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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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The community for ventures designed to scale rapidly | Read our rules before posting ❤️
Software As a Service Companies — The Future Of Tech Businesses
1) Funding & Deals
- ShinkeiSystems: Founders Fund backs a physical-AI vertical bet. Founders Fund backed ShinkeiSystems, whose AI-powered robot for fishing boats kills fish instantly to reduce stress and double shelf life. The company's fish brand is sold at Erewhon and Michelin restaurants, and the stated thesis is "low AI bets, odd spaces, almost no competition" .
- Elsewhere, the notable names in this batch are earlier. Cathova targets an August 2026 launch , the AI-native ATS founder is recruiting an equity-based technical co-founder , and Keptly is looking for early testers .
2) Emerging Teams
- AI-native ATS: domain expertise plus a live product. The founder brings 30+ years in recruitment and HR tech and says the product already supports CV/JD parsing into structured data, embeddings-based skills matching, employer-side match scoring, and applicant pipeline tracking. The current ask is a technical co-founder to own architecture and direction .
- Cathova AI: multi-model collaboration as the core product. Cathova is building a shared AI workspace where models carry context across chats and teammates, users can switch from GPT to Claude mid-conversation, and "Debate Mode" synthesizes outputs from multiple models. Automatic logging, role-based access, and BYOK push it toward team deployment rather than single-user chat . The founder is 18 and building solo, with launch planned for August 2026 .
- Wingball: applied computer vision from a bootstrapped team. Two founders built a tennis analysis tool that turns ordinary phone footage into shot tracking, auto-highlight reels, heatmaps, and movement stats despite weak lighting and awkward court angles. It is already live in a free open beta .
- Keptly: lightweight workflow automation for email commitments. Keptly connects to Gmail or Outlook, scans sent email every two hours, detects promises users made, and turns them into dashboard cards with deadlines, links back to the original email, overdue flags, and reminders. The founder is actively seeking workflow feedback from early testers .
3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs
- GLM-5.2 posts a notable open-weight spec and benchmark package. Z.ai released GLM-5.2 with MIT open weights, 1M context, and an 81.0 score on Terminal-Bench 2.1, described as within a few points of Claude Opus 4.8 .
- Generalist frontier models are beating specialist systems in medicine. Exponential View cites head-to-head results showing frontier generalist models outperforming best-in-class medical AI tools, and frames the result as another example of the Bitter Lesson favoring general methods that scale with computation .
4) Market Signals
- Open source and model plurality are becoming strategic defaults. Bindu Reddy's view is to go all in on open source and multiple AI models, adding that open source can beat top models and new releases may arrive weekly. GLM-5.2 adds a concrete example of that pressure in the market .
"What’s more dangerous is they have the best open-source model. And all the American developers are building on that."
- The geopolitical open-source race now looks operational, not theoretical. The same discussion argues China caught up in AI despite prior efforts to prevent it, points to DeepSeek as an earlier proof point, and says "the open-source AI race is not theory anymore" .
- AI-native startups appear structurally leaner. A working paper cited by Exponential View finds AI-native startups are 25% smaller than non-AI peers at similar funding and growth, with denser engineering talent and fewer managers .
- Capturing AI value requires redesigning the product, not just adding a model. Exponential View argues that companies get the strongest returns when AI does the work directly inside the product and closes the feedback loop, implying process and product re-engineering rather than surface-level automation .
- Lower token costs are expanding the feasible scope of a startup. Sam Altman says affordable token spend now enables work that previously required a 100-person elite engineering team, changing the ambition, speed, and parallel execution available to small teams .
- Agent observability still has a post-incident gap. A founder with prior exits says the harder problem is improving the system once something goes wrong, especially when domain experts and other non-technical stakeholders need to participate in the feedback loop after traces and alerts are already in place .
5) Worth Your Time
- Exponential View #579 — covers evidence that AI-native startups are smaller, argues that real value comes from product re-engineering around AI, and highlights frontier models beating specialist medical tools .
- GLM-5.2 and the open-source race — lays out the model's MIT open weights, 1M context, and benchmark result alongside the argument that open-source competition is already reshaping which models developers build on .
