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Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
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Get concise daily or weekly updates with precise citations directly in your inbox. You control the focus, style, and length.
Tibo
Peter Steinberger
Boris Cherny
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
The pattern worth stealing today: shrink the prompt surface, strengthen the harness. Kyle Daigle says GitHub has moved away from brittle mega-skills toward tiny composable skills , Theo argues AgentMD / Claude.md / system-prompt sprawl silently decays as models change and should be cut back to concrete project facts , and Boris Cherny says his own Claude Code workflow has already climbed from prompting directly to writing loops that prompt Claude for him . Theo also points to benchmarks where Opus performs roughly 10-30% better in Cursor than in Claude Code, which is a strong reminder that harness choice can matter as much as model choice . Cursor is making the same point from the infra side: a serious cloud agent needs durable execution and a powerful harness, not just a local agent moved to a server .
"My job is to write loops."
⚡ TRY THIS
Do a prompt-debt cleanup pass before you test another model. Audit every
AgentMD,Claude.md, system prompt, MCP server, plugin, and skill; delete stale files, keep only concrete project facts, remove behavior-steering fluff likethink step by steporyou're a skilled engineer, and leave unnecessary MCPs and skills off by default. Theo's advice for new models: start with the smallest possible harness, then add tools only when the task actually needs them .Break one brittle mega-skill into micro-skills. Kyle Daigle's pattern is to make each skill atomic and single-purpose, then compose them via orchestration instead of hiding everything inside one giant instruction blob. Share the pieces in a repo and run them from the CLI or Copilot desktop app; keep the underlying tool separate from audience instructions so the same summarizer can be reused for analysts, customers, or internal teams .
Automate a backward-looking retro into GitHub. Kyle's workflow pulls PRs, posts, Obsidian notes, Teams transcripts via Work IQ, and Slack, then asks the agent to say what happened this week, what worked, what didn't, and what to change over the next 3-4 days. He runs this from the Copilot desktop app / CLI and posts the output into GitHub issues or discussions via agentic GitHub Actions .
Turn repeated prompting into loops or precomputed programs. Boris Cherny's progression at Anthropic: prompt Claude directly, then run 5-10 Claude instances in parallel, then write orchestration loops that do the prompting for you. For repeated tasks, have the model write a program you can run over and over instead of paying for fresh inference each time, and capture team-specific know-how as reusable skills, like how your team queries the database .
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
OpenClaw landed on Windows with enterprise-shaped controls. The new Windows companion app can connect to claws on Windows or WSL, sandbox tool calls with Microsoft Execution Containers and process isolation, and gate access at the folder, clipboard, and internet level. Peter Steinberger also added observability, auto-permissions, non-binary folder access, and a harness plugin so you can layer OpenClaw on top of Copilot / Codex for persistent memory, heartbeats, and Slack / Teams use; the security push was driven by repeated can-I-use-this-at-work feedback, and the OpenClaw Foundation is meant to keep it model- and OS-agnostic .
Codex added more day-to-day app-building surface area. OpenAI's latest update adds website hosting and sharing for business-plan users, improved plugins and skills for broader roles, and visual annotation feedback inside docs, slides, sheets, and more. Riley Brown's same-day practitioner take: Codex Sites plus the new Convex plugin make internal tools fast to build, including a todo app whose agent can write and edit the DB; current limitation, sites still cannot be public. Official details: openai.com/index/codex-for-every-role-tool-workflow/.
GitHub Copilot is converging into one agent stack. Kyle Daigle says the CLI, desktop app, and cloud agents now share one SDK and harness, with the scope expanding from code completion into security remediation, issue handling, and repo / docs automation. Kent C. Dodds put the new GitHub Copilot App on roughly 30 broken workshop jobs in parallel and said it looked like it was working; PR: epicshop/pull/612.
Claude Code's internal adoption signal from Anthropic is still strong. Boris Cherny says lines of code and PR volume per engineer have grown by many hundreds of percentage points since release, new-hire ramp-up dropped from weeks to about two days, and the product surface now spans CLI, desktop, iOS, Android, Slack, and GitHub, with plan mode emerging from actual usage .
