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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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Google Antigravity
ClaudeDevs
Peter Steinberger
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
Build agent loops as durable operating systems, not repeated prompts. Jason Zhou’s team uses a single Markdown document to hold a loop’s goal, autonomy boundaries, SOP, durable state, and append-only run log; after a month automating much of SuperDesign, they report that some loops worked and some did not. Pair that contract with the right trigger: their cost-conscious “combo” pattern checks a data source with a script first, then wakes the agent only when there is real work.
⚡ TRY THIS
Put every recurring agent task behind a
LOOP.md. Define: (1) a finish line, (2) what the agent may ship or merge alone versus what must escalate, (3) a repeatable SOP, (4) a compact current-state section for hypotheses/backlog/follow-ups, and (5) an append-only log. For scheduled work, run a cheap script first; if it finds no changes, exit without invoking the model. Jason Zhou’s team uses this structure for loops such as daily documentation-drift checks and automated React issue cleanup.Return review findings to the author-agent, then require evidence. Peter Steinberger’s PR/commit skill invokes an available review CLI, but sends the findings back to the original coding session—the one that understands the task’s constraints—rather than asking a fresh reviewer to blindly patch them. Have that session record accepted or rejected review decisions in the PR description, and define repository invariants in
agent.mdso reviewers do not “fix” intentional behavior. For UI or setup-sensitive changes, give the verifier a fresh-machine box with screenshots and click capability.Contain Codex before it contains your rate limit. Theo’s current baseline is High reasoning, with Fast mode and Ultra turned off; he characterizes Ultra as an instruction to use more subagents rather than a reasoning level. Add this guardrail to global
agents.md:
Only use subagents if the user explicitly requests them
Then control autonomy in the task prompt: require a plan and feedback checkpoint, or let the agent build, test, open a PR, handle the first review round, and stop there. Theo’s point: explicit stop conditions are a cleaner control surface than repeatedly changing the harness.
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
Antigravity Agent Teams: run
/teamwork-previewto create specialized subagents that coordinate in the background to plan, build, and verify complex engineering work in parallel.Claude Code Artifacts: artifacts now support public sharing, multiplayer editing, and creation with Claude Tag.
Loopany platform: SuperDesign open-sourced its internal loop-management tool, which centralizes contracts, state, logs, triggers, and periodic “evolve” runs. Its templates include documentation maintenance, React Doctor, and tech-debt cleanup. Repo
Deep Agents Code on NVIDIA NemoClaw: LangChain says a single command deploys Deep Agents Code as a governed blueprint using Nemotron 3 Ultra, while retaining control of source, model, and audit trail. Details
Field signal, not a benchmark: Simon Willison’s
sqlite-utils4.0rc2 was “mostly written by Claude Fable” for about $149.25.
🎬 GO DEEPER
- 5:05–7:21 — Peter Steinberger on context-aware auto-review. Watch the implementation detail that matters: run a separate review, but feed the result back to the agent that authored the change so it can judge feedback against the real constraints.
- 7:56–9:34 — Jason Zhou on the three-role loop. A concise production pattern: an orchestrator plans, isolated worktree executors run in parallel, and a verifier attaches test evidence for a human to inspect.
- Study the Loopany repo. Its useful contribution is not another agent wrapper—it makes the contract, trigger, state, logs, and iterative improvement cycle first-class artifacts. Open the repo
Editorial take: agent autonomy is earned through explicit boundaries, durable state, and verifiable evidence—not by indiscriminately adding more agents.
Software As a Service Companies — The Future Of Tech Businesses
Aravind Srinivas
Funding & Deals
- 20VC has signed its first lead term sheet for an Israeli company, targeting 15% ownership. Harry Stebbings characterizes the opportunity as a true pre-seed business in a “mega market” and highlights the two-person founding team as standout Israeli operators. The company and round size were not disclosed in the source.
Emerging Teams
Cormaa is testing agentic tutorial generation for SaaS products. Its AI agent navigates a product workflow and creates a tutorial without manual screen recording; the longer-term product goal is to regenerate the tutorial when the interface changes. The company is in early beta with roughly 20 waitlist users and is seeking another 20–30 SaaS founders with live products for feedback.
