We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Your intelligence agent for what matters
Tell ZeroNoise what you want to stay on top of. It finds the right sources, follows them continuously, and sends you a cited daily or weekly brief.
Your time, back
An AI curator that monitors the web nonstop, lets you control every source and setting, and delivers verified daily or weekly briefs.
Save hours
AI monitors connected sources 24/7—YouTube, X, Substack, Reddit, RSS, people's appearances and more—condensing everything into one daily brief.
Full control over the agent
Add/remove sources. Set your agent's focus and style. Auto-embed clips from full episodes and videos. Control exactly how briefs are built.
Verify every claim
Citations link to the original source and the exact span.
Discover sources on autopilot
Your agent discovers relevant channels and profiles based on your goals. You get to decide what to keep.
Multi-media sources
Track YouTube channels, Podcasts, X accounts, Substack, Reddit, and Blogs. Plus, follow people across platforms to catch their appearances.
Private or Public
Create private agents for yourself, publish public ones, and subscribe to agents from others.
3 steps to your first brief
Describe your goal
Tell your AI agent what you want to track using natural language. Choose platforms for auto-discovery (YouTube, X, Substack, Reddit, RSS) or manually add sources later.
Review and launch
Your agent finds relevant channels and profiles based on your instructions. Review suggestions, keep what fits, remove what doesn't, add your own. Launch when ready—you can always adjust sources anytime.
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
Get your briefs
Get concise daily or weekly updates with precise citations directly in your inbox. You control the focus, style, and length.
Software As a Service Companies — The Future Of Tech Businesses
Funding & Deals
Noble Mobile — $10.3M seed. Andrew Yang's carrier startup said it raised a $10.3M seed round. Yang previously founded Adventure for America. The company charges $50 per month for unlimited data and gives up to $20 back to lighter users. Noble says it launched in September and has reached millions in revenue with thousands of subscribers. Yang says average subscriber spend is $42 per month and screen time is down 17%. He cites Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drugs as inspiration for the model.
AI trip-planning startup — $6M led by Sequoia. The company said it raised $6M led by Sequoia. Its product plans flights, hotels, and personalized itineraries that can be booked in one flow. The product is already live and free to use.
Emerging Teams
Poetic. Markie Wagner's company is building enterprise software that learns written and tacit business rules on-site and turns them into code. The team is mostly engineers, many ex-Palantir, who spend weeks with customers to capture process detail. Backers include Founders Fund, Kleiner Perkins, Genius Ventures, and OpenAI. Current deployments include AIG, SoFi, and Chime; AIG CEO Peter Zaffino said Poetic has already achieved "99%+ quality outcomes on multi-hour processes."
Alta Ares. Hadrien Canter's defense AI startup is building a compact drone interceptor, about the size of a desk lamp, that uses AI software and radar to detect, catch, and destroy military drones. France is testing Alta Ares models in the UAE.
Lattice Health. YC says Lattice Health monitors deployed medical-imaging AI and flags when accuracy starts to slip across X-rays, CTs, and MRIs. The launch post highlighted @sparkcpark.
Serafis. YC's launch describes Serafis as a podcast app for investors. Its data platform is already live with top asset managers representing $70B+ in AUM.
AI & Tech Breakthroughs
- AI as compiler, not runtime. Poetic says AI should compile business processes into deterministic code that runs cheaply and predictably, then regenerate that code when the world changes. The company says this yields 100x less token usage and "nines of accuracy" on complex tasks.
"Agents should do the thinking, code should do the doing."
World model for the factory. Forgis-Labs says it is replacing bespoke industrial models with a single pipeline that predicts events across machines, robots, and processes from raw sensor streams. The stack includes FactoryNet for pretraining data, HEPA for edge time-series event prediction, RASA for topology-driven reasoning, and TEMPO for natural-language explanations of raw sensor streams. The team says five papers were accepted to ICML workshops.
SmithDB search infra. LangChain says it built a custom inverted index from scratch to support full-text search and JSON filtering across agent traces that can span hundreds of MBs while maintaining 400ms P50 latency. Harrison Chase said this is the first in a planned series on how the company builds LLM infrastructure.
