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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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Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
Mike Knoop
Funding & Deals
- RHYMEBOOK is explicitly trying to convert traction into financing. The Toronto technical founder and Atlanta partner describe the product as an AI songwriting workspace, say it launched in January 2026, reached 500k Google impressions per day, migrated from Vercel to Digital Ocean as it scaled, and has already applied to YC while seeking guidance on getting funded.
- A separate workflow AI team is already monetizing without outside capital. An unnamed two-founder desktop app for non-native English speakers says it reached about $3k MRR roughly three months after launch with no funding, after pivoting toward real-time transcription, translation, suggested replies, and live summaries for meetings.
Emerging Teams
- The strongest operating signal is an unnamed AI meeting assistant for non-native English speakers. The founder says he was previously CTO at an acquired startup; his cofounder spent seven years in crypto doing daily English calls and was the core user. A plain problem-focused Threads post from a roughly 100-follower account drew 107+ likes, 168 comments, and about 12,000 views, leading to 150+ alpha testers via personalized outreach. The key product insight was that users valued help during meetings more than after them, which drove a pivot to real-time assistance; the team now reports about $3k MRR with a higher annual-plan ratio than the founder had seen in prior subscription products.
- Soma is a focused student-workflow play. The app pulls Canvas deadlines, builds study schedules, breaks homework into tasks, generates notes, quizzes, and outlines, and can save materials to Google Drive. The founder says privacy is built around Canvas calendar feeds rather than passwords or API tokens, and early beta testers include students from Stanford, UC Berkeley, Cornell, UCLA, UCSD, Emory, CMU, and Georgia Tech.
- RHYMEBOOK stands out on organic distribution. The team frames it as the lyrics layer for AI music and says the product reached 500k daily Google impressions after a January 2026 launch.
AI & Tech Breakthroughs
- Truman shows what a supervised vertical agent looks like in practice. At an early-stage AI company, the agent lives in Slack, drafts weekly strategy, writes posts in the company’s voice, queues them on a schedule with human approval, runs a periodic heartbeat to monitor news, notifications, and replies, and proposes instruction changes when it sees repeated human edits. The founder says it can rewrite voice and knowledge but not its safety rules, which remain hardcoded.
- Bendex Arc targets a real blind spot in agent security. Its approach tracks session behavior across turns to catch attacks that are spread across multiple ordinary-looking messages and therefore evade per-message filters.
- Agent infrastructure is splitting into control planes and interchangeable runtimes. AgentRail is positioning as a control plane for AI coding agents with one API from issue intake through shipping, while Anyframe offers agents that browse the web, interact with any UI, connect to existing tools, trigger from Slack, GitHub, and Discord, swap between Claude Code, Cursor, and Codex harnesses, and embed through Python and TypeScript SDKs.
Market Signals
- The most important investor read-through is the idea of reasoning PMF by vertical. Mike Knoop argued that Nov/Dec 2025 models plus harnesses produced the first complete loop to train and deploy AI reasoning to product-market fit in coding, and that repeating the pattern across other domains is mainly a question of focus; Marc Andreessen amplified the post as interesting.
"Nothing stops simply repeating this domain by domain other than focus."
- YC remains a major early-stage supply engine. Garry Tan says YC has 16 partners funding 40 to 60 companies per year, translating into more than 50 to 200 new San Francisco residents per partner annually depending on cofounder mix.
- Distribution still looks local, trust-based, and demo-driven. be1st.ai’s founder reported 4 signups in about 30 minutes from a 13.9k-member local developer Facebook community after posting a screenshot, a short phone-recorded audit video, and a request for honest feedback, while the same post produced zero signups and zero comments across about 10 generic English-speaking vibe-coding Facebook groups. Feedback centered on weak homepage context before registration and a free tier that felt too limited; the clearest interpretation in the thread was that local trust plus a concrete demo mattered more than the channel itself.
- For technical founders, go-to-market is still the recurring constraint. AgentRail’s founder says distribution is the hardest part, and AuraPOS’s solo technical founder is looking for two sales partners to handle market entry and client acquisition.
