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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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Riley Brown
Armin Ronacher
Cat Wu
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
- The best practitioners are routing models by job, not betting on one model for the whole loop. Cat Wu says Fable 5 is her default for careful production-codebase changes while Opus 4.8 still fits greenfield prototypes; Riley Brown used Fable 5 to spec a complex web→native iOS/Android conversion, then had Opus 4.8 implement it in one shot after 71 minutes; Theo says to explicitly tell Fable to use Opus or Sonnet for subagents because otherwise it tends to delegate to itself; and steipete’s real-world comparison makes the economics obvious: similar feature, about $20 on deep^2 versus $350-$457 on Fable .
- The corollary: don’t drown the agent in instructions. DHH says overstuffed steering files can fill the context window with distractions and yield worse code, while human review and architectural judgment still matter even when agents write more of the code .
⚡ TRY THIS
Spec with the strongest model; implement with the cheaper one. Practical recipe:
- Give Fable 5 the hardest planning task: architecture, migration plan, or cross-platform spec.
- Hand that spec to Opus/GPT/Codex for implementation.
- If the orchestrator is spawning subagents, explicitly tell it to use Opus or Sonnet underneath to control burn.
- On review, ask it to justify edge cases and timing-sensitive code. Riley Brown used exactly this split for a web app → native iOS/Android conversion; Theo’s tip is the cost control that makes it usable day to day; DHH’s workflow is to challenge suspicious-looking code until the agent explains why it is necessary .
Prompt goals + constraints, not step-by-step tutorials. Cat Wu’s advice: give the model a higher-level problem, let it brainstorm, and state your constraints upfront; Fable is better at deducing intent from vague prompts and knows when to ask clarifying questions. DHH’s warning pairs well with this: don’t bloat steering files with instructions for things the model already knows .
"If you try to tell an agent to do something in a certain way that it already kind of knew how to get right, you actually make it dumber."
Add explicit approval checkpoints to tools. Simon Willison’s latest agent stack gives a clean pattern you can copy today:
-
Let tools accept a
contextparameter. -
Call
await context.ask_user(...)for yes/no, multiple choice (options=[...]), or free-text (free_text=True) input. - Persist unanswered questions so the suspended run survives restarts.
-
Re-run the tool from the top after answer replay, so ask before side effects.
Backing this, LLM 0.32a3 adds
PauseChain, uniquetool_call_ids, and resume semantics for unresolved tool calls .
-
Let tools accept a
Only let loops run unattended when success is externally verifiable. Good templates from today:
- steipete lets Codex run for four days across multiple trees because the changes are end-to-end verifiable; the human mainly adds credit-card details and prunes bad ideas .
- Theo has Mythos rank open PRs nightly and emit HTML plans that humans or other agents can inspect fast .
- Armin says loops worked for a language port because the target was crisp: make the test suite pass; he avoids broader autonomous loops when QA/comprehension is fuzzy . If you can’t define the harness, keep the loop supervised—Kent C. Dodds describes an agent wiping production and its volume backups in nine seconds .
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
- LLM 0.32a3 — tool-call plumbing for real human-in-the-loop agents:
llm_tool_callinjection, uniquetool_call_id,llm.PauseChain, pause behavior for concurrent tool calls, resume-from-pending-tool-calls, and a fix for missing-tool async results . - datasette-agent 0.2a0 —
ask_user()mid-execution plus asave_querytool that always requires human approval before storing SQL . - datasette-agent-edit 0.1a0 — new base plugin for agentic text editing, built around Claude-style
view,str_replace, andinserttool patterns . - asyncinject 0.7 — Simon says Fable found bugs in the dependency and fixed them .
- Pi 0.79.2 —
pi updategets fable fixes and improved/modelautocomplete . - OpenAI docs agent — on developers.openai.com, the docs assistant answers product questions, links directly to relevant docs, and can generate a custom project guide you hand off to Codex .
- Codex reset controls — Go/Plus/Pro/Business users can now save a rate-limit reset and apply it later; rollout starts with one free reset. Announcement: OpenAI on X.
- Local model signal — Armin says Dwarf Star 4, a packaged quantized DeepSeek 4 Flash setup, is the first local model he has found viable for serious coding work, with roughly 450 tokens/s prefill and 25-26 tokens/s generation .
