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Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
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Tony Zhao
Kimi.ai
Sakana AI
Top Stories
Why it matters: a major open-weights release and a large enterprise-AI financing signal both point to intensifying competition in models and deployment infrastructure.
Moonshot AI launched Kimi K3, a 2.8T-parameter, native-multimodal model with a 1M-token context window. Its architecture combines Kimi Delta Attention—claimed to enable up to 6.3× faster decoding at million-token context—with Attention Residuals, which Moonshot says improve training efficiency by about 25% at under 2% added cost. The model is live through Kimi’s products and API; weights are scheduled for release by July 27.
Independent results place K3 at 57 on the Artificial Analysis Intelligence Index, comparable to Opus 4.8 and GPT-5.5 but behind Fable 5 and GPT-5.6 Sol. It also reached #1 in Frontend Code Arena with 1,679 points and a 76% pairwise win rate. Moonshot itself acknowledges a noticeable user-experience gap versus Fable 5 and GPT-5.6 Sol.
Databricks is raising strategic funding at a $188B valuation to expand its AI stack. Its priorities are Unity AI Gateway for multi-model governance and cost control, Genie for data-aware AI coworkers, and Lakebase, a serverless Postgres product for AI agents. The company reports a $6.9B annualized revenue run rate, with $1.7B from AI products.
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: efficiency improvements are increasingly coming from orchestration and model architecture, not simply bigger base models.
AI21 Labs reported a new SWE-Bench Pro result: 80.8% resolved across all 731 tasks at $5.99 per task. Its pipeline assigns parallel exploration to open-model “junior” agents, code extraction to a cheaper “senior,” and patch writing to a frontier “principal.” AI21 says frontier-model usage is 25% of the budget, bringing the cost to about one-third of a frontier-only agent while exceeding the closest cited hybrid result.
xHC expands the residual stream in language models to 16 paths while updating only four per layer. The authors report average downstream-score gains of 8.2 points on 18B models and 5.8 points on 28B models versus a vanilla architecture; at matched loss, they report requiring less compute than vanilla or mHC baselines.
A continual-learning study argues that weights may store facts without retaining reliable access to them. In the reported tests, restating a forgotten fact in the prompt restored answer accuracy to 77–80%; the authors conclude that memory systems should prioritize the context channel, which provides explicit addresses for information.
Products & Launches
Why it matters: agent products are adding workflow controls, persistent context, and practical automation rather than only new model endpoints.
Claude Code’s
/code-reviewnow adapts its method to effort level. Low runs a single cheap diff pass; high uses fresh-context subagents; and ultra launches a fleet of reviewers that independently reproduces findings to reduce false positives. Anthropic says it uses ultra on every pull request.Google renamed NotebookLM to Gemini Notebook and is integrating it more deeply across Gemini and Search. Every notebook is also receiving a secure cloud computer that can write and execute code for source-grounded data analysis.
Google Vids added Gemini Omni video generation and personal avatars. Users can generate and iteratively edit video from prompts and image references, while avatars are created from a selfie and brief voice recording; generated clips include an invisible SynthID watermark.
Industry Moves
Why it matters: AI infrastructure demand and multi-model orchestration are becoming central commercial battlegrounds.
TSMC reported Q2 revenue of NT$1.27T, up 36% year over year, and record net profit of NT$706.6B, up 77%. The company identified AI-chip demand as the primary growth driver, with CEO C.C. Wei saying demand will remain difficult to meet for a long time.
Sakana AI is integrating NVIDIA’s open Nemotron models into its Fugu multi-agent system. Fugu dynamically selects and combines specialized models through one API; the partners say the deployment will also provide real-world signals for improving both models and orchestration.
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: China is pairing open-source advocacy with a formal international-governance and capacity-building agenda.
- Xi Jinping called for open-source AI, global collaboration, and stronger safeguards to keep AI under human control. China also committed to 5,000 AI training and seminar opportunities for developing countries over five years, cooperation centers with groups including ASEAN, the African Union, and BRICS, and AI-powered weather-warning access for 30 countries.
