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Agent Benchmarks Rise as Context Infrastructure and Physical AI Take Shape
May 12
6 min read
751 docs
Colossus
Marc Andreessen
Fei-Fei Li
+17
Cognition and Legora set the strongest traction markers in this cycle, while new startups target agent analytics, context delivery, and secure local workflows. The broader investor backdrop is widening toward physical AI, voice, and defense autonomy as talent and chip economics become less forgiving.

1) Funding & Deals

  • Cognition AI: Cognition is reportedly raising at around a $25B valuation after Devin reached a $445M revenue run rate in its first 18 months, with usage doubling every eight weeks and customers including the US Army, Goldman Sachs, and Mercedes-Benz . The company was founded in November 2023 around the view that AI agents would work in the background like 24/7 coworkers, and it shipped Devin in March 2024 despite early public criticism .

  • VoriHQ: Vori raised a $22M Series B around a clear retail thesis: grocery stores do more volume than restaurants and hotels, yet most still run on clipboards. Its product is a modern operating system for grocers, including AI agents that automatically update shelf items when costs change .

  • Monaco: Sam Blond's Monaco reportedly closed millions in revenue days after launch by using forward-deployed account executives who configure the AI SDR live for customers. In this model, the sale and deployment happen at the same time, reducing reliance on long evaluations and discounting .

2) Emerging Teams

  • Legora: Legora has become one of the clearest legal AI traction stories: $100M ARR in 18 months, onboarding 50 customers every 14 days, and a reported $50M qualified pipeline from a Jude Law campaign . Its operating model is notable: former attorneys serve as Legal Engineers alongside forward-deployed engineers, and the company treats change management as part of the product . Paul Graham called it the most impressive startup he has visited in years .

  • Scope: Scope is building agent analytics for the agent era. It runs real workflows across Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, and similar tools so companies can see when agents choose them, get stuck, or pick competitors, and what to change . YC's launch post identified founder @anandPa94 .

  • Weavable: Weavable is an MCP-native context layer that preprocesses data from HubSpot, Jira, Slack, Zendesk, Notion, and more before it reaches an agent . The team reports 85% favorable results in LLM-as-a-judge evaluations against baseline retrieval and up to 90% token savings, using an evolving changelog across systems for entity resolution, freshness checks, and ranking .

  • Framewise Health: Framewise Health turns medical records, institutional protocols, and drug data into personalized videos for patient onboarding, adherence, and recovery . YC's launch post named founders @tanekimm and @sourdoggy8 .

3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • Laptop-scale open weights are improving faster than laptop hardware. On unchanged 128 GB MacBook Pro hardware, the best open-weight model runnable locally improved from score 10 to 47 on the Artificial Analysis Intelligence Index between May 2024 and May 2026, a 4.7x gain and a doubling every 10.7 months .

  • Parallel agent orchestration is becoming a product category. Replit launched Parallel Agents, which lets users run up to 10 agents in parallel, each with its own copy of the app and its own computer, then merge results agentically. Amjad Masad described the breakthrough not as multiple agents by itself, but correct orchestration and seamless merge-back, with projects moving 10x faster .

  • Secure local-first file handling is turning into core agent infrastructure. LlamaIndex released sandboxed-lit, a Rust CLI agent for parsing PDFs, images, and Office files with LiteParse, a secure sandbox powered by microsandbox, full filesystem mounting, and Bash access . Jerry Liu framed agents plus file sandboxes as a 2026 trend .

  • RL fine-tuning has a new efficiency lever for long prompts. A prompt-caching approach for RL fine-tuning computes the prompt once across grouped responses while preserving gradient flow, producing 5x to 7.5x speedups on long-prompt, short-response workloads in reported Qwen3.5-4B benchmarks .

  • Compiler experimentation is getting much more accessible. A hackable ML compiler built in 5,000 lines of Python lowers small models through six IRs to CUDA and, on RTX 5090 FP32, reports geomean performance of 1.11x versus PyTorch eager and 1.20x versus torch.compile, with wins up to 4.7x on some operations .

4) Market Signals

  • OpenAI tender liquidity is becoming a funding source for the next wave. SaaStr estimates cumulative OpenAI tenders since 2021 have likely created 300 to 500+ employees with more than $10M in realized secondary cash, and argues hundreds are already angel-investing into new B2B + AI startups in San Francisco . The same piece says top AI/ML talent now expects $500K+ base plus liquid equity, with secondary tenders every 12 to 18 months increasingly treated as table stakes . It also argues that non-founder operators at the right labs can now outperform typical founder economics .