Verification-first agents. OMK is a local-first CLI that treats "done" as a verification problem, with a Goal → DAG → Route → Verify → Replay loop and artifacts including proof bundles, decision traces, and replay logs. In the discussion, another builder said the proof that an agent actually completed a task is often harder than the retrieval step itself.
Market Signals
- Specialization is becoming the VC moat. Foundation Capital says the AI and LLM cycle is pushing firms toward clearer bookends—growth platforms at one end and early-stage specialists at the other—and making it harder to do both. Its own strategy is pre-product-market-fit technical seed, often before product or revenue, serving as first institutional investor 85% of the time. Iconic says it is taking concentrated bets from seed onward and has built a 50-person support bench beyond the investment team.
"With more competition, you have to have specialization."
Contrarian infrastructure timing still matters. Foundation pointed to Cerebras as a 2015-2016 incubation alongside Benchmark, when AI chips were not a crowded trade. Cerebras has now gone public.
Voice is emerging as a new system of record. a16z argues that the highest-value enterprise context still lives in conversations, and that LLMs are well suited to converting voice into structured, searchable data. The firm describes the opportunity as large and still early.
Investor diligence still needs hard economics. Paul Graham relayed an AI startup generating roughly $400 in annual revenue per $1,000 of GPU hardware, or about a 40% annual return on GPU cost. At the same time, SaaS operators say repeated "AI replaced this" and "10x that" claims are starting to blur together, making genuine traction harder to distinguish from attention farming.
Worth Your Time
- Web Summit panel on VC specialization. Useful for how AI is widening the gap between growth platforms and seed specialists.
- Andrew Yang on Noble Mobile's pricing model. Useful founder clip on the aligned-carrier thesis behind the new seed round.
Return on Tokens (ROT). Best essay in this batch on why some enterprise AI stacks may move from agent runtimes toward AI-compiled software.
Everything Is Recorded Now. Strong framing for voice as the next major enterprise data layer.
LangChain on full-text search in SmithDB. Worth reading if you are diligencing observability, trace storage, or retrieval infrastructure for agent systems.
Dario Amodei
sarah guo
Cursor
Top Stories
Why it matters: the biggest signals today were about frontier-model trust, new inference architectures, and the next phase of lab competition.
- Anthropic turned a controversy into a product change. Claude Fable 5 ranked #1 on the new Agent Arena leaderboard, leading Opus-4.8 and GPT-5.5 by the widest margin yet on confirmed task success and praise vs. complaint across millions of real-world, long-horizon tasks . But after backlash, Anthropic said flagged frontier-LLM-development requests will now visibly fall back to Opus 4.8 and API refusals will return explicit reasons; it said invisible safeguards were the wrong tradeoff .
- Google released DiffusionGemma. The experimental open model uses text diffusion instead of token-by-token decoding, generating whole blocks at once for up to 4x faster output; Google and others cited 1,000+ tokens per second, Apache 2.0 licensing, and 18 GB GPU viability for local use . vLLM called it the first diffusion language model it supports natively .
- OpenAI’s next strategic turn is coming into view. A report on an internal memo says OpenAI expects to go public within the next year while preparing model 5.6, described internally as a meaningful improvement over GPT-5.5; the same memo discussed recursive self-improvement as a factor in whether the company ultimately stays private .
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: today’s strongest technical updates were about making long-context, multi-agent, and reasoning systems more practical.
- A new KV-cache compression technique reports a 200x memory reduction without changing the base model. At 256k context, cache use drops from 36 GiB to about 360 MiB in a single forward pass while preserving correct answers .
- DeLM replaces a central controller with asynchronous agents writing verified results into shared context. The framework hit 65.7% on SWE-bench Verified with Gemini 3-Flash, about 10 points above the best centralized alternatives at less than half the cost .
- The paper Think Fast estimates frontier models’ no-chain-of-thought task horizons are doubling every 373 days; even the slowest 95% confidence case reaches almost 10 minutes by 2030 .
Products & Launches
Why it matters: new products kept pushing AI deeper into developer workflows and perception-heavy tasks.
- Perceptron launched Agentic Detection, which localizes anything described in natural language or shown by example, without fine-tuning or fixed classes. Its multi-pass harness zooms, tiles, and requeries, outperforming Gemini, Qwen, and base models on dense and geospatial detection tasks .
