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Layerbase's Early IP Interest, Picotron's GPU Flexibility, and India's Global AI Push
Jun 28
5 min read
597 docs
Machine Learning
Software As a Service Companies — The Future Of Tech Businesses
r/SideProject - A community for sharing side projects
+2
This brief highlights Layerbase's early acquisition interest, two emerging infrastructure-oriented teams, Picotron's hardware-flexible LLM training stack, and market signals around Indian AI ambition, agent governance, and a compressed model-release window.

1) Funding & Deals

  • Layerbase — $200k IP offer declined. The founder said somebody offered $200k for Layerbase's IP and he turned it down . The offer came 13 days after launch, when the product had reached almost 100 users with 3 paid plans through blog and SEO distribution . Layerbase is an open-core database platform with 21 databases and a branching model the founder says works across engines, not just Postgres or MySQL .

2) Emerging Teams

  • Layerbase. The creator is currently head of engineering at an affiliate platform and says he has been building Layerbase since November while working 80 to 90 hours a week . The product already spans 21 databases, a cross-platform desktop app, and an upcoming Layerbase Apps surface; docs are live, but the feature remains behind a flag while security testing continues, with the first app positioned as a Fullstory alternative .

  • Agency-focused AI voice agent platform. After running AI voice agent setups for small businesses, the founder built a platform around pain points he saw in Vapi and Retell: real production costs above headline pricing, extra HIPAA charges, and missing native white-label support . He argues existing tools are built for developers building for themselves, not agencies building for clients . The product includes a drag-and-drop workflow builder, inbound/outbound/web channels, bulk campaigns, BYOK for OpenRouter, OpenAI, Deepgram, and ElevenLabs, native white-labeling, and a self-host option; beta users had first live agents running in under 30 minutes, and the company is onboarding its first agencies at founding-member pricing .

3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • Picotron — LLM training without mandatory GPU-specific dependencies. Picotron is a clean-room rewrite that removes mandatory GPU-specific dependencies, runs on GPUs that support PyTorch, falls back to standard PyTorch SDPA by default, and can hook into FlashAttention-2 at runtime if installed . Current support includes GQA or MLA, QK-Norm, logit soft-capping, parallel FFN/Attn, and ZeRO-1, with roadmap work on MoE prep and easier dataset handling .

  • Layerbase's storage-layer branching approach. The founder says Layerbase uses a customized Linux operating system that manipulates storage blocks for instant referencing, which is what allows branching across all supported database engines instead of using a Postgres- or MySQL-specific plugin path . That sits under an open-core product built around an npm package and a maintained database registry .

  • Voice-agent tooling is getting more operationally productized. In the same batch, the agency-focused voice platform emphasized no-code conversation design, tool calls to external APIs, native white-labeling, and self-hosting for enterprises that need data residency . The founder framed that buildout as a response to production cost leakage and packaging friction in current platforms .

4) Market Signals

  • India's AI startup case is being framed as global, not local. Puneet, who said his previous startup scaled to around $100M in annual revenue and exited to Swiggy before roles at YC and Nexus, argued that AI is a global rather than hyperlocal wave and that Indian founders can now build global companies by living at the edge of the technology rather than optimizing first for go-to-market or business model details . Arnav, formerly at YC and now at Peak 15, said he is now mostly working with and investing in young builders building in AI . Puneet also cited an Indian student at IIT cold-emailing and selling to US insurance companies as evidence that old distribution barriers are weakening .

This is about, do you understand this technology 10x better than everyone else?

  • YC's founder filter is moving harder toward learning rate, agency, and product clarity. Speakers said AI has leveled the field for young founders because coding agents reduce build bottlenecks and shift the constraint to how fast a founder can learn . They emphasized clarity, taste grounded in customer insight, and relentlessly resourceful agency over attachment to a first idea, and noted that many winning ideas were neither the founders' first ideas nor the first product in-market . They also defined a valuable project as two people building something unassigned and getting someone to use it .

