AI Builders Brief
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Follow builders, not influencers.

2026.07.16

25+ builders tracked
BUILDER INSIGHTS
15
01
Boris Cherny Boris Cherny anthropicai

Boris Cherny

Something I have been thinking about: in the past, the best engineers I knew spent a lot of time automating their work in various ways. Better vim/emacs automations, writing lint rules to catch repeat code issues, building up a suite of e2e tests so they don't need to smoke test the app manually. These kinds of things were the highest leverage activities an engineer could do, because it multiplied their own output, which in turn meant they could build more things.

I think many of these automations have become even more important now. This is true for a number of reasons.

First, infra and DevX automation speeds you up. And if you are running an army of agents, each of those agents will be sped up also. More automation == more output per unit of time.

Second, moving things to code improves efficiency. Your agent could fix an issue every time it sees that issue happen, but that uses tokens and might miss cases. If Claude instead writes a lint rule, CI step, or routine, that class of issue can be fully automated forever. This is really what people are talking about when they talk about loops -- it's about automating entire types of busywork rather than solving them one off. This isn't a new idea at all. Engineers have been doing this for a long time!

Third and most importantly, automation makes it possible for others to contribute to the codebase more easily. Increasingly what I am seeing is engineers are contributing to codebases on day one because Claude can navigate the codebase for them, and that non-engineers are able to contribute to a codebase as effectively as engineers can. What gets in the way of both of these is domain knowledge that lives in peoples' heads rather than in automation -- the stuff you used to have to learn when ramping up. What has changed thanks to agents is the domain knowledge that can be encoded as infrastructure is no longer limited to what is expressible in lint rules and types and tests; it can now capture nearly all domain knowledge, encoded as code comments and skills and CLAUDE.md rules and memories. If I put up a PR for an iOS codebase I don't know and a code reviewer rejects it because it doesn't use the right framework, or if a designer builds a new feature and it gets rejected because it doesn't follow the right architectural patterns, these are failures of automation.

Every team should be writing the CLAUDE.md's, REVIEW.md's, skills, and docs that enable agents to productively work in their codebase with zero additional context from the prompter. This sounds crazy, and at the same time is a natural extension of the stuff engineers have always done: automate, and encode domain knowledge as infrastructure. As the model gets smarter and as the harness matures, this task becomes easier. In the meantime, it is on every team to look for ways to convert their domain knowledge to infra so that Claude can write code better, so that code review catches issues automatically, and so the next person working on your codebase can contribute more easily.

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02
Thibault Sottiaux Thibault Sottiaux OpenAI

Thibault Sottiaux

We've had no 5h limit in Codex plus and pro for a few days. Do you think it is better or are you finding it difficult to manage the usage included in the weekly limit effectively?

If we were to make this different, what should it look like in an ideal world?

On file deletions. We’ve investigated a handful of reports where GPT-5.6 unexpectedly deleted files.

What we have found is that this most commonly occurs when:

  • Full access mode is enabled and codex is run without sandboxing protections, including without auto review being enabled
  • The model attempts to override the $HOME env var to define a temporary directory.
  • The model makes an honest mistake and mistakenly deletes $HOME instead.

This is of course not how we want the system to behave, even when a user operates the model in full-access mode without the safeguards of our sandbox or without using auto review which checks for these kinds of high risk actions and rejects them.

We are taking steps to mitigate this risk including by updating the developer message, guiding more users towards safer permission modes, and adding additional harness safeguards. Even though this happens extremely rarely, we’ll share a detailed post-mortem in the coming days that goes into more details and what we are doing to minimize risks further.

Now that we merged ChatGPT and Codex, what should we merge next? What's the double or nothing move.

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03
Thariq Thariq anthropicai

Thariq

ideal prompting technique is:

  • thin prompts
  • thick artifacts + context
  • thin skills

software engineering is the profession of automation https://t.co/5OQXE5VBRH

this was such a fun talk with Cat and Simon, hope you get to check it out if you missed it https://t.co/kK8uOVJLSZ

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04
Aaron Levie Aaron Levie CEO, box

Aaron Levie

Hosted a dinner last night with a group of IT leaders of large enterprises around agent adoption in the enterprise. Some quick notes:

* Change management remains one of the biggest topics for driving workflow transformation. Still most processes need to be upgraded to modern operating models to work with agents, which is a mix of technology, data, and human process change. Lots of emphasis on getting data (structured and unstructured) into a setup that can work with agents properly.