Cursor's lesson post is blunt: runtime beats simple hosting. Cursor says good cloud agents require durable execution, a powerful harness, and infrastructure that gives agents realistic dev environments. External comparison worth noting: Theo says some benchmarks show Opus improving by roughly 10-30% in Cursor versus Claude Code. Lessons: cursor.com/blog/cloud-agent-lessons.
LangChain shipped practical branch-and-recover primitives. LangSmith Sandboxes GA now supports snapshots and cheap forks: capture a running sandbox, spin up 10 parallel branches for roughly the cost of one, and restore when the agent goes down the wrong path. Fleet access profiles let sandboxed agents call protected services without exposing the secret inside the environment; docs: sandbox snapshots and access profiles.
Microsoft shipped smaller new models for code and reasoning. MAI-Code-1-Flash is a 5B model purpose-built for GitHub Copilot and VS Code and is rolling out to Copilot individual users in VS Code. MAI-Thinking-1 is a 35B reasoning model that Microsoft says beat Sonnet 4.6 in blind human side-by-side evaluations; Simon Willison highlights Microsoft's statement that MAI-Code-1-Flash was built end-to-end using clean and appropriately licensed data .
🎬 GO DEEPER
- 6:29-7:48 — Kyle Daigle on the backward-looking loop. If you steal one workflow today, make it this one: mine PRs, notes, transcripts, and Slack, then turn the past week into a short forward plan .
- 12:11-13:27 — Kyle Daigle on micro-skills over mega-skills. A clean short argument for atomic skills that do one thing well and stay maintainable as workflows change .
- 11:16-11:53 — Boris Cherny on climbing the abstraction ladder. Watch the jump from IDE autocomplete to 5-10 parallel Claude instances to loops that do the prompting for him .
PR worth studying — Kent C. Dodds' Copilot App fix run. If you want a concrete artifact from multi-job agent debugging, start with epicshop/pull/612.
Docs worth reading — Cursor cloud-agent lessons + LangSmith snapshots. Cursor's post is useful for runtime architecture; LangSmith's docs are the practical reference for fork / restore branching in sandboxes. cursor.com/blog/cloud-agent-lessons and docs.langchain.com/langsmith/sandbox-snapshots.
Editorial take: the edge is moving away from giant custom prompt piles and toward maintainable runtimes — minimal harnesses, atomic skills, and loops you can still live with after the next model update.
Jerry Liu
Factory
clem 🤗
Funding & Deals
- Westmag — $11M seed around a domestic motor/actuator thesis. Westmag disclosed an $11M seed led by a16z with Founders Fund, Lux Capital, NFDG, Menlo Ventures, and others participating . The company is building US-made robot actuators and drone motors, is ramping production at its South San Francisco factory against committed offtake orders, and moved from inception to shipping from its first factory in under a year . The team pairs David Hansen’s motor supply-chain experience from Weel and years of direct Chinese BLDC sourcing with Jordan Sanders’ decade in robotics and commercial leadership at Slip Robotics . Its operating plan is to vertically integrate bottlenecks such as stator stamping, magnet processing, and actuator assembly, then aggregate demand across US drone and robotics startups through a high-volume, high-mix catalog modeled on T-Motor . The core thesis is that motors and actuators are a supply-chain single point of failure dominated by China, and that regulatory pressure plus defense and humanoid-robotics demand are making domestic supply more urgent .
Emerging Teams
- Listen Labs — strong enterprise traction in AI-native customer research. Launched about a year ago, Listen says it already serves 20% of the Fortune 500; named customers mentioned in the interview include Microsoft, Anthropic, Sweetgreen, and NBC . It combines AI voice interviews, a 30M-participant audience, and analysis/recommendations, and says it has completed more than 1M interviews with exponential growth . The origin story is notable too: the founders previously built a viral AI avatar app that hit 20k users overnight, then used an AI interview product to understand their own churn and turned that into the company .
- Soria — investor workflow software with real customers early. Soria is positioning as an AI Bloomberg Terminal for sector-specialist investors, starting with healthcare; its agents aggregate hundreds of sources, monitor inflections, and alert in real time. YC says it is already live with major banks and hedge funds .
