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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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Software As a Service Companies — The Future Of Tech Businesses
Entrepreneur Ride Along
1) Funding & Deals
- Factory — seed conviction resurfaced as the clearest deal signal in this batch. Matan Grinberg, a former physicist who spent about 12 years pursuing string theory and studied at Princeton before starting a Berkeley PhD, said Sequoia wrote a $1 million check at a $5 million post after he cold-emailed a partner, met his cofounder the next day, dropped out, and sent a screenshot before meeting the partnership . Gokul Rajaram, who says he invested in the seed round, called Grinberg a very very special founder and later summarized Factory's core thesis as a resource-allocation problem across tokens, dollars, and people .
2) Emerging Teams
- Aster — autonomous research lab with a strong launch signal. YC highlighted Aster as an autonomous research lab that runs thousands of AI agents in parallel to target 1000x speedups in research, and said the lab set a world record on ProteinGym in 30 minutes before moving into open-ended research . YC also congratulated founder @emmett_bicker on the launch .
- Nvoyce — workflow software built from a founder's own receivables pain. The founder previously worked on financial infrastructure at Amazon, started freelancing after being laid off, and spent a month chasing a single $2,400 invoice . Nvoyce uses AI to generate invoices and proposals from short work descriptions, adds Stripe payment links and automated reminders, converts proposals into invoices, and supports installment billing . It was built solo, is live on web, iOS, and Android, and is priced at $19.99 per month for solo users and $39.99 for teams .
- SMB voice agents — early willingness to pay is showing up before scalable distribution. One solo founder validated demand by cold-calling small businesses, then built an AI receptionist with Claude Code focused on natural-sounding voice; outreach and referrals have produced about 10 paying customers . The key objection was not the category but robotic delivery: prospects said they would consider AI only if it sounded natural . A second founder in the same category says onboarding is now down to pasting a business website, with a working receptionist generated in about 38 seconds and improved after each call .
3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs
- neuron-db — long-term memory without embeddings. The system stores word stems plus a few scalars instead of dense vectors, uses set logic over a stem index, and runs in microseconds in stdlib Python with no model or GPU install . Serialized storage is about 48 bytes per fact, or roughly 22 million facts per GB, which the author estimates is about 130x denser than float32 1536-dim vector storage . The tradeoff is explicit: it supports cue and associative recall rather than semantic similarity, and is positioned as a scalar-first tier alongside optional vector search .
- Kimi 2.7 — benchmark watch for coding agents. Bindu Reddy said Kimi 2.7 beats Fable and GPT 5.5 on agentic coding benchmarks, while also cautioning that some of the gain may come from benchmark optimization even if much of the improvement appears real .
- Capital-efficient multi-tenant agent ops are getting more sophisticated. One founder describes running isolated WhatsApp agents for multiple local e-commerce shops on a single $6 Ubuntu droplet using PM2 process isolation, Baileys multi-file auth state per client, and automatic failover from Gemini to Groq/Llama-3 when the core API throttles . The business model combines an upfront setup fee for inventory mapping with a monthly retainer, with expansion through Make.com webhooks into Google Sheets .
4) Market Signals
- Enterprise AI is moving from token maxing to ROI discipline. Factory describes three phases of adoption: board pressure, then token-heavy AI adoption, and now a hangover where enterprises examine bills and question returns . Its operating view is that 80-90% of software-development tasks can run on open models, with frontier spend reserved for the 10-20% of planning and decision-heavy work . Grinberg also said he expects a short-term contraction in usage of the very frontier models as enterprises tighten routing .
"Phase three is the hangover, where you go and look at the bill and it's like, oh my God, we are spending so much, I have no idea what the ROI is."
- Application-layer independence is strengthening as an investment thesis. Factory says it is model-agnostic and wants customers routed across OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and Microsoft based on price, speed, and performance . Gokul Rajaram's summary makes the broader case that model-app separation keeps providers competing, and that four roughly equivalent frontier labs is now more likely than a single dominant model .
