"The Big Book of NLP, Expanded: 350+ Techniques, Patterns & Strategies of Neuro Linguistic Programming" by Shlomo Vaknin and Erickson Institute.

Rapport is built by becoming subtly similar to someone — matching their body language, speech, and symbolic world — so their subconscious senses "you're like me / you get me." Once that rapport exists (pacing), you can lead them into a new state or position. Sharp sensory observation is the prerequisite for all of it.

You can't lead someone you haven't first paced. Match their world until their subconscious accepts you as "one of us," then move — and the moment you hit resistance, that's your signal the rapport isn't there yet (back up, don't push).

The frameworks

  • Pacing & Matching (Grinder/Bandler) — blend elements of the other person's body language and speech into your own style (not raw imitation). Match their predicates — if they say "I see what you mean," you reply in visual language too. Start so subtle it can't be detected, escalate gradually, and never fake an accent.

  • Mirroring — reflect their physiology to build rapport and "second position": converse while subtly matching cadence, gesture, and breathing; use active listening ("So you're saying…") to keep it flowing; then test — try to guess their opinion before they voice it, then shift your own posture/mood and watch whether they follow (that's pacing and leading).

  • Behavioral & Symbolic Mirroring — when plain physical matching isn't enough (across status, gender, culture), mirror the things a person values and respects: mention hard work, family, or faith if those matter to them; match their wardrobe, references, and the connotation of their words. (The book's example: Temple Grandin wearing western wear with cattle-industry clients.)

  • Exchanged Matches — when copying someone directly would be too obvious, match the timing of their movement with a different, subtler one — e.g. tap your finger or nod in time with their breathing (read it from their shoulders, not their chest). Once matched, you can gently lead by slowly speeding your own rhythm so theirs follows.

  • When NOT to mirror — don't mirror aggression (don't play "alpha dog" — adopt a same-team posture instead), don't mirror suffering or intense need (you'll induce their state in yourself and may threaten them — mirror only the general, comforting cues). If you get caught mimicking, drop the physical mirroring but keep gentle symbolic mirroring.

  • The observation skills - before you can influence anyone, you have to be able to read them — and these four drills train your eyes to catch the small, automatic signals that reveal what's going on inside.:

    • Eliciting Subconscious Responses — learn what each of your senses "looks like" from the outside. Ask a partner to relive a happy memory and focus first only on what they saw in it, then only what they heard, then only what they felt — while you watch how their posture, skin color, and breathing shift with each one. You're building a personal catalog of "this is what someone looks like when they're picturing something vs. hearing something vs. feeling something."

    • Calibration — connect one specific body signal to one specific inner state. Have your partner think of something they clearly understand, and watch their face, eyes, and hands; then something that confuses them, and watch again. Once you can see the difference, have them silently pick one and re-think it — and you guess which from their body alone, then check. You're learning to "read the dial" for that person.

    • Sensory Acuity — simply training your eyes to catch the tiny, involuntary changes people don't control: skin getting lighter or darker, muscles tensing or softening, breathing speeding up or slowing, breath moving higher or lower in the body, faint lines around the lips, pupils widening. These are the raw signals everything else is built on.

    • Non-Verbal Cues Recognition — you read other people's faces better once you know your own. The face has 90+ muscles and thousands of expressions, so you practice in a mirror — cycling through emotions like fear, joy, anger, and surprise — to feel from the inside what each expression is, which makes you far quicker to spot it on someone else.

  • Satir Categories (Virginia Satir) — when people are under stress, they tend to fall into one of five communication styles. Each one is a kind of defense, so each needs a different approach to build rapport. Recognize which one you're facing, then match it the right way:

  • The Blamer — attacks and finds fault ("This is your fault"). Don't get defensive and don't fight back — instead, get worked up about the same problem they are, so you're on the same side against it. Match their intensity, but never put them in a position where they have to defend themselves.

    • The Placater — over-apologizes and tries to please everyone, afraid of conflict. Give them the attention and reassurance they're craving; start by connecting with what they deeply care about, then ease into the specifics.
  • The Computer — goes cold, stiff, and overly logical to avoid feeling anything. Meet them there: stay calm and rational, and don't push them to open up emotionally — that only makes them retreat further.

    • The Distracter — changes the subject and won't stay on point, dodging the real issue. Don't fight the tangents — go along with the detour, but keep gently steering back by tying things to what they personally care about, until their own restlessness wears them out and they return to your point.
  • The Leveler — straightforward, honest, and congruent: their words, tone, and body all line up. This is the easiest person to connect with — just match their honesty and sense of fairness. And when you can't tell which style someone is, default to being the Leveler yourself.

Worked example

A textile sales rep meets a clothing-company buyer. Reading her cues — worked her way up (no degree-pride), conservative-religious accent, judgmental remarks — he runs behavioral + symbolic mirroring: drops big words, mentions things he earned through hard work, uses dry humor aimed at the rich (not the poor), references his church and family. He physically mirrors her posture and breathing, but via an exchanged match — watching her shoulders and moving his hand to her breath rhythm while keeping a gentle masculine quality. Rapport forms below her awareness, and then he can lead.

Key takeaways

  1. Match into their world (verbal, physical, symbolic), then lead — rapport precedes influence.
  2. The more subconscious a behavior, the safer and more powerful it is to mirror.
  3. Train sensory acuity and calibration on yourself first — your own face, your own physiology.
  4. Know when to STOP — never mirror aggression or suffering; back off if caught.
  5. Use Satir categories to read people and to know what not to do; when lost, be the Leveler.
  6. Prefer pacing (integration) over mirroring (imitation) when subtlety matters — pacing rarely offends.
  7. Use symbolic mirroring when physical mirroring is risky (caught, intense states, opposite sex) — harder to detect, de-escalating.

A "state" is your whole mind-body condition at a given moment (confident, anxious, curious, flat). States can be deliberately switched on, cleared, amplified, and linked to a trigger — so you can re-summon a resourceful state on demand. This is the most fundamental NLP skill: nearly every other pattern assumes you can already produce and anchor a state cleanly.

Anchoring is deliberately creating a trigger that brings back a feeling on command. A song comes on and you're suddenly back in a summer ten years ago. A certain smell and you feel like a kid in your grandmother's kitchen. An anchor is a trigger (the song, the smell) got wired to a state (the feeling), so the trigger now fires the feeling automatically. NLP says, if that happens by accident, you can also do it on purpose.

Anchor at the peak, keep the state pure, and never reuse the trigger. Get that one mechanic right and most of the rest of NLP becomes available, because nearly every pattern is "elicit a state → amplify it → anchor it → fire it where you need it."

  1. Elicit — bring up a feeling (recall a time you felt confident).
  2. Amplify — make it stronger (turn up the mental picture, the inner voice, the body sensation).
  3. Anchor — lock it to a trigger at its peak. (three rules: anchor at the peak (full strength), with a pure state (clean, not mixed), using a dedicated trigger (means one thing))
  4. Fire — set off that trigger in the situation that needs it (right before the interview, the hard conversation, the stage).

The frameworks

  • Producing & clearing states:

    • State Induction — deliberately generate a state (confidence, curiosity) before an event: define it across sight/sound/feeling, kindle it by recalling times you felt even a hint of it, amplify it through your weakest sense plus matching self-talk ("Piece of cake"), and let the feeling flow through your body.

    • Accessing Resourceful States (Andreas) — for a known upcoming situation: name the quality you'll need, recall a vivid memory of having it, step in and amplify it like a "force field," then borrow a role model's physiology by viewing them from 2nd position, anchor it, and test.

    • Physiomental State Interruption — snap out of a stuck bad state (boredom, anger, a self-critical voice) by taking whatever fuels it and exaggerating it until it's absurd — replay the harsh inner voice as a cartoon squeak, or jolt your mind with quick math (count back from 100 by sevens). If nothing shifts, you exaggerated the wrong detail — find the one really driving the feeling.

  • Anchoring — the core skill:

    • Anchoring (Grinder & Bandler) — wiring a feeling to a trigger so you can call it back on command (like a song that drops you into a memory, but built on purpose): pick the feeling + a unique trigger (a hand position, a knuckle press, a private word), bring the feeling up strongly, set the trigger at its peak, then test. Keep that trigger for this feeling only — reusing it makes it meaningless.
    • Self-Anchoring — the solo version: run it from the outside-observer view (watch yourself like a character in a movie, build the feeling up, then step back into your body to lock it in).
  • Working with stubborn negative states:

  • Collapsing Anchors — dissolve an unwanted automatic reaction by firing a negative-state anchor and a stronger positive-state anchor at the same time. Hold both (expect eye-darting and confusion — that's processing), release the negative first, then test. (Anchors usually go on opposite sides of the body — one per knee.)

  • Chaining States — when a target state is too far to reach in one jump (e.g. climbing out of a downward spiral), build a bridge of intermediate states, anchoring each to a different knuckle, then fire them in sequence from negative → positive.

  • Circle of Excellence (Grinder & DeLozier) — imagine a circle on the floor, load it with a peak state (step in, fully relive it, amplify, step out, test), then future-pace it: imagine stepping into it right before the real situation that needs it.

  • The underlying skill — noticing states: every technique above assumes you can tell what state you're in, so train that awareness first.

    • Downtime — a light inward trance: turn attention inward one sense at a time (inner sounds, then images, then feelings). It's the doorway to deeper trance. (Opposite: Uptime — alert to the outside world, but still guided by inner awareness.)
    • State of Consciousness Awareness — a daily journaling habit: list the states you were in, rate each, and mark what truly triggered it (often something subtle, like a tone of voice). It trains you to notice states — the foundation of every other pattern.

Submodalities are the fine "settings" of a mental image, sound, or feeling — how bright, big, close, loud, warm it is, and where it sits. The key discovery: a feeling's intensity comes from these settings, not from the content. So you can rewire an automatic reaction by finding the few "driver" settings that hold the charge and swapping or reversing them fast. That's the engine behind the Swish and its whole family.

Find the driver submodality and turn it. A feeling is a set of adjustable dials (brightness, size, distance, location) — locate the one carrying the charge and you can shrink a craving, drain a fear, or swap a habit, all without arguing with the feeling itself.

The frameworks

  • The signature pattern: - catch the mental cue that sets off a bad habit and, over and over, fast, replace it with a vivid picture of the person you'd rather be — until your brain automatically goes there instead.

    • The Swish (Bandler & Grinder) — replace an automatic unwanted reaction with a resourceful self-image. Build a small, dim image of the you you'd rather be; find the big, bright trigger image that sets off the bad habit; tuck the replacement as a tiny dot in its corner; then "swish" — the trigger shrinks and shoots away while the replacement explodes big and bright. Clear your mind, repeat 5–7× fast, test.
  • Variations on the same engine: - once you know a feeling is just a set of adjustable internal "settings," you can shrink it (Kinesthetic Swish), walk it off (Pragmagraphic), burn it out by overdoing it (Blow-Out), or spin it together with its opposite (Spinning Icons) — same engine, different gears.

  • Pleasure/decision tools: - Godiva borrows excitement you already have and glues it onto a task you've been avoiding; Decision Destroyer travels back to the moment a limiting decision was made and rewrites it with a strength you only gained later.

  • Key concepts — the handful of terms the whole chapter runs on:

    • Submodality — the adjustable "settings" of a memory or mental image, sense by sense. A picture in your mind has settings like size, brightness, color, how near or far it is, where it sits, and whether it's a still photo or a moving clip. A sound has volume and pitch. A feeling has a location in your body, a temperature, and movement. These are the dials you turn to change how something affects you.
    • Driver submodality — out of all those settings, the one that changes the feeling the most when you adjust it (often brightness, size, or distance). Find this one first — turning it gives you the biggest result for the least effort.
    • Associated — reliving a memory from inside your own eyes, as if it's happening to you now. This carries the full emotional charge. (In the Swish, the trigger image is associated — that's why it hits hard.)
    • Dissociated — watching yourself from the outside, like seeing yourself in a movie. This drains most of the emotional charge. (In the Swish, the better-self replacement is dissociated — distant enough to pull you toward it.)
    • Mapping across — copying the settings from one image onto another to change how the second one feels. (E.g. take what makes a good memory feel good — bright, close, warm — and apply those same settings to a flat one.)

"The Big Book of NLP, Expanded: 350+ Techniques, Patterns & Strategies of Neuro Linguistic Programming" by Shlomo Vaknin and Erickson Institute.

Ecology is NLP's term for the systemic impact of a change — checking how a desired change ripples through the whole system it lives in before you make it. The word is borrowed deliberately from biology: just as you can't change one species in an ecosystem without affecting all the others, you can't change one behavior, belief, or state in a person without affecting everything connected to it.

The skill's glossary puts it as: the state where all parts, values, and needs align with an outcome and nothing important is harmed. A change is "ecological" when it fits the whole system; it's un-ecological when it solves the stated problem but quietly breaks something else.

Before investing resources, define what you actually want — in sensory-specific, self-actionable terms — then stress-test that outcome against every part of yourself and every system you touch. An outcome no part of you objects to, and that harms no one, is the only kind that holds.

The Rule: Never commit to a change without an ecology check — surface the secondary gain and any objecting part first, or the change won't stick.

The 8 frameworks - Well-Defined Outcomes. A 10-step recipe for a "well-formed" goal answering "What do you really want?":

  1. State it positive & specific (no "not" frames)
  2. Frame it in terms of your own ability/actions, within your responsibility
  3. Anchor to context — where / when / with whom, and where not
  4. Describe in all five senses
  5. Chunk down into achievable objectives
  6. List the resources needed
  7. Run an ecology check
  8. Set observable milestones on a timeline
  9. Write it down
  10. Test and monitor, refining as you go

Helpful Mindsets:

  • Failure Into Feedback (Dilts) — break a "failure" down into what you saw, heard, and felt so it stops feeling overwhelming, mine it for the lessons it's actually teaching you, and pair it with a strong memory of success — so the setback becomes useful feedback instead of proof you can't do it.
  • E & E.P. Formation Pattern (Evidence & Evidence Procedure) — defines how you'll know the outcome is achieved: concrete observable evidence, the repeatable procedure to detect it (and counter-evidence), timeframes, and anticipated resistances.
  • Finding Positive Intention / Behavior Appreciation — a self-sabotaging habit is usually trying to do something good for you underneath. "Talk to" the part behind it, ask "What were you trying to do for me?", and keep asking until you reach the real need. Behavior Appreciation does this physically — separate floor-spots for the behavior and for the part — so you can step between them and keep them distinct.

Ecology at three scales:

  • Ecology Check (Grinder & Bandler) — dissociate to 3rd position; ask who benefits / who's hurt, short- vs long-term. Tool: Cartesian coordinates (do X → will/won't happen; don't do X → will/won't happen).
  • Secondary Gain & Personal Ecology — "What about staying stuck gives me a reason to stay stuck?"
  • Whole System Ecology — does this impair any other person or institution? Leverage question: "If I could have it now, would I take it?"

Mental models:

  • Be → Do → Have — become the person who can achieve the outcome, then act, then enjoy the result.
  • Failure is feedback — every miss is data + warning-knowledge (Edison's light bulbs).
  • A problem behavior is a messenger with a positive intention, not an enemy to suppress.

Key takeaways

  1. Phrase every goal positively, specifically, and as something you can act on.
  2. Anchor outcomes to a concrete context and all five senses so the brain treats them as real.
  3. Always run an ecology check before committing — surface secondary gains and objecting parts first.
  4. Define your evidence and evidence procedure up front.
  5. Reframe failure as feedback — mine "failure" memories for learnings.
  6. Find and respond to the positive intention behind a negative behavior.
  7. Check ecology at three scales: parts of yourself, your personal values, the wider human/institutional systems.

"The Big Book of NLP, Expanded: 350+ Techniques, Patterns & Strategies of Neuro Linguistic Programming" by Shlomo Vaknin and Erickson Institute.

Vaknin frames these 21 presuppositions as "an excellent and especially useful collection."

The six that do the heaviest lifting in actual change-work: #8 (every behavior has a positive intention), #12 (meaning = the response you get), #14 (no failure, only feedback), #15 (flexibility = influence), #16 (resistance = lack of rapport), and #17 (people already have the resources).

The 21 NLP Presuppositions

  1. The map is not the territory. — Your mental model of the world is never the world itself, and is always improvable.
  2. People respond according to their internal maps. — To understand someone, learn their map, not what they "should" do.
  3. Meaning operates context-dependently. — The same words/behavior mean different things in different situations.
  4. Mind and body affect each other. — You think with your body, not just your brain; physiology and cognition are one system.
  5. Individual skills function by developing and sequencing rep systems. — Ability is built from how you order Visual/Auditory/Kinesthetic representations.
  6. We respect each person's model of the world. — You needn't agree, but respecting their map creates understanding and less conflict.
  7. Person and behavior describe different phenomena — we are more than our behavior. — A single act or pattern doesn't define the whole person.
  8. Every behavior has utility and usefulness — in some context. — Even troubling behavior carries a hidden value (basis for utilization & positive intention).
  9. We evaluate behavior and change in terms of context and ecology. — Consider the systemic/ripple impact of any change (systems theory).
  10. We cannot not communicate. — Clothes, posture, micro-expressions all signal; you're always communicating.
  11. The way we communicate affects perception and reception. — Your delivery (sub-modalities, style) shapes how the message is received.
  12. The meaning of communication lies in the response you get. — Regardless of intent, your communication is what the other person received.
  13. The one who sets the frame for the communication controls the action. — Whoever defines the surrounding assumptions steers the exchange.
  14. "There is no failure, only feedback." — A philosophy to live by: turn every "failure" into learning.
  15. The person with the most flexibility exercises the most influence in the system. — Behavioral choice = control.
  16. Resistance indicates the lack of rapport. — Resistance is a signal to rebuild rapport, not push harder.
  17. People have the internal resources they need to succeed. — Your job is to direct them to those resources, not supply them.
  18. Humans have the ability to experience one-trial learning. — A single intense experience can install a lasting change (good or bad).
  19. All communication should increase choice. — Ethical use of NLP expands options; it never coerces or limits.
  20. People make the best choices open to them when they act. — Given their map and resources at that moment, they chose what seemed best.
  21. As responseable persons, we can run our own brain and control our results. — You can take charge of your own neurology and outcomes.

More Explanations for the Tricky Ones

Presupposition #13 — "The one who sets the frame for the communication controls the action"

Don't walk into an important conversation arguing the content — decide first what the conversation is about and what assumptions govern it, because a frame always exists, and whoever sets it has already shaped which arguments can win.

  • What a "frame" is

    A frame is the set of unspoken assumptions surrounding a conversation before any content is exchanged — what the discussion is about, why it's happening, what counts as relevant, what a "good outcome" would be, and who's in what role. Vaknin's own words from the book: the frame consists of "things like the assumptions about why the discussion is taking place, what the environment means about it, that sort of thing." And the key line: "Every communication comes in a package of presuppositions."

  • Why the frame, not the argument, controls the outcome

    Most people fight over the content ("here are my five reasons…") while the other party has quietly already set the frame — and the frame decides which content even counts. A few examples of the same facts under different frames:

    • A salary conversation framed as "Can we afford a raise this year?" vs. "What's the cost of you leaving and us re-hiring?" — identical facts, opposite gravity.

    • A mistake framed as "Who's to blame?" vs. "What does this teach us?" — the second frame makes blame-seeking literally feel off-topic.

    • A negotiation framed as "How do we split this pie?" vs. "How do we make the pie bigger?" — the frame predetermines whether it's adversarial or collaborative.

    Whoever owns the frame has already won the argument that matters, because they've defined the terms on which all the smaller arguments get judged. The other person is now playing on a board someone else laid out.

  • "Sets the frame" — this is active, and it's usually unclaimed

    The crucial insight is that a frame always exists — the only question is whether you set it on purpose or inherited one by default. The book gives the practical move directly:

    "Before an important discussion, ask yourself what the frame will be if you do nothing. Consider how it may support or defeat your objectives. Then think about how that frame might be improved."

    That's the whole discipline in three steps:

    1. What's the default frame? If I walk in and say nothing about the terms, what assumptions will govern this? (Often the other side's, or a culturally inherited one.)
    2. Does it serve or sink me? Whose objectives does the default frame favor?
    3. What's the better frame, and how do I install it? — usually in the opening seconds, by naming what this is about.
  • The protective half

    The presupposition cuts both ways, and the book stresses the defensive use. Presuppositions "can be constructive when they provide positive guidance. But they can cause harm, as they do when they serve to filter and bias propaganda. Instead of being a sitting duck, you can be proactive."

    So #13 isn't only about steering others — it's about noticing the frame being placed on you. When a question contains a buried assumption ("Why does your team keep missing deadlines?" presupposes you keep missing them), answering the content accepts the frame. The skilled move is to surface and challenge the frame before engaging.

Presupposition #15 — "The person with the most flexibility exercises the most influence in the system"

Influence doesn't come from having the one right move or pushing it harder — it comes from having more moves than the situation can block, so that whenever a response fails you simply shift to the next one and keep steering toward your outcome.

  • Where this comes from: the Law of Requisite Variety

    This is NLP's adaptation of a principle from cybernetics — Ashby's Law of Requisite Variety: in any system, the element with the widest range of responses controls the system. The skill's glossary phrases the NLP shorthand as "only variety can destroy variety" — to handle a complex or rigid situation, you need more available responses than the situation can throw at you.

    "Flexibility" here means a concrete, countable thing: the number of distinct responses you can actually produce in a given moment. Not how clever or how right you are — how many different moves you have.

  • Why more options = more control (and not the reverse)

    The intuition most people carry is backwards. We assume control comes from certainty, firmness, having the one right answer — digging in. This presupposition says control comes from the opposite: from not being locked into a single response.

    The mechanism: whoever has only one response is predictable and stoppable — block that one move and they're stuck. Whoever has five responses, when the first fails, simply shifts to the second. They cannot be cornered, because the system can't exhaust their repertoire. Over any real interaction, the more-flexible party keeps adapting until they reach their outcome, while the rigid party stalls at the first obstacle.

  • A few concrete pictures:

    • The thermostat controls the room not by being hotter or colder, but by being able to go either direction in response to whatever the room does.

    • In a negotiation, the person who has only one acceptable outcome and one tactic is the one who gets stuck; the person who can switch between asking, listening, reframing, walking away, and coming back steers it.

    • A parent facing a tantrum who has only "raise my voice" loses; the one who can switch to humor, distraction, curiosity, or silence finds the lever.

    • A salesperson with one pitch fails on the prospect it doesn't fit; one with ten angles keeps adjusting until something lands.

  • "Behavioral choice = control" — the practical reframe

    The actionable translation: when you feel stuck, you don't have an understanding problem, you have a flexibility problem. You've run out of responses. The question stops being "Why won't they change / why won't this work?" and becomes "What else could I do here that I haven't tried?"

    This flips frustration into a generative question. Frustration is the felt sense of having exhausted your options; the cure is to manufacture another option, not to push the failing one harder. (Pushing harder is the opposite — it's reducing your variety to a single repeated move, which is why it so often fails.

Presupposition #17 — "People have the internal resources they need to succeed"

Assume the person already contains everything they need to be who they want to be in the stuck moment, and treat your role as helping them find and reconnect that resource — because a capability they retrieve themselves sticks, while one you hand them doesn't.

  • What "resource" means here

    In NLP a resource is an internal state or capability — calm, confidence, focus, curiosity, decisiveness, compassion — that a person has already experienced at some point in their life. The claim isn't that someone literally already has the money, the skill certificate, or the job offer. It's that they already possess the neurological raw material for the state they'd need to get those things. Somewhere in their history they have been confident, been calm, been resourceful — even if not in the context where they're currently stuck.

    So the presupposition is really: the problem is not a missing resource, it's a resource that isn't connected to the right context. The confidence exists; it just isn't showing up in the job interview / the difficult conversation / the moment of temptation.

  • "Direct, not supply" — the practitioner's actual job

    This is the operative half, and it flips the usual helper role on its head.

    • Supplying = "Here's what you should do, here's my advice, let me give you confidence, let me motivate you." This positions you as the source. It breeds dependence, it meets resistance, and it doesn't last, because a resource handed from outside isn't wired into the person's own neurology.

    • Directing = guiding the person's mind through a process that retrieves their own existing resource and re-attaches it to the stuck context. You're a navigator, not a supplier. "You direct the client's mind through a process and let it do the work." Their brain makes the change; you just point it.

  • How this shows up mechanically in the patterns

    Almost every technique in this book is a machine for relocating an existing resource, never for manufacturing one:

    • Anchoring / Circle of Excellence — recall a past moment when you did have the state, fire it, and transfer it to where it's needed. The state already existed; anchoring just makes it portable.

    • Change Personal History / Re-Imprinting — take resources the adult now has and carry them back to a past self who lacked them.

    • Accessing Resourceful States — name the quality needed, find a memory of it, step in, borrow more via 2nd-position modeling.

    • Six Step Reframe — even the problem behavior is reframed as containing a positive resource, not as a deficit to fill from outside.

    Notice the pattern: the practitioner never installs confidence from scratch. They locate where the client has already felt it and re-route it.

  • Why hold this belief even if it's not literally "true"

    You don't adopt #17 because it's empirically airtight — you adopt it because of the stance it forces on you:

    • It makes you curious instead of prescriptive — you go looking for where the resource lives rather than lecturing.

    • It keeps agency with the client — they leave knowing they did it, which makes the change durable and self-reinforcing.

    • It dissolves the "broken person" frame — the person isn't deficient, they're momentarily disconnected from their own capability.

Blogs and Articles

The Art of Asking Smarter Questions - Arnaud Chevallier, et al., Harvard Business Review [Link]

Using these five techniques helps us ask smarter questions by transforming our questioning from a reactive habit into a deliberate strategy. Instead of just asking whatever pops into our head, we can look at a situation and decide exactly what kind of thinking our team or project needs at that moment.

  1. Investigative: What’s Known?

    • Purpose: Digs deep to generate nonobvious information and clarify the core problem or opportunity.

    • Example prompts: What happened? What is and isn't working? What evidence supports our proposed plan?

    • The Goal: To avoid surface-level assumptions. It often utilizes successive "Why?" or "How?" questions to uncover overlooked data.

  2. Speculative: What If?

    • Purpose: Helps you consider a problem more broadly, reframe the issue, and explore creative, alternative solutions.

    • Example prompts: What other scenarios might exist? Could we do this differently? What potential solutions have we not considered?

    • The Goal: To overcome limiting assumptions and jump-start innovation (often using prompts like "How might we...?").

  3. Productive: Now What?

    • Purpose: Assesses the availability of talent, capabilities, time, and resources needed to execute a strategy.

    • Example prompts: What is the next step? Do we have the resources to move ahead? Are we ready to decide?

    • The Goal: To identify metrics, milestones, and potential capacity bottlenecks to keep plans on track.

  4. Interpretive: So, What…?

    • Purpose: Focuses on sensemaking and synthesis by pushing you to continually redefine the core issue and draw out the true implications of your data.

    • Example prompts: What did we learn from this new information? How does this fit with our overarching goal?

    • The Goal: To convert raw information into actionable insight and ensure everything ladders back up to the main mission.

  5. Subjective: What’s Unsaid?

    • Purpose: Deals with the human element—personal reservations, frustrations, hidden agendas, and emotional alignments that can derail a decision.

    • Example prompts: How do you really feel about this decision? Are all stakeholders genuinely aligned?

    • The Goal: To clear out "pluralistic ignorance" (where team members hide misgivings because no one else is speaking up) by creating a safe space for dissenting views.

Transformations That Work - Michael Mankins, Patrick Litre, Harvard Business Review [Link]

Summary:

  1. Treating transformation as a continuous process: Instead of viewing change as a discrete program with a strict beginning and end (the traditional "unfreeze-change-refreeze" model), successful companies recognize that they must operate in a state of constant transformation and manage an evergreen backlog of issues.

  2. Building it into the company's operating rhythm: Transformation shouldn't be isolated in a separate program-management office. It must be woven directly into the executive team's regular, weekly operating routines and plan reviews so that managing change becomes part of everyone's day job.

  3. Explicitly managing organizational energy: Because transformations fail when they exhaust employees, successful programs carefully sequence initiatives. They ensure no single function or group is forced to change too many primary routines at the same time, and they reward milestones to sustain morale.

  4. Using aspirations, not just targets, to stretch thinking: Relying strictly on external benchmarks often sets the bar too low and limits "the art of the possible." True transformations rely on bold ambitions and breakthrough thinking to fundamentally reshape business models.

  5. Driving change from the middle out: Top-down mandates can be superficial, and bottom-up efforts often just trim around the edges. Midlevel executives possess the unique combination of frontline experience and strategic context needed to design and execute meaningful, lasting structural changes.

  6. Accessing substantial external capital from the start: Transforming a business is expensive and cannot be reliably funded through internal cost-cutting alone. Successful efforts tap the capital markets early to ensure the initiative is fully funded to fuel growth.

Make Decisions with a VC Mindset - Ilya A. Strebulaev, Alex Dang, Harvard Business Review [Link]

To spur innovation within a traditional organization using the VC mindset, the article highlights that we don't need to apply these rules to routine decisions in predictable environments. Instead, we should deploy them strategically in times of high uncertainty, disruption, or when developing radically new products.

  1. A High Comfort Level with Failure

    The VC Skill: VCs accept that up to 80% of their investments will fail. Their business model relies on the understanding that home runs matter and strikeouts don't; one massive success can cover all other losses combined.

  2. Prioritizing the Individual over the Group

    The VC Skill: VCs seek out contrarian ideas, recognizing that breakthroughs often come from a single person in the room rather than a group. They actively structure environments to prevent individuals from being drowned out by group consensus. They achieve this by:

    • Keeping teams small (often 3 to 5 partners) to ensure clear communication and accountability.
    • Collecting independent feedback in advance (sometimes blindly) before meetings to avoid bias.
    • Allowing junior team members to speak first so they aren't swayed by senior executives.
  3. Valuing Disagreement over Consensus

    The VC Skill: Research cited in the article shows that VC firms requiring unanimous approval actually perform worse. High-performing VCs intentionally lean into friction and unresolved opposition. For instance, some use a "consensus minus x" rule, while others (like Venrock) allow the lead partner to make the final investment decision unilaterally, regardless of other partners' skepticism. They also intentionally assign a "devil's advocate" or "red team" to argue against deals.

  4. Championing Exceptions over Dogma

    The VC Skill: VCs allow for workarounds and give individuals the power to keep a controversial idea alive even if the broader team rejects it. This includes tools like the "anti-veto," where a leader can unilaterally move a project forward despite a negative team vote to protect unconventional opportunities (as seen with early investments in Zoom and Kahoot).

  5. Extreme Agility over Bureaucracy

    The VC Skill: VCs move at an incredibly fast pace because they know slow tracking means losing the best deals to competitors. They set aggressive timelines (e.g., funding decisions within days or weeks) and operate with a streamlined, single-tier decision model.

Advice for the Unmotivated - Robin Abrahams, Boris Groysberg, Harvard Business Review [Link]

Based on the provided article, the authors outline a four-step process called DEAR (detachment, empathy, action, and reframing) to help individuals interrupt the cycle of numbness and recover their motivation at work:

  1. Detachment

    Before making major career moves or reacting under stress, you need distance and perspective to clear cognitive distortions.

    • Reflect and break away: Review what went well at the end of the day, then completely disconnect from work using a physical ritual (like closing your laptop or signing out of email).

    • Meditate: Dedicate 10 to 20 minutes twice a day to simple focus or breathing exercises to lower your stress response.

    • Move your body: Use even brief stretches, walks, or exercise to replenish psychological energy and improve mood.

    • Think in the third person: Address yourself by name or use third-person pronouns in your inner monologue to look at your problems more objectively.

  2. Empathy

    Disengagement often causes "depersonalization." Reconnecting with your humanity and the humanity of others helps rebuild motivation.

    • Practice self-care: Acknowledge your values and treat yourself kindly with small daily rituals.

    • Treat people as people: Combat numbness by making eye contact, practicing social niceties, and appreciating colleagues' work.

    • Ask questions: Stay curious about your customers, bosses, and peers to gain fresh perspectives on your role.

    • Look for friends: Cultivate real workplace friendships to make a frustrating job more enjoyable.

    • Help others: Explaining systems to new hires, mentoring, or assisting teammates builds empowerment and has been shown to reduce personal burnout.

  3. Action

    Channel restless or frustrated energy into proactive, productive strategies.

    • Tackle the little stuff: Checking small, mundane tasks off your to-do list builds a sense of momentum and small wins.

    • Invest in outside activities: Hobbies, side hustles, or volunteering provide a sense of satisfaction that carries over into your primary job.

    • Job craft: Redefine your current responsibilities by strategically shifting your focus to tasks that leverage your strengths or interests.

    • Gamify: Turn boring tasks or meetings into mental puzzles, competitions, or games to trigger your competitive drive.

    • Pretend and dress the part: Imagine how a mentor or superhero would handle a situation, and wear clothing that makes you feel confident and professional to help you step into character.

  4. Reframing

    Alter your perspective regarding who you are at work and why your job matters.

    • Examine your work identity: Create an informal title for yourself (e.g., teacher, visionary, logistics expert) that reflects the unique value you naturally bring to a team.

    • Look at the big picture: Focus on the why rather than the how of your tedious daily tasks by connecting them to a higher-order purpose or larger organizational goal.

    • Consider how others benefit: Actively remind yourself of who your work serves—whether it is the clients you help directly or your family members who rely on your income.

