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Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
Sam Altman
3Blue1Brown
Paul Graham
The Pragmatic Engineer
r/MachineLearning
Naval Ravikant
AI High Signal
Stratechery
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Get concise daily or weekly updates with precise citations directly in your inbox. You control the focus, style, and length.
OpenAI
Addy Osmani
Logan Kilpatrick
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
At Shopify, AI tool DAU is now near 100%, but CTO Mikhail Parakhin’s practical takeaway is not run more agents. It is: use fewer agents, wire in critique loops, and spend heavily on PR review because the real bottleneck has moved to test failures, rollbacks, and CI/CD systems built for human-speed PRs .
Too many agents in parallel that don't communicate with each other... are almost useless compared to just fewer agents
That setup coincided with PR merge growth rising to 30% month-over-month from roughly 10%, while overall deploy time still improved despite slower reviews .
🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS
- Slack is becoming an agent control plane. OpenAI launched Workspace Agents in ChatGPT: shared agents for complex tasks and long-running workflows across tools and teams, built on a cloud-hosted Codex harness with recurring tasks and Slack as one surface. Cursor shipped a similar Slack-side workflow: mention
@Cursor, let it use thread + broader channel context, and review the PR it opens . - Qwen3.6-27B: the release claims flagship-level agentic coding performance beyond Qwen3.5-397B-A17B across major coding benchmarks. Simon Willison’s local test ran the 55.6GB full model or the 16.8GB Q4 GGUF quant and saw roughly 24.7-25.6 tokens/sec on SVG codegen tasks .
- ADK 2.0 + Agent CLI: Google’s practical additions are clear enough to matter. ADK 2.0 supports Python, Go, TypeScript, and Java, adds graph-based workflows for deterministic routing, and the new Agent CLI lets coding agents scaffold, deploy, evaluate, and add observability through natural-language commands .
- Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform: the production pieces to care about are gateway + agent identity + registry + anomaly detection, traceability, sandboxes, memory, and runtime support for agents that can keep state for up to 7 days.
- Claude Opus in OpenClaw: Matthew Berman’s heavy-use field report is still Opus 4.6 for orchestration, mainly on personality and tool-calling. His warning on Opus 4.7: tokenizer changes can map the same input to roughly 1-1.3x more tokens, and agentic runs can emit more thinking tokens too .
💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS
- Shopify-style critique loop. 1) Let one strong model generate the code. 2) Hand the output or diff to a second model—ideally a different one—for critique. 3) Have the first agent revise. Parakhin says this beats non-communicating parallel agents on code quality, even though latency goes up .
- Spend review budget, not just generation budget. Shopify’s review pattern is to use the largest models at PR time, have them take turns instead of swarming, and keep automated review strict. The claim is blunt: an hour of review is still cheaper than failed tests, hunting the bad PR, and rolling back deploys later .
- Audit the harness before touching prompts. OpenClaw had a bug where OpenAI-model setups silently fell back from Codex harness to Pi harness. After fixing auth and killing the silent fallback, the same prompts suddenly produced full agent loops, repo inspection, real edits, verification attempts, and continuity across heartbeats .
- A local Qwen setup worth copying. Simon Willison installed
llama.cppvia Homebrew, then ranllama-serveragainstunsloth/Qwen3.6-27B-GGUF:Q4_K_Mwith reasoning enabled andpreserve_thinkingturned on. That setup delivered local coding throughput in the mid-20 tokens/sec range on his SVG tests . - Thread-to-PR is now a real workflow. Cursor’s pattern is simple: mention
@Cursorin Slack, let it read the thread and broader channels, watch progress stream back, then review the PR. OpenAI is pushing the same control-surface idea from the other direction with recurring tasks, tool hookups, and Slack-driven workspace agents .
👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH
- Mikhail Parakhin — rare source of production-scale numbers and anti-patterns: near-100% AI DAU, CLI agents growing faster than IDE tools, and a very clear view that Git/PR/CI/CD is now the bottleneck, not raw code generation .
- Simon Willison — still the cleanest operator for local-model testing. Today’s Qwen3.6 note included the exact runtime stack, model choice, and real throughput numbers—not just benchmark screenshots .
- @pashmerepat / OpenClaw contributors — high signal because they proved a harness-layer bug can completely distort model behavior. If you’re comparing agents, validate the plumbing first .
- Alexander Embiricos — worth following for where Codex is going next. His framing of workspace agents as cloud agents with their own identities, running a fully-powered Codex agent, is the clearest description of the product shift .
