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Post-Training Compute, Local-First AI, and Enterprise Model Control
Jul 12
4 min read
571 docs
Software As a Service Companies — The Future Of Tech Businesses
r/SideProject - A community for sharing side projects
Aravind Srinivas
+2
A seed-backed post-training buildout, early computer-use and regulated-AI teams, and enterprise signals around open models, AI ROI, and consumption pricing. The throughline is a growing premium on cost control, enterprise context, and deployable local or edge architectures.

Funding & Deals

  • Suhail’s AI venture has closed a seed round and is building out a post-training compute base. The founder reports starting with two 8×B200 GPU systems and later acquiring 64 B300s; the team says it has validated a basic RLVR post-training stack, made its first hire, and is recruiting for post-training or low-level model optimization.

Emerging Teams

  • Rosply is an early computer-use agent with its first reported paid customer two weeks after launch. Built by a solo founder, it watches a PC screen, uses a vision model to select actions, then clicks and types without APIs or browser extensions. The founder says it can browse, summarize files, build coding projects in VS Code, and accept voice commands.

  • A French trade-compliance SaaS team found its initial ICP was wrong and pivoted upstream. After building an AI system to read invoices and match them to ICC 2020 rules, the founders found freight forwarders already had the expertise; they shifted toward SME exporters and manually onboarded early beta users to adapt the workflow. They frame the combination of trade rules and EU regulations such as CBAM as a defensibility layer.

  • AURAX is pursuing secure enterprise RAG for regulated customers. Its solo founder is building a Rust-based, local-first platform for banking and legal organizations that cannot use cloud AI because of data-privacy requirements. The company describes its zero-trust, air-gapped architecture as production-ready and says it passes strict security audits; its immediate challenge is reaching enterprise decision-makers.

AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • SENSORIQ is applying edge-native unsupervised learning to industrial predictive maintenance. The framework trains symmetric autoencoders on a two-week healthy-machine baseline, flags anomalies through reconstruction error, and dynamically sets thresholds with median absolute deviation. It is designed for ONNX/ARM64 gateway deployment without cloud connectivity and combines vibration, acoustic, and optical sensing.

  • Document retrieval is being packaged as a lightweight MCP primitive. AIveilix lets users upload PDFs once into a document bucket and connect it to Claude through an MCP URL, so the model retrieves relevant material rather than loading an entire PDF into each conversation. The builder positions this as a way to reduce usage and keep answers focused.

  • Persistent AI workspaces are moving beyond chat history toward inspectable task state. Akeem is being built around persistent goals, long-term memory, and project context, responding to user feedback that current tools retain conversational detail better than user intent. A related design recommendation calls for explicit memory boundaries, attribution, retention/deletion controls, and visible state transitions and recovery.

Market Signals

  • Enterprise demand for open models is being driven by cost and control. Glean founder Arvind Jain says enterprises want the freedom to use multiple models rather than depend on a single provider, while AI budgets can be exhausted rapidly; he characterizes cost as the current primary driver of the open-source push.

  • For application-layer companies, frontier-model progress may be complementary rather than competitive. Jain argues that companies not training frontier models should treat advances from OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and open-source developers as assets. Glean’s own positioning centers on integrating multiple frontier models with company-specific context.

  • ROI is clearest where workflow output is directly measurable. Jain points to customer support, where cases resolved per agent can be tracked, while saying coding speed has increased without a corresponding increase in overall product-shipping speed at most companies he hears from.

  • Consumption pricing could weaken bundled AI distribution. Jain’s view is that, when businesses pay per unit of work, users can choose among multiple tools and the inherent advantage of a bundled suite diminishes.

  • Local, lower-cost model capability remains a consequential forecast to monitor. Aravind Srinivas assigns greater than 50% probability to a Fable 5-quality model becoming 3–4× cheaper within six months and an Opus 4.8-grade model running locally within 12 months.