Worth Your Time
- Mike Knoop on reasoning PMF in coding — the clearest short statement of the claim that AI reasoning can be productized domain by domain.
- Bendex Arc demo — useful if you’re evaluating multi-turn agent attacks rather than per-message filtering.
- AgentRail — a concise example of the control-plane thesis for AI coding agents.
- Anyframe — a current product expression of harness-swappable agents, tool triggers, and embedded agent SDKs.
Teknium 🪽
Theo - t3.gg
Riley Brown
🔥 TOP SIGNAL
Riley Brown spent three hours comparing Opus 4.8 to 4.7 and could not find a meaningful difference, while still trusting GPT-5.5 more for deep agentic coding and computer control; Theo’s benchmark recap likewise put GPT-5.5 at the top on realistic long-horizon tasks, with a much better token/cost profile than Opus and Flash.
The sharper edge in today’s sources is workflow design: persistent browser state, sub-agent thread spawning, transcript capture, and background QA loops all look more actionable than another minor model increment.
⚡ TRY THIS
Treat transcripts as artifacts, not disposable chat. Simon Willison’s Codex Desktop workflow: export the full conversation with
Copy as Markdown, paste it into a Gist, then link that Gist from commit messages and PRs so the decision trail survives outside the UI. If the menu item has vanished in your build, bind a custom keyboard shortcut to the command as a workaround.Split big jobs into explicit threads. Riley Brown’s Codex super prompt asks the current chat to spin up new chat sessions inside Codex, then creates six background threads with narrow briefs and completion criteria; Theo separately says one thread per request in OpenClaw/Hermes is easier to manage than one giant conversation. After the fan-out, use
Cmd+Gto search across the resulting chat history.Automate QA off every commit. Peter Steinberger is teaching Codex to create a user-test scenario for each commit, run it through webVNC plus computer/browser-use tools against OpenClaw exactly like a human QA pass, and open PRs with fixes in the background. Strong template for regression hunting before manual review.
Use shorter prompts, then keep a failure corpus. Theo’s rule: describe the problem and what success looks like in roughly two sentences, not a long step-by-step interface spec, and let strong models decide how to explore and test the change. When the agent fails, log the model, prompt, tools, codebase, and hash so you can replay those cases as your own mini benchmark when new agents arrive.
📡 WHAT SHIPPED
Codex workspace upgrades from a heavy user. Riley Brown, on a 43-day streak with 4B tokens, says Codex now supports Windows computer use plus ChatGPT mobile remote control via QR-synced threads; the in-app browser preserves sign-ins, supports multiple tabs per task, and
Cmd+Gnow searches full chat history. There is also a new GitHub-style activity page, and Peter Steinberger separately reports Codex writing ad-hoc codemods during a larger TypeScript migration.Model reality check: Opus 4.8 looks incremental. Riley could not tell a meaningful difference between Opus 4.8 and 4.7 after three hours, still prefers Opus 4.6 for general agent work, and uses GPT-5.5 when trust, deep coding, terminal work, or computer control matter most. Theo’s benchmark recap on long-horizon tasks similarly had GPT-5.5 at 70%, GPT-5.4 at 56%, Opus 4.7 at 54%, and Sonnet 4.6 at 32%; average GPT-5.5 trial used 47k output tokens and cost $5.80 versus Opus at 97k and $16.
Codex regression to watch. A recent Codex Desktop update removed Simon Willison’s favorite feature,
Copy as Markdowntranscript export, prompting issue #25201. His current stance: use the keyboard-shortcut workaround and think twice before auto-updating if your workflow depends on specific agent UI features.Hermes vs OpenClaw is becoming a real product split. Teknium says Hermes is intentionally batteries-included, can be pared back with
hermes skills configorhermes tools, and can export the entire agent as a GitHub repo; Peter Steinberger says OpenClaw should stay modular and lean, because fewer skills and tools make the agent more efficient. @pocarles, who says he has used both since early versions, describes them as almost opposite visions rather than a simple better/worse ranking; Theo also used Hermes to clone a repo and runnpm publishfrom his phone after putting his laptop away on a plane.New entrant to watch: MiniMax M3 and MiniMax Code. MiniMax claims M3 hits 59.0% SWE-Bench Pro, 66.0% Terminal Bench 2.1, 34.8% SWE-fficiency, 28.8% KernelBench Hard, and 74.2% MCP Atlas, with 1M context via sparse attention and native multimodality. Tool endpoints are live at MiniMax Code and platform.minimax.io; weights and a tech report were promised in about 10 days.
