training—while documenting practical constraints like recompilation overhead for weight updates and numerous ANE programming constraints .

Repo: https://github.com/mechramc/Orion

llama.cpp: NVFP4 quantization support may be close

A /r/LocalLLM thread points to an open PR for NVFP4 support in llama.cpp GGUF, speculating it could land within hours to a week . Commenters claim NVFP4 could bring up to 2.3× speed boosts and 30–70% size savings, with the caveat that it requires Blackwell or newer GPUs.

Why it matters: if merged, this could materially change local deployment footprints for some GPU setups—especially where RAM offloading matters.

PR: https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/pull/19769

Governance and sovereignty: internal accountability narratives collide with national strategy

“The OpenAI Files” recirculate—and draw high-profile reactions

A post described as a “huge repository” of information about OpenAI and Sam Altman (“The OpenAI Files”) highlighted claims including: leadership concerns attributed to senior researchers/executives , an alleged 2023 security breach that wasn’t reported for over a year , and an undisclosed change to OpenAI’s profit cap (raising it 20% annually) . Elon Musk replied “Wow” to the resurfaced thread , and Gary Marcus later posted “This clearly needs an update…” while linking back to it .

Why it matters: regardless of where readers land on the allegations, the episode shows how governance narratives keep re-entering the mainstream discourse around frontier labs.

Europe’s “AI sovereignty” case: economic, continuity, and cultural pillars

In a conversation, Mistral AI CEO Arthur Mensch lays out three pillars for AI sovereignty in Europe: economic sovereignty, business continuity for critical processes (including defense), and cultural sovereignty (reducing centralized cultural bias and supporting local languages) . He also warns that AI will be a “major source of influence” in upcoming elections and expresses concern about concentration of consumer AI .

Why it matters: it’s a clear strategic framing that links model capability directly to geopolitical dependency and continuity risk.

Quick product and industry notes

  • NotebookLM announced Cinematic Video Overviews (NotebookLM Studio), described as creating bespoke, immersive videos from user sources using a “novel combination” of advanced models, rolling out for Ultra users in English . Demis Hassabis called NotebookLM “magical” and “still super underrated” .
  • Andrew Ng announced a DeepLearning.AI short course, Build and Train an LLM with JAX, in partnership with Google, including training a 20M-parameter model and implementing a MiniGPT-style architecture with Flax/NNX . Course link: https://www.deeplearning.ai/short-courses/build-and-train-an-llm-with-jax/
  • Elon Musk said Tesla will stop Model S/X production “in a few months” to make way for an Optimus factory, urging customers to order before production stops .
AI “situational awareness,” agent-ready CLI design, and a robotics progress watchlist
Mar 5
3 min read
196 docs
Guillermo Rauch
Ivan Zhao
Reid Hoffman
+3
Today’s most high-signal picks span AI strategy, hands-on agent-ready tooling, and on-the-ground robotics progress—plus one founder’s recommendation for richly detailed, human-centered period films. The lead item is Vinod Khosla’s endorsed essay meant to sharpen “situational awareness” about the pace and impact of AI change.

Most compelling recommendation: an “AI progress is faster than businesses realize” reality check

Situational Awareness (essay) — @leopoldasch

  • Link/URL:http://situational-awareness.ai
  • Recommended by: Vinod Khosla
  • Key takeaway (as shared): Khosla says he’s “awe struck” by the pace of AI progress, expects today’s one-year-ahead expectations to “look silly,” and argues most businesses “have no clue” what’s coming as “rules of engagement will change” over the next ten years—prompting a need to rethink/transform every business . He adds he “buys” the essay’s assertion that only “a few hundred people know what is happening” .
  • Why it matters: This is a direct pointer (from an investor) to a single, named piece he treats as unusually clarifying—paired with a high-conviction claim that many organizations are underestimating what’s about to change .

I am awe struck at the rate of progress of AI on all fronts… It’s time to rethink/transform every business in the next decade.

