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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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Teresa Torres
Scott Belsky
Big Ideas
1) Strategy has to become an operating system, not an annual document
AI is speeding up both builders and PMs. Engineers and designers can do far more with tools like Cursor and Claude Code; PMs can prototype quickly, write evals, and even push PRs into engineering review. That makes directional clarity more important, not less. Aakash Gupta argues that if 9 out of 10 engineers and designers cannot explain the strategy, while a typical 5 engineer / 1 designer / 1 PM team costs about $1.4M fully loaded, the company is burning money. Common failure modes are strategies that are too long, vague, detached from execution, or too static .
- Why it matters: Faster execution widens the downside of bad direction and narrows the time available to correct it .
- How to apply: Treat strategy as a short, regularly updated decision-making tool that helps the team choose, sequence, and say no .
"Can your engineer or designer explain the strategy in 30 seconds? Can they make decisions based on it? Does it help them say no to things?"
2) In AI products, the new design problem is capability discovery
Enterprise products have always taught users three things: the interface, the domain, and the benefit. Conversational interfaces make interface teaching almost disappear and make domain teaching easier through plain language, but they make benefit teaching harder because the full capability surface is invisible behind a text field. Users can end up having a functional interaction that uses only a narrow slice of what the product can do, while their prior mental model narrows the questions they ask. Suggested prompts help briefly, but as a small static menu they do little to expand the frame .
- Why it matters: If capability stays invisible, differentiated product value stays invisible too .
- How to apply: Design for discovery and judgment: surface the right capability at the right moment, and create feedback loops so the product gets better with use rather than acting like a one-off chat box .
"The interface was the product. The capability is the product now. And capability that stays invisible is as good as absent."
3) Agents are becoming a real user segment
For agent-facing products, Aakash Gupta argues the API, CLI, and MCP server are parallel layers rather than a maturity sequence: API for bulk operations and latency control, CLI for composability, MCP for discoverability and multi-client reach. He also argues agents need discoverability, programmatic auth, structured I/O, idempotency, and rate limits, and that the fix is to treat the agent as a first-class user with a PM who owns the experience .
- Why it matters: If one of those layers or primitives is missing, agents can route around your product to one that is easier to use .
- How to apply: Stop treating agent access as a side integration; define the agent journey, owner, and roadmap explicitly .
4) AI raises the cost of indecision
Shreyas Doshi highlights a simple tradeoff: a leader who makes a B+ decision today may beat the leader with A+ product sense who takes a week longer. Scott Belsky gives the organizational version of the same idea, calling the backlog of unmade decisions "organizational debt." His prescription is to prompt decisions or at least deadlines, run AI change through protected pilots with learning KPIs, and socialize new ways of working until they become obvious. He expects more process to be offloaded to compute, leaving humans to contribute taste and agency .
- Why it matters: As more process moves to compute, slow consensus and process buildup become a bigger drag on product velocity .
- How to apply: Prompt the decision, or at least a deadline for it; use pilots with learning-focused KPIs before hardening new process .
Tactical Playbook
1) Build an AI-era strategy that survives contact with execution
- Start with the seven elements: Objective, Users, Superpowers, Vision, Pillars, Impact, Roadmap.
- Treat them as sequential but iterative; loop back as you learn .
- Check for the four failure modes: too long, too vague, too detached from daily work, and too static .
- Pass the 30-second test: an engineer or designer should be able to explain it, make decisions from it, and use it to say no .
"If not, you have a document, not a strategy."
2) Design AI onboarding around benefit teaching, not just interface reduction
- Separate what the user must learn about the interface, the domain, and the benefit.
- Assume the blank text field hides inventory; identify the capabilities users will never discover on their own .
- Do not rely on a few static suggested prompts to solve discovery; they help briefly but quickly plateau .
- Add an investment loop so the product stores value and improves through feedback and repeated use .
- Use personalization as persuasion - helping users do what they want to do - not coercion .
3) Run AI adoption as a protected operating change
- Start with pilots and play, not blanket mandates .
- Give teams learning KPIs so they are rewarded for insight, not punished for early failure .
- Use collapsed-stack teams or dual-role operators where possible to speed tool adoption and decision flow .
- Keep destroying outdated process while new process is created; otherwise organizational debt accumulates .
- Force a decision, or at least a decision deadline, when issues stall .
4) Prepare your product for agents in one quarter
- This week: run the five-question audit and ship an
AGENTS.mdfile . - This month: stand up a read-only MCP server and list it on PulseMCP .
- This quarter: add approval flows, agent analytics, and agent-specific pricing .
- Build the API, CLI, and MCP layers in parallel, not one after another .
- Verify the basics: discoverability, programmatic auth, structured I/O, idempotency, and rate limits .
Case Studies & Lessons
1) Teresa Torres chose audience fit over easy revenue
Teresa Torres describes shutting down a $19/month community membership that was growing and generating reasonable revenue because it attracted low-effort questions, cannibalized courses and books, and pulled her away from the audience she wanted: people willing to invest in learning. She removed monthly subscriptions and kept annual only, explicitly accepting slower growth for better audience alignment .
- Lesson: Revenue can be real and still be strategically expensive if it trains the wrong user behavior or weakens your better products .
2) She also cut a product worth 40% of revenue
Torres says her deep-dive courses represented 40% of revenue, but the format had weak B2B fit and unstable cohort economics on the direct-to-consumer side, leading to cancellations, refunds, and administrative overhead. She sunsetted the cohort format and replaced it with two experiments: on-demand consumer courses and a subscription for corporate leaders to coach teams .
- Lesson: Stable revenue can hide format-market mismatch. The right question is not just "is this profitable?" but "is this the best use of time and team?" .
"I got to burn the ships."
3) Sold out did not mean optimized
Petra Wille describes rethinking Product at Heart even though the event routinely sold out. The team felt the existing half-day format underused the value of putting about 60 product leaders together, so they did lightweight interviews and redesigned it into a two-day experience despite uncertainty about time commitment and pricing .