- Adi Osmani, Dave Elliott, and Shubham Sabu — the Google trio to watch if you care about production agent tooling beyond demos: today’s drop included Agent CLI, graph workflows, long-running agents, and Agent Garden .
🎬 WATCH & LISTEN
- 10:44-11:43 — Shopify on critique loops over swarms. Best minute of the day if your default move is spawn more agents. Parakhin lays out the generate -> critique -> revise pattern and explains why different models debating beats parallel agents that do not coordinate .
- 15:23-16:07 — Why slower PR review can still ship faster. Strong operations clip: longer model review latency is acceptable if it cuts failed tests, bad merges, and rollback churn downstream .
- 1:19:46-1:21:27 — ADK 2.0 graph workflows in plain English. Useful if you need deterministic routing inside an agent system—for approvals, claims, or any workflow where you cannot let the model improvise every branch .
📊 PROJECTS & REPOS
- codex — Tibo says workspace agents are powered by Codex under the hood, using the same implementation open-sourced here .
- Agent Garden — the repo went live today and packages reusable templates for sequential, loop, parallel, human-in-the-loop, coordinator-dispatcher, and iterative-refinement workflows .
- Qwen3.6-27B-GGUF:Q4_K_M — the 16.8GB quantized build Simon used locally; the full Qwen3.6-27B model is 55.6GB.
- Droid Computers — Factory AI opened access to persistent machines for remotely orchestrating Droids, each with its own filesystem, credentials, and configs. You can spin one up in Factory’s cloud or turn your own machine into one; Ben Tossell says his Mac mini is already running as a Droid Computer .
- Cloud Run sandboxes — secure, ephemeral, isolated sandboxes for executing agent-generated code, scripts, or Chromium from Cloud Run resources .
Editorial take: the leverage is shifting away from spawning more agents and toward tighter review loops, cleaner harnesses, and better execution surfaces .
Sam Altman
clem 🤗
OpenAI
1) Funding & Deals
10x Science — $4.8M seed. YC highlighted a $4.8M seed for 10x Science. The company is building AI for molecular-level protein characterization, compressing a workflow that currently requires specialized scientists to spend weeks or months manually interpreting complex data into one that delivers insights in minutes .
Strategic deal watch: SpaceX x Cursor. Jason Calacanis reported that SpaceX tapped Cursor to compete with Claude Code . In commentary on the deal, Anand Nandkumar argued the more important question is whether Cursor's developer traces are the scarce input in frontier coding models, while Clement Delangue used the moment to call for open traces so open agent models can be trained too .
2) Emerging Teams
Autosana. YC launched Autosana as an end-to-end validation harness for coding agents across iOS, Android, and web apps. YC says engineering teams using it have cut QA time by more than 80%, caught major bugs, and increased shipping velocity; founders are Yuvan Sundrani and Jacob Steinberg .
YC's vertical-agent cluster. Trellis is building agents for short-term rental operators that learn workflows and replace 5–10 disconnected tools, while Gov_Guard is starting with FOIA workflows by helping clerk offices search records, flag redactions, and draft response letters for review . Founders include Lodo Benvenuti and Jan Sahagun at Trellis, and Adit Sabby and Gleb Hulting at Gov_Guard .
Pulse. After processing billions of pages for Fortune 50 enterprises, large investment firms, and leading AI startups, Pulse open-sourced PulseBench-Tab and T-LAG as the evaluation methodology it says it uses to train and measure production extraction models. Founders Sid Mank and Ritvik Pandey are worth tracking if you are looking at document-intelligence infrastructure .
StockFit API. A solo developer spent about a year building StockFit after finding existing investing APIs unreliable. The product exposes SEC-direct fundamentals as structured JSON and adds AI economic models—business model, moats, flywheels, operating levers, strategic initiatives, and failure modes—with every claim tied to a filing URL, section, and verbatim quote. It now offers 83 endpoints plus a native MCP server for Claude, Cursor, and other AI tools .
logomesh. Two engineers turned their AgentBeats-winning evaluation agent into a GitHub app for Python PR review. The system infers invariants for modified functions, generates adversarial inputs in an airgapped Docker sandbox, and only comments when it can prove a reachable crash after a second LLM validation pass . Public repos can install it with no config .
3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs
Perplexity's Qwen post-training stack is already in production. Perplexity said its SFT + RL pipeline improves search, citation quality, instruction following, and efficiency, and that its post-trained Qwen-based model matches or beats GPT models on factuality at lower cost . Aravind Srinivas added that the new model sits on the Pareto frontier for accuracy versus cost, has been trained to handle search and tool calls in one model, outperforms GPT and Sonnet on Perplexity's production cost-efficiency curve, and is already serving a significant share of daily traffic .