* IT teams are finding increasing success embedding full engineers into the business functions (essentially internal FDE) that go and implement agents into the internal workflows. There’s so much technical work to be done to make agents successful, that they can accelerate months or quarters of failed experiments by having someone technical in the workflow early.

* Consensus that the tech function is becoming more important than ever. It’s clear that the business could only expect automation to affect a minority of the business before (e.g. ERP) but now it can impact all of knowledge work. This means IT is becoming a more central role to the workflows across the company.

* Workflows are cross functional, and getting agents to work cross functionally is a complicated data modeling and permissions issue. Single users don’t have access to this. Which means you need to have agentic systems take on their own roles and have their own privileges, which is non-trivial given agents can’t keep things secure on their own.

* Huge variance in budgets between coding work and the rest of knowledge work. Some companies had a $1,000 a month budget for developers, and others had much higher amounts (like $5,000) that were merely triggers to notify the team vs. block them. Far smaller budgets for non-coding work at the moment.

* More companies are building their own multimodel systems for routing workloads by task to frontier and lower cost models. Lots of energy around open weights models, but still more in experimentation instead of at scale usage (some companies can’t due to perceived Chinese issue).

* Clear sense that all enterprise software must be headless in the future. Relief that they don’t need to train employees on hundreds of different apps. However, clear frustration with the traditional vendors that don’t play extremely nice (technically or cost wise) with agents in a headless fashion. Huge warning for existing software vendors.

* Mythos or mythos level-models are finding more and more sophsiticated security risks. The chaining together of vulnerabilities is what’s novel right now, and companies are coming up with long backlogs of what they need to go patch quickly.

Even more discussed, but just a few of the hottest topics.

Fantastic to see more open weights innovation happening right now, especially coming from a US Lab.

The future of AI is going to be a mix of frontier intelligence that you can use as an orchestrator combined with either lower cost or tuned models for your workhorse tasks. https://t.co/pvQ6HgRkO1 https://t.co/zvY9XIgSPE

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05
Josh Woodward Josh Woodward VP, Google

Josh Woodward

Gemini Spark is headed to more Ultra subscribers around the world* plus 4 new features:

1) Spark can open and edit Google Docs, acting on feedback from last week

2) It can read comments in Google Sheets & Slides, so critical info isn't missed

3) It's >50% faster, you can feel it

4) It can parallel process across multiple sources, so tasks complete faster e2e

Pro members, stay tuned for an access update soon :)

*Full list of countries and changelog: https://t.co/oIjY9qQBoz

Full report https://t.co/Of02m7NqKY

We just released our first-ever Gemini Southeast Asia Report (below), 3 insights:

1/ Active users more than doubled in the last year
2/ 70% of prompts are submitted in native languages
3/ 40% of prompts only use voice, image, or video

Gemini's local language + multimodal capabilities + mobile apps are driving growth, and we have more coming soon for the region!

🇮🇩🇲🇾🇵🇭🇸🇬🇹🇭🇻🇳

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06
Guillermo Rauch Guillermo Rauch CEO, vercel

Guillermo Rauch

Vercel Sandbox:
◾ Growing DAUs at 100% m/o/m
◾ 3.5M+ sandboxes created per day
◾ Best-in-class Active CPU pricing model
◾ Powering @notion, @airtable, @meta, @zapier, @coderabbitai, @interaction, @conductor_build, @blackboxai… 🐐 farm

My DMs are open for migration help or if missing anything with: https://t.co/U9bNGNLdMZ

Easy money (British pounds)

Some really cool usecases of Web Analytics API:

▪️ Ask your agent to correlate visitors, custom events (“purchase”, “checkout”), with the evolution of your deployments and performance

▪️ Build custom frontends, and plot this data alongside e.g.: Stripe’s and Resend’s https://t.co/srTMkm6uhg

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07
Peter Steinberger Peter Steinberger OpenClaw

Peter Steinberger

Mostly true, 5.6 is relentless. https://t.co/aBiolT4vMF

“If I put up a PR for an iOS codebase I don't know and a code reviewer rejects it because it doesn't use the right framework, or if a designer builds a new feature and it gets rejected because it doesn't follow the right architectural patterns, these are failures of automation.” https://t.co/3dIgj0Hzs5

This is really clever. https://t.co/s8mRrtX6Rz

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08
Swyx Swyx dxtipshq

Swyx

you can just tweet things into existence https://t.co/4TnqEDoQsg

@jluan follow this track playlist

https://t.co/MzPfXCh1jb

someone just told me about this take* on CUA

this is one of those gell mann moments for me lol. i've been watching computer use since World of Bits (Shi, fan, karpathy, hernandez & liang 2017). we were the first technical pod to interview @jluan about Adept's work three years ago, we were there in the @AnthropicAI building when they first launched Computer Use 2 years ago, I fanboyed over Claude Cowork in our @felixrieseberg pod 3 months ago, and we ran our first full computer use track at @aidotengineer ft. @DhruvBatra_ @proceduralia @francedot 3 weeks ago.