- Maquoketa — defense software with an unusually concrete performance claim. The team is building the intelligence layer for drone manufacturers and the US military, starting with a guidance system that it says triples the hit rate of one-way attack drones at one-fifth the vehicle cost . Founders: @yeager620, @alejahern_, @davemuchows, and @McmasterMingus .
- Refortifai / Atrisa — analog design agents, not just digital codegen. Atrisa reasons hierarchically about circuits, proposes topologies against specs, and does debugging with awareness of parasitics, physical layout, reusability, and interference while ingesting existing PDKs and design docs . Founders: @Cyan9800, @RithikWasHere, and @AtmanKar .
AI & Tech Breakthroughs
- Factory Router is a clean example of the next optimization layer in AI products. Factory says its routing layer automatically picks the right model for each task, maintains frontier performance, and cuts costs by 25% . Jerry Liu argues this is a startup advantage: specialized model harnesses can deliver the same or higher accuracy at 2–10x lower cost and latency than a one-model approach . Clement Delangue’s related point is that automatic routing at the UI layer should push usage toward smaller and cheaper models by removing manual model selection from the user .
- OpenAI’s Sites in Codex moves AI coding closer to end-to-end software creation. The product now generates fully deployed URLs, workspace authentication, static files, and database-backed dynamic data, starting in preview for business and enterprise teams . The shift here is not just code generation, but bundling deployment and app state into the same interface .
- Listen Labs is also a useful vertical-AI case study in evaluation loops. Its AI interview agents run as video conversations, use emotion signals, and feed simulation models that the company says can reach up to 95% accuracy on some individual predictions . The team says it relies on post-training and RAG, and that one proprietary eval improved from 20% to 85% before being reset with a harder benchmark .
Market Signals
- Domestic defense and robotics supply chains are moving from theory to procurement urgency. Westmag’s timing lines up with January 2025 sanctions on T-Motor and the FCC’s December 2025 Covered List decision, both of which increased pressure on US drone companies to dual-source away from foreign components . Packy McCormick’s reporting adds that defense buyers are willing to pay a ‘Red, White, and Blue Premium’ for American components, creating an initial demand bridge for domestic suppliers . More broadly, the theme is reshoring critical ‘Electric Stack’ components for the US robotics and AI hardware ecosystem .
- The AI harness layer is emerging as a distinct category. Garry Tan calls model routing important and predicts an ‘AI Harness Wars’ dynamic as labs and startups compete around routing and orchestration rather than just base models . That view fits with Jerry Liu’s claim that optimized harnesses can beat frontier vendors on cost and latency and with one founder’s observation that hosted model pricing can vary by 150x for the same task, leaving many teams overpaying 8–10x and making self-hosting more compelling at scale .
- Infrastructure vendors keep climbing into the application layer. OpenAI’s Sites in Codex adds deployment, auth, files, and databases to code generation . Jason Calacanis reads the move as infrastructure companies trying to win the platform game and taking on app-layer startups directly .
- YC sentiment remains broad rather than incremental.
‘The startups from the spring YC batch that I did office hours with today have some of the biggest ideas I’ve ever encountered... There is so much more going on now than just “AI for x”.’
- Compliance around AI provenance may become an investable wedge. A founder behind NotarAI says EU AI Act Article 50 enforcement begins in August and that common tools such as Figma, file converters, and image-optimization workflows often strip the C2PA manifest that will be required for AI-generated images .
Worth Your Time
- America Spins on Westmag — the best sourced read here on Westmag’s founders, manufacturing plan, and the regulatory tailwinds behind domestic motor supply .
- Sequoia’s Listen Labs interview — a useful founder-level walkthrough of AI interviews, customer simulation, and why market research may matter more as building gets easier .
- The next frontier of visual AI is code — Yoko Li’s thesis that the most valuable visual AI tools generate source code rather than pixels, with the market organizing around the runtime .
- Soria YC launch page — worth a quick look because it is one of the few launches here aimed directly at sector-specialist investors and already claims bank and hedge-fund deployment .
Sam Altman
Daniel Han
Unsloth AI
Top Stories
Why it matters: model competition is shifting from raw capability to deployability, cost, and broader adoption.