Signal boost: Khosla later reaffirmed the recommendation with “Still true two years later” .


Other standout recommendations (practical + concrete)

“Rewrite your CLI for AI Agents” (blog post) — Justin Poehnelt

  • Link/URL:https://justin.poehnelt.com/posts/rewrite-your-cli-for-ai-agents/
  • Recommended by: Guillermo Rauch
  • Key takeaway (as shared): Rauch praises the CLI described as “very well implemented” and “thorough,” noting it dynamically registers commands, is designed for a browser-wielding agent to automate setup steps, and can start an MCP daemon .
  • Why it matters: It’s a concrete, implementation-level recommendation for building tooling that’s agent-operable (not just human-friendly), with specific features called out as evidence of quality .

Watching list (physical AI / robotics)

“China dominates the physical AI race” (article with videos) — Time (author not specified in source)

  • Link/URL:https://time.com/7382151/china-dominates-the-physical-ai-race/
  • Recommended by: Eric Schmidt
  • Key takeaway (as shared): Schmidt urges readers to “watch the videos,” saying “China is moving very fast in robots” .
  • Why it matters: A direct prompt to look at the evidence (via the included videos) rather than rely on secondhand summaries—useful if you’re tracking real-world progress in robotics/“physical AI” .

Offbeat (but deliberate) rec: detailed, human historical films

Merchant Ivory films (filmography / production company) — Merchant Ivory

  • Link/URL (where it was recommended):https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hYWMyXMkZmE
  • Recommended by: Ivan Zhao (Notion co-founder)
  • Key takeaway (as shared): Zhao says he recently discovered Merchant Ivory and recommends exploring their films—mostly period, adapted novels with meticulous detail, “beautifully shot,” and focused on “very human” dynamics between groups of people in historical settings (he mentions A Room with a View and Death in Venice) .
  • Why it matters: A founder’s explicit recommendation for work that’s craft-focused and “very human”—a different kind of input than tech/media analysis, but suggested as highly worth discovering .

Pattern across today’s picks

A cluster of recommendations point at AI showing up in more places, faster—from strategic “situational awareness” framing to agent-ready developer tooling details to “physical AI” progress you can watch directly .

Product Sense moats, AI-native operating loops, and the return of disciplined discovery
Mar 5
9 min read
51 docs
Shreyas Doshi's Product Almanac | Substack
Sachin Rekhi
John Cutler
+7
This edition synthesizes new frameworks and real-world examples on what differentiates PMs in the AI age (Product Sense), how AI-native loops are reshaping delivery and operating models, and how to avoid feature-factory failure modes through stakeholder evidence and minimally viable consistency. It also includes practical playbooks for focus, accessibility, and career signaling (GitHub), plus concrete case studies across B2B SaaS, gaming, and consumer marketplaces.

Big Ideas

1) In an AI-commoditized world, Product Sense becomes the career moat

Shreyas Doshi argues that as AI becomes embedded across product work (discovery, design, prototyping, coding, testing, deployment, analytics, feedback, competitive analysis, GTM, etc.) , the specific tools you use will matter less over time—tools “commoditize,” and tool choice won’t be a durable personal advantage .

The differentiator shifts to the human judgment applied on top of AI outputs—what he labels Product Sense. He breaks Product Sense into five component skills:

  • Strong empathy (needs beyond what AI has already analyzed)
  • Excellent simulation skills (future possibilities based on domain/tech/competition/customers/users)
  • Stellar strategic thinking (segments + differentiators)
  • Great taste (choose what’s optimal and explain why)
  • Creative execution (conceive unique solutions competitors won’t)

He frames this as a high bar that many product people may struggle to meet .

Why it matters: If AI equalizes execution throughput, advantage concentrates in judgment: picking the right problems, seeing tradeoffs, and improving AI-generated inputs/outputs .