Worth Your Time

  • Glean founder Arvind Jain on enterprise open-source adoption — a primary-source discussion of why cost pressure and data control are changing enterprise model selection.
  • Glean founder Arvind Jain on measuring AI ROI — useful framing on the gap between coding acceleration and end-to-end product delivery.
Use a Second Model to Steer Your Coding Agent
Jul 12
3 min read
53 docs
Tibo
Theo - t3.gg
Salvatore Sanfilippo
+2
Today’s strongest field signal is a practical multi-model pattern: let one coding agent execute while another provides fresh-context steering at blockers. Also included: a Claude Code-to-GPT routing setup, a second-instance planning loop, and a clear boundary between agent-assisted exploration and hard design work.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

Use a second model as a steering layer—not just a fallback. Salvatore Sanfilippo’s production workflow for Dwarfstar CUDA kernels keeps GPT-5.6 as the executor but tells it to consult Claude through the terminal whenever it is blocked; he reports this unlocked optimizations neither model reached alone. The useful mechanism is fresh context: the adviser repeatedly examines the problem without inheriting the primary agent’s tunnel.

⚡ TRY THIS

  • Give Claude Code a GPT-5.6-Sol route via CLIProxyAPI(Tibo, with a setup summary from Theo). Install CLIProxyAPI, configure Claude and Codex authentication, connect Claude Code, then create a claudex alias. Tibo’s configuration sets the subagent model, enables effort, caps tool concurrency at three, and disables tool search:

    alias claudex='CLAUDE_CODE_SUBAGENT_MODEL=gpt-5.6-sol
    CLAUDE_CODE_ALWAYS_ENABLE_EFFORT=1
    CLAUDE_CODE_MAX_TOOL_USE_CONCURRENCY=3
    ENABLE_TOOL_SEARCH=false
    claude –model gpt-5.6-sol'

    Tibo describes this as a roughly five-minute path that avoids installing the Codex app; Theo says it took him about two prompts after the proxy was already configured.

  • Add an explicit “consult another model when blocked” rule. Start the primary coding agent on the implementation, then instruct it to use a second model through the terminal for suggestions at blockers. Sanfilippo used this GPT-to-Claude pattern on CUDA-kernel work; the secondary model’s clean context is the point, not parallel generation for its own sake.

  • Run a planning critique before implementation. Give a second model the desired outcome plus your proposed approaches, and ask it to surface risks and constraints before transferring the discussion to the primary agent. Sanfilippo specifically recommends this two-instance handoff; he also cites OpenAI guidance that excessive implementation detail can degrade output, so lead with the outcome rather than a prescriptive build plan.

  • Use agents for probes; retain ownership of the hard abstraction. Armin Ronacher finds Pi useful for quickly building POCs and probing APIs, but not for speeding up cross-provider abstraction design. Treat that split as a task-routing rule: delegate exploration, then keep critical thinking engaged for the design decision—otherwise, in his words, the result is “slop.”

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

No additional release with enough new, practical implementation detail passed today’s filter; the strongest material was practitioner workflow evidence rather than release notes.

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • 13:35–14:58 — Sanfilippo on using Claude as GPT-5.6’s terminal adviser. A concise walkthrough of the multi-model steering pattern and why a fresh-context reviewer can help recover an agent that is stuck.
  • 23:52–24:25 — Pre-plan with a second instance. Watch for the actionable sequence: state the target, offer candidate strategies, ask for failure modes, then bring that critique to the implementation agent.

Editorial take: the durable workflow is not “pick the winning model”—it is using a second model to break local reasoning loops while keeping human judgment on the abstractions that remain hard.

AI Competition Turns to Agent Scale, Health Performance, and Compute Independence
Jul 12
3 min read
557 docs
Sam Altman
Sakana AI
Anthropic
+12
GPT-5.6’s health evaluation, China’s expanding domestic AI-compute infrastructure, and Codex’s rapid user growth lead this brief. It also covers research in open-ended creativity and robotics, new multimodal products, and the governance and infrastructure moves shaping enterprise AI.

Top Stories

Why it matters: the competitive focus is shifting toward the cost, reliability, and operational scale of agentic systems—not just headline benchmark scores.

  • GPT-5.6’s health results emphasize performance per dollar. OpenAI-associated reporting says the small Luna variant, at its lowest reasoning setting, outperformed GPT-5.5 at its highest setting while costing 25× less; Sol set a new high bar at cost. In a blinded physician comparison across 20,000 axis ratings, GPT-5.6 models were reported to have fewer flaws than physician-written responses across accuracy, communication, completeness, instruction-following, and decision helpfulness.