Microsoft made its biggest MAI push yet. At Build, Microsoft launched seven new MAI models across reasoning, code, image, transcribe, and voice, led by MAI-Thinking-1, a 35B active-parameter MoE with 256K context that scored 97% on AIME 2025 and 53% on SWE-Bench Pro. Microsoft also said the model delivers 30% better performance per dollar and 1.4x performance-per-watt on its MAIA 200 chip versus GB200. A separate post linked a 109-page technical report.
OpenAI pushed Codex beyond coding. New Sites let teams turn plans and work into interactive websites or apps with deployed URLs, authentication, static files, and database-backed dynamic data, with rollout starting on Business and Enterprise plans. OpenAI also added role-specific plugins for sales, product design, creative production, data analytics, and public equity investing. A report first shared with Axios said Codex passed 4M weekly users, up 5x since February, with knowledge workers now one-fifth of users and growing faster than developers.
Compute scarcity is becoming a strategic constraint. OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar said demand is rising “almost like a vertical wall,” that materially more compute in 2026 will be hard to source, and that supply constraints are likely to remain severe in 2027. She also said Nvidia remains OpenAI’s top partner while the company is also working with AMD, Cerebras, and Broadcom on diversified chip supply.
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: the most useful research today focused on scientific discovery, agent reliability, and where current frontier systems still fail.
Google DeepMind launched Co-Scientist, a Gemini-based multi-agent system that generates, debates, verifies, and ranks thousands of hypotheses for complex scientific problems. DeepMind said evaluations surfaced new targets for liver fibrosis, fresh ALS approaches, and genetic leads for reversing aging, and the system is now available to individual researchers through Gemini for Science.
Harness-1 proposed a different way to build agents. The core idea is to keep reliable working memory—candidate pools, evidence links, verification records, and budget-aware context—outside the policy, leaving the 20B model to decide what to search, keep, verify, and when to stop. Across eight retrieval benchmarks, it reached 0.730 average curated recall, beating the next-best open search agent by 11.4 points.
AutoMedBench showed how far medical research agents still have to go. The benchmark covers 24 tasks across CT, X-ray, pathology, question answering, report generation, and segmentation; the authors said six tested frontier models remained far from reliable medical AI researchers, with validation the weakest stage and engineering failures dominating.
Products & Launches
Why it matters: the product layer kept moving toward desktop-native agents and hybrid local/cloud workflows.
Devin Desktop launched as a workspace for managing fleets of local and cloud agents from one surface, with a full IDE, support for any ACP-compatible agent, and cloud handoff so work can continue after a laptop is closed.
GitHub Copilot app debuted as a desktop home for agent-native software development on GitHub, with continuity across desktop, CLI, mobile, and web, plus agent-native issue and PR workflows.
Perplexity announced hybrid agentic inference for Perplexity Computer, splitting tasks between on-device local models and frontier cloud models to keep private data local and improve token efficiency. The company said it is coming to Windows laptops, Macs, and Linux machines.
Industry Moves
Why it matters: labs are extending from model releases into enterprise control, vertical partnerships, and infrastructure bets.
Microsoft’s enterprise strategy is moving from models to customization. Its new Frontier Tuning lets companies build company-specific agents they control themselves; Microsoft said an early McKinsey tuning outperformed GPT-5.5 on quality at 10x lower cost.
Microsoft and Mayo Clinic are jointly training a frontier healthcare model, extending Microsoft’s MAI effort into a high-value vertical.
OpenRouter raised $113M in Series B funding led by CapitalG to scale its multi-model inference routing platform.
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: Washington’s AI posture is still being shaped in real time, and lab reactions matter.
- A new White House executive order on AI drew immediate support from major labs. Anthropic called it “an important step” for U.S. AI leadership and said it was ready to support implementation, while Sam Altman said the order gets the balance right between leading on model development, safety, and cyber defense.
Quick Takes
Why it matters: a few smaller updates still sharpen the competitive picture.
- Alibaba’s Fun-Realtime-TTS took the top spot on Artificial Analysis’ Speech Arena with a 1,219 Elo, ahead of Gemini 3.1 Flash TTS and Inworld Realtime TTS-2.