How to apply (weekly loop):

  1. Pick one recurring decision type (e.g., prioritization, positioning, UX tradeoffs).
  2. Use AI to generate options (not decisions), then explicitly practice the five skills: empathize, simulate, strategize, choose (taste), and propose a distinctive execution path .
  3. Write down what you improved beyond the AI output (your judgment delta) .

2) AI is compressing delivery cycles—PM work risks becoming the bottleneck

Björn Schotte highlights a “paradox”: engineering has become “10x faster” (2019–2025) while product management only “1.2x,” making PMs the bottleneck . He also describes a landscape split: 70–75% traditional, 20–25% hybrid, and 4–5% AI-native teams .

He argues AI-native teams connect discovery, validation, and delivery into a continuous loop (AI generating tests, deploying, measuring, reporting) .

Why it matters: If building gets radically faster, the failure mode becomes “shipping the wrong stuff faster” (see Torres below) rather than being blocked by implementation.

How to apply (start small):

  1. Pick one workflow where signals already exist (errors, user signals, customer emails, competitor monitoring).
  2. Create a daily or weekly AI-generated briefing that aggregates these signals into a short ranked list for human review .
  3. Make the human step explicit: review, reject, label, and sequence work (don’t auto-ship decisions) .

3) Operating models: aim for minimally viable consistency, not blanket standardization

John Cutler frames operating models as doing “8 jobs” regardless of context (value architecture, discover/prioritize, align capacity, route escalations, support execution, assess impact, circulate insights, provide financial/operational oversight, shape capacity) .

In parallel, his Substack post argues for Minimally Viable Consistency (MVC): the fewest consistent concepts/terms needed to operate, while preserving beneficial local variation . He warns that widely known frameworks (e.g., OKRs) often hide wildly different implementations—and that variation isn’t inherently bad .

Why it matters: AI adoption can tempt orgs into adding more process (or “consistency mechanisms”) to manage speed and change—but embedded rules rarely disappear .

How to apply (design MVC like a scaffold):

  1. Identify what risk you’re trying to reduce if something isn’t consistent (be specific) .
  2. Prefer lighter nudges (templates, defaults, shared artifacts) before mandates .
  3. Add an explicit reassessment date; plan how you’d remove the rule later .

4) AI can push teams back into “feature factory” mode—counter with discovery and alignment

Teresa Torres warns that “AI features dominating roadmaps” can lead teams back to feature factory behavior:

“All we are doing is shipping the wrong stuff faster.”

She argues you can’t win opinion battles with stakeholders; you can bring information they don’t have (customer interview insights, assumption-test data, patterns in the opportunity space) .

Hiten Shah offers a drift diagnostic: if you ask five leaders what the company does and get five different answers, the company is drifting—and roadmap debates turn into arguments .

Why it matters: Faster delivery increases the cost of misalignment and weak discovery.

How to apply:

  1. Start roadmap discussions with shared outcomes (not solutions) .
  2. Continuously “show your work” so decisions are less about opinions and more about evidence and reasoning .
  3. Use drift checks: periodically ask leaders to explain what the company does; treat divergence as an upstream problem to fix before prioritization fights .

5) Accessibility is both a product quality discipline and a go-to-market requirement

Konstantin Tieber frames disability as a mismatch between individual capacities and environmental demands , and highlights categories of impairments (visual, auditory, motor, cognitive) including situational/temporary constraints . He points to WCAG’s four principles (Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, Robust) as a practical compliance checklist .

He also connects accessibility to sales: enterprise buyers may require a VPAT/ACR (Accessibility Conformance Report) documenting WCAG conformance .

Why it matters: Accessibility expands reachable users and reduces exclusion by default; it’s also increasingly tied to procurement expectations and compliance workflows .

How to apply:

  1. “Shift left”: challenge UI concepts early (e.g., drag-and-drop) with “How do I operate this with a keyboard?” .
  2. Build with semantic HTML (avoid divs-as-buttons) .
  3. Test with keyboard + screen readers (e.g., VoiceOver) as part of release validation .

