Given the recent burst of activity around enterprise pricing and contracts, I think April 2026 was the month when both OpenAI and Anthropic found product-market fit https://t.co/0hgMfu9Khx
So google is replacing gemini-cli with agy (antigravity cli), but:
1. agy is not opensource
2. It no longer supports ACP
Really unfortunate development
5 million monthly users
2.6 million scientific articles
3 billion downloads
24,000 submissions in ONE MONTH!
The numbers don't lie - arXiv is dedicated to advancing open & collaborative research & we can't do it without you!
https://t.co/MzHJse3Emk
uv is one year old today. Hard to believe its only been a year. The growth, adoption, and impact surpassed my wildest expectations.
Happy birthday, uv! 🥳
Remember when SF hacker friends made the web significantly safer and broke the SSL oligopoly by making free HTTPS certificates with Let’s Encrypt? Top 10 all time hacks imo.
I learned yesterday the video I made in 2017 explaining how Bitcoin works was taken down, and my channel received a copyright strike (despite it being 100% my own content).
The request seems to have been issued by a company chainpatrol, on behalf of Arbitrum, whose website says they "makes use of advanced LLM scanning" for "Brand Protection for Leading Web3 Companies"
I could be wrong, but it sounds like there's a decent chance this means some bot managed to convince YouTube's bots that some re-upload of that video (of which there has been an incessant onslaught) was the original, and successfully issue the takedown and copyright strike request.
It's naturally a little worrying that it should be possible to use these tools to issue fake takedown requests, considering that it only takes 3 to delete an entire channel.
Check out our repo for all code, data, and instructions: https://t.co/Y0dgUNwQpX
our updated manuscript: https://t.co/Hiumc5I5av
and join the Boltz Slack community: https://t.co/eti26NXxr9
Merry Christmas from the Boltz team with @GabriCorso and @pas_saro!
Came up with the perfect click-bait title for my more structured write-up of DevDay...
OpenAI DevDay: Let’s build developer tools, not digital God
https://t.co/XPSWCOMk1C
NotebookLM is quite powerful and worth playing with
https://t.co/EMHIjc15iU
It is a bit of a re-imagination of the UIUX of working with LLMs organized around a collection of sources you upload and then refer to with queries, seeing results alongside and with citations.
But the current most new/impressive feature (that is surprisingly hidden almost as an afterthought) is the ability to generate a 2-person podcast episode based on any content you upload. For example someone took my "bitcoin from scratch" post from a long time ago:
https://t.co/7ajZNZ0BGi
and converted it to podcast, quite impressive:
https://t.co/ZZn0LJgsnu
You can podcastify *anything*. I give it train_gpt2.c (C code that trains GPT-2):
https://t.co/gDrAqix4Iv
and made a podcast about that:
https://t.co/bgcwmQr5d7
I don't know if I'd exactly agree with the framing of the conversation and the emphasis or the descriptions of layernorm and matmul etc but there's hints of greatness here and in any case it's highly entertaining.
Imo LLM capability (IQ, but also memory (context length), multimodal, etc.) is getting way ahead of the UIUX of packaging it into products. Think Code Interpreter, Claude Artifacts, Cursor/Replit, NotebookLM, etc. I expect (and look forward to) a lot more and different paradigms of interaction than just chat.
That's what I think is ultimately so compelling about the 2-person podcast format as a UIUX exploration. It lifts two major "barriers to enjoyment" of LLMs. 1 Chat is hard. You don't know what to say or ask. In the 2-person podcast format, the question asking is also delegated to an AI so you get a lot more chill experience instead of being a synchronous constraint in the generating process. 2 Reading is hard and it's much easier to just lean back and listen.
@karpathy the future is here, but not yet evenly distributed: https://t.co/jiQcyWQ5gE
using the Lightning Network, today we can programmatically send values as small as $0.00006 over the Internet instantly, avoiding all the friction that comes w/ high txn costs w/ traditional payments