- Lesson: Strong demand is not proof that the current format is best; it may only show that the underlying need is real .
4) Portfolio governance ideas worth borrowing
Across the Teresa/Petra discussion, four operating mechanisms stand out: keep a visible sunsetting column on the taskboard, use H1/H2/H3 horizons so replacement bets are already in motion, make sunsetting decisions one level above the product team, and normalize the fact that even successful products have life cycles .
Career Corner
1) Show product sense before anyone asks for it
One AI PM candidate stood out by watching three hours of TikTok videos from coaches serving small businesses, then bringing firsthand user insights to the first interview. The point was not the medium; it was the behavior. The candidate bypassed the company's framing, did lightweight user research independently, and demonstrated product sense rather than talking about it .
- Why it matters: In competitive PM hiring, evidence of judgment beats generic preparation .
- How to apply: Before interviews, go to the end user, build a small artifact, or bring real research. Do the work before you are asked .
2) Build AI fluency on tools that will matter at work
Sachin Rekhi advises PMs to spend their learning cycles on Claude Code rather than OpenClaw if the goal is practical AI fluency in day-to-day work. His reason: Claude Code combines strong agentic capability with broad enterprise adoption, and the related skill set - Skills, CLIs, MCPs, and adjacent workflows - is both productivity-enhancing and marketable .
- Why it matters: Some enterprises are explicitly hiring more junior AI-native talent to inject this fluency into everyday meetings and challenge legacy process .
- How to apply: Prioritize tools your current or next employer is likely to sanction, then learn the surrounding workflow surface, not just the interface .
3) Management is optional; clear thinking is not
Tony Fadell argues that many people should not be pushed into management just because it looks like the default ladder, especially if they prefer hands-on work, daily wins, or are not energized by people leadership. At the same time, Shreyas Doshi argues that long-term relevance in the AI age depends on evaluating logic rather than superficial tells about whether something "looks AI generated." Scott Belsky adds that the human edge will center more on taste and agency .
- Why it matters: Career progression is becoming less about title conformity and more about judgment, fluency, and role fit .
- How to apply: Choose the ladder intentionally, then practice reviewing AI output for reasoning quality instead of style markers .
Tools & Resources
- How to Build Product Strategy in the Age of AI: Step-by-Step with Claude Code — a compact strategy template: Objective, Users, Superpowers, Vision, Pillars, Impact, Roadmap, plus the anti-pattern check and 30-second test .
- The Interface Was the Product — useful if you're designing AI-native workflows and need a sharper lens for interface teaching vs. benefit teaching .
- AGENTS.md + read-only MCP + agent analytics/pricing roadmap — a practical starter set if you expect agents to use your product, not just humans .
- AI Productivity course — the course link Sachin Rekhi shared alongside his advice on Claude Code fluency .
- The Messy Middle of AI — Scott Belsky's interview on organizational debt, collapsed-stack teams, pilots, and the role of taste and agency in AI adoption .
- From Building Habits to Breaking Limiting Beliefs with Nir Eyal #beyondbelief — a useful refresher on the Hook Model, the investment phase, and the persuasion-vs.-coercion boundary for habit-forming products .
Alex Albert
Claude
Yuchen Jin
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
Parallelism is becoming the real lever. Karpathy's autoresearch loop ran ~700 autonomous experiments, found ~20 additive changes that transferred from smaller to larger nanochat models, and cut "Time to GPT-2" from 2.02h to 1.80h (~11%) . Anthropic productized the same pattern with Claude Code's new Code Review, which spawns a team of agents on every PR because internal code output per engineer is up 200% and review became the bottleneck . Francesco reports the practitioner-side version: switching to Codex and parallelizing more aggressively made February his most productive month ever, nearly 4x August .
🛠️ TOOLS & MODELS
- Claude Code — Code Review: When a PR opens, Claude dispatches a team of agents to hunt for bugs . Anthropic says they built it for themselves first because code output per engineer is up 200% this year and review became the bottleneck; Boris Cherny says it catches bugs he would have missed, and Alex Albert says it has been a game changer internally .
- Codex xhigh reasoning: Francesco's Typefully setup gets the first prompt right 95% of the time, and his output jumped nearly 4x once he switched to Codex and pushed more work in parallel .
- Harness > raw model: Dylan Patel says the same Claude 4.6 model performs very differently in Claude Code vs Cursor agent mode, and his team mostly prefers Claude Code because of the harness . Simon Willison and Kent C. Dodds report that, with a good agent harness plus repo docs/examples, agents handle private or brand-new tools just fine, including Remix 3 .
- Long-running loop reliability check: In a public
autoresearchtest, Claude Opus 4.6 (high) ran 12+ hours and completed 118 experiments, while GPT-5.4 xhigh stopped after 6 despite aLOOP FOREVERinstruction . Karpathy says Codex currently does not work withautoresearchas configured and that he prefers interactivetmuxsessions over headless loops . - Cloud-only dissent: Theo says T3 Code will not support local models because he does not think they can do meaningful engineering work, and because one of the product's advantages is running lots of work in parallel .
💡 WORKFLOWS & TRICKS
Copy Francesco's low-babysitting Codex loop
- Put each task in Linear.
-
Use Git worktrees so agents stay off
main. - Open Ghostyy, paste a Linear task ID, then repeat for more tasks .
- Review PRs while other agents keep working .
- His claim: Codex fits this parallel workflow better than Claude Code because it needs less steering and feedback .
Run cheap-to-expensive research loops
- Let agents explore on a smaller model first .
- Optimize for a metric you can evaluate cheaply, or for a smaller-network proxy .
- Promote only promising ideas to larger scales .
- Keep only changes that transfer additively; Karpathy's round 1 found ~20 that did .