- Org design is moving up a level, from coding to systems design. Gokul Rajaram's thread argues the relevant unit is the load-bearing individual rather than the 10x engineer, that token spend will be highly bimodal across engineers, and that the next-era engineer designs the assembly line that produces software rather than writing each line directly . Factory's own hiring lens aligns with that, emphasizing agency and end-to-end ownership over narrow credential funnels .
- AI-assisted product creation is accelerating faster than distribution. One founder says he stabilized six AI micro-SaaS products at $20k per month in total MRR while barely coding manually . But multiple founders in the same batch describe GTM as the bottleneck: RobinOS has 8 users and 3 paid subscribers so far, and the receptionist founder says cold calls worked while more scalable channels did not . In voice AI specifically, commenters argued that trust is the real constraint and recommended narrow verticals plus live demos to prove natural-sounding output .
- Chinese model progress is showing up in investor chatter through coding benchmarks. Bindu Reddy framed Kimi 2.7's reported lead as evidence of rapid progress and warned that US policy mistakes could narrow the competitive gap quickly .
5) Worth Your Time
- 20VC episode — direct source on enterprise AI token economics, routing, and the frontier-versus-open split in software development .
- Gokul Rajaram on FactoryAI — direct investor summary of resource allocation, model-app separation, and the four-frontier-labs view .
- Aster YC launch page — direct source on the autonomous research-lab claim and the ProteinGym result .
- neuron-db repo — direct source for benchmarks, the threat model, and the storage comparison behind the non-embedding memory approach .
Yoshua Bengio
Kimi.ai
Anthropic
Top Stories
Why it matters: today’s biggest signal was that access to frontier models is becoming as important as capability itself.
- The Anthropic shutdown now has a clearer backstory. Anthropic said a U.S. export-control directive forced it to suspend Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for foreign nationals, which in practice meant disabling both models for all customers; other Claude models were unaffected, and the company said it was working to restore access . New reporting added that Amazon CEO Andy Jassy raised security concerns to Trump administration officials, followed by urgent White House calls with Dario Amodei before the order was imposed .
- Open-weight challengers used the moment to press their case. Z.ai released GLM-5.2 with coding focus, 1M context, and long-horizon strengths, with API access next week and an MIT-licensed open-source release to follow . Zhipu explicitly framed the launch around keeping frontier intelligence open and globally accessible amid sudden restrictions on other models .
- Multi-model orchestration is becoming a product category. OpenRouter launched Fusion API, calling it a compound model that reaches Fable-level intelligence at half the price . In parallel, Databricks open-sourced Omnigent, a meta-harness for combining systems like Claude Code, Codex, and Pi with live collaboration and control policies .
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: the most useful technical updates today were about how models learn safety, how they scale, and where they are expanding beyond text.
- DeepMind’s latest interpretability result points upstream in the training stack. Researchers said many safety-relevant Gemini behaviors appear to come from the initial supervised fine-tuning stage, not later RL stages, challenging the assumption that alignment work mainly lives in RL .
- Stanford-backed analysis challenged the “high-quality data only” view. The reported result: filtering helps at small compute budgets, but as models get larger and train longer, full unfiltered Common Crawl performs better, with large models tolerating and even extracting value from messy data .
- WaveDiT generated full 3D brain MRI scans in one second. The system produces every voxel directly, with no lossy latent stage, and was reported as an early accept at MICCAI 2026 . Separate commentary said the method applies HDiT directly in the wavelet domain for diffusion-based 3D medical imaging .
Products & Launches
Why it matters: agent tooling is getting more operational, not just more autonomous.
- Adaline 2.0 launched as an “Agent Self-Improvement Layer” that turns production traces into behaviors, behaviors into issues, and issues into auto-generated evals, data, and new agent candidates for human review .
- Kimi-K2.7-Code expanded onto Together AI as a tool-heavy coding agent model with 256K context, multi-step tool calling, and roughly 30% lower thinking-token use than K2.6 .
- Cohere’s new 30B open-weight coding model targeted agentic workflows such as terminal use and repository patching, with reported strength on Terminal-Bench and SWE-Bench-style tasks .
Industry Moves
Why it matters: companies are reacting to model-access risk by rethinking ownership, deployment, and sovereignty.