SideTracked is an early consumer productivity experiment with its first paid user. Founder Ali’s app narrows a user’s day to one project and five AI-generated tasks, then uses an “alignment guard” to test whether a new task supports the day’s goal. Eight days after its Product Hunt launch, the product had one paying customer and reached No. 56; onboarding changes reportedly improved feedback on task specificity. Visit SideTracked
AutoBots is pursuing fully autonomous, self-improving agents. Bindu Reddy says the system takes a set of user goals and uses a mixture of six LLMs to continuously improve while pursuing them, without a human in the loop. There is no disclosed customer or deployment evidence in the source, so this is a product concept to monitor rather than a validated company signal.
AI & Tech Breakthroughs
Hugging Face’s Transformers backend can now run in vLLM at native speed. Hugging Face reports that the backend often matches or exceeds hand-written vLLM implementations, and its benchmarks showed comparable or better throughput across 4B–235B-parameter models, including tensor-parallel and mixture-of-experts configurations. The practical change: an architecture can be implemented once in Transformers and serve training, fine-tuning, evaluation, RL rollouts, and production inference rather than requiring separate research and inference implementations.
World-model demonstrations are becoming more visible. Airstreet’s Nathan Benaich reports that OdysseyML demonstrated a fully generated multiplayer GoldenEye session streamed from H100s. He also says world models moved from little general awareness to the top NeurIPS theme in 18 months—an investor viewpoint, but a useful indicator of fast-rising technical attention.
Anthropic’s “J-space” research is being framed as a new interpretability tool. In Lightspeed’s discussion, the speakers describe a Jacobian-lens method that translates relationships across a model’s internal layers into an inspectable “mental whiteboard.” They argue it could expose internal representations relevant to safety evaluations—including cases where a model’s output may conceal what it is considering—while stressing that this does not establish model consciousness.
Market Signals
On-the-job learning speed may be improving on a new curve. Exponential View cites ByteDance researchers who found that newer AI models learn in real-world environments about twice as fast as models from three months earlier. If sustained, this is material for startups whose differentiation depends on rapid adaptation after deployment rather than only pretraining.
Niche vertical AI apps are showing up as a repeatable founder pattern. Andrew Chen observes that founders increasingly operate portfolios of small vertical AI products, and says he often finds profiles with roughly 10 projects that each generate about $10,000 per month. This is anecdotal rather than market-wide data, but it points to lower-friction experimentation and distribution in narrowly scoped software categories.
Inference power constraints remain an architectural investment question. Aravind Srinivas identifies two potential paths to address the data-center inference power bottleneck: local models handling most token flow, or solar-powered data centers in space. The first is directly relevant when evaluating products designed for hybrid local/cloud inference.
Worth Your Time
- Lightspeed’s discussion of Anthropic J-space — a useful walkthrough of the claimed interpretability technique, its evaluation-awareness example, and the distinction between internal computation and consciousness.
Clement Delangue’s vLLM/Transformers thread — concise primary-source detail on a potentially consequential reduction in model-implementation duplication.
Cormaa beta — an early product to examine for whether structured UI workflows can keep customer education content current as SaaS interfaces evolve.
jason
AWS Newsroom
OpenAI
Top Stories
Why it matters: leading models are improving on agent and medical benchmarks, but new evaluations still show large gaps in sustained execution and safe autonomy.
OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 is expanding across products and scoring near the top of agent evaluations. The Sol, Terra, and Luna family is rolling out in ChatGPT, Codex, and the API, and is now generally available through Amazon Bedrock. GPT-5.6 Sol ranked #2 on Agent Arena from 7,800 real-world agent sessions, with #1 steerability and #2 confirmed task success; the benchmark tests long-horizon workflows with web, filesystem, and terminal access.
Muse Spark 1.1 posted strong healthcare results, while radiology tests retain a human-performance gap. On HealthBench Professional’s 525 clinician tasks, it had a higher overall score than GPT-5.6 Sol and was statistically on par on a length-adjusted score, at $1.25/$4.25 per million input/output tokens versus $5/$30 for Sol. On RadLE 2.0, it outperformed GPT-5.6 Sol and Gemini 3.1, and led the handover-readiness index at 48.5 against a 52.0 human-expert baseline—but the benchmark reports that no model reached average human-expert performance overall.