Quick Takes
Why it matters: retrieval, robotics, video agents, and managed-agent tooling continue to advance alongside frontier-model releases.
- NVIDIA released Nemotron-3-Embed-8B, reporting 78.46 average NDCG@10 on RTEB and 75.45 on MMTEB Retrieval; it also released efficient 1B variants.
- Runway Agent 2.0 ranked first overall on Physion-Arc 1.0, a benchmark of multi-scene video generation across 100 screenplays.
- Google added a free tier for Gemini API Managed Agents, plus token caps for pausing and resuming work and native cron scheduling.
- ACT-2 Preview reported 99% zero-shot success in real, unseen homes and says one fine-tuning example can teach behaviors that generalize.
Scott Stevenson
Yann LeCun
Yann LeCun
Funding & Deals
Elorian raised a $55M seed round at a $300M valuation. The company is pursuing specialized multimodal models for visual understanding and reasoning, with an eventual goal of visual AGI. Its investor group includes Menlo Ventures, Nvidia, and Jeff Dean. The 13-person team plans to grow 2–3x over the next six months and aims to release a public API after pursuing frontier visual-reasoning benchmarks later this year.
Runta raised a $20M seed led by a16z. It is building an execution layer intended to constrain agents while they run, with security and policy controls for local or cloud deployment. The founding team’s background includes leading Cloudflare’s edge proxy and Kong’s core proxy; Martin Casado is joining the board.
Bunkerhill Health raised $55M for a hospital AI platform. The company says its single interface will help health systems deploy AI across dozens of use cases.
Menlo Ventures and Anthropic launched the $100M Anthology Fund to invest in early-stage AI startups and provide participating companies access to Anthropic credits.
Emerging Teams
Elorian pairs substantial model-building pedigree with a narrowly defined technical wedge. Its founder spent more than a decade at Google DeepMind, worked on Gemini from its inception, and authored a 2015 paper later cited by OpenAI in relation to ChatGPT. Elorian’s stated focus is on failures in advanced visual tasks such as counting objects, tracing wires, and locating items in images—rather than general multimodal capability.
Lila Sciences is building a data-generation thesis around autonomous labs. CTO Andy Beam and CSO Rafa Gómez-Bombarelli are developing AI-guided robotic labs across biology, chemistry, drug discovery, and materials science. Lila reports producing more than 10 trillion experimentally validated scientific-reasoning tokens in a single automated facility. Its team reports a gas-sorption measurement redesign that is roughly 2,500x faster and model-suggested platinum-group-free electrocatalysts that became its best performers.
Bunkerhill Health’s origin and go-to-market offer useful healthcare-AI signals. CEO Nish Khandwala’s work began with a Stanford research project and was shaped by his father’s heart attack; the company landed Cleveland Clinic as its first customer through a cold email.
Appnigma is a small but relevant vertical-AI watchlist company. Its cofounder spent 3.5 years on Salesforce’s AppExchange security-review team, reviewing more than 300 ISV submissions. The company says it generates native Salesforce managed packages from natural-language instructions, and that Pylon, Warmly, and Avoma shipped to AppExchange in days rather than quarters. These are founder-reported customer outcomes.
AI & Tech Breakthroughs
Kimi K3 is a notable open-weights model release to track. Moonshot AI describes it as a 2.8T-parameter, 1M-context, natively multimodal model designed for long-horizon agentic coding; it reports up to 6.3x faster decoding in million-token contexts through Kimi Delta Attention and roughly 25% higher training efficiency through Attention Residuals. The company says weights will be released by July 27. On Frontend Code Arena, Kimi K3 reached first place with 1,679 points, leading six of seven domains after a 17-place jump from Kimi K2.6.
