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OpenAI Lands Noam Shazeer as Life-Science AI Advances and Frontier Costs Rise
Jun 18
4 min read
1001 docs
Cursor
xAI
Russ Salakhutdinov
+21
OpenAI made the day’s biggest talent move by hiring Noam Shazeer while also pushing deeper into life-science AI with a new benchmark and a lab-validated chemistry result. Meanwhile, Claude Fable 5 reset the price curve for frontier models, and G7 policy discussions moved toward tighter control over model access and hardware.

Top Stories

Why it matters: leadership changes, scientific validation, and frontier-model economics all shifted in ways that will shape the next phase of AI competition.

  • OpenAI hired Noam Shazeer from Google DeepMind. Shazeer is leaving his VP Engineering / Gemini co-lead role at Google DeepMind to join OpenAI, where the company said he will serve as lead for architecture research. He said the move was a difficult decision after work he was proud of at Google .
  • OpenAI pushed deeper into life-science AI. It introduced LifeSciBench, built with 173 scientists and 750 expert-authored tasks across seven biological research workflows . OpenAI said GPT-Rosalind scored above GPT-5.5 across all seven workflows . Separately, OpenAI said GPT-5.4 helped drive a medicinal chemistry project to a validated experimental result, with improved yields for 88% of boronic acids and 83% of sulfonamides tested .
  • Claude Fable 5 raised the cost of the frontier. Artificial Analysis reported Fable 5 at 60 on its Intelligence Index, ahead of Claude Opus 4.8 at 56 and GPT-5.5 at 55 . It also reported list pricing of $10/$50 per 1M input/output tokens and about $6.2K to run the benchmark suite, its highest recorded benchmark cost .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: today’s most useful technical work focused on making agents faster, measuring them in more realistic settings, and extending AI into longitudinal healthcare.

  • PreAct turns a computer-use agent’s first successful run into a replayable state-machine program, then reuses it without per-step model calls for 8.5x to 13x faster execution; if the screen no longer matches, control returns to the agent .
  • iOSWorld released a benchmark for personally intelligent phone agents across 26 custom iOS apps and 133 tasks. Even with privileged vision+XML access, the strongest frontier model reached only 52% success .
  • Google’s AMIE moved from one-off diagnosis toward longitudinal disease management. In a multi-visit study with patient actors, Google said it reached physician-level performance and scored higher on plan preciseness and guideline alignment .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: the developer stack is getting more agent-native, with tighter orchestration, routing, and design-to-code loops.

  • GitHub Copilot app is now generally available as a home base to pick up tasks, direct agents in parallel, and land PRs . GitHub also said Copilot’s Auto mode now uses a routing model that weighs reasoning depth, code complexity, debugging difficulty, and tool orchestration needs .
  • Cursor added cloud subagents. Users can launch a subagent in its own cloud VM with /in-cloud, keep environments as reusable snapshots, and continue prompting from a phone while agents work in parallel .
  • Claude Design now syncs both ways with Claude Code. Anthropic said /design-sync can pull a design system into a repo or push builds back to the canvas for further editing .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: companies are moving from pilot demos to capital allocation, internal deployment, and ecosystem bets.

  • Block said its internal Builderbot now handles 200,000 operations per day, merges 1,500 pull requests per week, and is responsible for 15% of production code changes; it said work that used to take months now takes days .
  • XDOF announced a $70M raise to build infrastructure for robot foundation models and said it is open-sourcing ABC-130K, described as the largest open-source teleoperation dataset .
  • OpenAI committed $600,000 to the Rust Foundation and said it is continuing to bet on Rust as the future of systems programming .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: AI governance is shifting from abstract debate to concrete controls over access, hardware, and model release conditions.

  • At the G7, Dario Amodei and Demis Hassabis called for a U.S.-led coalition to set AI standards and rules; reporting said the proposal included structuring access to frontier models and hardware in a way that excludes China .
  • U.S. officials told WIRED that Anthropic would need to ensure Fable 5 guardrails cannot be circumvented before any rerelease; the same report said security experts do not think that can be done .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: these smaller updates still show where new capability and infrastructure are appearing next.