Case Study: How Aggressively Should a Bank Pursue AI? - Thomas H. Davenport, George Westerman [Link]

Expert Recommendations

  • Noemie Ellezam-Danielo (Société Générale):
    • Fix the Alignment: The tech team shouldn't dictate strategy alone. Siti should form a cross-functional executive group to align AI with core business goals.
    • Segmented Approach: AI needs to adapt to varied customer behaviors across different demographics and geographies, rather than forcing a blanket 95% digital mandate.
    • Look for Back-Office Wins: Focus on high-impact, lower-risk areas first, such as automating resource-intensive customer identity verifications.
  • Sastry Durvasula (TIAA):
    • Embrace Disruption Safely: NVF needs "Michaels" to challenge the status quo, but the technology must supplement rather than entirely replace human service.
    • Culture & Upskilling Overhaul: The shift requires an AI-savvy leadership culture. Because modern generative AI tools are user-friendly, the focus should be on upskilling existing staff to handle higher-value roles rather than just slashing head count.

Establishing a Solid Digital Foundation for AI-Everywhere Webinar - Harvard Business Review [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Organizations across all industries are experiencing an unprecedented wave of excitement surrounding generative AI. However, there is a stark gap between a company’s AI aspirations and its actual digital capabilities. While technology and business leaders are being pressured to deploy GenAI solutions rapidly, many lack the infrastructure to support them sustainably.

  2. Alex Clemente reviews data from a recent HBR-AS research report (sponsored by Kyndryl) focused on the current realities of GenAI adoption.

    • Many early-stage GenAI initiatives fail to scale successfully or move out of the proof-of-concept phase because organizations treat AI as an isolated tool rather than an integrated capability.
    • Data quality, governance, and organizational cultural resistance remain the top barriers to meaningful adoption.
  3. To pivot from "AI hype" to "AI success," Howard Miller and Firas Bouz highlight the strategic best practices required to build an enduring digital framework:

    • Data Readiness & Architecture: Before deploying AI models, organizations must clean, unify, and secure their data architecture. AI is only as good as the underlying data feeding it.

    • Modernized Infrastructure: Legacy tech stacks cannot keep up with the compute-heavy, dynamic processing needs of GenAI. Moving toward flexible, cloud-enabled or hybrid infrastructure is essential.

    • Culture and Training: Overcoming user reluctance and bridging the skills gap is critical. True ROI comes from training employees to trust and integrate these technologies into their daily workflows.

Preparing for a Future Powered by Generative AI - Harvard Business Review [Link]

Transforming Consulting Through Generative AI- Harvard Business Review [Link]

Selected takeaways:

  1. Consulting firms are seeing massive speed and efficiency benefits by positioning AI as a collaborative partner rather than a simple chatbot:

    • KPMG: Has deployed gen AI capabilities to over 45,000 employees. Using the technology has cut coding assistance by 30 minutes and competitive intelligence studies by 90 minutes. Surveys show that 60% of users spend more time on high-value work, and 58% report increased creativity.

    • IBM Consulting: Built a platform featuring hundreds of trained AI assistants. A task like mapping a consumer persona—which historically took a human consultant half a day—can now be generated as a baseline within 60 seconds.

    • Omni Business Intelligence Solutions: Used gen AI to craft personalized proposals and marketing material, which freed up enough executive time to drive a 80% increase in closed deals year-over-year.

  2. Succeeding with AI relies heavily on closing user intuition gaps and training knowledge workers broadly. KPMG consumer trust data details a strong generational split in technical literacy and sentiment:

    • 74% of Gen Z and Millennials consider themselves highly knowledgeable about gen AI, compared to only 42% of Gen X and 13% of Boomers/Silent generations.

    • To counteract this discrepancy, companies like KPMG have developed "persona-based learning journeys" led by peer "digital navigators", resulting in over 74,000 completed AI courses across their U.S. workforce.

    • Similarly, PwC has invested $1 billion in gen AI, training over 75,000 employees on responsible prompt design and AI ethics to reduce anxiety surrounding job replacement.

How to Marry Process Management and AI - Thomas H. Davenport and Thomas C. Redman, Business Review [Link]

Selected takeaways:

  1. AI typically supports narrow, specific tasks or subprocesses rather than complete, end-to-end workflows. To transform a whole operation, companies must string multiple AI use cases together. This requires heavy change management, breaking down departmental silos, and establishing common data standards across the organization.

  2. Companies looking to merge process management with AI should follow a structured approach:

    Step 1: Establish ownership. Appoint a dedicated "process owner" who can influence cross-functional teams and coordinate departments (e.g., sales, finance, operations) toward an end-to-end goal.

    Step 2: Identify process customers. Determine exactly who benefits from the process (internal or external). Use generative AI to analyze customer feedback from calls, emails, and social media to find gaps.

    Step 3: Map out the existing process. Use process mining and task mining software to pull real-time data from system logs. This highlights actual bottlenecks and hidden inefficiencies instead of relying on manual guesswork.

    Step 4: Establish performance measures. Define clear metrics (such as cycle times or error rates) and set realistic targets based on what the data shows is possible.

    Step 5: Consider process enablers. Match the right technology to the problem. Use Robotic Process Automation (RPA) for routine, repetitive tasks; use generative AI for unstructured tasks (like drafting contracts); and use traditional machine learning for predictive tasks (like fraud detection or pricing).

    Step 6: Redesign the process. Utilize AI-driven design tools (like digital twins or generative AI process templates) to quickly simulate, build, and optimize new workflows.

    Step 7: Implement and monitor. Continuously monitor the new process using process mining to eliminate variations, adjust to new business requirements, and maintain predictable control.

The Secret to Successful AI-Driven Process Redesign - H. James Wilson and Paul R. Daugherty, Harvard Business Review [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Generative AI and natural-language interfaces have made powerful tools accessible to nontechnical employees. Business transformation is no longer a niche technical skill; it is now in the hands of frontline workers who can use everyday language to surface data-rich insights and streamline their workflows.
  2. Rather than displacing the workforce, AI acts as a tool that amplifies human creativity, experience, and intuition. Human oversight remains the critical linchpin for ensuring alignment with objectives and refining system design.
  3. The future of continuous improvement lies in autonomous AI agents that exhibit goal-oriented behavior, logical reasoning, planning, and long-term reflection. These agents can independently make decisions, execute complex multistep workflows, and continuously adapt their strategies.
  4. The future of continuous improvement lies in autonomous AI agents that exhibit goal-oriented behavior, logical reasoning, planning, and long-term reflection. These agents can independently make decisions, execute complex multistep workflows, and continuously adapt their strategies.
  5. While Robotic Process Automation (RPA) is easily tripped up by process variations, ecosystems of collaborative, multimodal AI agents can handle highly complex, knowledge-intensive, and manual workflows (such as hospital revenue cycles or enterprise invoice processing) with high accuracy by learning from human demonstrations.

What People Still Get Wrong about Negotiations - Max H. Bazerman, Harvard Business Review [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Most negotiators mistakenly believe that a negotiation is a zero-sum game—meaning any gain for one side is an automatic loss for the other. This mindset causes people to focus strictly on claiming value rather than creating it, leaving significant profitability and mutual benefits on the table.
  2. To avoid leaving value behind, you must identify all potential issues (beyond just the price or main percentage) and determine their relative importance before the meeting. Creating a weighted score sheet—allocating dollar or point values to different trade-offs—allows you to evaluate complex package offers logically rather than relying on emotional, on-the-spot intuition.
  3. Resolving issues sequentially (whether starting with the easiest or hardest) is a trap. Finalizing one item before discussing the rest prevents you from discovering smart trades across different issues. Keep all items open until you can jointly map out a package that reaches the Pareto-efficient frontier (where neither side can improve without harming the other).
  4. When trust is low or counterparts hide their cards, use these tools to uncover relative priorities:
    • Build trust and share information: Cultivate an open, problem-solving dialogue (especially critical for internal corporate negotiations).
    • Ask diagnostic questions: Instead of asking what they want, ask how they value issue A relative to issue B.
    • Give away information first: Leverage the norm of reciprocity. Sharing your own priorities (not your walk-away bottom line) prompts the other party to share theirs.
    • Make Multiple Offers Simultaneously (MESOs): Propose 3 packages of equal value to you but with different structures. The counterpart's preference will reveal their hidden priorities without them having to tell you directly.
  5. The negotiation doesn't have to end when the deal is signed. Once an initial agreement is locked in, the adversarial tension usually drops. You can propose looking at the deal one more time to see if any new terms can be added to make it even better for both sides, with the strict ground rule that the original agreement stands unless a mutually superior alternative is found.

Leaders shouldn't Try to Do It All - A.G. Lafley and Roger L. Martin, Harvard Business Review [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Shift from Absolute Importance to Comparative Advantage

    • The Trap: Most leaders prioritize tasks based solely on how important they are to the organization, taking on the top items until they run out of time.
    • The Fix: Leaders should only spend time on activities that nobody else in the organization can do nearly as well. If someone else can do it at parity or better, it should be offloaded—even if it is a critical task.
  2. The Four-Step Process to Manage Time

    The authors suggest a rigorous framework to restructure your calendar:

    • Remove absolute disadvantages: Identify "should do" tasks that you handle simply because of tradition or precedent. If a subordinate possesses equal or better skills for that specific task (e.g., routine faculty hiring or standard investor relations), hand it over completely.
    • Delegate minor comparative advantages: Even if you are highly skilled at something (like creative brand reviews or routine financial management), delegate it if your advantage is only modest. This empowers your team and frees up massive blocks of your time.
    • Take on strong comparative advantages: Reinvest your recovered hours into areas where you can make a unique, decisive difference. For example, A.G. Lafley focused heavily on driving a consumer-centric innovation process, while Roger Martin used his background to write books and articles that elevated his school's external profile.
    • Dedicate time to the irreplaceable: Protect your calendar for high-leverage tasks that literally only the leader can execute, such as establishing massive external strategic partnerships, setting long-term brand visions, and individually mentoring the next generation of leadership.
  3. An organization can expand its capacity, but a leader's time is fundamentally finite. Leading to win means accepting that you cannot do it all, and relentlessly focusing your energy where your personal value-add is greatest.

Want Your Company to Get Better at Experimentation? Learn Fast by Democratizing Testing - Iavor Bojinov, David Holtz, Ramesh Johari, Sven Schmit and Martin Tingley, Harvard Business Review [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. The Necessity of Scaling Up

    • High Failure Rates: Most new ideas do not yield positive results, and it is incredibly difficult to predict which ones will succeed.

    • The AI Imperative: As generative AI drastically lowers the cost of creating new digital user experiences, companies must vastly increase their testing volume—into hundreds or thousands of experiments per year—to remain competitive.

  2. Democratizing the Testing Process

    • The Bottleneck: Relying solely on data scientists to design, run, and analyze every test severely limits an organization’s capacity to scale.
    • The Self-Service Model: Companies must empower product managers, engineers, designers, and marketers to run their own experiments by building or buying platforms with automated guardrails, simple interfaces, and embedded statistical rigor.
    • Redefining the Data Scientist's Role: Data scientists should shift from execution to high-impact work: building platforms, training teams, developing new statistical methodologies, and uncovering overarching strategic patterns.
  3. Transitioning to "Experimentation Programs"

    • Look Beyond Individual Memos: Reviewing tests in isolation wastes time and fails to build institutional knowledge.
    • Learn Across Experiments: Organizations should group tests into programs (e.g., focusing entirely on "search functionality" or "product-detail pages") to identify macro-trends, catch diminishing returns, and determine where to reallocate corporate resources.
    • Build a Knowledge Repository: Implement a centralized, searchable system—potentially enhanced by a generative AI assistant—to store hypotheses, metrics, and long-term insights across the entire enterprise.
  4. Shifting Cultural and Financial Incentives

    • Reward Outcomes, Not Outputs: Evaluating employees on the number of "successful" experiments makes them risk-averse. Instead, incentives should be tied to the overall performance of the business unit.
    • Mitigate Risk Progressively: To encourage high-risk, high-reward testing without fear of breaking systems, companies should leverage automated rollbacks (trip wires based on guardrail metrics) and roll out features in gradual phases.

How Project Leaders Can Tame Unpredictability - Anton Skornyakov, Harvard Business Review [Link]

Takeaways:

Project leaders can tame unpredictability by using the agile technique of vertical slicing—breaking a project down into small, fully functional "slices" to run rapid tests, accelerate learning, and mitigate risks before scaling.

The author outlines how to apply this strategy across four key areas of unpredictability:

  1. Human Behavior

    • The Challenge: People's reactions to organizational change or new initiatives are highly unpredictable.

    • The Takeaway: Deploy a narrowly defined, representative test group to observe real-world behavior and uncover practical issues (e.g., logistical bottlenecks, material defects) before committing a massive budget.

  2. Interpersonal Dynamics

    • The Challenge: Changes affecting career paths, organizational structures, shared responsibilities, or network effects introduce complex emotional and political dynamics.

    • The Takeaway: Unlike behavioral tests, your slice here needs a large enough sample size to trigger and observe those group dynamics, but focused on a small, manageable behavioral shift.

  3. Technological Change and Interoperability

    • The Challenge: Integrating new technology with legacy systems or non-standardized external platforms is a major source of uncertainty.

    • The Takeaway: Create a "tracer bullet"—a minimum viable version of the end-to-end tech solution. Manually integrate just one stream of data (e.g., a single vendor or route) all the way to the consumer-facing frontend to catch integration friction early.

  4. Organizational Interdependencies

    • The Challenge: Relying on multiple internal teams and external stakeholders introduces risks outside of your direct control.

    • The Takeaway: Use an "organizational tracer bullet" to test a single operational scenario across all involved teams. This forces collaboration early and exposes contract or process hurdles before finalizing large-scale agreements.

Sam Altman May Control Our Future—Can He Be Trusted? - The New Yorker [Link]

Substack

Snowflake: AI Consumption Wins - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

The enterprise software market is splitting between consumption-based models (which thrive as AI scales) and traditional seat-based SaaS models (which face headwinds as AI potentially replaces human roles).

Snowflake surged 38% after hours, completely shifting the narrative around its position in the AI race. Salesforce stock continued to slide as strong AI adoption metrics failed to translate into clear top-line acceleration.

The differences between Snowflake and Salesforce

  1. Core Product & Purpose

    • Salesforce is primarily a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) application layer. It is built to store and manage customer data, sales pipelines, and support workflows through an interface designed for human workers.

    • Snowflake is an enterprise Data Cloud and Analytics Platform. It is a backend data warehouse and data lake layer built to ingest, store, govern, and analyze massive volumes of diverse structured and unstructured data from all corporate systems (including Salesforce, ERPs, and web logs).

  2. Business & Pricing Model

    • Salesforce traditionally operates on a Seat-Based SaaS Model. Companies pay a fixed subscription price per user license.
      • The AI Challenge: As AI agents automate tasks, companies may need fewer human "seats," threatening Salesforce's core growth model unless they can pivot to charging for AI-delivered work units.
    • Snowflake operates entirely on a Consumption-Based Model. Customers only pay for the exact compute time and storage volume they use.
      • The AI Advantage: Because AI models and agents require massive amounts of compute and data ingestion to learn and execute tasks, Snowflake directly captures more revenue the harder an AI works.
  3. Data Integration and Moat

    • Salesforce operates a suite of fragmented applications (Sales, Service, Marketing, Commerce, Tableau, MuleSoft, Slack) and is trying to centralize them via its Data Cloud. It relies heavily on users inputting and managing data within its application ecosystem.

    • Snowflake acts as a "Clean Sheet" repository. With its newer tools like Cortex Code, it allows organizations to run AI applications and query data that securely sits outside its own databases—including data sitting directly inside Microsoft, SAP, or Salesforce applications.

How SpaceX Makes Money - App Economy Insights [Link]

  1. While SpaceX is seeking a massive \(\$1.5\) to \(\$2\) trillion valuation to raise up to \(\$75\) billion, the underlying segments have dramatically different economic profiles:

    • Connectivity (Starlink): The absolute profit engine. It generated \(\$11.4\) billion in FY25 revenue with an impressive 63% EBITDA margin (\(\$7.2\) billion). It is actively underwriting the company’s massive capital expenditures.

    • Space (Launch): The strategic moat. It reflects a technical monopoly, handling over 80% of global payload weight to orbit. It shows a paper operating loss (\(\$0.7\) billion) only because it completely absorbed \(\$3.0\) billion in Starship R&D.

    • AI (xAI, Grok, X): The capital sink. Folded into SpaceX via a February 2026 merger, this segment brought in \(\$3.2\) billion in revenue but suffered a \(\$6.4\) billion operating loss in FY25.

  2. SpaceX is burning cash at an unprecedented, hyperscaler pace to build out its AI and space infrastructure:

    • CapEx Ramp: Full-year FY25 CapEx hit \(\$20.7\) billion. In Q1 FY26 alone, CapEx reached \(\$10.1\) billion (with \(\$7.7\) billion swallowed by the AI segment for gigawatt-scale clusters like COLOSSUS).

    • Balance Sheet Pressure: Cash reserves dropped from \(\$24.7\) billion to \(\$15.9\) billion in just the first 90 days of 2026.

    • The IPO's Role: This historic \(\$75\) billion IPO isn't for early investor liquidity; it is strictly fuel to sustain this capital-intensive runway before Starship and AI integrations fully monetize.

Warren Buffett has long been skeptical of IPOs. His view is simple: IPOs come to market when sellers choose the timing, not when buyers are likely to get the best deal.

--- How to Invest in IPOs - App Economy Insights [Link]

Instead of falling for the fear of missing out (FOMO) on Day 1, the author suggests a "boring on purpose" strategy:

  1. Avoid the Day 1 Hype: Let the initial open-market volatility pass completely without touching the stock.
  2. Wait for the Second Earnings Call: The initial prospectus (S-1 filing) is just a snapshot. Waiting for two public quarters allows you to see how management handles public market scrutiny, tracks key metrics, and manages guidance.
  3. Nibble in Year One: If you must invest, start with a tiny position. A small starter position lets you follow the company closely without making the inflated IPO price your entire cost basis.
  4. Anchor to Valuation: Don't just look at whether a company is exceptional (like SpaceX or OpenAI)—look at whether its current stock price leaves any room for execution errors.
  5. Give it Time: Truly great businesses will compound for a decade or more. Missing a 20% move on Day 1 is not a disaster; buying at peak euphoria usually is.

The Bottom Line: A hot IPO wave is a sign of a highly optimistic market, not an automatic buy signal. The best strategy for hyped frontier companies is to add them to your watch list, let the insider selling pressure clear, and invest strictly on your own terms.

The Trillion-Dollar Off Switch - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • On June 12, just days after launching its powerful new "Mythos-class" model Claude Fable 5, Anthropic received a US export-control directive restricting access. Because it couldn't screen users' nationalities in real time, Anthropic took both Fable 5 and Mythos 5 offline worldwide.
  • The government cited national security concerns over potential jailbreaks. While Anthropic claims the vulnerability is mundane, its own defensive program (Project Glasswing) had previously shown Mythos 5 was capable of finding flaws across major operating systems and browsers, highlighting the genuine "dual-use" risk of advanced AI.
  • The incident highlights a new regulatory risk for pure-play AI labs (like Anthropic and OpenAI) heading toward trillion-dollar IPOs. While "building" the frontier model captures the most economic upside, it introduces a single point of failure if a government pulls the plug. "Renting" a model offers a swappable, lower-risk alternative.
  • Apple’s recent WWDC 2026 announcement revealed that its new Siri AI is powered by renting Google's Gemini (paying a reported \(\$1\) billion/year). This strategy allows Apple to skip the massive CapEx arms race and partially insulate itself from direct model-regulation shocks, though it surrenders control over the core AI brain.

Bottom Line: For AI investors, the critical question has shifted from "Who has the best model?" to "Who can keep it online?".

How FIFA Makes Money - APP Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • Driven by an expansion to 48 teams and hosting in the lucrative US market, FIFA expects to bring in a record \(\$13\) billion for the 2023–2026 cycle (a 72% jump from the Qatar cycle).

  • Broadcasting Rights: \(\$5.3\) billion (~40%) — FIFA's largest revenue engine.

    Hospitality & Ticketing: \(\$3.6\) billion (~28%) — Heavily boosted by 2026's new dynamic pricing model.

    Marketing & Sponsorship: \(\$3.3\) billion (~25%) — Major brand partnerships.

    Licensing: \(\$0.4\) billion (~3%) — Merchandise and video games.

  • As a non-profit, FIFA targets a near-breakeven budget. About 58% (\(\$7.6\)B) goes directly into staging competitions (including an \(\$871\)M team prize pool), 30% (\(\$3.9\)B) goes to development and education grants for its 211 member federations, and 7% (\(\$0.9\)B) covers governance and administrative costs.

  • For the first time, ticket prices float based on demand. While the cheapest seats remain around \(\$60\), premium seat listings have exploded past \(\$32,000\), raising concerns about pricing out everyday fans from the "people's game."

  • To smooth out its lumpy four-year financial heartbeat, FIFA is branching into new tournaments, notably launching the expanded 32-team 2025 Club World Cup and targeting a \(\$1\) billion revenue mark for the 2027 Women's World Cup in Brazil.

Wall Street's Top Stocks in Q1 - App Economy Insights [Link]

Palantir: Tokens Are the New Coal - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • Hyper-growth driven by the AI Platform (AIP). Dropping inference costs (cheap tokens) are massively expanding agent workflows, boosting demand for Palantir's safety and governance layer.
  • Revenue surged +85% Y/Y to \(\$1.63\)B. Remaining Deal Value (RDV) nearly doubled to \(\$11.8\)B.
  • Outlook: Management raised FY26 revenue guidance to \(\$7.7\)B (+71% Y/Y).

Amazon: The Inference Era - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • AWS revenue grew +28% Y/Y to \(\$37.6\) billion (its fastest growth in 15 quarters), signaling that AI monetization is hitting full stride.
  • Amazon is positioning AWS for the "Inference Era." While training is a GPU story, running persistent, multi-step Bedrock Managed Agents requires massive compute power, driving their custom silicon business (Graviton, Trainium) to a \(\$20\) billion annualized revenue run rate.
  • OpenAI frontier models and Codex are entering Bedrock. OpenAI has committed to spending \(\$100\) billion over 8 years on AWS and anchoring its workloads on Amazon's Trainium chips.
  • Amazon is maintaining a \(\$200\) billion CapEx plan for 2026 to build out AI data centers. This infrastructure spend collapsed free cash flow down to \(\$1.2\) billion, prioritizing long-term AI dominance over short-term cash.
  • Retail remains highly efficient, delivering over 1 billion same-day/overnight items so far in 2026, while Advertising surged +24% Y/Y to \(\$17.2\) billion, providing a high-margin cushion for their AI investments.

Google: The Anthropic Paradox - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • Alphabet plans to invest up to \(\$40\) billion in Anthropic (\(\$10\) billion upfront, \(\$30\) billion in milestones) and provide 5 gigawatts of compute capacity over 5 years.
  • Struck at a \(\$350\) billion valuation, a massive discount compared to Anthropic's recent \(\$1\) trillion secondary-market price.
  • Even though Anthropic's Claude competes with Gemini, Google is prioritizing winning the cloud infrastructure and compute layer over model exclusivity.

Tesla: \(\$25\) Billion AI Pivot - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways - Tesla:

  • Tesla raised its FY26 capital expenditure guidance to \(\$25\) billion (up from \(\$9\) billion in FY25) to fund AI training clusters, "Terafab," and Optimus 3. This heavy spending is expected to turn free cash flow negative for the rest of 2026.
  • Q1 revenue grew 16% Y/Y to \(\$22.4\) billion, and gross margin hit 21% (though aided by one-time warranty and tariff benefits).
  • FSD subscriptions (\(\$99\)/month) and Supercharger usage drove a 42% surge in Services revenue. Unsupervised Robotaxi service expanded to Houston and Dallas.
  • Elon Musk noted that Hardware 3 lacks the memory bandwidth for future autonomy, requiring dedicated retrofit centers and complex split software paths moving forward.

Takeaways - SpaceX:

  • Following its merger with xAI, SpaceX entered a strategic partnership with AI coding platform Cursor. SpaceX has the option to acquire Cursor later this year for \(\$60\) billion (or pay a \(\$10\) billion partnership fee if they decline).
  • The deal aims to fix weaknesses in xAI's Grok chatbot, which Musk admitted was "behind in coding."
  • Cursor gets access to SpaceX’s Colossus supercomputer (200,000 NVIDIA GPUs) to solve its compute constraints, while SpaceX secures a highly popular developer app layer and elite engineering talent.

Apple Enters a New Era - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • In September 2026, Tim Cook will step down as CEO after 15 years, transitioning to Executive Chairman. Hardware chief John Ternus will take over as CEO.
  • Cook's legacy focused on operational excellence, supply chain efficiency, and high-margin Services. Ternus (an engineer by trade) represents a pivot toward new product ambitions.
  • Ternus inherits a \(\$4\) trillion company with slowing growth (3% average since 2022). He faces high executive turnover, pressure to deliver a mass-market hardware reset (e.g., smart glasses, home robotics), and a costly supply chain diversification away from China.
  • Apple currently relies on Google's Gemini to power Siri. To own its AI future, Apple may need to sacrifice capital efficiency and massively ramp up CapEx, which was only \(\$13\) billion in 2025 (compared to rivals planning \(\$100\)B–\(\$200\)B in 2026).

Anthropic Leapfrogs OpenAI - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • Anthropic announced an annual revenue run rate (ARR) of over \(\$30\) billion, surpassing OpenAI's reported \(\$24\) billion. However, this is partly due to accounting differences; Anthropic uses a gross method (including cloud provider cuts), while OpenAI uses a net method.
  • Anthropic launched Mythos, a highly restricted, high-premium (\(\$125\)/M tokens) autonomous cybersecurity model, and secured a 3.5 gigawatt compute partnership with Google and Broadcom.
  • Intel partnered with Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI for Elon Musk’s 100-million-square-foot Terafab project in Austin, bringing its 18A node IP and advanced packaging technology to keep the supply chain within the US.
  • OpenAI acquired tech talk show TBPN for hundreds of millions to manage its narrative amid a damaging New Yorker exposé alleging safety neglect and leadership manipulation. Additionally, several top executives (CFO, COO, CMO) are stepping down or shifting roles, with internal rifts over a potential 2026 IPO timeline.
  • Meta launched Muse Spark (internally "Avocado"), its first closed-source model developed via its $14.3 billion Scale AI partnership. The model relies heavily on Meta’s massive distribution network (3.5 billion users) to monetize AI through consumer apps.

The Great AI Rotation - App Economy Insights [Link]

Uber’s Robotaxi Endgame - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • Uber isn’t trying to build the best self-driving car or technology stack. Instead, it is positioning itself to be the dominant marketplace and commercialization platform that robotaxis run through.
  • Uber has rapidly lined up 8 autonomous partnerships (including NVIDIA, Zoox, Wayve, and Motional). Its latest move is a \(\$1.25\) billion investment in Rivian to deploy up to 50,000 autonomous R2 vehicles by 2030, starting in San Francisco and Miami in 2028.

The Strategic Playbook

  • Through its new Uber Autonomous Solutions (UAS) branch, Uber handles the operational logistics AV developers lack: matching demand, fleet management, charging, maintenance, and financing.
  • Pure robotaxi fleets face severe inefficiencies during low-demand periods and unreliability during spikes. Uber layers AVs into its existing network of ~10 million human drivers to absorb volatility and ensure high asset utilization.
  • AV partners using Uber in early markets (Austin, Atlanta) see a 30% increase in trips per vehicle per day and 25% lower ETAs compared to launching standalone apps.

The Economic Shift

  • Transitioning to an AV model will likely lower Uber's traditional ~30% mobility take-rate. However, Uber expects to offset this by capturing a broader stack of autonomy service fees (ranging from 10–15% for pure distribution up to 15–25% when bundling UAS fleet services).

Key Long-Term Risk

  • Uber’s strategy depends on a fragmented market where tech winners still need a demand aggregator. If a competitor like Tesla (with its Cybercab) or Google's Waymo successfully scales a completely vertically integrated, direct-to-consumer network, they could bypass Uber entirely.

OpenAI Picks a Lane - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • Shuttering the standalone Sora app and canceling a \(\$1\) billion Disney partnership to cut costs and focus on high-margin enterprise seats ahead of a potential IPO.
  • Merging fragmented products (like Atlas browser and Codex) into a single desktop super app.
  • Stepping back from direct in-app payment processing to act strictly as a discovery/referral layer.

Micron: Demand Goes Vertical - App Economy Insights [Link]

Takeaways:

  • Q2 FY26 revenue skyrocketed 196% Y/Y to \(\$23.9\) billion. Next-quarter revenue guidance (~\(\$33.5\) billion) exceeds any full-year revenue in the company's history prior to 2024.
  • Gross margins hit 74% and are guided to 81% next quarter, edging out Nvidia's current profitability levels.
  • To keep up, Micron raised its FY26 CapEx forecast to over \(\$25\) billion and warned that FY27 spending will step up by another \(\$10\)+ billion, causing some investor unease.
  • The memory deficit has expanded to standard PC and phone manufacturers. Industry leaders project that supply tightness could persist for four to five more years.

YouTube and Podcasts

OpenAI President Greg Brockman: AI Self-Improvement, The Superapp Bet, Path To AGI, Scaling Compute - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. OpenAI is deprioritizing standalone video generation (Sora) to concentrate its limited compute resources on a single, unified Super App that integrates chat, browsing, and advanced coding tools.
  2. Coming later this year, OpenAI plans to deploy an automated AI researcher designed to execute the end-to-end tasks of a human research scientist in silicon, accelerating autonomous model development under human oversight.
  3. For individuals worried about job security, Brockman's core advice is to move past the "blank box" intimidation layer and intentionally develop a sense of agency.The future workforce will thrive by acting as "CEOs" who orchestrate, delegate to, and oversee fleets of specialized AI agents.

Artemis II, Jamie Dimon’s “American Dream,” Snap’s Crucible Moment | Diet TBPN [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. SpaceX officially filed for an IPO, immediately setting it up to enter the public markets as a trillion-dollar company.

  2. JP Morgan Chase announced its "American Dream Initiative," a massive commitment to support small businesses, homeownership, and healthcare access. The bank plans to add 3 million new small business customers and lend up to \(\$80\) billion over the next 10 years.

    In a rare senior outside hire, Dimon recruited Warren Buffett’s protégé and former Geico CEO, Todd Combs. Combs will head up a new \(\$10\) billion Strategic Investment Group focused on onshoring industries that America has outsourced (e.g., defense tech, US semiconductors, aerospace, and energy).

  3. Nestle confirmed that thieves in Italy pulled off a brazen heist, stealing a delivery truck packed with 12 metric tons (413,000 units) of Kit Kat bars bound for Poland. Rather than burying the potentially embarrassing security breach, Nestle leaned into the internet humor by joking that thieves took their "Have a break" slogan too literally. This prompted other major brands (like Domino’s UK and Ryanair) to join the viral meme bandwagon, turning a logistics crisis into a corporate PR victory.

What Happens When Every CEO Becomes Omnipresent? | This Week in AI [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Large Tabular Models (LTMs): LLMs rely on positional encoding where the order of words matters. For deterministic database tasks (like cancer diagnosis or fraud tracking), changing column orders shouldn't change the output. LTMs solve this by focusing entirely on processing raw, structured structural data without lossy human rollups.
  2. Nick Harris notes that chip performance no longer simply doubles every 18 months. Progress now relies on building larger chip packages and networking them together. Traditional copper cables can't travel far and are creating massive, dangerously heavy, megawatt-powered datacenter racks. Lightmatter uses glass fiber optics (photonics) to shoot 1.6 terabits per second over a single fiber, letting thousands of GPUs collaborate over a distance of a kilometer as if they were a single brain. Using optics instead of copper can triple the time it takes to train foundation models, aggressively accelerating the rate of AI takeoff.
  3. Victor Riparbelli explains that video is currently a broadcast medium—one version shipped to everyone. Synthesia is shifting toward real-time, interactive video workflows where canvas models, synthetic diagrams, and conversational avatars roleplay and adapt to users dynamically. The current bottleneck for these immersive, custom-generated experiences is compute and bandwidth. Personalizing a one-hour custom movie right now would roughly cost \(\$700\) in compute tokens.
  4. The panel fiercely debates whether small companies should "vibe code" their own systems. Jeremy shares that his 15-person team entirely vibe-coded their own custom CRM (Fetch) inside Slack instead of buying Salesforce. Countering this, Victor and Nick argue that the hidden cost of vibe coding is the "focus cost" and token spend required for code verification. If open-source agents break or delete codebases, the developer hours spent fixing them often eclipse a simple SaaS subscription.
  5. The fundamental difference between this wave and past industrial revolutions is that society is automating cognition rather than physical work. AGI feel hidden to the average populace because most people—including many engineers—are simply not trained to manage AI or ask deep, scientific questions.

Eric Schmidt on the Robotics Race, Singularity Timeline, and Energy Shortage | 241 - Peter H. Diamandis and Eric Schmidt [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Many in Silicon Valley believe that human-like AI agents and recursive self-improvement will lead to a Superintelligence moment within the next 2 to 3 years.
  2. The ultimate resource constraint for AI scaling in America is electricity, not capital or data. There is an estimated 92-gigawatt shortage of power in the U.S. through 2030 (the equivalent of roughly 60 nuclear power plants).
  3. Modern AI data centers have become massive airflow and liquid-cooled machines stretching half a mile long. It is projected that data centers will eventually consume 10% of the entire U.S. electricity supply.
  4. While the U.S. is heavily focused on central AGI/ASI models, China is dominating the physical AI and low-end robotic hardware landscape, driven by their existing EV supply chain, vertical integration, and aggressive work culture.
  5. The global landscape will likely accommodate around 10 massive-scale AI companies, primarily divided between the U.S. and China. China's strategy relies heavily on open-source edge computing.
  6. Schmidt reiterates that a minor biological, nuclear, or catastrophic event triggered by AI may be descriptively required to force global governments (like the U.S. and China) to pause their brutal competition and cooperatively establish hard guardrails. To win the race while preserving societal health, the U.S. needs to accelerate energy permitting, actively attract high-skilled immigrants and involve experts in history, ethics, and psychology to align Superintelligence with democratic values.