AMI Labs is pursuing physical-AI world models through JEPA. Yann LeCun described JEPA as learning abstract representations of a signal and making predictions in that representation space, rather than predicting every signal detail. Existing V-JEPA models reportedly understand video, identify impossible events, and transfer to downstream tasks with minimal fine-tuning. Proposed applications include robot action planning, drone trajectory planning, and industrial-process control.
Sunday Robotics reports a generalization and reliability result for home robotics. Its ACT-2 Preview claims that a single fine-tuning example can teach a new behavior that generalizes, and reports a 99% zero-shot success rate in real, unseen homes. This is a company-reported result that warrants independent diligence.
Agent infrastructure is becoming a distinct systems layer. Perplexity launched SPACE, a secure sandbox platform for agentic AI; NVIDIA reports early tests showing up to 1.9x faster sandbox starts on Vera CPUs. Runta similarly argues that VMs and containers are not the right long-term execution substrate for agents.
Market Signals
Open-weight competition is broadening beyond a single vendor ecosystem. Marc Andreessen argues that well-funded teams in the U.S. and abroad are producing near-SOTA open-weight models, particularly for coding and agentic use. His accompanying view is that organizations are increasingly prioritizing control of data and token costs, even if that means giving up some frontier-model access.
AI and B2B venture capital remains sharply concentrated geographically. SaaStr reports that the Bay Area receives 51.5% of AI venture dollars and 53.2% of B2B dollars, while the top two metros together capture 72% of B2B funding. The implication for competitive Seed–Series B financings is not that location is mandatory, but that proximity to specialized investors can still matter.
Vertical applications may remain resilient against foundation-model substitution. Spellbook reported losing less than 1% of deals to Claude in Q2, challenging the claim that foundation models will absorb every software category. This is a company-reported sales metric rather than an industry-wide measure.
Operational agent deployments are moving toward controlled automation, not fully hands-off systems. Mintlify, which a16z says grew 10x in a year, routes actionable support tickets through coding agents and automated PR review, while retaining engineers for final review, testing, and merge decisions. Its hiring framework asks whether a problem can be solved by automation or process change before adding headcount.
Worth Your Time
- Elorian’s TechCrunch interview — the most direct source on its visual-reasoning thesis, Nvidia relationship, and public-API roadmap.
- Yann LeCun’s AMI Labs fireside — useful for evaluating the technical case for abstract-prediction world models and their potential role in physical AI.
Latent.Space’s Lila Sciences conversation — a substantive look at automated labs as a mechanism for generating experimentally verified training data, including the tradeoff between fast iteration and large multiplexed screens.
A16z’s Mintlify agent-systems thread — concrete workflow detail on support remediation, knowledge retrieval, sales briefs, and the human controls retained around automated coding.
LangChain
Riley Brown
Armin Ronacher
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
The agent control plane is where the real work is moving. Factory’s Eno Reyes says humans intervene most heavily on whether a proposed change and its plan/spec are actually the right ones; agents can then handle QA, code review, and security analysis. Armin Ronacher’s counterweight is blunt: remove every bit of friction and teams risk output they cannot understand or maintain—so keep review and operational checks while automating the toil around them.
⚡ TRY THIS
Build a signal-to-plan inbox before you build an auto-merge loop. Instrument customer Slack, GitHub issues, internal product discussions, telemetry, and other feedback into one pipeline. Have agents triage against a concise product-prioritization document, then make a human explicitly approve or reshape the resulting plan before agents implement, test, review, and analyze security. Factory keeps this guidance under roughly 2,000 lines.
Turn a large task into a “mission” with validators. Before implementation, force the agent to enumerate concrete outcomes and attach a validator to each: deterministic checks where possible, an LLM-based verifier only where necessary. Keep the loop running until every validation passes; run an agent-readiness check first. This is Factory’s approach for decomposing large engineering jobs.