  • Physical AI is moving from side thesis to investable category. Fei-Fei Li says the market is saturated with language AI use cases while underappreciating how perceptual and physical work really is . World Labs is building large world models aimed at understanding and navigating physical space, while Chelsea Finn's Physical Intelligence is building a foundation model for robotics .

  • Voice AI still looks early, but enterprise traction is real. Investors at the Cerebral Valley Voice Summit described the category as still in a Copilot era, with enterprise ahead of consumer . At the same time, Assort Health says its voice agents have already handled 150 million patient interactions across 5,000 providers, Abridge sees healthcare regulation and privacy as a moat, and OpenAI's newer realtime voice models can reason mid-conversation . Deepgram predicted a five-minute voice Turing Test could be passed by year-end through better context memory .

  • Semiconductor economics are no longer a free tailwind. Exponential View flagged Bloomberg reporting that TSMC does not plan to use ASML's High-NA EUV tool through 2029 because of cost . The same essay notes that cost per transistor stopped falling in 2011, and that even lithography-driven cost improvements have now reversed, which matters because modern AI infrastructure was built on generations of cheaper chips every 18 to 24 months .

  • Defense autonomy has shifted from taboo to urgent. a16z argues the US has the talent advantage but is losing the production race in autonomous systems, and frames the stakes as whether the country reaches the next conflict with overwhelming autonomy superiority or cedes that advantage to adversaries . Separately, My First Million described a cheap-drone problem where $2M missiles are used against $200 drones and argued that the next startup waves are increasingly clustering around AI labs, defense tech, and hard tech or robotics .

5) Worth Your Time

Fei-Fei Li on large world models

Watch for a concise articulation of why physical and perceptual intelligence may be the next major AI platform shift, and how world models could reconstruct, predict, and simulate physical space .

Marc Andreessen on the builder era

Watch for the strongest current argument that AI is creating a new builder role, with leading-edge programmers reportedly becoming 20x more productive and firms actively seeking AI-native talent .

The broken bargain of Moore's Law

Read for a useful framing of why TSMC's hesitation on High-NA matters for AI investors who have assumed another decade of automatic compute cost declines .

Newcomer's voice summit roundup

Read for operator-level traction and infrastructure details across Wispr Flow, Assort Health, Abridge, Cartesia, LiveKit, and Deepgram .

Harry Stebbings on Legora's enterprise AI playbook

Thread for a practical breakdown of why brand can create pipeline, but expert services and change management still determine whether enterprise AI workflows actually stick .

Multi-Agent Control Planes, Local DS4, and Practical Debug Loops
May 12
5 min read
153 docs
Artificial Analysis
Armin Ronacher
Salvatore Sanfilippo
+12
Today’s brief is about orchestration getting real: multi-agent control planes, parallel debugging, model routing, and measurable migrations are beating vague one-agent heroics. Also worth your attention: Cursor’s latest product moves, fresh benchmark data on model/harness combos, and DS4’s early local-agent momentum.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

  • Today’s clearest practical shift: multi-agent control is becoming operational. Anthropic shipped Claude Code’s agent view as a research preview; catwu shared the control-plane flow — run claude agents, then hit <- in any CLI session, ideally from the repo root — and Boris Cherny called it the best way to level up from one agent to many . Theo’s production outage story shows why that matters: he pasted the first error into one agent, opened another for a narrower DB-integrity question, then used the agent to draft schema-aware cleanup SQL while keeping the actual system understanding and final judgment on the human side .

⚡ TRY THIS

  • Run parallel theory agents on incidents (Theo). 1) Paste the first prod error into one agent. 2) Start a second agent/tab with a narrower diagnostic question — Theo used Which of these table referential integrity checks is the most likely to have a problem? 3) While both run, inspect logs/code yourself. 4) Once you isolate the cause, give the agent your real schema and ask it to draft the exact cleanup SQL, then review before executing .

  • Spike before you spec; pseudocode before you generate (Theo). Build the minimum viable shape first, learn what is annoying or underspecified, then write the real spec from what the spike teaches you. Theo also likes having the model draft pseudocode first, editing it in a back-and-forth, then asking what it looks like in the codebase .