  • Agent governance is becoming action governance. A founder working on runtime controls for AI agents framed the problem as agents drafting emails, updating records, calling tools, or triggering downstream actions before anyone reviews whether the output is risky . The buyer map in the discussion centered on teams already letting agents touch customer data, internal systems, or outbound communication, with ownership split across engineering, security or compliance, and product . The pain appears to spike in workflows such as outbound email, CRM or customer-data writes, billing or credits, and approval routing, where bad agent actions create cleanup work for humans .

  • The next two weeks may bring a crowded model-release window. Bindu Reddy flagged GPT 5.6, Fable 5, Gemini 3.5, and about a dozen open-source models as timed to launch together within 15 days .

5) Worth Your Time

  • YC on selling AI globally from India. Puneet argues the current AI cycle lets Indian founders sell globally and even cold-email into US buyers .
  • YC on clarity, taste, and agency. This segment is a compact statement of the founder qualities discussed in the YC session .
  • Picotron GitHub — primary source for the training stack and roadmap

  • Bindu Reddy's model-release thread — quick read on the 15-day cluster of GPT 5.6, Fable 5, Gemini 3.5, and open-source launches

  • Layerbase founder post — useful for the founder's explanation of the multi-engine branching design and the first traction points

DeepSeek Cuts Inference Costs as Web Agents and Open Coding Advance
Jun 28
4 min read
614 docs
elie
Anthropic
Sam Altman
+19
DeepSeek led the cycle with a major inference optimization and new serving economics, while long-horizon web agents and open-source coding models showed clear progress. The brief also covers important research on ensembling and evaluation, fresh document AI tools, and a policy update on Anthropic model access.

Top Stories

Why it matters: the clearest signals today were about cheaper inference, more capable agents, and stronger open-source specialization.

  • DeepSeek turned inference into the story. It released DSpark, a semi-parallel speculative decoding method, said production DSV4 saw roughly 50% throughput/latency gains with up to ~80% latency improvement, open-sourced the DeepSpec training/evaluation stack, and disclosed V4-Pro serving economics indicating at least 3x cheaper serving than prior benchmarks and roughly 5x cheaper inference at 50 TPS. Impact: frontier competition is increasingly about token delivery and serving efficiency, not just better base models.

  • Web agents are getting more real-world. Google DeepMind’s CUA team took #1 on Odysseys with a vision-only Gemini 3.5 Flash agent; the benchmark focuses on multi-hour web workflows that require planning, memory, reasoning, and verification across many sites and tools. ViDA’s open-source BrowserBC turns one recorded human browser flow into reusable skills and improved WebArena-Hard success from 60% to 81% while cutting tool calls 27%. Impact: progress is shifting from short browser demos to reusable, long-horizon workflows.

  • Open-source coding models kept moving upstack.Ornith-1.0 launched as an MIT-licensed family for agentic coding in sizes from 9B to 397B MoE, using an RL-based self-improving strategy that jointly optimizes scaffolds and solutions. The team reports state-of-the-art open-source results on benchmarks including Terminal-Bench 2.1 and SWE-Bench Verified. Impact: self-hosted coding stacks are becoming more capable and more commercially usable.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: several new papers challenged common assumptions about ensembling, evaluation, and AI readiness in medicine.

  • Model ensembling got a reality check. A new paper argues that any router, voting system, or mixture-of-agents setup that must return one member model’s answer is capped at 1 − β, where β is the fraction of queries that every candidate model gets wrong. It also argues that low pairwise error correlation does not reveal that ceiling.

  • BINEVAL made LLM judging more inspectable. It breaks each evaluation criterion into atomic yes/no questions and aggregates the results into calibrated multidimensional scores; across SummEval, Topical-Chat, and QAGS, it matched or beat UniEval and G-Eval, with especially strong factual-consistency results.

  • Medical AI showed both promise and limits. One ECG model was reported to flag sudden-cardiac-death risk and, with a generative explainability model, reveal a new biomarker. Separately, GPT-5.5 Pro improved radiology interpretation scores to 79/100 from 69/100 on older models, but the evaluation still found it short of reliable clinical use.

