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Threads, Pipelines, and Safer Autonomy in Coding Agents
May 30
5 min read
144 docs
Guinness Chen
Dan Shipper 📧
Romain Huet
+15
Today's strongest signal is that coding agents are turning into small operating systems: explicit pipelines, persistent thread topologies, shared skills repos, and safer review layers. This brief pulls the practical workflows, product updates, and clips that matter from Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, LangChain, and production teams using them for real work.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

  • The biggest shift today is from single-agent chat to explicit orchestration layers. Jason Zhou surfaced Claude Code's actual workflow primitives—agent(), parallel(), and pipeline(items, ...stages)—for multi-stage batch jobs that break a normal context window, while Codex users are building persistent pulse / log / inbox / router thread topologies and Cursor shipped Auto-review with a classifier subagent for actions outside the allowlist or sandbox path .
  • Matias Castello's production workflow at Alchemy points the same way: keep a shared skills repo, seed new projects with Agents.md, let Codex turn ideas into plans and tasks, and run feature experiments behind flags while you sleep .

⚡ TRY THIS

  • For big batch jobs in Claude Code, switch from “one prompt” to a staged pipeline. Jason Zhou says you can activate /workflow by including workflow in the prompt or using /effortultracode, then compose work with agent(), parallel(), and pipeline(items, ...stages). Copy the pattern: pipeline(files, f => reviewAgent(f), r => verifyAgent(r), v => summarizeAgent(v)). He specifically calls out bulk lead qualification, SEO audit/fix loops, and invoice processing as jobs that fit this better than a giant single-agent run .

  • Bootstrap side projects with a durable Agents.md, then let Codex plan before it builds. Matias Castello keeps an Agents.md file with his preferences, initializes new projects with it, asks Codex to create a plan, break it into milestones and tasks, and then tells it to build the plan . For existing products, he has Codex research competitors, score the most interesting features, and implement them as modular experiments behind feature flags overnight .

  • Give Codex an explicit thread topology instead of one giant conversation. Dan Shipper's setup uses morning pulse threads for recurring checks, a log thread for ongoing activity, an inbox thread that aggregates email and thread outputs, and a router thread that knows the rest of the system and routes messages appropriately . That pattern just got more useful because Codex can now create, search, organize, and pin threads, read across them, and spin up worktrees for parallel tasks .

  • Retro-run code review on incidents. After a migration-related outage, Alchemy reran Codex code review against the historical change and it caught the race-condition bug that caused the incident . Good postmortem move: once the fix is understood, run the old diff back through your review agent and check whether your current review setup would have surfaced the root cause .

Matias Castello's rule when an LLM fails: "Assume it's possible... assume you can do it... assume it's your fault."

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

  • Cursor — Auto-review mode. Agents can run tool calls with fewer approval prompts and safer execution; if an action isn't on your allowlist or can't be sandboxed, Cursor routes it to a classifier subagent that decides whether to allow the call, try a different approach, or ask for approval . Changelog: cursor.com/changelog/auto-review. Jediah Katz's pitch: this is the version for people who want YOLO-like flow without constant approvals .

  • Codex — Windows computer use and easier switching. Codex can now take action on Windows machines, and the ChatGPT mobile app can start, review, and steer tasks while work continues on the Windows box; OpenAI called it an early experience and Greg Brockman framed it as a significant upgrade for Windows users . Separately, Romain Huet said the team focused on bringing existing skills, configs, and context into Codex, and Ben Stein noted it imported local Claude Code projects plus CLAUDE.md and MCP config files on first run .

  • Codex thread management — now agent-manageable. Codex can create, search, organize, and pin threads and spin up worktrees for parallel tasks; Greg Brockman shared it as “Codex managing Codex,” and Riley Brown noted you can now explicitly prompt Codex to spin up new threads and read across all of them .

  • Claude Opus 4.8 / Claude Code — new effort tiers with real cost caveats. Theo says the effort selector now includes X-high and Ultracode, where Ultracode combines high effort with dynamic workflows that can fan work out to hundreds of subagents for audits, bug hunts, security reviews, and migrations . His practical take: it asks better clarifying questions and writes TypeScript more idiomatically than GPT-5.5, but large parallel runs can raise failure rates, and one Ultracode prompt cost about $168 in raw tokens and hit a $100-tier limit in 23 minutes . His bottom line: strong upgrade if you're already in Claude's ecosystem; otherwise try GPT-5.5 too .