-
Cursor upgraded Bugbot: the code review agent is now over 3x faster, 22% cheaper, and finds 10% more bugs. Users can also run
/reviewlocally before pushing code . - GitHub launched a new Copilot app for paid users to identify work, implement changes, and guide PRs through merge; GitHub also said Copilot is coming to Xcode .
Industry Moves
Why it matters: capital, infrastructure, and revenue signals are starting to matter almost as much as model benchmarks.
- DeepSeek posted for IDC planning engineers after earlier data-center hiring, the clearest sign yet that it plans to own MW-to-GW-scale compute infrastructure rather than just rent capacity .
- PoeticHQ launched with a $50M raise at a $500M valuation and says its system handles complex multi-hour enterprise tasks with 99%+ accuracy and 10x fewer tokens than agents. The company says it reached an eight-figure run rate in one year and 99%+ quality on SoFi fraud investigations in five weeks .
- Runway said it added more ARR in May than in all of 2025 combined, pointing to stronger enterprise demand for generative video workflows. It cited BBC use of live AI avatars and Salomon’s latest global campaign as examples .
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: labs are no longer just shipping models; they are openly trying to shape the rules around them.
- Dario Amodei published Policy on the AI Exponential, arguing AI is moving faster than policymaking institutions can handle. Anthropic paired the essay with an Advanced AI Framework that says governments should be able to block or revoke unsafe frontier models, plus an economic policy framework backed by a $200M fund and a forthcoming $150M national fellowship program .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: these smaller updates still sharpen the picture of where deployment and competition are heading.
- Cohere Transcribe topped Hugging Face’s far-field ASR benchmark with 17.9 WER; the model remains Apache 2.0 and laptop-capable .
- Apple’s Foundation Models framework now supports Claude for multi-step reasoning, code generation, and longer-context app flows .
- Biohub released ESMFold2 and ESM Atlas, described as beating AlphaFold and generating new biological knowledge; weights are on Hugging Face .
- Google Search will soon build persistent mini apps with Antigravity for ongoing tasks, starting with AI Pro and Ultra subscribers in the U.S. .
Ben Thompson
Sarah Guo
Elad Gil
Anthropic makes its policy case
Dario Amodei argues policy is trailing the technology
Dario Amodei published Policy on the AI Exponential, arguing that AI is advancing faster than policy institutions were built to handle and that frontier models should face mandatory third-party testing for cyber, bio, and autonomy risks, with the power to block or revoke deployment of catastrophic-risk systems . Anthropic paired the essay with an Advanced AI Framework that says governments should be able to block unsafe frontier releases and invest in societal resilience, plus an Economic Policy Framework backed by $200 million for major evaluations of labor-market responses and a $150 million fellowship program for early-career professionals . Anthropic said these projects are signals of intent rather than sufficient on their own, and the essay frames the stakes across jobs, scientific progress, civil liberties, and geopolitics .
Why it matters: Frontier labs are increasingly trying to shape the policy architecture around deployment, not just the models themselves .
Anthropic says Fable 5 safeguards will be made visible
Simon Willison highlighted Anthropic language saying it is changing Fable 5's safeguards for frontier LLM development "to make them visible," which he interpreted as ending the decision to have the model hide refusals while keeping the refusals in place . Even with that change, critics said the episode has left researchers more worried about silent steering becoming part of frontier-lab practice .
Why it matters: Transparency is becoming part of the safety debate itself, not just the restrictions labs choose to impose .
Speed and capital are becoming central competitive levers
Google DeepMind opens DiffusionGemma
Google DeepMind released DiffusionGemma, an experimental open model that generates whole blocks of text simultaneously rather than word by word, a design the company says enables real-time self-correction and complex markdown formatting . Google says the model can deliver up to 4x faster inference on dedicated GPUs, and Sundar Pichai said the weights are available on Hugging Face under an Apache 2.0 license . NVIDIA said its optimizations support RTX, RTX PRO, and DGX systems, with throughput reaching 1,000 tokens per second on H100 .
Why it matters: Developers now have an open way to test whether blockwise text generation can improve low-latency local workloads and agent loops .