- Bindu Reddy on open source and multiple models — a compact statement of the case for model plurality and fast-moving open releases .
- Founders Fund's thesis via ShinkeiSystems — useful for the explicit venture logic behind an applied AI hard-tech bet: low AI bets, odd spaces, almost no competition .
ollama
The Cognitive Revolution Podcast
unusual_whales
Top Stories
Why it matters: the clearest signals today were open-model quality, AI cost discipline, and how agents are reshaping enterprise software demand.
- GLM-5.2 kept turning open-weight momentum into measurable coding results. It became the top open-source model on DeepSWE at 44% pass@1, beating Kimi K2.7 Code by 17 points, and another post said max-reasoning runs beat GPT-5.5-low and Opus 4.8 low on the benchmark, though efficiency still needs work . Users described it as the first open model that clears the bar as a daily driver, with especially strong coding output . Infrastructure providers are already scaling around it: Ollama said it doubled U.S.-based B300 capacity for GLM-5.2, and Together said its serving stack is tuned for long-context coding and agent workloads .
- Enterprise AI spend is becoming an operations problem, not just an experimentation budget. Meta expects internal AI costs alone to reach billions in 2026 after employee token usage surged, and is building an AI Gateway with spending controls and token budgets . Separately, Ramp engineering described common overspend patterns—frontier-model defaults, unnecessarily high reasoning settings, and runaway automations—and recommended lower defaults, tighter model tiers, and banning automations from frontier models .
- Agents may expand incumbent SaaS usage rather than replace it. Box CEO Aaron Levie said he now uses Salesforce 5x more after connecting Salesforce’s MCP server to Claude Code, because the agent makes customer and market intelligence queries easy to run . Another post framed the pattern directly: the agent removes friction, so the underlying system gets queried more, not replaced . François Chollet summarized the thesis: “The more you embrace AI, the more you need SaaS” .
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: the most useful technical updates focused on making agents coordinate better, transfer better, and learn with less supervision.
- A small human-demo regularizer looked like a cheap alignment lever for self-play. One paper reported that 30 minutes of human data—2500x less than imitation learning—was enough to make self-play policies coordinate with real people; pure self-play learned effective but alien conventions instead . The resulting policies trained in 15 hours on a single consumer GPU and generalized to held-out human trajectories (paper) .
- Skill-MAS treats multi-agent orchestration itself as something that can evolve. The method uses closed-loop multi-trajectory rollout and selective reflection to refine a strategy-level “Meta-Skill” without changing model weights, and the resulting skills transferred across four benchmarks and four different LLMs (paper) .
- VIMPO proposed a different RL trade-off for LLM training. The work positions itself between PPO-style methods, which rely on hard-to-train critics for token-level credit, and GRPO-style methods, which assign the same trajectory-level signal to every token; one commentator suggested it may be a better alternative to GRPO than falling back to PPO .
Products & Launches
Why it matters: new releases are increasingly aimed at developer workflows, agent training, and practical access to strong open models.
- OpenPipe released ART, an open-source Agent Reinforcement Trainer. It plugs GRPO into any Python app, while handling inference, trajectory scoring, optimization, checkpointing, and LoRA updates for multi-step tasks such as tool use, email search, MCP, games, and reasoning (repo) .
- Together is offering a free, web-grounded GLM-5.2 chat app running on its U.S.-hosted inference stack at chat.together.ai.
- Leve launched as a filesystem-first durable agent framework built on LangGraph. Its core idea is that an agent can be described as a directory of files that Leve compiles and runs (GitHub) .
Industry Moves
Why it matters: talent concentration, enterprise traction, and funding are still shaping where AI capability gets commercialized fastest.
- Nvidia acquihired key Essential AI team members, including @ashVaswani, into Nemotron. A report cited funding challenges and talent competition with AMD as possible drivers .
- Elicit signaled real traction in high-stakes life sciences work. It said it now works with 7 of the top 20 life sciences companies on drug-target ranking and defending launch and pricing decisions to regulators and payers; separately, its automated software-engineering factory is now shipping 30–50 issues per week end to end .