  • Route between models/providers instead of marrying one agent (Theo). Keep more than one subscription/provider live; Theo says he regularly has GPT-5.5 debug Opus output and Opus improve GPT-5.5 UI work, and likes tools that let him hop between Claude/Codex/Cursor/OpenCode when reliability or fit changes . His cost note is the kicker: if prior-tier intelligence is enough, GPT-5.5 Medium matched earlier highs at under half the prior cost .

  • Aim agents at boring, benchmarkable migrations. Igor Alexandrov used Claude to rewrite SafariPortal’s tests from RSpec to Minitest and cut local runtime from 16m52s for 7003 examples to 111s for 5698 runs / 19375 assertions; DHH’s point is that conversion work makes the upside obvious. Pick one slow suite or framework seam, migrate it, and measure before/after instead of asking for greenfield magic .

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

  • Claude Code — agent view (research preview). One list of all sessions, live now; operator flow is claude agents + hit <- in any CLI session to register it, preferably from the repo root so every agent sits under one control plane . Announcement

  • Cursor Bugbot — effort levels. Usage-based Bugbot now exposes configurable thinking depth; Cursor says default-effort issues are resolved at merge time more than 80% of the time, and high effort finds 35% more bugs at the same resolution rate. Cursor uses high effort on infra/backend changes and default elsewhere . Docs

  • Cursor for Microsoft Teams. Mention @Cursor in a channel to delegate a task or pull info into Teams; Cursor says it reads the whole thread before implementing and opening a PR for review . Changelog

  • Artificial Analysis Coding Agent Index. New benchmark mix covers SWE-Bench-Pro-Hard-AA, Terminal-Bench v2, and SWE-Atlas-QnA . Top scores: Opus 4.7 / Cursor CLI 61; GPT-5.5 / Codex 60; Opus 4.7 / Claude Code 60; GPT-5.5 / Cursor CLI 58 . The operational spread matters more than the leaderboard: cost/task varies by more than 30x ($0.07 Composer 2 / Cursor CLI vs. $2.21 GPT-5.5 / Codex), time/task by more than 7x (~6 min Opus 4.7 / Claude Code vs. ~40 min Kimi K2.6 / Claude Code), and the best open-weight result here is GLM-5.1 / Claude Code at 53 .

  • Dwarfstar 4 (DS4). Salvatore Sanfilippo’s local DeepSeek v4 stack is explicitly shaped around coding agents: model-specific inference kernels, a server tailored to agent workflows, disk-backed KV cache with checkpointing, directional steering, and repeated correctness checks against online logits / higher quants . Early signal is solid: Salvatore says he uses it daily with PyAgent/OpenCode, and Armin Ronacher says recent fixes let it build and iterate on a small TUI Tetris game and explain ds4.c decisions well enough to feel useful .

  • PI + Warden. Armin says Arendelle acquired Mario’s open-source PI to steward it responsibly while keeping it useful as a building block for other agents; the design target is the earlier, more minimal Claude Code behavior that adapts per project . In the same orbit, Sentry’s Warden uses Claude Code SDK v1 plus skills to loop on vuln discovery and reportedly found ~100 issues in Sentry .

  • Codex computer-use is creeping into setup work. Peter Steinberger says Codex noticed a missing Google Cloud API while he was adding features to gogcli.sh and started Computer Use to click around Google Cloud Admin to enable it .

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • Theo on parallel outage debugging (25:37-26:07). One of the best short demos of using a second agent for a narrower theory instead of waiting for the first one to finish. Good template for DB and incident work where you still hold the map of the system .
  • Theo on the minimum-viable-shape method (41:51-42:25). If you only watch one planning clip today, make it this: use a quick spike to discover the real constraints, then write the spec after the learning happens .
  • Salvatore on why DS4 got traction (21:32-24:37). The useful bit is the product framing: faster local inference is not enough; the stack has to behave like a usable coding-agent system end to end .
  • Armin/Ben on Warden and agentic security scanning (19:27-21:20). Good short segment if you care about where harnesses go after coding assistants: Claude Code SDK loops, custom skills, and a focused vuln-finding workflow .
  • Study the artifacts, not just the hot takes. Armin shared the full DS4 Tetris trace here: session log. For tiny agentic scripts, Simon Willison’s shebang TIL is worth copying line-for-line: TIL.

Editorial take: the edge is shifting from bigger prompts to better orchestration — control planes, parallel hypotheses, model routing, and hard before/after checks on performance and maintenance.