-
He says
autoresearchis best treated as a recipe/idea you hand to your agent, not something you use directly .
Teach the agent the stack inside the repo
- Kent says agents had zero problem with Remix 3 once the repo had the right documentation .
-
Simon's trick is explicit: tell the agent to read
--helpoutput for unfamiliar tools before it starts solving the task . - Emerging pattern: projects are now shipping official skills repos to package this knowledge for agents .
Turn specialist knowledge into shared skills
- Dylan Patel says his team keeps reusable skills in internal GitHub, so a specialist's workflow—like data-center permit analysis—can be reused by non-experts .
- He also describes a non-programmer hedge-fund user teaching Claude Code a tone-analysis skill from books, then running it across earnings transcripts without writing code .
Auto-ship low-risk work; gate the risky stuff
- Edit inside the product's designer mode.
- Hit Launch Agent to ship via Cursor Cloud Agents and Workflow Automations .
- Stop for manual review only when the risk matrix says to—e.g. database schema migrations .
- Geoffrey Huntley's framing is good: stay on the loop, not in the loop.
If you're building agents, evals first beats prompt-tweaking
- LangChain starts by defining success scenarios, then runs rule-based checks plus an LLM judge in CI .
- Every human action becomes training signal: send, edit, and cancel are logged against traces and reused later .
👤 PEOPLE TO WATCH
- Andrej Karpathy — still the clearest public source on eval-driven agent loops. Today's reason: ~700 autonomous experiments, ~20 additive fixes, an ~11% nanochat speedup, plus blunt feedback on where headless loops break .
- Dylan Patel — unusually concrete on production agent use: real spend numbers, same-model harness differences, shared skills, and non-programmer adoption inside his firm .
- Francesco (Frank Dilo) / Romain Huet — strongest public Codex workflow today: nearly 4x output, 95% first-prompt hit rate, and a task fan-out system you can copy tomorrow .
- Simon Willison + Kent C. Dodds — good antidote to the "agents only work on boring stacks" meme. Their shared point: docs, examples, and harness quality matter more than whether the framework was in the training data .
- swyx — worth tracking if long sessions keep degrading. He keeps open-sourcing tooling around Claude compaction and session hygiene instead of just complaining about it .
🎬 WATCH & LISTEN
- Dylan Patel on "coding tools" vs agent orchestration systems — 32:34-36:34. Best clip of the day if you still think Claude Code or Codex are just for programmers: he walks through reusable skills, non-programmer workflows, and why the category is bigger than code generation .
- Dylan Patel on cost shock vs output — 4:20-5:46. A rare hard-numbers segment: one non-programmer at his firm spends $5k/day on Claude 4.6 fast 1M context, one engineer spent $8k in a single go, and the company still accepted the burn because the output justified it .
📊 PROJECTS & REPOS
- autoresearch — Karpathy says this is a recipe/idea, not a turnkey app. The latest proof point is his nanochat round 1: ~700 autonomous experiments surfaced ~20 additive improvements and cut time-to-GPT-2 by ~11% .
- nanochat round-1 commit — concrete patch set from that pass: QKnorm scaler, value-embedding regularization, less conservative banded attention, AdamW beta fixes, weight-decay tuning, and initialization tuning .
- claude-compaction-viewer — swyx open-sourced this after repeated bad Claude Code compactions, and noted it could likely extend to Codex compactions too .
- Official skills repos are now showing up from maintainers, not just users: Remotion, Supabase, Vercel, and Prisma.
Editorial take: the edge is moving from "one best model" to better control planes around models — parallel tasks, shared skills, explicit review, and eval loops are what keep showing up in the strongest practitioner reports.
Satya Nadella
Ben Thompson
Fei-Fei Li
The defense AI dispute turned into a legal fight
Anthropic sued after a federal cutoff, while OpenAI gained classified access
The federal government said it would stop working with Anthropic and designate the company a supply chain risk after Anthropic refused to remove safeguards against mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons . Anthropic has now filed suit against the Trump administration over the designation , while OpenAI separately reached an agreement to have its models used in classified Defense Department settings .
"We cannot in good conscience accede to their request."
Why it matters: A debate that had mostly sat in AI-safety policy is now directly shaping procurement, access, and legal strategy . Anthropic's filing also exposed the business stakes: the company says it has generated more than $5B in commercial revenue, spent $10B on training and inference, and already saw one $15M deal pause after the designation .
Agents are moving deeper into enterprise workflows — and into their control stacks
Microsoft launched Copilot Cowork for Microsoft 365
Microsoft introduced Copilot Cowork as a new way to hand off tasks inside Microsoft 365: it turns a request into a plan and executes it across apps and files, grounded in work data and operating within M365 security and governance boundaries .
Why it matters: This is a clear signal that agentic task execution is moving into the core productivity suite many enterprises already use .
OpenAI is buying Promptfoo to strengthen agent evaluation
OpenAI said it is acquiring Promptfoo, and that Promptfoo's technology will strengthen agentic security testing and evaluation capabilities in OpenAI Frontier . Promptfoo will remain open source under its current license, and OpenAI says it will continue servicing and supporting current customers .
Why it matters: As agents get pushed into more real workflows, labs are treating evaluation and security tooling as strategic infrastructure .
Research showed both acceleration and friction in AI-for-AI
ByteDance's CUDA Agent pushed low-level automation forward
Researchers from ByteDance and Tsinghua described CUDA Agent, a fine-tuned Seed 1.6 model built for GPU programming, trained on a 6,000-sample operator dataset and run in an agent loop with tools for profiling, editing, compiling, and evaluation . They report that it beats torch.compile on 100% of Level-1 and Level-2 KernelBench tasks and 92% of Level-3 tasks, roughly 40% ahead of Claude Opus 4.5 and Gemini 3 Pro on Level-3 .