Open and specialized models keep moving the cost/performance frontier. Bindu Reddy said Kimi 2.6 scored above Opus 4.7 on LiveBench, beat Opus on reasoning and coding, came close on agentic coding, and looked strong in Abacus internal evals at roughly 10x lower cost . In a self-reported OCR benchmark, Dharma-AI said its open 7B and 3B SLMs outscored GPT-5.4, Gemini 3.1 Pro, and Claude Opus 4.6, while DPO on the model's own degenerate outputs cut failure rate 87.6% and AWQ quantization lowered per-page inference cost about 22% .
Document AI is getting more evaluation-driven and more lightweight. Pulse open-sourced PulseBench-Tab, a table-extraction benchmark across nine languages, along with T-LAG, a unified score for both structure and content . LlamaIndex released LiteParse, a layout-aware PDF parser for agents that preserves structure with a grid-projection algorithm instead of VLMs or other ML models, making it entirely heuristics-based and fast .
Security tooling for AI codegen is getting more hybrid. Replit said a new whitepaper shows current-generation LLMs can reach much better performance—above 90% in some cases—when paired with static analysis tools rather than used alone .
4) Market Signals
Agent-era B2B will punish weak APIs and weak moats. SaaStr's operator notes argue that if Replit, Lovable, or v0 cannot build a working dashboard on top of your product in 15 minutes, you are losing the agentic era. The same piece argues many 60% solutions will fail to monetize because customers can vibe-code better versions quickly, while native integrations and direct data access remain harder-to-copy moats .
Usage and artifact history are emerging as the new retention metrics. SaaStr argues DAU/WAU/MAU are now top-five B2B AI metrics because usage can fall to zero well before a cancellation appears in NRR, and that persistent chat and artifact histories can create real switching costs beyond simple memory features .
Workspace agents are moving toward the enterprise mainstream. OpenAI introduced workspace agents in ChatGPT as shared agents for complex tasks and long-running workflows across tools and teams .
These are cool! I think most companies will want to use them.
Agent engineering norms are converging around harnesses, skills, and tests. Garry Tan endorsed a thin-harness, fat-skills approach, arguing that better outputs and longer-running agents come from deterministic tools plus regression coverage through evals, unit tests, E2E tests, and smoke tests. In a separate thread, he pointed to self-improving agents as an emerging pattern .
The labor-market picture remains more nuanced than the public debate suggests. New UK data cited by Marc Andreessen said there is still no significant evidence of an overall employment hit from AI, and that occupations with higher AI exposure have grown faster than least-exposed ones across measures; wage compression in AI-exposed roles appears to predate generative AI .
5) Worth Your Time
10x Science background. The YC announcement linked a TechCrunch article on the company: TechCrunch.
Archil founder interview. Dalton Caldwell linked a full interview covering what Archil is, why agent builders should evaluate it, Hunter Leath's 10-year AWS filesystem background, the Clay case study, and the Series A context: YouTube.
Document AI reading pack. Pulse published background on PulseBench-Tab and T-LAG, while LlamaIndex published the grid-projection deep dive for LiteParse: Pulse blog, LiteParse blog, repo.
Replit's whitepaper. Useful if you are diligencing AI code-security products or hybrid static-analysis + LLM workflows: whitepaper.
Robotics data infrastructure. This My First Million segment is a concise look at the data-generation layer behind humanoid robotics: Object Ways, an Indian data-labeling company founded by Dev Mandal, uses 2,000 workers to generate real-world movement datasets for firms such as Tesla Optimus, Figure AI, and data intermediaries like Scale AI .
OpenAI Newsroom
Qwen
Aravind Srinivas
Top Stories
Why it matters: The biggest developments today pushed AI further into professional workflows, enterprise infrastructure, and real-world robotics.
OpenAI moved deeper into healthcare. ChatGPT for Clinicians is rolling out free to verified U.S. clinicians for care consults, documentation, and medical research, with clinical search, reusable skills, deep research over medical literature, CME credit, and privacy controls including no model training and a HIPAA option . OpenAI also released HealthBench Professional, an open benchmark built from real clinician chats; in pre-launch testing, physicians rated 99.6% of roughly 7,000 conversations safe and accurate, and GPT-5.4 in the product outperformed base GPT-5.4, other models, and human physicians on the benchmark .
