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Sam Altman Profile

Sam Altman

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The Pragmatic Engineer

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Naval Ravikant

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Sam Altman Profile

Sam Altman

Profile
3Blue1Brown Avatar

3Blue1Brown

Channel
Paul Graham Avatar

Paul Graham

Account
Example Substack Avatar

The Pragmatic Engineer

Newsletter
Reddit Machine Learning

r/MachineLearning

Community
Naval Ravikant Profile

Naval Ravikant

Profile
Example X List

AI High Signal

List
Example RSS Feed

Stratechery

RSS

3

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GPT-5.6 Leads Design Arena as Agent Safety and Open Models Advance
Jul 13
3 min read
562 docs
vLLM
Aravind Srinivas
Beth Kindig
+15
GPT-5.6 Sol takes the top Design Arena position as agent-safety research exposes a weakness in chain-of-thought monitoring. This brief also covers visual and open-model releases, new deployment tools, DeepSeek’s expansion, and the economics behind AI infrastructure.

Top Stories

Why it matters: model competition is increasingly measured in task-specific quality, operational efficiency, and the reliability of agent safeguards.

  • GPT-5.6 Sol leads Design Arena’s frontend-design ranking. Design Arena reported Sol at #1 overall with a 1353 Elo—an 18-place, 60-point improvement over GPT-5.5—placing it above Claude Fable 5 and in the same performance band as GLM 5.2. The ranking also describes Sol as faster than any model at that preference-performance level.

  • A study challenges chain-of-thought monitoring as a standalone agent safety layer. Giving a monitor access to an agent’s reasoning trace increased harmful-action approvals by 9.5% on average; pairing a Claude 3.7 Sonnet monitor with a GPT-4.1 fact-checker reduced policy-violating approvals by up to 45%, versus 6% when one model filled both roles.

  • DeepSeek is reportedly expanding from a lean research lab into a product organization. Following a reported $7B+ funding round, the company has 121 open roles and is splitting work across pre-training, alignment, code/math reasoning, multimodal systems, and product engineering—while also navigating departures among core R&D staff.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: new work is pushing models toward visual planning, multilingual open weights, and more demanding evaluations.

  • ByteDance released UniVR-34B, a model described as learning complex reasoning, physical dynamics, and long-term planning directly from visual demonstrations rather than text reasoning chains. A separate post says its image-generation “reasoning” training uses a GRPO variant.

  • Soofi S 30B-A3B offers a transparent German-English open-model release. The hybrid Mamba mixture-of-experts model was trained on roughly 27 trillion tokens with German upweighted; its developers released per-source data accounting, hyperparameters, code, and checkpoints under permissive licenses. They report the strongest fully open results in their English and German aggregate evaluations.

  • Claude Fable 5 Max scored 91.9% on WeirdML. The benchmark author calls it a new best score, with Fable reaching per-task SOTA on seven of 17 tasks; results used two runs per task rather than the usual five.

Products & Launches

Why it matters: model capabilities are being packaged into cloud workflows and lower-cost deployment tooling.

  • Codex is now accessible inside ChatGPT on mobile and web. Users can send tasks to cloud execution through “Work” or continue computer-based work through “Remote.”

  • Inference AutoTune entered private beta. It claims to distill frontier models into 1–30B-parameter task-specific small models in roughly two hours for under $250, while routing requests to reduce cost and latency by more than 90%.

  • vLLM 0.25.0 makes Model Runner V2 the default for dense models and removes legacy PagedAttention. It also adds a unified streaming parser, heterogeneous-vocabulary speculative decoding, and reports Transformers-backend performance matching native vLLM.

Industry Moves

Why it matters: access policies, training-data supply, and hardware replacement cycles are becoming core parts of AI economics.

  • Anthropic extended Claude Fable 5 access across paid plans through July 19 and kept Claude Code weekly limits 50% higher for the same period.