  • China Telecom deployed an Ascend 910C training cluster with 11,520 Huawei chips and 9,000 PFLOPS in Guangdong. The stated aim is to reduce dependence on overseas high-end compute supply. An industry analysis identifies HBM memory as the immediate constraint on China’s Ascend production, estimating 1.4 million units this year and projecting that 200,000 wafers per month of HBM capacity by 2028 could support 1.2 million chips monthly.

  • Codex is becoming a large-scale developer product, not just a model interface. A developer AMA recap says Codex has surpassed 5 million weekly users—double its count three months earlier—and shipped 150 improvements. Planned work includes a Linux desktop app, better agent persistence, lower code complexity, and connectors for Slack, GitHub, and Notion.

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: researchers are testing where autonomous systems still fall short—and how model design can move from text generation into robust physical and creative workflows.

  • Sakana AI, MIT, and NYU used vision-language agents to recreate Picbreeder, an open-ended collaborative image-evolution experiment. Agents tended to revisit similar concepts and make smaller leaps than people, but diverse agent personalities substantially improved exploration and semantic diversity. The researchers conclude that humans remain better at turning unexpected outcomes into sustained creative discoveries.

  • Mistral open-sourced Leanstral 1.5, a formal-mathematics model. The project reportedly saturates miniF2F, solves 587 of 672 PutnamBench problems, sets new results on FATE-H/X, and found five previously unknown bugs across 57 tested repositories.

  • LingBot-VA 2.0 targets robot control with a video-action model trained natively for control. Its sparse video stream has 13B total parameters but activates 1.9B per token; the project reports 93.6 average on RoboTwin 2.0, adaptation from 10–15 demonstrations, and 142ms per action chunk after systems optimization.

Products & Launches

Why it matters: multimodal models are increasingly shipping as specialized creative and production tools.

  • Runway introduced Characters, which turns one reference image into a conversational expressive character. Its GWM-1 model generates lip-sync, facial movement, and head motion in real time at 24fps for photorealistic and stylized outputs.

  • BytePlus made the Seedream-5.0 Pro API available for enterprise visual production. The company positions it for image generation and editing; Arena rankings place it #2 in multi-image editing, #4 in image editing, and #11 in text-to-image, all major gains over Seedream-4.5.

  • Kyutai and MireloAI released MuScriptor, an open model for converting recordings across genres into separate instrument MIDI tracks.

Industry Moves

Why it matters: governance and infrastructure partnerships are becoming part of the competitive AI stack.

  • Anthropic added former U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke to its Long-Term Benefit Trust, extending the external oversight body’s membership.

  • Cohere partnered with Nvidia and CoreWeave around enterprise AI reliability, security, and infrastructure protection—an indication that enterprise positioning is increasingly tied to operational trust as well as model capability.

Quick Takes

Why it matters: these signals point to the practical requirements of the next agent wave.

  • Robbyant open-sourced LingBot-World 2.0, a real-time causal world model tested for 60 uninterrupted minutes across 20 scenes at 720p/60fps.
  • UC Berkeley researchers argue that near-zero inference costs will require data systems built for agent query swarms, multi-agent memory, and coordination.
  • OpenAI reset ChatGPT Work and Codex usage limits after reporting its fastest-ever traffic growth.
  • Sam Altman said he believes AI has so far been net job-creating, while noting that the trend could continue or change.
GPT-5.6 Health Claims Lead a Push for More Practical and Measurable AI
Jul 12
2 min read
231 docs
Sam Altman
Machine Learning
LocalLLM
+1
OpenAI shared a blinded physician evaluation supporting GPT-5.6’s health-performance and cost claims. Elsewhere, Vultr released retrieval models aimed at efficient offline use, while a new public benchmark opened a reproducible way to assess political neutrality in AI systems.

GPT-5.6 health evaluation puts cost-performance in focus

OpenAI reports fewer flaws in GPT-5.6 health responses than in physician-written answers

OpenAI described a blinded evaluation in which specialty-matched physicians wrote responses to difficult patient- and clinician-facing tasks, then other physicians assessed those responses alongside GPT-5.6 outputs across accuracy, communication, completeness, instruction following, and health-decision helpfulness. Across 20,000 axis ratings, OpenAI said all GPT-5.6 variants produced responses with fewer flaws than the physician-written answers, with Sol appearing strongest in the study.