Tactical Playbook

1) A stakeholder-management workflow that replaces opinion battles with evidence

Torres’ tactics are structured and repeatable:

  1. Start with shared outcomes (not solutions) .
  2. Use an opportunity solution tree as a stakeholder-management tool (to visualize options and assumptions) .
  3. Invite contribution with: “Did we miss anything?” .
  4. Share assumption tests and results, not only conclusions .
  5. Show your work continuously—avoid “big reveals” .

Why it works: It turns stakeholder conversations into joint sense-making, anchored in information stakeholders typically don’t have direct access to .


2) Use AI where it reduces collaboration overhead—protect high-context collaboration

Cutler’s heuristic: some work is “transactional” but forced into collaboration (meetings that should have been a doc review), and AI can help by sharing context and reducing friction . But there’s also work that should be collaborative and becomes transactional due to busyness; freeing time via AI should make room for deliberate collaboration .

He also warns that AI is weaker for certain research question types: it can be strong for definitional questions but tends to produce explanations too eagerly for explanatory questions (“it wants to please you”) .

Step-by-step:

  1. List your team’s recurring collaborative moments.
  2. Tag each as either (a) transactional-but-collaborative or (b) truly high-context collaboration .
  3. Automate (a) first (e.g., segment-specific release note reframes) so time returns to (b) .

3) Speed without sloppiness: apply rigor to wins, not just losses

Cutler flags a common management trap: people over-index on “good news,” stop applying rigor to wins, and start relying on luck .

Step-by-step:

  1. After a “win,” run the same review you’d run after a miss: what worked, what was luck, what to repeat .
  2. Capture learnings into a lightweight shared artifact (so you don’t lose the insight in celebration mode) .

4) If you’re overwhelmed, design “lanes” (vectors for meaningful hard work)

Cutler’s “lanes” concept: teams need viable lanes with the right challenge/progress balance; when passionate people have “no vectors for hard work,” they invent work .

Step-by-step:

  1. Define 1–3 lanes per team (not per person) with clear boundaries and intended outcomes .
  2. Audit current work: remove or downgrade initiatives that don’t fit a lane.
  3. Re-check lane viability monthly—adjust challenge level and clarity.

Case Studies & Lessons

1) When the environment drives the outcome more than the product: an Airbnb analogy

A Reddit post describes two similar Airbnb listings (photos, reviews, price) with different booking outcomes; the winner was surrounded by 15–20 nearby restaurants/cafes/bars, while the other was in a quiet residential area . The host can optimize the listing, but not the surrounding ecosystem, even if the interface looks identical .

Takeaway: Sometimes your “product” competes on the broader experience system—not just on-screen features.


2) Retention dropped because value and pricing didn’t match (mobile gaming)

Laura Teclemariam describes launching a “Modifications” feature (microtransactions ~$1–$5) and seeing retention drop after v2 because the feature’s pricing didn’t match the value it delivered . She adjusted pricing structures to better align value and price .

Takeaway: Retention problems can be value-to-price mismatches, not just UX issues .


3) “High-quality MVPs” and pixel-level rigor in animation production

Teclemariam compares animation development to product development: storyboards as prototypes, animatics as MVPs, with a higher quality bar at the MVP stage (less tolerance for “ugly baby” shipping) . She also highlights editorial rigor over details (every moment/pixel) as analogous to PM obsession with craft .

Takeaway: Speed isn’t the only lever—some domains require higher minimum quality to learn effectively.


4) Accessibility failure after heavy investment: Bild Zeitung’s readout feature

A cautionary example: Bild Zeitung launched a readout feature after significant engineering investment, then asked an accessibility influencer to test it; the trigger button wasn’t accessible via screen readers .

Takeaway: “Shift accessibility left”—validate operability (keyboard/screen reader) before launch .