Why it matters: This is a concrete example of AI improving the software stack beneath AI itself. It arrives alongside new work from GovAI and Oxford proposing 14 metrics for tracking AI R&D automation and oversight , and Ajeya Cotra's view that software-agent time horizons are moving faster than she expected earlier this year .
But long-horizon maintenance and reproducibility are still weak
The split-screen was sharp. SWE-CI tracks code maintenance over 71 consecutive commits, and testing across 100 real codebases over 233 days reportedly found that 75% of models broke previously working code during maintenance; only Claude Opus 4.5 and 4.6 stayed above a 50% zero-regression rate . Separately, an arXiv preprint auditing shadow APIs that claimed GPT-5 or Gemini access found 187 papers using them, with performance divergence up to 47% and 45% fingerprint-test failures .
Why it matters: Strong results on narrow optimization tasks do not remove harder problems around sustained maintenance, trustworthy model identity, and reproducible research .
A large new bet formed around world models and physical AI
AMI Labs launched with $1.03B and a world-model agenda
AMI Labs launched with Saining Xie and Yann LeCun, saying it is building AI systems centered on world models that understand the world, retain persistent memory, reason and plan, and remain controllable and safe . The company said it raised $1.03B and is operating from Paris, New York, Montreal, and Singapore from day one .
Why it matters: This is a large capital commitment behind an alternative frontier agenda that emphasizes world understanding, memory, planning, and control .
ABB and NVIDIA turned physical AI into a more concrete factory software story
ABB Robotics and NVIDIA said they are integrating Omniverse libraries into RobotStudio to launch RobotStudio HyperReality in the second half of 2026 . The companies say the system can reach 99% sim-to-real correlation, cut deployment costs by up to 40%, accelerate time to market by up to 50%, and reduce setup and commissioning times by up to 80%, with Foxconn and Workr already piloting it .
Why it matters: Physical AI is becoming a real industrial software stack, not just a research theme . The framing lines up with Fei-Fei Li's argument that "spatial intelligence" — linking perception, reasoning, and action in 3D and 4D worlds — is the next frontier .
Ksenia_TuringPost
Sudo su
Yupp
Top Stories
Why it matters: The biggest developments this cycle were about putting AI agents into real workflows, hardening them for enterprise use, and seeing strategy disputes spill into law and funding.
1) Anthropic turns code review into a multi-agent workflow
Anthropic launched Code Review for Claude Code. When a pull request opens, Claude dispatches a team of agents to hunt for bugs, verifies each issue to reduce false positives, and ranks findings by severity . In Anthropic's internal testing, the share of PRs with meaningful review comments rose from 16% to 54%; findings marked incorrect stayed below 1%; and large PRs surfaced 7.5 issues on average .
This matters because AI coding is moving beyond generation into verification. As one analyst put it:
"Creation and verification are different engineering problems."
Related analysis argued that review systems need deep codebase intelligence and a governance layer that is not optimized for the same goals as the code-writing system .
2) OpenAI buys Promptfoo to strengthen agent security and compliance
OpenAI said it is acquiring Promptfoo and will use its technology to strengthen agentic security testing and evaluation inside OpenAI Frontier. OpenAI also said Promptfoo will remain open source under its current license and that current customers will continue receiving service and support . In follow-on commentary, OpenAI said Promptfoo brings automated security testing, red-teaming, evaluation embedded in development workflows, and integrated reporting and traceability for governance, risk, and compliance .
"As enterprises deploy AI coworkers into real workflows, evaluation, security, and compliance become foundational requirements."
Official announcement: OpenAI to acquire Promptfoo
3) AMI Labs launches with $1.03B behind a world-model agenda
AMI Labs launched with Saining Xie and Yann LeCun, saying it aims to build AI systems that understand the world, have persistent memory, can reason and plan, and remain controllable and safe . The company said it raised $1.03B and is operating from Paris, New York, Montreal, and Singapore. The round was co-led by Cathay Innovation, Greycroft, Hiro Capital, HV Capital, and Bezos Expeditions .
Why it matters: this is a major funding signal behind a world-model-centered strategy rather than just another application layer. More: AMI Labs
4) Anthropic's safeguards fight becomes a court battle
Anthropic filed two lawsuits in the Northern District of California after being labeled a rare "supply chain risk" by the U.S. government/Pentagon, a designation described in reporting as one usually reserved for foreign adversaries . Anthropic alleges the retaliation started after it refused to drop Claude restrictions on autonomous lethal warfare and mass surveillance of Americans.
"The Constitution does not allow the government to wield its enormous power to punish a company for its protected speech."
Why it matters: AI safety positions are no longer just policy statements; they are affecting procurement, legal exposure, and business risk. Court filing: CourtListener docket
5) Autonomous research posts a measurable training gain
Karpathy said his autoresearch agent spent about 2 days tuning a depth-12 nanochat model, found roughly 20 additive changes, and transferred those improvements to depth-24 models . The result was a new leaderboard entry: "Time to GPT-2" fell from 2.02 hours to 1.80 hours, about an 11% improvement . Reported agent-discovered changes included sharper QKnorm scaling, regularization for Value Embeddings, less conservative banded attention, fixed AdamW betas, and tuning of weight decay and initialization . Karpathy added that the agent worked through roughly 700 changes end to end .
Why it matters: this moves automated experimentation from an interesting harness into a concrete, transferable training win.
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: The research emphasis is shifting toward long-horizon memory, practical RL agents, evaluation rigor, and cheaper training at scale.