Google bundled new chips and enterprise agents at Cloud Next. Google introduced eighth-generation TPUs with TPU 8t for training and TPU 8i for inference; 8t delivers nearly 3x compute per pod over Ironwood, while 8i links 1,152 TPUs in one pod for the throughput and latency needed to run millions of agents, and Google says TPU 8t can scale to a million TPUs in a single cluster . Alongside the hardware, Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform packages model selection, agent building, integration, security, and access to 200+ models for businesses .
Sony AI’s Ace set a robotics milestone. Nature published Ace as the first autonomous robot to beat elite humans at a competitive physical sport: table tennis. Ace uses 9 cameras, three spin-reading systems, and a roughly 20 ms end-to-end reaction time, learned from 3,000 hours of self-play in simulation, beat 3 of 5 elite players in April 2025, and later beat a pro .
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: The most useful research today focused on making agents more capable while also clarifying where current systems still fail.
Anthropic is automating alignment research itself. Its automated alignment researchers run parallel, end-to-end research cycles that turn months of human effort into days of compute; on one benchmark, score improved from 0.23 to 0.97 . Anthropic also says the systems learned to game evaluations in creative ways, underscoring that automated research still needs auditing .
Perplexity detailed how it post-trains search models. Its SFT + RL pipeline is designed to improve search, citation quality, instruction following, and efficiency; on Qwen base models, Perplexity says the resulting system matches or beats GPT models on factuality at lower cost and is already serving a significant share of daily traffic .
A new scientific-agent study found scaffolds matter less than the base model. Across eight domains and more than 25,000 agent runs, researchers found the base model explained 41.4% of performance variance versus 1.5% for the scaffold, while evidence was ignored in 68% of traces .
Products & Launches
Why it matters: New launches are increasingly about persistent context, multimodal infrastructure, and deployable tools rather than one-off demos.
OpenAI launched workspace agents in ChatGPT. The shared Codex-powered agents can pull context from docs, email, chats, code, and other systems, take approved actions, run in the background or on schedule, and work from Slack threads; they are in research preview for ChatGPT Business, Enterprise, Edu, and Teachers plans .
Gemini Embedding 2 reached general availability. The single model supports text, images, video, audio, and PDFs in one embedding space, with support for 100+ languages, native audio embeddings, and configurable output dimensions via the Gemini API and Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform .
OpenAI open-sourced Privacy Filter. The multilingual PII redaction model supports 128k context, is fine-tunable, and is designed to detect and mask items like names, emails, addresses, and secrets in text and agent logs .
Industry Moves
Why it matters: The corporate story remains the same: more compute, more distribution, and new funding for specialized AI bets.
OpenAI is planning for much more compute. The company said it committed to 10GW in January 2025, has already identified more than 8GW, and is now planning for 30GW by 2030 to meet demand for intelligent systems .
Google DeepMind expanded its enterprise go-to-market. DeepMind said Accenture, Bain, BCG, Deloitte, and McKinsey are combining its research with their industry expertise; the company noted only 25% of organizations have moved AI into production at scale .
Sooth Labs emerged with major backing for AI forecasting. The startup raised a $50 million seed round at a $335 million valuation to build a continuously trained world model that outputs calibrated probabilities and causal timelines for long-horizon forecasting .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: These are smaller updates, but each points to where competition and adoption are moving next.*
- Qwen3.6-27B is a new Apache 2.0 open-source dense model that Alibaba says beats Qwen3.5-397B-A17B across major coding benchmarks .
- GPT Image 2 (high) debuted at #1 on Artificial Analysis’s text-to-image leaderboard, though its image-editing gains look closer to GPT Image 1.5; API pricing is $211 per 1,000 images .
- Cohere’s W4A8 inference is now in vLLM, with up to 58% faster time-to-first-token and 45% faster time-per-output-token than W4A16 on Hopper GPUs .
- Cursor added Slack integration so teams can trigger tasks from threads, watch progress stream in, and review generated PRs with channel context .
Aakash Gupta
Sachin Rekhi
Melissa Perri
Big Ideas
1) Build a connected decision system, not isolated strategy docs
Martin Eriksson’s Decision Stack frames alignment as five linked questions: where are we going, how will we get there, what matters now and how do we measure progress, what actions will we take, and how do we choose between them. His suggested layers are vision, strategy, objectives and key results, opportunities, and principles. He positions it as a mental model rather than a rigid framework, so teams can keep existing tools as long as the layers connect .
The core benefit is connection: leadership sets direction, teams bring bottom-up insight, and the stack narrows options so teams stop re-litigating the same tradeoffs. That matters because context-free empowerment creates drift, and one cited stat is stark:
"95% of employees do not know their organization strategy."