  • The market for AI training data and RL environments is substantial and concentrated. One estimate puts more than 50 providers at roughly $8.5B in combined revenue and $100B in valuation, with Scale, Surge, Mercor, and Handshake accounting for over 75%.

  • A published cost breakdown estimates a 1 GW AI data center requires $37.2B upfront, including $21B for servers. The analysis argues that recurring three-to-five-year silicon replacement—not land or power connection—is the dominant economic burden.

Quick Takes

Why it matters: benchmarks, edge deployments, and evaluation quality remain fast-moving.

  • OpenAI’s audit found roughly 30% of SWE-Bench Pro tasks broken, prompting it to retract an earlier recommendation to use the benchmark as a replacement for SWE-bench Verified.
  • Opus 4.8 reached a new SOTA in the GSO benchmark, while GPT-5.5-xhigh and Sonnet 5 ranked fourth and fifth.
  • StepFun launched Step Edge for phone, vehicle, and other edge settings, with local text, vision, audio, and tool-call support.
  • Perplexity reported Vera CPUs ran agentic coding tasks 1.5× faster than traditional CPUs and said fuller metrics are forthcoming.
Agent Accountability Products Emerge as AI Exit Market Concentrates
Jul 13
3 min read
478 docs
Software As a Service Companies — The Future Of Tech Businesses
r/SideProject - A community for sharing side projects
SaaStr
+1
A review of agent reliability infrastructure, early enterprise-AI traction, and a more concentrated exit market. The key watchpoints are verifiable agent control, institutional workflow adoption, and rapidly improving model efficiency.

Funding & Deals

No new financing rounds or investor syndicates were disclosed in the reviewed sources.

Emerging Teams

  • ExamAi has meaningful early institutional usage in assessment software. The solo technical founder says the AI exam-creation, delivery, and grading platform has paying institutional clients, tens of thousands of students, and hundreds of thousands of graded questions. The company also reports a signed pipeline, though its school and university sales motion entails long cycles.

  • A prospective enterprise-AI founder brings substantial operating pedigree and is seeking a technical co-founder. The founder cites 20-plus years in enterprise technology and go-to-market roles across AWS, CrowdStrike, and Automation Anywhere, and is considering either a finance-focused “Financial Brain” or an agentic-enterprise memory layer. The latter is framed as verified, executable knowledge drawn from documents, Slack, email, and workflows.

  • Semfora.ai is entering private beta around codebase risk and AI-code governance. The company says its deterministic system has been tested on 118 open-source repositories and can tag fault causes, estimate token costs, detect AI-development adoption, and identify critical code paths without static analysis or code-owner files. It is seeking testers, initially targeting engineering leaders and SREs at larger organizations.

AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • Agent accountability is becoming a product category. Clay Seal is an open-source identity layer that gives each agent run a short-lived credential bound to that agent; its developers are also working on runtime capability scoping and suspicious-behavior detection. The design responds to agents receiving access to GitHub tokens, cloud credentials, customer data, and deployment permissions.

  • GateBolt applies deterministic verification to AI coding agents. Agents declare intended changes before execution; the system compares the resulting code changes with that declaration, flags undeclared files, secrets, or skipped work, and records the process in a hash-chained ledger. The founder recently presented the company at Cambridge’s Ignite programme.

  • Fetchsandbox targets a practical reliability gap in AI-written integrations. The product runs full pre-production integration lifecycles—including real workflows, webhooks, and on-demand failure scenarios—to catch issues such as duplicate events, non-idempotent handlers, and stale-state retries. Its founder reported reaching No. 2 on Product Hunt on launch night.

Market Signals

  • Exit-market concentration is favoring AI-native companies. SaaStr, citing the 2026 NVCA Yearbook, reports that 65% of U.S. venture deployment in 2025 went to AI while 859 unicorns awaited exits. It also characterizes AI-native positioning as the dividing line between companies that can exit and those likely to remain in a holding pattern.

