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Harness Beats Hype: Test-First Agent Loops, Pi, and Monty
Mar 15
5 min read
84 docs
tobi lutke
Armin Ronacher ⇌
Armin Ronacher
+6
Simon Willison’s test-first agent playbook was the clearest signal today, while Pi and Monty showed where serious users are pushing the harness layer: tighter context control, typed execution, and better review loops. This brief pulls out the concrete workflows, model-routing patterns, and repos worth stealing from.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Simon Willison published the clearest public playbook today for making coding agents less magical and more repeatable: start every session with the exact test command, tell the agent to use red-green TDD, then force a manual curl pass after the tests because green suites still miss real bugs . The bigger cross-source takeaway: the wins are coming from harness discipline—tests, templates, rewinds, scoped workers, and sandboxes—not from giving one model unlimited rope .

"Tests are no longer even remotely optional."

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Pi — minimal system prompt, top-five benchmark leaderboard performance with only basic file/bash tools, and strong context controls. The real signal is model routing: Haiku for question extraction, Sonnet 4.6 for well-scoped workers, Codex for review; Armin says that level of control matters because hidden harness changes and context injections kept breaking his Claude Code workflows
  • Monty + Pydantic AI — typed host functions, built-in TY type checking before execution, and in-process execution measured in ~800ns hot loops / single-digit microseconds. Samuel Colvin positions it as useful when a full sandbox is too slow or too awkward to self-host
  • Claude Code + Gemini CLI + Codex — Samuel mostly codes in Claude Code, uses Gemini CLI for fast whole-branch review reports, then points Claude Code at the report to implement fixes; Codex is a second reviewer when he wants a more agentic investigation
  • OpenClaw — next release adds /btw, a small but useful primitive: you can ask agents questions even while they are busy working. Docs are already up

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Simon’s default session loop
    1. Tell the agent how to run tests (uv run pytest)
    2. Add: use red-green TDD
    3. After codegen, have it start the server in the background and exercise the API with curl
    4. If you want a readable audit trail, tell it to use Showboat so it writes a Markdown log of the manual test run
  • Conformance-first implementation — Simon’s Datasette file-upload trick: ask the agent to build a test suite that passes against multiple reference implementations, then implement your own version against that shared behavior
  • Seed the repo so agents copy the right things
    • Use templates with tests, README, and CI
    • Keep at least a couple tests in your preferred style
    • Agents are extremely consistent at following existing patterns, so good scaffolding compounds
  • Use sub-agents surgically, not as a feature factory
    • Pi users keep 40-60% of context free by planning first, breaking work into todos, sending defined tasks to Sonnet 4.6 workers, then rewinding to a warm parent context for polish
    • Armin’s caution: sub-agents help with exploration and parallel search, but if you still read most of the code, swarms can just hand you too much to review
  • Security hygiene that survives model churn
    • Avoid the “lethal trifecta”: private data + malicious instructions + an exfiltration path
    • Containerization protects the host, but Armin says it does not solve secret exfiltration; Simon prefers Claude Code on the web when he wants the work contained off his laptop
    • Do not clone prod data to local laptops; generate mock users and edge cases instead
  • Two small workflow unlocks
    • Armin now routinely lets agents write small Python scripts instead of JavaScript because uv run made dependency handling simple enough
    • git bisect gets much easier to drive through an agent loop

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Simon Willison — dropped a quote-rich Pragmatic Summit fireside chat and notes; worth it for the TDD/manual validation/safety playbook and for his explicit rejection of “nobody reads code” workflows in security-sensitive contexts
  • Armin Ronacher — high-signal because he keeps surfacing small workflow changes that actually matter: uv run, agent-friendly git bisect, and real /autoresearch usage on MiniJinja
  • Samuel Colvin — strongest current voice on type safety, constrained host functions, and mixing models for review vs execution
  • Peter Steinberger — worth following for OpenClaw tooling, but also for the framing: this is “agentic engineering,” not sloppy vibe coding; you still need thinking, testing, debugging, and iteration
  • Dimitri — useful counterweight to autonomy hype: hands-off codegen currently tops out around a couple thousand lines of standard code, and enterprise rollouts are likely to force a review-heavy phase first

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 11:23-13:08 — Latent Space / Samuel Colvin: The cleanest explanation today of when coding agents jump from “a bit faster” to roughly 100x faster: known internals, known API, easy tests, and no bikeshedding about the interface .
  • 65:20-68:23 — Pi AMA: Armin’s take on memory for coding agents is worth hearing in full: the codebase is the source of truth, and agentic search beats hauling around stale summaries .
  • 27:45-29:56 — TheStandup / Dimitri: Useful reality check if your company is mandating AI use: the likely near-term outcome is a review-heavy workflow that many engineers will hate .

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Pi extension stack — Todos, Answer, screenshot/debug tooling, and patch-based multi-edit experiments are where the project feels differentiated right now
  • pi-autoresearch — now past the toy stage: Armin ran it overnight on MiniJinja, got many perf improvements, and is reviewing the resulting PRs one by one. Context: MiniJinja PR #884
  • Showboat — Simon’s new agent QA tool that turns manual test execution into a Markdown artifact you can actually inspect later
  • lossless-claw + qmd memory plugin — if OpenClaw’s stock memory is weak for your use case, steipete is explicitly pointing people to these alternatives

Editorial take: the durable edge right now is harness design, not raw model bravado—tests, context boundaries, and constrained execution keep showing up in every workflow that actually works.

An AI Essay That Changed Garry Tan’s Thinking, and a Useful World-Models Taxonomy
Mar 15
4 min read
133 docs
SXSW
Paul Graham
Garry Tan
+2
Garry Tan provides today’s strongest signal, saying a Sam Altman essay changed how he thinks about what builders should do next in AI. The rest of the set includes his shorter book recommendation, Scott Belsky’s endorsed world-models taxonomy, and one repeat-view cultural pick from Paul Graham.

Strongest signal: the Sam Altman essay Garry Tan says "opened my eyes"

Among today’s items, this is the clearest recommendation tied to a change in thinking. Tan says a Sam Altman essay he refers to as Age of Intelligence "really opened my eyes" to what he thinks builders should do next .

"His essay of Age of Intelligence was what really opened my eyes to what I think we should do from here, which is I think it’s time for us to boil the oceans."

  • Title:Age of Intelligence (as Garry Tan names it)
  • Content type: Essay
  • Author/creator: Sam Altman
  • Who recommended it: Garry Tan
  • Key takeaway: Tan says it changed how he thinks about what to do from here and pairs that with criticism of what he sees as too much doomerism from some frontier labs
  • Why it matters: This is the strongest signal in the batch because the endorsement is explicitly about changed thinking, not generic praise

Same recommender, much shorter format

Tan also reaches for a very different kind of resource: a compact book he describes as simple but foundational .

  • Title:Who Moved My Cheese
  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator:Not specified in the provided material
  • Who recommended it: Garry Tan
  • Key takeaway: He calls it "a short, very simple book" and also "the defining" one
  • Why it matters: The strength of the endorsement stands out given how compact he says the book is

Best map for a crowded AI topic

Scott Belsky’s most useful recommendation today is an explanatory X thread by @zhuokaiz that he calls "good posts on blurring lines of varied approaches to so-called world models…"

"good posts on blurring lines of varied approaches to so-called world models…"

  • Title:Five categories of world models
  • Content type: X thread
  • Author/creator: @zhuokaiz
  • Link/URL:https://x.com/zhuokaiz/status/2032201769053212682
  • Who recommended it: Scott Belsky
  • Key takeaway: The thread is useful because it does not flatten "world models" into one idea; it organizes the space into JEPA, spatial intelligence, learned simulation, NVIDIA Cosmos, and active inference
  • Why it matters: For readers trying to get oriented quickly, a five-part taxonomy is more actionable than treating the whole field as a single bucket

A few concrete anchors from the thread:

  • JEPA / V-JEPA 2: latent-space prediction instead of pixel reconstruction; after large-scale video pretraining, just 62 hours of robot data is described as enough for zero-shot planning
  • Spatial intelligence / Marble: persistent 3D environments that can be generated from images, text, video, or 3D layouts
  • Learned simulation: the thread argues generative video models and RL world models are converging around the same need—simulating how actions change environments over longer horizons
  • NVIDIA Cosmos: positioned as a platform play spanning data curation, tokenization, training, and deployment rather than one world model alone
  • Active inference / AXIOM: an object-centric, Bayesian alternative to monolithic neural world models, with robotics examples built around hierarchical agents and online inference

One offbeat repeat-view pick

This is the outlier in today’s set, but it is still a clear organic recommendation because Graham emphasizes repeat viewing, not novelty .

  • Title:The Larry Sanders Show
  • Content type: Show / series
  • Author/creator:Not specified in the provided material
  • Who recommended it: Paul Graham
  • Key takeaway: He says the show is "so amazing," says he is watching it again "for about the fourth time," and calls it "brilliant people skewering a world they know all too well"
  • Why it matters: The repeat-viewing detail makes this feel more durable than a one-off mention

What stands out

The most useful recommendations today do one of two things: they either clearly change a leader’s posture or they make a crowded area legible. Garry Tan’s Sam Altman essay recommendation is strong because he explicitly says it reframed what to do next, while Scott Belsky’s thread recommendation is useful because it gives readers a compact map of competing world-model approaches .

OpenAI Broadens Its Stack as Agent Infrastructure and AI Biology Advance
Mar 15
4 min read
146 docs
Aravind Srinivas
vittorio
Sam Altman
+7
Sam Altman outlined a broader OpenAI strategy around enterprise coding, chips, supply chains, and a less-exclusive Microsoft partnership. Elsewhere, new agent infrastructure and open computer-use data arrived, AI biology drew unusual attention, and Nando de Freitas called for limits on autonomous weapons.

