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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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Theo - t3.gg
swyx
Cole Brown
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
- The biggest edge now looks like harness engineering compounding with better models. After trying every Devin release, @dtcb says version 2.2 finally feels simpler than a local workflow and is now where he wants to debug . swyx says that jump came from a process the team behind Devin has been running since late 2023: dozens of model groups, constant evals for routing, and full harness rewrites every few months .
- Sam Altman’s framing fits the moment: build a company that benefits from the models getting better and better.
🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS
- Devin 2.2 — strongest practitioner signal of the day. One experienced user says it is now simpler than his local workflow; swyx says the underlying system relies on a couple dozen model groups, heavy evals, and periodic harness rewrites .
- Enterprise deployment check — Nvidia says Codex and Claude Code are already used by tens of thousands internally .
- Cursor — GPT-5.4 Fast — enable via Settings > Models > GPT-5.4 Fast. Reported tradeoff: 50% faster for 2x the price.
- LangSmith Skills + CLI — new terminal-native tooling so agents can debug traces, create datasets, and run experiments from the shell . Details
- Super Memory plugins — Dhravya Shah says a Cursor plugin is launching today; plugins already exist for Claude, OpenClaw, and OpenCode . The OpenClaw integration switched from tool-triggered memory search to hook-based context injection under 2k tokens per turn, with contradiction handling, temporal reasoning, and a hybrid RAG fallback when memory misses .
- Memory eval reality check — Shah argues LongMemEval over-rewards extracting everything and ignores cost or forgetfulness, while Locomo mostly tests retrieval and can be brute-forced by dumping context. His team open-sourced Memory Benchmark to compare providers on shared rules across quality, latency, cost, recall, and NDCG .
- GPT-5.4 vision -> code — Romain Huet says GPT-5.4 is especially strong on dense documents, diagrams, and rough sketches, then suggests handing the result to Codex to turn it into software .
💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS
- If you are building an agent harness, copy Devin’s routing pattern, not just its UI
- Maintain multiple model groups instead of betting on one model
- Eval every model before routing it into the harness
- Treat the harness as a living system and rewrite it periodically as models change
- Use a private agent backchannel with an approval gate
-
Run
acpxinside Codex - Connect over ACP to OpenClaw and a remote agent like Molty
- Let the agents discuss privately
- Send into the live destination only after the target session approves it
- Repo: acpx
-
Run
- Terminal beats chat when the toolchain already exists
- Nvidia engineers say coding agents outperform more general agents largely because shell access gives them compilers, tests, and every installed tool, so they can write, run, inspect errors, and fix in-loop
- Concrete example: with an Outlook CLI installed, one engineer had Codex summarize a messy inbox, highlight escalations, move reply-worthy threads into a folder, and archive the rest
- LangSmith is productizing the same pattern by exposing trace debugging, dataset creation, and experiments through a CLI
- Memory that helps coding agents is hybrid, not just a folder of notes
- File-based memory can work, but Shah says it depends on explicit remember-this behavior, gets slow to traverse, and lacks update logic
- His replacement pattern: keep a tiny always-on user profile plus recent episodes, surface memories first, and fall back to raw RAG chunks when memory misses
- Hard safety rule for powerful agents
- Nvidia’s rule of thumb: agents can access files, the internet, or custom code execution — but you should usually grant only two of the three
- If you need riskier setups, isolate them. Their example for OpenClaw is a Brev VM off the corporate network
- Visual-to-code loop
- Feed GPT-5.4 the dense doc, diagram, or rough sketch for interpretation
- If the task is UI-heavy, connect a design surface like Paper to Claude Code or OpenClaw
- Riley Brown’s demo flow: install Paper -> connect Claude Code -> plan design -> generate designs -> iterate -> build the React app -> deploy
- 100% agent-written code can still be disciplined
- Kent C. Dodds says he already has agents writing 100% of his code, but still steers the work and can read all generated code manually. His point: that is not the same as hands-off vibe coding
👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH
- swyx + @dtcb — best current read on why Devin suddenly feels good: same harness, better models, real user feedback
- Dhravya Shah — rare mix of implementation detail and benchmark skepticism on agent memory; worth watching if you care about stateful agents more than leaderboard screenshots
- Peter Steinberger — actively wiring Codex, OpenClaw, and ACP together in public; good source for multi-agent orchestration patterns, not just model takes