Long-horizon agency remains unresolved. Long-Horizon Terminal-Bench evaluated 18 frontier models on 46 reproducible terminal tasks requiring up to 90 minutes and 120–320 steps. The best mean reward was 0.505; no model solved a third of tasks, and 29 tasks remained unsolved by every model. Separately, the persistent-enterprise simulation Morpheus concluded that tested frontier LLMs are not continual learners in dynamic business settings.
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: progress is moving beyond larger models toward systems that use context, computation, and physical coordination more efficiently.
DeepSeek-V4 is presented as a full-stack redesign for native 1M-token context. The reported architecture combines compressed sparse and heavily compressed attention, multiple residual streams, fused mixture-of-experts kernels, and on-policy distillation. At 1M tokens, the report estimates V4-Pro uses about 27% of DeepSeek-V3.2’s single-token inference FLOPs and 10% of its KV cache; V4-Flash targets roughly 10% and 7%, respectively.
Sakana AI’s Smart Cellular Bricks demonstrate decentralized physical intelligence. Published in Nature Communications, the work uses identical neural-network-equipped cubes that communicate locally to infer a shared shape, identify missing modules, and guide repair. Tests across nearly 200 physical bricks reported 100% convergence; the system tolerated up to 15% module failure and located damage with 95% accuracy.
Hugging Face and vLLM removed a common inference bottleneck for open models. Transformers implementations can now run through vLLM at native speed, avoiding separate research and production implementations; reported benchmarks matched or exceeded native vLLM throughput from 4B to 235B parameters, including tensor-parallel and MoE setups.
Products & Launches
Why it matters: video generation and software agents are being delivered through lower-cost, more accessible workflows.
Google’s Gemini Omni Flash debuted at #1 in Artificial Analysis’s text-to-video and image-to-video leaderboards. The natively multimodal model accepts text, images, and video; produces 3–10 second 720p/24fps clips with native audio; and supports conversational editing. It costs $0.10 per generated second and is available through Gemini API, AI Studio, the Gemini app, and free in YouTube Shorts and Create.
Devin Fusion entered agent preview with Fable 5. Cognition reports lower cost per task than Opus 4.8 through better delegation and reasoning chains, while noting that savings are not uniform—serial debugging still needs accumulated context.
ChatGPT Sites entered public beta. Paid-plan users can turn prompts, files, or rough ideas into dashboards, reports, prototypes, and lightweight apps, then build in ChatGPT Work or Codex, preview privately, and publish via URL.
Industry Moves
Why it matters: continual learning and open-weight deployment are becoming strategic fronts alongside frontier-model development.
Richard Sutton and Khurram Javed left Keen Technologies to found Oak Lab. Their stated approach centers reinforcement learning and intelligence maintained through run-time experience; they argue current deep-learning methods require fundamental reworking. Oak Lab says it will first demonstrate limitations in simple settings before pursuing domain-independent algorithms and larger-scale systems.
Open-weight usage is rising alongside closed models. One gateway reported open-weight models accounting for 29% of tokens, up from 11% in April; Baseten says companies are increasingly deploying open-source AI alongside closed providers.
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: U.S. policy discussions may increasingly tie open-model treatment to international capability comparisons.
- The Trump administration and AI industry are reportedly discussing a capability framework for U.S. open-source models benchmarked against leading Chinese open-source models. According to the report, a proposal would streamline U.S. open and licensed models to market when their capabilities match or fall below Chinese open-model capabilities; the same report raises concerns over possible malicious software or exploitable back doors in Chinese models.
Quick Takes
Why it matters: capability gains are arriving alongside practical improvements in collaboration, access, and deployment.
- GPT-5.6 Sol Ultra was reported to have produced a short construction for Erdős problem #793 on 2-primitive sets.
- Claude Artifacts now supports public sharing, multiplayer editing, and creation through Claude Tag on Team and Enterprise plans.
- Step 3.7 Flash joined Baseten’s library with 198B total parameters, 11B active parameters, native image/video input, and a 256K context window.
- OpenAI reported 7M active users across Codex and ChatGPT Work.
Sakana AI
Greg Brockman
AWS Newsroom
OpenAI expands distribution while confronting an Apple lawsuit
GPT-5.6 reaches Amazon Bedrock as Apple alleges trade-secret theft
OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra, and Luna are now generally available through Amazon Bedrock, where AWS describes the models as spanning flagship reasoning through fast inference.