5) Translating dry WCAG reports into stories (with a warning about false confidence)

A ProductTank Cologne talk describes using synthetic personas (data-driven archetypes that can “act and speak”) to translate technical WCAG accessibility reports into experiential narratives via RAG (accessibility report + site metadata + persona data) . They found AI stories can significantly foster empathy and urgency for accessibility measures .

However, they caution synthetic personas can create false confidence and should complement, not replace, real user research (“there are no stereotypes”) .


Career Corner

1) A practical AI-era career hedge: build Product Sense (and treat it as upstream)

Doshi’s framing is that the durable advantage isn’t tool mastery; it’s your ability to improve AI outputs through empathy, simulation, strategy, taste, and creative execution .

Career action: pick one of the five skills and deliberately practice it with real artifacts (PRDs, prototypes, research plans), not just prompts.


2) GitHub as proof-of-skill for PMs (especially AI PM roles)

Aakash Gupta reports that when he interviewed 10+ AI PM hiring managers, they said they will check a linked GitHub—and only 24% of PM candidates have one . He adds that inbound recruiter outreach converts to offers at 37% vs 22% for outbound applicants; a strong GitHub can shift you toward inbound .

He recommends treating pinned repos as a portfolio (“two good ones is the MVP”) with clear READMEs and meaningful contribution activity . He also warns against copy-pasted AI code without tradeoffs sections and empty commit “farms” .

“Your resume says you can do the job. Your GitHub proves it.”


3) Staying effective amid chaos: focus via operating model + lanes

A mid-level PM asks how senior Staff/Principal folks maintain focus as the role gets more chaotic . One concrete response across sources is to make focus structural: define lanes and a lightweight operating model rather than relying on personal heroics .


Tools & Resources

  • Claude Code for Product Managers (video): Sachin Rekhi shared a recording link : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsAAaY8a63Q
  • Claude Code workflows (agentic capabilities): Rekhi describes autonomous workflows, local markdown artifacts, custom tool calls (e.g., transcription), and code-writing to accomplish tasks .
  • Product Sense course reference: Doshi links to a mindmap he created for a Product Sense course (link as provided): https://preview.kit-mail3.com/click/dpheh0hzhm/aHR0cHM6Ly9tYXZlbi5jb20vc2hyZXlhcy1kb3NoaS9wcm9kdWN0LXNlbnNl
  • Accessibility testing basics: keyboard + screen readers (including VoiceOver) and automated tooling like axe DevTools are listed as practical testing approaches .
  • Operating model prompts for “temporary consistency”: use expiration dates and plan removals for new rules added during strategic shifts .
Fertilizer and diesel spikes reshape spring budgets as Brazil’s safrinha window tightens
Mar 5
8 min read
93 docs
Ag PhD
Market Minute LLC
Successful Farming
+6
Input markets dominated the week: nitrogen fertilizer and diesel both surged on Middle East logistics risk, raising near-term uncertainty for spring budgets and 2026 acreage decisions. This brief also highlights actionable agronomy and livestock practices, plus Brazil’s safrinha pace and production outlook as weather compresses planting windows.

1) Market Movers

Fertilizer and fuel: the biggest near-term shock to spring input budgets (U.S. + global)

  • Fertilizer prices have surged since early December 2025. In one market discussion, urea was described as 70% higher than December 4, while corn prices were noted as up only $0.08 in the same span . Gulf urea was cited moving from $350/ton (Dec 4) to $600/ton over ~90 days .
  • Retail tightness is showing up in availability, not just price. One update described U.S. retail nitrogen offers at $700/ton or more (if available at all), with some retailers saying they’re not selling due to tight supply .
  • Diesel also spiked on the same conflict channel. Nationwide diesel was cited at $3.89/gal (up $0.12 from Monday) and $3.88/gal Tuesday per EIA (up $0.26 YoY) . The Strait of Hormuz disruption was described as halting refined product movement, including diesel .

Grains: prices mixed, with timing risk and export demand still in focus (U.S.)