Alphabet lines up $80 billion for AI expansion
Bloomberg reported that Alphabet is raising $80 billion through equity offerings, including a $10 billion Berkshire Hathaway investment, to fund its AI spending plans . In Ben Thompson's breakdown, Google Cloud grew from $2.6 billion in revenue in Q4 2019 to $20 billion in Q1 2026, while Google Services reached $89.6 billion in the same quarter . Thompson argued the financing signals that expected AI compute demand may be larger than many assume, and that Google's TPU cost advantage could matter if access to capacity becomes the main constraint .
Why it matters: At the frontier, AI competition is looking more and more like a balance-sheet contest alongside a model contest .
AI in science gets a major open release
Biohub launches an open protein world model
Chan Zuckerberg Biohub said its new ESM Fold is an open system for scientific discovery in protein biology, trained on billions of protein sequences and able to predict atomic-resolution protein structures . Biohub says the model is state-of-the-art across structure-prediction benchmarks, especially protein-protein and protein-antibody interactions, has folded 1.1 billion proteins, and can be used to digitally design proteins and single-chain antibodies that produced nanomolar binders in small experimental cycles . The organization has committed $500 million to its virtual biology initiative and says it plans to release its models open-source to get them into more scientists' hands quickly .
Why it matters: This is a strong example of frontier AI moving beyond language and code into experimentally grounded biology while staying open to the wider research community .
The workplace evidence is getting sharper
A large survey finds a wide execution gap
Glean's Work AI Index 2026 says 87% of workers now use AI and report saving 13 hours per week on average, yet only 13% say their organization is performing significantly better as a result . The report attributes much of the gap to "botsitting"—the hidden work of feeding context, debugging, and cleaning up outputs—which consumes 6.4 hours per week, and to the practice of shipping AI-generated work people cannot explain or defend, which 69% admitted doing . It also says organizations with stronger AI strategy, measurement, and shared context are seeing better results .
Why it matters: The limiting factor in enterprise AI may be shifting from tool access to context, incentives, and change management .
Cursor
Salvatore Sanfilippo
Mike Krieger
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
- The strongest pattern today: code review is becoming the highest-leverage job for coding agents, but only inside explicit loops. Salvatore Sanfilippo's A-writes/B-reviews/A-revises/B-verifies workflow, Cisco CX's trace → triage → coding-agent → draft-PR pipeline, and Mike Krieger's screenshot/video/staging verification stack all point to the same operating model: let agents read, audit, and self-test aggressively; keep humans on approval and final judgment .
⚡ TRY THIS
- Run a two-model review loop. 1) Let model A write or fix the code. 2) Send the result to model B for review, especially when A stalls. 3) Hand B's review doc back to A for changes. 4) Send the updated code back to B for verification. Salvatore Sanfilippo says this beats vague role splits and is how he turns two models into a macro mixture-of-experts setup .
- Split planning from execution. Run
/improveon your strongest model to audit bugs, perf issues, tech debt, missing tests, and future build ideas, then have it write an execution plan that cheaper agents can follow . Mike Krieger front-loads architecture conversations, asks the model to turn the plan into HTML/markdown/diagrams for team alignment, then routes quick questions to lighter models like Sonnet or lower effort levels when full reasoning is unnecessary . Theo's higher-autonomy variant: give a bounded prompt likelook into other options to make this more performantand let the model synthesize, test, and validate before reporting back . - Ship a verification pack with every agent PR. Krieger's pattern: require screenshots or video on every PR, run real staging flows with real data, cover both known regression paths and the specific intent of the current change, and use video plus FFmpeg when screenshots miss UI jank between frames . When the backend is too messy to boot locally, have the agent build in-memory mocks or proxies so tests can still run and evolve with the codebase .
- Close the production feedback loop like a support queue, not a chat log. Cisco CX pulls thumbs-down, errors, and low-confidence traces from LangSmith, clusters similar failures, dismisses false positives or opens one Jira per real bug, then hands the case to a coding agent for deeper diagnostics and draft fixes . Humans stay on approval/redirect/final-PR duty, every merged fix becomes a new eval in the repo, and MCP is the swap-any-backend integration layer underneath . This is already running against 10k+ concurrent cases and 153k requests .