  • The backlog remains structural for non-leading venture assets. The source reports median North American VC IRRs for vintages since 2019 in the single digits and median DPI below 1x for the past decade’s vintages; Bain data cited in the same analysis puts average exit holding periods at roughly seven years. It argues that a small number of potential blockbuster listings would not reopen the market for the wider backlog.

  • Model compression is a key assumption to stress-test for application and infrastructure investments. Andrew Chen argues that quantization, mixture-of-experts architectures, pruning, improved data, and distillation are shrinking the model size required for a given capability. He notes that 27B-parameter open models can now match prior frontier performance and forecasts that consumer-grade GPUs could run Fable-equivalent models by 2029.

Worth Your Time

Make Coding Agents Test and Repair Their Own Work
Jul 13
3 min read
84 docs
Andrew Ambrosino
Tibo
Riley Brown
+3
Today’s strongest practitioner signal is a closed-loop coding workflow: build from a ticket, test through computer use, repair failures, then review again in a separate thread. Also included: GPT-5.6 task routing, Codex updates, usage-limit changes, and an emerging parallel agent environment.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Make the agent prove the feature works before it reports back. Ross Mike’s Codex workflow is a closed loop: pull work from Linear or Notion, build it, run end-to-end browser QA through computer use, repair failures, and return only after the test passes. A separate self-review thread and scheduled PR checks extend that same feedback-loop pattern beyond a single task.

⚡ TRY THIS

  • Turn a feature ticket into a build–test–repair loop. Connect the agent to a Linear or Notion issue (or attach it through MCP), then use this instruction:

    Build this feature. Success criteria: use computer use to test it end to end. If it does not succeed, fix it and repeat. When it’s done, report back.

    Ross Mike uses this especially for UI work, where code alone is not sufficient evidence that a form or flow works.

  • Force a clean-context self-review before merge. Open a new thread and ask Sol to review the code it changed, assign a 1–5 score, then tell it: “Keep fixing until you give yourself 5/5.” Ross Mike reports that the agent can be harsh on its own work in this setup.

  • Schedule the boring review work. In Codex’s Schedules tab, set a daily job such as: “At 8am, review all open PRs, identify which need further review, run a security review, and spin up a thread to fix anything necessary.” The result is a report plus targeted repair threads rather than a manual review queue.

  • Route by task—and constrain the executor. Theo’s current default is Sol on High; he recommends it for uncertain work or tasks expected to run longer than 10 minutes. Use Terra for budget-sensitive review or implementation work, and reserve Luna for model-orchestrated bulk tasks. For Sol, provide sources, examples, style guides, and a clear outcome, then review and redirect: Theo warns it can turn a five-line change into a large rewrite without guardrails.

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

  • GPT-5.6 family: Sol is the flagship, Terra the balanced everyday model, and Luna the cost-efficient tier; the family is generally available after limited preview. Programmatic Tool Calling is described as letting the model write and run lightweight programs to coordinate tools, process intermediate results, and adapt its next action.

  • Codex developer upgrades: direct editing of Markdown and code, in-app PR review, Pro mode in Chats with handoff to Codex, Ultra mode, and new documentation.

  • Sol usage tuning: Codex reverted Sol’s product context limit from 372k to 272k after higher-than-intended usage consumption, with a plan to restore 372k after tuning. The team says inference optimizations should yield roughly 10% more usage, is fixing excess multi-agent use in high/xhigh reasoning, and has temporarily removed the five-hour limit.

  • Orca: Jason Zhou says that after trying “almost every parallel ADE,” Orca is his current favorite. Its listed features include a native TUI and file viewer, custom commands, mobile support, Claude Code/Codex usage tracking, design mode, and GitHub-to-agent task tracking. Repo: stablyai/orca.