Real-Time AI Interfaces, OpenAI’s Enterprise Push, and Devin’s Growth
May 12
3 min read
801 docs
Thinking Machines
Colossus
Greg Brockman
+17
Thinking Machines pushed AI toward real-time multimodal collaboration, while OpenAI expanded into enterprise deployment and cybersecurity workflows. This brief also covers key research advances, new agent products, and fresh market signals from Anthropic, Cognition, Core Automation, and Cerebras.

Top Stories

Why it matters: The biggest updates point to AI moving beyond turn-based chat and model access toward real-time collaboration, domain-specific workflows, and deeper enterprise deployment.

  • Thinking Machines introduced interaction models. The system is designed to talk, listen, watch, think, and collaborate simultaneously in real time, with demos showing interruption handling, continuous audio/video processing, and visually proactive tasks like posture monitoring and live finger counting . Impact: This is a direct attempt to move AI UX beyond prompt/response into continuous multimodal collaboration.
  • OpenAI widened its enterprise push on two fronts. It launched the OpenAI Deployment Company—majority-owned by OpenAI, backed by 19 partners, starting with 150 forward-deployed engineers and deployment specialists plus $4B of initial investment—and also launched Daybreak, which pairs OpenAI models and Codex with security partners to scan repositories, find vulnerabilities, generate patches, and automate response . Impact: OpenAI is expanding beyond model access into implementation and security-specific workflows.
  • Cognition’s Devin is showing large commercial traction. In its first 18 months, Devin reached a $445M revenue run rate, with usage doubling every eight weeks; customers include the US Army, Goldman Sachs, and Mercedes-Benz, and Cognition is raising at around $25B valuation . Impact: The software-agent category now has a major revenue datapoint.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: The most notable technical work focused on more predictable training, alternative language-modeling methods, and efficient small multimodal models.

  • Marin’s Delphi predicted a 25B-parameter, 600B-token training run by extrapolating 300x from smaller models, with reported 0.2% error.
  • A new paper on entropy-gated continuous bitstream diffusion says diffusion over bitstreams can outperform masked and uniform diffusion baselines and essentially match autoregressive language models under the paper’s evaluation settings .
  • MiniCPM-V 4.6 1.3B Instruct scored 13 on the Artificial Analysis Intelligence Index—the highest for open weights under 2B parameters—while using just 5.4M output tokens and reaching 38% on MMMU-Pro .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: New releases kept pushing agents closer to live operations across meetings, coding sessions, and desktop workflows.

  • GPT-Realtime-2 was demoed as a meeting agent that can turn spoken standup updates into ticket moves; OpenAI also released a repo for building similar voice-to-action workflows .
  • Claude Code added agent view, a research-preview control plane that shows all sessions in one list; terminal users can manage it via claude agents.
  • Hermes Agent previewed computer use with any model, letting models control a user’s computer in the background while the user keeps keyboard, mouse, and screen control .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: Capital and distribution are clustering around enterprise adoption, new labs, and AI infrastructure.

  • Anthropic launched Claude Platform on AWS, giving AWS customers native Claude access with AWS authentication, billing, commitment retirement, and governance tooling; Anthropic says it is a distribution and enterprise adoption move, not a new model .
  • Core Automation, a six-week-old startup founded by ex-OpenAI researcher Jerry Tworek, is already seeking funding at a $4B valuation; it is building models that continuously learn from real-world experience, with Nvidia as an early backer .
  • Cerebras is reportedly increasing the size and price of its IPO after demand exceeded available shares by 20x.

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These smaller updates still sharpen the picture on benchmarks, infrastructure, defense, and real-world AI usage.

  • Epoch AI says an AI-assisted review of FrontierMath flagged fatal errors in about a third of Tier 1–4 problems; corrected scores will follow after human review .
  • vLLM now tops Artificial Analysis on DeepSeek V3.2 and says its leading deployments for DeepSeek, MiniMax-M2.5, and Qwen 3.5 397B are open source .
  • Sphere Semi says its AI-designed chip is now deploying into military hardware with Northrop Grumman, calling it the first AI-designed semiconductor to go from concept to deployment in a defense system .
  • A METR survey of 349 technical workers found self-reported AI gains of 1.6–2.1x in work value on average, while explicitly warning those perceptions likely overestimate ground truth .
Quincy Jones Leadership, Cialdini Persuasion, and a High-Conviction AI Counterpoint
May 12
3 min read
136 docs
Elon Musk
Ben Horowitz
Marc Andreessen
+6
Today’s authentic founder recommendations clustered around leadership, persuasion, and cultural framing. The strongest pick was Ben Horowitz’s documentary recommendation for learning how elite teams manage ego, while Naval and Andreessen added a practical stack of books, videos, and one high-conviction AI article.