- Andrej Karpathy — now pushing autoresearch toward agent communities coordinated through GitHub Discussions and PRs instead of a single linear branch
- Theo — useful dissent. After hopping back into Claude Code for UI work, he says CLI agent UX is still awful compared with a real GUI
🎬 WATCH & LISTEN
- Latent Space — 19:24–20:35: why user profiles beat literal retrieval. Good explanation of why an agent needs a tiny always-on profile plus recent episodes to answer questions like what monitor fits you, even if you never explicitly talked about monitors
- Latent Space — 22:25–23:42: hybrid memory mode for OpenClaw. Memories surface first, RAG fills the gap when memory misses, and the system extracts that information in the background for future turns
- NVIDIA on Latent Space — 1:08:21–1:09:41: why coding agents keep beating general agents. The argument is straightforward: the terminal gives agents access to compilers, tests, and every installed tool, so the feedback loop is tighter than pure chat
📊 PROJECTS & REPOS
- acpx — bridge layer that lets Codex call OpenClaw over ACP and OpenClaw call Codex back. Steinberger is already using it for private agent-to-agent discussion with an approval gate before posting to Discord
- Super Memory — open-source context infrastructure for stateful agents. Shah says the project reached 100k users on about $5/month of Cloudflare spend in its early consumer phase and hit 10k GitHub stars in a few weeks after open source
- Memory Benchmark — open-source eval harness for memory systems across providers, benchmarks, and judges, with metrics for quality, latency, cost, top-K recall, and NDCG
- Karpathy’s lightweight GitHub coordination pattern — use Discussions for agent-written run summaries and PRs for exact commits you might adopt without merging
Editorial take: the edge is shifting from choosing one best model to building the system around it — routing, memory, terminal access, and permission boundaries
swyx
Cole Brown
OpenAI Developers
Agents were the dominant story today
OpenAI and Cognition show how agent performance is becoming a harness problem
A small OpenAI team says it used Codex to open and merge 1,500 pull requests with zero manual coding to ship an internal product used by hundreds of internal users. swyx groups that with OpenAI’s Frontier, Symphony, and harness engineering efforts as part of the emerging AI-native organization; in parallel, he says Cognition’s Devin evaluates dozens of model groups and regularly rewrites its harness, while one user says Devin 2.2 now feels simpler for them to use basically all the time, even when a change starts locally .
“Build a company that benefits from the models getting better and better”
Why it matters: The edge is starting to shift from any single model to the evals, routing, and workflow systems wrapped around improving models. A useful check on the narrative: Martin Casado says AI still struggles with finicky renderer work in sparkjs, where the main developer went back to hand-coding the renderer while keeping AI for tests, demos, and prototypes .
Karpathy is pushing autoresearch from a solo loop toward a research community
Karpathy says improvements found across roughly 650 experiments over two days on a depth-12 model transferred to depth-24, setting up a new nanochat leaderboard entry for “time to GPT-2.” He also says the next step for autoresearch is asynchronous, massively collaborative agents—closer to a research community than a single PhD student—with GitHub Discussions and PRs as lightweight coordination surfaces .
Why it matters: This is a concrete extension of autonomous research: not just an agent editing training code, but many agents contributing branches, reading prior results, and feeding findings back into a shared repo. Repo: autoresearch
Policy and infrastructure are starting to reorganize around agents
Shenzhen is drafting public support for AI-native “one person companies”
Longgang District in Shenzhen released a draft policy to support OpenClaw and the OPC model, where one person uses AI agents across R&D, production, operations, and marketing. The package includes public datasets, data-service subsidies, procurement support for OpenClaw-based solutions, free compute, subsidized workspace, relocation support, competition awards, and seed-stage equity investment up to RMB 10 million; the consultation window runs from March 7 to April 6, 2026 .
- Up to RMB 10 million in equity support for seed-stage OPC startups
- Three months of free compute and project funding up to RMB 4 million for strong demonstration projects
- Public datasets plus subsidies for data services and OpenClaw deployments
Why it matters: This draft directly funds solo AI-agent startups rather than only general AI R&D. That makes it a notable economic-development signal around how local governments think the agent ecosystem may evolve .
Nvidia is treating agent inference as a systems problem
On Latent Space, Nvidia engineers described Dynamo as a data-center-scale inference layer on top of vLLM, SGLang, and TensorRT-LLM that uses disaggregation to separate prefill and decode, then adjusts worker ratios as workloads change. They also connected agent workloads to more structured contexts and better cache behavior, and previewed GTC sessions on Dynamo and “the future of agents in production inference” .