Products & Launches

Why it matters: the strongest launches focused on practical infrastructure for documents and agents.

  • Mistral OCR 4 is a self-hostable document-intelligence model with bounding boxes, block classification, and confidence scores; one roundup said it beat competitors in human-preference testing and topped OlmOCRBench.

  • LiteParse was highlighted as an open-source parser with ~3 ms average page latency, support for 50+ formats, basic bounding boxes, and top results on OpenDataLoader-Bench, OlmOCR-Bench, and ParseBench.

  • Project Think said its next version lets agents make read-only fetch requests with SSRF hardening, explicit allowlists, markdown-first responses, and separate caps for downloads versus model context.

Industry Moves

Why it matters: strategy and org structure are starting to matter almost as much as raw model quality.

  • Microsoft made a leadership bet on Copilot. Reporting says Satya Nadella handed Copilot to Jacob Andreou, 33, as part of Microsoft’s push to regain AI momentum.

  • Sakana AI is pushing orchestration and sovereign deployment. The company said Japanese megabanks are moving AI workflows from PoC into production, argued that orchestrating many models may beat relying on one giant frontier model, and framed sovereign AI as the ability to develop, adapt, and run AI domestically inside global supply chains.

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: access to top models is increasingly a regulatory decision, not just a product rollout.

  • Anthropic said the US government cleared Mythos 5 for a narrow return. The company said its strongest cybersecurity model can be redeployed to a set of US organizations that operate and defend critical infrastructure, while broader Mythos and Fable availability is still being worked through with the government.

Quick Takes

Why it matters: these smaller updates still point to where performance, adoption, and tooling are moving next.

  • OpenAI says 750 tokens/sec is coming to 5.6 Sol in July.
  • A GMAC survey of 600+ recruiters found 1 in 3 employers replacing entry-level jobs with AI; tech was highest at 40%.
  • Seed Audio 1.0 was highlighted for scene-level audio generation, including multi-character dialogue and delivery from a single prompt.
  • Datalab said its balanced extraction mode hit 95.9% on an internal 225-document benchmark, above Reducto Deep Extract at less than half the price.
Low-Freedom Agent Pipelines and Loop Guardrails
Jun 28
3 min read
61 docs
James O'Reilly
Luke Schlangen
Geoffrey Huntley
+2
JamesOR's Antigravity codelab gives a copyable migration harness for messy monoliths, while Geoffrey Huntley lays out the loop-hardening stack: fresh-context rounds, memory files, strict caps, and context engineering.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Today's clearest practical convergence: both JamesOR's Antigravity codelab and Geoffrey Huntley's latest video argue that agent reliability comes from constrained loops, not better prompt poetry. JamesOR lays out a structured, open-source multi-agent workflow for migrating monolithic legacy code with low-freedom guardrails, Antigravity browser-subagent verification, and self-healing TDD pipelines . Huntley makes the same case at the harness layer: restart with fresh context, keep memory on the filesystem, and put hard caps plus approval gates around every run .

"I don't prompt anymore. My job is to write loops."

⚡ TRY THIS

  • For legacy migrations, split the work before you scale the agents. JamesOR's codelab starts with a structured multi-agent framework, then explicitly separates deterministic tasks from heuristic tasks. Wrap the flow in low-freedom guardrails, add Antigravity browser subagent verification, and close the loop with self-healing TDD so the pipeline can recover instead of silently drifting .

  • Run fresh-context rounds, not one giant chat. Huntley's RALPH pattern is simple: restart the agent each round with fresh context, use the filesystem as memory, and keep a memory file that the loop reads every turn so fixes stick without being re-explained .

  • Add a real HUD before you trust autonomy. Huntley's minimum controls are a cost cap and step cap on every run. Then layer least-privilege roles, sandboxing, human approval for anything that changes state, a verifier grounded in real data, circuit breakers, full tracing, and a default rule that instructions inside your data are hostile until proven otherwise .

