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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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Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Entrepreneur Ride Along
Funding & Deals
- a16z Speedrun: Andrew Chen's updated pitch is up to $1M per company, $7M+ in compute/software credits, and operator support across GTM, talent, launch, people, and fundraising . He also said he was personally reviewing one-line founder + idea submissions and flagging the best to the investing team . Program details are on Speedrun, and Chen linked a note on what Speedrun looks for in applications.
Emerging Teams
- Modular evidence infrastructure: A solo founder turned a cyber-specific product into a general evidence-handling core for secure third-party derivative sharing and disclosure, then added industry packs for cyber, insurance, HR, and legal. The same core can be licensed to teams building investigation software, with a pilot planned in six weeks .
- Arbiter Briefs: Matthew, a 17-year-old founder in Melbourne, is building a decision-intelligence platform that applies structured frameworks to high-stakes decisions and then runs multi-agent LLM simulations of investors, customers, competitors, press, and regulators with distinct incentives, biases, and memory . He said he fixed agent convergence by introducing information asymmetry and isolated memory; the private beta has 11 signups, no paying customers, and active outreach to fractional CFOs .
- Yaqeen: An early AI verification engine that watches videos, extracts claims, and cross-references them with credible web sources in real time . The backend uses FastAPI and Celery for asynchronous processing of 10-minute videos, runs a 120B-parameter model on DigitalOcean, uses Tavily for live search, and streams results via SSE into a custom Flutter app . The founder is explicitly asking AI and cybersecurity operators whether the architecture is overcomplicated .
- LLM cost optimization: Another solo founder is building an AI product aimed at reducing LLM API waste, arguing that many teams lose 40–70% of spend to fixable inefficiencies. The company is pre-MVP and looking for first customers or design partners while exploring pre-seed funding .
AI & Tech Breakthroughs
- Heterogeneous SLM+LLM stacks: A cited NVIDIA Research paper argues that a single massive LLM is inefficient for deployed agentic systems; instead, LLMs should handle high-level planning while specialized SLMs execute repetitive micro-tasks . The paper says models such as Nemotron-H and Hymba-1.5B can match or exceed models 10x larger on narrow instructions, with SLMs offering 3.5x higher throughput and potential operating-cost reductions of 90%+ on structured workloads .
- Experimental geometric compression: An individual researcher reported a sharp stability threshold at β=0.20 when routing transformer activations through a lossy Dual E8 (E16) lattice bottleneck with residual blending; beyond that point, open-ended generation collapsed into repetition . The same prototype reported 8x KV-cache compression and a theoretical 112x weight-matrix compression, pointing toward native geometric transformers trained with E8/E16 constraints .
- Agent control planes are emerging: Armorer is positioning itself as a local control plane for AI agents, with run records for every tool call, LLM response, and decision; human approval before dangerous operations; and replay/inspect-state debugging. It is self-hosted, local-first, and works with any agent via MCP .
Market Signals
- Physical AI is being framed as the next frontier. Caitlin Kalinowski said keyboard-bound AI will eventually saturate and that the next frontier is "the physical world"—robotics, manufacturing, and industrialization . She also noted that core capabilities from VR/AR—SLAM, depth sensing, and human-perception models—are directly transferable to robot navigation and interaction . On humanoids, she said a few companies are ahead and cited 1X Neo as an example of safety-focused design that pulls mass inward, which she described as safer around people . She also pointed to supply-chain dependencies in magnets, actuators, and related subsystems as a major constraint .
- Efficiency is becoming the strategic battleground. Bindu Reddy argued that the eventual winner in AI will be an efficient model for everyday tasks and that automation becomes ubiquitous when intelligence is cheap enough to meter, with flash and open-source AI as the leading contenders . That view aligns with the cited SLM argument that data-center economics now favor efficiency over scale .