Make orchestration code, not emergent behavior. Theo’s Claude Code workflow has the model write a JavaScript workflow file up front—stages, prompts, and sub-agents—then execute it top-to-bottom. Put the workflow convention in your global
agents.mdor system prompt so it becomes reusable; Theo reports these bounded workflows end cleanly and used about one-quarter of the tokens for comparable tasks in his testing.Treat permissions as a workflow decision. Keep autonomous agents to local, reversible actions such as edits and tests; require confirmation for destructive, hard-to-reverse, shared, or externally visible actions. This is not theoretical: reported Codex file deletions most commonly involved full-access mode without sandboxing or auto-review, followed by a mistaken
$HOMEdeletion during temporary-directory setup.
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
Gemini API managed agents: Google added cost controls, a free tier, and initial triggers for scheduled agent tasks. Related announcement.
Deep Agents Code + NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Ultra: LangChain highlighted a terminal-agent setup via Baseten with skills, sub-agents, MCP support, and LangSmith tracing; the cited model configuration is 550B parameters and up to 300 tokens/sec.
Devin’s current multi-agent workflow: Riley Brown’s hands-on walkthrough shows its Sessions/Kanban view for concurrent agents and per-agent model selection across SWE 1.7, Claude Fable 5, GPT-5.6 Luna, and GLM 5.2 High. The practical takeaway is less the model menu than the workflow: queue work, preview in-app, iterate with screenshots, and deploy through connected GitHub/Vercel tooling.
Model routing is becoming a product control, not a developer habit. Factory’s routing exposes an admin-set quality/cost slider and learns from a company’s task distribution; the company says typical savings are 30–50%, with the explicit tradeoff being quality.
🎬 GO DEEPER
- 4:40–5:44 — Theo on bounded, code-defined subagent workflows. A concise explanation of why a workflow file can be easier to control—and terminate—than agents spawning subagents opportunistically.
- 58:50–60:47 — Factory’s “missions” model. Watch the outcome/validator framing: define what success means, select deterministic or LLM validation, and do not let the agent declare completion prematurely.
- 26:39–29:25 — Armin Ronacher on guardrails that preserve human judgment. Concrete examples include linting architectural constraints, automatically fixing mechanical issues, and escalating migrations or dependency changes for human review.
Editorial take: the winning agent setup is not maximum autonomy—it is a system that makes plans reviewable, outcomes verifiable, and risky actions hard to perform by accident.
Vincent Chow
Yann LeCun
Yann LeCun
Open models and access policy
Kimi K3 arrives with frontier-scale specifications and planned open weights
Moonshot AI introduced Kimi K3, a native multimodal model with 2.8 trillion parameters and a one-million context window. The company says its Delta Attention enables up to 6.3× faster decoding at million-context scale, while Attention Residuals raise training efficiency by roughly 25% for under 2% additional cost; it is positioning the model for long-horizon agentic coding and self-evolving workflows.
K3 is available through Kimi.com, Kimi Work, Kimi Code, and the Kimi API, with open weights scheduled for July 27. Emad Mostaque separately estimated its training at about 1e25 FLOPs and $15–25 million, noting that the underlying training details have not all been disclosed.
Why it matters: Nathan Lambert characterized K3 as a large multimodal planning model for difficult tasks, alongside distinct open-model options for agentic work, general multimodality, and lower-cost serving. He called the current group of releases the most relevant open-model set since DeepSeek R1.
China reiterates an open-AI stance at the World AI Conference
A summary of President Xi Jinping’s first appearance at Shanghai’s World AI Conference said he reaffirmed China’s commitment to open source and “openness and win-win” AI. The speech also warned against overextending national-security concepts in AI and pledged 5,000 AI training and seminar opportunities for developing countries over the next five years through groups including ASEAN, the African Union, and BRICS.
Why it matters: The speech places international access and open-source development at the center of China’s stated AI posture. Nathan Lambert read it as a commitment to continuing an “open, global” approach.