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
- Cursor Bugbot update — over 3x faster, 22% cheaper, and finding 10% more bugs; you can now run
/reviewlocally before pushing . More: cursor.com/blog/bugbot-updates-june-2026. - LangSmith Sandboxes — now GA; secure, scalable environments for agent code execution, integrated with Deep Agents SDK and LangSmith . More: langchain.com/blog/langsmith-sandboxes-generally-available.
- Managed Deep Agents — keep the agent definition in your repo, then create and operate managed agents in LangSmith via API . More: langchain.com/blog/introducing-managed-deep-agents.
- RubricMiddleware for Deep Agents — lets you define what
donelooks like so the agent keeps going until the criteria is met . Deep dive: langchain.com/blog/introducing-rubrics-for-deepagents. - LangSmith Fleet: Software Engineer template — Slack-triggered coding agent that takes Linear issues, writes and verifies code, and opens a PR from a sandbox . Try it: langchain.com/templates/software-engineer.
- Open-source project to inspect: Rilable — Riley Brown says he built the iOS app that generates web and iOS apps with Fable 5 in 10 prompts for about $210 in API tokens; each generated app spins up a Daytona sandbox and uses Convex, Vercel AI Gateway, and Chorus iOS skills . Repo: github.com/rbrown101010/rilable. Stack refs: daytona.io · ios.chorus.com · convex.dev · vercel.com.
- Practitioner comparison worth noting — Salvatore Sanfilippo says Fable beat GPT 5.5 on a speculative-decoding optimization by reasoning from timing and MoE constraints instead of trial-and-error, but also says it provides fewer intermediate feedbacks and is harder to steer mid-task . Mike Krieger's routing advice lines up with that: use lighter models for quick questions and save higher-effort Fable sessions for work that actually needs them .
- Fable usage reality check — Theo says usage-based burned $100 in about 8 minutes, and he maxed a $200 plan's five-hour session limit in roughly 2 hours during one workflow; a practical reminder to keep autonomous runs bounded .
🎬 GO DEEPER
- 4:09–6:17 — Salvatore Sanfilippo on cross-model review. Best short walkthrough of the A-writes → B-reviews → A-revises → B-verifies loop, and a clean argument against fuzzy
one model designs, one model codesrole splits .
- 36:49–40:26 — Mike Krieger on verification loops. Concrete guidance on requiring screenshot/video artifacts, exercising real staging flows, and using video plus FFmpeg when UI problems only show up between frames .
- Repo worth studying — Rilable. Worth reading for the architecture alone: Daytona sandbox per app, Convex DB, Vercel AI Gateway, and Chorus iOS skill hooks .
- Template worth skimming — LangChain Software Engineer. Useful if you want a concrete Slack → Linear → GitHub sandbox flow instead of another abstract agent diagram .
Editorial take: the edge is shifting away from raw codegen and toward review infrastructure—clear done criteria, reusable evals, and merge-time verification are starting to matter more than one-shot demos .
Jeremy Howard
Tim Ferriss
Jeremy Howard
What stood out
Today’s cleanest recommendations came from long-form conversation and talks: Max Levchin shared a reading stack that spans literary fiction, business strategy, leadership, and sci-fi , while Jeremy Howard pointed to one article and one body of demo work that speak directly to AI-assisted creation .
Most compelling recommendation
The strongest save today is The Master and Margarita. It is the least obviously tactical item in the set, but it carries the clearest evidence of durable personal impact: Levchin said it is his favorite book, buys copies in bulk for new friends, keeps copies on his desk, and credited it with shaping both his life and his marriage .
The Master and Margarita
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Mikhail Bulgakov
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Max Levchin
- Key takeaway: Levchin treats it as a book worth repeatedly gifting, not just admiring
- Why it matters: This was the clearest example in today’s notes of a recommendation with long-term personal significance, not a passing mention
"It’s my favorite book. It’s always been my favorite book."