Most compelling recommendation

The Greatest Night in Pop

  • Content type: Documentary
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the provided notes
  • Link/URL: Not provided; discussed as available on Netflix
  • Who recommended it: Ben Horowitz
  • Key takeaway: Horowitz pointed the host to the film for what it shows about Quincy Jones as a leader: he was exceptional at handling super-talented, difficult people and setting collaboration norms before the work started
  • Why it matters: This was the strongest recommendation in today’s set because it came with a concrete operating lesson, not just praise. The host said the documentary taught him a lot about Horowitz and even summarized Horowitz as "the Quincy Jones of technology"

"Leave your ego at the door."

Naval’s practical learning stack

Naval Ravikant’s recommendations formed the clearest mini-syllabus of the day: persuasion, mission-setting, and what strong small teams feel like when they work well .

Influence

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Robert Cialdini
  • Link/URL: Not provided
  • Who recommended it: Naval Ravikant
  • Key takeaway: Naval called it the original book on persuasion, said the sequel is skippable except for anchoring, and highlighted Cialdini’s CLASSR framework: consistency, liking, authority, scarcity, social proof, and reciprocity
  • Why it matters: It was the most explicit framework recommendation in today’s notes

Glengarry Glen Ross

  • Content type: Movie
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the provided notes
  • Link/URL: Not provided
  • Who recommended it: Naval Ravikant
  • Key takeaway: Naval said it was effectively the full extent of his sales training, and still recommended it
  • Why it matters: It is a concise cultural reference for how one founder thinks about learning sales

Wind, Sand and Stars and Airman’s Odyssey

  • Content type: Books
  • Author/creator: Antoine de Saint-Exupery
  • Link/URL: Not provided
  • Who recommended it: Naval Ravikant
  • Key takeaway: Naval used Saint-Exupery’s writing to make a leadership point: inspire people to yearn for the mission rather than just assigning tasks
  • Why it matters: These were the clearest mission-building recommendations in today’s set

Liftoff, The Macintosh Way, and Soul of a New Machine

  • Content type: Books
  • Author/creator: Not fully specified in the provided notes
  • Link/URL: Not provided
  • Who recommended it: Naval Ravikant
  • Key takeaway: Naval framed them as inspiring stories of small, highly competent teams whose members can rely completely on one another and therefore do their most creative work
  • Why it matters: This cluster is useful less as theory than as an operating ideal for company-building

Repeat signal and other notable picks

Suicidal Empathy

  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: Gad Saad
  • Link/URL:Amazon
  • Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen; Elon Musk separately called it "Worth reading"
  • Key takeaway: Andreessen said Saad’s argument is that some social reform movements are driven by a pathological form of empathy that ends up harming the people they claim to help, or harming the reformers themselves
  • Why it matters: It was the clearest repeated title in today’s notes

Boomer Truth

  • Content type: YouTube video
  • Author/creator: Academic Agent / Nema Parvini
  • Link/URL: Not provided
  • Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen
  • Key takeaway: Andreessen called the two-hour video worth watching for its account of "Boomer Truth" as the habit of believing whatever television says, and for tracing how that pattern is breaking down
  • Why it matters: It was the most specific long-form video recommendation in Andreessen’s set of culture-oriented picks

Article arguing humans will still have valuable work in the age of AI

  • Content type: Article
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the provided notes; reposted by John Ennis
  • Link/URL:https://x.com/johnennis/status/2039064805827330362
  • Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen
  • Key takeaway: The piece pushes back on the idea that humans will have nothing valuable left to do in an AI-heavy future
  • Why it matters: Andreessen gave it his highest recommendation, making it the clearest AI-related resource endorsement in today’s set

"Absolutely lovely. Highest recommendation."