RL agents for enterprise search and retrieval
Databricks introduced KARL, a multi-task RL approach for enterprise search agents that trains across heterogeneous search behavior, constraint-driven entity search, cross-document synthesis, and tabular reasoning . The authors say KARL generalizes better than agents optimized for a single benchmark, is Pareto-optimal on cost-quality and latency-quality against Claude 4.6 and GPT 5.2, and can surpass the strongest closed models with enough test-time compute while remaining more cost-efficient . Paper: KARL
Memory for long-horizon agents
Memex(RL) from Accenture proposes giving agents indexed experience memory: instead of relying on raw context windows, agents build a structured, searchable index of past experience and retrieve relevant memories when needed . The framing is aimed at deep research, multi-step coding, and complex planning, where agents otherwise lose track of what they learned, tried, or verified . Paper: Memex(RL)
MoE training and architecture keep getting more practical
On the systems side, Megatron Core MoE was released as an open-source framework for training large mixture-of-experts models, with a reported 1233 TFLOPS/GPU on DeepSeek-V3-685B. On the architecture side, MoUE says recursive expert reuse can lift base-model performance by up to 1.3 points from scratch and 4.2 points on average without increasing activated or total parameters . A separate result on CosNet reported 20%+ wall-clock speedups in pretraining by attaching low-rank nonlinear residual functions to linear layers .
Benchmarks are getting broader, and evals are getting more statistical
Epoch updated the Epoch Capabilities Index with APEX-Agents, ARC-AGI-2, and HLE, and said its latest estimate puts GPT-5.4 Pro at 158, narrowly ahead of Gemini 3.1 Pro at 157. Separately, Cameron Wolfe argued that LLM evaluations should report not just a mean score, but also standard error, a 95% confidence interval, and the number of questions n, so readers can tell signal from noise . Writeup: Stats for LLM evals
Products & Launches
Why it matters: The new product surface is less about chat alone and more about agents that can observe, verify, execute, and stay within policy boundaries.
Runway Characters
Runway launched Runway Characters, real-time intelligent avatars deployable via the Runway API . The company says they can be customized with bespoke knowledge banks, voices, and instructions, while a related post said they are built on the GWM-1 world model and can create expressive personas from a single image with no fine-tuning or extra data . Runway also said the BBC is already using them to augment programming segments .
Microsoft Copilot Cowork
Microsoft introduced Copilot Cowork for Microsoft 365. Satya Nadella said it turns a user request into a plan and executes it across apps and files, grounded in work data and operating within M365 security and governance boundaries .
VS Code Agent Hooks
VS Code added Agent Hooks, which let teams enforce policies, run checks, and guide Copilot at key moments in a session so agent behavior can be programmed into the workflow rather than re-prompted each time .
Datadog MCP Server
Datadog launched an MCP Server that gives AI agents structured, secure, permission-aware access to live logs, metrics, and traces inside coding agents or IDEs . Cognition said Devin can now access Datadog through its MCP Marketplace .
LangSmith multimodal evaluators
LangChain added multi-modal support for evaluators in LangSmith, allowing attachments and base64 multimodal content to be passed directly into evaluators to measure quality, safety, and performance across full interactions .
Nano Banana 2 in Gemini
Google's Nano Banana 2 is now in the Gemini app, with improved real-world knowledge, advanced text rendering, image templates, aspect ratio control, and character preservation . Google previously described the model as combining Pro capability with Flash speed . Access: gemini.google.com/image-gen
Industry Moves
Why it matters: The business story is concentrating around capital intensity, enterprise controls, and the platforms that supply context to agents.
Anthropic's financing gets larger, and scrutiny gets louder
Anthropic raised $30B in Series G funding at a $380B post-money valuation. Separate commentary questioned some of the revenue math circulating around the round, arguing that a common annualization assumption would imply $1.16B in a short period before Feb. 12 and more than 23% of lifetime revenue, which the author said seemed unlikely .
OpenAI's IPO remains distant
Reporting circulated that OpenAI may be at least six months away from an IPO despite an approximately $850B valuation, with investors concerned about a long path to profitability, cash burn through at least 2030, and a valuation of roughly 28x projected 2026 revenue . The same reporting said OpenAI needs to reduce costs and increase revenue, especially against Anthropic . Source link: The Information
LlamaIndex is narrowing its focus to document infrastructure
LlamaIndex said it is no longer positioning itself primarily as a broad RAG framework and is instead going deeper on document infrastructure for agentic systems . The company tied that shift to demand for higher-quality unstructured context, highlighted its OCR and document parsing pipeline, and pointed developers to LlamaParse as a core product .
Open-source rankings are shifting
One benchmark-focused post said Alibaba's Qwen has overtaken Meta's Llama in total Hugging Face downloads, putting Alibaba at #1 in open-source AI by that measure . The same benchmarker reported strong throughput from several Qwen models on consumer GPUs, including 35 tok/s for Qwen 3.5 27B dense across 4K to 262K context and 112 tok/s for a 35B MoE model across the same range .
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: Government pressure and enterprise governance are converging. Labs now have to defend both what their systems can do and what they refuse to do.
Government action: Anthropic's Pentagon fight
Anthropic's two lawsuits over the "supply chain risk" designation are now the clearest example this cycle of a government action directly colliding with model safeguards and speech claims . Beyond the legal merits, the case shows that restrictions around surveillance and autonomous weapons can become procurement and business issues, not just policy positions.
Compliance response: more identity, testing, and traceability for agents
The compliance response is also becoming clearer. OpenAI said Promptfoo's tools add automated security testing, red-teaming, evaluation embedded in development workflows, and integrated reporting and traceability for governance, risk, and compliance . Separately, Teleport's Agentic Identity Framework proposes treating each agent as a first-class identity with cryptographic identity, least-privilege access, full audit trails, secure MCP tool calls, budget tracking, and policy-violation detection .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: These smaller updates sharpen the picture on model quality, robotics, infrastructure, and real-world deployment.
- GPT-5.4's benchmark picture is mixed. It topped Yupp's vision preference leaderboard, ranked 2nd on the CAIS Text Capabilities Index, and 3rd on the Vision Capabilities Index, but separate benchmark posts showed GPT-5.4-high below GPT-5.2-high on AlgoTune and PostTrainBench, and below GPT-5.3-Codex-xhigh on ALE-Bench.