"The winner will be an efficient model that is capable of everyday tasks"
- Agents are shifting the conversation from cost cutting to super-teams. Garry Tan argued that the ceiling for AI-human-computer-symbiosis teams has risen, and that a small founder-led team could supersede an incumbent by focusing on capability expansion rather than just lowering cost . He also framed the move from copilots to agents as "the biggest unlock" and said it is already happening at the highest levels of finance .
- Avoid the most crowded AI wedges. One niche-ranking exercise put AI writing tools last, citing 10/10 saturation and user expectations for constant model upgrades that solo developers cannot keep up with . A commenter summarized the commercial problem more directly: distribution and differentiation are harder than the product itself .
Worth Your Time
- The Secret Benefits of Small Language Models — essay on why SLMs can improve throughput, cut operating cost, and outperform larger models on narrow structured tasks within agent systems .
- Why we’re at the beginning of the AI hardware boom | Caitlin Kalinowski (ex–OpenAI, Meta, Apple) — interview on why AI opportunity may shift from keyboard work into robotics, manufacturing, and industrialization, and on the supply-chain constraints around magnets, actuators, and related components .
- What we look for in applications — Andrew Chen's linked note on how a16z Speedrun is screening very early companies .
- Suhail on mechanistic interpretability and follow-up on OpenAI's sparse circuit paper — Suhail said Dario Amodei showed interest in mechanistic interpretability and separately highlighted OpenAI's sparse circuit paper as useful for understanding why the technology works at a fundamental level .
Boris Cherny
Alex Albert
Salvatore Sanfilippo
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
- Anthropic put real primitives behind the agent-fleet idea. In the Claude Code keynote, Boris Cherny’s team showed routines that wake on issues, webhooks, API calls, or schedules; verify results; and babysit PRs until they are green. One Anthropic engineer said a lot of their code is now written by routines rather than direct prompting, and Anthropic says the broader shift drove a 200% increase in PRs per engineer at the same quality bar . Alex Albert’s framing matches that: once you can run many agents in parallel, the hard problem becomes context management — what matters, where agents are blocked, and when they need you — not raw generation speed .
⚡ TRY THIS
Set up repo context once, then protect it. In a new repo: run
claude, then/init, refine and commitCLAUDE.md, add/mcp, define/agents, tune/permissions, and finish with/doctor. During normal work, compact early with/compact, use/btwfor side questions, and split alternate paths into/branchsessions instead of polluting the main thread — a strong default from the AI For Developers guide .Run big changes in a plan/review loop, not a free-for-all. Switch to
/plan, approve the approach, execute, inspect with/diffas you go, then before commit run/reviewand/security-review. Also pick the model at the start — Sonnet for routine work, Opus for harder problems — because the guide warns that mid-task model switches and waiting too long to compact both degrade output .Wire repo events into async work. Boris Cherny’s keynote demo is the clearest reproducible pattern today: configure a routine once to listen for webhooks, API calls, or a schedule; let it start Claude Code locally or on remote compute; then pair it with verification so the agent checks the fix in-browser before declaring success. The target state is simple: wake up to merge-ready PRs instead of manually starting every session .
Use one agent as a cross-system investigator before opening a multi-day handoff. Alex Albert says he now opens a Claude Code session with access to product databases, logs, and Slack and asks feature questions directly, instead of waiting days for a separate investigation. He also sends Claude to inspect codebases and return scope estimates like whether a feature is just a small code change plus a flag flip .
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
Claude Code expanded from chat UI to agent ops stack in the Code with Claude 2026 keynote: Routines for webhook/API/scheduled triggers, Auto Fix for code review comments, security comments, CI flakes, and merge conflicts, Remote Control in the iOS/Android cloud apps, Shift Code Review as a team of bug-finding agents, and Cloud Security for overnight scanning plus auto-remediation . Adoption signal is real: Anthropic says +200% PRs per engineer at the same quality bar; Shopify is using Claude Code across engineering and non-engineering teams; Mercado Libre says everyone in its 23k-engineer org runs on it, with 500k+ PRs reviewed and 9k+ apps modernized, targeting 90% autonomous coding .