Why it matters: If agents impose more repeatable structure than chatbots, infra teams get new levers for speed and cost. The same conversation also emphasized sandboxing and permission boundaries: Brev provides one-click GPU provisioning and an isolated place to run tools like OpenClaw, while the security rule of thumb was to give agents only two of three powers—file access, internet access, and code execution .
Also notable
Microsoft shows long-term glass storage with AI-based readout
Microsoft’s Project Silica writes 5 TB into ordinary glass across 301 layers using ultrafast lasers, then reads it back with microscope imaging and an AI image-recognition model that the company says decodes the data with zero errors. The storage medium requires no power to preserve the data and is described as resistant to heat, water, radiation, and magnetic fields, with accelerated testing projecting more than 10,000 years of room-temperature life .
Why it matters: This is storage infrastructure rather than a new model, but it is a meaningful Microsoft + Nature result aimed at the energy cost of archival data. For long-lived cloud archives, it points to a very different tradeoff than magnetic tape .
The Product Compass
scott belsky
Big Ideas
1) AI is pulling PM and UX toward delivery unless teams protect strategy
A Reddit discussion argues that the current AI reset can pull PM and UX out of product shaping and into faster delivery work . The proposed response is to watch how much time teams spend in problem versus solution space, align UX with PM and business, and push leaders to preserve strategy instead of turning everyone into AI builders . Another commenter added that if you are not at the strategy table, your role may realistically collapse toward execution, especially under older operating models they see as uncompetitive in the AI era .
Why it matters: The risk is not just adopting AI tools poorly; it is losing influence over what gets built .
How to apply: Protect problem-space work, make the strategy-versus-delivery split explicit, and be clear about whether your role is shaping direction or executing it .
2) Platform shifts favor new builds over change-heavy retrofits
Scott Belsky argues that it is much easier to build something new than change something old . In platform shifts, less change management lets teams anchor on first principles, ignore sunk costs, and build for what they think the industry will be more than three years from now .
Why it matters: Legacy change costs can become a strategic drag when the environment is shifting quickly .
How to apply: When evaluating platform-shift bets, separate first-principles thinking from legacy constraints and be explicit about which sunk costs you are carrying forward unnecessarily .
3) Roadmaps are under more pressure to show business impact, not just product logic
In one PM community thread, a team was already using customer interviews and prioritization methods, but the board still wanted to see how the roadmap aligned with company growth . The hard part was that some necessary work addressed poor UX, high time-to-value, scalability, and churn risk rather than net-new revenue . The thread distilled the core tension into a simple question: how do you compare churn-risk reduction against new revenue?
Why it matters: Growth-only framing can underweight product-health work that protects retention and future scale .
How to apply: Translate foundational work into business terms stakeholders already use: churn exposure, time-to-value, scalability risk, and user experience costs .
Tactical Playbook
1) Keep PM work in the problem space before AI pushes everything into delivery
Step 1: Audit how much time your team spends in problem space versus solution space .
Step 2: Keep UX aligned with PM and business when framing problems, rather than defaulting to engineering-led delivery conversations .
Step 3: Push leaders to preserve strategic work instead of relabeling everyone as an AI builder .
Step 4: If you are not in a position to influence strategy, be explicit that your role is execution and optimize for that reality instead of assuming strategy ownership that is not there .
2) Use Claude Code to move from PRD to demo, then to engineer-ready artifacts
A Product Compass guide says Anthropic PMs use Claude Code to go from PRD to working demo in a single session instead of writing specs and waiting for engineering handoffs .
Step 1: Use it when you need to prototype, not just describe an idea .
Step 2: Start from the PRD and build a working demo, using Plan Mode to review before Claude changes anything .
Step 3: If the result is useful, push it to a branch and create a PR, or use it to replace a small Jira ticket by showing the change directly .
Step 4: Use its memory features when context needs to compound across sessions and you do not want to restate the project every time .
3) Make non-revenue roadmap work legible to boards and executives
Step 1: Start with customer interviews and a clear prioritization method, because stakeholders will ask how the roadmap ties back to growth .
Step 2: Challenge whether a supposedly necessary item is actually necessary .
Step 3: Reframe the work in business terms: poor usage feedback, high time-to-value, resilience or scalability gaps, and churn risk .
Step 4: Put that case directly next to the net-new revenue alternative, since that is the comparison stakeholders are already making .
Case Studies & Lessons
1) Claude Code lowers the barrier between product insight and working software
One guide claims Anthropic PMs already use Claude Code to prototype instead of writing specs and waiting for engineering . The same piece also points to an Anthropic hackathon where an attorney, a cardiologist, and a roads worker won because they understood their problems deeply and Code removed friction between idea and build .