- Fearn AI raised a $5.5M seed round to address patent-filing speed gaps in first-to-file systems, targeting AI use cases that require rigor, verification, and precise language .
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: governments are moving from watching AI to shaping ownership structures and domestic capability programs.
- The European Commission selected the Europa Consortium as the winner of its Frontier AI “Grande Challenge” to build European AI . The choice drew criticism from researchers who argued the process favored political or incumbent considerations over technical capability .
- U.S. officials have discussed government ownership stakes in major AI companies, and JD Vance endorsed using a sovereign wealth fund to take U.S. stakes in leading AI firms .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: these smaller updates still point to where the field is heading next.
- A post on recursive self-improvement said 80% of code merged into Anthropic’s codebase was authored by Claude .
- Dario Amodei framed AI infrastructure as a 1–2 year build cycle that can commit firms to $100B–$1T+ in spending coming online in 2027+, with $800B–$1T in revenue needed to break even .
- OpenAI is preparing GPT-5.6 as a “meaningful improvement” over GPT-5.5, according to a staff message cited in a post .
- Runway said a single person produced an entire global ad campaign in one day with its tools .
Sebastien Bubeck
Yann LeCun
Noam Shazeer
Today's main story: control is becoming the central AI question
Washington's AI debate widened from rules to ownership
A post quoting JD Vance said the administration supports a sovereign-wealth-fund style approach in which the U.S. would own stakes in major AI companies including OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI . The same thread pointed to the government's converted Intel CHIPS position as precedent and estimated that a 10% stake across roughly $5T of AI value would amount to about $500B of holdings .
Why it matters: The state's AI role is being framed less as simple regulation and more as ownership, capital allocation, and strategic control. In a separate interview, Dean Ball argued that broad diffusion of AI across businesses and institutions is the main political check against confiscatory or nationalization outcomes .
OpenAI is drawing state-level scrutiny
Luiza Jarovsky wrote that 42 state attorneys general are investigating OpenAI over alleged harmful practices . The surrounding commentary argued that authorities are becoming less willing to treat frontier AI as exempt from public-interest tests, though that standard was presented as opinion rather than official policy .
Why it matters: Oversight is no longer only a Washington story. State attorneys general are also emerging as meaningful actors around frontier AI governance.
OpenAI is pulling both policy and research capacity inward
Dean Ball said he is joining OpenAI to work on a boutique team that looks six to twelve months ahead on frontier capabilities, internal deployments, and decisions that may be made before public release . In the same interview, he estimated the U.S. AI Action Plan is roughly 30-40% implemented, while criticizing abrupt frontier-model export controls and classified predeployment testing run mainly by the intelligence community .
OpenAI is also adding Noam Shazeer from Google . Sebastien Bubeck called OpenAI's research culture unparalleled, while Yann LeCun questioned the value of that culture behind an event horizon .
Why it matters: OpenAI appears to be consolidating both technical talent and policy formation inside the lab just as its pre-release choices carry more weight.
The business model question is getting sharper
Goldman's $5.3T AI buildout thesis shifts attention from chips to finance
Goldman Sachs estimated hyperscaler AI and data-center spending at $5.3T from 2025 through 2030 . The cited analysis said capex plans are rising faster than actual construction, with financing capacity, power availability, and project execution becoming key constraints as the same few buyers lean harder on debt markets .
Why it matters: The next bottleneck may be balance sheets and utilities, not just model quality or chip supply. A separate quoted remark from Anthropic's CEO framed the revenue side just as starkly, warning that AI companies could face existential risk without hundreds of billions in revenue .
Early agent usage is boosting systems of record, not replacing them
Francois Chollet argued that the more companies embrace AI, the more they need SaaS platforms . As one example, Aaron Levie said connecting Salesforce's MCP server to Claude Code led him to use Salesforce five times more than before, because the agent made customer and market-intelligence queries easier to run rather than removing the underlying system .
Why it matters: If this pattern holds, some near-term value may flow through higher engagement with data-rich enterprise platforms and workflow tools, not only through frontier model vendors.