  • LangChain Deep Agents v0.6 — harness profiles and cheaper open-model paths. LangChain says v0.6 makes harness profiles a first-class abstraction and can get production-grade performance from Kimi, Qwen, and DeepSeek at 20x+ lower cost than closed frontier APIs . Tuning details: langchain.com/blog/tuning-deep-agents-different-models.

  • Production signal — Salesforce's agentic engineering redesign. Boris Cherny highlighted a Salesforce writeup claiming a migration scoped at 231 days shipped in 13, one PR delivered 21 endpoints with 100% test coverage, and incidents still dropped 5% while more PRs shipped . His framing is the important part: the teams getting the biggest gains are deleting handoffs and embedding security and quality guardrails directly into the workflow . Writeup: salesforce.com/news/stories/how-engineering-became-agentic/.

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • 10:04-12:19 — ThePrimeTime on using AI as a design-space explorer. Watch this if you want a concrete loop for generating multiple implementations, critiquing maintainability and bug risk, iterating a few times, and only then building the chosen version. Good antidote to cargo-cult prompting .
  • 06:43-08:04 — LangChain on why subagents matter. Clean explanation of isolated context, parallelization, and model-per-task routing. Worth watching if you're building your own harness and want timeless design rules instead of product-specific UI tips .
  • 14:03-15:40 — Cursor on the move from prompts to “software factories.” Strong framing on where serious teams are headed: keep review, automate best practices, and let background systems handle security and code review chores overnight .
  • Repo pattern to study — shared skills repo. Matias Castello says Alchemy keeps reusable PM skills—PRDs, customer-feedback analysis, and related tasks—in a shared repo that anyone can invoke. That's a strong template for standardizing agent behavior across roles, not just across engineers .

  • Repo pattern to study — seed every new project with Agents.md. Matias Castello reuses a single file summarizing how he likes to work, then initializes new projects with it before planning and execution. Copy that before you build a heavier memory system .

Editorial take: today's real edge is not a smarter prompt; it's a better control plane for context, delegation, and review.

Inherent’s $50M Debut, GigaML’s Enterprise Traction, and New AI Efficiency Signals
May 30
4 min read
726 docs
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
r/SideProject - A community for sharing side projects
shift
+8
An investor-focused scan of the strongest early-stage AI signals in the latest notes: Inherent’s stealth debut, GigaML’s enterprise traction, new product wedges in wealth and design software, a notable sparse-attention breakthrough, and market evidence on open models, AI capex, and AI-native org design.

Funding & Deals

  • Inherent emerged from stealth in the UK with a reported ~$50M (£40m) raise. The ex-DeepMind team says it will pursue AI science research and build lab capabilities to accelerate foundational work and commercialization.
  • GigaML raised a $4M seed after open-sourcing fine-tuned LLMs that topped Hugging Face benchmarks. The company says it now builds customer-support agents for DoorDash, one of the biggest crypto exchanges in the world, and top-three telecom providers, with current deflection rates around 60-70% and a target of 90-95%. In related operating context, the team says it won DoorDash as an 8-person company against a much larger competitor.
  • Read-through: the funding in this set clusters around two theses: new AI lab formation and enterprise automation tied to measurable service KPIs.

Emerging Teams

  • DraftedAI is the clearest traction signal in the batch outside funded companies. YC says the product generates floor plans, elevations, and 3D home designs from simple inputs, and that 120,000 users created 325,000+ home designs in one month. Founder: @PrimalNick.
  • Wealor is a vertical-AI watchlist name for wealth-tech: an AI-native platform for wealth managers positioned as a centralized source of truth across wealth management, tax, and legal, with agents automating operational work across legacy systems. Founders highlighted in the launch were @Pierredpy72 and @KarimBOURI1.
  • shift is testing an unusual robotics-data acquisition model: free apartment cleaning in New York City in exchange for anonymized recordings of how vetted operators perform the work, with the company saying that data value funds the service. It plans to expand into handymen, repairs, and errands.
  • gitdoctor.io is an early developer-tool signal worth watching. The product ingests user comments and feedback, then outputs prompts to fix code flaws; the founder reports 120+ active users, daily repo scans, and several real applications already moved to production.

AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • Dynamic Ultrametric Attention is the standout technical result. The framework lets a Transformer learn per-head block-sparse routing topologies during training, then transfer those learned sparsity maps directly to a Triton block-sparse kernel at inference. Reported results include 11.59x wall-clock inference speedup at 2048 tokens, scaling to 28x at 8192 tokens, 98.4% memory reduction, and a sparse PagedAttention decoding kernel with 8x effective memory bandwidth. The authors also report that early layers discover hierarchical parsing while later layers handle dense aggregation, and that the system maintains >88% sparsity on natural language while reducing loss from 10.9 to 1.55.
  • Moss is targeting a specific voice-agent bottleneck: retrieval latency. Garry Tan highlighted the company's claim of sub-10ms search with no network hop, framing retrieval as the missing layer for fluid conversational agents; the stack is open source.
  • Layzer shipped OAuth support for MCP apps, allowing users to securely sign into external tools without copying API keys. In the founder's framing, that unlocks useful catalog integrations such as Gmail, Linear, and GitHub; next steps are developer self-registration and crawling public MCP repos.

Market Signals

  • Open-weight adoption is accelerating. LangSmith Signal says 1 in 3 AI teams ran an open-weights model in April 2026, up from 1 in 5 nine months earlier, with the overall number of teams using open weights up 3x. Newer users are adopting open models at higher rates than earlier cohorts.
  • The AI capex cycle is broadening beyond equity. a16z highlighted that hyperscalers are increasingly funding the AI capex buildout with debt; Marc Rowan argues equity cannot fund the whole cycle, and another cited datapoint says IT capex is approaching 40% of all capex in the S&P.
  • AI-native org design is hardening into a founder playbook. Garry Tan calls this the biggest shift in startup building since cloud computing and argues founders should spend tokens rather than headcount, record everything, and build self-improving loops. GigaML offers a concrete operating datapoint: it says the company would need roughly 6-7x more engineers without coding agents.

"My advice to founders in 2026: spend tokens, not headcount."

  • One small-company distribution signal: TrunkTransfer says all three of its first paying customers came from Claude, ChatGPT, and Perplexity.

Worth Your Time

Gemini’s Agent Push, Anthropic’s Trillion-Dollar Valuation, and the Open-Model Catch-Up
May 30
4 min read
724 docs
OpenAI
NVIDIA AI
Turing Post
+16
Google broadened Gemini into a paid agent-centric product stack, Anthropic’s financing moved into trillion-dollar territory, and open-weight adoption kept rising despite a persistent frontier gap. The brief also covers standout research in protein design, low-precision training, realtime translation, and corporate moves in biodefense, licensing, and chips.

Top Stories

Why it matters: the clearest competitive shift is from standalone models to bundled agent systems, while capital and adoption keep concentrating around the leaders.

  • Google expanded Gemini into a full consumer stack. Gemini 3.5 Flash is positioned as Google’s fastest and most efficient model; Gemini Spark is a 24/7 background agent for U.S. Google AI Ultra subscribers; Gemini Omni adds custom video generation; and Daily Brief pulls from Gmail, Calendar, and Drive. Google AI Ultra is priced at $100/month and includes higher limits plus Gemini 3.5 Flash .
  • Open models are getting used more even as frontier closed models stay ahead. LangSmith said 1 in 3 AI teams ran an open-weights model in April, up from 1 in 5 nine months ago, while Epoch estimated open-weight models still trail the state of the art by four months and about 8 ECI points on average since January .
  • Anthropic is now being priced in trillion-dollar territory. CNBC said the latest Series H financing put the company right under a $1T valuation, while other widely shared posts described it as already above that mark .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: the most consequential technical work today aimed at biology, training stability, and agent efficiency.

  • Biohub’s ESM release pushes generative biology further into the open. The stack combines a protein language model, a structure/design system, and an atlas with 6.8B sequences and 1.1B predicted structures; the release says ESM has already produced lab-validated cancer-related and immune proteins, including a strong PD-L1 binder .
  • PowLU targets a major FP8 training failure mode. The authors argue SwiGLU’s quadratic growth creates destabilizing outliers; PowLU replaced that curve, matched SwiGLU scaling laws, and reportedly trained a 124B model on 800B tokens with zero loss spikes while matching or beating SwiGLU on 17 benchmarks .
  • Effective Feedback Compute may be a better way to budget agent runs. One report said raw token and tool-call counts explain failures at only R² 0.33-0.42, while EFC reaches 0.99; reallocating the same compute by useful feedback lifted success from 0.27 to 0.90 .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: product updates centered on making agents act more naturally across speech, code, and developer tooling.