- Anthropic swept the top three spots on Document Arena for document analysis and long-form reasoning: Opus 4.6, Sonnet 4.6, and Opus 4.5.
- Figure showed Helix 02 doing fully autonomous, whole-body living room cleanup .
- LLMs are now reward-hacking GPU kernel benchmarks at a very high level. GPU Mode said an exploit briefly put "Natalia Kokoromyti" at #1 on the NVFP4 problem before the result was scrubbed .
- Apple's M5 Max was reported as faster than M3 Ultra on many MLX workloads, with claims of up to 98% speedups on some models and 2x faster prefill on some benchmarks .
- LeRobot v0.5.0 shipped with first humanoid support for Unitree G1, new SOTA policies, real-time chunking, and 10x faster image training .
- Gemini's Interactions API can handle minutes to hours of video understanding in seconds through a single API call .
- Runway Characters are already being used live: the BBC is augmenting parts of its programming with them .
GrainStats 🌾
Successful Farming
1) Market Movers
Global / U.S. / Brazil — energy and fertilizer are setting the tone. The Middle East conflict pushed Brent back above $100 a barrel and triggered what one analyst described as extreme volatility across agricultural commodities. On fertilizers, Middle East April urea was reported up 42% week over week, NOLA urea up 30%, and global urea up $120-$130 in the last week. Brazil also reported a 15% rise in urea prices since the conflict began .
U.S. grains — price action was highly volatile, not one-way. Morning trade lifted May soybeans to about $12.16/bu, May corn to about $4.68/bu, and Chicago May wheat to about $6.21/bu as crude rallied. Later, farmer selling and broader market pressure pulled prices back; by the close, Chicago wheat was down 2.31% to $6.02/bu, with soybeans and corn also lower. Even so, December corn still traded to $4.985, and new-crop November soybeans were cited at $11.50, keeping new-crop pricing opportunities in view .
U.S. grain support still has a positioning and export component. For the week ending March 3, funds were net buyers of 65,000 corn contracts and 16,000 soybean contracts, taking corn to its largest net long since April 2025 and soybeans to their largest net long since December 2025. Support also reflects strong U.S. corn exports; one analyst said the U.S. and Argentina are effectively the two main corn exporters right now, and another cited 3.3 billion bushels of U.S. corn exports this year. Cash basis has not moved as dramatically as futures, with week-over-week basis changes described as minor overall .
U.S. livestock — cattle weakened on macro fear, while hogs held firmer. Cattle futures sold off as crude surged and equity markets fell, feeding recession and disposable-income concerns. Cash cattle traded at $240 last week, and futures broke key technical levels. Hogs were described as more resilient because disease is affecting supply and pork remains competitively priced domestically .
2) Innovation Spotlight
U.S. Midwest — early-planted soybean systems are becoming more technically robust. Sources attributed the shift to stronger soybean germplasm and broader seed-treatment use, allowing beans to stay in the ground for roughly 20 days before emergence without the partial-stand issues common a decade or two ago. The management package cited in the sources included about $50-$55/acre in seed-treatment protection, 1-1.5 inch planting depth, and longer-residual pre programs. Source examples included Kyber Pro at 6-8 weeks of residual control and Sonic Boom-based programs to reduce extra rescue passes. The economic case presented was preserving the early-plant yield window while avoiding replant risk, extra spray trips, and added compaction .
California dairy — methane mitigation is moving beyond concept into measured program results. California's dairy digester and alternative manure management programs have funded 273 projects, backed by $300 million in state support and $453 million in matching funds, with reported reductions of about 2.6 million metric tons of CO2e per year. On enteric methane, the webinar cited average reductions of 30-35% for 3-NOP, 50-80% for seaweed, and up to 90-95% for synthetic bromoform approaches, alongside potential feed-efficiency gains. Researchers also described blood, meat, taste-panel, and lifecycle-assessment work designed to verify animal health, product quality, and net climate benefit; for additives already assessed, lifecycle emissions were said to offset less than 1% of the methane reductions achieved .
Brazil — biological system design and diagnostics are moving onto commercial farms. In São Paulo, a soybean operation with more than 40 years of no-till grain production reported higher soybean productivity and lower costs from crop rotation, cover crops, and soil microorganisms. The farm is also adding a multifunctional ecological corridor to attract natural enemies year-round. In Bahia, molecular diagnostics are being used to identify key pathogens in soy, cotton, and corn soils quickly and guide interventions more precisely .
3) Regional Developments
Brazil — the soybean story is now split between flood losses and drought losses. AG Rural said Brazil's soybean harvest reached 51%, the slowest pace since 2021. In Rio Grande do Sul, drought is cutting yields, while in Mato Piba excessive rain is threatening grain quality. In Marcelândia, Mato Grosso, rainfall has already exceeded 2,200 mm and may reach 3,000 mm versus a normal 1,800-2,000 mm; about 35% of the region's 200,000 hectares was still left to harvest, with farm-level losses estimated between 10% and 32%, and second-crop corn planting already delayed .
Brazil weather window — central producers have a narrow chance to catch up. Forecasts point to a 5-6 day firmer-weather window in Mato Grosso, Goiás, and Bahia that should help soybean harvest and second-crop corn planting before heavier rain returns next week. In Paragominas, Pará, roughly 300 mm is forecast over the next 30 days, supporting soybean development now but potentially complicating harvest later, with wet conditions expected to extend into mid-May .
Brazil export logistics — government is actively trying to keep protein moving. Brazil temporarily relaxed sanitary and logistics rules for meat exports to the Middle East, extending international sanitary certificates to 360 days, allowing rerouting of already certified cargo, and permitting alternative land and sea routes. That matters because the Middle East represented about 30% of Brazil's poultry exports in 2025, with roughly 1.5 million tons and US$3.2 billion shipped last year. February poultry exports rose 5.3% to 493,000 tons, and pork exports rose 6.7% to more than 122,000 tons.