AI Widens the PM Role, but Discovery and Delivery Discipline Still Matter
May 12
9 min read
89 docs
Teresa Torres
Marc Andreessen
Julie Zhuo
+9
This issue covers the emerging AI-era PM profile, why direct customer discovery still matters, and how experienced practitioners are handling roadmap slippage and management in volatile environments. It also highlights signals that an organization has outgrown vendor-led product decisions.

Big Ideas

1) AI is widening the PM role, but not into a universal coding mandate

Across sources, there is agreement that AI is collapsing old boundaries between PM, design, and engineering. Aakash Gupta argues the PM bar is moving toward a polymath profile—coder, designer, CFO, marketer—and that the PMs pulling ahead are orchestrating agents rather than doing every task themselves . Marc Andreessen describes a similar convergence into a broader "builder" role, where people can enter from PM, design, engineering, or other backgrounds and still become responsible for complete products .

Teresa Torres adds the necessary caveat: not every PM needs to become a product builder. AI makes prototyping accessible, but production quality still depends on design systems, code review, CI/CD, automated testing, QA, and engineering involvement . Even in a future where ideas and code can come from anywhere, she argues PMs still own what gets integrated and whether the product stays coherent .

"There are no blockers anymore. Only latency."

Why it matters: The new advantage is broader leverage, not just narrower expertise.

How to apply:

  • Build adjacent fluency across functions, even if you stay deepest in one area .
  • Start small: build one agent this week to develop intuition before deciding how hands-on you want to be .
  • Treat production shipping as an organizational capability, not an individual superpower .

2) AI changes the throughput of discovery, not the need for customers

Torres separates AI adoption into three layers: personal efficiency, team/process change, and product impact . At the product layer, her message is direct: discovery still requires talking to customers . She also notes that AI-created time savings reveal company maturity: some teams use the time to push out more features, while stronger product organizations redirect it into discovery, innovation, and experiments .

A startup thread echoes that at a tactical level:

"Don't rely on surveys. Get on their calendar and meet with them."

Why it matters: Faster synthesis can create false confidence if direct customer contact drops.

How to apply:

  • Use AI for scheduling, synthesis, and pattern-finding across support tickets and sales calls .
  • Spend the saved time on live conversations, not just backlog expansion .
  • Ask teams to treat product ideas as hypotheses that can be invalidated quickly .

3) In volatile markets, good management looks like safety plus fast correction

Julie Zhuo argues that strong managers make it safe for teams to take risks, especially in the current AI period where technologies and ways of working are changing rapidly . Her standard is not "always be right." It is: try ideas, learn fast, and be the first to say a path is not working . She pairs that with a clear empowerment model: trust the person with the most context, own the outcome as the manager, and align the team on success and values so freedom does not become drift .

Why it matters: When uncertainty is high, fear slows learning and micromanagement scales badly.

How to apply:

  • Give decision authority to the teammate with the strongest context, not just the highest title .
  • Align explicitly on what success looks like and which values are non-negotiable .
  • Normalize fast course correction instead of defending bad bets .

Tactical Playbook

1) Repair a roadmap miss with a short ownership statement and a concrete reset plan

The roadmap-slippage thread converged on a practical sequence:

  1. Own the miss briefly and factually; do not hide behind stress, but do not spiral into apology either .
  2. Show the real state of the roadmap: what is going well, what is not, and where Q2 hit snags .
  3. Re-prioritize by value: what still ships, what moves to early Q3, and what should be killed after re-checking the original evidence .
  4. Spell out downstream impact, revised timelines, and remediation steps .
  5. Add prevention measures: tracked initiative status, a risk log, regular status updates, and better issue escalation .
  6. Get leadership buy-in to the new plan .

Why it matters: Several commenters emphasized that leaders are judging whether you have a grip on the situation, not whether the quarter went perfectly .

2) Put delivery instrumentation in place before trust erodes

One operator in the same thread described using Claude-built Jira dashboards to track lead times, planned versus actual velocity, roadmap timelines, completion rates, estimate variance, and a color-coded green-to-red status across initiatives . They paired that with informal syncs with the engineering manager because relying only on secondhand updates was too fragile .

How to apply:

  1. Track a small set of leading indicators: lead time, velocity variance, completion rate, and estimate drift .
  2. Map those indicators to initiatives or roadmap goals, not just tickets .
  3. Add a direct engineering check-in alongside PM reporting .
  4. Communicate possible delays as soon as the indicators turn, not after the quarter closes .

Why it matters: In small teams especially, once a PM loses first-hand signals from standups and sprint rituals, falling velocity can stay hidden for too long .