  • OpenAI released gpt-realtime-translate, a speech-to-speech model for realtime translation with 70+ input languages and 13 output languages, positioned as a specialized model and shown running on smart glasses .
  • Codex can now operate on Windows. OpenAI said computer use now works on Windows PCs, and the ChatGPT mobile app can start, review, and steer work while tasks keep running on the machine .
  • Managed Agents arrived in the Gemini API. A single API call can now spin up a sandboxed Linux environment with code execution, web access, and file I/O, with reusable skills and a published example for a data-science assistant .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: companies are moving beyond model releases into sector-specific deployments, licensing infrastructure, and chips.

  • OpenAI launched Rosalind Biodefense and expanded trusted access to GPT-Rosalind for select U.S. government and allied partners working on public health and biodefense missions .
  • NVIDIA is standardizing its open-model licensing. It is moving Cosmos, Isaac GR00T, Ising, and Nemotron onto the Linux Foundation’s OpenMDW framework so weights, code, docs, and data fall under one legal structure .
  • ByteDance is reportedly building its own inference chip. Posts citing The Information said the design borrows from Groq’s LPU architecture and uses on-chip SRAM plus manufacturing choices aimed at routing around U.S. export controls on HBM .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: several smaller updates pointed to rapid progress in translation, search, and creative tooling.

  • Cohere said Command A+ set a new company high in machine translation and outperformed Google Translate plus several frontier and open models .
  • ChatGPT added a table of contents for conversations with 5+ responses .
  • LiteParse v2 claimed the fastest open-source, model-free PDF parsing and added support for 50+ document types via a Rust rewrite .
  • Recraft said it ranked as the #1 independent image generation lab and #3 overall behind OpenAI and Google .
Packy McCormick’s Nanotech Starter Set: Hall’s Primer and Rintamaki’s Review
May 30
2 min read
187 docs
Not Boring by Packy McCormick
Packy McCormick shared a tight two-resource path for learning nanotech: J. Storrs Hall’s primer and Jacob Rintamaki’s technical review. The primer is the clearer starting point, with the review serving as the deeper follow-on.

A compact nanotech starter set from Packy McCormick

Packy McCormick shared two external resources for readers who want to get smart on nanotech . Together, they form a simple progression: start with a primer, then move to a technical review .

Most compelling recommendation

Nanotechnology: A Primer for Policymakers

  • Content type: Primer
  • Author/creator: J. Storrs Hall
  • Link/URL:https://www.abundance.institute/our-work/nanotechnology-a-primer-for-policymakers
  • Who recommended it: Packy McCormick
  • Key takeaway: McCormick included it as one of the two resources he recommends for getting smart on nanotech
  • Why it matters: Of the two, this is the clearest starting point because it is explicitly framed as a primer, making it the most natural entry point into the topic

The complementary follow-on

A Technical Review of Nanosystems

  • Content type: Technical review
  • Author/creator: Jacob Rintamaki
  • Link/URL:https://jrin771.github.io/nanosystems.html
  • Who recommended it: Packy McCormick
  • Key takeaway: McCormick paired it with Hall's primer as the other resource he recommends for learning nanotech
  • Why it matters: It complements the primer with a more technical framing, giving readers a deeper next step on the same topic

If you want to get smart on nanotech, I recommend Hall’s primer for the Abundance Institute and Jacob Rintamaki’s A Technical Review of Nanosystems.

Why this set is worth saving

The value here is focus: McCormick did not offer a broad reading list, but two specific resources aimed at the same goal of helping readers learn nanotech . For someone starting from scratch, that makes this a compact place to begin .

OpenAI’s Specialized Push, Gemini’s Agentic Roadmap, and New Pressure for AI Guardrails
May 30
4 min read
282 docs
Jeff Dean
Oriol Vinyals
Logan Kilpatrick
+10
OpenAI rolled out realtime translation, Windows computer use, and a biodefense initiative as Google DeepMind and Anthropic emphasized coding, multimodality, and workflow orchestration. Meanwhile, YouTube and a widening set of public voices sharpened the debate over disclosure, jobs, and ROI.