One practical operating signal
Coding agents are being reorganized into subagent swarms
A Cognition employee described agent fan out workflows where a master Devin breaks a task into many smaller jobs, launches 10 or more child agents in parallel, and then recombines the results; examples ranged from 100 Devins examining eval logs to parallel alternative implementations . The same thread emphasized smaller contexts, agent-written prompts, heavy multitasking, and self-testing, which swyx summarized as the summer of subagents .
Why it matters: The more interesting signal now may be orchestration, not one-agent demos. Teams are experimenting with ways to turn coding agents into parallel workers rather than single assistants.
Jared Zoneraich
Armin Ronacher ⇌
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
The most practical signal today is agent fan-out from inside Cognition: a lead Devin breaks a problem into independent chunks, spins up 5-100 child Devins in parallel, then combines the results . The rationale is simple and portable: agents do better when both the task and the context are small, and separate VMs make the parallelism real rather than cosmetic . This is already used by Cognition's model research and product teams, not just as a demo pattern .
⚡ TRY THIS
Use a coordinator/worker split for migrations and large refactors. Ask the parent agent to decompose the job into independent workstreams, spawn one child per workstream, and merge centrally at the end. Concrete example: one Cognition workflow split a React Native-to-Swift migration into 6 pieces and ran them in parallel .
Make the parent agent write the child prompts. Instead of hand-writing every worker brief, have the main agent generate prompts for its own subagents . Practical flow: define the top-level goal, ask for decomposition, then have the parent draft the child prompts before launch .
Front-load clarifications before you fan out. Tell the agent to ask every ambiguity-filling question up front, then give it all required context so the run does not stop every few minutes for missing details . This pairs directly with the small-context rule behind fan-out .
Require self-tests, then manage the fleet instead of one chat. Have the agent generate its own integration sanity tests as part of the run . In the same workflow, the human role shifts toward supervising many active agents rather than micromanaging one session .
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
Artifact worth studying: Armin Ronacher surfaced a 280kLOC AI-generated pull request against WebKit and said it is a reminder that "loops are coming for core infrastructure" .
Adoption signal: the fan-out pattern above is already being used inside Cognition's model research team to spin up 100 Devins on eval logs, and by product teams to run 5 child Devins against 5 alternative implementations of the same idea .
🎬 GO DEEPER
Study the original workflow writeup:imjaredz on Devin fan-out. It is a compact but unusually actionable thread on subagent orchestration: decomposition, child prompt generation, up-front clarification, parallel VMs, and agent-written sanity tests .
Read the maintainer reaction alongside the code:Armin Ronacher's note + WebKit PR #249. Useful if you are thinking about how established projects review and absorb very large AI-generated changes .
"Seeing a 280kLOC AI generated pull request against WebKit is a good reminder that loops are coming for core infrastructure. It’s both exciting and confusing. I wouldn’t know how to run an established project and make that change."
Editorial take: the edge is moving from better one-shot prompts to better decomposition—small contexts, parallel workers, and review processes that can handle much larger AI-generated diffs .
Product Management - The place for all things product
Aakash Gupta
The community for ventures designed to scale rapidly | Read our rules before posting ❤️
Big Ideas
"When building stops being the bottleneck, taste and direction become the job."
AI is compressing the path from idea to product. Aakash Gupta contrasts an old sequence of research, specs, design review, scoping, alignment, and build—with 30–50% coordination overhead—against a new loop: pick a direction, have an agent build a working version in 30 minutes, then react to real software . Why it matters: the leverage shifts toward choosing direction and judging output. How to apply: review working versions earlier, and question whether a long spec or heavy staffing is still necessary for the problem at hand .
Cheap building is widening the gap between shipping and solving. In one Reddit discussion, a PM described current startup options as dominated by niche AI devtools and agent-enablement products . Commenters countered that valuable companies often look "boring and utilitarian" while being built, and that enterprise point solutions are what attract funding and revenue . Another commenter warned that low friction to build is producing many apps with no real problem behind them . Why it matters: more output does not automatically mean more value. How to apply: test whether you can identify users whose work truly depends on the product, not just people who like the idea .