  • Midjourney announced a new division called Midjourney Medical and shared a technical dive into its Midjourney Scanner.
  • Grok Imagine Video 1.5 launched with sharper realism, better physics, and faster generations .
  • Google Cloud introduced the Open Knowledge Format, a markdown-and-YAML spec for AI context, and said Knowledge Catalog can ingest it natively .
  • GLM-5.2 is now available on Together AI for long-context, tool-heavy agent workloads .
Telepatia and Convey Raise as Self-Driving Labs, Verified AI, and ROI Discipline Gain Momentum
Jun 18
6 min read
746 docs
Vinod Khosla
ranjan_raj
John Sarihan
+17
Applied AI healthcare, operations, and formal verification produced the clearest early-stage funding signals in this batch. The strongest technical and market themes were self-driving labs, robotics data infrastructure, AI reliability, and a sharper investor focus on ROI, sovereignty, and founder leverage.

1) Funding & Deals

a16z led the two clearest applied-AI workflow rounds in this set, while Khosla and YC/First Round backed formal verification and AI-native growth software .

  • Telepatia — $42M total, including a $33M Series A led by a16z. The company is building an AI-native clinical platform for Latin America that combines an AI scribe, clinical decision support, and an AI auditor connected to hospital data sources . Since launching in July 2025, it says the platform has deployed across 25+ hospital systems in Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico, reaching 100k+ doctors and nurses and 14M patients .

  • ConveyAI — $38M Series A led by a16z. Convey positions itself as AI teammates for non-technical teams: users share a screen, walk through a process, and agents run the work inside existing systems, escalating when stuck . The company says its agents have already completed 1.1M+ hours of work at NBCUniversal, TelevisaUnivision, Unity, Samsara, ChargePoint, and Faire .

  • Pramaana — $27M seed led by Khosla Ventures. The company is targeting high-liability domains such as tax, law, finance, and healthcare by converting statutes and regulations into machine-verifiable code and attaching mathematical proofs of correctness to outputs .

Auto formalization will be an important new area.

  • PloyAI — $27M seed led by Y Combinator and First Round. Bryant Chou’s new company wants the website to function as an autonomous growth engine, tying together site, brand, CMS, CRM, campaigns, analytics, SEO/AEO, and customer data in one platform . Early users cited include Hex, Clay, Tonik, and TNT Growth .

  • XDOF — $70M for robotics infrastructure. XDOF says it is building the core robotic infrastructure ecosystem for robot foundation models .

2) Emerging Teams

  • XDOF’s founding team has unusually direct robotics pedigree. Philipps Wu, Fred Shentu, and Nemo Jin say they came out of Covariant, Meta, and Tesla with a shared focus on general-purpose robots, and that XDOF has spent the last two years supporting major labs and companies deploying robots with full-stack expertise across hardware, operations, and policy training .

  • Telepatia combines founder-product fit with real deployment. Nicolás says the company was inspired by his physician father’s death at 58 from a preventable drug interaction, and frames Telepatia as an AI Doctor for doctors, by doctors . The company also says it is already live in 25+ health institutions serving more than 100,000 doctors and nurses across Latin America .

  • Bryant Chou / PloyAI is a strong operator-to-founder transition. Chou spent 12 years at Webflow as founding CTO and says he also started the marketing and sales teams that drove some of the company’s fastest growth periods . That mix of product and growth experience fits PloyAI’s all-in-one GTM thesis .

  • Kinro AI is a useful YC launch to watch. YC describes it as an autonomous insurance brokerage where AI agents quote, answer, and serve customer needs 24/7; founders are Corentin, Pierre, and Parth .

  • Suhail is back in the market with a newly funded AI startup. He said the seed round is done, the effort started with 2×8xB200s, he is using an autonomous AI scientist for new optimizations, and he is hiring employee #1 .

3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • Radical AI’s self-driving lab is the clearest hard-tech result in the set. The company says its closed-loop system—an AI scientist generating hypotheses and automated robotics synthesizing and characterizing materials—produced and characterized 1,200 alloys in six months, versus a DARPA/GE MACH target of 500 in a year . It also says the AI scientist proposed and tested 300 new materials, with 10 reaching novel state-of-the-art properties that are now being developed for commercial applications .

Now imagine every scientist in the United States doing 10 times the research output.