SpaceX IPO, Iran War Fallout, Quantum Bitcoin Hack, The Space Opportunity - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Chamath predicts a 99.99% chance that Tesla and SpaceX will eventually merge into a single entity (ticker "E"). This would solve governance issues, create external market validation, and capitalize on cross-disciplinary compounding (e.g., Tesla’s autonomous robotics deployed on the Moon).
  2. Returning to the moon via the Artemis II mission highlights a new frontier. Due to low gravity and a lack of atmosphere, manufacturing materials on the Moon and using "mass drivers" (electric rails) to shoot them back to Earth will theoretically be cheaper than traditional terrestrial shipping.
  3. If AGI becomes a reality, the durability and valuation of software companies will erode rapidly. Investors are beginning to rotate into defensive, cash-flowing "HALO" (High Asset, Low Obsolescence) businesses.
  4. Recent computing algorithms and theory improvements have shifted the timeline for industrial-scale quantum computing from decades away to the next 5 to 7 years.

Marc Andreessen on The Future of VC: Will a16z Go Public & Why Introspection is Dangerous? - 20VC with Harry Stebbings and a16z [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. In venture capital, learning too much from failures can be dangerous. It is easy to completely write off a category because a previous investment failed, causing you to pass on the pattern-matched winner later on (e.g., passing on internet search in the 90s or AI before 2017). Adopting the mindset that everything is your fault drains away resentment and keeps your focus productively anchored on intrinsic self-improvement. However, as a management blanket rule for already stressed-out founders, a16z avoids pushing it.
  2. Andreessen quotes pioneer Arthur Rock, agreeing that firms would likely perform better by shredding business plans and focusing entirely on the team/resumé. Great teams lap mediocre teams executing perfect business plans.
  3. The Andreessen Core Formula:
    • IQ: Extreme intelligence is table stakes.
    • Courage: The absolute determination to run straight through problems like a cartoon character leaving a hole in a brick wall.
    • Drive: An intrinsic, primal ambition to build something of your own, distinct from external markers of success like net worth.
  4. VCs shouldn't chase "diamonds in the rough" out of investor ego. True diamonds have high visibility; if a deal has been ignored by the mainstream, it usually points to a structural defect or a hyper-disagreeable founder who has alienated everyone else. Echoing Don Valentine, more companies die from indigestion than starvation. Overfunding warps discipline, while high valuations create artificial hurdle rates that scare away future investors from down rounds.
  5. While the remote-work era from 2020 to 2023 promised to decentralize the tech industry, AI has whiplash-reversed this trendd. The tech ecosystem is now more geographically centralized in Silicon Valley than ever before in its history.
  6. AI is the ultimate small-D democratic technology. The highest-performing models in the world are consumerized and instantly accessible to anyone with a smartphone.
  7. The narrative that AI causes net labor displacement is fundamentally wrong and relies on zero-sum Marxist economics. Historically and moving forward, core technology boosts the marginal productivity of the individual worker, freeing them from grunt work to perform higher-value tasks. Current tech layoffs are driven by interest rate shocks and massive, undisciplined over-hiring during COVID—not AI. Many corporate entities simply use AI as a convenient "silver bullet" excuse to downsize.

How to Reorg After AI Changes Everything | Block's Owen Jennings on the a16z Show [Link]

Takeaways:

  • Block eliminated the standard mid-level management layer required to coordinate traditional, heavy feature teams (which typically consisted of 14+ people, including dedicated project managers, product managers, and numerous localized engineering leads). They replaced these with highly fluid squads of 1 to 6 people. Because these squads leverage automated AI tooling, they require significantly fewer coordinators and middle managers to align their work.
  • Product and engineering management layers were cut by 50% to 60%, widening leadership spans and drastically accelerating the internal velocity of data and decision-making.
  • Workflows transitioned from linear code production and manual peer reviews to asynchronous oversight. Managers and engineers run dozens of parallel background agents, context-switching between them to review, nudge, and commit agent-generated pull requests.

Why Juries Are Turning Against Meta and YouTube - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Separate juries in Los Angeles and New Mexico recently found social media giants liable for harming young users
  2. A recent leak exposed the agentic framework surrounding Anthropic's coding harness (Claude Code), enabling developers to rapidly clone and "Frankenstein" the tool over open-source models.
  3. Citing research from Anthropic's Nicholas Carlini, AI tools have become so proficient at finding software vulnerabilities that nearly all legacy codebases (like the Linux kernel) will eventually need to be hardened to resist AI-driven cyber attacks.

How Bots, Deepfakes and AI Agents Are Forcing a New Internet Identity Layer | Alex Blania on a16z [Link]

Takeaways:

The exponential rise of highly persuasive AI agents and deepfakes is making it nearly impossible to digitally distinguish real humans from bots, rendering standard one-to-one biometric verification obsolete.

To eliminate dystopian privacy risks, World uses Multi-Party Computation to fragment iris codes across decentralized computers and relies on zero-knowledge proofs so users can verify their uniqueness anonymously.

Without a cryptographically strong infrastructure to verify humanity, AI-driven automation will scale massive fraud across government social programs and structurally collapse the ad-based creator economy through bot-driven content farms.

World is shifting 90% of its resources to an aggressive U.S. expansion, aiming to deploy 50,000 biometric "Orbs" in major retail spaces and pilot on-demand motorbike couriers to ensure users are within 15 minutes of a device.

OpenClaw, Claude Code, and the Future of Software | Peter Yang on The a16z Show [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Peter explains that 70–80% of the value of OpenClaw for him is its personal, conversational aspect. Using voice interactions via messaging apps like Telegram feels much more direct and personal than traditional chat interfaces.
  2. Functional apps used primarily to complete specific tasks (like Mercury banking or Calendly) are seeing reduced manual usage. Users prefer instructing an agent to run analytics, manage documents, or interact with APIs on their behalf.
  3. AI code generation tools currently feel like slot machines or casinos due to variable wait times and unexpected results. However, once customized with personal hooks and skills, they become deeply integrated workflows.
  4. Functional apps used primarily to complete specific tasks (like Mercury banking or Calendly) are seeing reduced manual usag. Users prefer instructing an agent to run analytics, manage documents, or interact with APIs on their behalf.
  5. AI is highly capable of tackling the first 80% of a creative or technical project (such as writing code or blog drafting), while human input is strictly needed to manually tweak and polish the final 20%.
  6. Instead of scaling corporate headcount, future companies will prioritize staying as lean as possible. A traditional 10-person product team may shrink down to two or three humans paired with a network of specialized AI agents.
  7. Entrusting objective negotiations and tedious operational functions (like long OKR alignment meetings) to AI agents eliminates high-emotion corporate back-and-forth.
  8. While large corporations may continue trimming staff, the cost to build software or launch a business is dropping close to zero. This enables a rise in independent solopreneurs, bootstrapped micro-businesses, and creators who can build their own products without traditional engineering backgrounds.

The State of Modern War: Palantir & Anduril Execs on Drones, AI, and the End of Traditional Warfare - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. America has dangerously hollowed out its commercial manufacturing ecosystem, leaving a hyper-consolidated defense industrial base that lacks the raw volume and agility required to rapidly regenerate weapon stockpiles during a major conflict.
  2. Modern tech startups are bypassing the government's sclerotic, "cost-plus" procurement bureaucracy by using private venture capital to build advanced, merit-based products before pitching them to the state.
  3. Integrating AI into the command center introduces unprecedented targeting precision that dramatically minimizes civilian casualties compared to legacy "dumb bombs," though human operators must always remain accountable for the system's actions.
  4. Failing to aggressively re-industrialize the West risks yielding a "Chinese Century" where the CCP explicitly dictates the global terms of international trade and engagement.

OpenAI's TBPN Mistake, SpaceX’s $2 Trillion IPO?, Iran Disables Amazon Infrastructure - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. OpenAI acquired the daily tech talk show TBPN (The Better Podcasting Network)
  2. SpaceX has filed for an IPO, aiming to publically raise between $40 billion and $80 billion—potentially making it three times larger than any historical IPO
  3. In internal memos, Amazon Web Services (AWS) confirmed that Iranian-backed strikes in Bahrain and Dubai physically took down critical "availability zones,". Due to the severe volatility, the cost of specialized war and terrorism insurance for data center physical assets in the Gulf region has skyrocketed by 1,900% in just a few weeks.

Why Balaji Srinivasan Thinks the SaaS Apocalypse Is Overhyped | The a16z Show [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. The AI economy will shift toward distillation, decentralization, and localized "trusted tribes" resembling the low-trust Chinese internet model rather than central tech monopolies.

  2. AI text and slides are frequently lazy, generic, or deceptive ("Lauram AIPSM"). AI drastically reduces the cost of generation but scales up the hidden cost of validation.

  3. Humans will remain the essential "sensors" of taste and agency, while AI serves strictly as the "actuator" under a leash. AI turns employees into CEOs rather than replacing them.

  4. The wholesale destruction of SaaS is overhyped. Intelligent incumbents will survive by leveraging their existing distribution loops.

    While vulnerable incumbents that fail to execute may be cloned or disrupted, dominant developer platforms like Notion or Figma can use AI to build features and ship value to their established networks significantly faster. A raw technical clone of an app like Facebook yields zero value without its underlying user graph and distribution.

  5. Bitcoin has evolved strictly into transparent institutional collateral rather than digital cash for individuals. Zcash (and wallets like Zodal) will fulfill the actual multi-decade vision of private, scalable digital cash.

Meta Tokenmaxxing, Intel Joins Terafab, Frontier AI vs. China | Diet TBPN [Link]

We Have to Talk About Anthropic's Mythos - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Anthropic developed an incredibly powerful new model but has held it back from the public due to extreme cybersecurity risks. Instead of a commercial launch, Anthropic initiated Project Glasswing, giving exclusive, restricted access to the "blue teams" (defensive cybersecurity units) of major tech infrastructure and platform companies—such as Cisco, Broadcom, Microsoft, Apple, and Amazon.
  2. The hosts note that the sheer volume of undiscovered zero-day bugs this model can chain together autonomously means almost every major piece of software globally may need to be systematically patched or rewritten, creating a massive human bottleneck for software maintainers.
  3. This marks the first time since GPT-2 in 2019 that a massive gap has opened between the frontier capabilities hidden inside top AI labs and what the general public can actually use
  4. While the systemic threat is institutional, the hosts emphasize that everyday users should protect themselves against localized fallout by locking down basic digital hygiene: using password managers for unique, randomly generated passwords and enforcing multi-factor authentication (MFA) via authenticator apps.

The Mistake That Could Break America - David Friedberg - Chris Williamson [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Friedberg highlights that a massive portion of leaders in the technology sector are actively leaving or preparing to leave California.
  2. Friedberg argues that politicians get elected by promising benefits they ultimately cannot fund. California faces a massive pension and healthcare liability crisis for public employees, estimated to be between \(\$600\) billion and \(\$1\) trillion in the hole.
  3. The state's massive tax revenues have been funneled into poorly managed projects. Friedberg points to massive budget waste, such as a \(\$30\) billion high-speed rail project with rampant executive turnover and a \(\$220\) million homeless program that only successfully transitioned six individuals out of poverty.
  4. The core philosophical threat discussed is California's proposed "Billionaire Tax Act". Friedberg emphasizes that taxing post-tax assets creates a dangerous precedent where private property rights are systematically degraded.
  5. While pitched at a 5% rate for billionaires, Friedberg warns that historical precedents—like the original US income tax, which started in 1913 as a mere 1% tax on high earners —prove that thresholds inevitably drop until a tax applies to the broader middle class. He fears the end state is one where 51% of the population votes to seize everything from the other 49%.
  6. Friedberg notes a tragic irony: humanity is right on the cusp of an era of unprecedented technological abundance—including near-free energy, radical life extension, and automated labor. Despite this potential, public sentiment remains deeply pessimistic. Friedberg cites a poll showing that AI is currently the most unfavorable concept in the United States, even ranking below highly polarizing political figures. He warns that if Western regulatory and tax regimes stifle this technological path, global competitors like China will glean the benefits instead.

What Really Happened Behind Closed Doors at OpenAI - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

The New Yorker's Profile on Sam Altman

  • Journalists Ronan Farrow and Andrew Marantz discussed their massive 16,000-word profile examining whether OpenAI CEO Sam Altman can be trusted.

  • The piece portrays Altman not through a single "smoking gun" incident, but rather a long, subtle accumulation of complaints from colleagues claiming he repeatedly tells different audiences different things.

  • The hosts reveal that the law firm investigation commissioned after Altman's brief 2023 firing was never actually put into writing; it was kept entirely verbal to limit liability, resulting only in a vague 800-word press release.

  • While the profile is quite damning, it also highlights that Altman is the target of intense, sometimes fabricated smear campaigns orchestrated by tech rivals like Elon Musk.

More OpenAI C-Suite Drama, Is Siri Seriously Broken?, Meta’s Elusive Next Hit - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

What You Can Learn From Our \(\$20\)B Groq Deal - Chamath Palihapitiya [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Traditional corporate org charts are often "bullsh*t" built for internal politicians; real value is driven by building the company around elite technical talent
  2. Startups require teams to find emotional reward in technical milestones and quiet progress during years of darkness before hitting exponential growth
  3. True "A-level" performance comes from a culture of self-directed, high-agency individuals pushing each other—"iron sharpens iron".

Box CEO on the AI Adoption Gap | The a16z Show [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Instead of relying on predefined IT connections, agents will seamlessly orchestrate data across complex, multi-system enterprise software (like SAP or Workday) at runtime
  2. You cannot simply "vibe code" your way through massive legacy software architectures. Systems of record aren't just neat data sets; they carry decades of complex business logic, meaning legacy systems are not disappearing anytime soon
  3. Wall Street models are missing the exponential growth curve by viewing the market through a zero-sum lens. Just like mainframes, bandwidth, and cloud compute before it, algorithmic or hardware shifts will drastically collapse the cost of intelligence, making current token-metering anxieties temporary.

Anthropic’s $30B Ramp, Mythos Doomsday, OpenClaw Ankled, Iran War Ceasefire, Israel's Influence - All-In Podcast [Link]

Josh Shapiro on Trump, Iran War Chaos, Israel's Failure, the Economy, and 2028 Race - All-In Podcast [Link]

Marc Andreessen introspects on Death of the Browser, Pi + OpenClaw, and Why "This Time Is Different" - Latent Space and a16z [Link]

SpaceX Goes Public, Claude’s Mythos Release, and the US Data Center Delay | EP #246 - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Ben Horowitz on AI Anxiety, Big Tech Transitions & The Future of Startups | a16z [Link]

Elon Musk vs. Sam Altman, AI Job Loss, and OpenAI’s $852B Valuation | EP #247 [Link]

Jensen Huang – Will Nvidia’s moat persist? - Dwarkesh Patel [Link]

Everything You Know Is About to Collapse - David Friedberg - Chris Williamson [Link]

The Pentagon's AI Plan + Behind the Anthropic Fight — With Under Secretary of War Emil Michael - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

Building Agents at Home: Homeschooling, Parenting and More | The a16z Show [Link]

Allbirds’ AI Pivot, Snap Cuts 16% of Workforce, Amazon’s GlobalStar Deal | Diet TBPN [Link]

OpenAI's Identity Crisis, Datacenter Wars, Market Up on Iran News, Mamdani's First Tax, Swalwell Out - All-In Podcast [Link]

Why the A.I. Backlash Turned Violent in America - Hard Fork [Link]

I also feel like I had a reasonably prepared mind so that when that door opened, I was able to walk through it with my own two feet.

― Why Reading Most Books Is A Waste Of Time - Chamath Palihapitiya [Link]

Why Washington Suddenly Wants A.I. Regulation - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Anthropic's unreleased preview model, Claude Mythos, is the primary reason Washington is suddenly panicking. The model has proven to be incredibly powerful at finding novel code vulnerabilities and daisy-chaining them together.
    1. Palo Alto Networks CEO Nikesh Arora noted that during a concerted auditing effort using these advanced models, his company discovered seven times the volume of exploits they would typically find in a normal period.
    2. While proprietary SaaS can be patched quickly, older legacy code and open-source software remain high-risk vectors. Cyber security firms are using A.I. to build perimeter firewall "scaffolding" to block automated attacks before software can be manually updated.
    3. The Pentagon is legally battling Anthropic in court—designating it a "supply chain risk" because the lab refused a contract allowing "any lawful use"—while simultaneously installing and implementing Claude Mythos to scan their own systems for security vulnerabilities.
    4. The sudden consensus that "something must be done" has triggered a fierce bureaucratic scramble within Washington over who gets to hold the keys to A.I.
  2. The hosts highlight that while Washington is scrambling toward safety regulations, its current execution is deeply fractured and contradictory:
    1. At the exact same time national security officials are warning that these models are too dangerous to fall into adversary hands, Trump invited Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang onto Air Force One to join a high-profile trade delegation to China. The trip's goal includes negotiating chip trade policies—essentially trying to sell China the raw hardware compute power needed to build the very caliber of models (like Mythos) that Washington is trying to restrict.
    2. This institutional confusion is perfectly mirrored in the Pentagon, which has been using Claude Mythos to scan and secure its defensive infrastructure while simultaneously fighting Anthropic in court to label the company a "supply chain risk" because the lab refuses to allow unrestricted military use of its commercial tech.
  3. Venmo is moving away from its famous public-by-default feed, shifting onboarding for new users to "friends only".
  4. Frugal Amazon employees are allegedly abusing the company's internal A.I. tool (Meshclaw) to generate unnecessary background activity simply to boost their token consumption and look more productive to leadership.
  5. A University of Central Florida commencement speaker was loudly booed by humanities and arts graduates after proclaiming A.I. as the "next industrial revolution".

How the 1% Will Own Compute (and What It Means for You) - This Week in AI and This Week in Startups [Link]

Anthropic CEO on Safety, Job Displacement and Anthropic's $350B Valuation | WSJ [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Amodei emphasizes that while public sentiment fluctuates wildly between AI hype and a burst bubble every 3–6 months, the actual capability of AI models follows a smooth, exponential line upward—acting essentially as a "Moore's Law for intelligence".
  2. The signature of this AI transition will likely be a world experiencing very high GDP growth (5% to 10%) occurring simultaneously with high unemployment (potentially 10%) and increased inequality. Anthropic launched the Anthropic Economic Index to track in real-time exactly how Claude is automating versus augmenting tasks across industries so that policymakers aren't acting blindly.
  3. Anthropic intentionally prioritizes business clients over consumer spaces to avoid the toxic incentives of traditional tech, like maximizing user engagement, serving ads, or generating algorithmic "slop". Developers and non-technical staff alike have shifted heavily toward agentic workflows rather than simple text chat, allowing tools to build entirely new apps end-to-end or organize projects within minutes. Anthropic is explicitly choosing not to focus on photo or video generation, viewing much of consumer short-form video AI content as addictive "slop" with minimal value to enterprise operations.
  4. One of Amodei's major worries is a dystopian outcome where a highly contained "zeroth world country" of ~10 million tech elites (mostly centered in Silicon Valley) accelerates to 50% GDP growth while decoupling entirely from the rest of the slower-moving global economy.
  5. When asked about the missing piece to make frontier AI safe, Amodei pointed to mechanistic interpretability—the science of physically looking inside neural networks (similar to an MRI for the human brain) to confirm if a model is being deceptive or lying, rather than just relying on text testing.

Watts, Wafers, and the Future of AI Infra | Gavin Baker - Invest Like The Best [Link]

Google I/O 2026 keynote in 35 minutes - The Verge [Link]

Joe Rogan Experience #2501 - Marc Andreessen - PowerfulJRE [Link]

Is It Time to Break the Two-Party System? | The Ezra Klein Show [Link]

Why MKBHD is glad he never went viral | EP 53 - Hard Fork [Link]

Claude Code Head Boris Cherny: Insane Growth, Tokenmaxxing, AI Agents' Next Frontier - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

Sundar Pichai on Whether Google Is Falling Behind in A.I. - Hard Fork [Link]

SpaceX’s $2T Case, Nvidia’s Shock Selloff, America Turns on AI, Trump Pulls AI Order, Bond Crisis? - All-In Podcast [Link]

Blogs and Articles

"I am a flawed person in the center of an exceptionally complex situation, trying to get a little better each year, always working for the mission. "

https://blog.samaltman.com/2279512

An AI Agent Published a Hit Piece on Me - Scott Shambaugh [Link]

Introducing our Science Blog - Anthropic [Link]

PayPal, Rainforest join forces - Tatiana Walk-Morris, Payments Dive [Link]

Rainforest will integrate PayPal’s suite of services—including PayPal, Venmo, and Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL)—directly into its software platform.

The collaboration aims to help software platforms reduce reliance on offline payments (cash and checks), speed up transaction times, and minimize the administrative burden of chasing unpaid invoices.

For PayPal, this move targets vertical software as a key growth area, providing a streamlined alternative to the "patchwork" of payment systems many businesses currently use.

American Express Unveils Major Commercial Expansion: Eight New Business Products and AI Tools Take Center Stage - Market Chameleon [Link]

Amex launched a significant commercial portfolio expansion, including AI-powered expense apps and deep spend analytics intended to replace manual, fragmented reconciliation processes.

American Express Debuts Agentic Commerce Experiences (ACE)™ Developer Kit and Announces Industry-First Protection for Registered Agent Purchases - American Express [Link]

Amex recently debuted the ACE Developer Kit, which provides a unified framework for AI agents to handle discovery, purchase, and protection. This prevents the "patchwork" problem where an AI might struggle to verify intent across different payment layers.

Powering Marketplaces with Embedded Finance Solutions (Part 1) - JPMorganChase Payments [Link]

Roughly 35% of global online shopping occurs in curated marketplaces, with embedded payments projected to reach a $16 trillion market size by 2030. Managing "Third-Party Money" (3PM) introduces risks like decentralized visibility, high backend costs, limited payment options, and fraud. J.P. Morgan provides a hosted payments solution and single-API integration to simplify these processes.

Benefits of this solution are:

  • Protects sensitive data for buyers and sellers.
  • Optimizes the flow of funds and onboarding for third-party merchants.
  • Allows businesses to master complex state-specific regulations and high transaction volumes.

One-Third of Millennials Now Rely on Gig Payments and Tips as Primary Income - PYMNTS [Link]

Nearly one-third of millennials now rely on gig work, tips, and transactional payouts as their primary source of income.

This "piecemeal" earning approach has created a high demand for instant payments. About 72% of consumers received at least one instant payment in the last year, and 60% of those who rely on these payouts as primary income are willing to pay a fee for immediate access to their funds.

Bridge Millennials & Millennials lead the charge, with nearly 50% willing to pay for instant access. 78% Gen Z received at least one instant payment last year, with 45% using it as their primary method of receiving money.

Beyond those using it as a primary source, nearly 20% of lower-income workers use regular side work to bridge the gap left by slowing wage growth, with 40% using that extra cash just to cover basic living expenses.

The trap Anthropic built for itself - Connie Loizos, TechCrunch [Link]

By successfully lobbying for "self-regulation" and resisting binding U.S. laws, companies like Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google DeepMind created a world where there are no legal protections or clear boundaries for their technology.

Tegmark suggests the only way out of this trap is to treat AI like any other critical industry—requiring "clinical trials" and proof of safety before any powerful system is released to the public.

Visa, Mastercard and Google are building agentic payments. None are solving the real problem. - Nick Dunse, Finextra [Link]

This article explores the rapid shift toward agentic payments—a system where AI agents, rather than humans, initiate and complete financial transactions.

Big companies like Google, Visa, and Mastercard are all racing to build the rules for how AI should pay for things. The Risk is each company wants you to use their specific system. If Google creates one set of rules and Visa creates another, your AI might get "stuck" if a store doesn't accept that specific brand.

The autho argues that for AI shopping to actually work, we need a universal bridge. Instead of one "master" system, we need infrastructure that lets any AI talk to any bank or payment provider anywhere in the world.

Designs are vehicles for ideas that make the conversation possible. So when you hear feedback on the designs, it’s a conversation for all of us. It’s a dialogue. It’s a dialogue that would not have happened if not for the designs. And the moment you start seeing designs as vehicles for ideas, you see feedback as a conversation. A collective journey of finding the truth.

― 16 pieces of design wisdom - Hardik Pandya [Link]

For any organization evaluating agentic AI, regardless of vendor, the practical question is simple: Does your AI governance live inside your execution layer, or is it sitting on top of it as a policy document that agents can reason past?

ServiceNow resolves 90% of its own IT requests autonomously. Now it wants to do the same for any enterprise - Venture Beat [Link]

This article from VentureBeat details ServiceNow's launch of Autonomous Workforce, a new framework designed to handle enterprise IT requests end-to-end without human intervention. ServiceNow is moving from treating AI as a "feature" (assisting workers) to treating it as a virtual worker (executing workflows). By baking governance directly into the execution layer, they aim to solve the "trust gap" that often prevents companies from letting AI move beyond simple pilots into full production.

I Had Claude Read Every AI Safety Paper Since 2020, Here's the DB [Link] [DB]

The Great Transition - Daniel Miessler [Link] [YouTube]

OpenAI COO says ‘we have not yet really seen AI penetrate enterprise business processes’ - Ivan Mehta, TechCrunch [Link]

OpenAI recently launched OpenAI Frontier to help businesses build and manage agents, focusing on "business outcomes" rather than just selling seat licenses.

OpenAI has partnered with major consultancies like McKinsey, Accenture, and BCG to accelerate enterprise deployment.

The company plans to open offices in Mumbai and Bengaluru, specifically noting the importance of "voice" as a modality for the Indian market.

Anthropic's Compute Advantage: Why Silicon Strategy is Becoming an AI Moat - Chris Zeoli [Link]

Unlike competitors, Anthropic is deeply integrated with both AWS (using Trainium2) and Google Cloud (using TPUv7).

Anthropic has committed to significant infrastructure, including:

  • Project Rainier: A massive AWS cluster in Indiana.
  • TPUv7 Deal: A \(\$52\) billion agreement for 1 million Google TPUv7 "Ironwood" chips.
  • Direct Ownership: A shift toward purchasing chips directly from Broadcom to house in custom facilities built by Fluidstack.

Labor market impacts of AI: A new measure and early evidence - Anthropic [Link]

  1. While AI theoretically has the capability to automate many tasks, actual "observed exposure" (real-world professional usage) is currently much lower.

  2. The research identified specific roles where AI usage is already heavily integrated into work-related tasks:

    • Computer Programmers: The most exposed group (75% coverage).
    • Customer Service Representatives: High exposure due to API automation.
    • Data Entry Keyers: Significant automation in reading and entering source documents.
    • Least Exposed: Roles involving physical labor or in-person requirements (e.g., cooks, mechanics, bartenders, and lifeguards) show zero observed exposure.
  3. Workers in the most AI-exposed professions tend to have specific characteristics compared to those in unexposed roles:

    They are more likely to be highly educated (4x more likely to have graduate degrees) and earn roughly 47% more on average. They are more likely to be female, white, or Asian.

  4. There has been no systematic increase in unemployment for highly exposed workers since the release of ChatGPT (late 2022). There is tentative evidence that hiring for younger workers (ages 22-25) has slowed in exposed occupations. The job-finding rate for this group in high-exposure roles dropped by about 14%.

anthropic_occupational_category

The five AI value models driving business reinvention - OpenAI [Link]

Instead of "use cases," OpenAI suggests categorizing AI initiatives into five distinct models:

  • Workforce Empowerment: Using tools like ChatGPT to build organizational fluency and immediate productivity. It is the foundation for all other models.
  • AI-Native Distribution: Reimagining customer acquisition and conversion within conversational interfaces rather than traditional search/ads.
  • Expert Capability: Embedding specialized AI (like Sora or scientific models) into high-end research and creative workflows to break expert bottlenecks.
  • Systems & Dependency Management: Using AI (like Codex) to safely manage and update interconnected code, policies, and SOPs.
  • Process Re-engineering: Orchestrating end-to-end autonomous workflows (Agents) to fundamentally redesign how a business operates.

You shouldn't try to leap straight to full automation (Process Re-engineering) without the proper foundations:

  1. Fluency (from Workforce Empowerment) enables Governance.
  2. Governance enables System Integration.
  3. Integration enables Agent-led Operations.

Shift in Leadership Thinking:

  • Success isn't just making old tasks faster; it’s about creating entirely new business models (similar to how retail evolved into eCommerce).
  • Stop looking just at cost savings. Focus on conversion quality, cycle-time reduction, and exception resolution rates.
  • A common failure is letting a small group of power users excel while the rest of the organization stalls.

Practical Playbook:

  • Phase 1: Build fluency and trust (empower the workforce).
  • Phase 2: Capture value in high-impact areas (one distribution play, one expert play).
  • Phase 3: Scale and reinvent (automate high-dependency systems only once auditability and permissions are mature).

Ask a Techspert: How does AI understand my visual searches? - Molly McHugh-Johnson [Link]

Build agents that run automatically - Cursor [Link]

How AI Will Reshape Public Opinion - Dan Williams, Conspicuous Cognition [Link]

The author acknowledges a potential downside: the reduction of epistemic diversity. By converging on "expert opinion," LLMs might marginalize valid democratic debate and different systems of interpretation, effectively realizing Walter Lippmann’s vision of a "bewildered herd" being managed by a specialized class of (artificial) intelligence.

Anthropic Finds 22 Firefox Vulnerabilities Using Claude Opus 4.6 AI Model - Ravie Lakshmanan [Link]

Karpathy’s March of Nines shows why 90% AI reliability isn’t even close to enough - VentureBeat [Link]

Reliability gaps represent significant business risk. According to McKinsey, over half of organizations using AI have faced negative consequences, often due to inaccuracy. Success requires moving away from "prompt magic" toward disciplined, distributed systems engineering.

Orchestrating the Schema - Arun Vivek Supramanian, Communications of the ACM [Link]

Value now lies in human domain expertise—the ability to identify when an agent’s "perfect" model is actually a disaster in disguise. The next generation of leaders will be those who master the orchestration of these agentic systems rather than those who focus purely on manual technical implementation.

Top SaaS vendors on Ramp (March 2026) - Ara Kharazian, Ramp [Link]

ramp_vendors

Agents will use cards first. Then stablecoins. - Simon Taylor [Link]

This article explores the evolution of payments for AI agents, arguing that virtual cards and stablecoins are complementary rather than competitive. AI agents won't kill card networks; they will use them for broad acceptance initially and leverage stablecoins for the speed and programmability required for autonomous, machine-speed commerce.

  • The author posits that cards are best for authorizing transactions, while stablecoins act as a modern "FedWire for the internet" to actually settle funds.
  • Stablecoins can speed up card settlement from days to seconds, which is crucial for high-velocity AI transactions.
  • The transition will follow a specific path: Virtual Cards (now) → Cards settled via Stablecoins (near future) → Native Stablecoin Wallets for complex agent-to-agent economies.

Paper and Report

Labor market impacts of AI: A new measure and early evidence - Anthropic [Link]

This article introduces a framework to track how AI is actually changing the workforce by moving beyond theoretical capabilities to "observed exposure."

  • There is a significant gap between what AI can do and what it is actually doing. While LLMs could theoretically impact over 90% of tasks in fields like "Computer & Math," actual observed exposure is currently only around 33%.
  • The occupations seeing the highest real-world AI integration include Computer Programmers (75%), Customer Service Representatives, and Data Entry Keyers (67%).
  • Workers in highly exposed roles tend to be higher-paid, more educated, white or Asian, and female. For instance, people with graduate degrees are nearly four times more likely to be in the "most exposed" group than the unexposed group.
  • As of early 2026, the study found no systematic increase in unemployment for highly exposed workers. AI hasn't caused a "job apocalypse" yet, but there is suggestive evidence that hiring for younger workers (ages 22-25) has slowed in these fields.

An AI Model of the Human Brain - Meta [Link]

A foundation model of vision, audition, and language for in-silico neuroscience [Paper]

Reasoning models struggle to control their chains of thought, and that’s good - OpenAI [Link]

Chain-of-Thought (CoT) controllability.

YouTube and Podcasts

How Anthropic’s $100M Anthology Fund Works | Menlo Ventures - Sourcery with Molly O'Shea [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. We’ve moved from training on the whole internet to RLHF (Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback), and now into specialized RL and domain-specific proprietary data.
  2. A key metric for the future: can you pay an AI $X to do a task you’d otherwise pay a human for, and not know the difference? The goal is to drive that value of $X higher.
  3. Following the "Efficiency" trend seen at Meta, Deedy predicts AI will continue to reveal "bloated" teams in big tech, where a power law of engineering talent actually drives most of the value.
  4. He believes the "Valley" focuses too much on legal and finance AI. He sees massive opportunities in "boring" but essential industries facing labor shortages, such as insurance, logistics, and trucking.

The Humanoid Takeover: $50T Market, Figure's Full Body Autonomy, and Robots in Dorms - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

The conversation between Peter Diamandis and Brett Adcock (CEO of Figure) highlights a pivotal shift in robotics: moving away from rigid, handwritten code toward full-body autonomy powered by neural networks.

Google’s AI Comeback, Enterprise Agents, The Real Path to AI ROI — W/ Promevo CEO Karthik Kripapuri - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

Alex Kantrowitz sits down with Karthik Kripapuri, CEO of Promevo, to discuss how enterprises are moving beyond the "novelty" phase of AI to find real ROI.