Lesson: Deep problem understanding plus lower build friction can matter more than formal engineering background for early product exploration .
2) Revenue-only roadmap debates miss real retention risk
In the roadmap thread, the example problem was a core app experience with poor usage feedback and high time-to-value. The author described it as a ticking timebomb for churn, even though it did not map neatly to new revenue .
Lesson: If prioritization only rewards visible revenue, teams can starve work that protects retention and product quality .
3) Weak AI fluency can narrow ambition inside large organizations
One commenter describing an F500 environment said business PMs, UX, and UXR teams struggled to understand AI well enough, which led to narrow, fixed genAI workflows and slow, confirmation-heavy decisions .
Lesson: AI adoption risk is not only about tooling; it is also about whether the product organization has enough fluency to pursue broader opportunities .
Career Corner
1) Senior-to-IC moves are being treated as normal, not irrational
A Sr Director at a public company described being unhappy in role, worried about being managed out, and getting stronger interest for Principal PM IC roles than for management roles . Several responses said this is a common move and that a high IC title like Principal does not create much long-term concern .
Why it matters: The PM career ladder is becoming less linear in practice .
How to apply: Evaluate the work itself and the level of the IC role, not just whether it looks like a step down on paper .
2) In this thread, compensation did not argue against the IC path
The original poster reported $315k total compensation and said the IC move would not mean much less pay . One commenter said that number looked low for a Sr Director at a public company in a high-cost market . Another pointed to Lenny's Newsletter and said the 50th percentile for M6 was $545k . A separate commenter shared a move from director at a roughly $2B public company making $380k to an IC PM role in big tech making nearly $500k .
Why it matters: In at least this community snapshot, title prestige and pay were not moving in lockstep .
How to apply: Benchmark the role you want against actual market data and peer anecdotes instead of assuming management is always the higher-paying path .
3) The real decision is whether you want the IC day-to-day again
Commenters said IC roles can mean less upward mobility, but potentially better work-life balance, less stress, and more enjoyment of the work itself . Another commenter said it may be a good time to be an IC and catch up on how the PM role is changing . One response also argued that pure senior management PM roles may shrink, while people who are still strategic and tactical could be in a better position in two years .
Why it matters: The question is not only status; it is fit with how PM work is changing .
How to apply: Decide based on whether you want the more hands-on day-to-day of a Principal PM role, not just on title optics .
Tools & Resources
- Guide to Claude Code for PMs — useful if you want to move from PRDs and documents toward working demos, branches, and PRs faster .
- Lenny's PM compensation benchmark — cited in the community discussion as a reference point for evaluating senior-management versus high-level IC compensation .
- SVPG Product Operating Model — recommended in the AI strategy thread as a better fit than older operating models in the current environment .
N8 Programs
Peter Steinberger 🦞
OpenAI Developers
Top Stories
Why it matters: The most consequential updates this cycle centered on training inputs, agent scaffolding, deployment hardware, and governance.
1) Eon Systems pushed a connectome-driven fruit fly into a simulated body
Eon said it took the FlyWire connectome of the fruit fly brain, applied a simple neuron model, and used it to control a MuJoCo physics-simulated body, closing the loop from neural activation to action.
Observers said the simulated fly showed walking, grooming, and feeding-like behaviors without training data or gradient descent, and one post described the result as what may be the first whole-brain emulation controlling a body.
The significance is methodological: the system is being framed as modeling neural structure rather than learning behavior from examples.
A note of caution came from another expert, who argued the work is still far from a biophysically faithful fly-brain simulation because individual neurons are much more complex than this setup captures.
2) Agentic coding is becoming a systems discipline
The new OpenDev paper argues the field is shifting from IDE plugins to terminal-native agents and lays out concrete reliability patterns, including workload-specialized model routing, separate planning and execution agents, lazy tool discovery, adaptive context compaction, cross-session memory, and strict safety controls.
That direction is showing up in operations as well: OpenAI said a small team steering Codex opened and merged 1,500 pull requests with zero manual coding for a product used by hundreds of internal users.
LangChain’s new LangSmith Skills + CLI extends the same idea by letting coding agents debug traces, create datasets, and run experiments natively in the terminal.
At the application layer, Devin’s team says its system evaluates a couple dozen model groups for harness inclusion and rewrites its stack every few months, while one user said version 2.2 now feels simpler than local development for most work.
