Summary
Hello, and happy Sunday! Was this newsletter forwarded to you?Sign upto get it in your inbox.Knowledge base"The Most Human AI Model Is Also One of the Cheapest"byMichael Taylor:Michael Taylorran 60 experiments testing 12 leading AI models on their ability to roleplay as humans, and discovered something important: you can't buy authenticity. Read this if you're building AI products, conducting research, or just want to know which model won during our tests."Claude Code Camp: The Workflows Turning One Engineer Into Ten"byKatie Parrott: At Every’s secondClaude Code Camp, engineers showed how Anthropic’s new subagents can transform solo coding into a team sport. From executor/evaluator loops to log investigators, these lightweight AI teammates are already powering new features in tools like Spiral, Cora, and Sparkle. Read this if you want a playbook on scaling your output by turning Claude from a single contributor into a team lead."I Taught Claude Every's Standards. It Taught Me Mine."byKatie Parrott:Katie Parrottthought she was building an AI editor for Every. It turns out that she was also building a mirror for her own judgment—and it showed her things she didn't know she believed about good writing. Read this if you want to see how AI can sharpen your thinking rather than replace it.🎧🖥"How to Prepare for AGI According to Reid Hoffman"byDan Shipper/Chain of Thought: LinkedIn co-founderReid Hoffmanthinks AI won’t steal your job but will actually enhance your agency—if you know how to use it. In this podcast episode, Hoffman draws fascinating parallels between our current AI fears and historical panic around technologies like the printing press and argues that uncertainty is a feature, not a bug. 🎧🖥 Watch the full interview onXorYouTube, or listen onSpotifyorApple Podcasts."Can AI Write Creatively? It Depends Who’s Reading."byRhea Purohit/Chain of Thought: WhenSam Altmantweeted about an AI that impressed him with its creative writing, he unknowingly kicked off a philosophical debate that's been brewing for decades. Is creativity uniquely human, or can machines master it too? Well, it depends. Read this fromRhea Purohitto sound smarter during your next cocktail party debate.Click hereto read the full postWant the full text of all articles in RSS?Become a subscriber, orlearn more.Book information
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Business and Economics