- Open-source projects getting real pull — Agent Skills packages a spec→plan→build→test→review→simplify→ship workflow and sits above 56k GitHub stars; Headroom wraps Claude/Cursor/Codex to compress context and show savings via
headroom perf, with 24k+ stars; Last 30 Days turns recent internet discussion into agent-generated briefs and is above 40k stars . - Cost/guardrail reality check — Fable’s public spec is 1M context at $10/M input and $50/M output; Simon saw one debugging session price out around $12 and $110+ in a day, steipete saw $350-$457 on one feature and argues GPT can be 10-20x more token+cost effective for a similar outcome, and Riley says deeper frontier-LLM or security topics auto-route Fable sessions to Opus 4.8 .
🎬 GO DEEPER
- 25:16-29:14 — Theo on orchestration economics. Useful clip on why Fable is great at coordinating judge/harvest/synthesis swarms, but should be told to use Opus/Sonnet subagents if you care about burn .
- 11:23-15:36 — Matthew Berman on Headroom. Good hands-on demo of wrapping Claude Code, measuring savings with
headroom perf, and mining failed sessions withheadroom learn.
Study crabbox providers. steipete says Codex is running inside crabbox while building crabbox, with browser/computer-use signups and long loops across multiple trees; valuable if you want a real self-hosted agent-control reference point .
Read the release notes for LLM 0.32a3 and datasette-agent 0.2a0. This is one of the clearest public examples of how to build approval-aware tool calls instead of pretending full autonomy is safe .
Editorial take: the practical edge is no longer “pick the best model”; it’s route by task, define a verifier, and make approval pauses a first-class part of the loop.
Aravind Srinivas
1) Funding & Deals
- Poetic — $50M Series A. Enterprise AI automation startup Poetic raised a $50 million Series A led by Kleiner Perkins, with Founders Fund, First Harmonic, and OpenAI also participating . The syndicate combines major venture firms with a strategic AI backer around enterprise automation .
2) Emerging Teams
Datacurve (YC W24). Garry Tan highlighted Datacurve as the team behind DeepSWE, and Artificial Analysis has already adopted the benchmark in its Coding Agent Index . Adoption by a widely watched evaluation index is a strong validation signal for an early-stage infrastructure team .
PliOS. The founder brings 10+ years in banking, digital assets, and regulatory compliance and is building PliOS solo with AI-assisted development . The product is an AI-powered compliance OS covering policies, risk assessments, vendor due diligence, contract reviews, audits, and licensing, and the founder is now looking for early users .
ComplyAI. ComplyAI says it can generate audit-ready EU AI Act documentation in about 10 minutes after founders answer questions about their AI system . The timing matters: the EU AI Act deadline is August 2, seven weeks away, and the cited market read is that many SaaS founders still have no documentation ready .
CipherNode. CipherNode is positioned as a 100% offline agentic AI OS for sensitive data, with local multimodal inputs, self-healing code in a sandbox, and a local markdown artifacts vault . The founder rebuilt the product from a heavier React/Next.js frontend to native HTML/JS plus a packaged Python
.exebackend after concluding the original stack was slowing local inference .
3) AI & Tech Breakthroughs
DeepSWE resets coding-agent evaluation. Artificial Analysis replaced SWE-Bench Pro with Datacurve's DeepSWE benchmark in its Coding Agent Index . DeepSWE writes tasks from scratch rather than adapting public GitHub issues or pull requests, which Artificial Analysis said matters because older setups had become gameable through commit-history recovery . On the refreshed index, Claude Code with Fable 5 (max) leads at 77, Codex with GPT-5.5 (xhigh) scores 76, and Claude Code with Opus 4.8 (max) is at 73 .
Perplexity is framing orchestration as the core moat. Aravind said Perplexity orchestrates across models, files, tools, personal context connectors, and even chips where some inference can be offloaded to local devices . He described the hard problem as inference engineering: knowing which model is best for a task, doing it cost-efficiently, and handling model failure paths . He also argued that the future stack is hybrid, combining frontier models in the cloud with local open-source models on device .
Local-first agents are getting more technically opinionated. CipherNode's design centers on no-cloud processing for sensitive work, plus self-testing and self-fixing code before output is shown . The founder's implementation choice was to remove a heavier web framework and repackage the backend to improve local inference speed .