Platform strategy

OpenAI leans further into coding, chips, and a broader partner model

Sam Altman said ChatGPT is growing strongly and that Codex has shown especially strong momentum, with most enterprise demand still centered on coding and broader knowledge-work adoption expected over the coming year . He also said OpenAI now expects to rely on a richer semiconductor portfolio than it first thought—partnering with Nvidia and Cerebras while building its own inference chip—and warned that the AI stack is tight enough that one broken layer could cause knock-on effects .

"The partnership between Microsoft and OpenAI remains of paramount importance."

Altman added that the Microsoft relationship is still crucial but less exclusive on both sides than it was a few years ago, with OpenAI working with other infrastructure partners and Microsoft using other model families too .

Why it matters: OpenAI is talking less like a single-model lab and more like a company managing enterprise demand, chip supply, and a diversified infrastructure ecosystem .

Perplexity gets a new distribution lever

Perplexity said its Android app has passed 100 million cumulative downloads, and that figure does not yet include the broader rollout of Samsung native integration that Aravind Srinivas said is still ahead . That gives the company both a large installed base and an additional handset-driven distribution channel .

Why it matters: Consumer AI competition is increasingly about distribution as well as models, and Samsung integration could materially extend Perplexity's reach .

Agent infrastructure

Pydantic launches Monty for safer, lower-latency agent code execution

Pydantic launched Monty, a Rust-based Python interpreter for AI agents, positioned between simple tool calling and full sandboxes . Samuel Colvin said the focus is safe, self-hostable execution with tight control over what code can do: the system uses registered host functions and type checking, while in-process execution can run in under a microsecond in hot loops versus roughly one second to create a Daytona sandbox in his comparison . Early traction is notable, with 6,000 GitHub stars, 27,000 downloads last week, and serializable agents defined in TOML coming to Pydantic AI .

Why it matters: Monty is built around practical production constraints—latency, self-hosting, and controllable execution—rather than just agent demos .

Markov AI opens a large computer-use dataset

Markov AI said it is releasing what it calls the world's largest open-source dataset of computer-use recordings: more than 10,000 hours across tools including Salesforce, Blender, and Photoshop, aimed at automating more white-collar work . Thomas Wolf's brief "wow!" response showed the launch quickly drew notice .

Why it matters: The release packages large-scale recordings from real software workflows into open data explicitly aimed at computer-use automation .

High-stakes applications and safety

A canine cancer-vaccine story becomes a rallying point for AI biology

A case amplified by Greg Brockman, Demis Hassabis, and Aravind Srinivas described an Australian with no biology background who paid $3,000 to sequence his rescue dog's tumor DNA, used ChatGPT and AlphaFold to identify mutated proteins and design a custom mRNA cancer vaccine, and then received ethics approval to administer it . According to the shared account, the first injection halved the tumor and improved the dog's condition; Hassabis called it a "cool use case of AlphaFold" and "just the beginning of digital biology" .

"Cool use case of AlphaFold, this is just the beginning of digital biology!"

Why it matters: Whatever one makes of the broader rhetoric around the story, the level of attention from Greg Brockman, Demis Hassabis, and Aravind Srinivas made AI-enabled biology one of the day's clearest discussion points .

Nando de Freitas calls for a moratorium on autonomous weapons

Nando de Freitas called for a moratorium on AI autonomous weapons, arguing that cheap drones have already shown destructive effectiveness and that turning them into more capable agentic weapons is now technically feasible .

"It’s time to have a moratorium on AI autonomous weapons."

Why it matters: As the ecosystem pushes agent capabilities into software and biology, leading researchers are also arguing that the same technical progress has immediate military implications .

Tab Count, Lovable's Launch Engine, and Practical AI Monetization
Mar 15
9 min read
40 docs
20VC with Harry Stebbings
andrew chen
Elena Verna
+2
This issue centers on a simple AI opportunity filter—tab count—plus practical lessons from Lovable on launch cadence, engagement metrics, freemium, and monetization. It also includes a workflow-first B2B case study and a grounded look at Product Owner versus IT requirements roles.

Big Ideas

1) Tab count is a fast AI opportunity filter

Andrew Chen's heuristic is simple: the number of browser tabs or alt-tabs in a workflow is a proxy for how much AI can compress that work into a single experience . His example is person/company research, which used to require LinkedIn, X, Google, notes, and Slack, but can now be collapsed into one prompt in about 10 seconds . He says the biggest opportunities sit in workflows where users alt-tab 20+ times per task, especially in sales, recruiting, research, compliance, and procurement .

Why it matters: it gives PMs a concrete way to prioritize AI work around workflow compression rather than novelty .
How to apply: audit a few high-frequency jobs your users perform, count tabs and copy-paste loops, and prioritize the flows with the most context-switching first .

"AI doesn’t need to be superintelligent to be wildly useful. it just needs to be good enough to close the tabs"

2) AI monetization needs flexibility, not pricing dogma

Elena Verna argues current monetization models are not right for every AI company because many teams are still passing through expensive LLM costs to users . She expects LLM costs to fall and says monetization will need to move toward outcomes as models commoditize . She is also explicit that subscription-only monetization is a poor fit for bursty usage; at Lovable, adding top-ups on top of subscription increased monetization capture and improved retention .

Why it matters: if usage is uneven and model costs are moving, pricing becomes part of product strategy, not a one-time packaging decision .
How to apply: test ad hoc purchases alongside subscription for bursty use cases, and make pricing changes operationally easy instead of treating them as annual events .

3) For productivity tools, meaningful frequency beats intensity

Verna frames activation around product engagement: define the aha moment, the steps to reach it, and the early habit loops that bring users back . She argues intensity can be an anti-metric for simple productivity tools, because more time may mean users are stuck, while daily or weekly usage sits in the habitual zone and monthly usage drifts into the forgettable zone . She also warns against login-based metrics and prefers value-creating actions instead .

Why it matters: teams often mistake activity for value .
How to apply: choose one or two actions that clearly represent user value, then track repeat frequency on a daily or weekly basis rather than visits or logins .

4) "Minimum lovable" is part of the product bar

Verna argues teams should aim for a minimum lovable product in every feature, because software is increasingly judged by the emotion, trust, and connection it creates, not just by basic functionality . In her framing, the progression is: it works, users trust it, then users connect with it .

Why it matters: she argues personality and emotional connection are becoming a minimum bar to kickstart growth .
How to apply: during reviews, evaluate not just whether a feature works, but whether it creates trust and a recognizable product feel .

Tactical Playbook

1) Run a tab-count audit before you scope an AI feature

Use this sequence:

  1. List the tabs, docs, and tools a user opens to finish one job; Chen's core idea is that tab count signals compressibility .
  2. Mark every copy-paste handoff; Chen says eliminating 6+ tabs and a copy-paste loop is immediately useful to users .
  3. Prioritize jobs with extreme context switching; he highlights workflows with 20+ alt-tabs per task .
  4. Prototype the whole flow as one AI-native experience; his example collapses LinkedIn, X, Google, notes, and Slack into a single prompt-driven workflow .

Why it matters: this turns abstract AI brainstorming into a concrete prioritization method .

2) Redefine activation around value, not logins

A practical setup from Verna's framework:

  1. Write down the user's aha moment and the steps required to get there .
  2. Decide which action proves value; at Lovable, examples include building an app or receiving traffic on a published app .
  3. Track whether that action repeats daily or weekly, because that is the habitual zone Verna wants to see .
  4. Treat raw logins as a vanity metric and be careful with time-spent metrics if your product is supposed to feel simple .

Why it matters: it aligns your core metric with value creation instead of mere presence .

3) Use a two-speed launch system

Lovable's operating rhythm suggests a clear playbook:

  1. Ship customer-facing improvements daily, not just bug fixes .
  2. Let the people closest to the work share releases; Lovable encourages engineers to post launches socially and then "beeswarms" those posts for amplification .
  3. Reserve major narrative effort for bundled launches every 1-2 months, when multiple capabilities add up to a story and a step-function change .
  4. Treat ongoing visibility as part of retention and resurrection, not just acquisition; Verna says the constant noise brings people back because the product feels alive and evolving .

Why it matters: it separates release velocity from storytelling cadence without losing either .

4) Treat freemium as a marketing channel with its own metric

Verna's framing is unusually direct: a free user has value if they get delighted and then market the product on your behalf . Lovable tracks this with a "lovable score" that measures how often users refer the product to someone else .

How to apply:

  • Define what a successful free experience looks like before conversion .
  • Track referral behavior explicitly, not just free-to-paid conversion .
  • Protect the parts of the free experience most likely to create delight and sharing .

Why it matters: it gives PMs a clearer way to value free usage in products where word of mouth matters .

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Lovable turned shipping cadence into retention infrastructure

At Lovable, engineering releases improvements every day, employees post about those releases on social, the company amplifies them internally, and marketing concentrates on bigger tier-one launches every 1-2 months . Verna says that constant noise is part of retention and resurrection because users feel the product is "living, breathing" and worth revisiting .

Key takeaway: if your category is moving quickly, consistent visible improvement can be part of the product experience, not just a marketing layer .

2) A Romanian accountant SaaS validated the workflow before polishing the brand

One founder started with a very specific problem: accountants were spending 3-5 hours each month chasing invoices, bank statements, and receipts over WhatsApp . Validation was lightweight and direct: they messaged about 50 Romanian accountants on WhatsApp, got repeated confirmation, and built the MVP in 2 weeks . The product itself stayed close to the workflow: each client gets a personal upload link with no account or onboarding, and the accountant sees a dashboard showing who sent documents and who did not . On day one, the product saw 172 visitors, 18 signup reaches, 2 registered accounts, 2 Stripe checkout visits, and a 59% bounce rate .

