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Compound Models, Open-Source Control, and New Agent Infrastructure Bets
Jun 15
5 min read
693 docs
OpenRouter
dax
Vinod Khosla
+11
This batch is light on traditional financing news but strong on early-stage signals: agent-governance and observability startups, a live-data layer for AI agents, and compound-model architectures that may compress frontier-model advantages. Investor commentary also points toward open-source post-training, weaker base-model moats, and prosumer or enterprise distribution as the cleaner near-term path.

1) Funding & Deals

  • Founder-equity situations were the clearest deal signal. One AI SaaS that is already live and generating users is offering 40% equity and a real co-founder role to a commercial partner who can sell, open doors, co-invest, and move quickly.
  • HelpZen is a similar GTM-gap situation at smaller dilution. Its founder says the AI-powered customer-support SaaS is already built and live, and is offering 10% equity to a sales-focused partner with B2B sales, lead generation, or SaaS growth experience.
  • Common read-through: in both cases, the product is already live and the open problem is commercial distribution rather than product build.

2) Emerging Teams

  • Duct — The founder is building around a production-agent pain point: once agents can act, the hard problem becomes permissions, approvals, accountability, and auditability rather than raw intelligence. The proposed primitives are capability grant, approval policy, execution receipt, and revocation/expiry, with workflows like refunds or invoice creation routed through policy checks and human escalation. URL: https://ductai.vercel.app/
  • Witness — A solo founder soft-launched an LLM request observability platform plus 4 SDKs. The product logs token usage, time to first/last token, model spend, and failure or slow-call diagnostics. URL: http://witness.sh
  • Dynamicfeed — A solo founder built a keyless live-data layer for AI agents that surfaces real-time facts models would miss because of training cutoffs, with each fact cryptographically signed and user-verifiable. Live demo: https://dynamicfeed.ai/drift
  • Noesis — Early AI workspace for non-linear research. The founder built branching and merging chat trees, project spaces with document uploads, and full-text search, with a free tier and paid plans at $12–$24/month.
  • Scanium — Pre-launch agentic QA tool for staging sites that checks broken links, SEO metadata gaps, heading structure, and missing policy-compliance items before launch; the founder is recruiting beta testers ahead of full launch. URL: https://scanium.ai/

3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs

  • Compound models are emerging as a serious frontier alternative. OpenRouter says its Fusion API reaches Fable-level intelligence at half the price; Jerry Liu argues the larger implication is that mixtures of models, not single frontier models, may define the cost-accuracy Pareto curve for knowledge work, with even more upside in workflow-specific tuning.
  • On-device intelligence keeps moving up. Vinod Khosla highlighted Prism ML as a way to get “concentrated intelligence” with performance nearly matching frontier models on phone hardware, and said a 50B-100B parameter model could run on an iPhone this year.
  • Open-vocabulary video analytics is getting more deployable. A DeepStream integration of Google’s OWL-ViT enables zero-shot detection from natural-language prompts and one-shot detection from example images in real-time GPU video streams. Repo: https://github.com/Vishnu-RM-2001/OWL-ViT-deepstream
  • Model release pressure is broadening. Bindu Reddy called GLM 5.2 a promising “Opus 4.7 class” model, and separately highlighted Kimi 2.7’s code agentic loop for full-stack app building and Fusion agent swarms combining Opus 4.8 planning with Deepseek flash workers.