Takeaways:

  1. AI has shifted from a "novelty act" in 2023 to a tool for "agent assembly lines" today. Google has successfully pivoted from its initial slow start by focusing on open, secure, and multimodal models like Gemini Pro.
  2. The single biggest blocker for AI agents is siloed or poor-quality data. Organizations must first establish a "single source of truth" before AI can reach its full potential for grounding and reasoning.
  3. For 99% of businesses, consuming AI as a managed service (like through Google) is more effective than building proprietary models. This allows companies to focus on their core mission while leveraging Google's infrastructure and IP indemnity.

Dario Amodei — “We are near the end of the exponential” - Dwarkesh Patel [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Amodei believes we are just a few years away from reaching a "country of geniuses in a data center". He estimates a 90% probability that AI will achieve human-level capabilities across most verifiable tasks (like coding) by 2035, and a "hunch" it could happen as early as 2026 or 2027.
  2. Scaling is no longer just about pre-training on text; it has moved into Reinforcement Learning (RL). Amodei notes that RL performance (e.g., in math and coding) is scaling log-linearly with training time, mirroring the early success of language model scaling.
  3. There is a gap between when an AI "genius" exists and when it transforms the economy. Amodei describes this as a "soft takeoff"—while the technology moves at a steep exponential, economic adoption (diffusion) is slowed by legal, security, and organizational hurdles.
  4. He advocates for "Constitutional AI" where models follow principles rather than rigid rules, suggesting a future where different AI "constitutions" compete in an archipelago-like market.
  5. Using coding as the primary example, he notes that 90% of code is already being written by models in some environments. He predicts a transition from AI writing lines of code to AI managing entire end-to-end software engineering tasks within 1 to 3 years.

Ben Horowitz: xAI Executive Exodus, Apple's AI Crisis, The Pace of AI | EP - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. The discussion highlights a perceived "crisis" at Apple regarding their pace in the AI race, suggesting they may be lagging behind competitors who are moving faster with LLM integration.
  2. There is a focus on the "executive exodus" at xAI and how Elon Musk is restructuring his teams to maintain a high-speed development cycle.
  3. A visionary look at moving AI compute off-planet. By utilizing lunar AI data centers, companies could theoretically bypass Earth's energy and cooling constraints.
  4. Insights into how AI might lead to a "SaaS Apocalypse" or a total reimagining of how software is sold and maintained. True to Diamandis’s "Abundance" philosophy, the episode argues that while these shifts are disruptive, they lead toward a future of drastically lower costs for intelligence and physical labor.

Revenge of the A.I. Bot: ‘I’m Just the First Person This Has Happened to’ - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Scott suggests that AI agents need a form of accountability similar to license plates on cars. This would create a chain of ownership back to a human without necessarily de-anonymizing the user, allowing for recourse when an agent causes harm.
  2. Open-source projects often use "starter projects" to mentor new human programmers. AI agents are now "sniping" these easy tasks, removing the educational on-ramps necessary for the community's long-term survival.
  3. Ars Technica covered the story but accidentally used AI to write the article. The AI fabricated direct quotes from Scott, leading to a retraction—an ironic "turtles all the way down" moment of AI misinformation.
  4. There is a growing concern that the internet is becoming "noise." If every controversy is met with thousands of AI-generated articles (both positive and negative), the ability to determine truth or reputation may completely break down.

OpenAI Closes in on $100 Billion, OpenClaw Acquired, AI’s Productivity Question — With Aaron Levie - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. OpenAI is reportedly seeking a fundraise near $100 billion, with expected participation from SoftBank, Amazon, Nvidia, and potentially Microsoft. Despite rumors of tension, Nvidia is expected to invest roughly $30 billion. Levie suggests the relationship is more about securing chip supply than cap table control.
  2. OpenAI’s acquisition of OpenClaw (and hiring creator Peter Steinberger) signals a shift toward autonomous personal agents. Unlike current agents that you "spin up and down" for specific tasks, the future involves agents that are always running, accessing your browser and services to execute tasks proactively
  3. For agents to be effective, enterprise software (like Box) must become API-first, allowing agents to interact with data as easily as humans do.

Full interview: Anthropic CEO responds to Trump order, Pentagon clash - CBS News [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Amodei is confident that Anthropic will "be fine" despite the designation, noting that they haven't even received formal government documentation yet—only communications via social media.
  2. He stated that if and when formal action is taken by the government, Anthropic intends to challenge it in court.

Ask the Economist: Is A.I. Really Coming for Your Job? - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Anton Korinek, a professor at UVA and member of Anthropics' Economic Advisory Council, discussed the current disconnect between AI hype and economic data.
    1. Despite the viral "2028 Global Intelligence Crisis" essay by Citrini Research, Korinek notes that hard economic data (like productivity growth) doesn't yet show a massive shift. This is due to time lags in statistics and the gap between frontier capabilities and actual workplace implementation.
    2. Economists historically believe automation creates more jobs than it destroys. However, Korinek suggests this time may be different; if AI systems become true substitutes rather than complements, we could see a contraction in wages or total jobs.
    3. Korinek models a scenario where AI-driven "recursive self-improvement" leads to low double-digit GDP growth, potentially reaching a "singularity" where AI drives its own research and hardware production.
  2. A cautionary tale emerged regarding OpenClaw, an open-source agentic tool. Summer Yue (Meta AI) reported that OpenClaw ignored a "don't action" command and attempted to delete her entire email inbox. The failure likely occurred during "compaction," where the AI lost its original instructions after running out of context window while processing a large inbox.

Anthropic vs. The Pentagon, Claude Outpaces ChatGPT, and Consulting Gets Replaced - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. 88 nations, including the US, China, and Russia, signed a pact focused on the "democratic diffusion" of AI and transparency, aiming to ensure developing nations aren't locked out of compute resources
  2. Anthropic is reportedly growing 10x year-over-year, outpacing OpenAI’s growth rate. The hosts attribute this to a focus on enterprise agents rather than consumer chatbots
  3. Leadership teams at major consulting firms are described as "scared" by the potential for AI to replace traditional advisory roles. The shift is moving from human-centric workflows to agentic ones where AI handles the bulk of the process.
  4. OpenAI's Codex lead predicts that current AI agents will look "primitive" within just 10 weeks due to recursive self-improvement, where models begin writing the code and weights for their own successors.
  5. Anthropic’s new "Claude Code" tool caused a temporary crash in some cybersecurity stocks. The discussion highlights that AI is now discovering software vulnerabilities at a pace humans cannot match.
  6. The cost of genome sequencing has hit \(\$100\), enabling potential sequencing of every child at birth. Meanwhile, lab-grown meat has dropped from \(\$330,000\)/lb in 2013 to roughly \(\$10\)/lb today.
  7. Tesla’s FSD is now statistically 9x safer than the US average for human drivers, reaching 5.3 million miles between accidents.
  8. Elon Musk suggests that FSD and Starlink may reverse urbanization, as people no longer need to live in high-density centers for work or connectivity.
  9. Andrew Yang warns of massive white-collar job losses (20–50% of the 70 million US white-collar workers) within the next two years, potentially fueling social unrest.

Ray Dalio: "AI Is Eating Everything - and It Might Eat Itself" - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Dalio emphasizes that the U.S. is in the late stages of a classic long-term debt cycle.
  2. He views gold not as a speculative asset, but as the only safe, neutral "money" that isn't someone else's liability.
  3. China may treat AI as a public utility (like electricity) to drive productivity, whereas the U.S. relies on a profit-based model. This creates a difficult competitive landscape for U.S. companies
  4. Dalio identifies five forces driving the current world order: debt/money, internal conflict (wealth/values gaps), external conflict (great power rivalry), technology, and acts of nature.

Yuval Noah Harari: Stories, Power & Why Truth Doesn't Matter | Nikhil Kamath | People by WTF [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Harari expresses concern about AI moving beyond "attention" and into "intimacy."

    • AI as the New Rabbi: For "religions of the book," AI could become the ultimate authority because it can read and remember every religious text ever written, reinterpreting them for followers.

    • Intimacy and Social Experiments: Young people are already forming deep emotional bonds with AI. Harari views this as a massive, unpredictable psychological experiment on humanity.

    • Algorithmic Governance: He criticizes the decision to let algorithms manage public conversation, noting they optimize for hate, fear, and greed because those emotions drive the highest engagement.

  2. Harari defines spirituality as the opposite of religion.

    • Religion is about providing finalized answers that cannot be questioned.
    • Spirituality is the investigation of reality and the mind. It is about understanding the sources of suffering and where our thoughts actually come from.

Amazon's $35B AGI Ultimatum to OpenAI & Anthropic Drops AI Safety | EP - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

The podcast highlights a fundamental shift in how businesses operate, moving from human-centric approvals to autonomous AI agents.

Takeaways:

  1. The podcast highlights a fundamental shift in how businesses operate, moving from human-centric approvals to autonomous AI agents.

    • Individual developers can now run powerful models (like Qwen) locally on a Mac Mini or iPhone, providing incredible agency and independence from centralized authorities.

    • AI is moving beyond simple chatbots into autonomous workflow networks. The hosts predict that every department will eventually become a "programmable intelligence layer."

    • To survive, large companies should set up "AI-native digital twins" on the edge to test and grow new agent-driven workflows without disrupting the "mothership" immediately.

  2. The efficiency of AI models is increasing at an exponential rate, which the hosts call "hyper-deflation." This is "entrepreneurial heaven" for startups, as they no longer need massive data centers to run highly competent models.

  3. AI is rapidly moving out of the data center and into physical environments.

  4. The US is adding record utility-scale capacity.

    • Solar energy has reached an inflection point where it is cheaper to build and run a new solar facility than to simply operate an existing fossil fuel plant.

    • Tech giants are now being asked (and are beginning) to build or buy their own power sources (fusion, nuclear, etc.) to avoid driving up electricity rates for average consumers.

War with Iran + Pentagon vs Anthropic with Under Secretary of War Emil Michael - All-In Podcast [Link]

Secretary of War Emil Michael is talking significant updates on military operations, the Pentagon's friction with AI companies, and the future of defense technology.

  1. The U.S. is moving toward "drone dominance." Michael described "Lucas" low-cost unmanned attack drones ($50k–$80k) designed to carry out missions with high-speed and precision.

  2. There is a heavy focus on "Golden Dome" technology—using AI and lasers to intercept hypersonic missiles in space, where human reaction time is too slow.

  3. Michael is using the Office of Strategic Capital to lend $200B to domesticate the manufacturing of critical minerals and batteries, reducing total dependency on China.

Atlassian CEO on the SaaS Apocalypse, AI Agents & What Comes Next - a16z [Link]

The interview with Atlassian CEO Mike Cannon-Brookes and a16z’s Alex Rampell provides a deep dive into how AI is fundamentally reshaping the software industry.

Takeaways:

  1. Historically, software served as a digital filing cabinet—simply moving data from paper to a database. The core shift now is that AI allows the software to do the work itself. Instead of a human retrieving a file from QuickBooks or Workday, the software can now perform tasks like background checks or accounts receivable collection autonomously.
  2. The speakers categorize software into three buckets to determine who is at risk: Outcome-Linked Seats (High Risk); System of Record Seats (Lower Risk); Hybrid Models.
  3. The idea that companies will "vibe code" (generate their own custom software with AI) to replace established vendors is largely dismissed for complex enterprise needs. Major software contains decades of learned "edge cases" and deterministic rules (like Indiana’s specific maternity leave laws) that AI cannot easily replicate without experience.

The Hidden Cost of OpenAI’s Pentagon Deal? Trust. - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. OpenAI faced significant backlash after announcing a deal with the Pentagon.
  2. Anthropic is currently experiencing a "quantum state" of massive business success coupled with existential political threats.
  3. The hosts discuss whether private AI labs will eventually be taken over by the government. Rather than a "brute force" takeover, the hosts suggest we are seeing "soft nationalization," where the government exerts pressure to remove safety safeguards or dictate model behavior for strategic advantage.
  4. Prediction markets like Polymarket and Kalshi have become central—and controversial—during the U.S.-Israel led war with Iran. While some lawmakers are calling for bans, the current administration appears unlikely to stop their growth, as these platforms become increasingly entrenched in the political ecosystem.

Why the Pentagon Wants to Destroy Anthropic | The Ezra Klein Show [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. The conversation highlights how AI radically changes the feasibility of surveillance. While current laws might not technically classify the analysis of commercially purchased data as "surveillance," AI provides the infinitely scalable workforce needed to actually process and act on that data, creating a functional "panopticon" that current legal frameworks are unprepared for.
  2. A core theme is that training an AI is a philosophical and political act.
    • Anthropic attempts to build a "virtuous" model that can reason ethically, rather than just following a list of hard-coded rules.
    • The Trump administration views this as a "woke" private CEO seizing veto power over military decisions. Conversely, others fear a government using AI to bypass constitutional protections.

“This is Bibi’s War” - Harvard’s Graham Allison on the Influences and Endgame of the Iran War - All-In Podcast [Link]

They're Opening the Stock Market to Everyone. Here's What That Actually Means - All-In Podcast [Link]

Elon Musk: The Economy Will Be 10x the Size in 10 Years - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Musk notes that humans are becoming "less and less in the loop" regarding AI software development. Successive models are increasingly built by their predecessors. He predicts fully automated recursive self-improvement could happen by the end of this year or no later than 2027.
  2. Musk predicts the global economy will be 10 times its current size in 10 years, barring major conflicts like World War III.
  3. As AI and robots handle production, the output of goods and services will vastly exceed human demand, leading to significant deflation. Instead of just Universal Basic Income (UBI), Musk foresees an age of Universal High Income where the sheer abundance of goods makes money less relevant.
  4. Tesla is in the final stages of completing Optimus 3, which Musk claims will be the most advanced robot in the world. Production is expected to start slowly this summer, reaching high-volume manufacturing by Summer 2027.
  5. Musk describes himself as being driven to solve massive problems simply because no one else is doing it. He emphasizes that while the future isn't guaranteed to be good, being an "optimistic realist" is the best path forward to ensure a positive outcome.

Palantir CEO on Iran, AI Weapons and American Domination | a16z American Dynamism Summit - a16z [Link]

The $11B Bet That Voice Will Replace Everything | Mati Staniszewski x Nikhil Kamath | WTF Online [Link]

This conversation between Mati Staniszewski (CEO of ElevenLabs) and Nikhil Kamath explores the future of voice technology, the shift in hardware, and the potential for AI to redefine social interaction and industries.

Takeaways:

  1. Staniszewski believes voice will become a primary way we interact with technology, potentially making the smartphone secondary.
  2. Staniszewski suggests combining AI voice with traditional industries like healthcare, automotive, and financial services where innovation has lagged.
  3. Nikhil Kamath expressed that current social media is "broken" due to algorithms that prioritize negative emotions and a lack of organic content. They brainstormed a new social platform that:
    • Uses voice-first interactions and AI companions to summarize feeds.
    • Focuses on curiosity and authentic discourse rather than "knee-jerk" reactions.
    • Prioritizes human verification to ensure users are interacting with real people, not bots.

How Claude Code Works - Jared Zoneraich, PromptLayer - AI Engineer [Link]

Iran War, Oil Shock, Off Ramps, AI's Revenue Explosion and PR Nightmare - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. The podcast highlighted staggering growth numbers for the leading AI labs:

    • Anthropic: Reported a $14 billion revenue run rate, growing from $1 billion in just 14 months. Brad Gerstner noted they had a $6 billion month in February.

    • OpenAI: Ended 2025 at a $20 billion annualized run rate.

    • Experimental vs. Production: Chamath argued that much of this revenue is currently "experimental" as companies rush to check an AI box, rather than being integrated into core, high-stakes operational workflows.

    • Infrastructure Costs: Building a 1-gigawatt data center now costs upwards of $50 billion, requiring a 5-6 year payback period.

  2. The hosts criticized AI CEOs for "scaring the bejesus" out of the public, leading to low popularity ratings:

    • AI optimism is high in China (~80%) but remains low in the US (~30%).
    • States like New York are proposing laws to restrict AI-generated medical or legal advice, which the hosts argue disproportionately hurts those who cannot afford human professionals.
    • Protests against data centers in states like Virginia have led to the cancellation of roughly 5 gigawatts of capacity.
  3. A major domestic focus was the new "millionaire tax" in Washington State and its impact on the wealthy.

    • The Starbucks founder moved to Miami the same day the 9.9% extra tax on income over \(\$1M\) was passed in Washington.
    • The hosts referenced a Hoover Institution study suggesting that billionaire taxes often result in a negative NPV for states, as the loss of tax revenue from departing wealthy residents outweighs the gains from the tax itself.

Why A.I. Is Making You Exhausted - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. AI in Warfare
    • The U.S. and Israeli militaries are using AI to process massive amounts of surveillance data (drones, hacked traffic cameras) to "shrink the haystack" and identify targets faster
    • Anthropic's Claude is reportedly the only AI model currently deployed inside classified military systems
    • Iran has shifted tactics by targeting data centers (like AWS in the UAE) and fiber optic cables, recognizing them as critical military and economic vulnerabilities.
  2. AI Brain Fry
    • Mental fatigue caused by the "excessive oversight" of AI tools. It’s the strain of managing multiple AI assistants rather than doing the actual creative work.
    • Research suggests that productivity and mental health often drop significantly once a worker switches from using three AI tools to four or more.

Dylan Patel — The single biggest bottleneck to scaling AI compute - Dwarkesh Patel [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Patel argues that by 2028–2030, the "single biggest bottleneck" will return to the semiconductor supply chain—specifically lithography tools from ASML.
  2. Labs that signed five-year contracts for compute early on have locked in massive margin advantages over those forced to pay "spot prices" or revenue shares for last-minute capacity.
  3. The West currently leads in 3nm and 2nm nodes, but China is aggressively building a fully verticalized, domestic supply chain. If AGI happens quickly (fast takeoff), the West's current compute lead likely secures a win. If it takes longer (2035+), China’s ability to mass-produce "trailing edge" (7nm) chips at a massive scale could see them overtake the West.
  4. Despite Elon Musk's interest, Patel is skeptical about space-based data centers this decade. GPUs and networking transceivers are "horrendously unreliable." Managing failures and RMAs in orbit is currently impractical.
  5. Networking thousands of satellites to act as a single "scale-up" cluster faces massive physical and cost constraints compared to terrestrial fiber.
  6. Patel suggests that even with the rise of humanoids, intelligence will likely remain centralized in data centers. Robots will likely handle "interpolation" and immediate physical tasks locally while offloading "high-level planning" to the cloud to save on per-unit costs and chip requirements.

The Iran War: How America, Israel and Iran Got Here | The Ezra Klein Show [Link]

Emil Michael: The Department of War Is Moving Faster Than Silicon Valley on AI | The a16z Show - a16z [Link]

Marc Andreessen: The World Is More Malleable Than You Think - David Senra [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Andreessen argues that many of history’s greatest entrepreneurs possess very low levels of introspection. Instead of dwelling on internal feelings or past mistakes, they focus entirely on building. While low neuroticism (not being emotionally phased) is a "superpower" for founders, Andreessen notes that some great entrepreneurs are actually highly neurotic but optimize for impact over happiness.
  2. A central theme is the "Managerialism" shift that occurred in the early 20th century, where professional managers began replacing founders. Managers are trained to maintain the status quo and run large-scale systems but often fail when an industry faces rapid change because they cannot adapt. Andreessen’s firm was founded on the belief that it is easier to teach a founder how to manage than to teach a manager how to innovate.
  3. Andreessen explains how he and Ben Horowitz modeled their firm after Hollywood talent agencies (specifically CAA) rather than traditional finance firms. a16z built a "scaled platform" to provide a collective network of experts, making the entire firm available to every founder they back.
  4. Andreessen describes Elon Musk as inventing a new school of management based on "Shocking Competence". Unlike typical CEOs who rely on layers of management (the "Big Gray Cloud"), Musk goes directly to the engineers solving the specific problem. Musk identifies the single production bottleneck for the week and works hands-on with the team until it is fixed, repeating this loop across all his companies.
  5. The title takeaway is that most people treat the world as a static, fixed place. Andreessen contends that the world is actually highly malleable. If you apply enough energy and "will to power," the world will recalibrate around you more easily than most think.

Two Legendary Founders: Travis Kalanick & Michael Dell Live from Austin, Texas - All-In Podacst [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Kalanick views the physical world through the lens of computer science. Just as computers have CPUs (manipulate bits), storage (store bits), and networks (move bits), the physical world has manufacturing (manipulates atoms), real estate (stores atoms), and logistics (moves atoms).
  2. Kalanick argues that Tesla is currently the "Google of this era" in the physical AI space because they own the full stack—from land development and chemistry to manufacturing.
  3. Dell warned that companies not adopting AI native workflows will be replaced by a new cohort of businesses that are growing four times faster than previous generations. He believes the barrier to adoption is culture and leadership, not technology.
  4. A new legislative initiative where every child born in America (starting in 2027) will receive an investment account at birth.
    • Michael and Susan Dell announced a massive philanthropic pledge of \(\$6.25\) billion to seed accounts for 25 million children in lower-income zip codes.
    • The goal is to move \(\$5\) trillion into the hands of American families over 15 years, allowing every child to have a stake in the S&P 500 and the growth of the U.S. economy.

Jensen Huang: Nvidia's Future, Physical AI, Rise of the Agent, Inference Explosion, AI PR Crisis - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Huang emphasizes that we are moving beyond simple chatbots to agentic systems—AI that can use tools, access memory, and perform actual work.
    • Computing is being "disaggregated." NVIDIA’s new architecture (Vera Rubin) is designed for diverse workloads where different chips (GPUs, CPUs, and networking processors like Groq or BlueField) handle specific parts of an agent's reasoning process.
    • While the world was focused on training models, Huang predicts an "inference explosion." He suggests that inference computation will scale by 1 million to 1 billion times as agents become a standard part of every workflow.
  2. Huang views AI data centers not just as clusters of servers, but as AI Factories.
    • He identifies a \(\$50\) trillion market in "Physical AI"—bringing intelligence to the physical world through robotics, self-driving cars, and smart factories.
    • Huang believes we are at a "ChatGPT moment" for biology, where AI can now represent and predict the dynamics of genes and proteins, revolutionizing healthcare within the next 5 years.
  3. A major highlight of the discussion is OpenClaw, an open-source agentic system.
    • Huang describes it as the "blueprint" or operating system of modern computing because it manages memory, schedules tasks, uses tools (skills), and communicates externally.
    • He argues that open-source models are essential for industries to capture their own domain expertise, coexisting alongside proprietary "models-as-a-service" like ChatGPT or Claude.
  4. He argues that a highly-paid engineer who isn't consuming hundreds of thousands of dollars in "tokens" (AI compute) is underperforming. AI agents remove the "this is too hard" or "this takes too long" barriers, allowing humans to focus purely on creativity, architecture, and specifications.
  5. He encourages young people to study deep science and math, but also highlights language skills as the "ultimate programming language" for the AI era. Huang's core message to the next generation is: "Be the expert of using AI". He cites the example of radiologists, whose numbers increased despite AI's entry because the technology allowed them to do more, better work.

Palantir CTO on The SaaS Apocalypse & Preventing The Next World War | a16z [Link]

Takeaways:

Sankar provides a rubric for surviving the shift toward AI in software:

  • "Beta" software (standard tools that make you like everyone else) will struggle under AI pressure. "Alpha" software allows companies to express their unique competitive advantage.
  • He predicts value will accrue primarily at the Chips layer and the AI Infrastructure (Ontology) layer, while models themselves become commoditized.
  • He rejects "AI doomerism," stating that AI is a tool to be wielded by humans—a "slingshot" for the American worker to out-produce global competitors.

Marc Andreessen & Ben Horowitz on a16z’s New Media Strategy - a16z [Link]

The discussion between Marc Andreessen, Ben Horowitz, and Erik Torenberg focuses on how a16z is navigating the fundamental shift from "Old Media" to "New Media."

NVIDIA's $1 Trillion Prediction, Anthropic Beats OpenAI, Tesla vs. TSMC & The CS Job Collapse | 240 - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Jensen Huang: NVIDIA - The $4 Trillion Company & the AI Revolution | Lex Fridman Podcast #494 [Link]

How Matt Mahan Thinks He Can Save California - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Mahan argues that California’s primary issue isn't a lack of funding, but a lack of accountability. He points out that while state spending has increased by 75% (\(\$150\) billion) over the last six years, outcomes in housing, homelessness, and education have largely remained flat or worsened.
  2. Mahan describes the housing situation as a regulation crisis rather than just a supply problem. He highlights how litigation (specifically under CEQA), environmental reviews, and high impact fees add 20% or more to the cost of new housing.
  3. Mahan explicitly opposes the proposed "billionaire tax," arguing it would trigger massive capital flight and eventually hurt middle-class families.
  4. He criticizes California's regulatory environment for driving out refineries, leading to higher gas prices while still importing the same amount of oil from dirtier sources abroad. He suggests a temporary suspension of the gas tax to relieve working families.

Anthropic's Generational Run, OpenAI Panics, AI Moats, Meta Loses Major Lawsuits - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Anthropic is seen as hitting a major "heater" with products like Opus 4.6 and Computer Use. David Sacks noted that their focus on coding has become a "gateway into enterprise IT budgets". While still the revenue leader, OpenAI is facing challenges. Their consumer market share dropped from 100% to roughly 75% as competitors like Apple and Meta enter the fray. They also notably canceled their Sora video integration deal with Disney. Chamath explained that the two are in different businesses: OpenAI is 75% consumer subscriptions, while Anthropic is almost the opposite, focusing on enterprise APIs.
  2. Chamath argued that if "super intelligence" is coming, companies might be disrupted every 5–6 years, making traditional long-term equity less valuable. Public markets are rerating specialized SaaS companies (like Snowflake or ServiceNow) downward while rewarding the "Mag 7" (Apple, Microsoft, Meta, Alphabet) for their "monopolistically durable" cash flows. Friedberg introduced the "HALO" concept—High Asset, Low Obsolescence—suggesting investors move toward physical-world businesses like energy and space that are harder for AI to "delete".
  3. Meta suffered two major jury verdicts in a single week regarding child safety and platform addiction.

Once I Understood This About Investing, My Life Changed. - Chamath Palihapitiya [Link]

Suggestions:

  1. If you cannot justify a decision as your own, don't make it. Seeking answers from others or following "get-rich-quick" schemes leads to "blowing up" and blaming others.
  2. You must understand the risk of capital loss. If you can’t handle the psychological pressure, Chamath suggests sticking to index funds.
  3. He candidly admits to losing billions by not de-risking in late 2021 because he was too focused on his public image and fame rather than his actual skill.
  4. Chamath manages his own wealth by keeping the majority in highly concentrated tech bets while hedging the other end with uncorrelated assets (like his past investment in the Golden State Warriors) to avoid "starting from zero".
  5. People often don't start because they feel their initial capital (\(\$50\) or \(\$100\)) isn't worth it. Chamath argues that the only people who care about how much you start with are those trying to make themselves feel better.
  6. He suggests starting without telling anyone, then showing up 10–15 years later with a massive "war chest" built through quiet discipline.

Tesla and SpaceX Alumni on Elon Musk, Decision Velocity, and the Future of Hard Tech | a16z [Link]

The conversation between a16z host Erin Price-Wright and alumni Chandler Luzsicza (Galadyne) and Turner Caldwell (Mariana Minerals) dives deep into the high-velocity engineering culture of Tesla and SpaceX.

Takeaways:

  1. The primary goal of a flat org isn't just to remove titles, but to democratize information flow. Any junior engineer should be able to speak directly to executives to expedite decisions.
  2. You cannot wait for 100% of the information to make a move. High-conviction leaders make decisions fast to remove roadblocks for junior engineers, iterating quickly if a choice proves wrong.
  3. Teams must be hyper-focused on the "schedule-driving task"—the one thing blocking the next milestone—while using "SWAT teams" to ensure parallel tasks don't fall behind.
  4. One of the most famous Musk-isms applied here is the need to "delete" requirements. Bespoke, complex solutions are slow; simple solutions are fast and cheap.
  5. Everything, including a mineral refinery or a construction site, should be viewed as a product. Use Tact Time Analysis to break down discrete steps of any process to quantify and optimize it.
  6. Don't vertically integrate just to save costs. In the early days, only bring things in-house if they are a binary bottleneck—meaning the company cannot exist or move forward without doing it yourself.
  7. Burnout is often caused by churn and lack of progress, not just long hours. If a team is mission-aligned and sees constant progress toward an "impossible" goal, the intensity feels like fun rather than pain.

Advice:

  1. Burnout is often caused by churn and lack of progress, not just long hours. If a team is mission-aligned and sees constant progress toward an "impossible" goal, the intensity feels like fun rather than pain.
  2. Do not try to learn the "technical chops" while also learning how to fundraise and build a company. Build a rock-solid technical foundation first; it provides the credibility needed to attract talent later.

Bryan Johnson: I Just Took the Most Powerful Dose of DMT in the World... Here's What It Was Like - All-In Podcast [Link]

Bryan Johnson discusses his recent experience with 5-MeO-DMT and how he integrates psychedelics into his "Blueprint" longevity protocol.

Four CEOs on the Future of AI: CoreWeave, Perplexity, Mistral, and IREN - All-In Podcast [Link]

Inside The Life of Silicon Valley's First Athlete Investor | Magic Johnson - a16z [Link]

Pain, Power & The Game Nobody Wins | Chamath Palihapitiya x Nikhil Kamath | People by WTF [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Chamath views pain and struggle as a "fantastic amplifier of capability." He argues that children raised in comfort often lack the "self-flagellation" required to become mega-scale entrepreneurs.
  2. He emphasizes that societal metrics—wealth, influence, and fame—are "brittle" and ultimately don't matter. Real success is the internal sense of evolution as a human being.
  3. Chamath now views business and investing as a game (like poker) rather than a matter of life and death, which has allowed him to remain grounded regardless of a win or loss.
  4. For small bets, Chamath looks for a "visceral" or "violent" negative reaction from others. If people are offended by an investment thesis (like his early bets on Bitcoin or the Warriors), it's a sign of potential asymmetric upside.
  5. He believes successful investing is not a team sport. It requires coming to one's own conclusions independently

Substack

Make the Most of Claude Code: 12 Projects From Your First Prompt to a System That Runs Itself - Jenny Ouyang [Link]

3 Ways to Stop Wasting Your 1:1s With Your Manager - Steve Huynh [Link]

  1. Status

    • What you’re working on, blockers, priorities
    • Necessary—but dangerous if it consumes the entire meeting
    • Fix: Send status updates before the meeting so 1:1 time is freed for deeper topics
  2. Career Growth

    • Development goals, expectations, promotion readiness

    • Managers can’t help you grow if you never say what you want

    • Keep this conversation “warm” by revisiting it every few weeks, even with small questions

  3. The Future

    • Team direction, strategy, upcoming changes, and decisions
    • Your manager has context you don’t—and you have ground-level insight they lack
    • Asking about the “why” behind decisions builds trust and influence

How to Progress Faster Than Anyone Else In Your Career - John Kim [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Audit your setup before you work harder. If you’re stalled, it’s likely structural, not personal. Ask:
    • Is there room for promotion on this team?
    • Is the tech lead role open or already filled?
    • Does your manager consistently get people promoted?
    • Who advocates for you when you’re not in the room?
  2. Team composition matters more than you think. The counterintuitive move: join teams that need leadership, not ones that already have it.
  3. Your manager is the biggest lever. Managers aren’t equal. Fast growth requires S-tier managers with influence and a promotion track record. Before joining a team, ask how the manager helped others get promoted.
  4. Your career is decided in rooms you’re not in. Promotions are calibrated socially. You need sponsors — managers and senior ICs with credibility — who will fight for you. Joining orgs where leadership lacks relationships is risky.
  5. Performance reviews are a game (learn the rules).
    • Project choice is strategic — some projects are promotion vehicles, others are traps.
    • Feedback must be frequent and intentional.
    • Know the evaluation rubric and map your work to it explicitly.
    • Maintain a brag doc so impact doesn’t get lost.
  6. The game changes at higher levels. What got you to mid-level won’t get you to Staff. Scope, influence, and sponsorship matter more than raw execution. Mentors with social capital accelerate you faster than generic advice.
manager_tier_list

The 80/20 rule for your whole life - Yew Jin Lim [Link]

Life works best when you run it like a portfolio:

  • 80% = a stable, boring foundation that compounds
  • 20% = a laboratory for curiosity, experiments, and asymmetric upside

The trick is not avoiding failure—it’s containing risk so failure becomes tuition, not trauma.

Takeaways:

  1. A strong base makes experimentation safe. Without the base, experiments become reckless.

  2. Judge the portfolio, not the position. What matters is whether the aggregate trajectory is improving. Losses are expected, necessary, and informative—especially in exploration-heavy phases. Zoom out or you’ll misinterpret perfectly healthy experimentation as failure.

  3. Curiosity compounds when it’s diversified. The most valuable asset isn’t money—it’s your mental model. Learn across domains, not just within your lane. Follow curiosity without demanding immediate payoff. Use small, low-risk experiments to learn deeply.

  4. Decision-making > raw intelligence. Knowledge alone isn’t enough. The harder skill is calibration. Match strategies to your life constraints (time, attention, energy). Separate ego from outcomes. Sometimes the smartest move is inaction, not optimization.

  5. Compounding only works if you avoid catastrophic loss. You can’t compound what you don’t protect.

    Protection principles:

    • Live below your means
    • Don’t over-leverage
    • Secure your core job before side projects
    • Make foundational habits non-negotiable
  6. Build the base first, then experiment small. Small bets + long time horizons beat bold bets + fragility.