A commenter highlighted the strongest decision: the product started from a real workflow rather than "cool tech," and recommended 5-10 Zoom walkthroughs of actual month-end work to surface edge cases before chasing more traffic . The founder's own lesson was that niche, non-English B2B can be slow, but each signup is more likely to be a real customer than a curiosity click .

Key takeaway: tight workflow validation plus narrow positioning can produce higher-signal early learning than broad top-of-funnel traffic .

3) Lovable used top-ups to fit bursty AI usage

Verna says Lovable introduced ad hoc top-ups on top of subscription and the response was "absolutely wild" . Her claim is that this kind of purchase adds incrementally rather than cannibalizing recurring revenue, and that retention improves when users get this flexibility .

Key takeaway: when usage comes in bursts, a hybrid pricing model can capture more value than subscription alone .

Career Corner

1) Compare roles by daily work loop, not just by title

In one Product Management community thread, the choice was between an IT Requirements Engineer role in IAM and a Product Owner role in another area . The IT Requirements Engineer description centered on gathering requirements for identity and access management systems and translating business needs into technical specifications , while the Product Owner role centered on stakeholder work, product requirements, backlog prioritization, and guiding development teams .

Why it matters: the titles sound adjacent, but the day-to-day work is different .
How to apply: evaluate career options against growth, compensation, job security, work-life balance, domain interest, longevity, and pay—not title prestige alone .

2) Use community signals carefully when assessing AI exposure

In the same thread, one commenter said an IT Requirements Engineer sounds closer to a Business Analyst role . Another suggested IAM may be more repetitive, but also less likely to be handed over to AI than a Product Owner role .

Why it matters: job security discussions are already being filtered through assumptions about which work AI will and will not absorb .
How to apply: treat this as community signal, not settled fact, and stress-test any role by asking which parts of the job are domain-heavy, stakeholder-heavy, or easy to standardize .

3) Pricing and engagement design are becoming stronger PM differentiators in AI products

Across Verna's interview, two recurring responsibilities stand out: defining meaningful engagement signals instead of vanity metrics and building the infrastructure to test monetization model changes quickly as AI costs and economics shift .

Why it matters: these are product problems that cannot be solved by feature delivery alone .
How to apply: if you want to broaden your scope, volunteer for activation metric design or pricing and packaging experiments rather than limiting yourself to backlog management .

Tools & Resources

  • Andrew Chen's tab-count post — a compact framework for identifying AI opportunities by counting tabs, alt-tabs, and copy-paste loops in a workflow .
  • Tab-count worksheet — create a simple table with columns for job-to-be-done, tabs opened, copy-paste handoffs, and whether the flow could be collapsed into one AI-native experience .
  • Elena Verna: How Lovable Launches Product & Hacks Social to Go Viral — useful for PMs working on launch cadence, activation metrics, freemium, and AI monetization design .
  • Meaningful action scorecard — document the aha moment, the action that proves value, the target frequency, and the anti-metric you want to avoid, such as logins or excessive time spent .
  • Romanian accountant workflow-first case study — a useful teardown of direct problem validation, narrow MVP scope, simple pricing, and day-one funnel metrics in a niche B2B market .
AI-for-Science Claims, Agent Learning Advances, and Open-Stack Inference Gains
Mar 15
9 min read
451 docs
Nous Research
John Carmack
Cursor
+32
This brief covers a high-profile AI-assisted cancer-vaccine case and the skepticism it triggered, new results on continual agent learning and gradient-free search, faster open-source inference tooling, and key product, funding, and compliance developments across the AI market.

Top Stories

Why it matters: This cycle was defined by three practical shifts: AI is moving closer to high-stakes real-world work, agent research is getting more realistic about what actually transfers, and open-source tooling is narrowing the gap with specialized infrastructure.

1) A reported AI-designed cancer vaccine for a dog sparked both excitement and pushback

Posts this cycle circulated an Australian report describing an AI consultant with no biology training using ChatGPT and AlphaFold to design a personalized mRNA cancer vaccine for his rescue dog after sequencing the tumor DNA; multiple posts citing the report said the tumor shrank by about half after treatment . UNSW researchers highlighted the case as striking, with Dr. Kate Michie noting that a non-scientist had been able to do it, and genomics director Martin Smith asking why such approaches are not being rolled out more broadly . Demis Hassabis called it a cool AlphaFold use case and said it was the beginning of digital biology .

"If we can do this for a dog, why aren’t we rolling this out to all humans with cancer?"

At the same time, critics warned against turning the episode into an inflated generic AI-cures-cancer narrative .

Impact: AI biology is producing compelling case studies that expand imagination about personalized medicine, but the reaction also shows that validation and skepticism will matter as much as capability.

2) Agent learning results are getting more realistic about what transfers

A new agent-generalization study found that RL fine-tuning produces large gains within the same environment—easy WebShop training improved hard-task performance by 60+ points—but only weak transfer to unseen environments, with average gains of 3.3–3.4 points and one setting dropping WebShop from 28.6 to 10.3 . The same paper found sequential training across five environments could match joint training with minimal forgetting . Separately, XSkill showed that agents can improve over time without parameter updates by accumulating reusable experiences and skills from past trajectories, lifting Gemini-3-Flash success from 33.6% to 40.3% while cutting tool errors from 29.9% to 16.3% .

Impact: The field is moving away from the idea that RL alone will create broadly capable agents, and toward memory, reuse, and sequential learning.

3) Open-source inference is getting faster without a separate runtime tax

PagedAttention, the kernel behind vLLM’s speed, now ships natively in Hugging Face Transformers CB, reaching 84% of vLLM throughput on a single GPU with no extra runtime . Hugging Face Transformers also gained FlashAttention 4 support in v5, with reported gains of 3.7x over FA2 and 22–32x lower compile time than FA3 .

Impact: Performance once associated with specialized serving stacks is moving into mainstream open tooling, reducing integration complexity for teams shipping models.

4) AI-for-science continues to attract both capital and new search methods

Mirendil, a startup from former Anthropic researchers, is reportedly raising $175 million at a $1 billion valuation to build systems for long-term scientific reasoning in biology and materials science . On the research side, Sakana AI’s open-source ShinkaEvolve combined LLMs with evolutionary search to reach a new state of the art on circle packing in only 150 LLM calls, improve ALE-Bench competitive-programming results, and discover a new MoE load-balancing loss; the work will be presented at ICLR 2026 .

Impact: AI-for-science is no longer just about answering questions; it is increasingly about automating search over programs, experiments, and reasoning strategies.

5) Copyright risk is now delaying model launches

ByteDance delayed the global launch of Seedance 2.0 after copyright complaints from major Hollywood studios including Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount Skydance, and Netflix . The company is reportedly strengthening guardrails and moderation systems to prevent AI-generated copyright violations before expanding internationally .

Impact: For generative media products, rights management and moderation are becoming launch-gating requirements, not post-launch clean-up.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: The most useful research this cycle focused on making agents retain capabilities over time, improving optimization without standard RL assumptions, and identifying bottlenecks inside current model architectures.

Continual learning for agents is getting more structured

XSkill separates reusable experiences for action-level tool selection from skills for task-level planning and workflows, extracting both from successful and failed rollouts via cross-rollout critique and then retrieving them at inference time based on the current visual context . That produced gains across five benchmarks and four backbone models, including the Gemini-3-Flash jump from 33.6% to 40.3% success and a drop in tool errors from 29.9% to 16.3% .

For embodied agents, a separate continual-RL recipe for large VLA models combined a pretrained VLA, LoRA, and on-policy RL. The authors say the setup prevents catastrophic forgetting, preserves zero-shot ability, and often beats more complex continual-learning methods . They attribute this to three factors: pretrained VLAs already carrying broad knowledge, LoRA restricting updates to a low-rank subspace, and on-policy RL making gradual policy changes .

Gradient-free and evolutionary methods are gaining traction

Evolution Strategies were highlighted as a gradient-free alternative to RL for post-training: perturb parameters, score the resulting models, and update toward the best-performing directions . Reported results included Countdown improvements to 60.5% on Qwen-2.5-3B versus 32.5% for GRPO, plus large gains on ARC-AGI and Sudoku .

ShinkaEvolve pushed the search idea further by using adaptive parent sampling, novelty-based rejection filtering, and a bandit-based LLM ensemble to make program evolution more sample-efficient . Beyond circle packing, the framework improved a 5th-place ALE-Bench solution to 2nd place and found a new load-balancing loss for MoE models that improved performance and perplexity .

Two model-level papers worth tracking

  • GLM-OCR: Z.ai released the technical report for GLM-OCR after the model passed 3 million downloads . The system combines a 0.4B CogViT encoder with a 0.5B GLM decoder, uses multi-token prediction to speed deterministic OCR, and employs a two-stage layout-analysis plus region-recognition pipeline to reach state-of-the-art results in document parsing and table structure recovery .
  • Lost in Backpropagation: A new paper argues the LM head is a structural optimization bottleneck because backpropagating through a rank-D linear layer into a V-dimensional vocabulary suppresses 95–99% of gradient information, degrading learning efficiency across LLM architectures .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: Product work is moving beyond chat into workflow-native content generation, broader access, and lower-friction deployment for developers.

Google turns Workspace into a single-prompt content engine

Google upgraded Gemini for Workspace so it can generate fully formed Docs, Sheets, and Slides by pulling information from Gmail, Drive, and Chat in one step . The update turns Workspace into a single-prompt content creation engine .

Anthropic expands available Claude capacity for builders

Anthropic said it is doubling Claude usage outside peak hours for the next two weeks, covering weekends and weekdays outside 5 a.m.–11 a.m. PT through March 27 . The expanded limits apply across Claude.ai, Cowork, and Claude Code .