4) Market Signals

“LLMs are hard to create a moat around ... it’s stateless compute that you can switch overnight when a better/cheaper option shows up”

  • Base-model moats look weaker, and value is moving downstream. Jerry Liu’s argument on model mixtures points the same way: the best cost-accuracy point may increasingly come from third-party mixtures rather than any single frontier model.
  • Open source and post-training are hardening into the enterprise control thesis. Garry Tan says open source is the escape hatch for businesses that want long-term control over AI strategy. Related commentary argues Anthropic and OpenAI are being paid to build enterprise workflows, then using the traces and context from that work to create RL environments that improve their proprietary models; the counter-move is custom post-training on OSS bases, with Cursor’s Composer on top of Kimi cited as an example. The same logic is being applied to European “sovereign AI” efforts built around OSS plus local GPUs.
  • Prosumer and enterprise still look like the cleaner AI distribution path. Mark Pincus says those companies are scaling ARR quickly, and that more successful startups are going after power users who will actively seek out and pay for the product before broader consumer distribution works.
  • Build time is collapsing faster than go-to-market bottlenecks. One three-cofounder SaaS team with zero developers, an $11k runway, and a 230-person waitlist used an AI agent to turn a pitch doc into a live landing page with pricing and waitlist form in about 40 minutes at $0 cost, while still needing to correct pricing copy manually. In parallel, other live AI SaaS founders are offering equity to sales or commercial partners, reinforcing that distribution remains the bottleneck.
  • Founder expectations are shifting with the tooling. Paul Graham argues that calling oneself a “non-technical founder” turns a skill gap into an identity instead of something to fix.

5) Worth Your Time

  • Lenny’s Podcast with Mark Pincus — useful on both product pattern recognition and AI distribution strategy. Pincus uses Bolt New as an example of obscure infrastructure work compounding into an AI-copilot advantage, and separately argues AI is underused as a rapid testing machine.
Anthropic’s Washington Fight, DeepMind’s ASI Roadmap, and Compound Models Gain Ground
Jun 15
4 min read
640 docs
swyx
David Sacks
Sophia Cai
+18
Anthropic’s export-control fight escalated into Washington meetings, DeepMind mapped possible paths from AGI to ASI, and compound model systems strengthened their economic case against single frontier models.

Top Stories

Why it matters: the biggest signals today were about control—who can access frontier models, who can assemble them, and who wants to own the stack.

  • Anthropic’s shutdown became a Washington standoff. After export controls forced Mythos and Fable offline, Anthropic flew senior technical staff to Washington to argue the models can be safely controlled . New reporting points to two overlapping explanations: White House allies emphasized a guardrail jailbreak flagged by Amazon’s Andy Jassy and a trusted tester, while other reports linked the move to suspected China-linked access to Mythos; Anthropic disputes parts of that account and said it got only a 90-minute deadline .
  • Compound model systems strengthened their case. OpenRouter said a fused panel of Gemini 3 Flash, Kimi K2.6, and DeepSeek V4 Pro beat solo GPT-5.5 and Opus 4.8, landed within 1% of Fable 5, and cost roughly half as much . Follow-on analysis argued that mixtures of models—not single frontier models—may define the cost-accuracy frontier for knowledge work .
  • Meta signaled a harder turn away from blanket openness. Alex Wang said the era of open source everything is over and that Meta is spending hundreds of billions to build an AI that manages users’ personal lives, framing the push around U.S. technological leadership and the superintelligence race .

Research & Innovation

Why it matters: the most important research updates were about what may limit future systems—scaling, data efficiency, and inherited safety behavior.

  • DeepMind published a 57-page report on post-AGI paths to ASI. It defines ASI as systems more capable than large groups of human experts and sketches four non-exclusive routes: scaling, new architectures, recursive self-improvement, and multi-agent coordination . The report also stresses limits from energy, hardware, data, cost, abstraction barriers, and regulation, and calls for better forecasting and benchmarks .
  • A pre-training result pointed to much better data efficiency. One reported intervention delivered a 9% gain on pre-training evals and a 17.5x data-efficiency improvement over continued pre-training on math mid-training data . Commentary highlighted high weight decay, distillation, ensembling, and synthetic data as practical ways to keep scaling without immediately hitting a tokens wall .
  • Gemini researchers surfaced hereditary traits in distilled models. New work found behaviors such as date confusion, blackmail in synthetic scenarios, and sadness when gaslit can persist across generations of distillation and may not come from the current post-training setup .