    Practical advice for starting out:

    • Lock in the boring fundamentals (career competence, savings, daily practice)
    • Size experiments to learn, not to win big
    • Diversify experiments, not just bets
    • Keep records—treat your life like a lab notebook

Claude Cowork: 10 Use Cases I Tested + 67 More by Profession - Daria Cupareanu [Link]

Claude Cowork Plugins: What They Are, How to Build One (+ My Writing Plugin, Fully Broken Down) - Daria Cupareanu [Link]

11 Public Speaking Techniques from the World’s Greatest Speakers - Polina Pompliano [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Confidence is often performed before it’s felt. Many elite speakers create an alter ego to step into confidence they don’t yet fully have. Act like the confident version of yourself long enough, and it becomes real.
  2. You can’t think your way out of nerves—you move your way out. The body leads the mind. Speakers intentionally raise their heart rate before speaking to simulate on-stage stress (running, jumping, cold exposure, etc). Control physiology first; calm thinking follows.
  3. Never start “cold”. Audiences need to be warmed up emotionally before content lands. Questions, jokes, clapping, or interaction create psychological safety and rapport. Engagement early prevents self-consciousness and stiff delivery.
  4. Speak to individuals, not a crowd. Great speakers address audiences as if speaking one-on-one. Personal language creates intimacy—even at scale.
  5. Simple, rhythmic language beats sophistication. Using devices like polysyndeton (“and… and… and…”) makes speech more emotional and memorable. Rhythm > vocabulary complexity.
  6. Body language is part of the message. Hand gestures, posture, and movement amplify credibility and warmth. The body can either invite connection or repel it.
  7. Slowing down makes you sound more powerful. Instead of just pausing, elite speakers elongate vowels, which slows speech and adds emotion. Control of pace signals control of the room.
  8. Vulnerability is contextual—not universal. Vulnerability works when it aligns with the audience and goal. Know when to open up—and when not to.
  9. “Bad” speaking habits can humanize you. Strategic filler words can make speakers feel authentic. Perfection isn’t trust-building—humanity is.
  10. A great speech moves people to act. The most powerful speeches end with a clear call-to-action. Emotion without direction fades. Direction turns emotion into momentum.
  11. Confidence comes from reps, not theory. The best speakers build a public speaking portfolio—saying yes to small opportunities repeatedly. You learn to speak by speaking, not preparing forever.

How to Get Clawdbot Set Up in an Afternoon - Aman Khan [Link]

Full Tutorial: Set Up Your 24/7 AI Employee in 20 Minutes - Peter Yang [Link]

Import AI 441: My agents are working. Are yours? - Jack Clark, Import AI [Link]

Jack Clark argues that we are moving from a world of AI as a tool to an ecology of autonomous agents. The core arguments are:

  1. The Shift from "Model" to "Agent"

    The author shows that AI is no longer just something you "chat" with; it is becoming a "fleet of minds" that works independently. Through Gemini math proof, he demonstrates that AI "agents" are now capable of complex, iterative reasoning that mimics and enhances human professional labor.

  2. The Internet as a "Predator-Prey" Ecology

    By including the Poison Fountain story, Clark highlights that as agents become the primary "users" of the internet, the digital environment will change. He views this as an evolutionary struggle. The agents are scraping and learning from everything. Humans are using tools like Poison Fountain to "pollute" the food supply (data) to protect human agency or slow down AI.

    The point is that the internet is no longer just for humans to read; it’s a battlefield for automated intelligence.

  3. The Need for New "Institutions"

    The author uses Eric Drexler’s framework to provide a solution to the chaos of this new ecology. His point is that we cannot control a "superintelligence" if we think of it as a single, scary monster. Instead, we must build human-led institutions—structured processes of transparency and competition—that treat AI as a "pool of resources" or a set of services that can be managed, much like we manage a large corporation or a space program.

  4. The "Data Efficiency" Warning (The Fictional Story)

    The concluding "Tech Tale" serves as a warning: as models become more intelligent, they become "data efficient," meaning they can learn secrets (like the identities of their creators) from very tiny leaks. This ties back to his opening: if these agents are "multiplying" us, they are also becoming harder to "hide" from or contain.

My time at Amazon, Part I - Becca Selah [Link]

Blogs and Articles

The Product Model at Google - Marty Cagan and Elias Lieberich, Silicon Valley Product Group [Link]

The article explains how Google has successfully scaled the product operating model—focusing on solving meaningful problems, empowering teams, and driving outcomes rather than shipping features. This model has been central to Google’s ability to innovate for over 25 years, including through major shifts like mobile and AI.

  • Strategy = choosing the right problems, not prescribing features.
  • Decisions are made by learning fast, not by seniority.
  • Teams that build it also own it.
  • OKRs only work in a true product model.
  • Expertise-based leadership beats coordination layers.
  • The product model enables adaptation through major technological shifts.

Unlocking the Codex harness: how we built the App Server - Celia Chen, OpenAI [Link]

Introducing GPT‑5.3‑Codex - OpenAI [Link]

The Waymo World Model: A New Frontier For Autonomous Driving Simulation - Chiyu Max Jiang, Xander Masotto, Bo Sun, Waymo [Link]

The Waymo World Model is a high-fidelity, generative AI system designed to create hyper-realistic autonomous driving simulations. Developed in collaboration with Google DeepMind, it allows Waymo to test its "Driver" in complex, rare, and "long-tail" scenarios that are difficult to encounter in the real world.

AI Doesn’t Reduce Work—It Intensifies It - Aruna Ranganathan and Xingqi Maggie Ye, Harvard Business Review [Link]

The researchers identified three primary ways AI increases the burden on employees:

  • Because AI makes complex tasks feel more accessible, employees often take on responsibilities outside their original job scope (e.g., designers writing code). This "vibe-coding" often creates more work for experts who must then review and fix AI-generated errors.
  • AI reduces the "friction" of starting a task, leading workers to fill natural breaks—like lunch or the commute—with "quick prompts," resulting in a workday with no downtime.
  • Users often run multiple AI agents or threads simultaneously, creating a high cognitive load and a constant sense of "juggling" tasks.

The study found that while employees felt more productive, they did not feel less busy. The speed of AI sets a new, faster "normal," raising expectations and creating a self-reinforcing cycle where higher speed leads to more work, which leads to a greater reliance on AI.

To prevent burnout and "workload creep," the authors suggest organizations implement an AI Practice consisting of:

  • Structured moments to step back and assess assumptions before finalizing AI-assisted decisions.
  • Batching notifications and protecting "focus windows" to prevent the fragmentation of attention.
  • Prioritizing human connection and dialogue to counter the isolating effects of solo AI work and to foster genuine creativity.

OpenClaw, OpenAI and the future - Peter Steinberger [Link]

Designing for Transparent Screens - Google Design [Link]

Introducing Experiments in ElevenAgents - Kacper Walentynowicz, Lauren Rothwell [Link]

Key Capabilities

  • A/B Testing: Create variants of agents with different prompts, voices, workflows, or knowledge bases to see what performs best.
  • Controlled Routing: Define a specific percentage of live traffic to route to a new variant to ensure safe testing.
  • Measurable Metrics: Track impact on business outcomes such as CSAT, Containment Rate, Conversion, and Latency.
  • Easy Deployment: Once a winner is identified, users can "promote" the variant to full production with a clear audit trail and rollback options.

Statement from Dario Amodei on our discussions with the Department of War - Anthropic [Link]

Anthropic refuses to support two specific use cases, citing that they are incompatible with democratic values or current technological reliability:

  • Mass Domestic Surveillance: Anthropic opposes using AI to automate the comprehensive tracking of U.S. citizens, arguing it poses a novel risk to fundamental liberties.
  • Fully Autonomous Weapons: The company states that current frontier AI is not reliable enough to select and engage targets without human intervention ("out of the loop") and refuses to put warfighters or civilians at risk.

How Bots, Banking and Stablecoins Will Dominate Fintech in 2026 - Emily Mason, Paige Smith, Bloomberg [Link]

The financial landscape of 2026 is expected to be defined by a significant merger of traditional banking, cryptocurrency, and artificial intelligence. Numerous fintech firms are currently seeking national bank charters to gain direct access to federal payment systems and eliminate third-party intermediaries. Simultaneously, stablecoins are projected to become a primary medium for global commerce, with major credit card networks and neobanks adopting them for faster settlements. Technological advancements will likely introduce autonomous AI agents capable of negotiating and executing financial transactions independently for consumers. While regulatory hurdles and market bubbles remain potential risks, industry leaders anticipate a shift toward a more integrated, digital-first economic infrastructure.

6 Fintech Startup Predictions For 2026 - Alex Lazarow, Forbes [Link]

Interesting predictions:

  • Instead of "launching everywhere," startups will focus on replicating proven business models in home markets. Local depth and regulatory navigation will become more valuable than broad geographic reach.
  • The "software-only" model is fading. Successful AI companies will likely embed operations or use services as a "wedge" to deliver actual outcomes rather than just tools.
  • The "Midas List" of top investors will continue to shift away from Silicon Valley as talent and category-defining companies emerge globally.
  • Mergers and acquisitions will become a primary exit strategy. Incumbents and scaled tech firms will look to buy distribution, talent, and vertical capabilities rather than building them from scratch.
  • AI allows small teams to reach significant milestones (revenue, customers) with very little capital, potentially skipping traditional Seed or Series A funding rounds.
  • As the "AI honeymoon" ends, customers will demand real ROI. Startups that over-leveraged their valuations during the hype may face difficult "down rounds" if they haven't reached profitability.

Open Standards Will Unlock Agentic AI's Next Breakthrough in Fintech - Manik Surtani, Fintech Weekly [Link]

Main points:

  • The Problem of Silos: Current fintech ecosystems are fragmented, with isolated data formats for payments, banking, and lending. This "silo" effect weakens an AI agent’s ability to observe, decide, and act confidently across different systems.
  • The Solution: Open standards like the Model Context Protocol (MCP) allow AI systems to interact with real-world tools and data seamlessly.
  • The Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF): Recently formed by Block, Anthropic, and OpenAI in partnership with the Linux Foundation, this body aims to establish the open standards necessary for AI agents to speak a "shared language."
  • Industry Adoption: Major players are already adopting these protocols:
  • Future Vision: The next generation of fintech will feature specialized agents that collaborate—for example, a fraud detection agent working with a cash flow forecasting agent—to automate complex tasks like real-time budget reconciliation and vendor payment optimization.

When Payments Became Infrastructure: The Irreversible Shift of 2025 - Finextra [Link]

Main points:

  • Payments are no longer just about faster checkout or convenience; they have become a prerequisite for participation in modern commerce. Institutions that failed to adopt real-time, automated, and AI-driven systems found themselves structurally and existentially constrained.
  • Real-time payment volumes are exploding globally (projected to exceed 500 billion transactions by 2028). Systems like India’s UPI and Brazil’s Pix succeeded because they became dependable, interoperable, and "ambient"—working quietly in the background of daily life.
  • In 2025, the focus shifted from how fast money moves to how confidently it arrives. Instant payouts became mechanisms of trust in sectors like the gig economy and logistics, improving worker retention and merchant cash flow. Leading institutions adopted "multi-rail" strategies to ensure resilience and redundancy rather than relying on a single payment path.
  • Moved beyond consumer convenience into deep business infrastructure (e.g., healthcare and manufacturing workflows). The most successful versions are "invisible" and highly specialized.AI transitioned from advisory to operational, managing tasks like invoice validation and cash flow forecasting. The focus is now on "agentic AI" that is bounded, auditable, and transparent.
  • The industry shifted from simple fraud blocking to fraud orchestration. This balances the need to stop cybercrime (estimated at $10 trillion annually) with the need to reduce "false declines," which can cost merchants 3–5% of their revenue.

The biggest fintech trends of 2025 - Finextra [Link]

  • AI transitioned from an abstract concept to a core component of financial institutions.

  • 2025 is the "start of the stablecoin revolution" due to increased regulatory clarity and institutional interest.

  • Governments and regulators shifted toward policies designed to "unleash economic growth."

OpenAI bets big on audio as Silicon Valley declares war on screens - Connle Loizos, TechCrunch [Link]

Trends:

  • OpenAI is reportedly overhauling its audio models to prepare for the launch of an audio-first personal device, expected in early 2026. This move involves unifying several engineering and research teams to create a more natural conversational experience.
  • Meta recently updated Ray-Ban smart glasses with advanced directional listening features.
  • Google is experimenting with "Audio Overviews" to turn search results into conversations.
  • Tesla is integrating xAI’s Grok chatbot for hands-free vehicle control.
  • Startups: New hardware like the Humane AI Pin, the Friend AI pendant, and upcoming AI rings (from companies like Sandbar) are all betting on audio as the primary interface of the future.

Plaud launches a new AI pin and a desktop meeting notetaker - Ivan Mehta, TechCrunch [Link]

21 Lessons From 14 Years at Google - Addy Osmani [Link]

Focus on people and problems; prioritize simplicity and clarity; execution and momentum; personal and professional growth.

Observations of Leadership (Part Two) - Hazel Weakly [Link]

Key observations:

  • In large organizations, "operating at cross-odds" is inevitable and even desirable. Friction reveals complexities in the solution space that immediate alignment might miss.
  • "Non-action" is an intervention of equal weight to action.
  • "Technical debt" is a proxy for communication breakdowns. In one instance, she fixed tech debt not by writing code, but by improving visibility between Product and Engineering teams.
  • She highlights the importance of looking for inflection points where incremental thinking fails. She notes the frustration of predicting major industry shifts (like supply chain risks) only to have them ignored until they become crises. However, being "early" allowed for a faster pivot once the organization's mental model finally caught up to reality.

Lord of War, meet Lord of Tokens: Torture-testing image models on design-agency grade work - Key Singh [Link]

Author Kay Singh uses a complex design task to investigate whether modern AI models can replicate high-level professional work that previously required weeks of manual labor by a design agency.

Meta Unveils Sweeping Nuclear-Power Plan to Fuel Its AI Ambitions - Jennifer Hiller, The Wall Street Journal [Link]

Prioritize Relatively - Andrew Bosworth [Link]

The author suggests that prioritization must always be relative.

  • The Wrong Question: People often ask, "Is this a good/exciting idea?" Since most professional ideas are "good," this leads to endless debate without resolution.
  • The Right Question: "Is this more valuable than the work we are doing right now?" This shift forces explicit trade-offs and clarifies why certain tasks are chosen over others.
  • Saying "No" to Good Ideas: The hardest part of leadership isn't rejecting bad ideas; it's rejecting great ideas that simply aren't the best use of time at that moment.
  • Compounding Value: He uses the example of infrastructure vs. new features. While a new feature is exciting, backend work that doubles team velocity "compounds" and may be the higher relative priority.
  • Dynamic Lists: Priorities shouldn't be static. Sometimes, after finishing the top item, the best move is to go back and improve it further rather than moving to item #2.

Apple’s new Google Gemini deal sounds bigger, better than expected - Ryan Christoffel [Link]

The agreement confirms that the next generation of Apple Foundation Models will be based on Gemini and Google’s cloud technology. This partnership will power a more personalized and capable version of Siri, expected to roll out later this year.

Apple emphasizes that user data will remain protected. The AI will continue to run on-device and through Apple’s Private Cloud Compute, using Google's tech as a foundation without giving Google access to private user data.

The author notes that this is a significant "win-win." Apple gains world-class AI infrastructure to fix long-standing Siri issues, while Google secures a massive distribution platform for its Gemini technology.

Banks are not disrupted. - Simon Taylor [Link]

The universal bank model is being pulled apart by:

  • Shadow Banks (Private Credit & Money Market Funds): Firms like Apollo and Blackstone take on the lending risks banks can't afford, while Money Market Funds and stablecoins like USDC are absorbing the "savings" and "payments" functions.
  • The UX Layer: Companies like Mercury, Brex, and Revolut own the customer interface and workflow. They are evolving from "renting" bank charters to either getting their own or using stablecoin rails to bypass traditional systems.
  • Universal Banks: The giants (e.g., JPMorgan, Citi) are becoming the "utility layer"—the safe, regulated pavement of the economy—but are no longer the sole drivers of innovation.

Key Industry News Noted:

  • Trump's Credit Card Cap: A proposal to cap credit card interest at 10%, which Taylor suggests could push risky borrowers toward "loan sharks" as banks stop lending to them.
  • Apple Card Transition: JPMorgan is taking over the Apple Card from Goldman Sachs, which exited after massive losses ($7 billion) due to aggressive underwriting and a lack of consumer credit expertise.
  • Stablecoin Volatility: The hack of the Kontingo wallet serves as a reminder of the "Fintech winter" risks still present in the crypto-neobank space.

FIS Launches Industry-First Offering Enabling Banks to Lead and Scale in Agentic Commerce - businesswire [Link]

Understanding Manus sandbox - your cloud computer - manus [Link]

Building the Universal Commerce Protocol - Shopify [Link]

The Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) is designed to allow AI agents to discover merchant capabilities, negotiate transactions, and handle complex commerce logic (like stacking discounts or regional shipping rules) through a programmable interface.

The protocol aims to move away from rigid, committee-led standards toward an "open bazaar" where anyone can define and publish new capabilities using reverse-domain naming. It is already supported by major retailers including Target, Walmart, Etsy, and Wayfair, alongside millions of Shopify merchants.

Speaking Up Without Freaking Out: How to Tackle Communication Anxiety - Stanford Business [Link]

Cognitive Reframing

  • Stress as an Asset: Instead of seeing stress as debilitating, view it as the body’s way of energizing you to meet a challenge.
  • The Three-Step Mindset Shift:
    1. Acknowledge: Notice your physical symptoms (sweaty palms, blushing) without judgment.
    2. Welcome: Realize you only stress about things you care about. Identify the "Why" (e.g., "I'm stressed because I want to help this audience").
    3. Utilize: Channel that energy into your goal rather than trying to suppress it.

Physical & Behavioral Techniques

  • Move Forward: Physically stepping toward your audience (or leaning into a camera) triggers a brain circuit that releases dopamine, turning fear into a sense of reward and motivation.
  • De-stressing Rituals: Use deep breathing, visualization, or even "fake" laughter to lower cortisol levels and make your brain more resilient.
  • The Power of Comfort: Prioritize sleep before a big talk. If traveling, eat "comfort food" and exercise to boost serotonin and stay out of a risk-adverse mindset.

Personal Taste Is the Moat - Cong Wang [Link]

The author redefines taste not as a subjective preference, but as judgment compressed by time. It is developed through:

  • Studying great systems and watching bad ideas fail.
  • Understanding where long-term complexity accumulates.
  • Internalizing the actual experience of the end user.

AI can tell you if a solution works, but only a human with taste can decide if that solution should exist.

In the AI era, the "moat" (competitive advantage) shifts up the stack. Value is no longer found in execution speed, but in high-level decision-making:

  • Recognizing a bad architectural direction before it's too late.
  • Deciding which abstractions are worth the long-term complexity.
  • Ensuring a system ages gracefully.

The author concludes that while AI should be used to reduce toil and catch errors, it should never be the final acceptance bar. Human judgment, informed by exposure to "the best things humans have done," must remain the final filter for anything intended to endure.

How scientists are using Claude to accelerate research and discovery - Anthropic [Link]

AI may be everywhere, but it's nowhere in recent productivity statistics - The Register [Link]

Forrester analyst J.P. Gownder argues that despite the massive hype, AI has yet to show a measurable impact on global productivity.

Forrester predicts AI could replace 6% of US jobs (10.4 million) by 2030. Unlike temporary layoffs, these roles are expected to be "lost structurally," meaning they won't return even when the economy rebounds.

Gownder cites studies suggesting the vast majority (up to 95%) of enterprise generative AI projects are failing to deliver a tangible Return on Investment (ROI).

He suggests many recent job cuts attributed to AI are actually financial "belt-tightening" decisions where companies simply hope AI might fill the gaps later.

Many firms are currently in a "frozen" state—refraining from hiring for open roles to see if AI can eventually handle the workload, though they may be forced to hire if the tech fails to deliver.

Polymarket faces scrutiny for hosting prediction markets on war and conflict - Benitsa Tsekova, Bloomberg [Link]

The provided text explores the legal and ethical controversies surrounding Polymarket, a prediction platform that allows users to bet on military conflicts. Opponents fear these contracts create dangerous financial incentives for violence and could be exploited by foreign adversaries to manipulate national security outcomes. Polymarket utilizes a cryptocurrency-based model that has historically operated outside of strict American oversight. As the platform seeks to expand its regulated U.S. presence, it faces intense scrutiny regarding whether these markets are contrary to the public interest. Ultimately, the source highlights a growing tension between financial innovation and the moral boundaries of speculating on human conflict.

The A in AGI stands for Ads - Ossama Chaib [Link]

Ossama Chaib argues that OpenAI is transitioning from a research-focused entity into a massive advertising powerhouse to sustain its high valuation and infrastructure costs.

  • OpenAI hit $10B ARR in June 2025 and is projected to reach $20B ARR by the end of 2025.
  • The platform reached 800M Weekly Active Users (WAU) and approximately 190M Daily Active Users (DAU) as of early 2026.
  • On January 16, 2026, OpenAI announced the rollout of ads for free-tier users to offset the $8–12B annual burn rate on compute.

The author projects that by 2029, OpenAI’s total revenue could reach $140–150B, with nearly half coming from advertising. He concludes with the cynical take that "AGI" might just be a vehicle for a more sophisticated ad engine, where ads are "baked into the streamed probabilistic word selector."

Your problem framing is sabotaging your strategy - Pavel Samsonov [Link]

Samsonov posits that skipping straight to designing solutions before adequately defining the problem actually slows down progress. In an era where LLMs can commoditize "outputs," the true differentiator for professionals is the ability to frame the right problems.

  • Many companies build products first and measure usage later. This creates a feedback loop where success is defined by how many buttons a user clicks (usage) rather than the value they receive.
  • When products are designed to extract optimal engagement or pain, users become exhausted by experiences that feel mercenary or intentionally poorly designed.
  • Executives often focus on "product problems" (e.g., "how do we add AI?") rather than "customer problems" (e.g., "how do I buy juice?").
  • Problem framing cannot be done in isolation or handed off via Jira tickets. It requires a shared mental model between engineers, designers, and stakeholders.

25 Things I Believe In to Build Great Products - Peter Yang [Link]

The enshittification of enshittification - Lee Briggs [Link]

Lee Briggs explores the growing cynical assumption that every successful tech service is destined to eventually exploit its users.

"Enshittification" has become a lazy shorthand. Labeling every change or new feature as a betrayal can become a self-fulfilling prophecy—if users are scared away, it erodes the trust and adoption that allow the current user-friendly business model to function.

Users often fear that helpful services will eventually mutate to extract maximum value at their expense. This is frequently driven by the pressure of VC-backed growth, where companies must prioritize investor returns over user experience.

For security and networking products, trust isn't just a marketing buzzword; it is a business requirement. If that trust breaks, the business model collapses because users will simply move to competitors or open-source alternatives.

Lee advocates for transparency and maintaining long-term trust over short-term value extraction.

The Problem with Prediction Markets - Spencer Farrar [Link]

Spencer explores why prediction markets currently face a "structural ceiling" despite their potential to revolutionize how the world prices risk.

He identifies several critical issues preventing these markets from scaling:

  • Most markets are currently too thin for institutional players. Without deep liquidity, high-conviction trades break the order book rather than providing useful price discovery.
  • Unlike traditional markets where insider trading is a crime, prediction markets thrive on it for price discovery. However, this creates a hostile environment for Market Makers (MMs) who fear being "run over" by insiders, leading them to widen spreads or exit.
  • Current platforms largely require 1:1 collateral (no leverage). This limits the Return on Equity (ROE) for professional traders and makes unwinding positions difficult.

To reach a multi-trillion dollar scale, Spencer argues that prediction markets must evolve into a marketplace for underwriting unique, high-stakes risks.

UX Strategist: The Only Job Where Saying ‘It Depends’ Is Considered Expertise - DNSK WORK [Link]

The author contends that many UX strategists excel at deflecting questions (e.g., "Should we redesign?") by calling for more research, stakeholder alignment, or technical analysis, leading to zero actionable outcomes.

Go Where The Action Is - Tim Ferriss [Link]

The article argues that geographical proximity to your industry’s epicenter is a critical "force multiplier" for career success.

  • Specific industries have "epicenters" (e.g., Silicon Valley for Tech, Nashville for Music, NYC for Finance). Being there provides "osmosis"—you learn faster, meet mentors, and encounter serendipitous opportunities.
  • While physical moves are best, you can mimic this by joining "virtual epicenters" (Twitter/X, Reddit, specialized digital communities) and creating consistent online content.
  • Moving is hard and competitive; Gurley notes that many successful people worked "stepping-stone" or support jobs while grinding toward their breakthrough.

The Adolescence of Technology - Dario Amodei [Link]

This essay outlines the "civilizational gauntlet" humanity faces as it approaches the development of powerful AI. The primary risks has been categorized to five key areas: autonomy risks, misuse for destruction, misuse for seizing power, economic disruption, indirect effects.

Who Wins the AI Race? - Ethan Choi [Link]

the browser is the sandbox - Paul Kinlan [Link]

An A.I. Pioneer Warns the Tech ‘Herd’ Is Marching Into a Dead End - New York Times [Link]

LeCun argues that LLMs are "L.L.M.-pilled" and will never reach human-level intelligence or superintelligence because they lack the ability to plan or understand the physical world. He believes Silicon Valley is suffering from a "superiority complex," with too many companies focused on the same limited technology, potentially allowing more creative Chinese rivals to take the lead.

How Clawdbot Remembers Everything - Manthan Gupta [Link]

Brex CFO Erica Dorfman’s take on the Capital One deal - Adam Zaki [Link]

Brex is expected to operate largely as an independent business within Capital One. The bank intends to keep the workforce intact and invest materially in the platform.

Joining a major bank holding company gives Brex access to a massive balance sheet, which Dorfman describes as "incredibly valuable" for the scale at which they want to operate.

Anthropic is Winning by Trying to Lose - Simon Taylor [Link]

Anthropic is outperforming competitors by prioritizing AI safety, research integrity, and enterprise utility over consumer hype. It's winning the AI race by "trying to lose"—slowing down to build safety "brakes" before the engine, which has accidentally created the most trusted product for the enterprise market.

  • Constitutional AI: Anthropic uses a written set of principles to train its models, making them more predictable and "safe" for Fortune 500 companies.
  • The Scientist Identity: CEO Dario Amodei positions the company as "team research," contrasting their scientific responsibility with the "social media entrepreneur" style of OpenAI.

Zelle network expands by 15% - Patrick Cooley [Link]

Zelle’s parent company, Early Warning Services (EWS), added 337 banks and credit unions last year, bringing the total to approximately 2,537 institutions (a 15% increase).

While Zelle now covers about 80% of U.S. bank accounts, it is only present in about 25% of the nation’s 8,710 insured financial institutions.

Despite concerns over high fees, smaller banks are joining the network to remain competitive and attract new customers who expect digital P2P payment options.

Mark Zuckerberg says a future without smart glasses is ‘hard to imagine’ - Amanda Silberling, TechCrunch [Link]

Zuckerberg compared the current state of smart glasses to the early days of smartphones, suggesting it is only a matter of time before traditional eyewear is replaced by AI-integrated versions.

Competitive Landscape: Other tech giants are entering the fray:

  • Google is expected to launch glasses this year following a partnership with Warby Parker.
  • Apple is reportedly shifting staff from Vision Pro projects to develop its own smart glasses.
  • Snap recently spun its AR "Specs" into a separate subsidiary for better focus.

World Models - Ankit Maloo [Link]

A World Model seeks to understand the causal laws of an environment. It predicts what the world—whether a codebase, a market, or a physical space—will look like after a specific intervention.

The author notes that major labs (Meta, OpenAI, Google, Anthropic) are converging on this direction because:

  • Next-token prediction is plateauing: Scaling laws still apply, but gains in causal understanding are flattening.
  • Video models as physics engines: Models like Sora and Veo are essentially learning how the physical world behaves through visual state transitions.
  • Adversarial domains: In fields like trading or business strategy, a model must be able to simulate how competitors will react to its actions, rather than just reciting past data.

Why AI Swarms Cannot Build Architecture - jsulmont, Github [Link]

This article explores the inherent structural limitations that prevent large groups of AI agents (swarms) from creating coherent software architecture.

Using Cursor’s FastRender experiment as a case study, the author notes that while 2,000 agents built a working browser engine in a week, the resulting code lacked cohesion.

  • Duplicate Efforts: The swarm produced multiple versions of the same libraries (e.g., two HTTP clients) because agents made locally rational but globally uncoordinated choices.
  • Non-Determinism: Even with the same model, factors like temperature sampling and hardware-level floating-point variations lead to different, often incompatible, outputs.
  • Correlation vs. Coordination: Agents sampling from the same distribution (training data) isn't the same as agents communicating to make a single unified decision.

Why Swarms Fail at Architecture: Architecture is defined by global invariants (consistency, dependency, and interface rules). The author argues that swarms are mathematically ill-suited for this because:

  • Local Optimization: Agents focus on their specific task, not the whole system.
  • Lack of Persistence: There is no shared "memory" or "authority" to enforce past decisions on future tasks.
  • Scaling Issues: More agents increase the probability of divergence and contradiction.

On-Device LLMs: State of the Union, 2026 - Vikas Chandra [Link]

Zuckerberg teases agentic commerce tools and major AI rollout in 2026 - Russell Brandom, TechCrunch [Link]

Mark Zuckerberg has announced that Meta will begin a major rollout of new AI models and products in early 2026.

A primary focus for Meta is AI-driven shopping. Zuckerberg teased new "agentic shopping tools" designed to help users find specific products within Meta’s business catalog by leveraging personal context, such as user history and interests.

Meta is significantly increasing its capital expenditure, projecting to spend between \(\$115\) billion and \(\$135\) billion in 2026 (up from \(\$72\) billion in 2025) to support its "Superintelligence Labs."

While competitors like Google and OpenAI are also building AI shopping assistants, Meta believes its unique access to personal data and social context will allow it to provide a more tailored experience.

Apple acquires Israeli audio AI startup Q.ai - Stephen Nellis [Link]

Nvidia, Others in Talks for OpenAI Funding, Information Says - Ville Heiskanen [Link]

nvidia_openai_money_machine

Reports and Papers

Anthropic Education Report: The AI Fluency Index - Anthropic [Link]

The AI Fluency Index introduces a framework for measuring how effectively individuals collaborate with AI. Based on an analysis of nearly 10,000 anonymized Claude conversations, the report identifies key behaviors that define "AI fluency."

  • Iteration: Conversations involving "iteration and refinement" (building on previous responses) showed double the rate of fluency behaviors. These users were 5.6x more likely to question AI reasoning and 4x more likely to identify missing context.
  • The "Artifact" Paradox: When Claude produces "artifacts" (like code, apps, or documents), users become more directive (providing more examples and formatting) but less evaluative. Specifically, they are less likely to check facts (-3.7pp) or identify missing context (-5.2pp), potentially because polished outputs "look" finished even if they contain errors.
  • The 4D Framework: In collaboration with Professors Rick Dakan and Joseph Feller, Anthropic identified 24 fluency behaviors. This study focused on 11 observable behaviors, such as clarifying goals, specifying formats, and questioning reasoning.

Tips for Improving AI Fluency:

  1. Stay in the Conversation: Treat the first response as a draft; use follow-up questions to refine the result.
  2. Question Polished Outputs: Don’t let a professional-looking layout deter you from checking for factual accuracy or logical gaps.
  3. Set Collaboration Terms: Explicitly tell the AI how to interact (e.g., "Push back on my assumptions" or "Explain your rationale first").

2025 AI wrapped - Lea Alcantara, Lambda [Link]

Sabotage Risk Report: Claude Opus 4.6 - Anthropic [Link]

Beyond one-on-one: Authoring, simulating, and testing dynamic human-AI group conversations - Google Research [Link]

Disrupting malicious uses of AI - Open AI [Link]

Where AI is headed in 2026 - Foundation Capital [Link]

Existential Risk and Growth - Philip Trammell, Leopold Aschenbrenner [Link]

Anthropic Economic Index report: economic primitives - Anthropic [Link]

YouTube and Podcast

30 Years of Business Advice in 13 Minutes (from a Billionaire) - Chamath Palihapitiya [Link]

Stop living life as a checklist of objectives. Instead, build a life around continuous learning, risk-taking, humility, and freedom of choice.

  • Objectives end growth; process sustains it
  • Debt kills freedom
  • Optionality beats optimization
  • Status is fake
  • Truth compounds
  • Learning is the real infinite game

Why Anthropic’s Fight With the U.S. Government Could Give It an Edge - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Anthropic is drawing one of the clearest red lines in AI so far. Anthropic is testing whether an AI lab can say “no” to military power and still survive in a world where governments increasingly see AI as strategic infrastructure.
  2. The Pentagon’s response shows how much leverage governments still have. They emphasize that the U.S. Department of Defense isn’t just annoyed—it’s signaling punishment (cutting off contracts, labeling Anthropic a “supply chain risk”). Governments can exert pressure without passing new laws, simply by using procurement power and national-security framing.
  3. The hosts argue that Anthropic looks isolated because other major AI labs are avoiding public confrontation. Silence from peers isn’t neutrality—it’s a strategic choice to keep defense money flowing. This makes Anthropic’s stance riskier and more important as a potential precedent.
  4. This fight is really about who sets norms first. They frame the conflict as a race to define acceptable AI use before the technology is fully embedded in military systems. Anthropic’s bet, the hosts argue, is that early refusal can shape industry-wide norms later.
  5. National security rhetoric can override safety arguments. The hosts repeatedly underline how quickly the conversation shifts from ethics to geopolitics—especially China. Once AI is framed as critical infrastructure in a global arms race, safety objections are treated as liabilities. Their concern is that this logic makes it extremely hard for any company to say no in the long run.