3) Synthetic data and reusable skills are being treated as first-class assets
Hugging Face released FinePhrase and a Synthetic Data Playbook after more than 90 experiments and 1T generated tokens, producing a 500B-token synthetic dataset and publishing the associated recipes and code.
SkillNet complements that effort on the agent side: it organizes more than 200,000 AI skills inside a unified ontology with relationships such as similarity, composition, and dependency, and reports a 40% improvement in average rewards with 30% fewer execution steps across ALFWorld, WebShop, and ScienceWorld.
Together, these releases suggest teams are increasingly productizing the inputs to intelligence, not just the final model. Resources: https://huggingface.co/spaces/HuggingFaceFW/finephrase and https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.04448
4) SambaNova launched hardware aimed directly at agentic inference
SambaNova introduced the SN50 RDU, presenting it as a chip designed for the cost profile of agentic inference rather than conventional GPU-style serving.
The architecture maps model graphs directly onto hardware data paths and adds agentic caching across large-capacity memory, HBM, and SRAM so multiple models can stay resident and switch in milliseconds.
Reported performance claims versus NVIDIA Blackwell B200 were 5× faster inference, 3× higher throughput, and up to 8× lower TCO on large models, with SambaRack SN50 scaling to 256 accelerators and support for up to 10T-parameter models and 10M-token contexts.
SN40L is available now, while SN50 and SambaRack SN50 are expected in H2 2026.
5) OpenAI’s robotics leadership change made autonomy concerns concrete
Caitlin Kalinowski resigned from OpenAI over concerns about “lethal autonomy without human intervention.” She had led the robotics division after joining from Meta in November.
“This was about principle, not people.”
The resignation lands as robotics builders are also publicly describing unusually fast progress: Brett Adcock said he has “never seen this much progress in robotics” and that his lab is seeing capabilities emerge that “we didn’t even know were possible.”
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: This cycle’s research was unusually concrete about when agents help, how they should plan, and how automated research systems may scale.
Multi-agent gains depend on task structure
A study across 180 configurations found multi-agent setups can improve performance by up to 81% on parallelizable tasks such as financial analysis, but degrade performance by up to 70% on sequential tasks such as Minecraft crafting.
The paper also fits an equation that predicts the best architecture for a new task 87% of the time. PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2512.08296
Structured planning continues to outperform greedy web agents
StructuredAgent introduces dynamic AND/OR trees plus structured memory so agents can backtrack, revise, and preserve alternative solutions during long web tasks.
It reports 46.7% success on complex shopping tasks and interpretable hierarchical plans that make debugging and human intervention easier. Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.05294
Automated research stacks are opening up
Google DeepMind said it is open-sourcing part of its automated-research infrastructure for Gemini in the repo https://github.com/google-deepmind/simply, describing it as more complex than the nanochat setup but closer to state-of-the-art LLM pre- and post-training.
Karpathy also described the next step for autoresearch as asynchronously, massively collaborative agents, more like a research community than a single PhD student, with experiments summarized in GitHub Discussions or PRs that agents can later read and build on.
Model and tooling design notes
Hugging Face redesigned transformers to make mixture-of-experts models first-class citizens, covering weight loading, expert routing backends, parallelism, and training optimizations.
A separate argument from world-model research said symbolic world models that abstract away from pixels are especially important for agents, while also acknowledging that converting real-world signals into symbols remains unsolved.
Products & Launches
Why it matters: New launches this cycle focused on making agents easier to run locally, inspect, and integrate into everyday workflows.
- Codex: Recent updates included GPT 5.4, Windows support, Fast mode, and new skills such as Playwright Interactive, Slides, and Spreadsheets, alongside Codex Security and Codex for OSS. Official site: https://openai.com/codex/
- LangSmith Skills + CLI: LangChain released Skills + CLI so coding agents can debug traces, create datasets, and run experiments from the terminal. More: https://blog.langchain.com/langsmith-cli-skills/
- OpenClaw on Jetson: NVIDIA Robotics published a tutorial for running a fully local, always-on assistant on Jetson with zero cloud APIs; vLLM said the setup can serve MoE models such as Nemotron 3 Nano 30B on Jetson AGX. Tutorial: https://www.jetson-ai-lab.com/tutorials/openclaw/
- FireRed-Image-Edit-1.1: fal launched a new image-editing model with identity consistency across edits, multi-image reference blending, portrait makeup, text style reference, and photo restoration. Try it here: https://fal.ai/models/fal-ai/firered-image-edit-v1.1
- Hermes Agent: Nous Research published docs for Hermes Agent at https://hermes-agent.nousresearch.com/docs; earlier this week the app rose from #41 to #21 on OpenRouter.