The company also said its smallest variant, Luna, at the lowest reasoning effort outperformed GPT-5.5 at its highest effort while costing 25 times less; Sol set its highest claimed bar on the same cost-performance framing. Why it matters: OpenAI is making a domain-specific quality-and-cost case for GPT-5.6, rather than relying only on general-purpose model benchmarks.

Local AI development shifts toward retrieval efficiency and reproducible measurement

Vultr releases an offline-oriented retrieval model family

Vultr released its VultronRetriever family on Hugging Face after demonstrating offline question-answering and document embedding on an iPhone at Raise Summit Paris. The company says each model leads its size class on MTEB, with the 8B Prime model ranked first overall; it also claims up to 16× smaller index storage and 12× higher throughput than previous 9B-class leaders.

The smaller Flash model is presented as an edge option that can index up to 60 images per minute offline, while the Hydra architecture is intended to provide late-interaction retrieval with up to half the memory of comparable models. Why it matters: The release centers practical retrieval constraints—storage, throughput, and memory—alongside leaderboard performance, with an explicit path to on-device use.

New benchmark project makes model political-neutrality claims testable

The Neutrality Project launched an open-source benchmark for measuring model influence, beginning with political neutrality. Its approach uses each model’s far-left and far-right persona answers as individual anchors, fixes left/right references in advance using Qwen, Gemma, and Mistral, and separately flags dimensions where genuine refusals exceed 5%.

In its first results across 18 models from 12 labs, the project reported that 97 of 108 measured positions were left of center, with environmental questions showing the strongest average lean; Grok 4.5 was its closest-to-neutral model at −0.02. The code, question sets, scoring reference, and raw results are public and runnable locally, and the authors explicitly invite reruns and methodological critiques. Why it matters: The project offers a reproducible framework for examining politically sensitive model behavior, including whether refusals affect apparent positioning.

Making AI-Assisted Product Decisions Auditable
Jul 12
3 min read
75 docs
Leah’s ProducTea
Shreyas Doshi
Product Management
This brief focuses on disciplined product judgment in AI-assisted workflows: use analogies to explain rather than decide, make AI outputs auditable, and protect experimentation and roadmap decisions from weak interpretation. It also examines an 85% estimation failure and one potential route into a first PM role.

Big Ideas

Use analogies to communicate—not to decide

Analogies can make a product decision legible after the reasoning is complete, but they are a weak substitute for the underlying reasoning itself. One PM framing: they are useful for explaining the output of thinking, yet risky as input to it—“the map you draw after the journey, not one by which you navigate.”

Apply it: pressure-test a proposal with the customer, product, and data specifics first. Use an analogy later to align stakeholders on the conclusion, rather than letting resemblance to a familiar company or product determine the choice.

Tactical Playbook

Establish an evidence trail for AI-assisted product work

A suggested response to unreliable AI-generated work is to make verification and provenance explicit:

  1. Source every material claim. Record where the information came from and whether it was gathered or transformed with AI.
  2. Require an attestation for high-stakes outputs. Ask the author to state that they verified the information themselves, or to identify what remains uncertain.
  3. Review the working process, not only the document. Use screen-sharing sessions akin to pair programming for knowledge work to reveal how an analysis or recommendation was produced.
  4. Treat AI fluency as unproven until demonstrated. The recommended default is not to assume colleagues can reliably judge AI output without evidence of that capability.

Why it matters: polished one-pagers can conceal weak inputs. An evidence trail makes claims reviewable before they influence roadmap or investment decisions.

Gate access to experiment results and roadmap details

For important experiments, consider limiting self-serve access to tools such as Amplitude and Growthbook for people who cannot interpret results reliably. The risks described are premature inspection of non-significant results and mistaking a metric movement for proof that the associated hypothesis is correct; the recommendation is to review consequential or extreme results as a team.

For sales stakeholders, keep the internal backlog separate from a human-curated, near-release roadmap. Have a PM evaluate and route sales feedback, rather than allowing early backlog visibility to turn into customer promises or treating raw request volume as product priority.

Case Studies & Lessons

A data error inflated a redesign estimate by 85%

In one reported example, a PM estimated the impact of a product redesign using total business users rather than users of the relevant feature, overstating impact by 85%. The data was self-served through Amplitude and its AI prompting interface, but the one-pager did not disclose that workflow, include sources, or show that the figures had been cross-checked.