  • Treat context as a scarce resource. Huntley cites Anthropic's finding that larger context windows can reduce accurate recall through "context rot," so feed only what the model needs each turn instead of dumping the whole codebase into the window .

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

  • Antigravity's surface map is now explicit:2.0, CLI, IDE, and SDK. Google also published a chooser post for when to use each surface blog post.

  • JamesOR's Antigravity migration codelab is the most substantive workflow drop in today's feed: a step-by-step, open-source multi-agent orchestration framework for poorly documented monoliths with tech debt, using low-freedom guardrails and browser-subagent verification thread.

  • Antigravity 2.0 community demos are expanding beyond text chat. One shared demo shows multi-agent orchestration with voice-driven sub-agents demo.

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • 1:42-1:58 — Huntley on the skill shift from prompts to loops. Short clip, but it cleanly reframes the whole category: the durable skill is loop design, not prompt ornamentation .
  • 4:11-4:38 — Huntley on context engineering. Worth watching if your agent gets worse as you add more docs: his hook is that bigger windows can create "context rot," so good loops ration context turn by turn .
  • Study JamesOR's codelab thread, not just the demo. The key pieces to copy are the deterministic-vs-heuristic split, low-freedom guardrails, browser-based verification, and closed-loop TDD recovery path thread.

  • Study Huntley's bounded-loop resource list. He specifically points to Matthew Berman's 70 ready-made bounded loops, the Agent Loops list, Ralph, and a free checklist at qualixar.com as templates you can copy instead of inventing from scratch .

Editorial take: today's practical edge is not "more agent"—it's tighter loops, narrower freedom, and explicit verification at every handoff.

AI Moves Deeper Into Science as Enterprises Rebuild Around Cost and Control
Jun 28
3 min read
233 docs
sarah guo
LocalLLM
Nathan Lambert
+9
Today's digest tracks AI moving from abstract benchmark talk into expert workflows, production systems, and access debates. The clearest themes were higher-rigor use in science and medicine, enterprise orchestration around domain knowledge, and growing focus on cost, reliability, and distribution rules.

What stood out

AI moved deeper into expert science and formal reasoning

A scientist described using AI as a collaborator on a molecular crystal-structure problem: over roughly 48 hours it moved from classical physics to increasingly rigorous quantum calculations, narrowed the root cause to one hypothesis, and proposed novel molecules to confirm it experimentally . Separately, a Nature paper applies AI to sudden cardiac death risk—described in the source as affecting 300,000-400,000 people in the U.S. each year—and says the system can help decide who should receive implanted defibrillators . Another widely shared example said AI was used not just to assist a proof, but to create a large machine-checkable formalization with consequences that could extend beyond mathematics .

"Every time I interacted with the AI, it was more like a dialogue between a professor and a bright student or scientific collaborator."

Why it matters: These are higher-rigor use cases than ordinary chat assistance: testable hypotheses, clinical risk prediction, and formal verification .

Enterprises are building AI operating loops around their own knowledge

Aravind Srinivas predicted that every enterprise will build its own "model-harness-sandbox-eval flywheel" and optimize for token value per watt, because the company-specific edge lives in tacit knowledge of domains, customers, and workflows . Sakana AI offered a concrete version of that thesis: it says Japanese megabanks have moved real AI workflows from proof-of-concept into production, argues orchestration across many models is more likely to win than a single frontier model, and defines sovereign AI as the domestic ability to develop, adapt, and run AI within a global supply chain . The company says that strategy shows up in products such as its Fugu orchestration model and Namazu open-weight models tuned to Japanese knowledge and values .

Why it matters: The competitive layer is shifting outward from the base model to the surrounding system—routing, evaluation, local adaptation, and institutional trust .