3) Replace survey-led validation with a tighter customer-learning loop

A simple loop emerges across the discovery notes:

  1. Use AI to synthesize large volumes of support tickets and sales calls for patterns worth exploring .
  2. Get on customers' calendars; do not treat surveys as a substitute for direct conversations .
  3. Turn what you hear into explicit hypotheses about the product or market .
  4. Encourage the team to invalidate weak ideas quickly and say so openly .
  5. Reinvest the time AI saves into more discovery and experiments, not only more feature output .

Why it matters: AI can accelerate synthesis, but it cannot remove the need for real user input .

Case Studies & Lessons

1) A restaurant company's digital sprawl exposed the need for an internal PM function

A restaurant company expanded beyond locations into a POS system, internal accounting system, mobile app, and online ordering site, while keeping all IT development and support outsourced across multiple vendors . The symptoms were familiar: scattered product ownership, reactive feature requests, constantly shifting priorities, inconsistent operations-to-development communication, and no internal team responsible for strategy, roadmap, UX, or long-term product thinking . The poster's conclusion was that the company had reached the point where it needed a real product management department . The unresolved questions were practical: how to start the function, whether to begin with one PM or a full team, and how to structure work with outsourced developers .

Lesson: The post frames these symptoms as evidence that vendor coordination alone is not enough once digital products become a portfolio .

How to apply: Audit whether someone inside the company owns product vision, prioritization, UX, roadmap, and the boundary between operational requests and product ownership .

2) A small-team roadmap miss showed how quickly execution visibility can collapse

In a team with five engineers, a junior PM, and one senior PM, the senior PM said they had been pulled away from sprint ceremonies and engineering standups by conferences and ML work, while 1:1s with the VP of engineering were repeatedly cancelled . They relied more heavily on junior updates, missed the signals from piling work and falling velocity, and only discovered the miss after a commercial roadmap session .

Lesson: The thread suggests that secondary reporting can hide delivery risk when direct execution signals disappear .

How to apply: Keep at least one direct view into engineering health, and pair any reset conversation with both remediation and prevention .

Career Corner

1) Mastery starts when you stop trying to look impressive

"The path to mastery is mostly the death of the fantasy that you should look impressive while learning."

Shreyas Doshi adds that, for highly talented people, wanting to look or feel impressive is often one of the biggest blockers to mastery .

Why it matters: AI is creating new pressure to appear instantly fluent.

How to apply: Use awkward early reps as the point of the exercise. In this set of notes, the most concrete advice is to build the first agent this week because intuition comes from practice .

2) Build breadth, but choose your hands-on depth deliberately

Aakash Gupta argues that "good enough at everything" can now be stronger than expert-at-one-thing for PMs because AI raises the value of broad functional coverage . Andreessen's builder framing pushes in the same direction . Torres pushes back on the absolutist version: not every PM has to generate code, and the better test is whether the work is enjoyable and whether you have enough experience to do it well .

Why it matters: The role is broadening, but the right response is not identical for every PM.

How to apply: Build fluency across coding, design, finance, and marketing, then decide where you want hands-on depth and where agent orchestration is the better fit .

3) First-time management still feels like first-time management

Julie Zhuo describes stepping into management without really knowing what it entailed, then learning through awkward one-on-ones, offers, negotiations, and difficult performance conversations .

Why it matters: Discomfort is a normal signal during management growth, not automatic evidence of poor fit .

How to apply: Treat each new managerial task as a skill to learn, the same way you would treat a new PM tool or workflow .

Tools & Resources

1) Claude-built Jira intelligence dashboards

A practical setup from the roadmap thread used Claude to build dashboards over Jira data, tracking lead times, planned versus actual velocity, initiative timelines, completion rates, estimate variance, and a color-coded project state .

Why explore it: It gives earlier warning on slippage and helps PMs communicate risk before deadlines are missed .

How to use it: Start with one initiative or roadmap view, iterate until the signals are trustworthy, and review it alongside direct engineering syncs .

2) AI prototyping tools with hard guardrails

Torres says AI tools are already good enough for broad prototyping, but not every organization is ready to turn that into production shipping . The missing prerequisites are concrete: design systems, code review, CI/CD, automated testing, QA, and secure, scalable engineering practices .

Why explore it: It is a fast way to explore ideas without confusing exploration with production readiness .