- MiniMax-M3 became the new open-weight SOTA on the Vals Index and Vals Multimodal Index, ranking #6 overall.
- Unsloth, with NVIDIA and Microsoft, said users can now train 120B+ parameter models locally on the 128GB unified-memory RTX Spark laptop.
- Krea 2 Medium debuted at #6 on Artificial Analysis’ text-to-image leaderboard, ahead of its larger Krea 2 Large variant.
The Generalist
Tim Ferriss
Shane Parrish
Most compelling recommendation
Microcosm — George Gilder
- Content type: Book
- Link/URL: No direct resource URL was provided in the notes; context episode: The Hidden Pattern Behind Winning Products | Farmville creator Mark Pincus
- Who recommended it: Mark Pincus
- Key takeaway: Pincus said the book helped him argue in a TCI job interview that the company was positioned for the coming "information superhighway" before the internet existed
- Why it matters: This was the strongest recommendation in today's set because it was tied to a concrete action: Pincus used the book's framing to position an industry thesis in an important career moment
"Because I read this book by this guy, George Gilder called Microcosm, and I think that your company is positioned for this coming, you know, information superighway."
Best company-building case study
Genentech origin story book
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Not specified in the provided notes
- Link/URL: No direct resource URL was provided in the notes; context episode: Reimagining Biotech with Jake Becraft of Strand Therapeutics — Tim’s Founder Kitchen
- Who recommended it: Jake Becraft, in conversation with Tim Ferriss
- Key takeaway: Becraft called it one of the best business books he has read because it includes actual contracts, negotiations, mistakes, serendipitous moments, and unforced errors that had to come together for Genentech to survive
- Why it matters: The recommendation points readers toward a company history grounded in operating detail rather than abstraction
Broader reading stack from Bryon Hargis
Bryon Hargis surfaced the widest reading stack in today's set, spanning aerospace memoir, startup management, and physics
- Carrying the Fire: An Astronaut’s Journeys — Content type: Book. Author/creator: Michael Collins. Link/URL:Amazon. Who recommended it: Bryon Hargis. Key takeaway: Included in Hargis's book recommendations. Why it matters: It adds an astronaut memoir to a list otherwise heavy on operators and technical material
- Skunk Works: A Personal Memoir of My Years at Lockheed — Content type: Book. Author/creator: Not specified in the provided notes. Link/URL:Amazon. Who recommended it: Bryon Hargis. Key takeaway: Included in Hargis's book recommendations. Why it matters: It adds Lockheed operating history to the same stack
- The Hard Thing About Hard Things — Content type: Book. Author/creator: Ben Horowitz. Link/URL:Amazon. Who recommended it: Bryon Hargis. Key takeaway: Included in Hargis's book recommendations. Why it matters: It is the clearest startup-management title in Hargis's set
- Gravitation — Content type: Book. Author/creator: Misner, Thorne, Wheeler. Link/URL:Amazon. Who recommended it: Bryon Hargis. Key takeaway: Included in Hargis's book recommendations. Why it matters: It shows the list extends into fundamental physics
- “Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman!” — Content type: Book. Author/creator: Richard Feynman. Link/URL:Amazon. Who recommended it: Bryon Hargis. Key takeaway: Included in Hargis's book recommendations. Why it matters: It adds a Richard Feynman title to a stack that already includes Gravitation
- Perfectly Reasonable Deviations from the Beaten Track — Content type: Book. Author/creator: Richard Feynman. Link/URL:Amazon. Who recommended it: Bryon Hargis. Key takeaway: Included in Hargis's book recommendations. Why it matters: Together with the other Feynman pick, it makes scientific reading a visible part of Hargis's list
What stands out
The highest-signal recommendations today were the ones attached to real decisions and real operating detail. Microcosm mattered to Mark Pincus because it helped him frame an approaching industry shift, while the Genentech origin story stood out because Jake Becraft emphasized the contracts, negotiations, mistakes, and lucky breaks behind a company's survival. Hargis's list broadens the mix toward aerospace, entrepreneurship, and physics
Mustafa Suleyman
Arthur Mensch
Gary Marcus
The clearest thread today: control over the AI stack
Today’s most important announcements were less about isolated features and more about who controls the model, the runtime, the data, and the deployment environment . Microsoft, DeepMind, the White House, and Mistral each pushed a different version of that idea.