🎬 GO DEEPER
- 10:57-12:41 — Riley Brown on Codex super prompts. Best quick demo in today’s sources of a master thread creating six child threads with narrow briefs and completion criteria.
- 07:51-10:38 — Riley Brown on signed-in browser state inside Codex. Useful if you want to see why persistent auth and multiple tabs matter: he jumps across already-authenticated web tools from inside the agent workspace.
- 23:40-25:20 — Theo on token economics versus benchmark bragging. Fast breakdown of why GPT-5.5’s output-token and dollar profile looks materially better than Opus and Flash on the tasks he highlights.
Artifact to study — Simon Willison’s example transcript gist. If you want a concrete model for storing the full agent conversation alongside code changes, start with this transcript.
Issue to watch — Codex transcript export regression. If transcript capture matters to your workflow, keep an eye on issue #25201.
Editorial take: the edge right now is less about squeezing meaning from every new model point release and more about building better state, thread, review, and artifact workflows around the agents you already trust.
Sakana AI
Sam Altman
Diane
Top Stories
Why it matters: open models, robotics, and physical AI all moved closer to deployment today.
MiniMax M3 combined frontier coding/agent performance, 1M context, and native multimodality in one open-weight model. MiniMax introduced M3 as the first open-weights model to combine those three capabilities, with benchmarks including 59.0% on SWE-Bench Pro and 66.0% on Terminal Bench 2.1 . It was distributed quickly across OpenRouter, Ollama Cloud, and Together-powered inference, while weights and a technical report are due in about 10 days .
OpenAI turned its world-simulation work into a robotics division. OpenAI said its program led by Aditya Ramesh has evolved into OpenAI Robotics, which is hiring full-stack hardware, ops, systems, and ML engineers. The short-term target is robots that support skilled workers building infrastructure; the long-term goal is personal robots .
Nemotron 3 Ultra gave NVIDIA a larger US open-weight contender. According to Artificial Analysis, the 550B-parameter / 55B-active, 90%-sparse model is the largest Nemotron 3 release and the most intelligent US open-weights model so far, scoring 48 on its Intelligence Index and serving above 300 tokens/sec on a pre-release DeepInfra endpoint . Additional benchmarks are still to come at release .
Research & Innovation
Why it matters: the most useful technical work focused on physical AI, training efficiency, and cheaper long-context agents.
Cosmos 3 unifies reasoning, world modeling, and action generation for physical AI. NVIDIA’s new architecture replaces separate perception, prediction, and action models with a two-part system—Reasoner Tower and Generator Tower—aimed at robots, autonomous vehicles, and smart environments . The architecture uses Mixture-of-Transformers .
DiffusionBlocks targets training memory, not just model quality. Sakana AI says it can train networks one block at a time, drastically reducing memory requirements while remaining competitive with end-to-end training across ViT, DiT, masked diffusion, autoregressive transformers, and recurrent-depth transformers; code is already out for ViT .
The Efficiency Frontier paper reframes context management as an optimization problem. It models retrieval, compression, and full-context prompting under a single cost-performance objective; on 5,000 HotpotQA examples, deployment-aware selection cut effective token use by about 25%, and amortized memory compression was over 50% cheaper than full-context prompting in higher-performance settings .
Products & Launches
Why it matters: launches were strongest in multimodal creation, long-video understanding, and agent usability.
HiDream O1 Image arrived as an open-source image stack with strong arena results. The family spans three open-weight models for text-to-image and instruction-based editing, with the base and Dev models accepting text plus up to 10 images. Artificial Analysis said Dev-2604 leads open-weight models on its Text-to-Image Arena, and the weights plus full inference pipeline are released under MIT .