Claude Code’s control plane is getting more explicit. The slash commands guide notes that
/branchreplaced/forkin v2.1.77;/agentsgives you delegated subagents with isolated context;/mcpmanages external server connections; and skills in.claude/skills/can gate tool access with/SKILL.md allowed-toolsanddisable-model-invocation.DS4 Agent is a local-first coding-agent project worth watching. Salvatore Sanfilippo says he is building a DeepSeek 4 Flash agent that runs via CLI with the model loaded in memory, no API layer, persisted KV cache, and custom tools built around the model’s native tool-use training. The standout design detail is edit reliability: the read tool returns 4-character base64 checksum tags for file segments, and edits can target a line by checksum so replacements only happen on match; he says the current agent already calls tools successfully but still underdelivers relative to the model’s raw strength .
🎬 GO DEEPER
- 44:01-44:39 — Overnight issue to PR via routines. Best short clip today for seeing what async coding actually looks like: a GitHub issue lands, a repo watcher grabs it, and the work is kicked off without a human opening a fresh session .
- 42:30-43:41 — Verification is the unlock for async coding. The agent traces a race condition, fixes it, and verifies the behavior in-browser before calling the task done. This is the practical reason Anthropic keeps emphasizing verification instead of just more autonomy .
- 21:36-24:23 — Salvatore on local-agent tool design. Watch this if you care about local coding agents: he explains why keeping the model in memory, persisting KV cache, and editing by checksum could save context and reduce bad rewrites .
Study guide — Claude Code Slash Commands Guide. Best compact reference in today’s set for session controls, skills, subagents, and MCP wiring before you invent your own command soup .
Setup thread — Nick Baumann’s connected-device Codex workflow. Good pattern if you want an always-on agent reachable from phone, laptop, and desktop: Mac mini as the always-connected box, connected-device thread handoff, and mutual SSH for files .
Editorial take: the real edge now is the infrastructure around the agent — persistent repo context, isolated subagents, verification, and PR-loop automation — not squeezing one more clever prompt into a long chat.
MTS
swyx🛬 SFO
Owain Evans
Top Stories
Why it matters: today’s biggest signals were a major open world-model release, a sharper cyber capability warning, and mounting infrastructure strain.
- NVIDIA released SANA-WM. The 2.6B-parameter open-source world model generates controllable 720p videos up to 60 seconds from one image, a text prompt, and a 6-DoF camera trajectory. It is described as running locally on a single RTX 5090-class GPU, denoising a full 60-second clip in about 34 seconds, with 36× higher throughput than earlier open models .
- The UK AI Safety Institute flagged a faster cyber-capability curve. It said the length of cyber tasks frontier models can autonomously complete is doubling every 4.7 months, versus 8 months last November, and that Claude Mythos Preview and GPT-5.5 are already above that trend .
- Power and GPU supply look increasingly constraining. One note said the proposed Stratos data center in Utah could consume up to 9 GW at full buildout, roughly New York City’s average electricity demand, while another said H100s now cost more than they did three years ago and remain unavailable on demand because large labs have locked up supply .
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: the most useful research today focused on better ways to reason, search, and train agents under real constraints.
- On Training in Imagination separates dynamics error from reward error in model-based RL under imperfect world models and limited budgets. The reported takeaways: reward models scale faster with data than dynamics models, smoother low-Lipschitz models produce more stable rollouts, and many cheap noisy reward labels can outperform fewer accurate ones, though biased rewards are especially risky .
- OpenDeepThink scales test-time compute through parallel populations of candidate solutions instead of a single longer reasoning trace. In competitive programming, it improved Gemini 3.1 Pro by +405 Codeforces Elo across eight sequential LLM-call rounds .
- Is Grep All You Need? argues agent harness design matters as much as retrieval. Across LongMemEval tasks, grep-style search beat vector retrieval, especially for coding-style evidence-location problems such as finding exact symbols, diffs, or failing tests .