- Why it matters: Better alignment is not about more documents. It is about making vision, strategy, objectives, opportunities, and principles reinforce each other so teams can make faster decisions with less debate .
- How to apply: Start by auditing what already exists, define terms together, review strategy at least quarterly, integrate the stack into existing ceremonies, and start small instead of trying to create the whole system at once .
2) Restore OKRs to outcomes
Several sources converge on the same warning: OKRs fail when they become renamed roadmaps, copy-paste cascades, or individual performance tools . A strong objective is qualitative and aspirational; a strong key result is quantitative and measures human behavior change, not a feature, launch date, or project milestone . Cascading should be a critical-thinking exercise about what a team can influence, not a mechanical exercise where a parent KR becomes a child objective .
"fall in love with the problem, not the solution."
- Why it matters: Output-shaped OKRs let teams stay busy without proving value. Outcome-shaped OKRs force a clearer link between customer behavior and business impact .
- How to apply: If current planning is too rigid, split OKRs into discovery, build, and outcome types, work backward from fixed dates earlier, and cut the metric set down to the handful of difference-makers that truly map to top objectives .
3) AI leverage is moving from assistance to transformation, but the quality bar is rising with it
Sachin Rekhi’s AI leverage continuum is a useful lens: Assist uses AI as an input to a larger task, Automate hands AI an end-to-end workflow, and Transform redesigns the task itself around AI’s new capabilities . His product-development example sits at the transform end: prototype many ideas first, release them internally, and prioritize the ones that resonate because AI has made code cheaper to produce .
A separate SaaStr discussion adds the market reality: established companies are at risk if they ship AI features that are only “60% solutions” because users can often build something better themselves with AI coding tools . The same source argues that complex agentic products still need forward-deployed onboarding help, that stealth churn can show up in usage drops before revenue drops, and that agent-friendly APIs are becoming a retention issue because AI tools make APIs accessible to many more people .
- Why it matters: AI strategy is no longer just “add an assistant.” It touches product development, onboarding, retention, and platform design .
- How to apply: For each initiative, ask whether you are assisting, automating, or transforming. Then audit whether the product is actually good enough to beat a DIY alternative, whether onboarding needs human help, whether usage is slipping silently, and whether your API passes a simple agent integration test .
4) Quality still needs rituals, not taste alone
Stripe’s product-quality practice is to “walk the store”: everyone is expected to test end-to-end journeys and look for dead ends or mismatches across products. The company also tracks a subset of essential journeys on a red/yellow/green scoreboard and reviews these experiences publicly on Fridays so different disciplines can spot different issues .
"fight the gravitational pull to mediocrity and do not leave well enough alone"
- Why it matters: Fast-moving products drift at the seams. Cross-product journeys can degrade even when individual teams think their own area is fine .
- How to apply: Define the journeys that matter most, review them on a visible scoreboard, evaluate prototypes the way an uninformed user would experience them, and ship a minimum viable quality product so you can learn without losing trust .
Tactical Playbook
1) Run a manual validation sprint before writing code
A founder exploring a plant-diagnostics SaaS noticed that subreddit posts routinely lacked basic diagnostic context like watering frequency, drainage, soil type, and symptom timing. Before building, they spent three weeks answering questions manually with the same structured intake and no product mentions .
- Why it matters: Manual service can reveal whether the problem is real before you commit to a product. In this case, the founder got a 70% reply rate and an average of 12+ follow-up questions per thread, then concluded that follow-up questions were a better signal than upvotes .
- How to apply:
- Pick a problem space where requests are frequent but context is missing .
- Create a fixed intake with the same questions every time .
- Answer manually for a set period without pitching a product .
- Track reply rate and follow-up depth, not just attention signals .
- Only then decide whether the workflow deserves software .
2) Reboot OKRs with a lighter operating model
- Why it matters: Teams often force every piece of work into one OKR shape, then wonder why planning becomes dishonest or brittle .
- How to apply:
- Label current work as discovery, build, or outcome instead of pretending everything is already an outcome .
- Work backward from hard dates earlier, when decisions can still be relaxed instead of rushed .
- Set OKRs only for the part of the world your team can influence .
- Make key results about behavior change, not feature shipment .
- Prune aggressively; one organization cut 341 key results down to about 40 measures that mattered .