Industry Moves
Why it matters: The clearest business pattern this cycle was investment in the operating layer around models: harnesses, routing, infra, and distribution.
AI-native organizations are standardizing around harnesses
OpenAI’s Harness Engineering post said a small team used Codex to open and merge 1,500 pull requests with zero manual coding for a product used by hundreds of internal users.
Devin’s reported setup follows a similar logic: it uses a couple dozen model groups, evaluates models extensively for harness inclusion, and rewrites the stack every few months; one frequent user said Devin 2.2 now feels simpler than local development for most tasks.
“Build a company that benefits from the models getting better and better”
Infrastructure competition is widening
NVIDIA acquired Brev.dev, whose founders said they started the company to build the best possible developer experience and had already been working closely with NVIDIA since August.
Huawei, meanwhile, showcased the Atlas 950 SuperPoD with 8,192 cards and the Atlas 850E inference server; one estimate said the SuperPoD is roughly comparable to 8K H200s, with Q4 2026 delivery constrained by HBM and NPU chip bottlenecks.
On the demand side, Similarweb said Claude was the fastest-growing generative AI tool by website visits in February.
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: Policy signals are still early, but this cycle included both a concrete disclosure rule and direct public subsidies for agent deployment.
New York added a clear disclosure and consent requirement
New York will require disclosure when AI is used in advertising and prior consent for the commercial use of a deceased individual’s name, voice, or image.
Shenzhen is subsidizing agent deployment directly
Shenzhen rolled out free OpenClaw setup, three months of free computing power, a 50% subsidy on data services, and a 30% hardware subsidy. One observer said the scale and direct government involvement make the security implications of agents harder to ignore.
Quick Takes
Why it matters: These smaller items help track where capability, tooling, and evaluation practice are moving next.
- Claude-assisted debugging: A Zhihu writeup said Claude Opus 4.6 helped isolate a DeepEP race condition involving PyTorch deterministic mode, GPU streams, and NaN-filled buffers after roughly two days of intermittent runs.
- Small-model pressure: One tester concluded Qwen 3.5-4B is about as good as GPT-4o in most benchmarked cases; another said its reasoning version was narrowly stronger on WildChat but more verbose, less knowledgeable, and more hallucination-prone.
- OpenClaw benchmarking: PinchBench launched to compare model performance on OpenClaw-style tasks.
- Secure execution: Monty, a minimal secure Python interpreter written in Rust for AI use cases, is now on GitHub at https://github.com/pydantic/monty.
- Kernel optimization: A fused RMS Norm + NVFP4 quantization kernel written in CuTeDSL reported a consistent ~2.9× speedup over separate Triton kernels.
- LLM eval rigor: A forthcoming long-form post on applied statistics for LLM evals highlighted noise reduction, more confident conclusions, and faster experiments, with paper recommendations attached.
Michael Witbrock
Matt Mullenweg
Andrej Karpathy
Most compelling recommendation: autoresearch
This stands out because it comes with both a concrete operating model and a reported result. Andrej Karpathy’s autoresearch packages a minimal, single-GPU LLM training core into a self-contained repo; Tobi Lütke says adapting the approach to his qmd query-expansion model produced a +19% score on a 0.8B model, above his previous 1.6B model, after 37 experiments in 8 hours .
autoresearch
- Content type: GitHub repo / code resource
- Author/creator: Andrej Karpathy
- Link/URL:github.com/karpathy/autoresearch
- Who recommended it: Tobi Lütke, who shared his results after adapting the setup to his own model work
- Key takeaway: The human iterates on the prompt while the AI agent iterates on the training code in an autonomous git loop, searching for better architectures, optimizers, and hyperparameters via repeated short training runs
- Why it matters: Lütke says the setup beat his previous baseline on a smaller model, already built a better reranker, and was valuable as a learning tool in its own right
“I learned more from that than months of following ml researchers.”
Qasar Younis’s founder reading stack
Younis’s strongest meta-recommendation is to read old, time-filtered books across history, business, and society rather than low-quality new content. He argues that broader reading makes founders more well rounded and helps them build better products .