AI systems move into labs and the physical world
Lila Sciences treats experiments as data for reasoning models
Lila Sciences is building automated “AI Science Factories” in which models propose experiments, receive experimental feedback, and use nature as a verifier for reinforcement-learning post-training. The company says it has assembled 10 trillion experimentally verified scientific reasoning tokens across life sciences, chemistry, and materials science, and reports that its general model often outperforms domain-specific models.
Its lab architecture connects instruments through a physical transport layer; instructions are API calls that may be executed by either robotic or human arms. Lila describes the lab platform as the data-generation mechanism, while the reasoning model is the core asset.
Why it matters: This is a concrete attempt to extend verifiable-reward training beyond math and code by making experimental outcomes part of the learning loop. Lila’s thesis is that scientific experimentation can provide the next large-scale source of post-training data.
Yann LeCun’s AMI Labs pursues world models for physical AI
Yann LeCun described AMI Labs’ focus as world models that learn from physical signals and predict the consequences of actions. Its JEPA approach learns abstract representations from video and predicts in latent space rather than reproducing pixels; LeCun said V-JEPA models can already identify certain physically impossible events in video with limited fine-tuning.
LeCun argued that reliable agentic systems, domestic robots, and level-5 self-driving require such models to reason about the real world. AMI is also advancing Project Tapestry, a distributed-training framework intended to let countries contribute local data and compute to shared foundation models without disclosing the raw data; its kickoff took place in Paris.
Why it matters: The work targets a capability gap that language-model scaling alone does not address: planning and acting under physical constraints.
Inference business reaches new scale
Fireworks AI raises $1.5 billion as specialized-model usage grows
Fireworks AI announced a $1.5 billion Series D at a $17.5 billion valuation. The company also said it has surpassed $1 billion in annual recurring revenue and serves more than 40 trillion tokens daily, with over 95% of those tokens coming from models specialized on customer data.
Why it matters: The financing and operating figures point to a large market for production inference and customer-specific models. Nathan Lambert argued that inference companies with billion-dollar-scale revenue may become functioning “neolabs” faster than many research labs.
Verónica Bäcker-Peral
Brian Armstrong
Tim Ferriss
Most compelling: The Tail End
- Content type: Blog post
- Author: Tim Urban / Wait But Why
- Link: The resource URL was not supplied; Ferriss’s recommendation
- Recommended by: Tim Ferriss
- Key takeaway: Ferriss called it the one article to read this month, pointing to its diagrams as a way to grasp how short life is.
- Why it matters: It turns an abstract concern about limited time into a concrete prompt to consider the time remaining with close family.
“It turns out that when I graduated from high school, I had already used up 93% of my in-person parent time. I’m now enjoying the last 5% of that time. We’re in the tail end.”
First principles and long-run measurement
Bitcoin white paper
- Content type: Research paper
- Author: Satoshi Nakamoto
- Link: The white paper URL was not supplied; watch the discussion
- Recommended by: Brian Armstrong
- Key takeaway: Armstrong encouraged readers to work through the paper despite its difficulty, calling it “one of the most important documents written in financial history.” He described Bitcoin’s core problem as enabling peer-to-peer cash without a bank, government, or company in the middle.
- Why it matters: Armstrong’s interpretation connects the paper’s technical premise to reduced intermediary costs and delays, sound money, and economic freedom.
Working paper on US standard-of-living growth, 1900–1990 (full title not supplied)
- Content type: Working paper
- Authors: @VBPeral and @bhwittenbrink
- Link:Read the announcement thread
- Recommended by: Marc Andreessen
- Key takeaway: The authors use 5.1 million Sears catalog listings to construct a quality-adjusted consumer-goods price index. They report that twentieth-century growth was larger than official statistics imply and peaked before World War II rather than after it.
- Why it matters: The paper offers a data-driven challenge to both the measured scale and timing of US living-standard growth; Andreessen called it “Absolutely fascinating.”