Products & Launches
Why it matters: product updates centered on making agents more useful in day-to-day workflows.
- Hermes Agent v0.14.0 added xAI SuperGrok and Premium+ access for Grok models, image and video generation, X search, a Codex backend for OpenAI models, a LINE gateway, native video generation, and a Windows native beta .
- Codex appears to be moving into broader desktop workflows. A recent demo showed agentic Excel on Mac, alongside roadmap hints from a keynote and a draft guide from a Codex team member on daily-use primitives .
- Anthropic released a two-hour training on building Claude agents. The course covers unsupervised agent structure, terminal access, file-system memory, hallucination-blocking hooks, and operating on large codebases more safely .
Industry Moves
Why it matters: hardware access and open-model strategy are becoming strategic levers, not just engineering choices.
- China is planning a large AI token-factory buildout in Wuxi. The initial deployment uses four Huawei CloudMatrix 384 systems and was described as the largest token factory in China; one estimate put it at roughly 1.5K H800s and 3 million V3 tokens per second .
- OpenAI’s Cerebras interest was framed as a timeline decision. In trial testimony, Greg Brockman said he and Ilya Sutskever estimated AGI would take 15 years on standard computing progress, but Cerebras hardware could cut that to 5 years, which he said is why OpenAI explored a merger with Cerebras .
- The open-model geopolitical debate sharpened. One analysis warned that without a credible Western open frontier player, Chinese open models could become the default across much of the world by 2030; Yann LeCun pointed to Project Tapestry as the response .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: several smaller updates still highlighted reliability, security, and adoption shifts.
- Fine-tuning on documents that explicitly say an implausible claim is false can still make models believe the claim; the issue was noted in GPT-4.1 and Kimi K2.5 .
- KV cache flushing in Claude Code appears to degrade performance; a related note says KV states carry information that text tokens alone do not, so flushing can reduce accuracy .
- OpenAI said ChatGPT Images 2.0 has already generated more than 1 billion images in India .
- A recent TanStack supply-chain attack was described as specifically targeting AI developer tooling .
Lenny's Podcast
Shane Boyce
tobi lutke
What stood out
Today's authentic recommendations were all books. Caitlyn Kalinowski surfaced a classics-heavy reading list in conversation, while Tobi Lütke gave a terse but direct endorsement of the trilogy being praised in a post about finishing Death’s End.
The strongest single recommendation was Histories because Kalinowski explained exactly why she values it: as the first history book, built from firsthand and secondhand accounts, and as a window into a very different era .
Most compelling recommendation
Histories
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Herodotus
- Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
- Who recommended it: Caitlyn Kalinowski
- Key takeaway: Kalinowski called it "pretty incredible" and highlighted it as the first history book, noting that it often relies on firsthand or secondhand accounts and lets readers look into a completely different era
- Why it matters: This was the richest recommendation in today's set because it came with a clear explanation of both the book's method and its enduring value
"Herodotus histories is pretty incredible... it's the first history book... It's a way to look into the world at a completely different era than it is now."
Also worth reading
Mrs. Dalloway
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Virginia Woolf
- Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
- Who recommended it: Caitlyn Kalinowski
- Key takeaway: She described it as "a very interesting book about transitions" and noted its post-war context
- Why it matters: The recommendation is specific about what the reader gets from it: a literary treatment of transition rather than a generic classic-novel endorsement
Book of the New Sun
- Content type: Book (fiction)
- Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
- Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
- Who recommended it: Caitlyn Kalinowski
- Key takeaway: Kalinowski called it "a great fiction book" that she really recommends
- Why it matters: It is the clearest fiction-forward pick in her list and stands on a direct, unqualified endorsement
Death’s End trilogy
- Content type: Book series / trilogy
- Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
- Link/URL: Not provided in the source material
- Who recommended it: Tobi Lütke
- Key takeaway: Lütke replied "incredible series" to a post that said, "Just finished Death’s End. My god, what a trilogy"
- Why it matters: The signal is brief but clean: it is an explicit founder endorsement of a specific trilogy, not a vague comment about reading in general
"incredible series"
Bottom line
If you only pick one item from today's set, start with Histories for the clearest articulated reason to read it . More broadly, the day's organic signals were entirely book-focused: Kalinowski's classics-heavy list on one side, and Lütke's direct trilogy endorsement on the other .