Separately, Apple has sued OpenAI and former Apple employees Tang Tan and Chang Liu, alleging a campaign to obtain trade secrets—including manufacturing, testing, and supplier information—to accelerate OpenAI’s hardware effort; OpenAI said it has “no interest in other companies’ trade secrets.”
Why it matters: The Bedrock launch broadens enterprise access to OpenAI’s newest family, while the suit places a major legal challenge around the company’s reported hardware ambitions.
Agent benchmarks show progress—and a persistent-learning gap
Grok 4.5 leads a long-horizon benchmark, while Morpheus questions continual learning
Grok 4.5 reached the top position on Long-Horizon Terminal-Bench; a benchmark analysis reported 13 completed tasks, compared with a prior best of seven out of 46. Perplexity said it integrated Grok 4.5 into Perplexity Computer within hours because it scored best in its evaluations, was its most cost-effective option, and had zero-data-retention support available immediately.
Meanwhile, the new Morpheus benchmark uses persistent enterprise simulations in which objectives shift and choices compound rather than reset like game environments. Its authors’ conclusion from testing frontier LLMs: they are not continual learners.
Why it matters: Stronger long-horizon task completion does not by itself establish that models can adapt and learn continuously throughout a changing real-world deployment.
The UK backs a domestic frontier-model effort
Cosine receives sovereign-AI support and Isambard compute
UK frontier lab Cosine says it has received a mandate to build a UK sovereign LLM after previously concentrating on coding agents for regulated sectors. It says government backing through the sovereign AI unit includes compute on Bristol’s Isambard supercomputer cluster.
Cosine’s stated commercial approach is to license model weights for customer-run deployments rather than host inference itself, directing more resources toward training while avoiding inference-serving costs.
Why it matters: The initiative is a concrete government-supported attempt to build domestic frontier-model capacity, pairing public compute with a deployment model designed for secure environments.
Physical AI research tests decentralized self-repair
Smart Cellular Bricks use local communication to infer shape and detect damage
Sakana AI researchers and collaborators published Nature Communications research on “Smart Cellular Bricks”: identical modules that run the same neural network locally, communicate only with neighboring bricks, and reach consensus on collective shape in under three minutes.
The team reports successful transfer from simulations to nearly 200 physical bricks with a 100% convergence rate, plus tolerance of up to 15% module failure and 95% accuracy in locating missing components.
Why it matters: The work moves decentralized collective intelligence from simulation toward physical systems that can recognize their own structure and use local signals to guide recovery.
Engram raises $98 million for weight-based AI memory
A well-funded bet that long context and RAG are not enough
Engram has raised a $98 million seed round to develop “cartridges”—task- or corpus-specific knowledge representations produced through gradient-based training. The company says these cartridges can represent context at roughly 1,000× compression, allowing models to work with fewer tokens than a purely retrieval-based approach.
Engram is also working with Harvey on large enterprise file systems, where it argues that broad questions spanning many client matters are not easily handled through RAG alone.
Why it matters: The funding highlights growing interest in storing and updating knowledge in model weights or parameter-efficient components as organizations contend with larger proprietary data collections and long-horizon agent tasks.
Tony Fadell
Lenny Rachitsky
Big Ideas
Product is the story customers can understand
Scott Belsky argues that separating product management from product marketing is a mistake: what is built and how it is explained should form one cohesive job. In this view, messaging is not a launch-layer artifact—it predicts customer concerns, shapes the product itself, and provides context that a specification cannot.
Why it matters: A feature can be technically complete yet still fail if the team has not made its value legible to the intended customer.
Apply it: Before committing to a feature, write the customer-facing explanation alongside the requirements. Test whether it addresses the concern that would stop a customer from adopting it. Build empathy by behaving like a beginner rather than relying on internal familiarity; in one example, Apple’s Greg Joswiak tested a next-generation iPod with a beginner’s mindset and focused on battery life.
PM work is adaptation, not control
Product managers operate amid ambiguity, changing priorities, and accountability without equivalent authority. Seniority does not eliminate this uncertainty; the problems and stakes simply grow. One product leader argues that the role is not about removing uncertainty, but working effectively within it.