GPT 5.6 + Superapp is even better at CUA than everything i just mentioned. excited for our @AriX podcast to discuss the @skybysoftware story and Codex progress.

if you actually use these things as intensely as we do, CUA is progressing so, so incredibly fast. i have asked my nontechnical team to CUA as much as possible, all their knowledge work with signing up for random payment and invoicing portals and speaker and sponsor and attendee and vendor and union data requests. if you found yourself nodding along to this take below, you are so not up to date that you don't know what you don't know, and underestimating capabilities is quite a dangerous category error if you are doing any ai decisionmaking.

*i admire dwarkesh alot; only criticizing one single take, not the message nor the overall enterprise, screenshot only to share

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09
Zara Zhang Zara Zhang

Zara Zhang

If you want agents to actually work inside a company, you have to design the company so they can read it

Shopify did this with an agent that had no private chat function at all, only public channels. The side effect was peer learning https://t.co/L1jub0HgYw

Because I never learned programming the traditional way, using coding agents has been purely an act of creativity and self-expression

GitHub is basically my Substack https://t.co/eZ6OA62XLZ

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10
Matt Turck Matt Turck FirstMarkCap

Matt Turck

Argentina’s World Cup recipe:

1) trail 10-15 minutes before the end
2) bring on Lautaro Martinez
3) win
4) repeat

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11
Nikunj Kothari Nikunj Kothari Partner, fpvventures

Nikunj Kothari

Forgive me (travel) Lord for I have sinned..

After spending 3 hours in the immigration line in Paris,

I will never complain about SFO and US immigration ever again.

Also, will be taking a hiatus from tech Twitter for a bit to spend some time touching grass ✌️

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12
Garry Tan Garry Tan CEO, ycombinator

Garry Tan

We should just bring back the em dash

Reclaim it for our own https://t.co/CTWPmnBfgK

Skill files are portable and free you from frontier model dependency

This is a good thing https://t.co/oLdkN9rVEO

The path to healing SF and every West Coast city is this: real compassion is focusing on recovery and treatment and making it possible for people to really thrive instead of mandating pro-drug environments that make sobriety impossible https://t.co/8dgiWAaAmJ

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13
Nan Yu Nan Yu head of product, linear

Nan Yu

Excuse me, I thought you had to grind until your eyes bled and you forgot how to smile https://t.co/EgBoSczxAK

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14
Peter Yang Peter Yang

Peter Yang

Need one of those foot pedals for pianos except when you step on it it turns on the laptop mic

Life's good https://t.co/DqZssEUaed https://t.co/LqU79Ygmr2

ChatGPT Live and Codex are two incredible products that don’t talk to each other.

This is @OpenAI's biggest missed opportunity imo.

I went on a walk with ChatGPT Live and asked it to pull up my Google Doc. It said it couldn’t.

I then manually triggered the Documents plugin to find my Google Doc, and all of a sudden, ChatGPT Live had the right context.

It would be amazing to talk to ChatGPT Live and have it be able to use all the plugins, tools, and browser use that Codex has access to. Then I could ask it to reply to emails, schedule meetings, edit docs, ship code, and more all during a live conversation.

I think the first step is to make ChatGPT Live aware of all the plugins that it’s already connected to.

Why build such a great voice assistant but have it not be able to do anything?

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15
Madhu Guru Madhu Guru CTO

Madhu Guru

btw, i have used ai to refine ideas and from time to time, some of the standard AI-isms leak into my writing.

have since moved to consciously using ai mainly during the brainstorming phase and keeping final writing human.

We need a term for that feeling when you’re reading something and realize it’s ai written. it’s this primal feeling though the phenomenon itself is new. first the brain recoils, followed by a combination of disgust and mental nausea. I offer:

  • semantic nausea
  • uncanny prose valley
  • synthetic shudder
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