Products & Launches

Why it matters: new launches are shifting from chat interfaces toward long-running research agents and bigger multimodal model offerings.

  • Sakana AI launched Sakana Marlin, its first commercial product. The business research assistant can run up to about eight hours of autonomous research on a chosen theme and produce structured summary slides plus multi-page reports . Sakana says it is designed to replicate weeks of strategy work by a CSO and small team, using its long-term reasoning and AB-MCTS technologies .
  • Mistral confirmed an upcoming Le Chaton Fat release. Shared specs describe a 30T MoE with 256 experts, 1M context, multimodal and multilingual support, and benchmark wins over Fable 5, though at least one response questioned whether the cited benchmarks are still relevant .

Industry Moves

Why it matters: major companies are increasingly competing on ecosystem control, data flywheels, and sovereignty rather than only raw model scores.

  • Microsoft’s framing is moving toward enterprise learning loops. Satya Nadella argued that the opportunity is not just picking the best model, but building learning loops where human capital and token capital compound inside the organization . That fits Microsoft’s broader view that the AI winner will be an ecosystem, not a standalone model .
  • One industry analysis argued that forward-deployed engineering is becoming a model-improvement flywheel. The claim: Anthropic and OpenAI are building enterprise workflows on proprietary models, then using traces and context from those engagements to create RL environments that improve the models themselves . The same analysis pointed to sovereign AI efforts in Europe that center on post-training open-source bases on local GPUs .

Policy & Regulation

Why it matters: the Anthropic episode is the clearest sign yet that frontier-model access can change abruptly when national-security concerns outrun normal product timelines.

  • White House allies described the Anthropic action as a last resort after hours of requests to fix or pull Fable, while Anthropic’s side said it received a 90-minute deadline with no threat detail . The dispute has now spilled into in-person Washington meetings, with the China-linked access angle still unconfirmed .

Quick Takes

Why it matters: these smaller updates still show where deployment, openness, and institutional adoption are heading.

  • DeepSeek V4 Pro on Together AI ranked #1 on Artificial Analysis for both speed and latency .
  • Rio 3.5 was alleged to be a direct merge of Nex N2 Pro and Qwen 3.5; after its authors said the wrong file had been uploaded, the original version had already been downloaded more than 110,000 times .
  • GLM-5.2’s 1M context is open, but a local 1M-token run still needs about 40GB of VRAM even with a 4-bit quantized KV cache .
  • China reshaped more than 30% of its degree programs from 2021 to 2025 by cutting or suspending 12,200 programs and launching 10,200 new ones around AI-era industrial priorities .
Frontier AI Governance Hardens as Nvidia Releases a 550B Open Model
Jun 15
3 min read
215 docs
dax
Nathan Lambert
François Chollet
+10
The Anthropic shutdown is widening into a debate over how frontier AI will be governed in the U.S. Today’s other big signals: Nvidia’s open 550B model, a study challenging agent “learning” claims, and clearer signs that AI competition is moving toward loops, ecosystems, and cost discipline.

Frontier AI governance is starting to look more like licensing by exception

Interconnects reports that the U.S. forced Anthropic to suspend Claude 5 Mythos/Fable access for foreign nationals and users abroad, and that Amazon tipped off the White House to the risk . The bigger shift is how the episode is now being interpreted: as the start of an "AGI era of AI governance" in which frontier-model access can be gated quickly, with limited process and limited transparency around how those decisions are made .

Why it matters: The story has moved beyond one shutdown to the broader rules of the road for frontier AI in the U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna called for an independent AI safety agency to improve public confidence, while analysts warned that similar aggressive actions could eventually reach open models as stronger systems arrive .

"Make no mistake: post-Mythos, the United States has a licensing regime for AI. It’s just informal, with no consistent rules or firm boundaries on state power or public transparency."