Morgan
LocalLLM
Sara Hooker
Production AI is becoming systems engineering
Several speakers converged on the same practical point: reliable AI in production comes from surrounding models with structure, not from asking one LLM to do everything. JJ Gwax described production systems built around routing, transformation, and safety layers; Arize emphasized explicit planning outside conversation history plus production traces as eval ground truth; and IBM’s Tis framed harnesses as the environment around an agent that adds guardrails, verification, and retries .
Cloudflare showed the tooling version of that same shift. Its “code mode” turns tool use into TypeScript types so a model can write one executable snippet with branching, loops, and parallelization; for Cloudflare’s API surface, a search-and-execute setup reduced the context footprint to about 1,000 tokens, a 99.9% reduction, with execution isolated in V8 sandboxes .
- Planning outside chat history to keep tasks from getting truncated
- Routing and transformation layers instead of a single LLM router
- Harnesses with verification loops to improve reliability even with older or cheaper models
- Sandboxed code execution to make tool use more efficient and controllable
“We can’t just tell our customers, don’t worry, I added don’t break any laws to the prompt.”
Why it matters: The shared message was that production AI is moving away from prompt-centric design toward architecture, observability, and control. That lands against a broader trust problem: experiments reported that people overestimate how confident AI systems are, even though conversational AI outputs are not always accurate or reliable .
Adaption sharpened the case for adaptive intelligence over brute-force scale
Sara Hooker argued that scaling model size is no longer delivering proportional returns: models of the same size keep improving over time, small models can outperform much larger ones, redundancies across weights are high, and better data can sharply reduce the need for scale . Her alternative is “adaptive intelligence”: adaptive compute, stronger data optimization, real-world interaction, continuous learning, and a stack that adjusts from data through interface rather than shipping one static model to everyone .
Adaption paired that thesis with product claims. Hooker said the company released tools covering 242 languages, had already processed 27 million data points, and launched AutoScientist, which she said can co-optimize data and model training quickly enough to train a frontier model in two days .
Why it matters: This was more than a critique of hyperscaling. It was a concrete claim that the next competitive edge may come from faster adaptation across the stack, not simply from spending more on pretraining compute .
xAI is accelerating on both Grok models and developer tooling
xAI said its 1.5T V9 Grok model has finished training and is moving into supplemental training with Cursor data, followed by SFT and RL, with release expected in about three to four weeks . In parallel, Elon Musk said the 0.5T Grok foundation model V8, public version 4.3, is still being improved every few days .
On the product side, Grok Build CLI Beta can now be installed from Grok Web with a single terminal command and is currently limited to SuperGrok Heavy subscribers, which xAI is discounting by 67% to $99 per month for six months . Third-party posts also described a major overnight improvement in Grok Build, saying it moved from failing after a minute or two to running tasks through to completion, while Musk said the product is “improving like lightning” .
Why it matters: The main signal here is tempo. xAI is pushing frontier-model updates and a developer-facing agent workflow product at the same time, with rapid iteration itself presented as part of the value proposition.
Product Management - The place for all things product
Aakash Gupta
The community for ventures designed to scale rapidly | Read our rules before posting ❤️
Big Ideas
1) AI for PMs is maturing from "chat" to an operating system
Aakash Gupta and Pawel Huryn describe five distinct Claude surfaces for a full workday: Dispatch for quick mobile tasks (~35%), Code Web for deep work in a cloud VS Code environment (~35%), Claude Code for multi-file and codebase work (~25%), Cowork for files and email via connectors, and Chat for basic text-only tasks (~5%) . They also separate production automation from personal automation: use n8n for deterministic logic, retries, and access control, and Claude Code for judgment-in-the-loop systems that improve over time .