Why it matters: This is a temporary promotion, but it lowers the cost of experimentation for users running heavier coding or research workflows.

Ollama updates cloud hardware and pricing for agent workflows

Ollama said its cloud now runs Kimi K2.5 and GLM-5 on NVIDIA B300 hardware, with faster throughput, lower latency, and reliable tool calls for integrations . It also highlighted fixed subscription tiers at $0, $20, and $100 to avoid surprise overage bills for workloads like Claude Code or OpenClaw .

Why it matters: Predictable pricing and better tool-call reliability matter for teams trying to operationalize agents rather than merely demo them.

Industry Moves

Why it matters: The commercial story is broadening from frontier model releases to distribution, AI-native workflow redesign, and capital aimed at domain-specific reasoning.

Mirendil targets scientific reasoning as a business

Former Anthropic researchers are using Mirendil to pursue long-term scientific reasoning for biology and materials science, backed by a reported $175 million raise at a $1 billion valuation . That places AI-for-science squarely in the venture-backed frontier stack rather than at the edge of research.

Perplexity keeps adding distribution

Perplexity crossed 100 million cumulative Android app downloads, and the company says a wider Samsung native integration is still ahead . That makes distribution—not just model quality—a more important part of the competitive picture.

Agent-first operating models are starting to show business results

Box CEO Aaron Levie argued that the big difference is not applying agents to an existing process but redesigning the process from scratch for agents that can write code, use APIs, connect systems, and work through unstructured data . OffDeal says that was its exact bet in investment banking: one banker can run 5–7 concurrent sell-side processes versus a 5–7 person team running one, and the company expects a two-person team to handle 15–20 deals within a year . OffDeal also argues incumbents will not see the same productivity gains by simply adding agent software to legacy workflows .

Why it matters: The business value may come less from buying a model subscription and more from redesigning work around code-executing agents.

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: This cycle’s policy signals were less about new laws and more about the practical governance issues slowing or shaping deployment: copyright, security, and training norms.

Copyright complaints are forcing pre-launch guardrails

ByteDance’s Seedance 2.0 delay is the clearest example this cycle: copyright complaints from major studios were enough to pause a global release, while stronger moderation and guardrails are being added before international expansion .

Japan’s AI strategy conversations are becoming more sector-specific

Sakana AI founder Ito Ren met former Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio to discuss generative AI, Sakana’s work in finance and defense, Japan’s possible AI strategy, and the security needs that come with broader deployment .

Open-source training norms remain contested

John Carmack said AI training on his million-plus lines of open-source code magnifies the value of the gift and that he is enthusiastic about it . Teknium echoed the position more directly: everything he puts out should be trained on .

Why it matters: Even without new regulation, the norms around what AI systems should be allowed to train on remain a live governance question.

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These smaller items help show where the ecosystem is getting more capable, more accessible, or more operational.

  • NVIDIA’s concept-driven synthetic data pipeline generated 15 million Python programming problems and reportedly improved Nemotron-Nano-v3 by 6 HumanEval points, from 73 to 79, when included in pretraining .
  • Cursor shared a new method for scoring models on agentic coding tasks, including comparisons of intelligence and efficiency inside Cursor .
  • Chrome 146 now includes a toggle that exposes the current live browsing session via MCP; the open-source chrome-cdp skill uses that to let coding agents see and interact with live Chrome sessions without a browser automation framework .
  • A Hermes-based Job Scout agent reportedly fetched 219 real job listings, scored them, researched companies, and generated a CSV tracker after roughly 12 hours from one prompt .
  • The Hermes Agent hackathon had 72 submissions with just over 24 hours remaining, after Nous increased the prize pool to $7,500 for first place .
  • OpenAI is expanding Codex meetups globally, with local workshops focused on workflows and shipping projects .
  • Posts citing infrastructure charts warned about a possible CPU shortage after earlier GPU and memory constraints, pointing to steep growth since December 2025 across compute providers .
Winter Wheat Freeze Risk and Turkey Poultry Disruption Lead the Cycle
Mar 15
5 min read
60 docs
Arlan Suderman
Successful Farming
Sencer Solakoglu
+5
Weather risk in winter wheat, Turkey's poultry export disruption, and North American soybean disease pressure lead this cycle's market watch. The brief also highlights measurable models from India, China, and the U.S. in farmer collectives, land monetization, desert remediation, and specialty livestock management.

Market Movers

  • Winter cereals / freeze risk: Arctic cold is likely to damage winter wheat over the next 2-3 days. March freezes tend to hit hardest in high-yield years, but a good spring can still support recovery through secondary and tertiary tillers. The key variables are rain and a long spring before heat arrives; the same source flagged the current ENSO phase as a potential complication .
  • North America / soybeans: Soybean cyst nematode remains a major yield risk. It was described as having a rapid life cycle, an estimated $1.5 billion annual yield-loss potential, and status as the most damaging soybean pathogen in North America .
  • Turkey / poultry and feed: A Turkish poultry-sector commentary said a white-meat export ban was imposed to restrain pre-Ramadan price increases despite rising costs. The same commentary said Turkey had been self-sufficient, exported 20% of production to more than 70 countries, sold chicken at about €1.5/kg versus €3/kg in Europe, and faced feed pressure because corn, wheat, and soy make up 80% of raw materials while corn trades at nearly double world prices .

Innovation Spotlight

  • India / farmer collectives: Spectrum says its model combines governance playbooks and quarterly audits, board and youth entrepreneurship bootcamps, shared packhouse and lab infrastructure, and working capital aligned with harvest cycles. It cited one collective moving 800 acres into organic vegetables, winning a retail contract, and doubling member dividends, alongside women-led spice units selling traceable products to metro stores. Its 2026 target is 120 branded, export-ready collectives .
  • United States / diversified land income: Infinite Outdoors said it has added more than 1.6 million acres of private land in six years. It cited a 40-acre Colorado property that moved from a few thousand dollars of annual lease income to $15,000-$20,000/year, while pairing access revenue with biologist-set harvest quotas and analysis showing when leaving field corners out of crop production can be offset by hunting income .
  • China / desert remediation as a production system: In Alashan, Inner Mongolia, saxaul trees are used for sand fixation and as hosts for Cistanche, a medicinal crop. The featured system combines 1.5-meter sand barriers and household water reuse for irrigation, and local income was cited at RMB 30,000-40,000/year once the tree-crop system was established .
  • Farm data / interoperability: John Deere Operations Center customers can access their farm data through the API and build custom dashboards, and a free tutorial is planned .

Regional Developments

  • China / Jiangxi muscovy ducks: Producers shifted from 3-month commodity muscovy ducks to ecological "old duck" systems with grow-out extended to more than 6 months because longer grow-out improved flavor and market value. That shift also raised management difficulty: males become more aggressive after 6-7 months in mixed flocks, and birds older than 5-6 months can fly short distances .
  • China / premium pork programs: In Jilin, a Northeast min pig × wild boar third-generation hybrid from the Jilin Academy of Agricultural Sciences is being raised for more than a year, with daily mountain exercise linked to a higher lean-meat rate. In Guizhou, Qianbei black pigs are mountain-raised on a slower schedule; the featured farm linked darker color, firmer texture, and visible marbling to higher activity, slower growth, and feed such as sweet potatoes and cabbage .
  • Turkey / export-market exposure: The Turkish poultry commentary also argued that war-related freight and proximity had improved Turkey's position in Middle East and European markets, but that the export ban risks ceding customers to Brazil if integrators cut output .

Best Practices

  • Winter cereals: After a March freeze, recovery potential still depends on follow-up moisture and a long spring before heat. Secondary and tertiary tillers can still support acceptable yield if those conditions hold .
  • Soybeans / SCN watchlist: Treat soybean cyst nematode as a primary yield threat in North American soybean planning because the pest cycles quickly and carries large loss potential .
  • Muscovy ducks: For flocks carried past 6 months, separate males and females after birds approach sexual maturity, clip 7-8 feathers beginning at the sixth feather on one wing only, and use same-color glasses on aggressive birds to reduce fighting. The economics were direct in the featured case: dead birds were valued at more than RMB 200 each, injured birds sold RMB 30-50 lower, and losses from 50-60 escaped birds reached about RMB 10,000.
  • Water-scarce restoration systems: In desert plantings, the featured system reused household wash water for tree establishment, used about 1.5-meter spacing in sand barriers to improve fixation, and paired revegetation with Cistanche so restoration also generated cash income .

Input Markets

The extracted notes were light on fertilizer pricing. The clearest input signals this cycle were in feed, crop protection, and machinery.

  • Feed / Turkey poultry: Corn, wheat, and soy were cited as 80% of poultry feed raw materials, with corn priced at nearly double world levels in the Turkish market commentary .
  • Crop protection / North America soybeans: SCN remains the clearest crop-protection pressure in the notes, with an estimated $1.5 billion annual yield-loss potential .
  • Machinery / hay equipment: For baler purchases, one equipment note said buying decisions are being shaped by operational efficiency versus upfront cost differences .

Forward Outlook

  • Near term / winter wheat and oats: The next 2-3 days are the immediate damage window from Arctic cold, and the recovery path still depends on rain and delayed heat .
  • Turkey / poultry: The Turkish industry commentary expects export restrictions to force production cuts and eventually raise domestic prices, while competitors such as Brazil move into affected customer markets .
  • India / organized value-add: Spectrum's stated 2026 plan is to incubate 120 collectives with their own brands, export readiness, and youth leaders .
  • Specialty livestock / flock planning: Producers holding muscovy ducks beyond 5-7 months need fight and flight controls in place before birds reach full maturity .