- Defog is shifting back toward owning model weights. After abandoning in-house training in 2024 in favor of frontier APIs, the company said it will now spend at least a third of its time fine-tuning frontier open-source models because it “can’t build a business on shifting sands” .
- Europe’s sovereignty debate intensified. A new “Europe 2031” scenario called for far more compute on European soil, an AI middle-power coalition, labor-market reform, and a stronger robotics and industrial AI strategy . Yoshua Bengio separately argued Europe should invest either to leapfrog the frontier or supply critical layers such as safety and reliability .
- The UK highlighted direct chip-industry funding. A government response pointed to a dedicated AI industry unit and £1.1bn for the UK AI chip sector .
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: governments are starting to intervene directly in model access and AI company operations.
- The Anthropic order is no longer just a vague compliance event. New accounts describe it as a national-security export-control action triggered after reported jailbreak findings and failed efforts to get Anthropic to pull or fix Fable quickly .
- OpenAI was served with a state-AG subpoena. The request reportedly seeks documents on advertising, engagement and retention, consumer and health data handling, minors and seniors, deep learning models, sycophancy, and company policies .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: these smaller updates still add signal on product quality, deployment, and infrastructure speed.
- OpenAI removed 5.2-Pro from ChatGPT, according to Mikhail Parakhin .
- DeepSeek V4 Pro on Together reportedly became #1 on both latency and speed .
- Rio 3.5 Open 397B arrived from Rio de Janeiro’s municipal IT organization, built on Qwen with the SwiReasoning framework .
- Suno upgraded stem separation by regenerating stems from scratch rather than isolating frequencies .
Nathan Lambert
Sebastian Raschka
Anthropic
The story still moving
Fable’s blackout now appears to be a dispute over guardrails, not just a generic export-control action
Anthropic said a U.S. export-control directive suspended access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for any foreign national, forcing the company to disable both models for all customers to comply; other Claude models were unaffected . In a separate public account, David Sacks wrote that a trusted partner found a jailbreak in Fable’s guardrails, that the administration asked Anthropic to fix it or de-deploy the model, and that Dario Amodei refused . Another report cited by Gary Marcus said Anthropic described the removal as a 90-minute hard deadline, while the administration said its concerns were not taken seriously .
Why it matters: The core issue is no longer just that a frontier model was pulled offline. It is now a specific fight over whether a jailbreak on a guardrailed model justified an immediate shutdown, and how much process sat behind that decision .
The follow-on debate is broadening to transparency and enforcement
Reaction split quickly. Martin Casado argued that the government should not be regulating AI "to this extent" , while Gary Marcus said the shutdown came with too little public transparency and warned against selective enforcement given that "every model has been jailbroken" . Nathan Lambert argued that the episode shows the need for more visibility into both labs and government, rather than letting frontier access hinge on conflicting public narratives .
"Transparency into every power player at the frontier of AI (labs, government, etc) is the only viable solution."
Why it matters: Even critics who think Anthropic mishandled the situation are increasingly focused on how frontier AI is being governed, not only on whether one model had a serious jailbreak .
What Fable looked like before it went dark
Strong autonomous engineering signals, but lots of refusals and little evidence of research autonomy
Early user reports discussed on The Cognitive Revolution suggest Fable routinely downgraded to Opus 4.8 when asked to touch production databases, security keys, or some ML research tasks . In API use, some advanced coding or personal-data-adjacent tasks failed outright rather than falling back . At the same time, the model showed impressive workflow behavior in at least two examples: building a to-scale 3D Yosemite model by combining NASA elevation data with satellite imagery and adding trees and snow based on pixel analysis , and post-training smaller models with more than 10x gains on specialized tasks like puzzle-solving .
Anthropic’s own framing, as described in that discussion, emphasized acceleration in engineering execution rather than research judgment, and reviewers said the release did not yet show clear signs of autonomous research breakthroughs .
Why it matters: Before the shutdown, Fable was already looking like a meaningful step for high-agency engineering work, but not yet like proof of broad autonomous research capability .