The Emperor of All Maladies
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Siddhartha Mukherjee
- Who recommended it: Qasar Younis
- Key takeaway: He says it changes how you think, and treats that shift in framing as the test of great material
- Why it matters: It shows the kind of non-tech book Younis values: one that changes your worldview rather than offering a direct startup tactic
SPQR
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Mary Beard
- Who recommended it: Qasar Younis
- Key takeaway: He picked it after realizing he did not know Roman history well and uses books like this to fill important gaps in knowledge
- Why it matters: It turns his broader heuristic into something actionable: identify an area you do not understand, then read the best book in that space
Made in America
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Sam Walton
- Who recommended it: Qasar Younis
- Key takeaway: Younis calls it an unbelievable book and notes that Walton wrote it on his deathbed
- Why it matters: It is one of the durable business histories he elevates over low-quality content, consistent with his view that founders should spend scarce reading time on books that have already survived time’s filter
House of Huawei
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
- Who recommended it: Qasar Younis, who says his company recently read it together
- Key takeaway: He calls it a really great, interesting book and pairs it with admiration for Huawei as a company that makes great technology
- Why it matters: It was strong enough to become a company read, making it a useful organizational case study rather than just a personal pick
Guns, Germs, and Steel / Collapse
- Content type: Books
- Author/creator: Jared Diamond
- Who recommended them: Qasar Younis
- Key takeaway: He places both near the top of his list and calls them fantastic
- Why it matters: They are clear examples of the non-tech, time-tested books he thinks founders should choose over lower-quality content
Two worldview reads on intelligence and the internet
What is Intelligence?
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
- Link/URL:mitpress.mit.edu/9780262049955/what-is-intelligence/
- Who recommended it: Tobi Lütke
- Key takeaway: Lütke calls it a great book while agreeing with the claim that computer science is becoming an explanation of how the world works, like physics, biology, and chemistry
- Why it matters: The recommendation is attached to a broad framing of computing as foundational knowledge, not just a useful craft
A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace
- Content type: Manifesto / article
- Author/creator: John Perry Barlow
- Link/URL:eff.org/cyberspace-independence
- Who recommended it: Matt Mullenweg
- Key takeaway: Mullenweg says it is an apt time to revisit the text roughly 30 years later and praises its poetry
- Why it matters: It is an explicit recommendation to go back to an older primary text, not just commentary about the internet
“Governments of the Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and steel... You have no sovereignty where we gather.”
Pattern across today’s recommendations
The common thread is a bias toward foundations over novelty: Younis tells founders to read old books, Mullenweg revives a 30-year-old internet text, Lütke links intelligence to computing as a basic explanatory lens, and his strongest practical pick is a stripped-down repo that exposes the mechanics of model research .
Prairie Routes Research
Angie Setzer
Successful Farming
1) Market Movers
- Global / North America / Europe — nitrogen remains the clearest market driver. More than 30% of world urea trade moves through the now-closed Strait of Hormuz, and Iran represents 25% of global export surplus . Because urea trade is concentrated among a small number of firms and manufacturing sites, net importers such as North America and Europe have few alternatives; the source expects prices to keep rising until demand falls enough to match the lost supply . North American demand is rising as farms head toward seeding with less fertilizer booked than they want .
- U.S. grain trade — positioning has turned hostile to bearish old-crop views. GrainStats said many analysts who viewed old-crop balances as bearish were stopped out .
- Energy complex — fuel remains part of the farm margin story. Gasoline futures were cited at 3.10, while commentary stressed that price stability still matters and that corn-based homegrown fuel helps stabilize energy security .
2) Innovation Spotlight
- China, Daba Mountains — balanced feeding changed poultry economics. A 1,000-bird mountain-chicken flock fed one daily corn ration was still below standard sale weight at 8 months, with birds around 4 jin versus a 5-jin standard at 6 months . The diagnosis was that corn supplied energy but not enough protein or vitamins for birds walking 50,000-60,000 steps a day . Switching to a ration built around crushed corn, bean cake, and vitamins, and installing feeders and waterers at one per 25 birds, shortened the cycle to 6 months and lifted output to 5-6 jin . Daily feeding cost rose from about 300 yuan to 350 yuan, but total cost fell from about 72,000 yuan to 63,000 yuan because the flock finished earlier, a savings of about 9,000 yuan .
- North America — nitrogen-use efficiency options are getting more practical attention. One advisory said around half of conventionally applied urea runs off or gases off before reaching roots, making targeted foliar-applied melted urea a way to feed the crop when nitrogen is converted more efficiently into yield and protein . Another option is legume intercropping, which fixes atmospheric nitrogen and can still feed conventional markets where seed-cleaning plants can separate the harvested mix .