Why it matters: Treating uncertainty as a personal failure encourages unproductive pressure and over-control. Treating it as the environment of the job shifts attention toward decisions, learning, and adaptation.
Tactical Playbook
Create a focus-and-feedback operating loop
When priorities are continually arriving, use this sequence:
- Name the most important work for today. Community advice is to regain control of current execution before zooming out into future strategy; use what is learned now to build the broader vision.
- State what is being worked on now and next—and why. This makes prioritization explainable when stakeholders ask for an update.
- Delegate operational work where possible. Reserve your attention for strategic decisions and the rationale behind them.
- Add reporting to every project’s scope. Define how results will be visible later, rather than scrambling to demonstrate impact after launch.
- Protect capacity to think. Remove one unnecessary meeting and reduce context switching, which can erode the thinking capacity central to product work.
Conflict need not signal failure: it can be “alignment in progress” when teams use disagreement to make tension productive.
Case Studies & Lessons
Positive interviews did not predict product use
A founder researching a barber-focused product received encouraging interview feedback: prospective users said they would use it, discussed prices, and agreed to pilot testing. After an MVP was offered free, outreach to more than 25 barbers in person and 70+ via Instagram produced about three signups; only one person used the service once, while Reddit feedback from barbers was explicitly negative.
Lesson: Treat behavior as stronger evidence than polite interest. Suggested next steps from the discussion were to speak with the few people who tried the product, learn why usage stopped, and time-box a final week of live observation rather than continue polishing the existing pitch.
For discovery, ask whether customers articulate a real problem rather than whether they like a proposed solution. In this case, commenters noted that showing a barber reference photos already addressed the need and questioned whether the new product was materially better.
Career Corner
Build experience where product decisions are real
For people entering PM with limited direct experience, one community recommendation is to pursue an internal transition into an associate PM role, work there for at least a year, and then reassess further education.
Set expectations accurately: product work extends beyond defining the “what” and “why” to handling stakeholder conflict, executives pushing work against a roadmap, people dynamics, and engineering constraints. Failed experiments can still accelerate learning by delivering clarity about what does not work.
Tools & Resources
- AI-native PM course: A four-week course promoted by Lenny Rachitsky covers AI-supported discovery, prototyping from a real codebase, GitHub-based production changes, and evaluation systems for quality. It is aimed at PMs as well as designers, operations professionals, and researchers.
- The Mom Test: In the barber case discussion, this book was recommended as a framework for uncovering actual customer problems before building.
- Input audit: Curate professional content by asking whether it improves your thinking or feeds anxiety; the source cautions that some product content monetizes insecurity rather than supporting growth.
Jason ✨👾SaaStr.Ai✨ Lemkin
Aaron Levie
Most compelling: a model-routing experiment focused on delegation
- Title: Experiment on model routing and effective delegation with Fable
- Content type: X post / analysis
- Author/creator: Joon H. Lee
- Link:https://x.com/joon_h_lee/status/2076714221837173097
- Recommended by: Aaron Levie
- Key takeaway: Levie highlighted the post as an example of using frontier intelligence for management and lower-cost models for workhorse tasks while maintaining performance. The experiment found that Fable’s effective delegation reduced overall cost despite its 2× premium: it set constraints and outcomes, gave feedback rather than making fixes, and usually did not touch the code.
- Why it matters: Levie frames this combination of models as a future template for targeted performance and optimized cost structures.
“It specified constraints and outcomes instead of spelling out the implementation, gave feedback instead of making fixes itself, and in most cases never touched the code at all. These are the habits of a good manager.”
A sales-focused video break
- Title:The Global Salesman
- Content type: Video
- Author/creator: Not specified in the source material
- Link:https://youtu.be/oSRIYN9LkUg?si=Z9DGgnbFOM6fi6la
- Recommended by: Jason Lemkin
- Key takeaway: Lemkin presented the video as a particularly strong watch for people who enjoy sales and want a break.
- Why it matters: This is a direct, personal recommendation from a startup leader, with an immediately accessible link for sales-minded readers.
The stronger learning resource is the Fable routing analysis: it pairs a concrete cost result with a usable management lens for allocating work across models. The Global Salesman is a lighter, explicitly sales-oriented watch.
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