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Harness Beats Hype: Test-First Agent Loops, Pi, and Monty
Mar 15
5 min read
84 docs
tobi lutke
Armin Ronacher ⇌
Armin Ronacher
+6
Simon Willison’s test-first agent playbook was the clearest signal today, while Pi and Monty showed where serious users are pushing the harness layer: tighter context control, typed execution, and better review loops. This brief pulls out the concrete workflows, model-routing patterns, and repos worth stealing from.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Simon Willison published the clearest public playbook today for making coding agents less magical and more repeatable: start every session with the exact test command, tell the agent to use red-green TDD, then force a manual curl pass after the tests because green suites still miss real bugs . The bigger cross-source takeaway: the wins are coming from harness discipline—tests, templates, rewinds, scoped workers, and sandboxes—not from giving one model unlimited rope .

"Tests are no longer even remotely optional."

🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS

  • Pi — minimal system prompt, top-five benchmark leaderboard performance with only basic file/bash tools, and strong context controls. The real signal is model routing: Haiku for question extraction, Sonnet 4.6 for well-scoped workers, Codex for review; Armin says that level of control matters because hidden harness changes and context injections kept breaking his Claude Code workflows
  • Monty + Pydantic AI — typed host functions, built-in TY type checking before execution, and in-process execution measured in ~800ns hot loops / single-digit microseconds. Samuel Colvin positions it as useful when a full sandbox is too slow or too awkward to self-host
  • Claude Code + Gemini CLI + Codex — Samuel mostly codes in Claude Code, uses Gemini CLI for fast whole-branch review reports, then points Claude Code at the report to implement fixes; Codex is a second reviewer when he wants a more agentic investigation
  • OpenClaw — next release adds /btw, a small but useful primitive: you can ask agents questions even while they are busy working. Docs are already up

💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS

  • Simon’s default session loop
    1. Tell the agent how to run tests (uv run pytest)
    2. Add: use red-green TDD
    3. After codegen, have it start the server in the background and exercise the API with curl
    4. If you want a readable audit trail, tell it to use Showboat so it writes a Markdown log of the manual test run
  • Conformance-first implementation — Simon’s Datasette file-upload trick: ask the agent to build a test suite that passes against multiple reference implementations, then implement your own version against that shared behavior
  • Seed the repo so agents copy the right things
    • Use templates with tests, README, and CI
    • Keep at least a couple tests in your preferred style
    • Agents are extremely consistent at following existing patterns, so good scaffolding compounds
  • Use sub-agents surgically, not as a feature factory
    • Pi users keep 40-60% of context free by planning first, breaking work into todos, sending defined tasks to Sonnet 4.6 workers, then rewinding to a warm parent context for polish
    • Armin’s caution: sub-agents help with exploration and parallel search, but if you still read most of the code, swarms can just hand you too much to review
  • Security hygiene that survives model churn
    • Avoid the “lethal trifecta”: private data + malicious instructions + an exfiltration path
    • Containerization protects the host, but Armin says it does not solve secret exfiltration; Simon prefers Claude Code on the web when he wants the work contained off his laptop
    • Do not clone prod data to local laptops; generate mock users and edge cases instead
  • Two small workflow unlocks
    • Armin now routinely lets agents write small Python scripts instead of JavaScript because uv run made dependency handling simple enough
    • git bisect gets much easier to drive through an agent loop

👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH

  • Simon Willison — dropped a quote-rich Pragmatic Summit fireside chat and notes; worth it for the TDD/manual validation/safety playbook and for his explicit rejection of “nobody reads code” workflows in security-sensitive contexts
  • Armin Ronacher — high-signal because he keeps surfacing small workflow changes that actually matter: uv run, agent-friendly git bisect, and real /autoresearch usage on MiniJinja
  • Samuel Colvin — strongest current voice on type safety, constrained host functions, and mixing models for review vs execution
  • Peter Steinberger — worth following for OpenClaw tooling, but also for the framing: this is “agentic engineering,” not sloppy vibe coding; you still need thinking, testing, debugging, and iteration
  • Dimitri — useful counterweight to autonomy hype: hands-off codegen currently tops out around a couple thousand lines of standard code, and enterprise rollouts are likely to force a review-heavy phase first

🎬 WATCH & LISTEN

  • 11:23-13:08 — Latent Space / Samuel Colvin: The cleanest explanation today of when coding agents jump from “a bit faster” to roughly 100x faster: known internals, known API, easy tests, and no bikeshedding about the interface .
  • 65:20-68:23 — Pi AMA: Armin’s take on memory for coding agents is worth hearing in full: the codebase is the source of truth, and agentic search beats hauling around stale summaries .
  • 27:45-29:56 — TheStandup / Dimitri: Useful reality check if your company is mandating AI use: the likely near-term outcome is a review-heavy workflow that many engineers will hate .

📊 PROJECTS & REPOS

  • Pi extension stack — Todos, Answer, screenshot/debug tooling, and patch-based multi-edit experiments are where the project feels differentiated right now
  • pi-autoresearch — now past the toy stage: Armin ran it overnight on MiniJinja, got many perf improvements, and is reviewing the resulting PRs one by one. Context: MiniJinja PR #884
  • Showboat — Simon’s new agent QA tool that turns manual test execution into a Markdown artifact you can actually inspect later
  • lossless-claw + qmd memory plugin — if OpenClaw’s stock memory is weak for your use case, steipete is explicitly pointing people to these alternatives

Editorial take: the durable edge right now is harness design, not raw model bravado—tests, context boundaries, and constrained execution keep showing up in every workflow that actually works.

An AI Essay That Changed Garry Tan’s Thinking, and a Useful World-Models Taxonomy
Mar 15
4 min read
133 docs
SXSW
Paul Graham
Garry Tan
+2
Garry Tan provides today’s strongest signal, saying a Sam Altman essay changed how he thinks about what builders should do next in AI. The rest of the set includes his shorter book recommendation, Scott Belsky’s endorsed world-models taxonomy, and one repeat-view cultural pick from Paul Graham.

Strongest signal: the Sam Altman essay Garry Tan says "opened my eyes"

Among today’s items, this is the clearest recommendation tied to a change in thinking. Tan says a Sam Altman essay he refers to as Age of Intelligence "really opened my eyes" to what he thinks builders should do next .

"His essay of Age of Intelligence was what really opened my eyes to what I think we should do from here, which is I think it’s time for us to boil the oceans."

  • Title:Age of Intelligence (as Garry Tan names it)
  • Content type: Essay
  • Author/creator: Sam Altman
  • Who recommended it: Garry Tan
  • Key takeaway: Tan says it changed how he thinks about what to do from here and pairs that with criticism of what he sees as too much doomerism from some frontier labs
  • Why it matters: This is the strongest signal in the batch because the endorsement is explicitly about changed thinking, not generic praise

Same recommender, much shorter format

Tan also reaches for a very different kind of resource: a compact book he describes as simple but foundational .

  • Title:Who Moved My Cheese
  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator:Not specified in the provided material
  • Who recommended it: Garry Tan
  • Key takeaway: He calls it "a short, very simple book" and also "the defining" one
  • Why it matters: The strength of the endorsement stands out given how compact he says the book is

Best map for a crowded AI topic

Scott Belsky’s most useful recommendation today is an explanatory X thread by @zhuokaiz that he calls "good posts on blurring lines of varied approaches to so-called world models…"

"good posts on blurring lines of varied approaches to so-called world models…"

  • Title:Five categories of world models
  • Content type: X thread
  • Author/creator: @zhuokaiz
  • Link/URL:https://x.com/zhuokaiz/status/2032201769053212682
  • Who recommended it: Scott Belsky
  • Key takeaway: The thread is useful because it does not flatten "world models" into one idea; it organizes the space into JEPA, spatial intelligence, learned simulation, NVIDIA Cosmos, and active inference
  • Why it matters: For readers trying to get oriented quickly, a five-part taxonomy is more actionable than treating the whole field as a single bucket

A few concrete anchors from the thread:

  • JEPA / V-JEPA 2: latent-space prediction instead of pixel reconstruction; after large-scale video pretraining, just 62 hours of robot data is described as enough for zero-shot planning
  • Spatial intelligence / Marble: persistent 3D environments that can be generated from images, text, video, or 3D layouts
  • Learned simulation: the thread argues generative video models and RL world models are converging around the same need—simulating how actions change environments over longer horizons
  • NVIDIA Cosmos: positioned as a platform play spanning data curation, tokenization, training, and deployment rather than one world model alone
  • Active inference / AXIOM: an object-centric, Bayesian alternative to monolithic neural world models, with robotics examples built around hierarchical agents and online inference

One offbeat repeat-view pick

This is the outlier in today’s set, but it is still a clear organic recommendation because Graham emphasizes repeat viewing, not novelty .

  • Title:The Larry Sanders Show
  • Content type: Show / series
  • Author/creator:Not specified in the provided material
  • Who recommended it: Paul Graham
  • Key takeaway: He says the show is "so amazing," says he is watching it again "for about the fourth time," and calls it "brilliant people skewering a world they know all too well"
  • Why it matters: The repeat-viewing detail makes this feel more durable than a one-off mention

What stands out

The most useful recommendations today do one of two things: they either clearly change a leader’s posture or they make a crowded area legible. Garry Tan’s Sam Altman essay recommendation is strong because he explicitly says it reframed what to do next, while Scott Belsky’s thread recommendation is useful because it gives readers a compact map of competing world-model approaches .

OpenAI Broadens Its Stack as Agent Infrastructure and AI Biology Advance
Mar 15
4 min read
146 docs
Aravind Srinivas
vittorio
Sam Altman
+7
Sam Altman outlined a broader OpenAI strategy around enterprise coding, chips, supply chains, and a less-exclusive Microsoft partnership. Elsewhere, new agent infrastructure and open computer-use data arrived, AI biology drew unusual attention, and Nando de Freitas called for limits on autonomous weapons.