How to use it: Keep these tools in the discovery and prototype layer unless your organization already has the guardrails to absorb production contributions safely .

3) Personal AI agents as a weekly practice loop

Aakash Gupta's advice is simple: intuition for AI comes from practice, so build the first agent this week . The example payoff he gives is that two hours spent setting up an agent can buy back six hours the next week, then more over time .

Why explore it: It is a direct way to learn where AI genuinely creates leverage in your own workflow .

How to use it: Start with one repetitive PM task and measure the time it returns over the next two weeks .

OpenAI Expands Into Deployment and Cyber Defense as Real-Time Models Debut
May 12
3 min read
432 docs
Greg Brockman
Nathan Lambert
Christopher Manning
+10
OpenAI made the day’s clearest enterprise moves with a new Deployment Company and the Daybreak cyber-defense initiative. Thinking Machines pushed native real-time interaction, Cognition posted a notable business signal for coding agents, and research and policy updates pointed to training and governance as the next bottlenecks.

AI moves closer to live workflows

OpenAI creates a deployment arm with capital, partners, and field engineers

OpenAI launched the OpenAI Deployment Company to help businesses build and deploy AI to production. The company says it is majority-owned and controlled by OpenAI, brings together 19 investment firms, consultancies, and system integrators, starts with $4 billion of initial investment, and will add 150 Forward Deployed Engineers and Deployment Specialists through its agreed acquisition of Tomoro .

Why it matters: OpenAI is building a formal implementation layer around its models, not just selling access to them .

Details: Deployment Company

Daybreak turns OpenAI’s latest models toward cyber defense

OpenAI also launched Daybreak, described as frontier AI for cyber defenders. It combines OpenAI’s models, Codex, and security partners to help teams find and fix vulnerabilities earlier, cut through security backlogs, and automate detection, validation, and response; Sam Altman said OpenAI wants to work with as many companies as possible on continuous security now .

Why it matters: This is one of OpenAI’s clearest attempts to package frontier models into a specific, high-stakes enterprise workflow .

Details: OpenAI Daybreak

Thinking Machines makes the case for native real-time interaction

Thinking Machines introduced interaction models, a new class trained from scratch for real-time interaction rather than adapted from turn-based systems . The company said the models are built to talk, listen, watch, think, and collaborate simultaneously, and Soumith Chintala framed this as step one in increasing human-AI bandwidth; a Horace demo showed model and user speaking at once, which Nathan Lambert called “genuinely different” .

“People talk, listen, watch, think, and collaborate at the same time, in real time. We’ve designed an AI that works with people the same way.”

Why it matters: The interface race is moving beyond turn-taking chat toward systems built for live collaboration .

Details: Thinking Machines blog

A notable commercial signal arrives for AI coding agents

A Colossus profile reported that Cognition’s Devin reached a $445 million revenue run rate in its first 18 months, with usage doubling every eight weeks; customers cited include the U.S. Army, Goldman Sachs, and Mercedes-Benz, and the company is reportedly raising at around a $25 billion valuation . The same profile says Scott Wu founded Cognition in November 2023 and shipped Devin in March 2024 after an initially rough reception .

Why it matters: Reported revenue at this scale suggests AI software agents are moving from demo category to material enterprise spend .

The next bottlenecks: training recipes and state capacity

Better pre-training recipes are still producing large gains

A Stanford CS25 lecture described three levers: a two-phase curriculum that improved results 17% over random ordering and 3.4% over an optimal blend without curriculum, front-loading reasoning data so gains persist through SFT and RL, and “reinforcement as pre-training” (RLP), where models generate reasoning traces before predicting the next token . Combined, the strategies yielded up to 60% relative improvement over baselines using the same data, and related datasets were open-sourced on Hugging Face .

Why it matters: The frontier is still moving through training method, not only more data and more compute .

AI policy discussion gets more operational

Big Technology noted that the U.S. government gained early access to models from Microsoft, Google, and xAI for national security testing . Separately, Import AI highlighted the Institute for Law & AI’s “radical optionality” approach: avoid overregulation in the short term while building institutions, information channels, legal authorities, model-security measures, assessments, and technical talent for a range of future scenarios . Jack Clark argued that ideas like these can start paying off quickly by generating information and building state capacity around advanced technology .

Why it matters: The policy conversation is inching away from abstract principles and toward concrete testing, staffing, and oversight mechanisms .

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