- China, Jiangsu — trust-based ag retail can improve price realization. One operator said genuine old geese cannot be sold at the unrealistically low prices seen online, with poor-quality offers eroding buyer trust . The response was a hybrid of livestream selling plus offline community-store pickup and inspection so buyers could verify product quality before paying; more than 100 geese sold in 15 minutes under that model .
3) Regional Developments
- Australia — sheep movement and wet summers remain a disease trigger. The source said sheep movement spreads foot rot and described significant issues in northern Victoria after a wet summer, including in places that had not seen the disease for years . It also noted that sheep bought years earlier can still be the source of a later problem . Crossbred sheep from higher-rainfall areas can carry strains without strong expression, creating risk when introduced into merino systems .
- China, Fujian and Yunnan — specialty fungi producers are differentiating through cultivation and processing. In Gutian, silver-ear substrate supplemented with Chinese herbs increased mycelium density and gel content, while broken-wall processing was used to preserve leaf shape and cut cooking time to about 10 minutes . In Yongsheng, golden ear was moved from a white juvenile stage into a double-layer house where light, temperature, and humidity drove color change; harvest standards centered on fist-sized, golden-yellow, elastic fruiting bodies .
- China, Jiangsu — provenance-led livestock and aquaculture remain part of rural branding. Chenjia Village markets semi-free-range old geese raised under peach trees and freshwater crabs grown with water grass that serves as feed, shelter, and predator protection .
4) Best Practices
Grains and nitrogen
- If land cannot shift away from high-nitrogen crops, one advisory was to secure upcoming fertilizer needs quickly because retail first-in-first-out pricing means future local prices will reflect today's higher replacement costs .
- Where growers need to cut nitrogen without giving up yield, the same source points to two levers: better timing through foliar-applied melted urea and biological substitution through legume intercropping .
Crop protection
- The source set also flagged nozzle choice and maintenance as a controllable factor in herbicide performance .
Sheep biosecurity
Surveillance is critical. Biosecurity is really important.
- Buy only from sources willing to declare they are free of virulent foot rot; if they will not declare, avoid the purchase .
- Keep purchased sheep isolated until a warm, wet spread period occurs so latent infections have a chance to express; in some areas that may mean holding them separately for up to two years .
- After summer eradication programs, either continue vaccination or intensify inspection by catching and tipping sheep to look for under-running; keep any breakdown mob isolated and cull low-value groups if needed .
Poultry
- In very active free-range systems, corn-only feeding can underperform because it supplies energy but not enough protein and vitamins for growth . The quantified China example used crushed corn, bean cake, vitamins, and one feeder and one waterer per 25 birds .
- In one Sichuan black-chicken system, chicks received Marek's vaccine within 24 hours, were given herbal soup early, and were rotated through pine forest with corn and pumpkin supplements; the operator reported survival above 90% .
- For catching free-range chickens, nighttime handling can be easier because the birds' night blindness reduces escape response .
5) Input Markets
- Fertilizer — North America / Europe. Urea remains supply-driven, with more than 30% of global trade moving through Hormuz and no easy alternative supply for net importers if disruptions persist . North American farms are already approaching seeding with less nitrogen booked than they want .
- Procurement — local pricing. Retail FIFO inventory practices mean future farmgate fertilizer prices will reflect today's higher wholesale purchases, which argues for earlier coverage where needs are unavoidable .
- Feed — poultry economics. The China mountain-chicken case showed that spending 50 yuan more per day on balanced feed still reduced total cost because it cut the growout cycle by about two months .
- Chemicals and fuel. The source set offered little hard price discovery for crop protection, but it did point to application efficiency through nozzle maintenance . On fuel, gasoline futures were cited at 3.10 .
6) Forward Outlook
- Spring 2026 planning — fertilizer exposure stays front and center. If the war continues, the source expects further disruptions in urea and the energy products derived from it . The crops most exposed in the source material were high-nitrogen systems such as corn and canola .
- Marketing discipline — schedule risk reviews. One grain-marketing note said regular check-ins are often what is missing, and that producers should review markets with a focus on managing physical risk, not just price talk . That advice matters more when bearish old-crop views are being stopped out .
- Australia — watch wet weather windows. Foot rot may stay hidden in dry periods and then express during warm, wet conditions, so seasonal surveillance becomes more important as moisture returns .
- Soils — circular-input systems are an emerging watch item. A Colorado project is testing whether mycelium can turn wood waste from wildfire-mitigation work into a resource for depleted prairie soils .
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