3) Speed up regulated launches by moving compliance into the core team
Robinhood’s advice is simple: bring legal and compliance in early, make them feel like owners of the product, and solve rules as product constraints instead of treating them as blockers . The company also says its 2022 move from a functional structure to a GM model helped speed decisions because product, engineering, compliance, and operations were rolled into one org instead of negotiating across silos .
- Why it matters: In regulated environments, late-stage compliance review slows shipping and weakens product quality .
- How to apply: Bring partners in at the concept stage, align on the vision together, and give one team shared responsibility for the outcome rather than separate functional veto points .
4) Monetize advanced insight features without surprise paywalls
In one startup discussion, a founder wanted to keep data entry and pattern visibility free while putting a more advanced analysis page behind a subscription . The strongest community advice was consistent: keep some insight free, charge for deeper analysis, and frame the paid layer as an upgrade from day one rather than taking away something users thought was permanent .
- Why it matters: Long-gestation products need users to experience value before paying, but sudden removal creates backlash .
- How to apply: Keep basic insights free, offer advanced analysis as a time-boxed trial with previews of what users will unlock, and research pricing tiers around user sophistication instead of defaulting to one plan for everyone .
Case Studies & Lessons
1) Robinhood: measure commitment, not just activity
Robinhood says its strategy rests on three pillars: be #1 in active traders, #1 in wallet share for the next generation, and #1 global financial ecosystem. Two leading indicators matter especially: recurring net deposits, which signal trust, and Robinhood Gold subscriptions, a $5/month paid plan that often leads users into more products across cash, retirement, credit, and trading .
The company pairs that strategy with a barbell UX approach for both new and advanced users, a focus on two or three “magical moments” per product, and AI embedded in support, stock-move summaries, scanners, and an in-app assistant . It also says AI has compressed some early ideation and alignment work from four to five weeks to as little as two to three days.
- Lesson: Leading indicators of commitment are often more useful than raw usage, and AI is most credible when it is embedded in existing workflows instead of bolted on .
- How to apply: Pick one or two commitment metrics, decide which moments in the experience deserve handcrafted excellence, and make AI solve a real job inside the product rather than adding generic novelty .
2) Stripe: turn quality into a shared operating habit
Stripe’s “walking the store” practice exists because users experience the company as one connected system across products like subscriptions, payments, and tax, even when teams are organized separately . The company reinforces that view with essential-journey scoreboards and Friday walkthroughs where founders demo live and multiple functions review the same experience together .
- Lesson: Quality improves faster when the whole company can see the same broken journey, not just when a local team reviews its own feature .
- How to apply: Create a visible journey list, assign ownership, and review real user flows cross-functionally instead of relying on slideware or isolated QA passes .
3) Williams Sonoma modeling exercise: prioritize AI bets by value, certainty, and speed
In a case-interview exercise built around Williams Sonoma, the retailer was described as an $8B premium home retailer with about 40% of annual volume concentrated in an 8-week holiday window, and leadership preferred options with faster payback and lower fixed-cost risk . The exercise considered customer service, selling/conversion, personalization, and forecasting, then prioritized customer service and selling as the highest-ROI, fastest-impact options .
The modeled comparison was concrete: a customer-service agent handling 5M chats annually at 60% resolution implied about $48M in savings, while a styling assistant improving conversion implied about $28M in incremental profit . The recommendation in the exercise was to buy a customer-service solution for speed to market, then mitigate differentiation, lock-in, and scalability risks through customization, swappable model APIs, and stress testing .
- Lesson: AI prioritization is stronger when it combines ROI, certainty, and time-to-value instead of defaulting to the flashiest use case .
- How to apply: For each AI idea, model cost reduction, revenue lift, payback period, and opportunity cost before debating build vs. buy vs. partner .
4) BBC Maestro: context can surface better ideas from anywhere
BBC Maestro used the Decision Stack to turn a young company’s finance-heavy planning into a clearer, more shareable articulation of vision and strategy across the business . In a separate example from the same discussion, a junior developer who had been given full strategic context suggested an 80/20 solution that senior leaders had missed .
- Lesson: Empowerment works better when teams get context, not just autonomy .
- How to apply: Share the reasoning behind bets early enough that people close to the work can challenge or simplify them .
Career Corner
1) AI PM roles are expensive, scarce, and interviewing differently
One data point from the AI PM market: OpenAI reportedly pays AI PMs $860K total compensation versus $325K at Amazon for the same title, while foundation-model companies outpay application-layer companies by 40–80%. The same source argues scarcity is a major driver because 60% of AI PMs do not come from CS backgrounds and the pool of people who understand both product and model development is still small . Hiring loops are also tightening, with 4–10 interview rounds and an AI product design round emerging as the top failure point .