  • Robot foundation-model infrastructure is getting more open data. XDOF open-sourced ABC-130K, which it describes as the largest open-source teleoperation dataset, in collaboration with UC Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon, MIT, and Amazon FAR .

  • Legal and compliance AI is moving toward verification, not just generation. Pramaana’s approach is to formalize statutes and regulations into machine-verifiable code with proofs of correctness , while Crosby Intelligence launched to advance legal AI and released the RedlineBench benchmark on Hugging Face .

  • GLM 5.2 is a notable open-source model signal, with caveats. One investor account highlighted benchmark wins over Opus 4.8 and GPT 5.5 on some evaluations, while also saying internal evaluations still place it behind those models and calling it a major win for open-source AI .

4) Market Signals

  • Enterprise AI buyers are moving from token consumption to ROI. Tiffany Luck said the market has gone from token maxing to ROI, and pointed to Factory’s model router, Ramp’s spend-management work, and a new crop of seed-stage companies tackling AI usage metering and observability . On the standards side, she also flagged iuc’s attempt to provide Moody’s-like or private SOC 2-style safety certification for AI systems .

  • Forward-deployed support still matters in AI adoption. Luck described sending internal team members alongside customers to help them build workflows and succeed with the product, framing that work as both adoption infrastructure and a feedback loop for product learning .

  • The fullstack founder thesis is moving from rhetoric to operating evidence. Garry Tan amplified the view that AI compresses the gap between technical and non-technical founders, and pointed to a three-founder company that reached $3M ARR and 2,000+ customers in under a year with each founder spanning product, outbound, content, and sales . Separately, a PM-turned-solo founder said AI coding tools let them build and run a real-estate-adjacent product with paying users, a signed B2B partnership, and rough break-even economics .

  • Reliability is becoming a design principle for practical agents. One founder building a WhatsApp assistant for real-estate agencies moved all consequential decisions—date parsing, intent routing, property matching, and contract type—into deterministic Node.js logic, leaving GPT-4o-mini to handle only natural-language replies after earlier end-to-end LLM handling proved unreliable . This aligns with a broader push toward verified or bounded AI behavior in higher-stakes workflows .

  • European AI investors are leaning into repeat founders and sovereignty themes. Luciana Lixandru pointed to repeat founders such as Arthur Waller at Pennylane and to defense companies like Stark as examples of where ambition is rising, while arguing that AI is acting as a great equaliser for European founders by reducing geography as a disadvantage .

  • Open-source / PRC model progress is drawing explicit concern. Marc Andreessen amplified a post arguing GLM 5.2 is around Opus 4.7-4.8 level and replied, Concerning..

5) Worth Your Time

  • NEA’s Tiffany Luck on enterprise AI ROI — the cleanest investor/operator discussion here on why enterprise AI evaluation is moving from raw usage to ROI, and why routing and spend-management layers matter .
Anthropic Holds Back Mythos as OpenAI Pushes Deeper Into Science
Jun 18
4 min read
274 docs
Dario Amodei
Andrew Ng
Harrison Chase
+9
Anthropic’s CEO explained why the company is withholding Mythos and where it draws red lines on cyber and military use. OpenAI paired a new life-science benchmark with a lab-backed chemistry result, while Noam Shazeer’s move to OpenAI and claims around Z.ai’s Huawei-trained GLM-5.2 underscored intensifying competition.

The main signal

Today’s developments were less about new chat surfaces and more about where frontier AI is allowed to go: into cyber operations, into real scientific workflows, and into the talent and hardware stacks that will shape the next competitive cycle.

Safety and strategy at the frontier

Anthropic says Mythos stays limited until cyber safeguards improve

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said the company withheld Mythos after seeing a large jump in its ability to find vulnerabilities and turn them into exploits autonomously across the cyber kill chain . He said Anthropic is widening access gradually, starting with defenders, because current cyber safeguards can still be jailbroken and are not yet strong enough for a broad release .

“this is a super weapon ... Please don’t release this.”

Amodei also said Anthropic will support some defense use cases while maintaining red lines against mass surveillance and fully autonomous weapons, with humans retaining the final targeting decision .

Why it matters: Anthropic is explicitly tying release policy to both the current limits of jailbreak defenses and a narrower definition of acceptable defense use .