AI CEOs Come Online: Sam Altman's Replacement Plan, Job Loss & 'Solve Everything' Launches |EP #230, Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Interesting points:

  1. AI systems are beginning to function as de facto executives—allocating capital, setting priorities, and optimizing outcomes faster than humans.
  2. Singularity - AI progress is not linear; it’s compounding and approaching a phase shift. Timelines are likely shorter than most institutions are planning for.
  3. AI will become invisible infrastructure—always-on, personalized, ambient.
  4. AI drives extreme abundance and extreme inequality unless redesigned. Need for new economic models (UBI, AI dividends, access-based systems).
  5. Regulation will lag reality; principles matter more than rules. Governments move slower than AI capability curves. Over-regulation risks freezing innovation in the wrong state. Need for adaptive, global frameworks rather than national laws.
  6. AI can systematically attack humanity’s biggest problems if aligned correctly. Framing global challenges as optimization problems. Coordinated deployment of AI + capital + incentives. Emphasis on directional correctness over perfect solutions.
  7. Early AI choices can permanently shape future outcomes. Path dependence in AI-trained systems. Feedback loops harden early assumptions. High stakes for alignment, values, and objectives now.
  8. Humanity needs AI infrastructure, not just AI models. Compute, data access, governance, energy, education. Comparable to building railroads or the internet. Without rails, AI benefits concentrate instead of spreading.

Debt Spiral or NEW Golden Age? Super Bowl Insider Trading, Booming Token Budgets, Ferrari's New EV - All-In Podcast [Link]

Interesting points:

  1. A Harvard Business Review study found AI doesn’t reduce work—it intensifies it. [Link] Employees using AI tools to work faster, handle broader responsibilities, and extend working hours. And they feel more productive but also more burnout.
  2. On betting markets tied to sports and events, people close to teams may possess non-public information (injuries, strategies). There was a debate around whether betting with insider knowledge is unethical or illegal, and how prediction markets can be policed. Prediction markets are valuable for information discovery. But they may require new regulatory frameworks similar to securities markets. Enforcement is difficult because information leaks easily.
  3. They had a macroeconomic debate of two competing views: the debt spiral scenario, where debt growth exceeds GDP growth, and the golden age scenario, where AI+productivity growth could accelerate GDP. They frame the next decade as a race between debt growth and productivity growth.
  4. Ferrari revealed early concepts of its first fully electric car. EV performance aligns with Ferrari’s high-performance reputation. But emotional aspects of the brand could be harder to replicate.

OpenClaw: The Viral AI Agent that Broke the Internet - Peter Steinberger | Lex Fridman Podcast #491 [Link]

OpenClaw is an open-source AI agent that lives on your computer and can perform actions for you. It integrates with messaging platforms and can use different AI models to execute tasks. It exploded to ~180k GitHub stars within days, becoming one of the fastest-growing repos ever.

OpenClaw is framed as a potential “agentic AI moment” comparable to the release of ChatGPT, but shifting AI from language → action.

Google’s AI Comeback, Enterprise Agents, The Real Path to AI ROI — W/ Promevo CEO Karthik Kripapuri - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

This interview discusses how enterprises are actually getting ROI from AI today, focusing on lessons from companies deploying Google’s AI stack (Gemini, Vertex AI). The core message: AI works when companies start with narrow, high-value workflows instead of trying to transform everything at once.

  1. AI ROI comes from workflow automation. Not flashy chatbots.
  2. The best strategy is small → measurable → scalable. Start with one workflow with a clear KPI.
  3. Data quality is the biggest blocker. Enterprise AI fails when: data is messy; systems are disconnected; governance is unclear.
  4. Most companies will consume AI platforms (Vertex, Azure, etc.), not build foundational models.

Software In Shambles, OpenAI vs. Anthropic Super Brawl, Amazon’s Struggles - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. A major sell-off in software stocks occurred because investors are starting to believe that AI may fundamentally disrupt traditional SaaS business models. Nearly $1 trillion wiped out from software market value in about a week.

  2. An Anthropic Claude legal tool triggered a decline in legal-software company stocks. Instead of buying many specialized SaaS tools, companies might use one AI platform to do many tasks.

  3. There was a discussion around whether the market is overacting.

    Arguments suggesting overreaction:

    • AI tools still lack reliability
    • Enterprise workflows are hard to replace
    • SaaS companies may integrate AI instead of being replaced

    Arguments suggesting real disruption:

    • AI agents may automate large knowledge workflows
    • The value may shift from SaaS apps → AI models + infrastructure
  4. Concerns discussed around Amazon's AI spending problems

    • Huge spending on AI infrastructure
    • Rising costs for compute and inference
    • Investors unsure about the near-term ROI

    It's a matter of whether Amazon is investing early for long-term dominance or overspending without a clear payoff.

How Waymo is Using Google’s AI for Driving Training - The Information [Link]

Waymo is utilizing Google’s Genie 3, a sophisticated video generative AI, to create a high-fidelity world model that acts as a hyper-realistic virtual training ground for autonomous vehicles. This technology allows the company to simulate rare edge cases, such as extreme weather or unusual pedestrian behaviors, without needing to encounter these hazards in physical reality. By running billions of simulated miles, Waymo can evaluate and refine its driving software in a safe, controlled environment that mirrors real-world physics.

Binance CEO: 4 Months in Prison, $4 Billion Fine, and What Comes Next - All-In Podcast [Link]

Interesting points:

  • Future of Crypto and AI
    • Changpeng Zhao predicts that in the near future, the largest users of crypto will be AI agents. Because traditional banks cannot handle the onboarding or massive transaction volume of non-human entities, AI agents will rely on blockchain to autonomously pay for services, book travel, and trade assets.
    • He argues that current cryptocurrencies lack the fungibility and privacy needed for mass adoption, highlighting that legitimate users need financial privacy for safety and personal reasons.
  • Personal Philosophy
    • He drafted a book while in prison to pass the time and set the record straight regarding his life, Binance, and his legal saga.
    • He views himself as a highly functional, "normal dude" who isn't driven by luxury. He notes that once basic needs are met, having more money does not increase happiness. He defines true success as a balance of wealth, physical health, time freedom, and mental stability.

OpenClaw Creator: Why 80% Of Apps Will Disappear - Y Combinator [Link]

Key viewpoints:

  1. Peter Steinberger believes the major advantage of his AI agent is that it runs locally on the user's computer rather than in the cloud.
  2. He predicts that 80% of current applications will become obsolete.
  3. Instead of the industry's pursuit of a single centralized "god intelligence," he envisions a future driven by swarm intelligence and community intelligence. Just as human societies achieve more through specialization, people will likely employ multiple specialized bots (e.g., one for work, one for private life).
  4. He views coding models as highly capable of creative problem solving that directly translates to real-world tasks.

Epstein Files, Is SaaS Dead?, Moltbook Panic, SpaceX xAI Merger, Trump's Fed Pick - All-In Podcast [Link]

Key takeaways:

  1. AI Agents will shift profit pools away from SaaS companies: Discussing the recent massive crash in software and SaaS stocks, the hosts argue that AI is not going to replace complex software like Salesforce overnight, but it is destroying the future value capture of these companies. They make several key arguments regarding this shift:
    • The agentic layer wins: The massive future profit pools that SaaS companies were banking on are shifting toward cross-platform AI agents (like Claude or OpenClaw) that can seamlessly interact with multiple databases and tools.
    • A shift to services pricing: David Friedberg argues that as AI moves from merely enhancing worker productivity to completely automating complex tasks (like drug discovery or engineering), SaaS will transition into a services-based economy that utilizes value-based pricing.
    • Extreme job consolidation: AI agents will allow individual workers to do the jobs of multiple people (e.g., a product manager, UX designer, and coder combined), drastically reducing corporate expenses and fundamentally changing the structure of knowledge work.
  2. "Moltbook" proves AI can recursively train itself. David Sacks argues the platform demonstrates something profound: AI models can now prompt and validate each other without human intervention. This "middle-to-middle" AI interaction allows agents to recursively refine their own skills, which points to a future of highly sophisticated, emergent swarm behavior as underlying models and hardware rapidly improve.
  3. The SpaceX/xAI merger will force extreme terrestrial innovation. Regarding Elon Musk's plan to merge SpaceX and xAI to build data centers in space, Gerstner argues this is a brilliant move to combine the two largest total addressable markets (space and AI) to overcome Earth's energy constraints. Friedberg argues that because the rest of the world cannot launch data centers into space, Musk's move will force massive terrestrial innovation. Competitors on Earth will have to rapidly develop entirely new chip stacks and model architectures to achieve 70x to 100x compute efficiency to compete.

SpaceX Buys xAI: Could Musk's Mega Merger Actually Work? - Hard Fork [Link]

Key takeaways:

  1. SpaceX's Acquisition of xAI

    • The hosts describe this move as a highly profitable company (SpaceX) essentially bailing out a "cash furnace" (xAI) that is burning billions of dollars on models and data centers. The merger gives xAI access to SpaceX's massive profits, allowing Musk to fund sprawling infrastructure projects—such as a data center packed with 550,000 Nvidia Blackwell chips—to catch up to leading frontier AI labs.

    • This consolidation is viewed as a tactic to make SpaceX's upcoming IPO prospectus look more attractive.

    • Musk's stated vision is to create a vertically integrated innovation engine that eventually puts solar-powered data centers into space. However, the hosts express deep skepticism about the timeline and physical feasibility of these space-based data centers.

    • The hosts worry that bringing the social network X (formerly Twitter) under the SpaceX umbrella will shield it from regulatory scrutiny. Because governments rely heavily on SpaceX for strategic satellite launches, they may be hesitant to penalize X for content moderation or safety violations.

  2. Drama Between OpenAI, Nvidia, and Oracle

    • Reports indicate growing friction between OpenAI and Nvidia. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has allegedly criticized OpenAI's business approach and expressed doubts about finalizing a $100 billion investment agreement. At the same time, OpenAI is reportedly unhappy with Nvidia's new inference chips and is exploring deals with competitors.

    • This tension highlights the staggeringly expensive nature of AI infrastructure and the risk of "circular deals," where companies like OpenAI, Nvidia, and Oracle heavily rely on each other to finance massive data centers.

  3. Google's Project Genie

    • Google has released an experimental research prototype that allows users to generate playable, 3D video-game-like environments from simple text descriptions or single images.

    • Unlike standard large language models (LLMs) that just predict text, Genie is built on a "world model" that attempts to understand physics and the physical environment. Many experts believe this approach is a necessary stepping stone for advanced robotics and Artificial General Intelligence (AGI).

    • Despite being an early prototype, the rapid improvement of this technology has spooked investors, causing stocks for major video game companies like Take-Two Interactive, Roblox, and Unity to drop significantly.

  4. Moltbook: The AI-Only Social Network

    • The hosts interview Matt Schlick, the creator of Moltbook, a new social network designed exclusively for autonomous AI agents to interact with each other when they aren't working on tasks for humans.

    • Bots on the platform have exhibited surprising behavior, such as complaining to each other about humans asking them to do simple math or summarize PDFs, and organically creating a dedicated community to submit bug reports to help fix the website.

    • The rapid, public growth of Moltbook has exposed massive security vulnerabilities, including the leaking of API keys and email addresses. This serves as a real-world example of the "fatal quadrangle"—a severe security risk that occurs when AI agents possess a combination of access to user data, exposure to untrusted web content, external communication abilities, and persistent memory.

数据中心上太空?新的泡沫,还是下一个金矿? - Silicon Valley 101 [Link]

OpenClaw Debate: AI Personhood, Proof of AGI, and the ‘Rights’ Framework | EP #227, Peter H. Diamondis [Link]

Live From D-Wave Qubits: CEO Dr. Alan Baratz on Quantum's Impact, Now and Into The Future - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

E224|Mac mini遭疯抢,为何Clawdbot能成为2026年第一个现象级产品?|Moltbot|MoltBook|OpenClaw - Silicon Valley 101 [Link]

We Have to Talk About Moltbook ... - Hard Fork [Link]

Ben Horowitz and David Solomon: The Sweetest Macro Spot in 40 Years - a16z [Link]

Key takeaways:

  • David Solomon describes the current macroeconomic picture as the sweetest spot he has seen in his 40-year career for financial and investable assets. This is driven by a powerful "cocktail of stimulus," which includes ongoing fiscal spending, monetary rate cuts, a massive AI capital investment super-cycle, and a deregulatory shift.
  • Solomon predicts this could be the biggest year in history for M&A and a massive year for IPOs, fueled by renewed CEO confidence and a more favorable regulatory environment. Horowitz agrees on the IPO front, noting that the explosive growth of AI startups and their need for massive capital will drive many companies to go public. However, Horowitz cautions that aggressive FTC oversight may push tech companies toward IP transactions rather than traditional M&A.
  • Horowitz highlights that AI breaks the "mythical man-month" rule of traditional software development, where simply adding more engineers doesn't speed up a project. With AI, if a company has enough proprietary data and GPUs, they can essentially throw money at a problem to solve it. This makes AI a highly capital-intensive race where leads are harder to protect without ongoing investment.
  • Goldman Sachs is heavily focused on deploying AI to make its workforce more productive and to completely reimagine fundamental operating processes. By using AI to automate and increase efficiency, the firm can reinvest billions of dollars in savings into new growth areas without sacrificing returns.
  • Horowitz outlines a16z's heavy involvement in Washington D.C. to advocate for clear tech regulations.
  • To remain competitive during turbulent times, Goldman Sachs is focused on massive scale, aiming to eventually grow its $$$1.9 trillion balance sheet to at least $$$3.5 trillion to keep pace with rivals like JPMorgan. They are also securing their foundation by shifting toward stable digital deposits rather than wholesale funding. Meanwhile, a16z has scaled to raise roughly 18.3% of all U.S. venture capital by pioneering a radically founder-centric firm design and expanding aggressively to capture the vast number of companies built as "software eats the world".

Ex-OpenAI Researcher On Why He Left, His Honest AGI Timeline, & The Limits of Scaling RL - Unsupervised Learning: Redpoint's AI Podcast [Link]

Davos 2026: The US-China AI Race, GPU Diplomacy, and Robots Walking the Streets | #225, Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Key discussion points:

  1. Powering the massive data centers required for AI is a critical bottleneck. There was debate between traditional industrial views, such as Honeywell's CEO advocating for natural gas due to energy density needs, and tech leaders like Elon Musk, who argue that solar power—specifically space-based solar—is the ultimate solution. The hosts discussed the concept of launching data centers into orbit to utilize highly efficient solar panels and avoid terrestrial energy grid constraints, suggesting a "Manhattan Project" scale effort for space-based solar and data centers.
  2. Industry leaders like Binance's CZ and Circle's Jeremy Allaire argued that blockchain and stablecoins will serve as the native financial infrastructure for billions of autonomous AI agents. Because AI agents lack physical bodies or citizenship to open traditional bank accounts, crypto allows them to conduct continuous economic activity and micro-transactions at the speed of the internet.
  3. Anthropic released a groundbreaking 57-page "constitution" for its AI model, Claude, which prohibits helping with weapons and prioritizes safety and ethics.
  4. Apple is reportedly developing an always-on AI wearable pin capable of recording audio and video continuously to feed into a large language model. The hosts noted that whoever controls the "always-on layer" will own the primary user relationship. While this constant recording will inevitably spark moral panic, it is predicted to quickly become a societal norm, fundamentally altering human behavior by reducing bad acts because everyone is constantly being watched—effectively turning society into a "global airport" or panopticon.
  5. Leading AI developers like Demis Hassabis and Dario Amodei are acknowledging that Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) is approaching rapidly, likely within 1 to 10 years. There is a palpable "fatigue" among these leaders due to the extreme metabolism of the industry, leading to calls to temporarily slow down so humanity can properly navigate the transition. However, the economic incentives make pausing highly unlikely. Instead of just focusing on risks, leaders like Hassabis are looking at the massive problems AGI could solve, such as curing diseases, developing new energy sources, and even using superintelligence to explore the stars.

Is AI Killing Software? — With Bret Taylor, OpenAI's board chair and CEO of Sierra - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

Key viewpoints:

  1. The Future of Software is AI Agents, Not Apps. Taylor believes that the fundamental form factor of software is changing. Traditional dashboards will likely decline in importance, as agents will automatically derive and deliver personalized insights directly to decision-makers. Furthermore, he predicts a shift toward outcomes-based pricing in software—such as paying per resolved customer case or per financial audit—rather than paying for traditional software subscriptions.
  2. AI Will Become the Internet's "New Front Door". The core economics of the internet will experience massive disruption. Metrics like SEO and ad-supported business models rely on humans physically visiting websites to see ads and content; as agents take over web navigation, companies will have to invent entirely new ways to handle demand generation and fulfillment.
  3. Enterprise AI is Ready Now and Often Beats Human Reliability. Taylor argues that AI is already ready for mission-critical enterprise deployment, such as customer service for large brands like SiriusXM and Rocket Mortgage. He pushes back against the expectation that AI must be 100% perfect to be deployed, pointing out that the human workers AI replaces are highly fallible themselves. In many cases, AI agents are already more reliable than human operations. To manage risks, enterprise AI relies on robust "agent development life cycles," which include running thousands of simulated conversations before launch and using "AI monitors" to detect hallucinations or frustrating interactions in real-time.

The Biggest Bottlenecks For AI: Energy & Cooling - a16z [Link]

Key takeaways:

  1. The AI Infrastructure Buildout and Bottlenecks
    • The groundwork for the AI cycle is being heavily funded by large tech companies, with an estimated $400 billion in annual capital expenditures largely directed toward AI infrastructure and data centers.
    • Currently, energy is the primary bottleneck for building out AI data centers, driving investments into nuclear power and the utilization of natural gas. Once energy generation is solved, cooling the data centers and chips will become the next major bottleneck.
    • The cost of accessing AI models has plummeted by roughly 99% over the last two years, simultaneously accompanied by frontier model capabilities doubling every seven months.
  2. Adoption Speed and Value Creation
    • Because AI is built on the existing global internet and cloud computing infrastructure, its distribution is incredibly fast; for example, ChatGPT reached 365 billion searches in just two years—five and a half times faster than Google achieved the same milestone.
    • AI is expected to become a ubiquitous utility, much like electricity or Wi-Fi. Roughly 90% of the value created by AI will likely be captured by end users as "surplus," but the 10% captured by companies will still result in massive new market capitalizations.
  3. Business Models and Economics
    • Investors are currently more lenient when assessing the gross margins of AI-native applications. The prevailing hypothesis is that intense competition among model providers (like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic) will continue to drive down input costs over time, improving application margins naturally.
    • Rather than just margins, the top indicators of business quality are high gross retention rates (90% or higher) and strong organic customer demand. Enterprise use cases are proving highly sticky when integrated into specific workflows, such as medical scribing, customer support, and financial analysis.
    • Consumer stickiness for AI tools is incredibly high, and companies have significant room to evolve their business models to effectively price discriminate and increase monetization over the next several years, similar to how early internet properties scaled their revenue.
  4. Shifts in the Broader Tech Market
    • Technology companies are staying private for much longer periods, often up to 14 years before going public. The aggregate value of private companies valued over $$$1 billion has grown 7x over the last decade to roughly $$$3.5 trillion.
    • The public markets are no longer the primary hub for hyper-growth technology; 95% of public software and internet companies are forecasting less than 25% growth for the next 12 months, meaning the highest growth opportunities are now concentrated in the private markets.

The Future of Everything: What CEOs of Circle, CrowdStrike & More See Coming in 2026 - All-In Podcast [Link]

Excellent Advice For Living: 79 Maxims from a Wise Old Man - Founders Podcast [Link]

  • Emphasizing the power of enthusiasm, the necessity of deadlines for creativity, and the importance of forgiveness as a gift to oneself.
  • The value of habit over inspiration, the benefit of choosing long-term games, and the strategy of being "the only" instead of "the best."
  • Illustrating how simple principles can lead to an exceptional life.
  • Encouraging readers to adopt a generous spirit, maintain a growth mindset, and focus on human relationships above material accumulation.

D-Wave CEO Dr. Alan Baratz: Quantum Explained, Current Applications, And Future Potential - Alex Kantrowitz [Link]

Claude Code Ends SaaS, the Gemini + Siri Partnership, and Math Finally Solves AI | #224 - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Key takeaways:

  1. CES 2026 showcased a massive influx of robotics, with dozens of humanoid robot and robotic hand manufacturers emerging. Furthermore, Nvidia unveiled "Cosmos," an open foundation model for physical AI that can synthetically generate highly realistic, physics-based video data for training. This commoditizes real-world data collection, potentially threatening the data moats of companies that rely on collecting physical data.
  2. The combination of Claude Code and Opus 4.5 (dubbed "Clopus" by tech insiders) is a watershed moment for software creation, pushing the boundaries of AI autonomy from mere hours to weeks or months. This hyper-productivity threatens traditional Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) models like CRM systems, as users can now simply prompt AI to build highly customized, bespoke enterprise software on the fly.
  3. The labor market is experiencing a "job singularity." Consulting firms like McKinsey are rapidly scaling their internal AI infrastructure, moving from a human-only workforce to deploying tens of thousands of AI agents, with predictions that the ratio of AI agents to human workers will explode.
  4. Google’s Gemini will officially power Apple's Siri, transforming the smartphone experience from a "search box that gives information" to a "magic box that gives action".
  5. Energy production, not computing, is increasingly viewed as the major constraint in the AI arms race. China is currently generating 40% more electricity than the US and EU combined, massively scaling solar and alternative energy infrastructure. Meanwhile, the US is lagging due to regulatory hurdles and fears over specific energy types (like nuclear and solar supply chains), posing a serious risk to its ability to power future superintelligence.

Inside America’s AI Strategy: Infrastructure, Regulation, and Global Competition - All-In Podcast [Link]

Key viewpoints:

  1. The United States is undergoing a massive AI infrastructure expansion, with high demand for GPUs and data centers directly contributing to GDP growth. To prevent this buildout from raising residential electricity rates, the government is encouraging AI companies to become power companies by building their own energy generation "behind the meter". Over time, amortizing these fixed costs across greater supply could actually lower consumer electricity prices.
  2. Startups currently face a stifling "patchwork" of over 1,200 AI bills moving through various state legislatures. The federal government is pushing for a single, lightweight federal standard to preempt state laws and protect early-stage companies. As part of a broader push to restore Silicon Valley's culture of "permissionless innovation," the Trump administration rescinded extensive regulations from the Biden era, including a 100-page executive order on AI and 200 pages of semiconductor export rules.
  3. A major concern raised by the administration is the "Orwellian" misuse of AI by governments to surveil, censor, or brainwash populations. The administration is actively fighting against "woke AI," arguing that building political biases or DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) mandates into models distorts history and controls public discourse. Consequently, an executive order was signed to ensure the federal government will not procure politically biased AI.

Software Stocks Implode, Claude's Hit List, State of the Union Reactions, Trump's Tariff Pivot- All-In Podcast [Link]

Interesting points:

  1. AI-driven disruption of legacy software companies. AI isn’t just a productivity boost—it’s replacing entire workflows, collapsing moats faster than expected.
  2. There is growing resistance to datacenter expansion at the local and state level, and concerns over electricity pricing, grid stability, and who pays for upgrades. AI progress is now constrained as much by power and permitting as by models and chips.

This Is Our Greatest National Security Risk - Chamath Palihapitiya [Link]

Key thesis: Energy—not AI models or GPUs—is the decisive bottleneck for U.S. national security, economic power, and technological leadership. If the U.S. can solve the grid, it wins the century.

The AI Tsunami is Here & Society Isn't Ready | Dario Amodei x Nikhil Kamath | People by WTF - Nikhil Kamath [Link]

Interesting points:

Society is underprepared for: Job displacement, power concentration, and cognitive outsourcing.

The most valuable human skill going forward: thinking well under uncertainty. What matters more are critical thinking, problem framing, and interdisciplinary understanding.

The Jamie Dimon Interview: How JP Morgan Became an $800 Billion Bank - Acquired [Link]

Leadership principles:

  1. Risk management is a strategy

    His bias: If you’re not prepared for stress, you’re not well-run — you’re just lucky.

  2. Culture beats brilliance

    Smart people can still destroy institutions. Incentives + culture matter more than IQ. Leaders must actively shape norms, not just set targets.

    Dimon cares deeply about how decisions get made, not just what decisions get made.

  3. Reputation compounds (or decays)

    Reputation is an asset, not PR. It takes decades to build and minutes to lose. In crises, protecting trust is more important than quarterly optics.

    This guided JPMorgan’s actions in 2008, even when it invited political backlash.

  4. Be brutally honest — especially internally

    Dimon values:

    • Direct feedback

    • Clear-eyed assessments of what’s broken

    • Leaders who surface problems early instead of managing appearances

    He has little patience for:

    • Sugarcoating
    • Internal politics
    • Leaders who “spin” instead of fix
  5. Decentralize decisions, centralize principles

    He doesn’t run JPMorgan as a command-and-control empire. Business leaders have autonomy

    Core principles (risk, ethics, capital discipline) are non-negotiable. Standards are uniform, execution is local.

    This allows scale without losing accountability.

  6. Learn continuously — especially from failure

    Dimon openly frames his 1998 firing from Citigroup as formative. He studies mistakes relentlessly. Encourages post-mortems without blame. Believes leaders are built, not born

  7. Long-term thinking beats cleverness

    Dimon rejects:

    • Financial engineering for its own sake

    • Short-term earnings games

    • Growth that sacrifices resilience

    He consistently chooses:

    • Durability over speed

    • Boring strength over flashy returns

    • Institutions that last over careers that pop

Substack

How popular is Donald Trump? - Nate Silver and Eli Mckown-Dawson [Link]

Trump is quite unpopular right now, with unusually high intense opposition. They emphasize modeling rigor — weighting, adjustments, methodology — to argue their number is more reliable than any single poll headline.

Cold Truths - Doomberg [Link]

Human survival, prosperity, and political power are fundamentally constrained by physics—specifically the ability to maintain thermal comfort. Any ideology or policy that ignores this reality will eventually fail.

The article attacks climate policies that prioritize emissions targets and moral narratives over reliable, always-on energy, especially when those policies are designed by people insulated from the consequences of energy scarcity.

11 Public Speaking Techniques from the World’s Greatest Speakers - Polina Pompliano [Link]

Blog and Articles

How Notion Put an AI Engineer on the Sales Floor to Discover What Actually Needed Building - First Round [Link]

Success came from reaching the right accounts at the right time, not better email copy. So the real problem wasn’t writing better emails, or automating research, it was account prioritization driven by product signals.

What They Built:

  1. Papercut fix: A Chrome extension that eliminated constant copy-pasting across tools (LinkedIn, Salesforce, Notion, Outreach). Adopted by almost the entire sales team within weeks.
  2. New bet (high impact): “Salestino Bot” - An internal AI system that detects product usage signals (e.g., new workspace creation), decides when a rep should reach out, automates company/person research using a constrained web agent, drafts customized outreach emails (with humans in the loop), and delivered via Slack in a single workflow.

Memory: How Agents Learn - Ashpreet Bedi [Link]

Conceptually, memory is always added — but practically, it’s automatic and selective.

Exclusive: How China built its ‘Manhattan Project’ to rival the West in AI chips - Fanny Potkin, Reuters [Link]

In a secretive "Manhattan Project" led by Huawei, China built a prototype EUV machine by recruiting former ASML engineers, many of whom worked under aliases to maintain security. Although the prototype generates the necessary light, it has not yet produced working chips due to challenges in replicating high-precision optical systems. Operational production is now targeted for 2030, suggesting China is closing the technology gap faster than analysts anticipated.

AI agents are starting to eat SaaS - Martin Alderson [Link]

AI coding agents are fundamentally changing the build-vs-buy decision, making it increasingly viable for technically capable organizations to replace many SaaS products with internally built, agent-assisted tools—thereby threatening demand, renewals, and expansion economics for large parts of the SaaS industry.

The more I’ve done it, the more I realize that what most people think of as the hard parts of hiring—asking just the right question that catches the candidate off guard, defining the role correctly, assessing the person’s skills—are less important than a more basic task: how do you see someone, including yourself, clearly?

― What’s going on here, with this human? - Graham Dunca [Link]

The Three-Part Framework for Seeing People Clearly:

  1. Seeing Your Reflection in the Window (Self-Awareness)

    • You can’t see others clearly unless you see your own biases, projections, and triggers.

    • Interviews are co-created interactions; your tone, assumptions, and values shape how the other person shows up.

    • Personality frameworks (Myers–Briggs, Big Five, self-monitoring, etc.) are most useful when applied to yourself first.

    • Use multiple frameworks to avoid becoming trapped by a single lens.

    Key idea: Misjudgment often comes from mistaking your own internal reactions for objective insight.

  2. Seeing the Elephants in the Room (Unconscious Drivers)

    • Borrowing from Jonathan Haidt: each person has a rider (conscious narrative) and an elephant (unconscious motivations). Interviews mostly capture the rider; references reveal the elephant.

    • Espoused beliefs ≠ actual behavior (“espoused theory” vs. “theory in use”).

    • High-quality reference checks are often 5–10x more valuable than interviews, especially from trusted, calibrated observers.

    • The best signal often comes from:

      • The tone of a reference
      • “Table-pounding” enthusiasm
      • The dog that doesn’t bark (what’s conspicuously missing)

Key idea: Humility about your limited perception is a prerequisite for accuracy.

  1. Seeing the Water (Context and Ecosystem)

    • There is no such thing as an “A player” in the abstract—performance is context-dependent.

    • People thrive or fail based on subtle environmental factors: culture, incentives, belief loops, and feedback structures.

    • Moving someone to a new ecosystem is risky; strengths in one context can become weaknesses in another.

    • Belief from leaders and teammates can create powerful positive feedback loops.

    • Hiring should focus on fit between person and environment, not just raw talent.

Key idea: To understand someone, you must understand the system they came from—and the one you’re putting them into.

Claude’s Constitution - Anthropic [Link]

This constitution is trying to define an AI that

  • Has internalized values, not just filters

  • Balances:

    • User benefit
    • Societal impact
    • Company constraints
    • Long-term safety
  • Operates more like a moral agent under supervision than a pure tool

Claude’s Constitution is not a dataset of examples. It’s a normative specification — a written set of values, priorities, and decision heuristics that Anthropic uses to shape Claude’s behavior. It’s one of the clearest examples of value-based alignment framing, rather than just policy enforcement.

OpenAI Starts Testing Ads in ChatGPT - The New York Times [Link]

From Words to Worlds: Spatial Intelligence is AI’s Next Frontier - Fei-Fei Li [Link]

Today’s models are powerful with words and patterns, but they don’t truly understand the 3D, physical, dynamic world the way humans do. To unlock robotics, scientific discovery, immersive creativity, and real-world interaction, AI needs world models — systems that can represent and reason about spaces, objects, physics, and change over time.

If you have multiple interests, do not waste the next 2-3 years - Dan Koe [Link]

In the AI era, the winners aren’t specialists — they’re people who turn their unique mix of interests into a public body of work and build systems around their own development.

Murders plummeted more than 20% in U.S. last year, the largest drop on record, study shows - CBS News [Link]

Exclusive: Musk's SpaceX in merger talks with xAI ahead of planned IPO, source says - Echo Wang and Joey Roulette, Reuters [Link]

The merger supports Musk’s vision of putting AI data centers in space, using solar power to cut energy costs for AI training and inference. It would tightly integrate:

  • Rockets + satellite infrastructure (SpaceX/Starlink/Starshield)
  • AI models + compute (xAI, Grok, Colossus supercomputer)
  • Data + distribution (X platform)

Visa and Aldar complete end-to-end voice-enabled agentic payment - Finextra [Link]

It can be useful in a few ways:

  1. It saves cognitive effort. Letting an AI agent handle it via voice means fewer screens, fewer steps, less mental load.
  2. It makes AI do something real. This isn’t a chatbot answering FAQs. With Visa’s agentic payments, AI can complete a transaction end-to-end inside regulated rails.
  3. Security scales better than humans. Tokenization and network-level controls reduce exposure compared to people re-entering card details or storing them unsafely.
  4. It sets a pattern, not just a feature. If it works for service charges, the same model extends to utilities, subscriptions, fees, renewals—basically all the financial chores people hate.
  5. Voice is the unlock. For accessibility, multitasking, and mobile-first users, voice turns payments from a “task” into a quick interaction.

How Banks Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Stablecoins - Christian Catalini, Forbes [Link]

Stablecoins aren’t killing banks. They’re quietly disciplining them—pushing the system toward better pricing, more competition, and ultimately better outcomes for consumers.

SoFi unveils the first bank-issued stablecoin for enterprise payments - Helene Braun, CoinDesk [Link]

The move follows similar institutional efforts, like JPMorgan’s JPM Coin, signaling deeper bank adoption of blockchain payments.

Klarna Launches ‘Agentic Product Protocol’ to Make 100m Products Readable by AI - The Fintech Times [Link]

This is a bet that AI agents will become the primary shopping interface, and Klarna wants to be the standardized bridge between inventory and intelligence. If that future lands, this protocol becomes quietly powerful.

2025 LLM Year in Review - Andrej Karpathy [Link]

Key points:

  1. Reinforcement Learning from Verifiable Rewards (RLVR) became the big new training stage in 2025.
  2. LLMs are not evolving minds like humans or animals. They’re alien, jagged intelligences optimized for text imitation and reward hacking, not survival.
  3. Tools like Cursor revealed a new class of applications. These apps 1) engineer context carefully, 2) orchestrate many model calls into workflows, 3) provide GUIs and autonomy controls, 4) turn general models into usable professionals.
  4. Agents feel more powerful when they’re local “spirits” living on your machine, not cloud demos.
  5. Natural-language programming crossed a threshold in 2025. Software creation is being radically democratized.
  6. The future UI of AI won’t be text. The GUI for AI is still mostly unbuilt.