4) Market Signals
Buyers are shifting from buying software to building with AI. At SaaStr AI 2026, build-oriented vendors led sponsor engagement: Replit drew 1,423 leads, OpenRouter 915, Lovable 605, and Relevance AI also landed in the top 15 . SaaStr's interpretation is that vibe coding and agents have changed the buyer question from "what do I buy" to "what do I build" .
AI-native revenue software is also gaining attention. In the same SaaStr data, Lightfield beat Salesforce by 35 leads, while Vivun, Artisan, Reevo, and Glyphic all showed up as AI-first revenue tools .
Infrastructure and routing economics are moving up the org chart. SaaStr flagged OpenRouter's 915 leads as a sign that cost per token, fallback behavior, and latency are becoming CEO-level issues as AI goes into production . Aravind made the parallel strategic claim that value is accruing to applied inference platforms and orchestration layers rather than only to frontier models .
Accuracy-sensitive verticals are adopting AI, but with tighter controls. Perplexity says it is seeing strong demand in financial services and legal, along with small-business founders and executives; it also singled out hedge funds, private equity, and investment banks among power users . In healthtech, a Series A founder described a much stricter operating model: no AI-generated dosing, indications, or contraindications text, three human reviews for patient-facing output, and prompt logging for traceability .
"The useful AI products are the ones that own a real workflow, not just the output."
EU AI Act timing is creating deadline-driven demand. ComplyAI is explicitly targeting founders with "zero documentation ready" seven weeks before the August 2 deadline and positions itself as drafting support for lawyers rather than a substitute for legal review .
Macro capital formation is still AI-centric. a16z said American investment in industrial capital stock has mostly focused on AI build-out .
5) Worth Your Time
- In Conversation with Aravind Srinivas: Live from FF Global 2026 — the best item in this batch for the case that value may accrue to orchestration and applied inference platforms, including routing across models, tools, and local chips .
Artificial Analysis on DeepSWE — the clearest explanation here of why SWE-Bench Pro had become gameable and how DeepSWE changes the coding-agent leaderboard .
Who Got the Most Leads at SaaStr AI Annual 2026? — a useful read on where 10k+ B2B and AI founders/operators are focusing spend: build tools, AI-native revenue products, and production infrastructure .
claude for medical/healthtech writing in 2026. the rules i learned the hard way. — worthwhile diligence reading for any regulated-AI investment because it is specific about where AI is allowed in workflow, where it is not, and how teams are creating traceability before regulators ask .
OpenAI
Richard Socher
Yulu Gan
Top Stories
Why it matters: the clearest signal today was that model capability and model availability are now separate stories.
- Anthropic had to shut off Fable 5 and Mythos 5. Anthropic said a U.S. export-control directive suspended access for foreign nationals, including foreign-national employees, and that the practical result was disabling both models for all customers; other Claude models remain available, and Anthropic says it is working to restore access. Across Claude products, new sessions now use the selected default model or Opus 4.8, existing Fable 5 sessions end with errors, and platform requests to Fable 5 also return errors.
- The shutdown landed just after Fable 5 posted some of the week’s strongest benchmark results. It ranked #1 on FrontierSWE, which the benchmark authors called the biggest capability jump since release, and on many tasks it reportedly worked productively for close to 20 hours. Epoch separately reported 87% on FrontierMath Tiers 1–3 and 88% on Tier 4, while Artificial Analysis’s refreshed Coding Agent Index put Claude Code with Fable 5 at the top with a score of 77.
- Open models kept advancing at the same time. MiniMax released M3 as an open-weight model with ~428B parameters (~23B activated), 1M context, native text/image/video input, and frontier coding and agentic positioning. Moonshot open-sourced Kimi-K2.7-Code with gains of +21.8% on Kimi Code Bench v2, +11.0% on Program Bench, +31.5% on MLS Bench Lite, and 30% lower reasoning-token use than K2.6.
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: the most useful research updates were about making agents cheaper to run, easier to evaluate, and more autonomous in discovery.
- AA-AgentPerf introduced a benchmark built around real long-context agentic coding workloads and production optimizations such as KV cache reuse and speculative decoding. Its first results show 61,354 Agents/MW on rack-scale GB300 versus 21,053 on B300, with GB300 about 3x more power-efficient than single-node Blackwell in this test.
- Recursive unveiled an early automated discovery system, described as a milestone toward recursive self-improving superintelligence, and said it reached state-of-the-art results on NanoGPT speedrun, NanoChat, and NVIDIA’s Sol-ExecBench using ideas and code generated by the system itself.