Keye-VL-2.0 brought sparse attention into long-video multimodality. ModelScope said the 30B-A3B release is the first multimodal model with DeepSeek Sparse Attention, supports a 256k context window for hour-long video processing, and outperforms 200B+ open models on LongVideoBench while cutting prefill costs by 50% .
Hermes Agent now has native Windows support. Nous Research said Windows support is out of beta, installable directly from PowerShell, extending the full desktop agent experience to Windows users .
Industry Moves
Why it matters: today’s bigger strategic moves were about compute, platform control, and ecosystem alignment.
NVIDIA said Vera Rubin is entering full production for agentic AI factories. The company described it as a POD-scale platform for agentic workloads with end-to-end security, backed by Taiwan server makers and a broader manufacturing, cloud, and infrastructure ecosystem .
Apple’s AI stack may be shifting toward Google and NVIDIA infrastructure. A post citing The Information said Apple’s upcoming Siri and on-device AI upgrade centers on a distilled Gemini model running locally on iPhone silicon, while heavier queries route to Google Cloud using NVIDIA confidential-compute technology—a change from Apple’s earlier Private Cloud Compute positioning .
Nous Research is aligning Hermes Agent with NVIDIA’s new edge stack. Nous said it has been working with NVIDIA so Hermes Agent runs on RTX Spark and integrates with OpenShell, which connects Hermes to Microsoft security primitives .
Quick Takes
Why it matters: a few smaller updates sharpened the picture on evals, local inference, and hands-on agent behavior.
- Claude 4.8 Opus set a new high on GBA Eval, where models build a working Game Boy Advance emulator within 24 hours .
- OBLIQ-Bench was proposed as a harder IR benchmark after frontier-LLM oracle reranking showed little headroom on older search benchmarks .
- vLLM + DGX Spark showed desk-side large-model inference with streaming responses, paged KV cache, runtime tuning, and Prometheus metrics .
- A Codex user reported that, given only two MP4 filenames, Codex found the files, verified codec, fps, and resolution, stitched them without re-encoding, and spot-checked the transition .
Richard Sutton
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
Lenny's Podcast
Most compelling recommendation
Richard Sutton’s video/speech on AI creativity and discovery
- Content type: Video/speech
- Author/creator: Richard Sutton
- Link/URL:https://youtu.be/K5LAFEjTlBA
- Who recommended it: Marc Andreessen, who called Sutton "a genius and a legend"
- Key takeaway: Sutton argues that generative AI trained by supervised learning can be highly useful, but cannot make true novel discoveries on its own. The missing ingredient, in his framing, is discovery through trying many things, testing what works, and keeping the best results—the logic behind reinforcement learning and other generate-and-test systems
- Why it matters: This was the clearest high-signal pick in the set because the recommendation came with a specific framework for separating useful mimicry from systems that can actually discover new things
"In this video, I explain the sense in which generative AI trained by supervised learning is incapable of making novel discoveries."
Benedict Evans’s broader-reading picks
"Read books. Read different books generally. Read books for grown-ups. Please read something other than Lord of the Rings."
Three Men in a Boat — Jerome K. Jerome
- Content type: Book
- Link/URL: Context episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BD3vLtWhT5A
- Who recommended it: Benedict Evans on Lenny's Podcast
- Key takeaway: Evans named it as one of the books he recommends most and described it as a classic British comedy with sections that keep feeling useful in everyday situations
- Why it matters: It shows the kind of reading Evans thinks stays valuable across very different contexts
Nature's Metropolis — William Cronon
- Content type: Book
- Link/URL: Context episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BD3vLtWhT5A
- Who recommended it: Benedict Evans on Lenny's Podcast
- Key takeaway: Evans said this economic history of Chicago is highly relevant to technology because it covers standardization, packetization, logistics, channel conflict, network dynamics, and network neutrality
- Why it matters: It turns economic history into a lens for understanding modern tech systems, which is exactly the broader-reading habit Evans is advocating
Pattern from today’s authentic picks
The strongest recommendations today came with reasons, not just titles. Andreessen pointed readers to Sutton for a specific argument about the limits of supervised generative AI, while Evans used two very different books to argue for reading more widely and about subjects you do not already know
Sam Altman
Satya Nadella
Ben Thompson
What stood out
If one theme defined today, it was AI moving closer to the physical world. NVIDIA used GTC Taipei/COMPUTEX to launch new pieces for robots, factories, local agents, and AI-cloud buildouts, while OpenAI said its world-simulation program has become OpenAI Robotics .