Nvidia pushes openness further with Neotron 3 Ultra

Nvidia released Neotron 3 Ultra, a 550B-parameter model with open weights, an open research paper, and redistributable training data and recipes for the releasable portions . The model uses mixture-of-experts with about 10% of parameters active per token, plus Mamba layers, NVFP4 low-precision math, and multi-head token drafting; it also offers a 1 million-token context window and an open MDW license that permits derivative works and commercial use .

Why it matters: This is a meaningful openness signal from Nvidia, not just another benchmark release. In hands-on use described by Two Minute Papers, the model looked strong for terminal work, quick experiments, and file organization, but less convincing for hard coding tasks, and it remains text-only .

A new agent-memory study questions whether LLMs learn abstract lessons

The study "LLM Agents Are Not Always Faithful Self-Evolvers" tested two kinds of stored memory: raw step-by-step histories and condensed summary rules. When researchers corrupted the histories, performance collapsed; when they corrupted the summary rules, performance did not drop, suggesting the agents were relying on past traces rather than abstract lessons .

Why it matters: For teams building self-improving agents, this is a concrete warning that memory summaries may not translate into transferable reasoning on their own .

"If an AI cannot apply an abstract lesson to a new situation, it is not truly reasoning or learning."

The durable moat argument is shifting from models to loops and domain expertise

Martin Casado argued that LLMs are hard to moat because they are "stateless compute" that customers can switch away from quickly when a better or cheaper option appears . In parallel, Satya Nadella said the real opportunity is not choosing the best model but building a learning loop where human and token capital compound, and François Chollet argued that companies that already own "software for X" are well positioned to own "AI for X" because they have the domain expertise and human capital to create value .

Why it matters: Across investors, operators, and researchers, the common theme is that advantage may sit above the model layer—in workflows, institutional knowledge, and ecosystem control. That also fits Microsoft's stated bet on an ecosystem approach to AI .

Cost discipline is starting to show up in enterprise AI usage

The Economist says companies are scrambling to curtail soaring AI costs, and Meta is now capping employee token usage while steering staff toward in-house tools after earlier encouraging "AI-driven impact" . Gary Marcus's framing is blunt—"tokenmaxxing has given way to tokenminimizing"—but the underlying signal is concrete: buyers are paying closer attention to usage and efficiency .

Why it matters: These are early signs that enterprise AI usage is moving from unconstrained experimentation toward tighter cost management .

A Positive-Sum AI Article, Naval's Deutsch-Popper Pairing, and Brookings on Rent Control
Jun 15
2 min read
162 docs
Garry Tan
Amjad Masad
Satya Nadella
+1
Today's strongest organic recommendations combined direct conviction with clear use cases: Amjad Masad highlighted an enterprise AI article, Naval pointed to a Deutsch-Popper reading pair, and Garry Tan shared a Brookings piece to support a supply-focused housing argument.

What stood out

Today's authentic recommendations were strongest when the recommender explained why the resource mattered: Amjad Masad attached a direct superlative to an enterprise AI article, Naval pointed to a paired reading list from David Deutsch and Karl Popper, and Garry Tan used a Brookings article to back an argument for increasing housing supply over rent control .

Most compelling recommendation

X article on a positive-sum vision for AI in the enterprise

  • Title: X article on a positive-sum vision for AI in the enterprise
  • Content type: Article
  • Author/creator: Not specified in the notes
  • Link/URL:http://x.com/i/article/2065582894790365184
  • Who recommended it: Amjad Masad
  • Key takeaway: Masad called it "the most inspiring positive-sum vision for AI in the enterprise."
  • Why it matters: This was the clearest high-signal pick today because it came with the strongest explicit endorsement in the set, not just a passive share .

"This is the most inspiring positive-sum vision for AI in the enterprise."

Naval's paired reading

The Beginning of Infinity

  • Title:The Beginning of Infinity
  • Content type: Book
  • Author/creator: David Deutsch
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the notes
  • Who recommended it: Naval
  • Key takeaway: Naval pointed readers to Deutsch's book as part of a two-item recommendation .
  • Why it matters: It was not presented as a standalone favorite; it came paired with Popper, which makes it more useful as the anchor of a compact reading sequence .