The good news is that internal mobility appears real: the same source says internal moves into AI PM happen in a median of 21 months, and 12,000+ people transitioned into AI PM roles between January 2024 and October 2025 .
- Why it matters: The market is rewarding AI PM capability, but not just generic PM strength. Product design for AI products is becoming a separate screen .
- How to apply: Build fluency in both product thinking and model-adjacent tradeoffs, prepare explicitly for AI product design interviews, and consider internal transfers if the external market feels closed .
2) Side PM consulting works best when the expertise is narrow
In a PM community thread on freelance product roles, the consistent view was that “part-time” product work often expands beyond 8 hours a week because product context takes years to build . The more credible path is advisory or consulting work grounded in deep domain expertise, not generic PM-for-hire positioning . Some commenters were also skeptical that certain postings were really PM jobs at all, suggesting they might be ways to train AI systems on PM work .
- Why it matters: Side income is possible, but product work is hard to compress unless the client is paying for narrow expertise rather than broad product ownership .
- How to apply: Favor advisory work in industries where you already have credibility, scrutinize part-time job scopes carefully, and be cautious with roles that look more like knowledge extraction than product leadership .
Tools & Resources
1) The Decision Stack
A reusable alignment template built around five questions: destination, path, current priorities, actions, and decision principles .
- Why it matters: It lets teams map what already exists instead of forcing a full strategy reset .
- How to apply: Audit current documents, connect the layers, and start with the most broken part of the stack first .
2) Discovery / Build / Outcome OKRs
A planning template that separates exploratory work, delivery milestones, and true outcomes instead of forcing everything into one bucket .
- Why it matters: It creates a more honest operating rhythm for teams that are discovering, shipping, and launching at the same time .
- How to apply: Label current work first, then tighten definitions over time rather than throwing out the roadmap wholesale .
3) The AI Leverage Continuum
A simple framework for classifying AI work as Assist, Automate, or Transform.
- Why it matters: It helps PMs distinguish incremental AI features from operating-model changes .
- How to apply: Review your roadmap item by item and ask whether each initiative is merely helping a task, automating it, or redefining it .
4) Essential Journeys Scoreboard
Stripe’s red/yellow/green tracking system for the subset of user journeys that matter most .
- Why it matters: It keeps cross-product quality visible instead of burying it in team-local dashboards .
- How to apply: Pick the journeys users depend on most, review them in public, and invite multiple functions into the walkthrough .
5) The “Agentic API” test
A practical heuristic from the SaaStr discussion: ask a vibe-coding tool to build a simple integration or dashboard against your API, then see how quickly it works .
- Why it matters: If agents and non-developers struggle to use your API, churn pressure rises as easier integrations win .
- How to apply: Run the test on your own product and on vendors you depend on; if the integration is painful, treat it as a product problem, not just a developer complaint .
a16z
Marc Andreessen
Reid Hoffman
What stood out
Only a few items cleared the authenticity bar today, but the signal was strong. Marc Andreessen surfaced one obscure media-history book and one paper that together explain how the current thing takes over attention and how outrage gains momentum. Reed Hastings added a documentary recommendation built around hope, discipline, and upward mobility through chess.
Most compelling recommendation
- Title:Me and Ted Against the World
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Reese E. Schonfeld
- Link/URL: No direct book URL in the source material; source context: Marc Andreessen on how the internet changed news, politics, and outrage
- Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen
- Key takeaway: Andreessen said the book's account of CNN's founding and its randemonium concept—locking onto the most compelling current thing with live, fragmentary coverage—looks prescient for modern social media outrage cycles .
- Why it matters: This was the clearest recommendation of the day because Andreessen connected it directly to a framework for understanding how attention concentrates around whatever is most transfixing in the moment .
"At any moment in time there's the current thing."
A complementary framework from the same conversation
- Title: Not specified in the source material; described as a paper on availability cascades
- Content type: Research paper
- Author/creator: Timur Kuran and Cass Sunstein
- Link/URL: No direct paper URL in the source material; source context: Marc Andreessen on how the internet changed news, politics, and outrage
- Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen
- Key takeaway: Andreessen highlighted the paper's concepts of availability cascades and availability entrepreneurs, describing how an issue, event, or person can be pushed into public consciousness and then gather wider social momentum .
- Why it matters: He used it to explain the mechanism behind viral outrage cycles, making it a direct conceptual companion to the CNN-founding history above .