- RandOpt claims that adding Gaussian noise to pretrained LLMs and ensembling the results can match or beat PPO/GRPO on math reasoning, coding, writing, and chemistry across Qwen, Llama, OLMo3, and VLMs, without gradient-based training.
Products & Launches
Why it matters: product releases kept pushing AI deeper into developer workflows, deployment infrastructure, and media generation.
- OpenAI launched a docs agent on developers.openai.com that answers questions about OpenAI products, links directly to relevant documentation, and can generate custom guides that open in Codex or export as Markdown for coding agents.
- Claude Managed Agents now support user-controlled sandboxes on a company’s own infrastructure or any chosen provider, with new setup guides for multiple partners.
- Zyphra released ZONOS2, a real-time TTS model with high-fidelity voice cloning that the company describes as the first open-source sparse MoE TTS system; it uses raw UTF-8 input and is released under Apache 2.0.
Industry Moves
Why it matters: partnerships and commercialization moves are increasingly shaping where AI gets deployed first.
- Google DeepMind launched a Robotics Accelerator with 15 European startups, offering access to its AI stack, Gemini Robotics models, and hands-on support over a three-month program.
- Cognition is putting money behind Devin adoption. The company said its AI Productivity Guarantee is a $10,000,000 bet that Devin delivers engineering value.
- Baseten and Harvey are partnering on legal AI. Baseten said the two companies are pushing open models toward frontier-level performance for legal applications and that LAB was central to their joint post-training work on legal agents.
Policy & Regulation
Why it matters: this was not a normal product outage; it was a compliance event that immediately changed what customers and employees could access.
Anthropic said the directive suspended access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, including foreign-national employees, forcing the company to disable both models for all customers to comply. Other Claude models remain available, but developers are being told to move integrations off Fable 5 while Anthropic works to restore access.
Quick Takes
Why it matters: these smaller updates still add signal on benchmarks, tooling, and evaluation.
- FrontierMath Tiers 1–4 (v2) went live after an audit fixed errors in 42% of problems; GPT-5.5 (xhigh) now leads Tiers 1–3 at 85%, and Google’s AI co-mathematician leads Tier 4 at 76%.
- Google Research’s Gemini-SQL2 hit state-of-the-art results on the BIRD text-to-SQL benchmark; one team member cited a 2.5% improvement over the previous single-model SOTA.
- Ramp launched Ramp SWE-Bench, a private, production-grounded coding benchmark built from real internal engineering problems.
- OpenAI is rolling out Codex rate-limit reset banking, starting Go, Plus, Pro, and Business users with one free reset.
Matt Wolfe
Jeremy Howard
Nathan Lambert
The story driving today’s cycle
U.S. export controls abruptly take Anthropic’s newest models offline
The U.S. government, citing national security authorities, ordered Anthropic to suspend access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for any foreign national, including Anthropic employees, whether they are inside or outside the United States . Anthropic said the practical result was an immediate shutdown of both models for all customers, while access to other Claude models remains unaffected .
"We believe this is a misunderstanding and are working to restore access as soon as possible."
The order lands just days after Fable 5 launched on June 9 as a new tier above Opus, and after Anthropic had already reversed part of its rollout by making certain model redirects visible following backlash .
Why it matters: The directive affects both customer access and which employees can use the models, bringing export-control policy directly into frontier-model operations .
The reaction quickly expanded beyond Anthropic itself
The strongest reactions focused on workforce structure and power concentration. Nathan Lambert said that, in his experience, a minority of LLM researchers are American citizens and warned that rebuilding frontier AI research around citizenship segregation would be "industry destroying" . Jeremy Howard said he opposed the government action but argued Anthropic should have expected a response after advancing a "too dangerous for anyone except us" posture , while Hugging Face CEO Clement Delangue said he is going to Washington next week to argue for open-source AI, transparency, and against concentration of power .
Why it matters: The response tied this single order to broader questions about international staffing, open access, and who gets to shape AI policy .
Scrutiny is widening to AI product behavior
New York subpoenas OpenAI on data, engagement, and model conduct
New York’s attorney general has issued a broad subpoena to OpenAI seeking documents related to advertising, user engagement and retention, handling of consumer and health data, activities involving minors and seniors, deep learning models, model sycophancy, and company policies .