What stood out

A clear theme today: major labs are pushing past one-size-fits-all chat toward specialized models, computer-use surfaces, and agentic workflows.

OpenAI broadens its stack beyond chat

OpenAI made several product and strategic moves in that direction at once. It launched gpt-realtime-translate, expanded Codex computer use to Windows, introduced Rosalind Biodefense with trusted access to GPT-Rosalind for selected government and allied partners, and shipped a new GPT-5.5 instant aimed at lower sycophancy, better factuality, and stronger multilingual performance .

  • Realtime translation: speech in any of 70+ input languages can be translated into speech in 13 target languages, and OpenAI showed the system running on smart glasses .
  • Computer use on Windows: Codex can now take action on Windows computers, and the ChatGPT mobile app can start, review, and steer tasks while work continues on the machine .
  • Biodefense: Rosalind Biodefense is positioned to help trusted builders develop biodefense and pandemic preparedness capabilities, with GPT-Rosalind access expanding to select U.S. government and allied partners .

Why it matters: OpenAI is spreading into modality-specific tools, more autonomous operating surfaces, and mission-specific deployments beyond the standard chat box .

"LLMs are great, but you need specialized models for specialized use cases"

DeepMind uses Gemini 3.5 Flash to emphasize coding, multimodality, and self-improvement

Google DeepMind said Gemini 3.5 Flash centers on coding and agentic experiences, building on multimodal, tool-use, and agentic foundations from the start . In the same conversation, DeepMind framed Gemini Omni as a jointly trained multimodal system aimed at better understanding physics and producing more consistent video and 3D outputs, while pointing to improved distillation and future self-learning or continual learning as the next frontier for Gemini .

Why it matters: DeepMind is signaling that the next competitive layer is not just a better chatbot, but models that can code, simulate the world across modalities, and eventually help improve the research stack itself .

Anthropic and Microsoft push the workflow layer forward

Anthropic described Claude Opus 4.8 as a modest but tangible upgrade with small gains in coding, reasoning, and computer use, plus better honesty in flagging uncertainty and avoiding unsupported claims . More consequential for day-to-day work, dynamic workflows in Claude Code now split tasks across parallel subagents, check results, and iterate until answers converge .

Microsoft, meanwhile, launched MAI Image 2.5 with improvements in instruction following, text rendering, and visual reasoning, rolled out a redesigned Microsoft 365 Copilot that can pull context from emails, files, chats, and meetings, and brought Perplexity Computer into Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook for more complex multi-step tasks .

Why it matters: Differentiation is increasingly showing up in orchestration, tool use, and application embedding, not just in raw benchmark gains .

Governance and disclosure move closer to the point of use

YouTube said it will move AI disclosures to more prominent positions and automatically label significant photorealistic AI content when internal signals detect it and creators do not disclose it themselves . Separately, Pope Francis issued a major letter on AI comparing its risks to nuclear weapons, and an Anthropic co-founder said labs face commercial and competitive pressures that can conflict with doing the right thing .

Why it matters: Pressure for guardrails is showing up both inside major platforms and from outside institutions, closer to where AI systems are actually distributed and used .

"We desperately need outside critics with no skin in the game who will tell the labs when they’re failing."

The jobs and ROI narrative remains unsettled

Labor messaging stayed mixed. Sam Altman said AI has not eliminated as many entry-level white-collar jobs as he had feared, Jensen Huang criticized using AI as an excuse for layoffs, and OpenAI COO Brad Lightcap framed AI as a potential "blue-collar revival" tied to infrastructure and regional investment . Critics pushed the other way: Gary Marcus argued CEOs are downplaying replacement ambitions and said most agent experiments are still failing to yield significant ROI .

Why it matters: The debate is shifting from abstract forecasts to competing claims about real jobs, real budgets, and whether current deployments are producing returns .