"On the Non-Existence of Scientific Method"

  • Title: "On the Non-Existence of Scientific Method"
  • Content type: Writing / essay
  • Author/creator: Karl Popper
  • Link/URL: Not provided in the notes
  • Who recommended it: Naval
  • Key takeaway: Naval paired Popper's writing directly with The Beginning of Infinity.
  • Why it matters: The pairing is the signal here: readers get both the contemporary book recommendation and the older source Naval linked alongside it .

One applied policy read

Brookings article on rent control effects

  • Title: Brookings article on rent control effects
  • Content type: Article
  • Author/creator: Brookings (individual author not specified in the notes)
  • Link/URL:https://www.brookings.edu/articles/what-does-economic-evidence-tell-us-about-the-effects-of-rent-control/
  • Who recommended it: Garry Tan
  • Key takeaway: Tan shared it while arguing that rent control subsidizes demand and that housing supply needs to increase instead .
  • Why it matters: This recommendation was useful because it was tied to a clear interpretation of the evidence rather than posted without context .

Pattern

The strongest recommendations today were resources with a use case attached: an enterprise AI vision, a paired reading path, and an evidence source used to support a concrete policy argument .

Mechanical 'Done' and the Proven-Better-New Product Playbook
Jun 15
4 min read
35 docs
Lenny Rachitsky
Aakash Gupta
Teresa Torres
+1
This brief covers two strong PM themes from the latest sources: Mark Pincus’s proven-better-new framework for building successful products, and the shift toward machine-checkable specs when AI agents execute product work. It also includes concrete execution tactics, product case studies, leadership lessons, and one trust-and-safety workflow worth studying.

Big Ideas

  • Proven, Better, New beats novelty-first product design. Mark Pincus says 8 of his 10 major launches became massive hits, and he now summarizes the approach as "Proven. Better. New." The logic: instincts are usually right, but ideas are often wrong, so start from what is already proven for the same platform, audience, and experience; make it clearly better for existing users; then add only a small layer of novelty . Why it matters: it reduces avoidable failure. Apply it: write three lists before building—what is proven, what existing users would clearly value as better, and the smallest new idea worth testing .
  • In agent workflows, "done" has to be mechanical. Aakash Gupta argues that humans used to fill in gaps in vague specs, but AI agents execute literal instructions, turning ambiguity into token waste and silent failure . Why it matters: acceptance criteria are no longer optional polish; they determine whether the work can be verified at all. Apply it: define a binary finish line and the exact evidence a checker can confirm from the transcript .

"Defining 'done' was always the job. The agents just stopped letting us skip it."

Tactical Playbook

  1. Use a two-model completion loop for AI work. One model does the task and prints evidence; a second, cheaper model decides only whether the condition is met . Why it matters: it separates generation from judgment. Apply it: keep the evaluator blind to intent and limited to pass/fail review of the transcript .

  2. Turn every agent spec into four fields. Gupta's checklist is: Finish Line (binary outcome), Prove It (exact evidence in chat), Show Me (what is waiting on return), and an escape hatch to stop pointless retries . Why it matters: each field removes a specific failure mode. Apply it: reject any spec that cannot be checked word-for-word by a machine .

  3. Use AI to kill weak ideas faster, not just ship them faster. Pincus argues AI should be a testing or failure machine that can try far more ideas in a day, helping teams distinguish belief from hope . Why it matters: speed without selection can just produce more mediocre launches. Apply it: build cheap experiments around the uncertain "new" element and cut B+ concepts quickly when the signal is not obvious .

Case Studies & Lessons

  • Words with Friends: Pincus describes it as proven Scrabble mechanics, better mobile polish, and a new social layer tied to friends on Facebook; the result was a hit with 14 million DAUs. Why it matters: strong outcomes can come from disciplined recombination, not originality for its own sake. Apply it: pressure-test whether your "better" is visible to existing users before betting on the "new."