- Why it matters: the leverage is not just better prompts; it is choosing the right interface for the job.
- How to apply: map your recurring PM work by context—mobile triage, deep editing, connected knowledge work, codebase changes, simple text—and stop forcing everything into one chat window.
"The PM with a self-improving system will outperform five PMs who open a fresh Chat window every morning."
2) When iteration is expensive, define goals early and work risk-first
Experienced hardware teams set goals early, change them as little as possible, and use those goals to judge when a product is ready to ship . They start with the hardest failure points first—such as whether cables can fit through a hinge—rather than the parts that are easiest to design, and they give the most iteration to the components customers touch most . They also act immediately on known work because surprises will consume future slack . For zero-to-one products, that same mindset changes discovery: customers often cannot specify what they want until they see it, so prototype testing is more useful than asking for requirements upfront .
- Why it matters: early clarity and risk-first sequencing reduce avoidable churn.
- How to apply: lock the few metrics that matter most, review the biggest technical unknowns first, and test prototypes when the category is genuinely new.
Tactical Playbook
1) Turn design states into acceptance criteria
WalnutAI's approach is notable because it reads selected Figma frames as UI specifications, not screenshots. It identifies components, built states such as empty/error/success/loading, validation rules, and edge cases, then generates role/goal/outcome stories with acceptance criteria derived from those states . Each story links back to the source frame for traceability in sprint discussions .
- Why it matters: it closes a common gap between what design shows and what the backlog captures.
- How to apply: even without the tool, review each frame for disabled, loading, error, and success states and convert each one into explicit ACs; keep every story linked to its source design.
- Watch-outs: implied-but-unbuilt states will be missed, and differently structured mobile/desktop variants can create duplicate stories .
2) Define pilot success before launch
Before a pilot ships, write down what would count as a real signal: usage, payment, repeat behavior, referral, or a painful objection you can actually fix .
- Why it matters: it prevents teams from rewriting the definition of success after the fact.
- How to apply: choose one or two primary signals in advance and decide what each result means: continue, iterate, or stop.
Case Studies & Lessons
1) Quest 2: use one constraint to drive the whole redesign
Meta's Quest 2 redesign centered on one objective: lower the price to get VR to more people. That forced changes to components, materials, and manufacturing processes, and the result was the highest-selling VR headset of all time while remaining a high-quality product with low return rates .
- Takeaway: when the core objective is explicit, trade-offs become easier to make consistently.
2) A community example of product architecture broadening
One founder described shifting from a cyber-specific evidence platform to a general evidence handler with industry-specific packs for cyber, insurance, HR, and legal, all running on the same core . That created two packaging paths: license a pack or license the core engine to other teams building investigation software .
- Takeaway: if the underlying workflow generalizes, separate shared infrastructure from domain packaging before cloning product lines.
Career Corner
What frontier teams are hiring for
For AI hardware and robotics, one hiring pattern stands out: strong generalists who can adapt skills from adjacent fields, a mix of zero-to-one builders and scalers, and younger AI-native talent who treat AI as native to their process . Mission alignment and intrinsic motivation—learning, excellence, openness to new information, and a desire to win—also matter .
- Why it matters: this is a useful signal for PMs targeting new-category teams.
- How to apply: show that you can cross domains, operate in ambiguity, and use AI as part of your normal workflow rather than as an occasional add-on.
Tools & Resources
- WalnutAI: worth watching if your team already treats design as the most current spec, especially for story generation with frame-level traceability .
- Aakash Gupta's AI PM resource stack: Claude Cowork, Claude Code, a PM operating system, n8n, and an AI PM guide form a practical checklist for building a more durable workflow system .
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