Microsoft turns Build into a full-stack agent pitch
At Build, Satya Nadella framed Microsoft’s announcements as a "frontier intelligence ecosystem" spanning Windows AI, new device concepts, enterprise context layers, autonomous agents, and new MAI models . Project Solara, announced with Qualcomm, was presented as a new platform for agent-first devices, with Qualcomm describing a broader shift from apps and operating systems toward agents .
On the model side, Microsoft announced seven new MAI models. Microsoft said MAI-Thinking-1 is a 35B active-parameter MoE with 256K context that reached 97% on AIME 2025 and 53% on SWE Bench Pro; MAI-Code-1-Flash hit 51% on SWE Bench Pro with 5B parameters; and MAI-Image-2.5 reached #2 on leaderboards for image editing . Frontier Tuning is designed to let companies build company-specific agents with their own data and control; Microsoft said early tuning work on McKinsey tasks beat GPT-5.5 on quality at 10x lower cost, and it separately announced a joint frontier healthcare model effort with Mayo Clinic .
"With the new MAI models and Frontier Tuning capabilities we announced today, we’re focused on helping every company move from just consuming a frontier model to fully participating at the frontier."
Why it matters: Microsoft is positioning itself less as a gateway to frontier models and more as a provider of the full enterprise agent stack, from on-device and silicon-optimized models to organizational context and compliance-heavy automation .
DeepMind packages scientific discovery as a multi-agent workflow
Google DeepMind launched Co-Scientist, a Gemini-based system that generates, debates, and refines scientific hypotheses through specialized agents using reasoning, multimodal, long-context, and tool-use capabilities . It can produce thousands of hypotheses, rank them through a "tournament of ideas" and scientific debates, verify claims against literature and data, and pull in web search and specialized models .
In evaluations with outside experts, DeepMind said the system helped identify new targets for liver fibrosis, fresh approaches to ALS, and genetic leads for reversing aging. It is now available to individual researchers through Hypothesis Generation in Gemini for Science .
Why it matters: This is one of the clearer attempts to turn frontier models into a structured research partner rather than a chatbot, with critique, ranking, and literature checking built into the loop .
Washington shifts toward prerelease model testing
President Trump signed the executive order "Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security," giving U.S. agencies voluntary prerelease access to new AI models for up to 30 days of safety and vulnerability testing . Gary Marcus described it as a 180 from the administration’s earlier hands-off approach, while arguing that executive-order access is not enough and that Congress should eventually require mandatory preflight testing .
Anthropic called the order "an important step" and said it would work with the White House on implementation; Sam Altman said the new EO "gets the balance right" . Separately, Anthropic said it expanded Project Glasswing, extending Claude Mythos Preview to approximately 150 additional organizations across more than fifteen countries .
Why it matters: The center of gravity in U.S. AI governance moved toward structured testing today, even if the current mechanism remains voluntary . It also arrives as labs continue widening controlled-access programs for higher-risk systems .
Mistral pairs sovereign compute with a new enterprise agent platform
Mistral said it is opening a new high-availability inference site in France as part of a €4 billion data-center buildout across France and Sweden, targeting 200MW by 2027 and 1GW by 2030. The site is meant to supply low-carbon tokens through Mistral’s studio, public-cloud, and private-cloud offerings .
At the same time, Mistral introduced Vibe, an enterprise agent platform built on its open-source models. It combines coding agents, orchestration, state management, tenant-hosted data and customization, and human validation steps for long-running workflows . CEO Arthur Mensch said Europe has a two-year window to build independent AI infrastructure or risk strategic dependence, and positioned the company around full-stack control for customers seeking data and deployment residency .
Why it matters: Mistral is making a concrete European alternative to the U.S. hyperscaler model: local inference capacity plus an enterprise agent layer built around control, customization, and data residency .