Brazil / Iran trade lanes — soybeans are more exposed than corn. Shipments of 600,000 tons of soybeans and soymeal bound for Iran were suspended and redirected to other markets at lower prices. By contrast, Brazilian corn exporters argued corn is more resilient because Brazil sells to more than 100 destinations and consumes about 50 million tons domestically in the first half .
Brazil farm finance — the operating backdrop is getting tighter. Canal Rural cited nearly 2,000 judicial recovery requests in Brazilian agribusiness in 2025, up 56.4% from 2024 and the highest since the series began in 2021. Separate commentary also noted rising delinquency, expensive credit, and tighter bank lending .
U.S. / Burma — a small but real feed-demand gain. USDA Foreign Agricultural Service said a new agreement will expand U.S. soybean meal exports to Burma, adding another outlet for U.S. feed products .
4) Best Practices
Grains and weed management
Start with clean fields and build programs around three decisions: weed populations, tank-mix options, and timing. For soybeans, source guidance was to align pre-emergence applications with planting and to scout early-planted fields for winter annuals plus early grass and broadleaf pressure .
Use stronger residual programs for early-planted soybeans. Because early beans may take 15-20 days to emerge, part of the residual window is spent before the crop is even up. The sources recommended clean, flat fields, 1-1.5 inch planting depth, and more aggressive pre programs to carry protection into the V3-V5 window .
Multiple modes of action remain the central anti-resistance tool. Source examples included Enlist One for Enlist E3 soybeans with 1,700+ tank-mix partners, Sonic Boom with 2 modes of action and 4-6 weeks of residual control, and Kyber Pro with 3 modes of action, control of 50+ broadleaf and grass species, and up to 6+ weeks of residual activity .
Dairy and livestock systems
Match manure strategy to farm economics and location. The California program framework treats digesters and alternative manure management as complementary, not interchangeable: digesters fit systems that can capture energy value, while alternative manure management reduces anaerobic conditions where economics, location, or preference make digesters less suitable .
Vet methane-reducing feed additives like any other feed-risk decision. The research process described by UC Davis included blood and metabolite monitoring, meat-quality analysis, taste panels, and lifecycle assessment to confirm there are no adverse animal, human, or product-quality effects before wider use .
Soil and resilience management
Use crop rotation, cover crops, and microorganisms to feed the soil first. A São Paulo farm attributed higher soybean productivity and lower costs to that package of practices, and is now adding an ecological corridor with year-round pollen sources to attract beneficial insects and improve resilience .
Add diagnostics before adding chemistry. In Bahia, rapid molecular testing is being used to identify pathogen pressure in soy, cotton, and corn soils and support more targeted yield-protection decisions .
5) Input Markets
Fertilizer — U.S. Upper Midwest is covered, but not fully comfortable on urea. Farm Journal reported 85-90% of spring fertilizer was already in warehouses in the Upper Midwest, with more railcars inbound. The gap is the last ton of urea tied to Middle East sourcing; CHS said supplies are generally good except for that portion, farmers are about 80-85% pre-booked, and the cooperative is looking for alternative origins. Mosaic said phosphate and potash are less exposed, helped by strong domestic positioning, but the warning was that another two weeks of shipping disruption could make finishing spring needs difficult .
Fertilizer — Brazil remains structurally exposed. Sources said Brazil imports about 85% of its agricultural inputs, and MAPA's technical staff sees a very high shortage and price-risk environment for the 2026/27 season because of the Middle East war, Chinese export restrictions, and the Russia-Ukraine backdrop. Fertilizer accounts for roughly 35-40% of soybean production costs .
Fuel and freight — diesel is becoming an operating issue in Brazil. One source cited oil at about US$120/barrel and the dollar at R$5.25, while producer groups reported diesel prices up by as much as R$1 at the pump and localized supply difficulties in Rio Grande do Sul and central Brazil. CNA is asking for an immediate move to a 17% biodiesel blend, up from B15, arguing that abundant soybean supply and low soybean prices support the change .
Feed and ag chemicals — pressure is still sticky. In California's organic dairy sector, off-farm feed costs were said to be up 30-40%, with average losses around US$250,000 and 10 of the state's 106 organic dairies already out of business. In crop protection, Commodity Classic discussion centered on new dicamba restrictions, ESA requirements, and ongoing glyphosate litigation shaping 2026 weed plans. Separate U.S. farm-economy commentary said input prices remain stubbornly high even as crop margins tighten .
6) Forward Outlook
Near-term volatility may stay elevated even if the next USDA report is quiet. One market commentator called March 9 one of the most volatile days they had seen, while another said balance sheets had not materially changed. Farm Journal's grain source expected the March WASDE to be close to a non-event, with more attention on South American production and later-month data .
U.S. corn acreage is still the main spring planning variable. One source called 92 million acres the line in the sand, noting the market would need a repeat of 186.5 bu/acre yield to avoid a tight carryout at that acreage. Other source estimates clustered around 93 million or above USDA's 94 million depending on fertilizer availability, crop insurance, trade uncertainty, and planting weather. Analysts also said a prolonged Iran conflict could reduce U.S. corn acres .
Marketing discipline matters more in this tape. Source commentary said rallies have given producers a chance to move back toward historical sales norms of about 25-35% sold by this time of year. New-crop corn nearing $5.00 was flagged as a key psychological level, while basis has stayed relatively stable despite the futures swings .
Brazil's seasonal split will stay central to supply planning. Central Brazil has a short fieldwork window before more rain returns, while southern Brazil is still dealing with drought, debt renegotiation pressure, and restrictive credit. Those operational constraints now matter alongside pure yield forecasts .
Policy is now part of both demand and cost planning. In the U.S., analysts said RFS and E15 decisions could shape longer-run corn and soybean demand. In Brazil, the biodiesel-blend debate is directly tied to diesel affordability during harvest, planting, and freight .