Platform strategy

OpenAI leans further into coding, chips, and a broader partner model

Sam Altman said ChatGPT is growing strongly and that Codex has shown especially strong momentum, with most enterprise demand still centered on coding and broader knowledge-work adoption expected over the coming year . He also said OpenAI now expects to rely on a richer semiconductor portfolio than it first thought—partnering with Nvidia and Cerebras while building its own inference chip—and warned that the AI stack is tight enough that one broken layer could cause knock-on effects .

"The partnership between Microsoft and OpenAI remains of paramount importance."

Altman added that the Microsoft relationship is still crucial but less exclusive on both sides than it was a few years ago, with OpenAI working with other infrastructure partners and Microsoft using other model families too .

Why it matters: OpenAI is talking less like a single-model lab and more like a company managing enterprise demand, chip supply, and a diversified infrastructure ecosystem .

Perplexity gets a new distribution lever

Perplexity said its Android app has passed 100 million cumulative downloads, and that figure does not yet include the broader rollout of Samsung native integration that Aravind Srinivas said is still ahead . That gives the company both a large installed base and an additional handset-driven distribution channel .

Why it matters: Consumer AI competition is increasingly about distribution as well as models, and Samsung integration could materially extend Perplexity's reach .

Agent infrastructure

Pydantic launches Monty for safer, lower-latency agent code execution

Pydantic launched Monty, a Rust-based Python interpreter for AI agents, positioned between simple tool calling and full sandboxes . Samuel Colvin said the focus is safe, self-hostable execution with tight control over what code can do: the system uses registered host functions and type checking, while in-process execution can run in under a microsecond in hot loops versus roughly one second to create a Daytona sandbox in his comparison . Early traction is notable, with 6,000 GitHub stars, 27,000 downloads last week, and serializable agents defined in TOML coming to Pydantic AI .

Why it matters: Monty is built around practical production constraints—latency, self-hosting, and controllable execution—rather than just agent demos .

Markov AI opens a large computer-use dataset

Markov AI said it is releasing what it calls the world's largest open-source dataset of computer-use recordings: more than 10,000 hours across tools including Salesforce, Blender, and Photoshop, aimed at automating more white-collar work . Thomas Wolf's brief "wow!" response showed the launch quickly drew notice .

Why it matters: The release packages large-scale recordings from real software workflows into open data explicitly aimed at computer-use automation .

High-stakes applications and safety

A canine cancer-vaccine story becomes a rallying point for AI biology

A case amplified by Greg Brockman, Demis Hassabis, and Aravind Srinivas described an Australian with no biology background who paid $3,000 to sequence his rescue dog's tumor DNA, used ChatGPT and AlphaFold to identify mutated proteins and design a custom mRNA cancer vaccine, and then received ethics approval to administer it . According to the shared account, the first injection halved the tumor and improved the dog's condition; Hassabis called it a "cool use case of AlphaFold" and "just the beginning of digital biology" .

"Cool use case of AlphaFold, this is just the beginning of digital biology!"

Why it matters: Whatever one makes of the broader rhetoric around the story, the level of attention from Greg Brockman, Demis Hassabis, and Aravind Srinivas made AI-enabled biology one of the day's clearest discussion points .

Nando de Freitas calls for a moratorium on autonomous weapons

Nando de Freitas called for a moratorium on AI autonomous weapons, arguing that cheap drones have already shown destructive effectiveness and that turning them into more capable agentic weapons is now technically feasible .

"It’s time to have a moratorium on AI autonomous weapons."

Why it matters: As the ecosystem pushes agent capabilities into software and biology, leading researchers are also arguing that the same technical progress has immediate military implications .

Tab Count, Lovable's Launch Engine, and Practical AI Monetization
Mar 15
9 min read
40 docs
20VC with Harry Stebbings
andrew chen
Elena Verna
+2
This issue centers on a simple AI opportunity filter—tab count—plus practical lessons from Lovable on launch cadence, engagement metrics, freemium, and monetization. It also includes a workflow-first B2B case study and a grounded look at Product Owner versus IT requirements roles.

Big Ideas

1) Tab count is a fast AI opportunity filter

Andrew Chen's heuristic is simple: the number of browser tabs or alt-tabs in a workflow is a proxy for how much AI can compress that work into a single experience . His example is person/company research, which used to require LinkedIn, X, Google, notes, and Slack, but can now be collapsed into one prompt in about 10 seconds . He says the biggest opportunities sit in workflows where users alt-tab 20+ times per task, especially in sales, recruiting, research, compliance, and procurement .

Why it matters: it gives PMs a concrete way to prioritize AI work around workflow compression rather than novelty .
How to apply: audit a few high-frequency jobs your users perform, count tabs and copy-paste loops, and prioritize the flows with the most context-switching first .

"AI doesn’t need to be superintelligent to be wildly useful. it just needs to be good enough to close the tabs"

2) AI monetization needs flexibility, not pricing dogma

Elena Verna argues current monetization models are not right for every AI company because many teams are still passing through expensive LLM costs to users . She expects LLM costs to fall and says monetization will need to move toward outcomes as models commoditize . She is also explicit that subscription-only monetization is a poor fit for bursty usage; at Lovable, adding top-ups on top of subscription increased monetization capture and improved retention .

Why it matters: if usage is uneven and model costs are moving, pricing becomes part of product strategy, not a one-time packaging decision .
How to apply: test ad hoc purchases alongside subscription for bursty use cases, and make pricing changes operationally easy instead of treating them as annual events .

3) For productivity tools, meaningful frequency beats intensity

Verna frames activation around product engagement: define the aha moment, the steps to reach it, and the early habit loops that bring users back . She argues intensity can be an anti-metric for simple productivity tools, because more time may mean users are stuck, while daily or weekly usage sits in the habitual zone and monthly usage drifts into the forgettable zone . She also warns against login-based metrics and prefers value-creating actions instead .

Why it matters: teams often mistake activity for value .
How to apply: choose one or two actions that clearly represent user value, then track repeat frequency on a daily or weekly basis rather than visits or logins .

4) "Minimum lovable" is part of the product bar

Verna argues teams should aim for a minimum lovable product in every feature, because software is increasingly judged by the emotion, trust, and connection it creates, not just by basic functionality . In her framing, the progression is: it works, users trust it, then users connect with it .

Why it matters: she argues personality and emotional connection are becoming a minimum bar to kickstart growth .
How to apply: during reviews, evaluate not just whether a feature works, but whether it creates trust and a recognizable product feel .

Tactical Playbook

1) Run a tab-count audit before you scope an AI feature

Use this sequence:

  1. List the tabs, docs, and tools a user opens to finish one job; Chen's core idea is that tab count signals compressibility .
  2. Mark every copy-paste handoff; Chen says eliminating 6+ tabs and a copy-paste loop is immediately useful to users .
  3. Prioritize jobs with extreme context switching; he highlights workflows with 20+ alt-tabs per task .
  4. Prototype the whole flow as one AI-native experience; his example collapses LinkedIn, X, Google, notes, and Slack into a single prompt-driven workflow .

Why it matters: this turns abstract AI brainstorming into a concrete prioritization method .

2) Redefine activation around value, not logins

A practical setup from Verna's framework:

  1. Write down the user's aha moment and the steps required to get there .
  2. Decide which action proves value; at Lovable, examples include building an app or receiving traffic on a published app .
  3. Track whether that action repeats daily or weekly, because that is the habitual zone Verna wants to see .
  4. Treat raw logins as a vanity metric and be careful with time-spent metrics if your product is supposed to feel simple .

Why it matters: it aligns your core metric with value creation instead of mere presence .

3) Use a two-speed launch system

Lovable's operating rhythm suggests a clear playbook:

  1. Ship customer-facing improvements daily, not just bug fixes .
  2. Let the people closest to the work share releases; Lovable encourages engineers to post launches socially and then "beeswarms" those posts for amplification .
  3. Reserve major narrative effort for bundled launches every 1-2 months, when multiple capabilities add up to a story and a step-function change .
  4. Treat ongoing visibility as part of retention and resurrection, not just acquisition; Verna says the constant noise brings people back because the product feels alive and evolving .

Why it matters: it separates release velocity from storytelling cadence without losing either .

4) Treat freemium as a marketing channel with its own metric

Verna's framing is unusually direct: a free user has value if they get delighted and then market the product on your behalf . Lovable tracks this with a "lovable score" that measures how often users refer the product to someone else .

How to apply:

  • Define what a successful free experience looks like before conversion .
  • Track referral behavior explicitly, not just free-to-paid conversion .
  • Protect the parts of the free experience most likely to create delight and sharing .

Why it matters: it gives PMs a clearer way to value free usage in products where word of mouth matters .

Case Studies & Lessons

1) Lovable turned shipping cadence into retention infrastructure

At Lovable, engineering releases improvements every day, employees post about those releases on social, the company amplifies them internally, and marketing concentrates on bigger tier-one launches every 1-2 months . Verna says that constant noise is part of retention and resurrection because users feel the product is "living, breathing" and worth revisiting .

Key takeaway: if your category is moving quickly, consistent visible improvement can be part of the product experience, not just a marketing layer .

2) A Romanian accountant SaaS validated the workflow before polishing the brand

One founder started with a very specific problem: accountants were spending 3-5 hours each month chasing invoices, bank statements, and receipts over WhatsApp . Validation was lightweight and direct: they messaged about 50 Romanian accountants on WhatsApp, got repeated confirmation, and built the MVP in 2 weeks . The product itself stayed close to the workflow: each client gets a personal upload link with no account or onboarding, and the accountant sees a dashboard showing who sent documents and who did not . On day one, the product saw 172 visitors, 18 signup reaches, 2 registered accounts, 2 Stripe checkout visits, and a 59% bounce rate .