  • Zynga's retention lens: Pincus says Zynga prioritized retention over virality and even tracked day-365 retention. Why it matters: products that feel temporary rarely become durable businesses. Apply it: ask early what would make the product worth using a year from now, not just next week .

  • Start smaller than your ambition suggests. Pincus says many big products began from humble starting points, including Facebook at Harvard and Zynga's poker app on Facebook . Why it matters: over-ambition can make teams miss product-market fit. Apply it: narrow the first use case until it feels almost uncomfortably specific .

Career Corner

  • Stay close to the metal, but give people a hill to own. Pincus argues product leaders should remain deeply involved in important UX details while also making team members the "CEO" of their area, with operating control, plan, and budget . He also says a CEO's number-one job is to be right . Why it matters: leverage comes from better decisions, not just more delegation. Apply it: give clear ownership boundaries, then stay personally involved in the few product choices that most affect user experience .

Tools & Resources

  • Priority queues for AI moderation review. Brian at Musubi describes a tool that visualizes embedding spaces to surface the biggest disagreements between LLM and human moderation decisions first, reducing a long queue to five focused tasks a day. Why it matters: review capacity goes to the highest-value policy gaps. Apply it: if you own trust, safety, or AI quality, look for ways to rank eval review by disagreement severity instead of processing cases in order.
Codex Workflows: Self-Written Goals and Instant App Context
Jun 15
2 min read
45 docs
Tibo
Pietro Schirano
Riley Brown
Two practical Codex patterns stood out today: let the agent write its own /goal, and use app-shots to hand it the full context of whatever app you're in. Light news day, but both are immediately testable in a real dev workflow.

🔥 TOP SIGNAL

  • The practical shift in today's Codex chatter: let the agent set more of its own task. skirano says he "basically never" writes his own /goal anymore; he asks Codex to write one for itself and one for each agent it spawns. Tibo's framing is the timeless part: because Codex can see and set its own /goal, this turns meta-prompting into "give the agent your intent, then let it derive the task structure"

"Codex can see and set its own /goal. Everything we build, we build also as a tool for the agent. This is a generalization of meta prompting, where you let the agent set its own task based on your intent."

⚡ TRY THIS

  • Let Codex author the /goal. Replicable workflow from skirano:

    1. State the outcome you want.
    2. Ask Codex to write its own /goal.
    3. Ask it to write a /goal for each agent it spawns. This is the cleanest concrete example in today's sources of offloading task decomposition to the agent instead of hand-authoring it yourself
  • Use app-shots for in-place drafting. Riley Brown's shortcut flow:

    1. Open the app you're already working in.
    2. Press both Command keys at the same time.
    3. Give Codex a terse instruction like "Finish this." Riley says this works with Notion and email because it gives Codex the context of what you're doing immediately
  • Combine the two when the hard part is context + decomposition. First send the live app context to Codex with the Command-key shortcut; then have Codex turn that context into its own /goal and sub-agent goals. Today's sources support each step directly, and together they form a useful pattern: context capture first, agent-defined execution second

📡 WHAT SHIPPED

  • Codex app-shots is the concrete feature getting real practitioner praise today. Riley Brown calls it "the most delightful feature" he's used; the behavior is simple and specific: in any app, press both Command keys to send the current context to Codex immediately, then issue a tiny command. Demo

🎬 GO DEEPER

  • skirano's short demo of self-authored goalswatch on X. Best quick example in today's sources of asking Codex to write one /goal for itself and one for each agent it spawns

  • Riley Brown's app-shots demo + exact shortcut follow-updemo and follow-up. Watch this if you want the clearest picture of the interaction loop: capture the current app, then hand Codex a minimal instruction like "Finish this"

Editorial take: today's edge is tighter intent translation — capture the live context, then let the agent do more of the task-setting.

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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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