AI moves deeper into lab work

OpenAI pairs a life-science benchmark with a chemistry result

OpenAI introduced LifeSciBench, a benchmark built with 173 biotechnology and pharmaceutical scientists that includes 750 expert-authored tasks across seven biological research workflows . The benchmark is meant to test whether models can reason from evidence, work with scientific artifacts, handle uncertainty, and make decisions under real-world constraints; OpenAI said GPT-Rosalind scores above GPT-5.5 across all seven workflows .

Separately, OpenAI said GPT-5.4 helped drive a medicinal chemistry project from literature review to a validated result with Molecule.one’s Maria AI and a specialized lab . In testing, yields improved for 88% of boronic acids and 83% of sulfonamides, and 11 of 14 hand-validated reactions showed higher yields, including 8 with more than twofold improvement; the full process took about 2.5 months .

Why it matters: Taken together, the two announcements connect evaluation and execution: OpenAI is not just publishing a science benchmark, but also pointing to a human-validated chemistry campaign as an early example of models supporting more of the research loop .

NVIDIA fills in the operational details behind ENPIRE

NVIDIA’s GEAR lab shared new details on how ENPIRE runs unattended robot experiments safely: hard kinematic limits trigger task failure and auto-reset, torque-limited compliant grippers turn bad contact into a safe stall, and reward functions are frozen before AutoResearch begins so agents cannot rewrite their own success criteria . The system also tracks Mean Robot Utilization, Mean Token Utilization, GPU utilization, Tokens-to-Success, and Time-to-Success .

Why it matters: This is a practical look at what one lab thinks is required before autonomous experimentation can run overnight on physical hardware .

Competition keeps tightening

Noam Shazeer is joining OpenAI

Noam Shazeer said he is joining OpenAI after leaving Google . Sam Altman replied that Shazeer is one of the people he has most wanted to work with since OpenAI’s founding, while Nathan Lambert called it a major talent move and joked that OpenAI had fixed its supposed “scaling pretraining problem” .

Why it matters: Even without technical details, the public reaction framed this as a strategically important talent gain for OpenAI’s model-development effort .

GLM-5.2 sharpens the debate over a Chinese AI stack

Artificial Analysis’s Intelligence Index published its conclusion on Z.ai’s GLM-5.2 release . Emad Mostaque said the model was trained on Huawei Ascend chips with no NVIDIA hardware and described it as running on a fully Chinese stack that is roughly three months behind leading models and 90% cheaper; he also estimated total cost at $25 million, mostly post-training .

Why it matters: The notable signal is not just model quality, but the claim that competitive systems can be built on a non-NVIDIA stack, which would matter for both AI economics and geopolitics if it holds up .

One useful read for operators

Andrew Ng says the bottleneck is shifting from models to workflow design

Andrew Ng said coding agents are moving unusually fast, with teams now mixing Claude Code, OpenAI Codex, and Gemini CLI, and with more coding happening on phones than he would have expected a year ago . But he argued that enterprise ROI depends less on automating one step and more on redesigning whole workflows—such as compressing loan approval from a week to 10 minutes—and that unstructured data architecture is becoming a major blocker for agent deployment .

Why it matters: For teams trying to operationalize agents, Ng’s message was simple: model progress is no longer the only constraint; workflow redesign and data readiness are becoming the harder part .

Reusable Skills, Cloud Handoffs, and Verifier Loops
Jun 18
4 min read
110 docs
Andrew Ng
Harrison Chase
Riley Brown
+12
Today's strongest coding-agent pattern is turning successful runs into reusable systems: skills, automations, workflow code, and cloud jobs. Practical highlights span Cursor's new cloud subagents, Theo's Claude Code orchestration tricks, Codex automation and iOS workflows, Context Hub, and new open-model/sandbox tooling.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

  • The clearest shift today: strong practitioners are productizing successful agent runs instead of re-prompting from scratch. Riley Brown turns plain-English Codex sessions into reusable skills and timed automations , Theo has Claude Code load precomputed context and write JS workflows for staged sub-agents , and Boris Cherny reduces the durable pattern to one line: agent + advanced model + verifier in a loop .
  • The common idea is timeless: capture good behavior once, then reuse it with guardrails instead of leaning on prompt hacks every time .