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • 10:39–12:12 — Computer-use QA loop. Watch the exact feature-ticket-to-browser-test workflow, including why the agent is told to repair failures rather than merely report them.
  • 16:32–17:31 — Self-review until 5/5. A short walkthrough of splitting review into a fresh thread, having the author-agent score its own changes, and iterating on the findings.
  • 30:23–32:14 — Model routing inside the GPT-5.6 family. Theo’s practical breakdown of when to use Sol, Terra, and Luna—useful if cost and long-running reliability matter more than chasing a single default model.

Editorial take: the useful agent loop is increasingly simple—give it a concrete goal, a feedback mechanism, and permission to iterate; then keep cost and scope under deliberate control.

Books and Analyses for Better Decisions, From Desire to Capital Allocation
Jul 13
4 min read
108 docs
tobi lutke
Naval Ravikant
Andrew Wilkinson
+5
Andrew Wilkinson’s recommendation of *Wanting* leads a set of founder and investor picks on intrinsic motivation, long-term organizational thinking, product design, attention, and policy outcomes. Direct links are included for the Anthropic operating-model video and Texas solar analysis.

Most compelling: Wanting — a practical lens on borrowed ambition

  • Title:Wanting
  • Content type: Book
  • Author: Luke Burgis
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Recommended by: Andrew Wilkinson
  • Key takeaway: Wilkinson called the book a “revelation” for making mimetic desire accessible: people can adopt desires modeled by peers, such as status purchases or career markers. He contrasts these “thin” desires with “thick” desires—quiet, intrinsic interests that do not depend on signaling to others.
  • Why it matters: It gives readers a concrete question for evaluating ambition: is this goal personally meaningful, or primarily borrowed from the people around them?

Books for operating over the long term

Finite and Infinite Games

  • Content type: Book
  • Author: James Carse
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Recommended by: Tobi Lütke
  • Key takeaway: Lütke called the book profound and underappreciated. In his framing, a finite game has an endpoint, while an infinite game—such as fitness—is not a destination.
  • Why it matters: It offers a useful distinction for leaders weighing short, bounded wins against pursuits that must continue over time.

The Outsiders

  • Content type: Book
  • Author: William Thorndike
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Recommended by: Andrew Wilkinson
  • Key takeaway: Wilkinson said he loved the book’s account of 12 low-profile CEOs who compounded results over decades. He emphasized its central lesson: capital allocation—putting money into the highest-return opportunities—can matter as much as innovation or management.
  • Why it matters: It is a focused read on the long-run consequences of investment and acquisition decisions.

Parkinson’s Law

  • Content type: Book
  • Author: Not specified in the source notes
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Recommended by: Tobi Lütke
  • Key takeaway: Lütke gives it to Shopify executives as an 80-page, comic treatment of how companies become unnecessarily silly and bureaucratic; he sees humor as a way to identify and replace bad organizational habits.
  • Why it matters: The recommendation is especially relevant for teams trying to recognize organizational bloat before it becomes normalized.

Mindset

  • Content type: Book
  • Author: Carol Dweck
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Recommended by: Tobi Lütke
  • Key takeaway: Lütke described it as especially insightful on the distinction between growth and fixed mindsets, which he sees as central to the change people need to make.
  • Why it matters: It is a direct resource for readers thinking about learning, feedback, and development within teams.

Design, attention, and foundational reading

The Design of Everyday Things

  • Content type: Book
  • Author: Not specified in the source notes
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Recommended by: Tobi Lütke
  • Key takeaway: Lütke said he is a huge fan and connected the book to the need to complain about—and improve—bad design.
  • Why it matters: It supplies a design-oriented perspective for anyone building products or systems that people must use every day.

Huberman Lab episode with Anna Lembke

  • Content type: Podcast episode
  • Creator: Huberman Lab; guest Anna Lembke
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Recommended by: Andrew Wilkinson
  • Key takeaway: Wilkinson credited the conversation on dopamine and addiction with helping him understand his own experience of digital overload. He relayed its comparison between repeated stimulation and diminishing enjoyment, along with a four-week “dopamine fast” recommendation for students struggling with social-media and video-game use.
  • Why it matters: This is a personal, experience-backed recommendation for readers examining the relationship between digital habits, craving, and motivation.