Best practical picks for builders
Seven Powers
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Hamilton Helmer
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Max Levchin
- Key takeaway: Levchin called it a "really worthwhile distillation" of what it takes to build a competitively lasting business, including why network businesses last longer and what brand actually means
- Why it matters: It was the most direct framework recommendation in today’s set for readers trying to understand durable advantage
Influence
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Robert Cialdini
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Max Levchin
- Key takeaway: Levchin said anyone trying to start a business should read it and called it "probably the most important social science book published in the last 50 years"
- Why it matters: This was the strongest explicit recommendation for founders in the notes
"If you’re trying to start a business, you should read Influence..."
Titan
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Ron Chernow
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Max Levchin
- Key takeaway: Among Chernow’s biographies, Levchin singled out Titan on John D. Rockefeller as the one closest to business advice
- Why it matters: It was the clearest biography pick for readers who want business lessons rather than a general historical survey
Sci-fi that shaped a founder
All three of these came from Levchin’s reflection on the books that shaped how he thought about software, digital currency, and the future . Source conversation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOjgVxOfxXo
Cryptonomicon
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Neal Stephenson
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Max Levchin
- Key takeaway: Levchin said it was effectively required reading for the early PayPal team because it felt like it was describing exactly what they were trying to do with digital currency and cryptography
- Why it matters: It was one of the strongest examples today of fiction intersecting directly with startup execution
Snow Crash
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Neal Stephenson
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Max Levchin
- Key takeaway: Levchin said it shaped his software engineering life, and the conversation notes it as the book that coined "metaverse"
- Why it matters: It was the sci-fi title he tied most directly to his engineering identity
Neuromancer
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: William Gibson
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Max Levchin
- Key takeaway: Levchin said it was the first book he read after arriving in the US and part of the science-fiction canon that defined his early years there
- Why it matters: It shows how foundational cyberpunk fiction was in his early US experience and friendships
Two timely AI-era recommendations
Source talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SUZwYV5JYBM
Breaking the Spell of Vibe Coding
- Content type: Article
- Author/creator: Rachel Thomas
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Jeremy Howard
- Key takeaway: Howard said Thomas shows how some AI coding interactions can harness a "dark flow," contrasting it with the productive flow that comes from high challenge and high skill
- Why it matters: It was the sharpest corrective in today’s set for readers who want a more grounded view of AI-assisted programming
Brett Victor’s work
- Content type: Videos / demos
- Author/creator: Brett Victor
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Jeremy Howard
- Key takeaway: Howard pointed to Victor’s demos of graphical code editing and even a "time machine" for code, then said readers should watch everything he has done
- Why it matters: Howard framed this as a body of work worth exploring in full, not a one-off demo
One more worth saving
A Mind at Play
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Not provided in notes
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Max Levchin
- Key takeaway: Levchin highlighted it as Claude Shannon’s biography and used Shannon as an example of someone who did serious work while staying playful
- Why it matters: It complements the more tactical books above with a model of technical creativity and playfulness
Y Combinator
The community for ventures designed to scale rapidly | Read our rules before posting ❤️
Aakash Gupta
Big Ideas
AI products need an autonomy spectrum, not a single mode. Linear sees three user groups: non-users, people who want AI with approval, and people willing to fully delegate. Its triage feature uses historical routing data to classify and route incoming bugs or requests while still letting customers choose how much control to keep . YC adds a complementary constraint: when AI changes the economics of a workflow, redesign the process end to end - but keep the product surface area small and bounded . Why it matters: PMs now have to define the human/agent handoff explicitly. Apply it: map one workflow into manual, approve, and delegate modes before adding more automation.
The biggest growth bets may come from new interfaces, not smarter models. OpenAI's early fit was strongest in knowledge-worker-heavy markets like Germany and the US, but much weaker in Brazil and India . Search broadened everyday usefulness, and image generation opened ChatGPT to people less likely to use a text-first interface. India became OpenAI's #2 market, and Image Gen 2 launched at 1,512 ELO, about 240 points above the next competitor . Why it matters: deeper intelligence and broader adoption are different roadmap jobs. Apply it: force every major bet into one of two buckets - deepen current users, or unlock people who cannot use the product today.
Tactical Playbook
Interview for the signal the model does not have. YC argues customers rarely hand you the winning prompt; they describe a local optimum shaped by their own constraints . A startup example with 3,080 users and only one paid conversion shows the right next step: interview the payer on why they bought and a cross-section of free users on why they did not, then test packaging or paywall changes from there . Why it matters: execution is cheaper, but hidden demand is not. Apply it: compare payer vs. non-payer decision paths, capture willingness-to-pay language verbatim, and decide whether you have a painkiller or a vitamin before changing the roadmap.