  • Market open levels (U.S. futures, one recap): May corn $4.45¾ (down ¾¢), May soybeans $11.72½ (up 2¢), May Chicago wheat $5.70 (down 4¢), May KC wheat $5.75 (down 3¼¢), May spring wheat $6.12½ (down ¾¢) .
  • Wheat pressure from near-term weather forecasts: wheat futures were reported lower overnight on forecasts for rain in the southern Plains, while Kansas wheat conditions were said to have declined month-over-month .
  • New-crop corn seasonality watch: a market note flagged that new-crop corn posted a new high “yesterday,” and also stated that since 2004, new-crop corn has never posted its highest price of the year in March.

Livestock: boxed beef strength and hog recovery (U.S.)

  • One report cited Choice boxed beef up $6.71 to $388.05, with Select up to $378.58.
  • In the same update, live cattle were cited $0.40 to $1.00 higher and feeders ranged $0.12 lower to $0.62 higher.

2) Innovation Spotlight

Low-CI corn and 45Z: turning practices into documentation (U.S.)

  • Practices named as trackable low-CI criteria: nitrogen stabilizers, no-till/rotations in and out of soybeans, and cover crops.
  • The bottleneck is recordkeeping. Tracking/recording low-CI practices was described as time-consuming—up to 10 hours for one field—with BASF pointing to its Xarvio Field Manager “Bioenergy” application as a way to package information for retailers and ethanol plants to digest and align with 45Z guidance .
  • A related BASF segment framed 45Z as a potential income add, while noting the payout rate was not yet known; it also cited survey results implying participation rises from ~18–19% without retail help to ~80% with retailer help.

Fungicide performance claims under stress conditions (U.S.)

  • BASF described 2025 demo participation of 1,800+ growers and 300 retailers and said growers saw 20–60 bushel differences in corn in areas hit hard by tar spot and southern rust using Veltyma/Revytech/Revilock fungicides, with “similar percentage” soybean gains when it turned dry later in the season .

Crop protection/regulatory updates tied to 2026 access (U.S.)

  • Dicamba (over-the-top): Bayer said its dicamba product for over-the-top use on XtendFlex cotton/soybeans was approved the first week of February, describing positive farmer response and 2026 season access . A separate BASF interview also described dicamba over-the-top label progress after a two-year effort with EPA and noted state registrations filtering through .
  • Waterhemp/pigweed tool pipeline: Bayer highlighted diflufenican as an active ingredient it believes can be a strong technical solution for waterhemp and pigweed, while emphasizing the need for timely EPA approval (with timing a challenge for spring 2026 access) .

New equipment (U.S.)

  • Fendt unveiled 800 Vario Gen5 tractors (models 826, 829, 832) with a new AGCO Power Core80 8-liter engine described as maintaining high torque at low RPMs for low fuel consumption .

3) Regional Developments

Brazil: safrinha corn window, soybean harvest pace, and demand growth

  • Production outlook: Beyond Agro projected total corn production at 137.5M metric tons, down from 141M last season , with the second crop potentially down up to 3.5M tons while demand was said to rise 8M tons. Demand growth was linked to corn ethanol and the animal protein sector .
  • Planting window risk: Canal Rural noted that in key producing states the ideal window ends in the second half of February, and delays raise the risk of hitting dry periods during grain filling.
  • Progress and delays: one national update said Brazil had planted nearly 65% of intended safrinha area , with soybean harvest around 42% complete (behind the prior year’s pace) . State-level snapshots included Mato Grosso ~85% planted for safrinha, while Paraná was cited as about 20% behind last year; São Paulo was described as not yet started in that segment due to waiting for more rain .

Middle East conflict: fertilizer supply risk framing (global)

  • StoneX analysis emphasized the region accounts for 41% of global urea exports (with relevant ammonia and DAP share as well), and said shortage risk depends heavily on whether the conflict is short-lived vs. prolonged—with the Strait of Hormuz a key logistics factor .
  • Current market behavior described included urea sellers withholding offers due to price uncertainty and producers cutting output due to export bottlenecks and storage issues .