One operational signal worth watching
GitHub executives said AI-driven development is now producing 14x year-over-year growth in commit volume, with 275 million commits per week and visible pressure across Actions compute, permissions, and large monorepos . They also described Copilot’s shift from code completion to a shared agent harness powering the CLI, desktop app, cloud agents, and broader context-and-memory workflows across work data sources .
Why it matters: The agent era is starting to reshape not just model roadmaps but the underlying software infrastructure that has to absorb AI-generated work .
Product Management
Aakash Gupta
Sachin Rekhi
Big Ideas
- The next AI advantage is team context, not just individual speed. Ravi Mehta argues AI has created 10x individuals but also siloed “context engineering”; the next wave is 10x teams that turn shared context into shared progress . He frames the canvas as the place where ideas, decisions, prototypes, and tradeoffs live together, and says the PM role is shifting from prioritizing what to build toward curating what should ship . Why it matters: as artifact creation gets cheaper, alignment becomes the bottleneck. Apply it: keep decisions, prototypes, and tradeoffs in one shared workspace instead of splitting them across separate tools.
"The canvas is the team’s shared context."
- AI-era PM leverage comes from defining quality faster. Aparna Dhinakaran says top AI PMs stand out by defining what “good” looks like at scale faster than anyone else, and Aakash Gupta notes PMs who already run traces and evals on their agents are pulling away . Why it matters: as code gets cheaper, the differentiator shifts to evaluation judgment . Apply it: make eval design, failure analysis, and trace review part of normal PM practice for recurring AI-assisted work.
Tactical Playbook
Start with one narrow PM agent, then harden it with evals.
- Build one job first: pull GitHub issues, score priority, and write a daily build report .
- Inspect predictable errors early; in the example, bugs ranked too low while feature requests beat production issues .
- Add even a noisy eval, then iterate: refine eval -> improve agent -> collect better traces -> sharpen eval .
- Schedule the loop once it is useful; at Arize it now runs on cron . Why it matters: triage compresses from weeks of manual review to fast feedback without removing PM judgment .
For meeting recap automation, give AI the transcript and local context—not just notes.
- One PM found ChatGPT output generic because it did not know the existing PRD or what engineering expected .
- A suggested fix was to record the meeting and feed the full transcript to AI along with context and explicit instructions for what to generate . Apply it: include the current PRD, engineering expectations, and desired outputs in the same prompt .
Case Studies & Lessons
- Arize’s PM-agent demo shows where the new bottleneck sits. In 45 minutes, one prompt processed 40 discussions, 60 issues, and 8 releases and scored them all . The first output was not correct, but the errors surfaced immediately, were instrumented with evals, and improved fast enough that the loop now runs continuously and can support same-day issue identification, prototyping, and shipping . Key takeaway: when build time collapses, the winning loop is generate -> inspect -> evaluate -> iterate.
Career Corner
AI fluency is becoming explicit. Zapier’s open-sourced rubric scores four components—mindset, strategy, building, and accountability—across four levels from unacceptable to transformative, and it breaks expectations out by role, including product . Apply it: use it for self-assessment, hiring, onboarding, or development planning. Full rubric
Interrogate PM job design before you accept the title. In one Reddit thread, a solo PM covering four products, no designers, and end-to-end work was measured on 90%+ on-time delivery, +20% sprint velocity, and NPS 8+ while being benchmarked as a project manager . Commenters said velocity and milestone targets are project-management metrics, called the KPI mix contradictory or gameable, and urged job hunting; some also described $85k as far below the scope, citing higher ranges from their own experience . Apply it: ask whether the role truly owns strategy and outcomes—or mostly backlog, deadlines, and coordination.
Tools & Resources
Miro Canvas 26 is worth tracking if your team struggles with fragmented context. The product direction centers on Sidekicks that pull team context, Flows that turn messy workshop inputs into structured outputs while keeping humans in the loop, live Code to Prototype on the board, and MCP to make the canvas readable and writable by AI agents .
ProductHQ is a new PM-built workspace aimed at reducing tool sprawl across discovery, prioritization, roadmapping, PRDs, spec generation, and Jira push, with an optional AI assistant called Maya. It is free to try at myproducthq.com.
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