Two other signals worth tracking
Cohere ships a smaller open-weight model aimed at agentic coding workflows
Cohere released a lightweight 30B open-weight model for agentic coding, built on Command A+ with a parallel transformer design that is nearly half the size while almost doubling the number of layers . The model is tuned for workflow-style evaluations such as Terminal-Bench, where it uses a terminal and inspects its environment , and SWE-Bench, where it navigates repositories, patches code, and passes tests on real software issues . Sebastian Raschka said it is well ahead of Gemma 4 on these agentic benchmarks, though still below Qwen3.6 overall .
Why it matters: The release reinforces a broader shift from single-prompt coding demos toward models optimized for multi-step software work inside real tool environments .
A new paper puts a name to the cost of making agents safer
A paper presented at ACM CAIS 2026 evaluates safety in tool-using LLM agents on τ-bench scenarios and separates outcomes into safe success, unsafe success, and failure. The authors propose a two-tier verification setup—deterministic checks first, then an LLM verifier—and report that verification reduces unsafe success but also lowers task completion on longer-horizon tasks, a tradeoff they call the Verifier Tax. The paper is here: ACM CAIS 2026.
Why it matters: This gives a concrete framework for a tradeoff many teams are now running into in practice: safer agent behavior can come at the cost of reliability as workflows get longer .
Armin Ronacher ⇌
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
pi-coding-agentshipped as a package. Armin Ronacher says it's now available both for direct CLI use and for developers who want to build on top of it. The real practical signal is the caveat attached to the release: he says proper pinning is still unclear with shrinkwrap deprecated, and he is unsure whethernpm install -gis the right move.
"So today the pi-coding-agent package is here for both the CLI usage and people to built on top. It’s entirely unclear to me how we could properly pin it, particularly with shrinkwrap being deprecated now. What’s the right move? Not to use npm install -g at all? I’m out of ideas."
⚡ TRY THIS
Evaluate
pi-coding-agentas a reusable component, not just a terminal tool. The point of the release is that it now exists for CLI usage and for people building on top of it.Keep install/pinning strategy on your checklist. Armin's own release note says pinning is unresolved, shrinkwrap deprecation is a problem, and
npm install -gmay not be the right default. Track the upstream context thread before treating the packaging story as settled.
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
pi-coding-agentpackage — released for CLI usage and for developers building on top of it, per Armin Ronacher.- Open packaging question — no clear answer yet on how to pin it properly now that shrinkwrap is deprecated; Armin explicitly asks whether avoiding
npm install -gis the right move. - Context link — earendil-works/pi issue #5653
🎬 GO DEEPER
- Study the packaging discussion:earendil-works/pi issue #5653 — this is the context link Armin attached alongside the
pi-coding-agentannouncement, and it's the best place in today's sources to follow the install/pinning discussion.
Editorial take: today's useful signal isn't just that pi-coding-agent shipped—it's that packaging and pinning are still open questions even at release time.
Keith Rabois
Bill Gurley
20VC with Harry Stebbings
What stood out
Today’s authentic recommendations worked at three levels: a conversation about where software is heading in the AI era, a book that helped a founder learn startups from the outside, and an article that broadens the usual China AI chip narrative beyond Huawei .
Most compelling recommendation
Harry Stebbings interview with Matan SF of FactoryAI
- Title: Harry Stebbings interview with Matan SF of FactoryAI
- Content type: Podcast interview
- Author/creator: Harry Stebbings
- Link/URL:https://open.spotify.com/episode/40R3ULhqI2XjfUqG27lU7O?si=Eo4aKww2R0SG2khS0VO0ow
- Who recommended it: Keith Rabois
- Key takeaway: Rabois said the episode explains “the future of software in the age of AI” and later amplified a distillation of it as “Outstanding,” saying it explains why the podcast is not skippable
- Why it matters: This was the clearest signal today because it was the only resource that drew a direct recommendation and a second, stronger follow-up from the same investor
"Outstanding distillation. Explains why you can’t skip this podcast."