Sapiens and Seven Brief Lessons on Physics

  • Content type: Books
  • Author: Not specified in the source notes
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Recommended by: Naval Ravikant
  • Key takeaway: Ravikant said he was rereading Sapiens because he loves it, and had read Seven Brief Lessons on Physics at least twice as part of a recurring science-reading practice.
  • Why it matters: Repeated reading is a stronger signal than a casual title mention: both books have remained in Ravikant’s active reading rotation.

Two timely direct links

Analysis of Texas’s utility-scale solar growth

  • Title: Texas Dispatch analysis citing Texas2036 (full article title not specified)
  • Content type: Article/analysis
  • Author/creator: Texas Dispatch, citing Texas2036 analysis
  • Link/URL:https://buff.ly/8X2OSCh
  • Recommended by: Bill Gurley
  • Key takeaway: Gurley highlighted the analysis as a worthwhile read for people interested in policy and real-world impact. It reports that Texas overtook California as the top U.S. producer of utility-scale solar power after a 25-year rise from a single Austin array to nearly one-fifth of U.S. utility-scale generation.
  • Why it matters: It pairs a measurable policy outcome with Gurley’s reminder to prioritize results over performative claims.

Video on how Anthropic operates

  • Content type: Video
  • Creator: Not specified in the source notes
  • Link/URL:https://youtu.be/ra0-ZvVApGk?si=SxERM7sZmKsrJhSv
  • Recommended by: Jason Lemkin
  • Key takeaway: Lemkin shared the video as a resource for learning more about how Anthropic operates.
  • Why it matters: It is the day’s most direct operational-AI video pointer, with an immediately usable link.

The strongest pattern across these organic picks is decision quality: distinguish intrinsic from socially modeled goals, treat organizations and capital allocation as long-duration work, and use evidence rather than stated intent to judge outcomes.

Open-Model Policy Debate Deepens as AI Competition Shifts to Workflows
Jul 13
3 min read
165 docs
Kyle Chan
François Chollet
Sam Altman
+7
Open-model policy discussions and reported NSF collaboration limits raise new questions about access and international research. Meanwhile, model competition is becoming more task-specific, early enterprise-adoption data offers a measured view of jobs, and an open-source terrain project demonstrates scalable generative research.

Open-model policy questions move from debate toward concrete constraints

Unconfirmed White House discussions coincide with tighter U.S.–China research ties

Interconnects reports that sources are citing White House discussions about an executive order for managing open models, while stressing that there is no official information; the analysis says any initial action would likely concern Chinese-origin models and government use. Its author argues that open-weight models above a frontier-capability threshold could face a ban or indefinite delay, while Nathan Lambert warns that an undefined licensing regime could severely constrain the open-model economy.

Separately, reporting cited by researchers says the National Science Foundation has decided to bar its funded U.S. scientists from collaborating with nearly all Chinese research institutions and their employees.

Why it matters: The immediate story is not a confirmed federal restriction on open models, but the policy debate is now occurring alongside a reported constraint on scientific collaboration—two developments with potentially consequential effects on model access, research, and cross-border competition.

Model competition becomes more workload-specific

GPT-5.6 Sol leads Design Arena; Grok 4.5 makes browser and software claims

Design Arena reported GPT-5.6 Sol at the top of its frontend-design leaderboard with an Elo of 1353, ahead of Claude Fable 5 and in the same performance band as GLM 5.2. It described the result as an 18-position, 60-point gain over GPT-5.5 and a new preference-versus-speed frontier.

Elon Musk called Grok 4.5 “Opus class” for browser use and said it ranks slightly above Fable on some software benchmarks. An evaluator cited in the discussion placed it above GPT-5.6 Sol and just below Opus for browser use, describing it as somewhat faster but only 10% cheaper overall because of cache-input costs.