"run Claude Code + an advanced model + a verifier in a loop"

⚡ TRY THIS

  • Turn a good run into a skill. Riley Brown's workflow: ask the agent to do the task, push until the output is right, then say turn this into a skill called [Name]; when you learn a better format later, request the change and say update the skill. His broader point: stop micromanaging files or using act as hacks — describe the change clearly in natural language .

  • Schedule the boring stuff. Brown uses natural-language automations in Codex for both recurring and one-off tasks. Two prompt shapes that worked: do research every morning at 9am and send me a hook outline and set an automation in 35 minutes to upload this video to YouTube as a draft, send me a text when you do it. Pattern: if a task is useful once, ask whether it should recur or trigger later.

  • Precompute context inside the skill. Theo's Claude Code trick: make the skill execute a script on load so the model starts with facts already computed. His Repo Explorer skill keeps a ~/Explore Repos cache, lists current repos first, then clones only if the target is missing — useful when you want the agent to inspect real source without cluttering the active workspace .

  • Make the agent show its orchestration code before you pay for it. Theo's prompt is worth stealing: I want to audit the open PRs on this project... I want to use a workflow to break up all of this work. Before you run the workflow, please output the code you're going to use to run it so that we can read through it together. That yields staged audit/rule/verify phases instead of blind tool-call flooding , and it pairs cleanly with Boris Cherny's verifier-loop advice; just watch the burn rate, since Theo saw about $100 every 10 minutes with eight parallel agents on Fable .

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

  • Cursor cloud agents/in-cloud spins up an isolated cloud VM for long-running or parallel work; environments save as snapshots for faster future startups and verified testing; local agents can be moved to cloud so work continues with the laptop closed. Changelog: cursor.com/changelog/cloud-in-agents-window.
  • Codex “Build iOS Apps” plugin — runs the app in an in-app browser, opens SwiftUI previews, and hot-reloads edits without leaving Codex. Greg Brockman called it "a much better way to build iOS apps" because it removes the copy-paste-build-screenshot loop .
  • LangSmith sandboxes in Harbor — LangSmith is now a first-class Harbor environment alongside Daytona, E2B, and Modal; Harbor supports Dockerfile snapshots, SDK profiles, and a full exec/upload/download lifecycle. Docs: docs.langchain.com/langsmith/sandbox-harbor.
  • Orca — Jason Zhou says Orca is now his favorite IDE, pointing to built-in file/diff review, a setup script, agent session discovery, and native mobile support. Repo: github.com/stablyai/orca.
  • Context Hub — Andrew Ng and Rohit Prasad are building a "stack overflow for AI agents" so agents can fetch the latest API/SDK docs and contribute feedback back into the docs; Ng says it helps his agents make accurate calls to newer APIs and has accelerated his own coding work .
  • Open-model options are widening — Codex App, CLI, and SDK can use any open-source model via OSS-mode providers, per Tibo's config note . Riley Brown is also testing GLM-5.2 both through Cursor's custom-model path and in ZCode, which he describes as an "exact replica of Codex" with Telegram/Discord bot channels and access via a Coding Plan API key .

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • 3:34–5:35 — Theo on Repo Explorer. Best demo of Claude Code's "skills can execute scripts on load" advantage. You see the exact pattern: keep a repo cache outside the workspace, list what's already there, clone only when needed, and feed the result back into the run .
  • 6:10–8:09 — Riley Brown on turning a one-off task into a skill. Shows the full do task -> improve it -> turn this into a skill -> update the skill loop .
  • 8:35–9:14 — Andrew Ng on Context Hub. Worth watching if your agents keep failing on recent SDKs or annoying API syntax; the point is simple: load fresher docs into the run .

Editorial take: the durable edge is shifting from clever prompts to reusable agent infrastructure — skills, automations, fresh docs, cloud runs, and verifier-backed loops.

Multiple Leaders Converge on a Critique of AI Doom Messaging
Jun 18
2 min read
203 docs
Elon Musk
Gad Saad
clem 🤗
+2
Two independent recommendations converged on the same New York Times essay pushing back on AI apocalypse rhetoric. The rest of the day's strongest authentic picks reinforce that theme through a communication lesson shared by David Sacks and a book Elon Musk called essential reading.