A commenter highlighted the strongest decision: the product started from a real workflow rather than "cool tech," and recommended 5-10 Zoom walkthroughs of actual month-end work to surface edge cases before chasing more traffic . The founder's own lesson was that niche, non-English B2B can be slow, but each signup is more likely to be a real customer than a curiosity click .

Key takeaway: tight workflow validation plus narrow positioning can produce higher-signal early learning than broad top-of-funnel traffic .

3) Lovable used top-ups to fit bursty AI usage

Verna says Lovable introduced ad hoc top-ups on top of subscription and the response was "absolutely wild" . Her claim is that this kind of purchase adds incrementally rather than cannibalizing recurring revenue, and that retention improves when users get this flexibility .

Key takeaway: when usage comes in bursts, a hybrid pricing model can capture more value than subscription alone .

Career Corner

1) Compare roles by daily work loop, not just by title

In one Product Management community thread, the choice was between an IT Requirements Engineer role in IAM and a Product Owner role in another area . The IT Requirements Engineer description centered on gathering requirements for identity and access management systems and translating business needs into technical specifications , while the Product Owner role centered on stakeholder work, product requirements, backlog prioritization, and guiding development teams .

Why it matters: the titles sound adjacent, but the day-to-day work is different .
How to apply: evaluate career options against growth, compensation, job security, work-life balance, domain interest, longevity, and pay—not title prestige alone .

2) Use community signals carefully when assessing AI exposure

In the same thread, one commenter said an IT Requirements Engineer sounds closer to a Business Analyst role . Another suggested IAM may be more repetitive, but also less likely to be handed over to AI than a Product Owner role .

Why it matters: job security discussions are already being filtered through assumptions about which work AI will and will not absorb .
How to apply: treat this as community signal, not settled fact, and stress-test any role by asking which parts of the job are domain-heavy, stakeholder-heavy, or easy to standardize .

3) Pricing and engagement design are becoming stronger PM differentiators in AI products

Across Verna's interview, two recurring responsibilities stand out: defining meaningful engagement signals instead of vanity metrics and building the infrastructure to test monetization model changes quickly as AI costs and economics shift .

Why it matters: these are product problems that cannot be solved by feature delivery alone .
How to apply: if you want to broaden your scope, volunteer for activation metric design or pricing and packaging experiments rather than limiting yourself to backlog management .

Tools & Resources

  • Andrew Chen's tab-count post — a compact framework for identifying AI opportunities by counting tabs, alt-tabs, and copy-paste loops in a workflow .
  • Tab-count worksheet — create a simple table with columns for job-to-be-done, tabs opened, copy-paste handoffs, and whether the flow could be collapsed into one AI-native experience .
  • Elena Verna: How Lovable Launches Product & Hacks Social to Go Viral — useful for PMs working on launch cadence, activation metrics, freemium, and AI monetization design .
  • Meaningful action scorecard — document the aha moment, the action that proves value, the target frequency, and the anti-metric you want to avoid, such as logins or excessive time spent .
  • Romanian accountant workflow-first case study — a useful teardown of direct problem validation, narrow MVP scope, simple pricing, and day-one funnel metrics in a niche B2B market .
AI-for-Science Claims, Agent Learning Advances, and Open-Stack Inference Gains
Mar 15
9 min read
451 docs
Nous Research
John Carmack
Cursor
+32
This brief covers a high-profile AI-assisted cancer-vaccine case and the skepticism it triggered, new results on continual agent learning and gradient-free search, faster open-source inference tooling, and key product, funding, and compliance developments across the AI market.

Top Stories

Why it matters: This cycle was defined by three practical shifts: AI is moving closer to high-stakes real-world work, agent research is getting more realistic about what actually transfers, and open-source tooling is narrowing the gap with specialized infrastructure.

1) A reported AI-designed cancer vaccine for a dog sparked both excitement and pushback

Posts this cycle circulated an Australian report describing an AI consultant with no biology training using ChatGPT and AlphaFold to design a personalized mRNA cancer vaccine for his rescue dog after sequencing the tumor DNA; multiple posts citing the report said the tumor shrank by about half after treatment . UNSW researchers highlighted the case as striking, with Dr. Kate Michie noting that a non-scientist had been able to do it, and genomics director Martin Smith asking why such approaches are not being rolled out more broadly . Demis Hassabis called it a cool AlphaFold use case and said it was the beginning of digital biology .

"If we can do this for a dog, why aren’t we rolling this out to all humans with cancer?"

At the same time, critics warned against turning the episode into an inflated generic AI-cures-cancer narrative .

Impact: AI biology is producing compelling case studies that expand imagination about personalized medicine, but the reaction also shows that validation and skepticism will matter as much as capability.

2) Agent learning results are getting more realistic about what transfers

A new agent-generalization study found that RL fine-tuning produces large gains within the same environment—easy WebShop training improved hard-task performance by 60+ points—but only weak transfer to unseen environments, with average gains of 3.3–3.4 points and one setting dropping WebShop from 28.6 to 10.3 . The same paper found sequential training across five environments could match joint training with minimal forgetting . Separately, XSkill showed that agents can improve over time without parameter updates by accumulating reusable experiences and skills from past trajectories, lifting Gemini-3-Flash success from 33.6% to 40.3% while cutting tool errors from 29.9% to 16.3% .

Impact: The field is moving away from the idea that RL alone will create broadly capable agents, and toward memory, reuse, and sequential learning.

3) Open-source inference is getting faster without a separate runtime tax

PagedAttention, the kernel behind vLLM’s speed, now ships natively in Hugging Face Transformers CB, reaching 84% of vLLM throughput on a single GPU with no extra runtime . Hugging Face Transformers also gained FlashAttention 4 support in v5, with reported gains of 3.7x over FA2 and 22–32x lower compile time than FA3 .

Impact: Performance once associated with specialized serving stacks is moving into mainstream open tooling, reducing integration complexity for teams shipping models.

4) AI-for-science continues to attract both capital and new search methods

Mirendil, a startup from former Anthropic researchers, is reportedly raising $175 million at a $1 billion valuation to build systems for long-term scientific reasoning in biology and materials science . On the research side, Sakana AI’s open-source ShinkaEvolve combined LLMs with evolutionary search to reach a new state of the art on circle packing in only 150 LLM calls, improve ALE-Bench competitive-programming results, and discover a new MoE load-balancing loss; the work will be presented at ICLR 2026 .

Impact: AI-for-science is no longer just about answering questions; it is increasingly about automating search over programs, experiments, and reasoning strategies.

5) Copyright risk is now delaying model launches

ByteDance delayed the global launch of Seedance 2.0 after copyright complaints from major Hollywood studios including Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount Skydance, and Netflix . The company is reportedly strengthening guardrails and moderation systems to prevent AI-generated copyright violations before expanding internationally .

Impact: For generative media products, rights management and moderation are becoming launch-gating requirements, not post-launch clean-up.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: The most useful research this cycle focused on making agents retain capabilities over time, improving optimization without standard RL assumptions, and identifying bottlenecks inside current model architectures.

Continual learning for agents is getting more structured

XSkill separates reusable experiences for action-level tool selection from skills for task-level planning and workflows, extracting both from successful and failed rollouts via cross-rollout critique and then retrieving them at inference time based on the current visual context . That produced gains across five benchmarks and four backbone models, including the Gemini-3-Flash jump from 33.6% to 40.3% success and a drop in tool errors from 29.9% to 16.3% .

For embodied agents, a separate continual-RL recipe for large VLA models combined a pretrained VLA, LoRA, and on-policy RL. The authors say the setup prevents catastrophic forgetting, preserves zero-shot ability, and often beats more complex continual-learning methods . They attribute this to three factors: pretrained VLAs already carrying broad knowledge, LoRA restricting updates to a low-rank subspace, and on-policy RL making gradual policy changes .

Gradient-free and evolutionary methods are gaining traction

Evolution Strategies were highlighted as a gradient-free alternative to RL for post-training: perturb parameters, score the resulting models, and update toward the best-performing directions . Reported results included Countdown improvements to 60.5% on Qwen-2.5-3B versus 32.5% for GRPO, plus large gains on ARC-AGI and Sudoku .

ShinkaEvolve pushed the search idea further by using adaptive parent sampling, novelty-based rejection filtering, and a bandit-based LLM ensemble to make program evolution more sample-efficient . Beyond circle packing, the framework improved a 5th-place ALE-Bench solution to 2nd place and found a new load-balancing loss for MoE models that improved performance and perplexity .

Two model-level papers worth tracking

  • GLM-OCR: Z.ai released the technical report for GLM-OCR after the model passed 3 million downloads . The system combines a 0.4B CogViT encoder with a 0.5B GLM decoder, uses multi-token prediction to speed deterministic OCR, and employs a two-stage layout-analysis plus region-recognition pipeline to reach state-of-the-art results in document parsing and table structure recovery .
  • Lost in Backpropagation: A new paper argues the LM head is a structural optimization bottleneck because backpropagating through a rank-D linear layer into a V-dimensional vocabulary suppresses 95–99% of gradient information, degrading learning efficiency across LLM architectures .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: Product work is moving beyond chat into workflow-native content generation, broader access, and lower-friction deployment for developers.

Google turns Workspace into a single-prompt content engine

Google upgraded Gemini for Workspace so it can generate fully formed Docs, Sheets, and Slides by pulling information from Gmail, Drive, and Chat in one step . The update turns Workspace into a single-prompt content creation engine .

Anthropic expands available Claude capacity for builders

Anthropic said it is doubling Claude usage outside peak hours for the next two weeks, covering weekends and weekdays outside 5 a.m.–11 a.m. PT through March 27 . The expanded limits apply across Claude.ai, Cowork, and Claude Code .