U.S.: wildfire losses (Southwest Kansas)

  • A report highlighted recovery efforts for a rancher in Southwest Kansas after a wildfire burned 35,000 acres and killed around 200 cattle.

4) Best Practices

Corn: early planting success in cold soils (U.S.)

Ag PhD’s guidance for early corn planting in 40°F soils centered on:

  • Start only when soil is dry and no earlier than the first crop insurance date.
  • Run a cold germination test (commonly at 50°F) because the warm germ score on the seed tag is done at 77°F and may be less informative for early planting conditions .
  • Consider strong seed treatments (or biological packages) and added protection such as Xyway fungicide, in-furrow insecticide, and pop-up fertility for cold stress .

Input procurement and risk management: increase conversations, avoid “all at once” decisions (U.S.)

"You need to talk to [your supplier]... have those conversations... quit letting emotion dictate it... Do a layer... on the grain side... on the fertilizer... on the chem."

A separate segment emphasized not facing stress alone:

"Make sure you've got a friend, a family member, somebody you can talk to... This is a very tough time."

Livestock management under extreme seasonal conditions (Brazil – Pantanal)

  • A Pantanal cattle segment described using timed AI (IATF) to target calving in Aug–Oct, followed by early weaning (Jan–Feb) and moving calves to higher-ground farms because calves tolerate flood conditions poorly compared with cows .
  • The same operation emphasized selection for rusticity, using semen from improved Nelore bulls (and Angus crossing for weaker cows) .

Soil amendment at small scale: biochar methods shared by practitioners (homestead)

  • One approach recommended a trench method described as low-cost and suitable for limbs/brush . Another described using a cauldron + lid approach to create coals for compost while functioning as a fire pit .

5) Input Markets

Nitrogen fertilizer: import dependence + logistics timing (U.S.)

  • A fertilizer discussion described the U.S. as a net-importer market with pricing tied to global replacement values; it cited urea imports around 5.1–5.2 million tons this year .
  • Another segment framed spring timing risk: even if a vessel is loaded quickly, the product may not reach the farmer until early May due to ocean transit plus inland movement .

Diesel: spring demand timing problem (U.S.)

  • The diesel spike was described as arriving “at one of the worst times” given higher diesel demand during spring planting . One source also noted it was a tough time to lock in fuel costs in early March and said many farmers missed seasonal lows in December/early January .

On-farm operational risk: grid reliability for poultry (Brazil – Paraná)

  • A producer in Paraná reported losing over 20,000 birds during repeated power failures, estimating losses around R$150,000. She also described equipment damage from voltage swings—including five solar inverters—despite having generator and solar backup . Another segment cited infrastructure concerns such as ~50-year-old cables.

6) Forward Outlook

2026 acreage and pricing: inputs vs. margins (U.S.)

  • One market breakdown estimated nitrogen as 10–20% of a corn grower’s total production costs; a 40% nitrogen price spike was described as potentially raising total production costs 4–8%.
  • A fertilizer-focused discussion suggested elevated input costs could shift acreage expectations: while some market talk referenced higher corn acreage, one analyst said they continued using 93M corn acres as a conservative approach and expressed uncertainty it would be that high .
  • Another market show framed acreage as the “big swing” variable into the end of March (ahead of planting intentions), with fertilizer more of a yield variable among many others .

Key calendar items to monitor

  • A market note flagged a USDA report on Tuesday.
  • Trade expectations remain a swing factor: one markets segment referenced upcoming U.S.–China meetings, including a mid-month USTR/Vice Premier meeting and a planned trip to Beijing later in the month .

Brazil seasonal planning: rainfall timing and harvest/planting execution

  • Canal Rural’s weather discussion warned that safrinha corn needs ~60 rainy days and that broad “rain cut” typically begins late April/early May; it also emphasized that the most problematic scenario would be both delayed planting and an earlier-than-normal rain cutoff (which was said not to be expected in that segment) .

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