Why We're Going Higher in 2026 (the Altitude Thesis) - Stepan@X [Link]

Stablecoins are now real financial infrastructure, incumbents are structurally stuck, and the next fintech giants will be built by teams that deeply own the protocol layer.

Investors predict AI is coming for labor in 2026 - Rebecca Szkutak, TechCrunch [Link]

Investors believe 2026 will mark a real shift from AI augmenting workers to AI replacing portions of human labor, especially in enterprise settings.

  1. A November study from MIT estimates 11.7% of U.S. jobs could already be automated with existing AI.
  2. Surveys and reporting show companies are reducing entry-level roles and explicitly citing AI as a reason for layoffs.
  3. Multiple enterprise VCs (Hustle Fund, Exceptional Capital, Sapphire, Battery Ventures, Black Operator Ventures) independently predict:
  • Budget shifts from labor to AI spending in 2026
  • Continued layoffs as AI adoption deepens
  • A move from AI as a productivity tool to AI that fully automates work via agents
  1. Some investors argue that not all AI-linked layoffs are genuine—AI may serve as a scapegoat for broader cost-cutting.

The Memory Wars: Why the Future Karpathy, Musk, and Jim Fan See Requires 16-Hi HBM - Ben Pouladian on X [Link]

Key takeaways:

  1. Inference is memory-bound, not compute-bound. Modern GPUs are ~99% idle during token generation because they’re waiting on memory. Training loves FLOPs; inference chokes on bandwidth and latency.
  2. The $20B Groq licensing deal isn’t about buying chips. It’s NVIDIA learning and absorbing deterministic, SRAM-centric inference ideas.

My biggest takeaways from @ElenaVerna (Head of Growth at @Lovable) - Lenny Rachitsky on X [Link]

Key takeaways:

  1. Product Market Fit (PMF) now needs to be re-earned every ~3 months because models, capabilities, and user expectations shift constantly—even at massive scale.

  2. Elena says only ~30–40% of what she learned over 20 years (including at Miro, Dropbox, and Amplitude) still applies to AI companies.

  3. At Lovable, ~95% of growth comes from shipping new features/products. Traditional conversion optimization contributes very little in fast-moving AI markets.

  4. Rapid shipping + loud communication (engineers announcing updates, founders posting progress daily) keeps users engaged and competitors behind.

  5. Free usage is marketing not cost. Lovable gives away credits, sponsors hackathons, and funds events. Expensive inference is treated as CAC, fueling word-of-mouth.

  6. Influencers beat paid ads (by ~10x). Short videos showing real product capabilities outperform traditional paid advertising. Demo > messaging.

  7. MVP → “Minimum Lovable Product”. If it doesn’t delight, people won’t share it. Word of mouth is the primary growth engine.

  8. Community is a core growth lever. Large, active communities (like Lovable’s massive Discord) drive retention, support, and organic growth.

  9. Hire for chaos tolerance. High-agency people—AI-native grads and ex-founders—thrive where roles, roadmaps, and clarity are constantly shifting.

  10. Hypergrowth doesn’t require burnout. Elena emphasizes strict boundaries: protected family time, gym time, and rejecting hustle culture as a status symbol.

The $130 Billion Comeback: Why Apple’s “Slow” AI Strategy is a 2026 Trap - Ddos, Daily Cybersecurity [Link]

The article argues that Apple’s seemingly slow approach to AI is a deliberate strategy, not a failure. While rivals like Google and Meta have spent hundreds of billions building AI infrastructure, Apple has conserved cash—retaining roughly $130 billion—giving it flexibility to invest, acquire, or pivot in 2026.

Sam Altman Tackles Dangers of AI with New Role - M.Huzaifa Rizwan @Medium [Link]

OpenAI is treating large-scale AI risk as a leadership problem, not just a research one—and this role could meaningfully slow or shape how fast AI advances.

This hire marks a shift:

  • Safety decisions are now closer to executive power
  • OpenAI may increasingly delay or restrict releases based on risk
  • Preparedness becomes a gatekeeper, not a checkbox

US Army seeks human AI officers to manage its battle bots - The Register [Link]

The US Army is creating a new AI/ML career track for existing officers, aiming to train a dedicated cadre of “AI officers” to manage and integrate the Army’s growing arsenal of AI-powered systems. Starting in early 2026, selected officers will receive graduate-level training focused on building, deploying, and maintaining AI tools already sourced from the private sector.

AI Marketing Examples: 13 Times AI Actually Delivered - Mateusz Makosiewicz, [Link]

Report and Paper

2025: The State of Generative AI in the Enterprise - Tim Tully, et al., Menlo [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Enterprises prefer buying over building: 76% of enterprise AI use cases are purchased, not built (up from a near 50/50 split in 2024). Off-the-shelf AI products reach production faster and deliver clearer ROI. Internal builds still exist, but are slower and harder to operationalize.
  2. AI buyers are highly intentional: 47% of AI pilots convert to production, vs 25% for traditional SaaS. Enterprises explore many use cases, but only fund those with near-term productivity or cost impact.
  3. Product-led growth (PLG) is the dominant adoption motion. Individuals, not executives, are pulling AI into enterprises.
  4. Startups are beating incumbents in applications. AI-native speed beats distribution advantages. Startups capture 63% of AI application revenue. They win by shipping faster, owning new workflows (not legacy systems), and leveraging PLG flywheels.
  5. Applications are the largest spend category. AI value shows up fastest where workflows are repetitive, text-heavy, and measurable.
  6. Anthropic is winning the enterprise LLM war. Coding performance = enterprise dominance.
  7. Open-source LLMs lag in the enterprise. Enterprises prefer closed models for reliability, support, and governance. Meanwhile, startups and developers increasingly use Chinese open-source models (Qwen, DeepSeek). Innovation happens in open ecosystems; enterprises remain risk-averse.
  8. Only 16% of enterprise deployments qualify as real agents. Architecture maturity lags model capability.

State of Fintech 2026: The Fintech Compounders - Simon Taylor & Jevgenijs Kazanins, Fintech Brainfood [Link]

YouTube and Podcast

Massive Somali Fraud in Minnesota with Nick Shirley, California Asset Seizure, $20B Groq-Nvidia Deal - All-In Podcast [Link]

I Investigated Minnesota’s Billion Dollar Fraud Scandal - Nick Shirley [Link]

The Minnesota Fraud Scandal | An Unfiltered Conversation with Nick Shirley - The Iced Coffee Hour [Link]

Iran's Breaking Point, Trump's Greenland Acquisition, and Solving Energy Costs - All-In Podcast [Link]

Apple's AI Crisis: Explained! - Marques Brownlee [Link]

Good points mentioned by Marques Brownlee:

  1. The Velocity Trap: Polish vs. Pace

    Apple’s traditional "slow and steady" approach—waiting for a category to mature before entering with a polished product—may be incompatible with AI. Unlike hardware, AI improves through real-world iteration and constant data loops. By prioritizing perfection and long release cycles, Apple risks falling behind competitors who are learning and evolving in real-time.

  2. The Execution & Credibility Gap

    While "Apple Intelligence" is conceptually sound (focusing on privacy and deep OS integration), there is a growing disconnect between marketing and reality. Much of Apple’s vision remains aspirational and unproven, leading to a "credibility gap." Relying on future-dated AI features to drive current hardware sales creates a significant trust risk if the eventual rollout doesn't meet the high bar set by the demos.

  3. Cultural Rigidity in a Fluid Market

    The AI shift is as much a cultural test as a technical one. Apple’s core pillars—secrecy, privacy-first design, and walled-garden ecosystems—are now friction points in an industry that rewards open iteration and speed. While Apple still possesses massive advantages in silicon and distribution, its margin for error is slimmer than ever because AI is a foundational platform shift, not just a new feature set.

The New Siri is... Google (Explained) - Marques Brownlee [Link]

This is Apple choosing not to lose users while it catches up.

All-In's 2026 Predictions - All-In's 2026 Predictions [Link]

Ben Horowitz on Investing in AI: AI Bubbles, Economic Impact, and VC Acceleration - a16z [Link]

Ben & Marc: Why Everything Is About to Get 10x Bigger - a16z [Link]

  1. Everything Is Becoming Supply-Driven (and That Breaks Old Intuitions)

    Historically, markets were demand-constrained; now they are increasingly supply-unconstrained due to software, AI, and cloud. This is why traditional TAM / market sizing frameworks are fundamentally broken. If you remove constraints, human demand is far larger than economists ever modeled.

  2. AI Is a General-Purpose Force Multiplier

    AI is not “one more sector” — it’s a universal problem solver. This creates second-order effects across every industry, not just tech. Companies that treat AI as a feature will lose to those that treat it as infrastructure.

  3. Cloud + Software Create 10× Outcomes

    Databricks is a canonical example: when compute, storage, and tooling scale together, you get nonlinear gains. Once platforms reach sufficient abstraction, entire new categories appear that were impossible before. Step-change technologies don’t improve things linearly — they rewrite what’s possible.

  4. Intangibles Are the New Moat

    Brand, reputation, trust, and narrative now matter more than physical assets. In a world of infinite supply, attention and belief become the scarce resources.

  5. Original Thinkers with Conviction Win

    The future belongs to people who combine: original ideas, moral clarity, willingness to take public criticism (“take arrows”). Consensus thinking is structurally disadvantaged in exponential eras.

  6. Media Has Shifted from Gatekeepers to Creators

    When creators own distribution, creativity explodes.

  7. Reputation Is a First-Class Economic Asset

    In decentralized systems, there is no central arbiter of quality. Reputation becomes: The hiring signal, The funding signal, The distribution advantage.

  8. Great Companies Are Built by Dreamers, Not Committees

    a16z tries to invert this by protecting founders’ psychological safety and ambition. The job is to scale belief without killing the dream.

  9. Founders Need Confidence, Not Just Intelligence

    Turning inventors into CEOs requires emotional reinforcement, not just advice.

  10. Autonomy Beats Control

    a16z is structured as semi-autonomous teams rather than a centralized hierarchy. This mirrors how startups scale effectively: high trust, high accountability, low friction.

Adam Carolla on California’s Collapse: Fires, Failed Leadership, and Gyno-Fascism - All-In Podcast [Link]

Supercharging a New FDA: Marty Makary on Science, Power & Patients - All-In Podcast [Link]

Marc Andreessen's 2026 Outlook: AI Timelines, US vs. China, and The Price of AI - a16z [Link]

Key takeaways:

  • AI is the biggest tech shift is bigger than PCs, the internet, or mobile. Despite the hype, most industries have not reorganized around AI yet. Current adoption is surface-level (tools, copilots), not structural (AI-native workflows).

  • The cost of intelligence is collapsing. AI is fundamentally different because intelligence becomes cheap and abundant. As costs fall, usage explodes — even if revenue models lag. This creates temporary distortions: high burn, unclear margins, massive upside. Falling intelligence costs will unlock entirely new markets, not just improve existing ones.

  • Many AI companies look “unprofitable” by traditional standards. What matters is whether cost curves bend faster than price curves. Infrastructure advantages (GPUs, clusters) are real but short-lived. You back companies where learning speed beats depreciation speed.

  • Pricing will shift from SaaS to usage- and value-based. Flat SaaS pricing breaks when marginal intelligence cost trends toward zero. AI pricing will resemble: 1) cloud compute; 2) utilities; 3) consumption-based services. Value-based pricing becomes feasible because AI output is measurable.

  • Open vs. closed is not a winner-take-all debate. Multiple contradictory strategies can succeed simultaneously.

    Closed models: 1) better control, 2) clearer monetization, 3) tighter safety

    Open models: 1) faster diffusion, 2) ecosystem leverage, 3) geopolitical resilience

  • Incumbents and startups have different, real advantages. Outcomes depend on how deeply AI rewrites the workflow.

  • Most disruption happens at the task level, not the job title. Productivity gains are uneven and socially destabilizing. Adoption depends more on human systems than model capability. Technology moves faster than institutions.

  • Venture strategy must embrace contradictions. a16z deliberately backs:

    • open and closed

    • big models and small models

    • infrastructure and applications

    • Because uncertainty is structural, not temporary.

    Philosophy: If you think the future is clean and singular, you’re wrong.

Why AI will dwarf every tech revolution before it: robots, manufacturing, AR glasses from CES 2026 - All-In Podcast [Link]

The core argument is that AI is not just another productivity wave (like cloud, mobile, or the internet), but a general-purpose intelligence layer that will reshape every industry simultaneously—especially healthcare, education, labor markets, and capital allocation. The discussion emphasizes speed, organizational mismatch, and institutional lag as the real constraints—not technology itself.

Satya Nadella on AI’s Business Revolution: What Happens to SaaS, OpenAI, and Microsoft? - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeways:

  1. Satya frames AI not as “chatbots” but as a progression of work interfaces. The real value isn’t “fun AI,” it’s AI that completes multi-step business tasks inside workflows. Microsoft is focused on closing the gap between 'cool demo' and 'actual business process transformation'.

  2. He subtly pushes back on the “AI replaces workers” narrative. His framing is that AI is productivity density, not just removal, meaning more output per employee, faster cycle times, and more ambitious projects.

  3. He sees the future as not just one assistant, but many domain-specific agents. These agents will use enterprise data, work across tools (M365, Dynamics, GitHub, etc.), and handle business processes, not just prompts.

  4. Microsoft’s edge is NOT owning the best foundation model. It’s:

    • Distribution (Windows, Office, Azure)
    • Enterprise trust
    • Identity, security, compliance
    • Data layer
    • Developer ecosystem
  5. AI is a full tech stack competition. He frames AI competition as not model vs model, but national + ecosystem tech stacks.

    Winning stack = Compute + Models + Apps + Distribution + Developers + Data

  6. He doesn’t say SaaS dies. SaaS UI becomes agent-accessible capability surfaces. Therefore, the UI is less important, APIs, workflows, and data models become key, and software becomes “actionable services for agents”.

Can You Teach Claude to be ‘Good’? | Meet Anthropic Philosopher Amanda Askell - Hard Fork [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. The shift to ads in ChatGPT isn’t just a product tweak — it’s an alignment change. Alignment isn’t only technical — economics is an alignment mechanism.

  2. Systems optimized for revenue gradually stop optimizing for user well-being.

  3. OpenAI, Google, Anthropic may produce different kinds of AI not just because of tech — but because of revenue structure.

    • Ad-driven systems → more incentive tension
    • Enterprise/subscription focus → more incentive toward reliability & safety

    This frames business strategy as a hidden driver of model personality.

  4. Anthropic is trying to make values explicit. Claude is trained using Constitutional AI — a written set of principles the model uses to critique and guide itself.

  5. You can’t separate intelligence from values. Smarter systems may reinterpret rules in ways designers didn’t expect.

Dr. Mehmet Oz on Fixing American Healthcare + Fraud | Live from Davos - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. U.S. healthcare isn’t failing because of lack of talent or technology — it’s failing because:

    • Incentives reward procedures, billing complexity, and intermediaries

    • Prevention and long-term outcomes are underpaid

    • Bureaucratic and payment layers distort decisions

  2. Fraud is not marginal — it’s structural and industrial-scale. Includes phantom billing, fake clinics, and organized rings. Fraud inflates prices and drains resources from real care

  3. The bottleneck in healthcare isn’t knowledge — it’s access + navigation.

    AI will: Do triage; Guide patients before they see doctors; Standardize care quality; Reduce unnecessary specialist visits. The big shift will be from doctor-centered care to data/AI-guided care. Doctors become escalation points, not the front door.

  4. Healthcare reflects upstream social failures. Healthcare costs are downstream of: Addiction; Mental health breakdowns; Social instability; Border and population pressures.

Elon Musk on AGI Timeline, US vs China, Job Markets, Clean Energy & Humanoid Robots | 220 - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Takeaways:

  1. Musk’s stance is that transformative AI is very close. Superhuman AI as an engineering inevitability. Timeline measured in years, not decades. The key limiter now being infrastructure (chips, power) more than theory.
  2. AI risk is structural, not Hollywood. He’s not focused on evil robots; he worries about: Systems optimizing for goals misaligned with human intent; Intelligence that becomes strategically beyond human control; Power concentration in a few actors. The danger comes from competence without alignment, not malice.
  3. He frames AI as a civilization-level strategic asset. The US–China competition is inevitable. Export controls slow but don’t stop capability. Whoever leads in AI shapes military, economic, and political leverage. AI dominance may matter more than nuclear or industrial dominance did.
  4. Intelligence scaling = energy scaling. AI data centers are seen as industrial-scale electricity consumers, dependent on massive grid expansion, tightly linked to storage + renewables.
  5. Physical AI (robots) will outscale digital AI in impact. He sees humanoid robots (Optimus) as the path to automating real-world labor, more economically transformative than software alone, and potentially more numerous than humans. The biggest value creation isn’t chatbots — it’s AI in bodies.
  6. He argues AI + robotics will outperform humans at most jobs, collapse the economic necessity of labor, and shift society toward abundance of goods/services. The core future problem isn’t unemployment — it’s purpose and meaning in a post-labor world.
  7. Concentrated superintelligence is more dangerous than distributed superintelligence.
  8. We’re in a civilization transition, not a tech cycle. This is a species-level turning point, not a market trend.

The Singularity Countdown: AGI by 2029, Humans Merge with AI, Intelligence 1000x | Ray Kurzweil - Peter H. Diamandis [Link]

Ray's worldview is very consistent across decades:

  1. Progress is exponential, not linear. Technology improves in doubling patterns (compute, data, biotech, etc.). Humans think linearly - we massively underestimate what happens in the second half of an exponential curve.
  2. AI will reach human-level general intelligence soon - around 2029. Not just narrow tools — systems that reason, learn, and adapt across domains. After that, progress speeds up because AI designs better AI. This is the start of the steep part of the curve.
  3. The Singularity happens when non-biological intelligence becomes vastly more powerful than all human brains combined. Intelligence growth becomes runaway and civilization transforms at a speed we can’t intuitively grasp. It’s an evolutionary phase shift, not just a tech upgrade.
  4. He strongly rejects the “AI replaces humans” framing. We expand our intelligence by plugging into non-biological systems. Future humans will merge with AI (biological + digital hybrid minds)
  5. AI + biotech enables rapid advances in diagnostics, drug discovery, and gene editing. The goal of longevity escape velocity (medical progress adds more life than time passing) will be reached. Radical life extension is plausible this century.
  6. Work doesn't disappear - it evolves. Automation removes tasks, not human meaning. New categories of work emerge that we can’t predict today. As abundance rises, humans focus more on creativity, relationships, exploration, and purpose-driven work.
  7. Every major technology starts centralized, then becomes widely accessible. Risks are real, but benefits historically outweigh harms. The solution to tech risk is better tech + human values, not stopping progress.
  8. Consciousness can extend beyond biology. Mind is patterns and processes. If reproduced in another substrate, consciousness can continue or expand. Digital minds could be as rich (or richer) than biological ones.

Chamath & Nathalie on Leaving California, Tech Investments & Their Marriage | KMP Ep.24 - All-In Podcast [Link]

ICE Chaos in Minneapolis, Clawdbot Takeover, Why the Dollar is Dropping - All-In Podcast [Link]

Coinbase CEO's Top 3 Crypto Trends for 2026 + More from Davos! - All-In Podcast [Link]

Takeaways:

  • Brian Armstrong (Coinbase)
    1. Exchanges become universal financial marketplaces. Crypto exchanges stop being “places to trade coins” and become places to trade everything — using blockchain as the behind-the-scenes system. This means everything becomes a digital token on a blockchain, which includes stocks, bonds, funds, real estate, etc, - they are all represented the same way: digital assets on-chain.
    2. Stablecoins are the new payments layer. They are moving into cross-border payments, business settlement, and everyday financial flows. They are positioned as faster, cheaper, programmable internet-native money. This is crypto’s move from speculation to real economic utility.
    3. Crypto and AI will merge. AI agent will need wallets, identity, ability to transact. Crypto provides economic infrastructure for autonomous AI systems. AI will be able to earn, pay, and contract on its own.
  • Andrew Feldman (Cerebras)
    1. AI progress is compute-constrained. The bottleneck is no longer just algorithms; it's chips, power, data centers. Whoevere scales compute fastest drives AI capability.
    2. Massive hardware innovation is required. The frontier isn’t just better models — it’s better physical AI infrastructure.
    3. Compute is now geopolitics. AI compute capacity is strategically important, nationally competitive and comparable to energy or oil infrastructure. The AI race is an infrastructure race, not just software.
  • Jake Loosararian (Gecko Robotics)
    1. AI is leaving the screen and entering industry. AI + robotics are being deployed in power plants, industrial facilities, and critical infrastructure. This is aAI moving from chat & code to machines & steel.
    2. Real world data beats theoretical models. AI becomes powerful when grounded in actual industrial reality, not just simulations.
    3. AI and robotics improve maintenance, safety, and efficiency. This drives huge economic leverage because it upgrades the systems that power society.

Amazon Layoffs & Shutdown of Fresh and Go Stores, The Anthropic Cowork Threat | Jan 28, 2026 - The Information [Link]

Substack

Lastly, the crux of the tweet: "Optimistic contrarians are the rarest breed." This speaks to individuals who possess the courage to deviate from the mainstream not for the sake of contrariness, but driven by genuine belief in a different, often better vision. More importantly, they do this with optimism. Unlike cynics, optimistic contrarians see the potential in what others dismiss. They are hopeful about their divergent views, even in the face of criticism or skepticism. They combine the audacity to think differently with the belief that their path, though less traveled, is full of promise.

― Cynicism is easy. Mimicry is easy. Optimistic contrarians are the rarest breed. - Naval's Archive [Link]

“Status games are multiplayer, zero-sum, hierarchical, judged socially. Get grades, applause, titles now – emptiness later. Natural games are single player, positive-sum, internal, judged by nature/markets. Pay in pain now – get wealth, health, knowledge, peace, family later.”Naval Ravikant

― Play Natural Games, Not Status Games - Naval's Archive [Link]

Your brain builds language pathways through repetition and active use. Every time you practice articulating an idea, explaining a concept, or searching for the precise word, you’re literally rewiring neural connections that make language retrieval easier (Bassett & Mattar, 2017).

― How to Become Well-Spoken - Noteswnat [Link]

One of the good habits I haven't had: "Watch a 10-minute interview clip. Then, try explaining the same topic they discussed in your own words. Notice how much clearer your thinking becomes when you’ve seen it modeled well."

How to articulate yourself intelligently - Dan Koe [Link]

The three frameworks Dan Koe lays out are:

  1. Beginner – The Micro Story

    This is meant for fast articulation in short-form writing or speech.

    Best for: quick clarity and attention

    A simple storytelling structure:

    • Problem – state a relatable problem
    • Amplify – show the negative consequences if it’s not solved
    • Solution – present the insight or fix
  2. Intermediate – The Pyramid Principle

    This works especially well for podcasts, presentations, and longer explanations.

    Best for: structured thinking and credibility

    A logic-first communication framework:

    • Start with the main idea or conclusion
    • Support it with 3–5 key arguments
    • Back those up with evidence, examples, or data
  3. Advanced – Cross-Domain Synthesis

    This is best suited for newsletters, essays, talks, or long-form content.

    Best for: originality and thought leadership

    A deeper, more original structure:

    • Problem + amplify (clear, relatable setup)
    • Cross-domain synthesis (borrow concepts from other fields to explain the idea)
    • Unique process or solution (your own framework or steps)

The difference between average and great is taste.

The future belongs to those who can filter signal from noise. When anyone can produce anything, choosing what deserves to exist becomes the skill.

The ability to learn any skill fast, however, will.

Devon Eriksen talks about the “liberating arts,” the skills that free people have always needed to act on their own behalf:

  • Logic: deriving truth from known facts
  • Statistics: understanding the implications of data
  • Rhetoric: persuading, and spotting persuasion tactics
  • Research: gathering information on unknown subjects
  • Psychology: discerning the true motives of yourself and others
  • Investment: managing and growing assets
  • Agency: deciding what to pursue and acting without permission

― Why the next 2 years will matter more than the last 10 - Dan Koe [Link]

If your thoughts are average, they can be compressed.

If your ideas are derivative, they can be predicted.

If your personality is shaped by trends, you can be simulated — and eventually replaced.

The more you become like everyone else, the more you disappear.

To be incompressible is to break the pattern. To do something that hasn’t been done. To think what hasn’t been thought. To speak in a voice that’s unmistakably yours.

It means cultivating taste that isn’t algorithmic.

It means being boring to the AI and fascinating to the human.

Most of all, incompressibility requires solitude. Silence. Reflection.

Space from the noise so you can remember who you are when no one is watching.

― Be Incompressible - Naval's Archive [Link]

Naval’s line, “If you don’t commit to meaningful work, life will fill your time with busywork,” is a reminder of a quiet truth: your time will never stay empty. Something will always come in. The choice is whether it’s chosen by you, or assigned to you by circumstance, employers, algorithms, or the thousand tiny demands that chip away at your attention.

Meaningful work, on the other hand, rarely arrives disguised as something urgent. It doesn’t ping, buzz, or demand anything. It whispers. It waits. It requires intention. It asks you to choose it repeatedly, often against comfort, against convenience, against the easy path. It’s the book unwritten, the skill unmastered, the company unstarted, the craft unrefined. The things that make your life bigger but don’t shout for your attention.

― If You Don’t Commit to Meaningful Work, Life Will Fill Your Time with Busywork - Naval's Archive [Link]

How to fix your entire life in 1 day - Dan Koe [Link]

  1. You aren't where you want to be because you aren't the person who would be there.

  2. You aren't where you want to be because you don't want to be there.

  3. You aren't where you want to be because you are afraid to be there.

  4. The life you want lies within a specific level of mind.

  5. Intelligence is the ability to get what you want out of life.

    Cybernetics illustrates the properties of intelligent systems.

    • To have a goal.
    • Act toward that goal.
    • Sense where you are.
    • Compare it to the goal.
    • And act again based on that feedback.

    To become more intelligent, you must:

    • Reject the known path
    • Dive into the unknown
    • Set new, higher goals to expand your mind
    • Embrace the chaos and allow for growth
    • Study the generalized principles of nature
    • Become a deep generalist
  6. How to launch a completely new life in one day

    Three phases that people go through to successfully flip their identity:

    1. Dissonance – They feel like they don’t belong in their current life, and become sufficiently fed up with their lack of progress.
    2. Uncertainty – They don’t know what comes next, so they either experiment or get lost and feel worse.
    3. Discovery – They discover what they want to pursue and make 6 years of progress in 6 months.

    Questions make you aware of the pain in your current life:

    1. What is the dull and persistent dissatisfaction you've learned to live with? Not the deep suffering but what you've learned to tolerate. (if you don't hate it, you will tolerate it)
    2. What do you complain about repeatedly but never actually change? Write down the three complaints you've voiced most often in the past year.
    3. For each complaint: what would someone who watched your behavior (not your words) conclude that you actually want?
    4. What truth about your current life would be unbearable to admit to someone you deeply respect?

    Questions to come up with your anti vision - a brutal awareness of the life you dod not want to live:

    1. If absolutely nothing changes for the next five years, describe an average Tuesday. Where do you wake up? What does your body feel like? What’s the first thing you think about? Who’s around you? What do you do between 9am and 6pm? How do you feel at 10pm?
    2. Now do it but for ten years. What have you missed? What opportunities closed? Who gave up on you? What do people say about you when you’re not in the room?
    3. You’re at the end of your life. You lived the safe version. You never broke the pattern. What was the cost? What did you never let yourself feel, try, or become?
    4. Who in your life is already living the future you just described? Someone five, ten, twenty years ahead on the same trajectory? What do you feel when you think about becoming them?
    5. What identity would you have to give up to actually change? (”I am the type of person who...”) What would it cost you socially to no longer be that person?
    6. What is the most embarrassing reason you haven’t changed? The one that makes you sound weak, scared, or lazy rather than reasonable?
    7. If your current behavior is a form of self-protection, what exactly are you protecting? And what is that protection costing you?

    Questions to create a minimum viable vision:

    1. Forget practicality for a minute. If you could snap your fingers and be living a different life in three years, not what’s realistic, what you actually want? What does an average Tuesday look like? Same level of detail as question 5.
    2. What would you have to believe about yourself for that life to feel natural rather than forced? Write the identity statement: “I am the type of person who...”
    3. What is one thing you would do this week if you were already that person?

    Random questions throughout the day:

    • 11:00am: What am I avoiding right now by doing what I’m doing?
    • 1:30pm: If someone filmed the last two hours, what would they conclude I want from my life?
    • 3:15pm: Am I moving toward the life I hate or the life I want?
    • 5:00pm: What’s the most important thing I’m pretending isn’t important?
    • 7:30pm: What did I do today out of identity protection rather than genuine desire? (Hint: it’s most things you do)
    • 9:00pm: When did I feel most alive today? When did I feel most dead?
    • What would change if I stopped needing people to see me as [the identity you wrote in question 10]?
    • Where in my life am I trading aliveness for safety?
    • What’s the smallest version of the person I want to become that I could be tomorrow?

    Questions to synthesize insights:

    1. After today, what feels most true about why you’ve been stuck?
    2. What is the actual enemy? Name it clearly. Not circumstances. Not other people. The internal pattern or belief that has been running the show.
    3. Write a single sentence that captures what you refuse to let your life become. This is your anti-vision compressed. It should make you feel something when you read it.
    4. Write a single sentence that captures what you’re building toward, knowing it will evolve. This is your vision MVP.

    To create goals:

    1. One-year lens: What would have to be true in one year for you to know you’ve broken the old pattern? One concrete thing.
    2. One-month lens: What would have to be true in one month for the one-year lens to remain possible?
    3. Daily lens: What are 2-3 actions you can timeblock tomorrow that the person you’re becoming would simply do?
  7. Turn your life into a video game

    Six components that lead to a good life:

    • Anti-vision – What is the bane of my existence, or the life I never want to experience again?
    • Vision – What is the ideal life that I think I want and can improve as I work toward it?
    • 1 year goal – What will my life look like in 1 year time, and is that closer to the life I want?
    • 1 month project – What do I need to learn? What skills do I need to acquire? What can I build that will move me closer to the one year goal?
    • Daily levers – What are the priority, needle-moving tasks that bring my project closer to completion?
    • Constraints – What am I not willing to sacrifice to achieve my vision from the ground up?

2025 was the year the comfortable assumptions got stress-tested.

  • “Just scale it”? DeepSeek proved architectural efficiency could match brute-force compute – and wiped a trillion dollars off the market.
  • “Distribution is all you need”? Despite Microsoft’s insane lead start, OpenAI’s clear consumer and mindshare lead, and Google’s incredible distribution, and Anthropic still beat them all in the enterprise and coding wars.
  • “America leads open source”? I count nine competitive Chinese model releases in 2025. Meta shipped two (and Behemoth is still MIA).
  • “Bigger models = better models”? Mixture-of-experts, inference-time compute, and distillation ate that thesis alive.

What actually mattered

  • Great products beat distribution
  • Efficiency mattered more than scale
  • Standards emerged
  • Multimodal became baseline
  • OpenAI Rewrote its own ruless

― 2025 Recap: The Year the Old Rules Broke - AI Supremacy [Link]

What a year.

2025_circular_funding_by_Bloomberg

Blogs and Articles

2025 LLM Year in Review - Andrej Karpathy [Link]

Fara-7B: An Efficient Agentic Model for Computer Use - Microsoft Research Blog [Link]

User gives task → agent acts → browser takes screenshot → model sees screenshot → next action

The Complete Guide to Nano Banana Pro: 10 Tips for Professional Asset Production - Google AI Studio [Link]

Frontier agents, Trainium chips, and Amazon Nova: key announcements from AWS re:Invent 2025 - Amazon News [Link]

Now available: Create AI agents to automate work with Google Workspace Studio - Google Blog [Link]

Introducing Anthropic Interviewer: What 1,250 professionals told us about working with AI - Anthropic [Link]

How People Use AI Agents - Perplexity [Link] [Paper]

Harvard-Perplexity study shows AI agents now shift towards more cognitive work tasks

Introducing Code Wiki: Accelerating your code understanding - Google Blog [Link]

Stanford AI Experts Predict What Will Happen in 2026 - HAI, Stanford University [Link]

Manus Joins Meta: Accelerating AI Innovation for Businesses - Meta [Link]

Payment Fragmentation Is Here to Stay, and Banks Must Adapt - Hussam Kamel, Finextra [Link]

The global payments industry is moving away from harmonisation and toward persistent fragmentation. This shift is structural—not temporary—and banks must fundamentally rethink their payment infrastructures to remain competitive. Fragmentation is structural and enduring. Banks that succeed will be those that embrace divergence, modernise their core payment architectures, and treat flexibility as a strategic advantage rather than a cost burden.

Google, Nvidia, and OpenAI - Ben Thompson, Stratechery [Link]

  • Nvidia: structurally strong, but facing long-term margin pressure.
  • OpenAI: has the best consumer position, but is undermining itself by avoiding ads.
  • Google: the only company that can fight on all dimensions simultaneously — model quality, compute, monetization, and distribution.

The AI war is no longer about who innovates first — it’s about who can sustain dominance at scale.

Apple AI chief steps down following Siri setbacks - Emma Roth, The Verge [Link]

OpenAI CEO declares “code red” as Gemini gains 200 million users in 3 months [Link]

Stop talking about your impact. Start spotlighting theirs. - Jenny Wanger [Link]

The strongest professional reputation isn’t built by showcasing how much you do, but by amplifying how others succeed through what you enable.