Cosmos 3 and FOX extend NVIDIA’s push into physical AI
NVIDIA launched Cosmos 3, an open world foundation model that combines vision reasoning, multimodal generation across text, video, images, ambient sound, and action, plus action prediction for robots, autonomous vehicles, and vision AI agents . NVIDIA said the model supports native action generation for robot control, tops several open leaderboards, and is available through build.nvidia.com, Hugging Face, GitHub, and NVIDIA NIM under the OpenMDW 1.1 license .
At the same event, NVIDIA introduced the Factory Operations Blueprint (FOX) for autonomous factory manager agents built with NemoClaw, AI-Q Blueprint, and Nemotron models . Early deployments cited by NVIDIA include projected gains at Foxconn, Pegatron, and Advantech:
- Foxconn: 80% faster root-cause analysis, 15% higher labor productivity, and 10% fewer machine failures
- Pegatron: 15% lower asset redundancy costs
- Advantech: 10% energy savings
Why it matters: NVIDIA is presenting physical AI as a full workflow—from world modeling to factory orchestration—rather than a single robotics model release .
RTX Spark makes on-device agents a more serious PC story
NVIDIA unveiled RTX Spark, a new class of Windows PCs built for personal agents, with 1 petaflop of AI compute and 128GB of unified memory for secure local execution . NVIDIA and Microsoft are pairing that hardware with new Windows security primitives and the OpenShell runtime, which adds policy controls, local/cloud routing based on privacy policies, and protections for personal data in cloud queries .
NVIDIA also highlighted faster inference on agentic models in llama.cpp and vLLM, multi-GPU optimizations, Linux support through DGX Spark, and partner work from H Company and Adobe to speed up local computer-use and creative workflows .
"Our goal is to deliver unmetered intelligence to every home and every desk with Windows."
Satya Nadella called RTX Spark "a real breakthrough" toward that goal .
Why it matters: The important shift is not just a faster PC. It is a clearer stack for private, on-device agents that can act locally on Windows and Linux machines .
OpenAI says its world-simulation program has become OpenAI Robotics
OpenAI said its world simulation research program, led by Aditya Ramesh, has evolved into OpenAI Robotics, with hiring underway for full-stack hardware, ops, systems, and ML engineers . The short-term focus is robots that support skilled workers building future infrastructure; the longer-term ambition is personal robots that can help with everyday needs .
Why it matters: This is one of the clearest signs yet that OpenAI sees robotics as a direct extension of model and simulation work, not a side project .
AI factories keep expanding, but the buildout now has real-world constraints
NVIDIA said its AI Cloud ecosystem is expanding worldwide, with partners building AI factories for training, inference, agentic AI, physical AI, and sovereign AI workloads . Examples included Firmus expanding across Australia and Asia-Pacific, CoreWeave extending its platform for physical AI workflows and Cosmos 3-based synthetic data, and Nebius launching a Physical AI Workbench built around Cosmos 3, Isaac Sim, and Isaac GR00T .
"Every company and every country needs AI factory infrastructure to turn data into intelligence"
In separate commentary, Ben Thompson argued that AI data centers now require much higher power density and liquid cooling, often forcing entirely new builds, and that local opposition is often less about literal water usage than about fear of AI-driven job disruption and the fact that communities now have approval power over new projects .
Why it matters: Compute expansion is now as much an infrastructure and permitting story as it is a chip story .