AI implementation: the firm-specific work
Post/thread on encoding firms’ nuances into AI agents (title not supplied)
- Content type: Post/thread
- Creator: @gsivulka
- Link:Read the thread
- Recommended by: Marc Andreessen
- Key takeaway: Andreessen called the post “a very good read” and singled out its central claim: “Encoding each firm’s nuances into agents will become the largest economic task of the decade ahead.”
- Why it matters: The recommendation directs attention to organization-specific knowledge and workflows as the consequential work behind deploying agents, rather than treating generic agent capability as the whole challenge.
Two additional Tim Ferriss picks
The Last Time
- Content type: Audiobook chapter / meditation
- Creator: Sam Harris
- Link: The resource URL was not supplied; Ferriss’s discussion
- Recommended by: Tim Ferriss
- Key takeaway: Ferriss described it as a short meditation on the experiences people do not recognize, in the moment, as their last time.
- Why it matters: It complements The Tail End with a more personal lens on attention, change, and finite experiences.
The Blade Itself series
- Content type: Fantasy novels; audiobooks recommended
- Author: Joe Abercrombie
- Link: The resource URL was not supplied; Ferriss’s discussion
- Recommended by: Tim Ferriss
- Key takeaway: Ferriss called the series “really fun” and highlighted it as a relatively short fantasy read.
- Why it matters: A clear leisure-reading recommendation alongside the day’s more analytical and reflective resources.
Aakash Gupta
Shreyas Doshi
Big Ideas
Expansion strategy starts with how value travels
A product’s expansion model should follow its underlying economics: marketplaces and network-effect products need local density and can fail when taken global too early, while horizontal SaaS may be able to launch globally from day one.
Why it matters: Sequential expansion can still create hidden product debt when early pricing and product choices are optimized around assumptions from the first market that do not hold elsewhere, making later rebuilds larger than expected.
Apply it:
- Identify whether customer value depends on local supply, demand, or network density.
- Make the first market’s product and pricing assumptions explicit.
- Before expanding, assess which assumptions travel and which would require redesign.
Tactical Playbook
Turn positioning feedback into a focused messaging test
MixDroid’s founder found that prospective users could understand individual features but could not immediately identify who the product was for or which painful workflow it replaced. The response was to revise the landing page with a clearer explanation, screenshots, and a demo video, then validate whether the message improved.
Why it matters: Feature comprehension alone does not establish product positioning. The founder’s experience was that building the technology was easier than explaining it.
Apply it:
- Ask prospects to state the intended user and the existing workflow they believe the product replaces.
- If they can name features but not either of those answers, treat it as a positioning gap.
- Update the explanation and supporting product evidence—such as screenshots or a demo—and seek feedback specifically on messaging, not engineering.
Case Studies & Lessons
Messaging and expansion are product decisions, not post-launch polish
The MixDroid example shows that a technically built product can still require deliberate positioning work before moving further. Separately, the expansion discussion highlights that product and pricing decisions made for one market can impose redesign costs later.
Takeaway: Treat two questions as early product work: Can the target customer identify the job this replaces? and Will the assumptions behind the product work in the next market? The available examples suggest both are cheaper to confront before further scaling.
Career Corner
Match learning to career stage—and make interview evidence concrete
Aakash Gupta’s proposed PM learning plan begins with fundamentals—strategy, discovery, stakeholders, PRDs, and feature-results writeups—then adds AI product work and job-search preparation. It explicitly argues that a CS degree or MBA is not required to enter PM.
Shreyas Doshi offers an important counterweight: early-career practitioners may be better served by experience than a course on building successful products, whereas after 10–20 years, simply shipping more may no longer provide the learning needed to become world-class.
Apply it: Build a learning plan around your current gap rather than collecting generic coursework. For interviews, anchor answers in impact, know the relevant metrics, prepare clear stories, and practice.
Tools & Resources
The learning plan points to practical resources for PM strategy, continuous discovery, and an AI product operating model. Use them selectively to address a defined skills gap rather than as a substitute for applied product work.
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