Tactical Playbook
Weight feedback by willingness to pay and frequency of use.
- One founder got 200+ signups on day one and 300+ in the first month, but retention lagged while the team focused on fundraising .
- They later realized they had over-weighted feedback from non-paying users and started filtering insight from people who could pay and use the tool daily .
- Their updated target became users "whose life is dependent upon this tool's existence" .
- After five months without a first paying daily user, the founder treated that gap as a core product question .
Why it matters: it separates applause from product-market fit. How to apply: let payment intent and expected usage frequency determine which feedback shapes the roadmap.
Use AI to shorten execution loops, not just increase output. Start with a direction, let the agent build a working version, review the product itself, then kill weak concepts quickly or recycle them into the next idea . Why it matters: in this operating model, only 2 of every 10 builds ship, but the rest still inform the next decision . How to apply: run short prototype batches before committing to a large cross-functional plan .
Case Studies & Lessons
Codex inside a large enterprise: two engineers using Codex in a hackathon finished in three days work that had been budgeted at 10 engineers and 12 months. Aakash also says Codex runs 10–12 product surfaces with 2 PMs, 1 designer, and 40 engineers, versus traditional staffing of 15–20 people per surface, and cites Cursor passing $4B ARR with one PM and 40 engineers. Lesson: Aakash's takeaway is that humans shift toward strategy, constraints, and quality direction: PMs own 12-month strategy and go-to-market, engineers review agent output and set constraints, and designers brief and direct the quality bar .
Research-reuse MVP: strong signup numbers and positive feedback still did not translate into a first paying daily user after five months . Lesson: early enthusiasm can help shape messaging—here, X interactions influenced the initial product marketing—but it does not prove daily-use demand .
Career Corner
- Domain adjacency looks more realistic than a cold PM pivot. In r/ProductMgmt, commenters said skills from law or commercial work—analytical thinking, empathy, risk assessment, detail orientation, stakeholder management, and communication—do transfer . But they also described direct entry as difficult without referrals or prior product experience, suggested stepping stones such as legal software, business analyst, product ops, customer success, legal-tech, compliance-tech, fintech, or SaaS operations, and noted that the PM market is crowded . One commenter pointed to "Build AI PM" as an emerging but uncertain opening . How to apply: if you're transitioning, target roles where your existing domain knowledge is already valuable.
Tools & Resources
- Pivot: a free AI simulator built by an aspiring PM to practice ambiguous scenarios such as "DAU dropped 15% WoW, what is your first move?" It evaluates answers on problem discovery, prioritization, and stakeholder communication . The creator built it to supplement books and mock interviews, and explicitly asked experienced PMs to test whether the scenarios and feedback match real-world practice . Why it matters: it offers structured practice on messy PM judgment. How to apply: use it for rehearsal, but sanity-check the feedback with experienced PMs before treating it as a rubric .
Rufo & Lomez
Balaji Srinivasan
Today’s clearest recommendation
Today’s findings surfaced one unusually strong organic recommendation: Albion's Seed, a book Balaji Srinivasan said is worth reading and rereading for its relevance to the present moment .
Albion's Seed
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Not specified in the source notes
- Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
- Who recommended it: Balaji Srinivasan
- Key takeaway: Srinivasan called it "the single most important book" to read repeatedly because he believes it offers deep insight into "the moment that we're at" .
- Why it matters: This was not framed as a casual recommendation. He made it while discussing Network School, a "societies movement," and how America was founded, which makes the book notable as a lens he sees as especially useful right now .
"that book to me is the single most important book to like read and reread and reread because it has so much insight into the moment that we're at"
Why this stood out
The value here is the strength of the endorsement. Srinivasan did more than mention the title: he singled it out as the most important book to revisit, and tied that judgment directly to understanding the current moment .
If you only save one thing
Save Albion's Seed. It was the day’s clearest high-conviction recommendation, with a specific reason attached: Srinivasan thinks it helps explain the present moment .
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