Real-world agent economics are overtaking token metrics

A discussion between swyx and an OpenAI research scientist centered on what changes when models get large test-time compute budgets, including $10M for a single task, and on the idea that benchmarks should be scaled by cost rather than treated as fixed scores . swyx argued that open-model launches should report "thinking levels" by dollar inference cost on popular providers, not just by token count . In a separate test of NVIDIA's open-weight Nemotron family on about 1,000 real-world coding agent tasks, the jump from Nano 30B to Super 120B looked like crossing an "agent capability floor": the larger model handled longer act-observe-decide loops more reliably, while Nano's cheaper inference was partly offset by higher failure rates and retries . Yann LeCun separately argued that a core GPU energy wall comes from moving bits to and from memory, which is one reason efficiency constraints remain central .

Why it matters: For agents, the useful metric is moving from token price or leaderboard rank toward cost per successful outcome under real compute and reliability constraints .

The open-model debate is widening again

Nathan Lambert said he still encounters people who want open models banned, just as he did in 2023 and 2024, and said he has faced increasing backlash for speaking against regulatory capture and unintentional attacks on open-source AI . He argues that more openness—though not blanket openness—currently does more to support inclusive and fair AI applications than closed approaches . A separate policy critique argued that FLOP thresholds are a poor regulatory proxy because capabilities depend on test-time compute, training focus, and system integration, not just pretraining compute, and said the more important unresolved question is who should have access to which advanced capabilities . Andreessen also highlighted claims from "many smart people/AI insiders" that GLM-5.2 may be the first Chinese model to match or beat leading American public models .

Why it matters: The policy fight is increasingly about access rules and distribution choices, not just model size—and international competition is part of that pressure .

Version-Controlled PM Work, Validation Before Scale, and Fintech Proof-of-Work
Jun 28
4 min read
68 docs
Product Management - The place for all things product
Product Management
ProductManagementJobs
+3
This brief centers on one operating shift: storing AI-era PM artifacts in version-controlled repos instead of scattered folders. It also pulls tactical lessons on validation, release documentation, fintech job hunting, and reusable PM skill libraries.

Big Ideas

  • Treat GitHub as PM infrastructure, not just a code tool. Aakash Gupta’s framework is to version-control the PM artifacts that now shape AI-assisted work: personal CLAUDE.md, skills, autoresearch configs, eval criteria, PLANNING.md, and code . The structure is three repos: a private workspace, a shared-tools repo with stripped context, and one repo per initiative . Why it matters: this makes drift reversible, changes reviewable, and project history durable instead of scattered across folders and local files . How to apply: separate personal context, team assets, and project records rather than keeping everything in one workspace.

Tactical Playbook

  1. Adopt the seven-step rhythm. Pull, branch, edit, commit, push, PR, merge—using natural-language commands in Claude Code rather than memorizing git syntax . Why it matters: it standardizes how PM artifacts change and adds review points when work is shared . How to apply: skip branches and PRs only for solo work in a private repo; use them for shared tools and team workflows .

  2. Use version control for four PM-specific jobs.

    • Roll back a degraded skill or reviewer by checking out the previous hash
    • Prune CLAUDE.md regularly; the source warns that files over 200 lines cause Claude to deprioritize instructions
    • Treat git log as your autoresearch experiment record
    • Version evals so a score drop—like 0.82 to 0.71—can be traced to model regression versus changed criteria

    Why it matters: this turns AI workflow quality into something diagnosable rather than anecdotal. How to apply: commit after each meaningful change, and make commit messages specific enough to explain what changed and why .

  3. Do security work before the first push. Use .gitignore, run a secret scan, and exclude API keys, .env files, customer data, internal docs, HR feedback, raw Slack exports, and sensitive screenshots .

"A private repo is not a privacy strategy."

Case Studies & Lessons

  • Validation still comes before scale. One PM described two Australian startups with functional MVPs and $0 revenue: an employee cognition platform with 13 staff averaging about 110k AUD, and a consumer cashback app with about 15 full-time employees . The reported common issue was weak product validation, combined with founders removed from day-to-day operations . Why it matters: funding and team size can make unvalidated bets more expensive, not safer . How to apply: validate continuously before expanding team or burn.