Two more useful picks
Zero to One
- Title:Zero to One
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Peter Thiel
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Matan Grinberg, CEO and co-founder of Factory
- Key takeaway: Grinberg said he read it while learning about startups after leaving physics and described it as “incredible,” “so concise,” and “beautifully written”
- Why it matters: The value here is the specificity of the use case: this is the book he reached for when building startup intuition from scratch
"incredible book... so concise, beautifully written"
China's AI Chip Landscape: A Complete Overview
- Title:China's AI Chip Landscape: A Complete Overview
- Content type: Article / Substack post
- Author/creator: Not provided in notes
- Link/URL:https://crossingriver.substack.com/p/chinas-ai-chip-landscape-a-complete
- Who recommended it: Bill Gurley
- Key takeaway: Gurley said people often focus only on Huawei when discussing AI chips in China, even though there is a much larger ecosystem of players, including Cambricon, and many are already public
- Why it matters: It is a useful corrective for readers trying to understand China’s AI infrastructure beyond a single-company narrative
Mind the Product
Product Management
Big Ideas
Your next power users may not be technical. OpenAI said 20% of Codex’s 5M weekly users are now non-developers, and that group is growing 3x faster than its developer core. It also launched role-specific plugins spanning 62 apps and 110 skills so PMs, designers, marketers, and others can automate cross-tool work without engineering help . Why it matters: PMs can no longer design onboarding, permissions, or AI workflows assuming a developer champion. Apply it: segment activation by role, rewrite first-run flows around outcomes rather than code, and identify which automations non-technical users can complete end-to-end .
The interface layer is moving upward. Apple’s rebuilt Siri can hold context, act across apps, and expose app capabilities directly through conversation; the most capable parts are powered by Google Gemini . Apple may take 12–18 months to ship this at scale, but the implication is immediate: users may not need to open your iOS app to use it . Apply it: decide which actions in your product should be safely invokable through voice or conversational entry points, and what your app becomes when Siri sits on top of the UI .
Frontier models now add a third UX state: handoff. Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 routes high-risk cyber, biology, and chemistry queries to Opus 4.8 via a “safety trapdoor” . Why it matters: products can no longer assume only help vs. refuse; a routed response may change latency and output quality . Apply it: design explicit fallback behavior for research, security, and biotech workflows before the model makes that decision for you .
Tactical Playbook
- Constrain AI before you automate it. PMs discussing payroll and bookkeeping AI highlighted four baseline risks: non-determinism, hallucinated entries, security exposure, and regulatory misinterpretation . Start with narrow tasks, predetermined context, and outputs that retrieve or list existing data rather than rewrite or interpret it .
- Keep humans where expertise is required. Several practitioners said current LLMs are safest in low-stakes tasks where the user can spot errors; they are a much better fit for expert-reviewed workflows or developer tools than consumer-facing automation .
- Treat hallucination as a design constraint.
"Hallucination isn’t a bug, it’s a feature."
Build reviews, exception handling, and clear ownership for bad outputs instead of assuming guardrails will remove the problem .
Case Studies & Lessons
- Payroll shows where AI ambition hits operational reality. One PM exploring AI in payroll noted that full automation looked attractive until teams had to fix too many errors by hand . Former payroll PMs echoed the same lesson: the hardest part was not the product experience, but taxes, filings, reporting obligations, and jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction differences . Takeaway: in compliance-heavy products, refuse features that create unlawful or ambiguous states—even if customers ask for them—because support and trust costs show up later .
Career Corner
- AI literacy now includes knowing when not to ship. Practitioners argued that many product leaders still underestimate hallucination and stability limits, especially for consumer products . Why it matters: PMs who can separate viable assistive use cases from unsafe automation will make stronger roadmap calls and stakeholder trade-offs. Apply it: before approving an AI feature, force a written answer on failure visibility, who catches mistakes, and whether the workflow is low-stakes enough to tolerate non-determinism .
Tools & Resources
- Codex’s role-specific plugins are worth studying as workflow patterns. OpenAI highlighted plugins for data analytics, creative production, and product design, connecting tools such as Snowflake, Databricks, Hex, Tableau, Figma, and Canva across 62 apps and 110 skills . Why explore them: even if you do not use Codex directly, they show how AI tooling is being packaged for PM, design, and marketing work without engineering mediation. Apply it: audit your own product’s highest-friction handoffs—research to spec, spec to prototype, reporting to insight—and look for cross-tool steps that could be automated safely .
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