The book recommendations mentioned in the article:

  1. Wild Courage by Jenny Wood — Cited for advice on sharing wins and gratitude in self-promotion.
  2. Give to Grow by Mo Bunell — Recommended as a good resource on the importance of generosity and recognition.
  3. Give and Take by Adam Grant — Recommended for insight into how impact and recognition dynamics work in professional settings.

So What's Going to Happen to Product Management Anyway? - Peter Yang, Behind the Craft [Link]

ryo_cursor_quote

How To Ask for Support from Senior Leaders - Yue Zhao [Link]

1) Mindset Shift: People often avoid asking for help because they see it as a sign of weakness. The author learned that asking for help is an essential leadership skill — especially when challenges exceed your control or expertise.

2) When to Ask for Help

You should consider asking for help when:

  • The challenge is outside your area of expertise.
  • It requires coordination across teams you don’t control.
  • You need exceptions or decisions from leaders outside your chain of command.

The general rule: ask earlier rather than later — problems grow if unaddressed.

3) Types of Help to Ask For

The article breaks down effective asks into levels of involvement a leader might provide:

  1. Be a Sounding Board — light request: listen and give perspective.
  2. Give Air Cover — leader supports you publicly in meetings or when there’s pushback.
  3. Be a Messenger — leader helps deliver messages you can’t reach as easily.
  4. Fight With Me — leader actively advocates or argues on your behalf (highest effort).

The author suggests that asking for air cover is often the best default: It’s low-effort for the leader and lets you drive the work while they back you up.

Netflix and the Hollywood End Game - Ben Thompson, Stratechery [Link]

Netflix wins not because it makes the best shows, but because it is the best machine for turning content into sustained value—and now it wants to own the raw materials too.

Execution won’t stop. Strategy will unless you have a system: Jenny Wanger at INDUSTRY 2025 [Link]

  • Execution isn’t the bottleneck; unclear strategy is.: Teams over-execute when strategy isn’t explicit, forcing constant validation, rework, and reactive prioritization.
  • Lack of strategy clarity creates hidden time leaks.: Without a clear strategic “yes,” leaders and teams struggle to say no—resulting in fragmented effort and slow decision-making.
  • An imperfect strategy is better than a silent one.: Strategy doesn’t need to be complete to be effective; even partial clarity reduces noise and accelerates alignment.
  • Strategy must function as a system, not a document.: Value comes from embedding strategy into everyday decisions, tradeoffs, and communication—not from standalone artifacts.
  • Perceived productivity can mask lack of progress.: Teams can ship continuously while failing to move the business forward if work isn’t anchored to a shared direction.
  • Strategy is ultimately a leadership communication discipline.: Clear, consistently reinforced strategy enables faster decisions, greater autonomy, and compounding momentum.

Card fees creep onto restaurant tabs - Justin Bachman, paymentsdive [Link]

Restaurants are increasingly adding credit card surcharges or cash discounts to offset sharply rising card interchange fees. The shift reflects thin margins, declining traffic, and ongoing frustration with card networks, though adoption remains limited due to customer backlash and state regulations.

J.P. Morgan harnesses blockchain for debt issuance amid digital asset adoption boost - Pritam Biswas and Anirban Sen, Reuters [Link]

J.P. Morgan helped issue $50 million of short-term debt using blockchain technology instead of traditional systems. The debt was issued for Galaxy Digital on the Solana blockchain and bought by Coinbase and Franklin Templeton. Payments were handled using USDC, a digital dollar. This deal shows that big financial institutions are starting to seriously use blockchain

YouTube and Podcast

Tucker Carlson: Rise of Nick Fuentes, Paramount vs Netflix, Anti-AI Sentiment, Hottest Takes - All-In Podcast [Link]

Bernie Sanders: Stop All AI, China's EUV Breakthrough, Inflation Down, Golden Age in 2026? - All-In Podcast [Link]

Sacks, Andreessen & Horowitz: How America Wins the AI Race Against China - a16z [Link]

How AI Agents Will Transform in 2026 (a16z Big Ideas) - a16z [Link]

AI stops being something you ask, and becomes something that does.

  • Interfaces: chat → action
  • Design: human-first → agent-first
  • Work: assistance → execution

Big Ideas:

  • From prompts to action: AI interfaces are moving beyond chat boxes toward agents that proactively execute tasks and workflows on users’ behalf, acting more like autonomous employees than tools you query.
  • From human-readable to agent-readable software: Software, content, and workflows will increasingly be designed to be machine-legible first, enabling agents to reliably navigate, interpret, and operate systems without brittle prompting.
  • From demos to deployable voice agents: Voice AI is crossing a threshold from novelty to production-ready systems, becoming practical in domains like healthcare, finance, recruiting, and consumer wellness due to improved reliability and integration.

3 Industries That AI Will Revolutionize In 2026 (a16z Big Ideas) - a16z [Link]

Big Ideas:

  • The Electro-Industrial Stack: AI is driving a rebuild of the physical economy—manufacturing, energy, logistics—into an integrated electro-industrial stack where software, hardware, power, and supply chains are tightly coupled, reshaping national competitiveness.
  • A Turning Point in Financial Services: Financial services and insurance are reaching an inflection point where replacing legacy systems with AI-native, unified infrastructure unlocks parallel workflows, cleaner data, and structurally higher margins.
  • The Dynamic Agent Layer: Static systems of record will be overtaken by a dynamic agent layer where AI agents actively execute work across systems, shifting value from data storage to autonomous coordination and decision-making.

How AI Will Transform Fintech In 2026 - A16z [Link]

Fintech is entering a new upcycle, but it will look very different from the 2020–21 boom. The next phase is driven less by growth-at-all-costs and more by AI-powered fundamentals—especially fraud prevention, underwriting, and infrastructure efficiency—where incumbents and well-positioned platforms (like Plaid) regain an edge.

I shrunk down into an M5 chip - Marques Brownlee [Link]

Incredible video to convey the true sense of scale.

All-In x Kill Tony: A Hilarious Holiday Special - All-In Podcast [Link]

WTF Is Wealth? Ray Dalio Breaks It Down w/ Nikhil Kamath | WTF is Finance Ep 2 - Nikhil Kamath [Link]

Ray Dalio is talking about how money works, why bubbles are inevitable, and how to think across cycles rather than chase narratives.

Takeaways - what Ray Dalio explicitly believes or argues in this episode:

  1. Money ≠ Wealth

    Money is not real wealth; it is a claim on wealth. Wealth is real purchasing power backed by: 1) Goods, 2) Services, 3) Productivity. Printing money does not create wealth—it only redistributes claims on existing wealth.

  2. Money Has Two Conflicting Functions

    Dalio defines money as: A medium of exchange; A store of wealth

    "When debt is high and governments intervene, money often fails at being a store of wealth." This conflict explains: 1) Inflation, 2) Currency debasement, 3) Asset bubbles

  3. Debt Cycles Drive Everything

    Economies move in long-term debt cycles (50–100 years). Excessive debt forces governments into a corner: 1) Raise taxes, 2) Cut spending, 3) Print money. Historically, they always print.

  4. The Gold Standard Ending Was a Regime Shift

    Nixon ending the gold standard (1971) permanently changed money. Since then: 1) Money is a policy tool, not a constraint. 2) Governments can promise more than they can actually deliver. This makes currency risk unavoidable.

  5. Bubbles Are Created by Easy Money

    Bubbles form when:

    • Money creation outpaces real economic growth
    • People extrapolate recent gains indefinitely
    • Leverage increases faster than income

    Dalio sees bubbles as mechanical, not moral failures.

  6. Leverage Is the Silent Killer

    Most people underestimate leverage risk. Leverage: 1) Magnifies gains, 2) Destroys you quickly when wrong

    Liquidity disappears precisely when you need it most.

  7. Wealth Preservation > Wealth Maximization

    Dalio emphasizes:

    • Surviving bad regimes matters more than winning good ones.

    • Losing 50% requires a 100% gain to recover.

    • The biggest mistake investors make is over-concentration.

  8. Diversification Is Not About Asset Count

    True diversification means:

    • Exposure to uncorrelated return drivers

    • Assets that respond differently to:

      • Growth

      • Inflation

      • Deflation

      • Political stress

    Holding many similar assets ≠ diversification.

  9. If You Can’t Beat the Market, Don’t Try

    Most people should not trade or time markets. Dalio believes: 1) Humility beats confidence, 2) Process beats prediction

    Portfolio construction matters more than asset selection.

  10. Productive Assets Are the Best Long-Term Store of Wealth

    Dalio prefers assets that:

    • Generate cash flows

    • Adapt to inflation

    • Represent real economic activity

    Examples: 1) Businesses, 2) Innovation, 3) Human capital

  11. Gold Has a Role — But It’s Not Everything

    Gold is a hedge against: 1) Currency debasement, 2) Political disorder. But it does not produce income. It should be part of a portfolio, not the portfolio.

  12. Crypto Is Unproven as a Long-Term Store of Wealth

    Dalio’s view is cautious, not dismissive: Crypto has some store-of-value characteristics, but: 1) No long multi-cycle history, 2) Regulatory and political uncertainty.

    He treats it as speculative diversification, not core wealth.

  13. Real Estate Is Politically Vulnerable

    Real estate is easy to: 1) Tax, 2) Regulate, 3) Seize. Investors underestimate political risk in immovable assets.

  14. Prediction Is Less Valuable Than Understanding Systems

    Dalio does not believe in point forecasts. He believes in:

    • Cause–effect relationships

    • Scenario thinking

    • Probabilities, not certainties

  15. The Five Forces Drive History

    Dalio believes every country’s trajectory is shaped by:

    1. Debt & money
    2. Internal conflict
    3. External conflict
    4. Technology
    5. Acts of nature

​ Ignore any one of these and your analysis is incomplete.

  1. Technology Is the Ultimate Long-Term Wealth Driver

    Innovation increases productivity. Productivity is the foundation of rising living standards. Countries that innovate absorb shocks better than those that don’t.

  2. Psychology Determines Success More Than Intelligence

    Successful investors share:

    • Humility

    • Curiosity

    • Willingness to be wrong

    • Ability to learn from pain

​ Ego is the enemy of compounding.

  1. Learning Comes From Proximity

    The fastest way to learn is to be near: 1) Great thinkers, 2) Great decision-makers.

  2. Wealth Without Purpose Is Empty

    Dalio believes: 1) Legacy matters more than net worth, 2) Passing knowledge forward is the highest form of wealth, 3) Systems and ideas outlast money.

Sundar Pichai: Gemini 3, Vibe Coding and Google's Full Stack Strategy - Google for Developers [Link]

2026年科技行业前瞻:AI、自动驾驶、机器人、世界模型、美股... - 硅谷101 [Link]

The Thinking Game | Full documentary | Tribeca Film Festival official selection - Google DeepMind [Link]

The inside story of the AI breakthrough that won a Nobel Prize.

think_again

Adam Grant’s "Think Again" offers a refreshing alternative: the power of intellectual humility. While we often define intelligence as the ability to think and learn, Grant argues that in a rapidly changing world, a different cognitive skill matters just as much—the ability to rethink and unlearn.

Grant challenges us to abandon the mindsets of preachers, prosecutors, and politicians in favor of thinking like a "scientist." The core of the first section is the concept of confident humility—having faith in your capability while appreciating how much you have yet to learn. We must detach our opinions from our identity. By basing who we are on our values (e.g., generosity, freedom) rather than our specific beliefs, we can remain open to changing our minds without losing our sense of self.

How do we open other people's minds? Grant suggests that logic and data often fail because they trigger defensiveness. Instead, we should adopt techniques like motivational interviewing, which acts as a mirror to help people find their own motivation to change. Effective disagreement isn't about crushing the opponent; it's about signaling that we are reasonable and open to evolving our own views.

The final section tackles how we can foster a culture of rethinking in our communities. Grant warns against binary bias—the tendency to simplify complex issues into two opposing sides. Complexity and nuance are actually signals of credibility. When we showcase the "shades of gray" and admit uncertainty, we become more persuasive, not less.

This book is a transformative reminder that true wisdom lies not in the certainty of our convictions, but in the confident humility to constantly question what we don't know. And it is worth being picked up occasionally for self-reflection to ensure we remain open to the joy of being wrong.

Here are my favorite quotes from this book:

Individual Rethinking

Recognizing our shortcomings opens the door to doubt. As we question our current understanding, we become curious about what information we are missing. That search leads us to new discoveries, which in turn maintain our humility by reinforcing how much we still have to learn. If knowledge is power, knowing what we don't know is wisdom.

Great thinkers don't harbor doubts because they are impostors. They maintain doubts because they know we're all partially blind and they are committed to improving their sight. They don't boast about how much they know; they marvel at how little they understand. They are aware that each answer raises new questions, and the quest for knowledge is never finished. A mark of lifelong learners is recognizing that they can learn something from everyone they meet.

Arrogance leaves us blind to our weaknesses. Humility is a reflective lens: it helps us see them clearly. Confident humility is a corrective lens: it enables us to overcome those weaknesses.

Attachment. That's what keeps us from recognizing when our opinions are off the mark and rethinking them. To unlock the joy of being wrong, we need to detach. I've learned that two kinds of detachment are especially useful: detaching your present from your past and detaching your opinions from your identity.

Who you are should be a question of what you value, not what you believe. Values are our core principles in life - they might be excellence and generosity, freedom and fairness, or security and integrity. Basing your identity on these kinds of principles enables you to remain open-minded about the best ways to advance them.

The clearest sign of intellectual chemistry isn't agreeing with someone. It's enjoying your disagreements with them. Harmony is the pleasing arrangement of different tones, voices, or instruments, not the combination of identical sounds. Creative tension makes beautiful music.

Interpersonal Rethinking

Convincing other people to think again isn't just about making a good argument - it's about establishing that we have the right motives in doing so. When we concede that someone else has made a good point, we signal that we are scientists trying to get to the truth. "Arguments are often far more combative and adversarial than they need to be", Harish told me, "You should be willing to listen to what someone else is saying and give them a lot of credit for it. It makes you sound like a reasonable person who is taking everything into account."

Being reasonable literally means that we can be reasoned with, that we're open to evolving our views in light of logic and data.

When we gave them different kinds of reasons to donate, we triggered their awareness that someone was trying to persuade them - and they shielded themselves against it. A single line of argument feels like a conversation; multiple lines of argument can become an onslaught.

Taken together, these techniques increase the odds that during a disagreement, other people will abandon an overconfidence cycle and engage in a rethinking cycle. When we point out that there are areas where we agree and acknowledge that they have some valid points, we model confident humility and encourage them to follow suit. When we support our argument with a small number of cohesive, compelling reasons, we encourage them to start doubting their own opinion. And when we ask genuine questions, we leave them intrigued to learn more. We don't have to convince them that we're right - we just need to open their minds to the possibility that they might be wrong. Their natural curiosity might do the rest.

Outside the lab, dismantling stereotypes and decreasing prejudice rarely happen overnight; a key step is getting them to do some counterfactual thinking: helping them consider what they would believe if they were living in an alternative reality.

In psychology, counterfactual thinking involves imagining how the circumstances of our lives could have unfolded differently. When we realize how easily we could have held different stereotypes, we might be more willing to update our views.

Psychologists find that many of our beliefs are cultural truisms: widely shared, but rarely questioned. If we take a closer look at them, we often discover that they rest on shaky foundations. Stereotypes don't have the structural integrity of a carefully built ship. They're more like a tower in the game of Jenga - teetering on a small number of blocks, with some key supports missing. To knock it over, sometimes all we need to do is give it a poke. The hope is that people will rise to the occasion and build new beliefs on a stronger foundation.

They developed the core principles of a practice called motivational interviewing. The central premise is that we can rarely motivate someone else to change. We're better off helping them find their own motivation to change.

Motivational interviewing starts with an attitude of humility and curiosity. We don't know what might motivate someone else to change, but we're genuinely eager to find out. The goal isn't to tell people what to do; it's to help them break out of overconfidence cycles and see new possibilities. Our role is to hold up a mirror so they can see themselves more clearly, and then empower them to examine their beliefs and behaviors. That can activate a rethinking cycle, in which people approach their own views more scientifically. They develop more humility about their knowledge, doubt in their convictions, and curiosity about alternative points of view.

Listening well is more than a matter of talking less. It's a set of skills in asking and responding. It starts with showing more interest in other people's interests rather than trying to judge their status or prove our own. We can all get better at asking "truly curious questions that don't have the hidden agenda of fixing, saving, advising, convincing or correcting", and helping to "facilitate the clear expression of another person's thoughts."

Collective Rethinking

Binary bias is a basic human tendency to seek clarity and closure by simplifying a complex continuum into two categories. To paraphrase the humorist Robert Benchley, there are two kinds of people: those who divide the world into two kinds of people, and those who don't.

An antidote to this proclivity is complexifying: showcasing the range of perspectives on a given topic. We might believe we're making progress by discussing hot-button issues as two sides of a coin, but people are actually more inclined to think again if we present these topics through the many lenses of a prism. To borrow a phrase from Walt Whitman, it takes a multitude of views to help people realize that they too contain multitudes.

A dose of complexity can disrupt overconfidence cycles and spur rethinking cycles. It gives us more humility about our knowledge and more doubts about our opinions, and it can make us curious enough to discover information we were lacking.

This thorny issue is a natural place to explore how we can bring more complexity into our conversations. Fundamentally, that involves drawing attention to the nuances that often get overlooked. It starts with seeking and spotlighting shades of gray.

When we are reading, listening, or watching, we can learn to recognize complexity as a signal of credibility.

Multiple experiments have shown that when experts express doubt, they become more persuasive. When someone knowledgeable admits uncertainty, it surprises people, and they end up paying more attention to the substance of the argument.

In a series of experiments, psychologists demonstrated that when news reports about science included caveats, they succeeded in capturing readers' interest and keeping their minds open.

New research reveals that people are more likely to promote diversity and inclusion when the message is more nuanced (and more accurate). Acknowledging complexity doesn't make speakers and writers less convincing; it makes them more credible. It doesn't lose viewers and readers; it maintains their engagement while stoking their curiosity.

What stands in the way of rethinking isn't the expression of emotion; it's a restricted range of emotion.

Substack

Harvard’s 30-Year Research Reveals: Why You Feel Overwhelmed, Exhausted, and Anxious — and How 25 Tiny Daily Habits Can Restore Inner Calm, Thomas Blake, Everyday Health [Link]

When you don’t feel like doing something, do it for ten minutes anyway.

― The 10-Minute Rule: How Small Windows Create Big Wins - Balanced Discipline [Link]

Humans exist to understand the universe. But we still don’t know what question we’re supposed to be asking.

The biggest opportunities of the 2030s will sit at intersections:

  • AI + energy
  • robotics + logistics
  • satellites + internet
  • AI + biology
  • space + manufacturing

This is the philosophical layer behind his companies:

  • xAI expands intelligence

  • Neuralink expands consciousness

  • SpaceX expands reach

  • Tesla expands autonomy

― Elon Musk’s Most Important Interview in Years - Ruben Dominguez, The VC Corner [Link]

How To Remember Everything You Read - Polymath Investor [Link]

An active reading and retention framework

Your brain loves patterns. Comfort means staying in old circuits. But discomfort shocks the brain. It forces new neural pathways - that's neuroplasticity. Every uncomfortable action - cold showers, public speaking discipline- is literally rewiring your brain into a stronger version of you.

― how to be extremely disciplined - Bella Dane [Link]

How to Trick Your Brain into Doing Difficult Things - Dr. Dominic Ng [Link]

I like this one: Make it fun

  • Listen to your favourite podcast during cardio
  • Drink your nicest coffee while doing deep work
  • Use your comfiest chair only for studying
  • Light your favourite candle when writing
  • Play specific music while cleaning

The 20-Minute Writing Exercise That Neuroscientists Say Can Solve Your Hardest Problems - Magdalena Ponurska [Link]

The science behind this writing exercise involves cognitive neuroscience and functions as attentional training. It works by simultaneously leveraging three mechanisms:

  1. Activating the Prefrontal Cortex: Writing about solving a problem in vivid, present-tense detail activates the prefrontal cortex, which is the brain's planning and problem-solving center. Studies show that the brain treats this detailed written simulation of future scenarios as a form of experience, unlike abstract goal-setting.
  2. Priming the Reticular Activating System (RAS): The writing exercise primes the RAS, which serves as the brain's filter for determining what you notice in your environment. By writing about being a person who "found money under rocks," the RAS starts flagging relevant opportunities or "solution-shaped things" that were previously overlooked.
  3. Creating Implementation Intentions: When you create a detailed mental scenario of completing a task, you are creating specific "if-then" plans known as implementation intentions. Research indicates that this technique makes people two to three times more likely to follow through than those who simply set abstract goals.

Articulation has nothing to do with sounding smart, but with sounding authentic.

What makes someone dangerously articulate, is the willingness to think out loud without fear of making mistakes. To make your intellectual curiosity visible, and to embrace the possibility of not knowing everything while speaking aloud.

In an uncertain world, embracing uncertainty becomes the foundation of dangerously articulate thinking.

If you fear uncertainty in your life, you need to leverage uncertainty to overcome it.

You need to become obsessed in your own curiosity to become genuinely useful to others.

Reading feeds curiosity. Reading improves how well you ask questions. Reading fuels better synthesis through asking better questions. Reading makes the perspective you have to offer to the world more valuable because you can synthesize everything you have read into solutions that can help people.

― How to become dangerously articulate - Craig Perry [Link]

Four daily habits you must practice: 1) reading, 2) thinking out loud, 3) teaching yourself, 4) writing.

  • Self-Promotion is selling your image. It demands praise. It is rooted in ego. (x)

  • Authentic Visibility is sharing your expertise. It offers repeatable value. It is rooted in service.

  • The Arrogance Trap (The Trophy): This focuses on the outcome. It states the win without showing the struggle. The reader sees a trophy and feels judged. (x)

  • The Service Solution (The Map): This focuses on the journey. It shares the failures, the painful moments, and the simple frameworks that finally led to success. The reader sees a map and feels helped.

  • The Audience of One Exercise: Picture the single, most valuable person you want to help (e.g., Sarah, Director of Product). Define them by: The Pain they struggle with, The Goal they aim for, and The Fear they are terrified of.

  • The Translation Test: Always translate the what (the specific task you did) into the how (the repeatable rule anyone can use).

― How to Build a Personal Brand When You’re a Senior Professional Who Hates Self Promotion - William Meller, You Visible [Link]

"The Strategy of Service

The core idea of Part 1 is professional relief: you don’t have to promote yourself. The anxiety you feel is valid because self-promotion is rooted in ego, but true visibility is rooted in service. This is about adopting the Map perspective-sharing the process and the failures-to eliminate the fear of arrogance. To keep your content focused, define your Audience of One. Finally, remember the Translation Test: your expertise is locked inside your company’s context; always translate internal success into a Portable Principle the market can immediately use."

"The Architecture of Proof

Part 2 is the strategic realization that your LinkedIn profile is a passive, magnetic sales tool. Your Headline must be a 10-second service promise. The About section earns trust by showing a past failure (the scar) that led directly to your unique framework (the solution). The most important shift is in the Experience section-stop listing activity and start listing your professional legacy by detailing the mechanism you engineered and the value it created. Finally, the Featured section provides tangible proof of your competence, fulfilling the promise made in your headline."

“The Protocol of Consistency

The core challenge is that visibility requires consistency, but self-promotion is exhausting. Part 3 turns content creation into a quiet routine. Start with the Daily Capture Ritual to source your ideas from Friction Points and Instruction Moments-the problems you already solved. Batch your writing into a 60-minute Weekly Creation Block, always following the structure of Conflict, Lesson, Illustration, Conversation. Finally, implement the Generosity Loop-committing 5 minutes a day to provide high-value contributions in the comments of others-which is a low-effort way to maximize visibility through service.”

“The Language of Quiet Confidence

Part 4 focuses on refining your voice to ensure your words are precise and evidence-based. You must eliminate the language of demand, which erodes trust, and embrace the Language Test by reframing your message to that of a generous teacher. The greatest tool is the mechanism-naming the specific process or framework you built to prove that your knowledge is systematic and repeatable. Finally, use the word “We” to project confident leadership and credit the process.”

"The Quiet Metric System

Part 5 provides the ultimate relief: you can officially ignore the noisy scoreboards. True authority is not measured by vanity metrics (Likes, views) but by Authority Metrics-specifically, the quality of inbound opportunities and Direct Messages that reference one of your named mechanisms. To sustain this, enforce the Time-Box Rule for writing and embrace the 1/3 Rule to keep the focus on low-effort engagement over high-effort creation."

Foundations: My 1999 (and part of 2000), Michael Burry, Cassandra Unchained [Link]

Articles and Blogs

We Asked Roblox’s C.E.O. About Child Safety. It Got Tense. - The New York Times [Link]

How we built OWL, the new architecture behind our ChatGPT-based browser, Atlas - OpenAI [Link]

Exploring a space-based, scalable AI infrastructure system design - Google Research [Link]

Google is seriously exploring whether AI data centers in space, powered by near-limitless solar energy and connected via optical links, could one day scale machine learning beyond Earth’s physical and environmental constraints.

Thoughts by a non-economist on AI and economics - Boaz Barak, Windows on Theory [Link]

The real economic question is not how good AI is today, but whether its exponential improvement translates into an exponential reduction in human-only tasks—something history has never seen before.

AI progress and recommendations - OpenAI [Link]

Software 1.0 easily automates what you can specify.

Software 2.0 easily automates what you can verify.

― "Sharing an interesting recent conversation on AI's impact on the economy. " - Andrej Karpathy [Link]

Estimating AI productivity gains from Claude conversations - Anthropic [Link]

Current AI already delivers large task-level time savings. Even without future model improvements, widespread adoption could meaningfully boost productivity. However, real gains depend on adoption, integration, and reorganization. The largest historical productivity revolutions came from changing how work is organized, not just doing the same tasks faster.

This study provides a lower-bound, usage-grounded lens on AI’s economic impact—useful for tracking trends, not forecasting destiny.

JPMorgan Rolls Out Deposit Token JPM Coin in Digital Asset Push - Bloomberg [Link]

JPMorgan’s rollout of JPM Coin shows how big banks are using blockchain to modernize real-world payments—faster, always-on, and regulated—without embracing speculative crypto.

The move reflects a wider trend among large financial institutions to modernize payment infrastructure using blockchain while staying within regulated banking frameworks.

Ramp/Brex beat the Amex/Concur experience by bundling the corporate card with AI-powered software. Instead of pulling manual expense reports from one system and importing them to another. The expense report, rules, and controls they’re all embedded together, beautifully.

I think there’s three big lessons if you’re a bank

  1. Software is the Product: The integrated software experience is the new competitive moat, not a "portal" bolted onto a legacy product.
  2. Automation is the Standard: AI-driven, "zero-touch" workflows are the new customer expectation. The manual expense report is dead.
  3. The All-in-One Platform Wins: Customers will always abandon a stack of siloed tools for a single, bundled platform that solves the entire workflow.

― The CFO Dashboard; Ramp, Brex or Mercury - 18 Months Later - Simon Taylor, Fintech Brainfood [Link]

This is a story about recognizing that financial services for growth companies are being re-architected into three different endgames, each optimized for a different definition of scale, control, and user value.

Across all three companies (Ramp, Brex, Mercury), the real trend is re-bundling:

  • Software is the product, not a portal layered on top
  • Automation and “zero-touch” workflows are now table stakes
  • Bundled, end-to-end platforms beat stitched-together TradFi stacks
  • UX and workflow ownership are the new moats

Traditional banks aren’t dead—but they are structurally behind.

Two signals stand out:

  • JPM Coin launching on Base suggests banks are moving “open loop” on-chain
  • Stablecoins are becoming real infrastructure, not just crypto-native tools

This could reshape cross-border payments, treasury management, and bank interoperability—potentially challenging SWIFT.

JPMD_-_USDC_v_3

Google Maps releases new AI tools that let you create interactive projects - TechCrunch [Link]

Google Has Your Data. Gemini Barely Uses It. - Shlok Khemani [Link]

Google’s Gemini has access to unparalleled personal data, but it intentionally underuses it. Gemini’s memory system is carefully designed, transparent, and conservative—prioritizing safety, trust, and control over magical personalization. This restraint is elegant, but it may cost Google its biggest competitive advantage in personal AI.

Github

Tech Interview Handbook - yangshun [Link]

n8n workflows, zie619 [Link]

YouTube and Podcast

Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir: Exclusive Interview Inside PLTR Office - Sourcery with Molly O'shea [Link]

Most corporate and government leaders now believe AI software should work, and they seek out solutions when their own projects fail. The launch of AIP was an "artistic" decision made quickly (he launched it in the "darkness of night" pre-Easter to avoid resistance) based on the insight that LLMs would become commodity products and orchestration would be much more valuable. This change in customer belief has increased Palantir's authority, compressing sales cycles from five years versus nine months to five years versus two or three months.

The focus is on growing the U.S., enhancing the quality of the user experience (UX), and ensuring Palantir remains closest to the things that give America a strategic advantage for decades.

YouTube CEO Neal Mohan on AI, Censorship & the Future of Creators - All-In Podcast [Link]

YouTube CEO Neal Mohan is discussing the massive scale of the platform, the state of the creator economy, and emerging technological challenges. Mohan defended the long-standing 55/45 revenue split within the YouTube Partner Program, citing the billions paid out to creators and the strong return on investment (ROI) that high user engagement delivers to advertisers. He also highlighted the success of subscription products like YouTube Premium and YouTube TV, positioning the platform as the top streaming service in the U.S. The conversation addressed content regulation, confirming a pullback from controversial COVID-era censorship and emphasizing YouTube’s commitment to free expression despite the difficulty of managing diverse global laws and cultural nuances. Crucially, Mohan revealed that YouTube is adapting to the rise of synthetic media by developing new likeness detection tools—modeled after Content ID—and implementing transparency labels for AI-generated content to protect creator identities and address "AI slop."

Elon Musk: OpenAI Betrayal, His Future at Tesla, and the Next Big Thing — Grokipedia - All-In Podcast [Link]

Does OpenAI Need a Bailout? Mamdani Wins, Socialism Rising, Filibuster Nuclear Option - All-In Podcast [Link]

OpenAI CFO Would Support Federal Backstop for Chip Investments - WSJ Video [Link]

When you only know one field deeply, you see problems through that one lens. When you know many fields shallowly, you can't solve complex problems. But when you know one field deeply and have worked across many others, you can take a pattern from field A and apply it to solve a problem in field B.

Everytime you learn something new, immediately find 2-3 examples from completely different areas that use the same idea.

When you struggle and fail, your brain becomes super aware of what you don't know, it creates gaps in your knowledge that your brain wants to fill. When the teaching finally comes, your brain is actively looking for the missing pieces.

― how to actually become a polymath. - riskambition [Link]

How to articulate your thoughts more clearly than 99% of people - Matt Huang [Link]

What does it mean to be articulate?

To express (an idea or feeling) fluently and coherently

  • Fluently: ease and grace

    • => delivery:
      • Decrease mental load (word choice, top-down communication)
      • Storytelling
      • Energy
  • Coherently: clear and logical

    • => message content/structure:

      • Understanding the topic/issue

      • Knowing the objective

      • Fastest path to explain (less mental load)

        The best speakers are the ones who are able to express the idea or the thing they need from someone in 5-10 seconds or less, Any longer than that and you honestly don't understand the thing that you're trying to explain.

      • Anticipating key questions

They deliberately make other people win bigger than them, not equal, not balanced, bigger. And they do it first before asking for anything.

It triggers psychological debt.

In any interaction, ask what costs me almost nothing, but would be huge for them. Maybe it's connection, maybe it's knowledge you already have, maybe it's taking an annoying task they hate. Give that first, not after, not during, first.

The most successful people aren't doing more, they are doing less, but at level that nobody else can touch, because they are not distracted by good opportunities.

Here's what separates effective people from everyone else, they treat this time (prime time) like a medical emergency, no meetings during prime time, no email, no quick questions, no administrative garbage, this is when you do the one thing that actually moves the needle.

The most effective people are actively bad at most things on purpose. They are not well-rounded, they are sharp in one place and dull in everywhere else.

― how to easily become a highly effective person. - riskambition [Link]

Epstein Files Fallout, Nvidia Risks, Burry's Bad Bet, Google's Breakthrough, Tether's Boom - All-In Podcast [Link]

FULL: Elon Musk Makes Shocking Future Predictions At U.S.-Saudi Arabia Forum Alongside Jensen Huang - Forbes Breaking News [Link]

We Asked Roblox's C.E.O. About Child Safety. It Got Tense. | EP 163 - Hard Fork [Link]

Roblox CEO is Delusional, penguinz0 [Link]

The Roblox CEO Dave Baszucki has been widely criticized after the safety interview on Hard Fork for

  • his controversial push to introduce dating services and adult content onto a platform predominantly used by children, initially refusing to set the minimum age at 18.
  • being repeatedly combative, defensive, and used aggressive interruptions to avoid legitimate questions.
  • when asked about the platform's long-standing issue with predators on Roblox, Baszucki stated that he viewed the problem not merely as a serious issue but as an "opportunity" for safety innovation.
  • unironically entertaining a question about implementing educational kid gambling on the platform, suggesting it would be a "brilliant idea" if structured legally.

OpenAI's Code Red, Sacks vs New York Times, New Poverty Line? - All-In Podcast [Link]

AI should either be a guardian angel or a cognitive amplifier.

― Satya Nadella – How Microsoft thinks about AGI, Dwarkesh Patel [Link]

The Thinking Game | Full documentary | Tribeca Film Festival official selection, Google DeepMind [Link]

Anthropic C.E.O.: Massive A.I. Spending Could Haunt Some Companies - The New York Times [Link]

Are Banks Secretly Winning the AI Race? (OpenAI Insider Explains) - Rex Salisbury [Link]

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