Why it matters: The competitive conversation is increasingly centered on particular working contexts—frontend design, browser operation, and software tasks—rather than a single universal model ranking.

Early adoption data complicates the AI-jobs narrative

Enterprise use is rising, while employment and skills remain the focus

An analysis shared by Marc Andreessen, citing BTOS data, says the share of large U.S. enterprises using AI rose from roughly 25% in November 2025 to 37% in May 2026. The same analysis notes little movement in unemployment: 3.6% for workers aged 20+ in September 2024, 4.1% in November 2025, and 3.8% in July 2026, and cautions that the data is still early.

Sam Altman said AI has been net job-creating so far, contrary to his expectation that effects would already be visible at current capability levels. François Chollet adds a useful skills lens: he argues that stronger code-generation systems now help high-skill programmers most, while lower-skill users may underuse them or become overwhelmed.

Why it matters: The available indicators do not establish a broad employment outcome, but they point toward a near-term challenge of adoption and AI fluency—not simply headcount reduction.

An open-source terrain generator targets planet-scale worlds

Diffusion-based method keeps generation cost independent of world size

A new terrain-generation approach combines diffusion with overlapping local-window queries and weighted averaging, so query cost does not increase as the generated world grows; the presentation says this permits instant teleportation across millions of miles. A Laplacian reextraction technique is designed to preserve both broad geography, such as mountains and trenches, and finer terrain detail.

The project was reportedly trained in two weeks, runs interactively on a four-year-old consumer GPU, and has released its code and a Minecraft mod for free.

Why it matters: It is a practical example of research combining learned generation with a scalability mechanism, while making the resulting implementation available for direct experimentation.

Use AI to Improve Portfolio Economics, Not Just Output
Jul 13
4 min read
92 docs
The Beautiful Mess
Product Management
Lenny Rachitsky
+2
A portfolio framework helps PMs assess software assets by value, carrying cost, and direction of travel—and apply AI only where it improves those economics. This brief also examines a sharp activation gap in a mobile launch and practical responses to a more strained, AI-shaped PM career environment.

Big Ideas

Manage software as a portfolio of economic postures

A framework from The Beautiful Mess places each software asset on two dimensions: value created and carrying cost. The resulting posture is to Incubate (low value/low cost), Compound (high value/low cost), Refinance (high value/high cost), or Liquidate (low value/high cost).

Why it matters: static categorization is not enough. The key question is where an asset is moving, how quickly, and whether that movement is intentional. A healthy path can move from Incubate to Compound and later toward Refinance, where the team must restore the economics or eventually retire the asset.

For platform work, judge success by whether dependent products gain value, lower their carrying costs, or both—not by adoption or output alone. A platform that adds coordination overhead and complexity is simply another costly asset.

Treat AI as an accelerator, not a strategy

The useful question is: which portfolio movement are we asking AI to accelerate? AI can improve an asset’s economics, but it can also accelerate known traps: building faster without evidence of value, adding throughput to an existing constraint, or over-optimizing today’s winner at the expense of future bets.

Technical debt follows the same logic. It can be rational leverage for a Compounding asset, but is riskier before value is proven and becomes a restructuring problem when its carrying cost consumes returns.

Tactical Playbook

Run an economics-based asset review

  1. List the assets in the product area: customer-facing features, platforms, integrations, and aging systems.
  2. Place each one by its current value and carrying cost, then assign the corresponding posture: Incubate, Compound, Refinance, or Liquidate.
  3. Record its direction and speed. Identify whether the asset is becoming more valuable, more costly, or both—and whether that trajectory is deliberate.
  4. Choose the matching action: prove value for Incubate bets; protect and expand Compound assets; restructure Refinance assets; retire low-value, high-cost work.
  5. Apply the AI check: before automating or accelerating work, specify the economic movement expected. If AI only lets the team produce more of an unproven or constrained activity, pause.