Lesson: separate data retrieval, interpretation, and decision approval. Before using an AI-assisted analysis in a planning artifact, validate the population and metric definition against the specific feature or behavior being evaluated.

Career Corner

Consider an internal path into PM

A community response to an aspiring PM with IoT and integration experience characterized external entry into product management as difficult, and suggested joining a company first in a sales-engineer or comparable role before transitioning internally to PM.

How to apply it: if pursuing this route, target adjacent roles where you can build product context, customer exposure, and an internal record of cross-functional problem-solving—then use that evidence when pursuing an internal PM opening.

An Enterprise AI Playbook, a Foundational Whitepaper, and a Starship Watch
Jul 12
2 min read
167 docs
SpaceX
tobi lutke
Aaron Levie
+1
Aaron Levie’s enterprise-AI recommendation leads a compact set of organic picks, alongside Brian Armstrong’s reflection on the Bitcoin whitepaper and Tobi Lütke’s Starship flight-test video endorsement.

Most compelling recommendation: applied AI has to change the workflow

Aaron Levie recommended an enterprise-AI analysis, saying its most useful ideas concern what AI transformation looks like inside an organization—not merely which companies stand to gain from AI.

  • Title: Enterprise AI transformation analysis (title not specified in the source notes)
  • Content type: Article/post
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source notes
  • Who recommended it: Aaron Levie
  • Key takeaway: Moving from chat tools to agents means deploying against workflows that can cross multiple organizational functions. The post argues that meaningful ROI requires substantial up-front work: domain-specific deployment, FDE support, change management, organized data, and comprehensive workflow evaluations.
  • Why it matters: It gives readers an operational frame for applied AI: value should come from changing the underlying process, while allowing process owners to pause workflows, alter rules, approve exceptions, or reintroduce people when needed.

“Software asks the employee to adopt a tool, but infrastructure changes the operating layer underneath the employee.”

A foundational technology read

Brian Armstrong credited the Bitcoin whitepaper with changing his view of the opportunity in financial systems.

  • Title:Bitcoin whitepaper
  • Content type: Whitepaper
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the source notes
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the source notes
  • Who recommended it: Brian Armstrong
  • Key takeaway: Armstrong said reading it made him see a “huge opportunity” and conclude that the world needed an updated financial system.
  • Why it matters: This is a direct reflection on a resource that shaped the recommender’s thinking, rather than a passing mention.

A launch-test video pick

Tobi Lütke called SpaceX’s Starship’s thirteenth flight test a “Great watch.”

  • Title:Starship’s thirteenth flight test
  • Content type: Video
  • Author/creator: SpaceX
  • Link/URL:spacex.com/launches/starship-flight-13
  • Who recommended it: Tobi Lütke
  • Key takeaway: Lütke offered a concise, direct endorsement of the launch-test video.
  • Why it matters: It is a straightforward visual resource for readers following Starship’s forthcoming thirteenth flight test, which SpaceX said was preparing to launch as early as Thursday, July 16.

The day’s strongest learning signal is the applied-AI analysis: Levie supplied not only a recommendation but a concrete implementation lens. Armstrong’s whitepaper reflection offers the clearest example of a foundational text shaping a founder’s thinking, while Lütke’s video pick adds a focused technical watch.

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Coding Agents Alpha Tracker avatar

Coding Agents Alpha Tracker

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

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

AI in EdTech Weekly avatar

AI in EdTech Weekly

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

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

VC Tech Radar avatar

VC Tech Radar

Daily · Tracks 120 sources
a16z
Stanford eCorner
Greylock
+117

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

Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker avatar

Bitcoin Payment Adoption Tracker

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

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

AI News Digest avatar

AI News Digest

Daily · Tracks 114 sources
Google DeepMind
OpenAI
Anthropic
+111

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

Global Agricultural Developments avatar

Global Agricultural Developments

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

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

Recommended Reading from Tech Founders avatar

Recommended Reading from Tech Founders

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

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

PM Daily Digest avatar

PM Daily Digest

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

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

AI High Signal Digest avatar

AI High Signal Digest

Daily · Tracks 1 source
AI High Signal

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

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