Why it matters: This inquiry reaches beyond abstract model safety to concrete questions about product design, data handling, vulnerable users, and behavioral effects .
The buildout around agents and robotics kept moving
NVIDIA’s Blackwell leads the first AgentPerf benchmark
Artificial Analysis’s new AgentPerf benchmark measures how many coding-agent tasks a system can support simultaneously while meeting responsiveness and output-rate thresholds, using long-horizon trajectories drawn from public code repositories across 12+ programming languages . NVIDIA said its GB300 NVL72 led the first published results on DeepSeek V4 Pro workloads and ran up to 20x more agents per megawatt than HGX H200, with Together AI, DeepInfra, and Baseten already serving production agentic workloads on Blackwell .
Why it matters: The benchmark compares concurrent agent tasks under latency and token-rate constraints, not just single-turn generation .
Google DeepMind launches a European robotics accelerator
Google DeepMind said its new Robotics Accelerator has launched with 15 startups working on physical AI in Europe . The three-month program gives participants access to DeepMind’s AI stack, Gemini Robotics models, and hands-on support from its teams .
Why it matters: DeepMind is pairing robotics models with direct startup support, extending its AI stack into company-building around physical AI .
Brian Armstrong
Sahil Lavingia
Satya Nadella
What stood out
Today's cleanest recommendations were working frameworks, not just links to save. Satya Nadella reached for history to explain the balance between technology, markets, and democracy ; Sahil Lavingia used Westworld as a shortcut for understanding agent loops ; Brian Armstrong shared a Paul Graham post as a prompt for more concise AI-assisted writing ; and Keith Rabois pointed readers to a thread he said was worth reading very carefully because it framed frontier AI as controlled strategic capability . A second theme was human capability: Nadella highlighted Sarah Go on the "untrainable parts" of people and organizations, while Graham suggested autobiographies as a better parenting resource than most parenting books .
Most compelling recommendation
Parallel Paths to Prosperity
- Content type: Book
- Author/creator: Joel Mokyr and co-authors
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Satya Nadella
- Key takeaway: Nadella said the book describes a thousand-year history of Western growth and the virtuous cycle among technological revolutions, markets, and democracy, each acting as a check on the others
- Why it matters: This was the strongest pick today because Nadella did more than name the book; he extracted a concrete framework and applied it to how society should think about the current age
"the west in particular got three things into a virtuous cycle... technological revolutions and markets and democracy all both acting as a check on the other"
Compact frameworks for the AI moment
Westworld (first episode)
- Content type: TV episode
- Author/creator: Not provided in notes
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Sahil Lavingia
- Key takeaway: Lavingia said that if you do not understand agent loops, you should watch the first episode of Westworld
- Why it matters: It was the most compressed recommendation in the set: one episode offered as a mental model for how agent loops work
Paul Graham post on concise, "unsummarizable" writing
- Content type: X post
- Author/creator: Paul Graham
- Link/URL:https://x.com/paulg/status/2062891972042637573
- Who recommended it: Brian Armstrong
- Key takeaway: Armstrong said Graham's quote is a good prompt for an agent to make writing more concise without stripping out the interesting ideas
- Why it matters: It is a practical heuristic already being used in real writing workflows, not a generic preference for brevity
"strive to make my writing unsummarizable, in the sense that it has so little fluff left in it that if you take any words out, as summaries by definition do, you lose a lot of interesting ideas"
Thread on frontier AI as controlled strategic capability
- Content type: X thread
- Author/creator: Linked X account:
_the_prophet__ - Link/URL:https://x.com/theprophet/status/2065613953288597855
- Who recommended it: Keith Rabois
- Key takeaway: Rabois said it was worth reading very carefully; the linked post called the shift a "monster signal" and described it as the moment frontier AI stops being treated like software and starts being treated like controlled strategic capability
- Why it matters: It was the clearest recommendation today about a change in how frontier AI is being framed
Human capability and indirect learning
Sarah Go on "untrainable parts"
- Content type: Blog
- Author/creator: Sarah Go
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Satya Nadella
- Key takeaway: Nadella said Go's post asks what the untrainable parts are in people and organizations, and he connected that to human agency, ambition, and the "glue work" people do
- Why it matters: It was the clearest people-centered recommendation in today's set, emphasizing capabilities Nadella said should not be counted out
Autobiographies (especially the early sections)
- Content type: Book category
- Author/creator: Various
- Link/URL: Not provided in notes
- Who recommended it: Paul Graham
- Key takeaway: Graham said early sections of autobiographies are often implicitly about parenting, making them a better recommendation than most books explicitly about parenting
- Why it matters: It is a distinctive reminder that some of the best practical learning comes indirectly through life stories rather than advice manuals
Product Marketing
Product Management
The community for ventures designed to scale rapidly | Read our rules before posting ❤️
Big Ideas
Validate the pain before you map the journey. Multiple sources converged on the same operating principle: do discovery first, then decide whether a journey map or feature set is worth building. One recommendation was to spend about two weeks talking to users about frustrations instead of pitching ideas, because insights come from discovery rather than opinion . Shreyas Doshi adds an important B2B filter: many customer problems are too minor, too episodic, too hard to justify to finance, offset by acceptable alternatives, or blocked by inertia and switching costs . Why it matters: PMs often overestimate how much customers want a problem solved. Apply it: validate severity, alternatives, inertia, and whether users will spend time or budget before assigning roadmap space.