What stood out

Today's strongest pattern was a coordinated pushback on AI doom messaging. Chamath Palihapitiya and Clement Delangue independently pointed readers to the same New York Times essay, and David Sacks shared a Keith Rabois communication lesson that he said helps explain why AI leaders are failing publicly .

Most compelling recommendation

New York Times essay on AI doom claims

  • Title: Not specified in the notes; shared as a New York Times essay critiquing claims that AI will end the world
  • Content type: Essay/article
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the notes
  • Link/URL:https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/17/opinion/ai-dangerous-openai-anthropic.html
  • Who recommended it: Chamath Palihapitiya and Clement Delangue
  • Key takeaway: Chamath said the essay highlights the unresolved question of why AI makers "constantly whine and cry that the world will come to an end because of AI," then added, "Hint: it won't." Clement's framing was simpler: "Let's stop doom marketing/trolling!"
  • Why it matters: This was the only resource in today's set to earn independent recommendations from multiple leaders, and both used it to push back on how AI risk is being framed in public

One adjacent video worth saving

Keith Rabois on communicating to an audience

  • Title: Lesson on communication
  • Content type: Video
  • Author/creator: Keith Rabois / @rabois
  • Link/URL:video clip
  • Who recommended it: David Sacks
  • Key takeaway: Sacks said the core lesson is that it is not enough to "speak your truth"; you have to communicate in a way that "elucidates your audience." He tied that directly to why AI leaders are failing publicly
  • Why it matters: It provides the most actionable framework in today's set: if your message persuades you but alienates everyone else, public communication has failed

"It's not sufficient just to 'speak your truth.' You have to communicate in a way that elucidates your audience."

One high-conviction book pick

Suicidal Empathy

  • Title:Suicidal Empathy
  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Gad Saad
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Who recommended it: Elon Musk
  • Key takeaway: Musk called it "essential reading"
  • Why it matters: The notes do not include a summary of the book's argument, but this was the clearest pure book endorsement in today's set

If you only pick one

Start with the New York Times essay. It had the strongest combined signal because two separate leaders recommended it independently, and it defined the main theme running through today's recommendations: skepticism toward AI doom framing .

AI-Native Product Teams, Hidden Growth Signals, and PM Workflow Automation
Jun 18
3 min read
66 docs
Product Management
Aakash Gupta
Nir Eyal
+5
This brief covers the strongest new PM themes from the latest sources: the rise of an AI-native product operating model, practical AI workflows for PM execution and discovery, and case studies from Epic and Mozilla on growth, trust, and user choice.

Big Ideas

  • The AI product operating model is changing how product teams work. Marty Cagan’s product operating model is being contrasted with an "AI product operating model" built on a different assumption: building code is no longer expensive . Aakash Gupta’s examples point to leaner team shapes at Anthropic, OpenAI Codex, and Cursor, plus a build-first, evaluate-second loop where Codex reportedly ships about 2 of every 10 things it builds and discards or reuses the rest . Why it matters: if tasks can fall from 10 engineer-hours to 10 minutes, the logic behind heavy sprint planning and other coordination layers weakens . Apply it: move more work into fast working prototypes, then spend PM time on 12-month direction, distribution, and pricing .

Writing code is hard, and engineers are your scarcest resource.

  • The Hook Model is still a useful product lens in the AI era. Nir Eyal describes a four-step loop of trigger, action, variable reward, and investment . His emphasis for modern products is the investment step: repeated use creates stored value and personalization, so the product can improve with use and rely less on external reminders over time . Apply it: check whether repeat usage is creating user-specific value or just more activity.

Tactical Playbook

  1. Use AI to structure ambiguity. PMs described turning meeting notes, Slack threads, screenshots, emails, and transcripts into PRDs, release notes, Jira tickets, decision logs, and stakeholder updates . They also use AI as a translator between vague executive asks and clearer requirements, or between technical constraints and stakeholder-friendly language . How to apply: first ask AI to organize raw inputs into decisions and actions, then run a second pass for the audience that needs to consume it.