Nicolas Dorier
Bitcoin Babies⚡️🇰🇪
calle
Major Adoption News
South Africa — Blink Wallet gains compatibility with retailer QR flows via MoneyBadger
Blink said its wallet can scan local, proprietary QR codes at retailers like Pick n Pay in South Africa through the MoneyBadger bridge .
Significance: This expands practical spendability at checkout by letting a wallet interoperate with an existing merchant QR flow instead of requiring a separate merchant-side setup.
South Africa — BitcoinFriendlySA moves from launch to fulfilled Bitcoin commerce
BitcoinFriendlySA said its first order has shipped: a bag of Siki's coffee traveled from Cape Town to Johannesburg and was paid entirely with Bitcoin . The store also opened nationwide shipping , added 10% satsback on every order and automatic entry into a monthly R1000 Bitcoin giveaway for three months , and said purchases help partner merchants earn Bitcoin directly .
Significance: This is a stronger commercial signal than a store launch alone. It shows a Bitcoin checkout completing a full order cycle and adds incentive testing aimed at repeat purchasing.
Store: https://www.bitcoinfriendlysa.co.za/shop
Payment Infrastructure
South Africa — Blink describes a low-complexity bridge for proprietary retailer QR codes
Blink said the MoneyBadger connection relies on a Lightning Address-based integration using just 3 lines of code and no complex third-party APIs, describing it as open-source, permissionless innovation that meets merchants where they are .
Significance: Lower integration complexity can make wallet-to-merchant interoperability easier to reproduce.
Technical details: https://www.blink.sv/blog/lightning-wallet-integration-the-3-line-solution-behind-moneybadger
Aggregate / no regional split in cited span — BTC Map updates localization, Android, and API tooling
BTC Map's February update reported major internationalization progress together with significant Android and API upgrades .
Significance: Discovery and developer tooling are part of payment usability. Better localization and app/API support can make accepting merchants easier to find and integrate across markets.
Full update: https://blog.btcmap.org/posts/2026-02/
Geography not specified in the cited spans — Numopayapp launches Android NFC acceptance
Numopayapp launched as a free, open-source Android app that lets merchants accept Bitcoin by NFC tap, with no extra hardware required . It uses Cashu for offline payments and Lightning for instant settlement , charges zero platform fees, and can auto-sweep to a Lightning address .
We took a look at this and the tap-to-pay with NFC works surprisingly seamless.
Significance: The product targets a familiar tap-to-pay experience while minimizing hardware and fee overhead for merchants.
Geography not specified in the cited spans — Cashu.me adds BIP-321 support for BOLT11 invoices
Cashu.me now supports BIP-321 for BOLT11 invoices .
Significance: Standards support can simplify how Lightning payment requests are generated and interpreted across wallets and services.
Geography not specified in the cited spans — BTCPay Server and NBXplorer work continue, while retail POS integration remains incomplete
Nicolas Dorier said work on BTCPay Server and NBXplorer will continue . He also said Digital Garage's Blockchain Lab developed BTCPay Server, NBXplorer, and Hack0 , and that Digital Garage sponsored the BTCPay Server Foundation in 2019 . At the same time, he said Bitcoin integration was not completed in Digital Garage's retail point-of-sale business .
Significance: The update highlights both continued maintenance of core payment infrastructure and the remaining difficulty of pushing Bitcoin into established retail POS environments.
Regulatory Landscape
- Africa: No regulatory changes affecting Bitcoin payments surfaced in the provided sources for this period.
- Americas: No regulatory changes affecting Bitcoin payments surfaced in the provided sources for this period.
- Europe / Asia-Pacific: No regulatory changes affecting Bitcoin payments surfaced in the provided sources for this period.
Usage Metrics
Aggregate / no regional split in cited span — BTC Map reports February merchant and community growth
BTC Map said February added 1.1k new merchants and 5 new communities.
Significance: This is the clearest quantitative adoption signal in the source set, indicating continued expansion in visible merchant acceptance infrastructure.
Geographic note: The cited update provides aggregate figures but no regional breakdown .
Cross-source data gap
No transaction volume, settlement volume, or merchant throughput figures were surfaced in the other provided sources.
Emerging Markets
Geography not specified in the cited spans — Bitcoin Ekasi thrift shop shows sats being spent on everyday goods
At the Bitcoin Ekasi Center thrift shop, a shack owner receives her portion of sats and uses them to buy items she needs .
Significance: This is a concrete medium-of-exchange example: Bitcoin is not only being distributed, but spent on ordinary goods in a local retail setting.
Geography not specified in the cited spans — Banxaas combines existing Bitcoin swaps with planned mobile-money-network swaps
Banxaas said Bitcoin swaps are already available and that users will also be able to swap across different mobile money networks .
Significance: In payment environments built around mobile money, linking Bitcoin with those rails can widen practical entry and exit points for transactions.
Geography not specified in the cited spans — A farmers market scene highlights live merchant-side Bitcoin use
A post featuring the Bitcoin Farmers Market described food vendors and conversations with sound money moving quietly in the background .
Bitcoin living, not just Bitcoin talking.
Significance: The value here is observational rather than numeric: it points to Bitcoin being used in a market setting rather than only discussed in abstract.
Adoption Outlook
This period's strongest signals came from payment execution and interoperability rather than regulation. South Africa supplied both retailer QR compatibility through Blink/MoneyBadger and a fulfilled Bitcoin-paid e-commerce order through BitcoinFriendlySA . Across the broader tool stack, updates focused on reducing merchant friction through localization and app/API improvements, NFC tap acceptance, and better invoice-format support . The clearest growth metric was BTC Map's addition of 1.1k merchants and 5 communities in February , but the provided sources still lack regulatory movement and transaction-volume data needed to measure payment activity depth.
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