Scale decisions with frameworks, not heroics. Rivian estimates that bringing one vehicle to life requires roughly 40 million decisions, making centralized decision-making impossible . Their answer is a shared product vision, decision criteria, escalation only when necessary, and full alignment after a call is made . Scaringe also notes that org structure is just a tool for efficient work and should change as the company grows . Why it matters: PM leverage rises when teams can make consistent decisions without waiting for a founder or executive. Apply it: write down decision criteria early, define escalation paths, and revisit structure as team size changes.
Tactical Playbook
Sequence discovery correctly. Start with the target market, interview individuals, and do problem discovery before discussing solutions . A practical version from the community is to map backward from the outcome users want and keep V1 to the critical path only . If you use JTBD / Outcome-Driven Innovation, Importance-vs-Satisfaction plots can highlight where actionable value exists .
Separate truth-seeking from stakeholder packaging. One PM shared a stakeholder-friendly chain: business outcomes customers pay for, pain points blocking those outcomes, capabilities required, current product gaps, and the features needed to close them . Pair that with Doshi’s advice to sound less clever when thinking through product ideas so you work closer to truth before translating the case for others .
"This forces you to deal at the level of truth rather than clever proxies."
- Test referrals through customer language. For early-stage B2B customer acquisition, don’t ask for intros first. Ask a customer how they would explain the product to a peer in one sentence . If they can do it clearly, use that sentence to find others with the same problem; if they cannot, fix the explanation first . Run this as structured experimentation so you learn why referral tactics do or do not work .
Case Studies & Lessons
Rivian: high-conviction architecture, low-ego feature changes. Rivian chose to own its in-vehicle software platform and zonal computing architecture despite board skepticism and limited capital, arguing it would matter for competitive differentiation; Scaringe says that investment later led to a $5.8B software licensing deal. At the feature level, the team removed the glove box on R1 to create more space for computers, enlarge the frunk, and shift cost into suspension, then reversed the decision on R2 after customer feedback . Takeaway: stay stubborn on strategic architecture, but flexible on customer-facing trade-offs.
Small teams first can improve execution later. Rivian now limits the first six months of a new vehicle program to 50 people or fewer so a small cross-functional group can settle architecture and major trade-offs before scaling the team . Scaringe frames the broader principle as prioritizing progress over motion—avoiding activity that creates demos or artifacts without moving the product forward . Takeaway: if a program is clogged with too many voices early, reduce the decision surface before adding more people.
Career Corner
- Invest deliberately in management fundamentals. A PM who transitioned from UX design recommended Study.com’s Business 101 - Principles of Management for areas many PMs learn informally: organizational structure and psychology, change management, and stakeholder communication . The reported advantage is that it can be completed quickly, including in a weekend sprint . Use it if: your product judgment is strong but your leverage across teams is still developing.
Tools & Resources
- Pre-mortems: Doshi recommends pre-mortems as a way to think through worst-case scenarios and then act on them. Resource: https://coda.io/@shreyas/pre-mortems
- Launch command center: A shared GitHub repo for B2B launches is aimed at mid-sized and larger orgs; it tracks revenue targets and timing to show how launch delays affect pipeline and cross-functional alignment. Repo: https://github.com/carolg79/launch-command-center
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