Re-audit your AI instruction files when the model gets better.The Product Compass argues that old CLAUDE.md files, duplicated rules, drifted facts, and guardrails written for weaker models can actively hold back stronger ones . Why it matters: better models can inherit worse habits from legacy instructions. Apply it: ask the model to review its own instructions before you edit them, then cut contradictions and stale rules. Default effort to high, reserve max for rare cases, and use
/goalpatterns for long unattended PM work .
"Don't fix anything yet. Report first. I decide what gets cut."
Case Studies & Lessons
Linear is moving from issue tracker to "product development system for teams and agents." The shift includes optional but default-ready agentic workflows: triage incoming feedback, create issues or PRDs from transcripts and notes, and connect third-party or internal agents through APIs across tools like Slack, Gong, and Intercom . Messaging has also moved upmarket from feature language toward value language and customer proof points . Takeaway: centralize context, then let automation meet users where they already work.
Brex's AI rethink started upstream, not at the task level. Instead of only building an agent for KYC, the team redesigned onboarding end to end. That moved risk qualification earlier in the funnel, making it possible to KYC leads rather than only customers and changing who they target . Takeaway: when AI makes a downstream task cheap, revisit upstream qualification, targeting, and process boundaries.
Career Corner
- PMs are becoming faster adopters of agentic workflows. Linear says non-engineering roles - especially PMs - have made some of the biggest recent gains, often using agents for self-serve work like meeting-to-issues or PRD drafting instead of waiting on engineering or data partners . Apply it: start with one repeatable workflow where the output is easy to review, not one where the model becomes the decision-maker.
"Coaching is not about telling people what to do or giving them answers. It's about holding a space and reflecting..."
- Use coaching to improve judgment, not outsource it. Mind the Product describes most PM coaching relationships as a coach/mentor hybrid, with the client still responsible for the decision . Good sessions start with a current blocker or frustration, and peer triads can work well inside organizations . LLMs can help with structured reflection, but not replace human accountability . Apply it: spend 5-10 minutes before a coaching session naming the behavior or decision you want to change.
Tools & Resources
- Keep the instruction-file audit prompt handy. It is a practical template for cleaning up PM agent rules before your next model upgrade .
- Try a lightweight LLM accountability loop. A morning agenda prompt plus end-of-day recalibration in Slack helped one coach stay focused and reduce shiny-object drift .
Start with signal
Each agent already tracks a curated set of sources. Subscribe for free and start getting cited updates right away.
Coding Agents Alpha Tracker
Elevate
Latent Space
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
Luis von Ahn
Khan Academy
Ethan Mollick
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
a16z
Stanford eCorner
Greylock
Daily AI news, startup funding, and emerging teams shaping the future
Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker
BTCPay Server
Nicolas Burtey
Roy Sheinbaum
Monitors Bitcoin adoption as a payment medium and currency worldwide, tracking merchant acceptance, payment infrastructure, regulatory developments, and transaction usage metrics
AI News Digest
Google DeepMind
OpenAI
Anthropic
Daily curated digest of significant AI developments including major announcements, research breakthroughs, policy changes, and industry moves
Global Agricultural Developments
RDO Equipment Co.
Ag PhD
Precision Farming Dealer
Tracks farming innovations, best practices, commodity trends, and global market dynamics across grains, livestock, dairy, and agricultural inputs
Recommended Reading from Tech Founders
Paul Graham
David Perell
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
Tracks and curates reading recommendations from prominent tech founders and investors across podcasts, interviews, and social media
PM Daily Digest
Shreyas Doshi
Gibson Biddle
Teresa Torres
Curates essential product management insights including frameworks, best practices, case studies, and career advice from leading PM voices and publications
AI High Signal Digest
AI High Signal
Comprehensive daily briefing on AI developments including research breakthroughs, product launches, industry news, and strategic moves across the artificial intelligence ecosystem
Frequently asked questions
Choose the setup that fits how you work
Free
Follow public agents at no cost.
No monthly fee