  2. Speed up discovery with public feedback and lightweight prototypes. Practitioners cited static HTML, ASCII sketches, and AI-generated mockups for rapid prototyping, including one prototype built in under 1.5 hours for user testing . For competitor research, they recommended reading app-store reviews, monitoring Reddit/X/forums, and talking to support teams; Appbot, AppFollow, and Sensor Tower were named as tools to help monitor at scale . How to apply: pair direct reading of complaints with a lightweight monitoring stack so you keep the raw user language while reducing manual scanning time.

Case Studies & Lessons

  • Epic found growth by following unexpected users. While personally handling support, Suren Markosian noticed that many Epic users were teachers rather than the intended parent audience . He made the product free for teachers despite the cost, and those teachers became a strong distribution channel by recommending Epic to each other and then to parents . Lesson: unexpected users in your support and usage data can reveal a better growth path than the one you planned .

  • Mozilla is sequencing AI around trust and choice. Firefox launched AI controls first so users can turn AI off, kept AI features opt-in, and says its default experience is privacy-optimized . Mozilla also argues that open source builds trust through inspectability and gives the community a direct way to influence the product; it cites a security-related collaboration with Anthropic that emerged through that openness . Lesson: for AI features with privacy implications, set controls and defaults before expanding the feature set.

Career Corner

  • PM leverage is shifting away from coordination work. In the AI operating model, the work that shrinks is ceremony, detailed ticket-writing, and coordination overhead; the work that grows is long-horizon strategy and getting the product to the right people at a price that captures value . How to apply: invest more in strategic direction, pricing, and go-to-market judgment—not only in process management.

Tools & Resources

  • From the latest PM discussions: Claude connectors for turning transcripts and emails into actionable docs , ChatGPT for mockup generation , static HTML as a lightweight spec or prototype format , and Appbot/AppFollow/Sensor Tower for competitor-feedback monitoring .

Start with signal

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Coding Agents Alpha Tracker avatar

Coding Agents Alpha Tracker

Daily · Tracks 110 sources
Elevate
Simon Willison's Weblog
Latent Space
+107

Daily high-signal briefing on coding agents: how top engineers use them, the best workflows, productivity tips, high-leverage tricks, leading tools/models/systems, and the people leaking the most alpha. Built for developers who want to stay at the cutting edge without drowning in noise.

AI in EdTech Weekly avatar

AI in EdTech Weekly

Weekly · Tracks 92 sources
Luis von Ahn
Khan Academy
Ethan Mollick
+89

Weekly intelligence briefing on how artificial intelligence and technology are transforming education and learning - covering AI tutors, adaptive learning, online platforms, policy developments, and the researchers shaping how people learn.

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VC Tech Radar

Daily · Tracks 120 sources
a16z
Stanford eCorner
Greylock
+117

Daily AI news, startup funding, and emerging teams shaping the future

Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker avatar

Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker

Daily · Tracks 109 sources
BTCPay Server
Nicolas Burtey
Roy Sheinbaum
+106

Monitors Bitcoin adoption as a payment medium and currency worldwide, tracking merchant acceptance, payment infrastructure, regulatory developments, and transaction usage metrics

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AI News Digest

Daily · Tracks 114 sources
Google DeepMind
OpenAI
Anthropic
+111

Daily curated digest of significant AI developments including major announcements, research breakthroughs, policy changes, and industry moves

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Global Agricultural Developments

Daily · Tracks 86 sources
RDO Equipment Co.
Ag PhD
Precision Farming Dealer
+83

Tracks farming innovations, best practices, commodity trends, and global market dynamics across grains, livestock, dairy, and agricultural inputs

Recommended Reading from Tech Founders avatar

Recommended Reading from Tech Founders

Daily · Tracks 137 sources
Paul Graham
David Perell
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
+134

Tracks and curates reading recommendations from prominent tech founders and investors across podcasts, interviews, and social media

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PM Daily Digest

Daily · Tracks 100 sources
Shreyas Doshi
Gibson Biddle
Teresa Torres
+97

Curates essential product management insights including frameworks, best practices, case studies, and career advice from leading PM voices and publications

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AI High Signal Digest

Daily · Tracks 1 source
AI High Signal

Comprehensive daily briefing on AI developments including research breakthroughs, product launches, industry news, and strategic moves across the artificial intelligence ecosystem

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