Teresa Torres
Aakash Gupta
1) Big Ideas
- PM review is moving up a layer—from code to artifacts. In one agentic workflow, the PM reviews plans, decisions, strategy docs, and other "load-bearing" artifacts instead of reading code diffs . Why it matters: accountability stays with the PM, but the unit of review becomes what changed, why it changed, and whether it should ship . How to apply: keep strategy, decisions, constraints, and plan docs in the repo; review those first and only escalate to code when the decision requires it.
"You're not approving lines of code. You're approving a description of what changed, why, and whether it should ship."
- Build before agreement. The old PRD-first motion made sense when implementation was the expensive step. The source material argues that a first working version is now often cheaper than the meeting about it, so prototypes, screen recordings, failed paths, confusing labels, and observed user behavior produce better alignment than imagined specs . Why it matters: teams can collapse ambiguity faster with something inspectable than with a document everyone interprets differently. How to apply: use rough prototypes as the first alignment artifact, then discuss evidence from what people actually do.
2) Tactical Playbook
Create an agent-ready context layer.
-
Put target users, trade-offs, non-goals, and failure conditions in repo docs like
strategy.mdorCLAUDE.mdthat agents read repeatedly . -
Keep one source of truth and point every agent to it with a lightweight
AGENTS.mdredirect . -
After each bug, add the smallest test, eval, or policy that would have caught it; one example in the notes is a
fuckups.mdfile that stores scar tissue from repeated mistakes .
Why it matters: a shared working-context layer keeps multiple agents from developing different realities and lets the system improve from failure instead of repeating it .
-
Put target users, trade-offs, non-goals, and failure conditions in repo docs like
Separate preferences from non-negotiables.
- Put preferences in prompts.
- Put non-negotiables in hooks, tool permissions, and branch protections .
- Spend manual skepticism on irreversible changes and high-impact claims, then cross-review them with a different model .
Why it matters: the source notes argue that soft instructions can be reinterpreted, while mechanical limits hold when the model is confident and wrong .
3) Case Studies & Lessons
Lorikeet keeps discovery inside engineering. Every engineer is expected to answer a weekly question: "What’s one thing you learned from a subscriber?" Releases then move through alpha, beta, and launch with checkpoints to confirm the product actually solves the problem . Key takeaway: customer learning is not a separate research ritual; it is part of delivery. How to apply: ask every team member to bring one customer learning each week, then use staged checkpoints to test whether that learning changed the release.
One PM artifact system grew into 44 markdown files around a single
CLAUDE.md. The author says that structure emerged from use and became the layer that held strategy, decisions, constraints, and shipping context together . Key takeaway: the durable asset is often not the spec itself; it is the inspectable context that humans and agents can both use .
4) Career Corner
The AI-era PM bar is more hands-on. April Underwood, former product leader at Slack and Twitter, is seeking a part-time internship because the PM job "has changed a lot" . In the same set of notes, Aakash Gupta says the old PRD → design → engineering handoff model is collapsing, and the new bar includes prototyping in code, writing and running evals, reasoning about model tradeoffs, and shipping with AI agents . How to apply: if you need a reset, the practical path in the source material is to build something end to end, learn Claude Code, get AI foundations, build taste at speed, and create a PM GitHub that shows shipped work .
For mid-career PMs, optimize for fit—not optics. Shreyas Doshi argues that satisfaction depends less on how your LinkedIn looks and more on resisting career envy . Title, money, and scope may feel good when you accept a role, but they stop delivering happiness once the job starts; competence, flow, culture fit, work-life harmony, and how Sunday evenings feel matter more over time . How to apply: evaluate roles against your own criteria, because when it comes to your career, "you are the user," and the true audience is you and those dependent on you .
5) Tools & Resources
- Four lightweight repo templates stand out:
strategy.mdfor target users and trade-offs ,CLAUDE.mdas a central instruction file agents can read ,AGENTS.mdas a pointer so every agent shares the same context , andfuckups.mdfor policies learned from repeated failures . These are small, practical ways to make agent-assisted product work easier to inspect and reuse.
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