  • Documentation needs an audience, not total coverage. In a release-doc discussion, commenters warned that documents meant for "everyone" and "everything" usually fail because the purpose and reader are not defined .

"A document like this that tries to serve everyone ends up serving no one."

Why it matters: unclear audience is often a sign the team has not defined what the document should actually do . How to apply: write launch docs against one job—decision, alignment, readiness, or reference—then scope content to that job.

Career Corner

  • Break into fintech PM with one end-to-end proof piece. One practical recommendation: build a real fintech-ish side project and use that story in every interview . Why it matters: it gives you concrete evidence of product thinking, execution, and domain interest when your resume title does not yet do that. How to apply: be ready to explain the problem, target user, product choices, trade-offs, and what you learned.

  • Local compensation benchmarking can be noisy. One Chandigarh Tricity PM reported earning 25 LPA with 8 years of experience and said some small or mid-sized B2B SaaS firms are offering below online benchmarks of 35+ LPA . Why it matters: broad market ranges may not match local offers. How to apply: gather location- and role-specific datapoints before negotiating.

Tools & Resources

  • Examples of shareable PM skill repos mentioned in the source: gstack, with 23 specialist skills; pm-skills, with 100+ skills across 8 plugins; and claude-code-pm-course, an interactive Claude Code course . The same post also points to a PM .gitignore template for keeping secrets out of GitHub . Why it matters: these are concrete examples of what a shared-tools repo can look like. How to apply: borrow structure and reuse patterns, but strip personal and company-specific context from anything you publish .
Kevin Kelly’s *A Thousand True Fans* Leads Today’s Organic Recommendations
Jun 28
2 min read
100 docs
Patrick OShaughnessy
20VC with Harry Stebbings
Two authentic recommendations cleared the filter: Paul Erlang tied Kevin Kelly’s A Thousand True Fans to a concrete feedback-driven growth loop, while Patrick O'Shaughnessy shared David Bessis’s Attention is All We Have with a direct endorsement. The brief prioritizes the resource that came with the clearest practical takeaway.

What passed the filter

Two recommendations cleared the authenticity filter today. The stronger signal came from Paul Erlang, who referenced Kevin Kelly’s A Thousand True Fans while answering how consumer founders should reach their first thousand users . Patrick O'Shaughnessy added a simpler but still genuine recommendation of David Bessis’s Attention is All We Have, saying he "Really enjoyed reading this" and linking directly to it .

Most compelling recommendation

A Thousand True Fans

  • Content type: Essay
  • Author/creator: Kevin Kelly
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Who recommended it: Paul Erlang, co-founder and CEO of FOMO
  • Key takeaway: Keep talking to early users and iterating on their feedback as you move from 10 users to 100 to 1,000
  • Why it matters: Erlang connected the essay to a specific product-building loop: FOMO gave passionate users early access to its web app, then used their feedback to improve it quickly

"Talk to them. You need to keep iterating until you have 10 people, 100 people, a thousand people using it."

Erlang said the web app became "probably twice as good just in that week" because early users were passionate and willing to give rapid feedback .

Also worth saving

Attention is All We Have

  • Content type: Article
  • Author/creator: David Bessis
  • Link/URL:open.substack.com/pub/davidbessis/p/attention-is-all-we-have?r=1qfvl3&utm_medium=ios
  • Who recommended it: Patrick O'Shaughnessy
  • Key takeaway: O'Shaughnessy said he "Really enjoyed reading this"
  • Why it matters: This is a clean, direct recommendation with the exact article link attached, making it easy to save even though the source note does not include a fuller explanation of what stood out to him

If you only save one

Save A Thousand True Fans first. It was the only recommendation today that came with a concrete framework for founder behavior—talk to passionate early users, ship to them early, and iterate from their feedback .

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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.

VC Tech Radar avatar

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

AI News Digest avatar

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

Global Agricultural Developments avatar

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

PM Daily Digest avatar

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

AI High Signal Digest avatar

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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