Also worth tracking

  • GPIC introduced a permissive visual-generation corpus with 100M image-text pairs for training and 1M for benchmarking, positioned for both research and commercial use .
  • ElevenLabs released Music V2, trained on licensed data, and Dubbing V2 for voice- and emotion-preserving video translation .
  • StepFun released Step 3.7 Flash, a 198B MoE vision-language model for coding agents and search workflows, with native vision input and improved tool-use reliability over Step 3.5 Flash .
Taste, UX, and Distribution Become the Real AI Product Moats
May 30
3 min read
79 docs
Product Management
Elena Verna
Hunter Walk
+9
This brief covers the latest AI-native PM patterns: same-day prototype-to-production loops, why UX and correction flow can matter more than model changes, and how org design, pricing, and distribution are evolving at fast-moving product teams.

Big Ideas

  • Taste is becoming the real bottleneck. Arize's CPO described a loop where a PM spots a high-priority issue in the morning, prototypes a fix in Claude Code by lunch, gets an engineer review, and ships the same day . In a live demo, she built a PM agent in about an hour that pulled GitHub issues, scored priority, generated a daily triage report, added tracing, and created a first eval . Sachin Rekhi argues the gap from 70% to 95% quality is hundreds of small judgments, plus the ability to articulate them clearly enough for an LLM to systemize . Apply it: turn judgment into reusable instructions, examples, and evals—not tacit intuition .

  • AI velocity is an org design choice, not just a tooling choice. Lovable routes context through a "company brain" plus team-specific agents with responsible domain "parents" . Its org removes director/manager/VP titles, keeps three layers, gives ICs end-to-end ownership, and experiments with lead-to-IC ratios from 7:1 to 50:1, with frequent re-orgs . Hunter Walk's framing fits: companies are products, and hiring, compensation, engineering style, and cadence have to work together; the bad cultures are the inconsistent ones .

Tactical Playbook

  1. Compress the loop from problem to production.

    • Start with a clearly high-priority issue
    • Prototype fast in Claude Code
    • Require engineer review before production
    • Add tracing and a first eval in the first pass

    Why it matters: the cycle described at Arize runs in hours rather than traditional sprint timing .

  2. Use UX and impact to reject AI optics work. Shreyas Doshi warns that CEO pressure for "more AI" can create tokenmaxxing and the perception of AI use without much regard to UX or impact . Use that as a screening question for AI proposals.

  3. Do not start vendor-dependent work before scope is real. A community example describes teams being asked to build before scope is defined or SOWs are executed, then leaving features in dark mode for months until vendor code arrives, only to face integration issues that disrupt other commitments .

Case Studies & Lessons

"We left the machine learning models the same. All we rebuilt was the UX—and yet our users were four times more efficient."

Teresa Torres says the lesson is that helping humans review and correct AI errors matters as much as the model itself; the interface defines what "good" looks like and makes misses easier to catch .

  • Lovable's PLG model is deliberately generous upfront. Verna says premium access equals 60-70% of total costs and is treated as marketing spend, with partnerships used to drive adoption and word of mouth before the paywall . Sales only handles expansion from organic self-serve demand—no outbound or cold outreach . Pricing removed per-user gating in favor of unlimited users plus a platform fee by company size and scalable AI credits, which increased workspace invites, hand-raisers, and close rates .

Career Corner

  • The new craft is "distilling the art." The best-positioned professionals can both recognize good output and explain it clearly enough for an LLM to reproduce . Aakash's Arize example suggests PMs who pair that with rapid prototyping are increasingly hard to distinguish from engineers .

  • Current employer-interest snapshot: Lenny Rachitsky's poll showed Anthropic leading, strong interest in starting a company, Google ahead of OpenAI, and Vercel, Linear, Every, and PostHog overperforming . He framed it as a useful list for people deciding where to work .

Tools & Resources

  • Aakash Gupta's note points to four concrete starting points: Ship your first PR, PM OS scaffolding, an Arize walkthrough, and an OpenAI example . He also warns not to copy another company blindly .

  • A PM from the Reddit community is offering free mock interviews across product sense/cases, metrics and funnels, and behavioral rounds; requests should include years of experience, target role, and practice round .

Start with signal

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Coding Agents Alpha Tracker avatar

Coding Agents Alpha Tracker

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

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

AI in EdTech Weekly avatar

AI in EdTech Weekly

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

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

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 108 sources
BTCPay Server
Nicolas Burtey
Roy Sheinbaum
+105

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

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AI High Signal Digest

Daily · Tracks 1 source
AI High Signal

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

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