Why it matters: This is a temporary promotion, but it lowers the cost of experimentation for users running heavier coding or research workflows.

Ollama updates cloud hardware and pricing for agent workflows

Ollama said its cloud now runs Kimi K2.5 and GLM-5 on NVIDIA B300 hardware, with faster throughput, lower latency, and reliable tool calls for integrations . It also highlighted fixed subscription tiers at $0, $20, and $100 to avoid surprise overage bills for workloads like Claude Code or OpenClaw .

Why it matters: Predictable pricing and better tool-call reliability matter for teams trying to operationalize agents rather than merely demo them.

Industry Moves

Why it matters: The commercial story is broadening from frontier model releases to distribution, AI-native workflow redesign, and capital aimed at domain-specific reasoning.

Mirendil targets scientific reasoning as a business

Former Anthropic researchers are using Mirendil to pursue long-term scientific reasoning for biology and materials science, backed by a reported $175 million raise at a $1 billion valuation . That places AI-for-science squarely in the venture-backed frontier stack rather than at the edge of research.

Perplexity keeps adding distribution

Perplexity crossed 100 million cumulative Android app downloads, and the company says a wider Samsung native integration is still ahead . That makes distribution—not just model quality—a more important part of the competitive picture.

Agent-first operating models are starting to show business results

Box CEO Aaron Levie argued that the big difference is not applying agents to an existing process but redesigning the process from scratch for agents that can write code, use APIs, connect systems, and work through unstructured data . OffDeal says that was its exact bet in investment banking: one banker can run 5–7 concurrent sell-side processes versus a 5–7 person team running one, and the company expects a two-person team to handle 15–20 deals within a year . OffDeal also argues incumbents will not see the same productivity gains by simply adding agent software to legacy workflows .

Why it matters: The business value may come less from buying a model subscription and more from redesigning work around code-executing agents.

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: This cycle’s policy signals were less about new laws and more about the practical governance issues slowing or shaping deployment: copyright, security, and training norms.

Copyright complaints are forcing pre-launch guardrails

ByteDance’s Seedance 2.0 delay is the clearest example this cycle: copyright complaints from major studios were enough to pause a global release, while stronger moderation and guardrails are being added before international expansion .

Japan’s AI strategy conversations are becoming more sector-specific

Sakana AI founder Ito Ren met former Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio to discuss generative AI, Sakana’s work in finance and defense, Japan’s possible AI strategy, and the security needs that come with broader deployment .

Open-source training norms remain contested

John Carmack said AI training on his million-plus lines of open-source code magnifies the value of the gift and that he is enthusiastic about it . Teknium echoed the position more directly: everything he puts out should be trained on .

Why it matters: Even without new regulation, the norms around what AI systems should be allowed to train on remain a live governance question.

Quick Takes

Why it matters: These smaller items help show where the ecosystem is getting more capable, more accessible, or more operational.

  • NVIDIA’s concept-driven synthetic data pipeline generated 15 million Python programming problems and reportedly improved Nemotron-Nano-v3 by 6 HumanEval points, from 73 to 79, when included in pretraining .
  • Cursor shared a new method for scoring models on agentic coding tasks, including comparisons of intelligence and efficiency inside Cursor .
  • Chrome 146 now includes a toggle that exposes the current live browsing session via MCP; the open-source chrome-cdp skill uses that to let coding agents see and interact with live Chrome sessions without a browser automation framework .
  • A Hermes-based Job Scout agent reportedly fetched 219 real job listings, scored them, researched companies, and generated a CSV tracker after roughly 12 hours from one prompt .
  • The Hermes Agent hackathon had 72 submissions with just over 24 hours remaining, after Nous increased the prize pool to $7,500 for first place .
  • OpenAI is expanding Codex meetups globally, with local workshops focused on workflows and shipping projects .
  • Posts citing infrastructure charts warned about a possible CPU shortage after earlier GPU and memory constraints, pointing to steep growth since December 2025 across compute providers .
Winter Wheat Freeze Risk and Turkey Poultry Disruption Lead the Cycle
Mar 15
5 min read
60 docs
Arlan Suderman
Successful Farming
Sencer Solakoglu
+5
Weather risk in winter wheat, Turkey's poultry export disruption, and North American soybean disease pressure lead this cycle's market watch. The brief also highlights measurable models from India, China, and the U.S. in farmer collectives, land monetization, desert remediation, and specialty livestock management.

Market Movers

  • Winter cereals / freeze risk: Arctic cold is likely to damage winter wheat over the next 2-3 days. March freezes tend to hit hardest in high-yield years, but a good spring can still support recovery through secondary and tertiary tillers. The key variables are rain and a long spring before heat arrives; the same source flagged the current ENSO phase as a potential complication .
  • North America / soybeans: Soybean cyst nematode remains a major yield risk. It was described as having a rapid life cycle, an estimated $1.5 billion annual yield-loss potential, and status as the most damaging soybean pathogen in North America .
  • Turkey / poultry and feed: A Turkish poultry-sector commentary said a white-meat export ban was imposed to restrain pre-Ramadan price increases despite rising costs. The same commentary said Turkey had been self-sufficient, exported 20% of production to more than 70 countries, sold chicken at about €1.5/kg versus €3/kg in Europe, and faced feed pressure because corn, wheat, and soy make up 80% of raw materials while corn trades at nearly double world prices .

Innovation Spotlight

  • India / farmer collectives: Spectrum says its model combines governance playbooks and quarterly audits, board and youth entrepreneurship bootcamps, shared packhouse and lab infrastructure, and working capital aligned with harvest cycles. It cited one collective moving 800 acres into organic vegetables, winning a retail contract, and doubling member dividends, alongside women-led spice units selling traceable products to metro stores. Its 2026 target is 120 branded, export-ready collectives .
  • United States / diversified land income: Infinite Outdoors said it has added more than 1.6 million acres of private land in six years. It cited a 40-acre Colorado property that moved from a few thousand dollars of annual lease income to $15,000-$20,000/year, while pairing access revenue with biologist-set harvest quotas and analysis showing when leaving field corners out of crop production can be offset by hunting income .
  • China / desert remediation as a production system: In Alashan, Inner Mongolia, saxaul trees are used for sand fixation and as hosts for Cistanche, a medicinal crop. The featured system combines 1.5-meter sand barriers and household water reuse for irrigation, and local income was cited at RMB 30,000-40,000/year once the tree-crop system was established .
  • Farm data / interoperability: John Deere Operations Center customers can access their farm data through the API and build custom dashboards, and a free tutorial is planned .

Regional Developments

  • China / Jiangxi muscovy ducks: Producers shifted from 3-month commodity muscovy ducks to ecological "old duck" systems with grow-out extended to more than 6 months because longer grow-out improved flavor and market value. That shift also raised management difficulty: males become more aggressive after 6-7 months in mixed flocks, and birds older than 5-6 months can fly short distances .
  • China / premium pork programs: In Jilin, a Northeast min pig × wild boar third-generation hybrid from the Jilin Academy of Agricultural Sciences is being raised for more than a year, with daily mountain exercise linked to a higher lean-meat rate. In Guizhou, Qianbei black pigs are mountain-raised on a slower schedule; the featured farm linked darker color, firmer texture, and visible marbling to higher activity, slower growth, and feed such as sweet potatoes and cabbage .
  • Turkey / export-market exposure: The Turkish poultry commentary also argued that war-related freight and proximity had improved Turkey's position in Middle East and European markets, but that the export ban risks ceding customers to Brazil if integrators cut output .

Best Practices

  • Winter cereals: After a March freeze, recovery potential still depends on follow-up moisture and a long spring before heat. Secondary and tertiary tillers can still support acceptable yield if those conditions hold .
  • Soybeans / SCN watchlist: Treat soybean cyst nematode as a primary yield threat in North American soybean planning because the pest cycles quickly and carries large loss potential .
  • Muscovy ducks: For flocks carried past 6 months, separate males and females after birds approach sexual maturity, clip 7-8 feathers beginning at the sixth feather on one wing only, and use same-color glasses on aggressive birds to reduce fighting. The economics were direct in the featured case: dead birds were valued at more than RMB 200 each, injured birds sold RMB 30-50 lower, and losses from 50-60 escaped birds reached about RMB 10,000.
  • Water-scarce restoration systems: In desert plantings, the featured system reused household wash water for tree establishment, used about 1.5-meter spacing in sand barriers to improve fixation, and paired revegetation with Cistanche so restoration also generated cash income .

Input Markets

The extracted notes were light on fertilizer pricing. The clearest input signals this cycle were in feed, crop protection, and machinery.

  • Feed / Turkey poultry: Corn, wheat, and soy were cited as 80% of poultry feed raw materials, with corn priced at nearly double world levels in the Turkish market commentary .
  • Crop protection / North America soybeans: SCN remains the clearest crop-protection pressure in the notes, with an estimated $1.5 billion annual yield-loss potential .
  • Machinery / hay equipment: For baler purchases, one equipment note said buying decisions are being shaped by operational efficiency versus upfront cost differences .

Forward Outlook

  • Near term / winter wheat and oats: The next 2-3 days are the immediate damage window from Arctic cold, and the recovery path still depends on rain and delayed heat .
  • Turkey / poultry: The Turkish industry commentary expects export restrictions to force production cuts and eventually raise domestic prices, while competitors such as Brazil move into affected customer markets .
  • India / organized value-add: Spectrum's stated 2026 plan is to incubate 120 collectives with their own brands, export readiness, and youth leaders .
  • Specialty livestock / flock planning: Producers holding muscovy ducks beyond 5-7 months need fight and flight controls in place before birds reach full maturity .

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