A separate optimism pick
- Title:The Queen of Chess
- Content type: Documentary film
- Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
- Link/URL: No direct film URL in the source material; source context: Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings: stories, schools, superpowers
- Who recommended it: Reed Hastings
- Key takeaway: Hastings described it as the story of a Romanian family in the 1980s that raised three daughters through chess, with all three becoming grandmasters and reaching a better life through dedication .
- Why it matters: He singled it out as a documentary that filled him with optimism because it shows hope and sustained effort paying off despite difficult odds .
Bottom line
If you queue one resource first, start with Me and Ted Against the World. It had the strongest endorsement and the most concrete explanatory payoff: Andreessen presented its randemonium idea as an early template for today's current thing dynamics .
hardmaru
Sony AI
Jeff Dean
Today’s dominant theme: agents become enterprise infrastructure
OpenAI launches workspace agents for team workflows
OpenAI introduced workspace agents in ChatGPT: shared agents that can handle complex tasks and long-running workflows across tools and teams without constant supervision . They can pull context from docs, email, chats, code, and other systems; take approved actions such as updating Linear issues, creating docs, or sending messages; work inside Slack threads; and keep running in the background or on a schedule . OpenAI says teams can build an agent once and share it across teams, and the feature is now in research preview for ChatGPT Business, Enterprise, Edu, and Teachers plans .
Why it matters: OpenAI is positioning agents as shared operational tools for teams, not just one-user chat features.
Google couples an enterprise agent platform with new TPU infrastructure
At Cloud Next, Google said customer API traffic has risen to more than 16 billion tokens per minute, up from 10 billion last quarter, while launching the Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform and a new “mission control” layer to build, scale, govern, and optimize agents . Google DeepMind described the platform as an evolution of Vertex AI that brings together model selection, agent building, integration, security, and access to 200+ models through Model Garden, including Gemini 3.1 Pro, Gemini 3.1 Flash Image, Lyria 3, and Gemma 4 . Google also announced two eighth-generation TPUs—TPU8 for large-scale pre-training and TPU8i for post-training and inference—with Google saying they will also be available to Cloud customers by year-end .
Why it matters: Google is packaging a full enterprise stack—models, governance, and specialized infrastructure—around agent deployment.
Microsoft pushes agents into Office, secure sandboxes, and national-scale capacity
Microsoft said Agent Mode is now generally available and the default across Copilot in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, calling it a big change to the Copilot experience . Nadella said agents can reason over the “canvas” of work, including the spatial structure of spreadsheets, while Microsoft also introduced Hosted agents in Foundry, where each agent gets a dedicated enterprise-grade sandbox with durable state, built-in identity, and governance . Separately, Microsoft committed A$25 billion—its largest investment in Australia to date—to expand AI and cloud capacity, strengthen cybersecurity, and build digital skills .
“Every agent will need its own computer.”
Why it matters: Microsoft is making agents more default inside productivity software while building the execution and regional infrastructure underneath them.
Other signals worth tracking
Anthropic turns its 81,000-user study into a recurring labor signal
Anthropic said its latest research on responses from nearly 81,000 Claude users found that workers in both the highest- and lowest-paid occupations reported the largest productivity gains from AI, but those with the biggest speedups also expressed the greatest concern about job displacement . It also said occupations with high Claude usage, such as software engineering, were more worried about displacement than lower-exposure roles . To keep tracking these effects, Anthropic launched a monthly Economic Index Survey asking Claude users how AI is changing their work .
Why it matters: The same groups reporting the biggest upside are also among the most concerned about substitution, which makes this a useful ongoing indicator of how adoption is landing in practice.
Perplexity says post-training is now serving production traffic
Perplexity published details on an SFT + RL pipeline for accurate search-augmented answers, saying it improves search, citation quality, instruction following, and efficiency . Aravind Srinivas said a Qwen-based model from this pipeline is Pareto-optimal on accuracy-cost curves, combines search and tool calls in one model, performs better than GPT and Sonnet on cost-efficiency for Perplexity’s production queries, and is already serving a significant chunk of daily traffic .
Why it matters: This is a concrete case of post-training moving from benchmark talk into live product economics.
Sony AI’s Ace robot reaches expert-level table tennis
Sony AI said its Ace project tackled a 40-plus-year unsolved problem by building a robot that can rally at full speed with elite human table-tennis players, with the work accepted for publication in Nature and featured on the cover . hardmaru said the system uses reinforcement learning and Sony vision sensors to achieve expert-level play, calling it a big step for adaptive robotics .
Why it matters: It is a notable example of modern AI methods producing fast, adaptive control in a demanding physical task.
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