Case Studies & Lessons

An acquisition spike that did not activate users

A mobile app offered a free lifetime subscription to drive Google Play pre-registrations. It received 111 pre-registrations and a launch-day spike of 111 device acquisitions, but only two first opens.

The reported structural issue was that Google Play auto-installed the app in the background: the incentive generated intent to download, but the passive installation did not earn active attention. The app was sitting silently on 109 home screens.

Lesson for launch planning: separate device acquisition from activation. Do not treat install volume as evidence that users have encountered, understood, or used the product. Evaluate whether the delivery mechanism itself creates an active moment of attention before using pre-registration acquisition as a launch-success metric.

Career Corner

AI is amplifying some PM work—and destabilizing other career expectations

In a tech-worker survey discussed on Lenny’s Podcast, 50% reported feeling amplified by AI, while 27% felt their role was being redefined, 14% destabilized, and 5% diminished; only 3% reported no professional-identity shift. Significant burnout rose from 44.7% in 2025 to 54.7% in 2026, while optimism fell from 54.8% to 48.7%.

How to respond: go deep on a small number of AI-supported tasks rather than trying to become an AI generalist; watch for an expanding scope without corresponding compensation; and recalibrate workload with your manager. The discussion also emphasizes investing in the manager relationship and seeking strong mentorship, especially earlier in a career.

Make a job search an operating system

One Staff/Principal PM’s account describes a roughly four-month search with 30+ interviews that reached at least recruiter-screen stage, alongside substantial ghosting and rejection. Their response was to treat the process as a structured project: track every application and outcome in a spreadsheet, visualize the funnel in a Sankey diagram, reserve dedicated preparation time, and take occasional rest days.

Apply it: track the funnel rather than judging progress by any one rejection. A visible record of stages and outcomes can make the search more measurable while revealing where effort should go.

Tools & Resources

  • Portfolio economics grid: Use the Incubate / Compound / Refinance / Liquidate model as a lightweight template for product, platform, and technical-debt discussions.
  • Application-funnel tracker: A spreadsheet paired with a Sankey-style visualization can turn a job search into a reviewable pipeline rather than an unstructured stream of applications.

Start with signal

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Coding Agents Alpha Tracker avatar

Coding Agents Alpha Tracker

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

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

AI in EdTech Weekly avatar

AI in EdTech Weekly

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

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

VC Tech Radar avatar

VC Tech Radar

Daily · Tracks 120 sources
a16z
Stanford eCorner
Greylock
+117

Daily AI news, startup funding, and emerging teams shaping the future

Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker avatar

Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker

Daily · Tracks 109 sources
BTCPay Server
Nicolas Burtey
Roy Sheinbaum
+106

Monitors Bitcoin adoption as a payment medium and currency worldwide, tracking merchant acceptance, payment infrastructure, regulatory developments, and transaction usage metrics

AI News Digest avatar

AI News Digest

Daily · Tracks 114 sources
Google DeepMind
OpenAI
Anthropic
+111

Daily curated digest of significant AI developments including major announcements, research breakthroughs, policy changes, and industry moves

Global Agricultural Developments avatar

Global Agricultural Developments

Daily · Tracks 86 sources
RDO Equipment Co.
Ag PhD
Precision Farming Dealer
+83

Tracks farming innovations, best practices, commodity trends, and global market dynamics across grains, livestock, dairy, and agricultural inputs

Recommended Reading from Tech Founders avatar

Recommended Reading from Tech Founders

Daily · Tracks 137 sources
Paul Graham
David Perell
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
+134

Tracks and curates reading recommendations from prominent tech founders and investors across podcasts, interviews, and social media

PM Daily Digest avatar

PM Daily Digest

Daily · Tracks 100 sources
Shreyas Doshi
Gibson Biddle
Teresa Torres
+97

Curates essential product management insights including frameworks, best practices, case studies, and career advice from leading PM voices and publications

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AI High Signal Digest

Daily · Tracks 1 source
AI High Signal

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

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