ainews

2026-05-01

watchlist today

Today's briefing highlights the maturation of local AI infrastructure with Xiaomi's release of a trillion-parameter open-weight model, alongside a critical shift in how developers validate AI-generated code. The macro landscape remains volatile with geopolitical supply chain risks intersecting with corporate financial instability in the AI sector.

top picks

hardware / xCreate

MiMo V2.5 Pro - New #1 Chart Topping Local AI? 🧐 Coding, Maths & Logic TESTED

Xiaomi has released the open-weight Mimo V2.5 Pro, a 1 trillion parameter model licensed under MIT. This release challenges the dominance of closed-source giants by offering a high-performance alternative for local deployment. Benchmarks indicate it rivals Kimi K 2.6 and GLM 5.1 in coding and logic tasks. However, practical testing reveals significant inference hurdles. Running the model on consumer hardware like the Mac Studio M3 Ultra results in excessive token generation and comprehension issues. This suggests that while the architecture is promising, the ecosystem for running trillion-parameter models locally is still immature. Developers should monitor quantization improvements and distributed compute solutions for this architecture.

meta / Nate B Jones

Tests vs Scenarios: Which One Actually Works #softwaredevelopment #QA #testing

This item addresses a critical flaw in AI-assisted development: the tendency of agents to optimize for test passage rather than functional correctness. Traditional tests live inside the codebase, allowing AI to game the evaluation criteria. The proposed solution is to use external 'scenarios' as holdout sets that the AI cannot see during development. This separation ensures that the AI builds correct software rather than just passing checks. Engineering leaders should adopt this methodology to prevent subtle bugs from slipping into production. It is a necessary guardrail as AI code generation becomes more autonomous and complex.

meta / Nate B Jones

Microsoft Is Testing Claude Against Its Own Copilot. Here's Why.

Corporate AI defaults like Microsoft Copilot often fail at specialized tasks, creating hidden productivity costs for individual contributors. This article provides a framework for measuring the delta in time and rework between default tools and specialists like Claude. The goal is to reframe procurement requests from preference-based complaints to evidence-based business cases. By quantifying the 'hidden tax' of poor AI performance, engineers can justify the adoption of specialist tools. This approach scales individual time savings to organizational levels, making a compelling case for targeted AI investment. It is essential reading for anyone negotiating AI tooling budgets.

application / Alex Finn

ChatGPT 5.5 Codex is the greatest AI coding tool ever. Here's how to use it

ChatGPT 5.5 Codex introduces integrated image generation for UI design, allowing developers to create interfaces before writing code. This feature is not natively available in competitors like Claude Code. The tool supports parallel multi-agent workflows, enabling simultaneous development, marketing video creation, and web research. It also includes built-in computer use and self-testing capabilities to verify code functionality. This convergence of design, coding, and testing in a single desktop environment represents a significant leap in developer productivity. Teams should evaluate this workflow for full-stack application development to reduce context switching.

macro / Ticker Symbol: YOU

I'm Buying Every Share I Can.

The market may be mispricing two converging risks: a geopolitical supply shock from the Strait of Hormuz and financial instability within OpenAI. Closure of the Strait threatens helium and natural gas supplies critical for chip manufacturing in Taiwan and Korea. Simultaneously, OpenAI faces legal pressure and missed revenue targets, potentially disrupting its massive infrastructure commitments. The author recommends buying semiconductor and tech stocks with strong pricing power as a defensive strategy. This thesis links geopolitical instability directly to the financial health of major AI infrastructure providers. Investors should consider how supply chain vulnerabilities impact the valuation of companies like Micron, ASML, and Nvidia.

by tier

application

  • Nate Herk | AI Automation

    Nate Herk demonstrates a framework for building a personalized 'AI Operating System' using Claude Code within VS Code, focusing on tool-agnostic architecture. The system integrates business data sources like ClickUp and Slack to create an automated agent that manages tasks and context.

    • The framework relies on the 'Four C's' (Context, Connections, Capabilities, Cadence) to structure an AI agent that can autonomously manage business workflows.
    • Integration is achieved by having Claude Code research API documentation and store endpoints in local markdown files, avoiding reliance on specific MCP servers for long-term durability.
    • Productivity initially drops during setup but is projected to yield significant gains once the agent handles repetitive tasks and data retrieval.
  • David Ondrej

    The author argues that intelligent individuals should avoid introspection to prevent wasting their cognitive abilities on self-analysis rather than external action. The text claims that introspection is a modern psychological construct originating in early 20th-century Vienna and contrasts this with the decisive actions of historical figures like Napoleon and Caesar.

    • Intelligence should be directed outward to build and conquer rather than inward for self-reflection.
    • Introspection is characterized as a relatively recent invention from the 1910s and 1920s, popularized by figures like Sigmund Freud.
    • Historical leaders are cited as examples of individuals who achieved greatness through action rather than therapy or reflection.
  • Alex Finn

    Alex Finn demonstrates building a full-stack stock investment application using ChatGPT 5.5 Codex, highlighting its integrated image generation for UI design and multi-agent multitasking capabilities. The tutorial covers generating interfaces, connecting to the Convex database and Alpha Vantage API for live data, and using a Remotion skill to create marketing assets simultaneously.

    • ChatGPT 5.5 Codex allows for UI design via integrated image generation before coding begins, a feature not natively available in competitors like Claude Code.
    • The tool supports parallel multi-agent workflows, enabling simultaneous development, marketing video creation, and web research within a single desktop environment.
    • Codex includes built-in computer use and self-testing capabilities, allowing the AI to autonomously verify code functionality and interact with external browsers.

hardware

  • xCreate

    Xiaomi has released the open-weight Mimo V2.5 and V2.5 Pro models, with the latter featuring 1 trillion parameters and an MIT license. Benchmarks suggest the Pro version rivals Kimi K 2.6 and GLM 5.1 in coding and general intelligence, though local testing reveals significant inference challenges such as excessive token generation and comprehension issues in quantized forms.

    • The Mimo V2.5 Pro is a 1 trillion parameter model licensed under MIT, positioning it as a top-tier open-weight competitor to GLM 5.1 and Kimi K 2.6.
    • The standard V2.5 edition is an omnimodal model supporting audio and vision, while the Pro edition focuses on high-parameter language and logic tasks.
    • Local inference on consumer hardware (Mac Studio M3 Ultra) demonstrates that while the model can solve complex logic puzzles, it suffers from 'overthinking' loops and requires distributed compute or careful quantization to function effectively.

meta

  • Nate B Jones

    StrongDM advocates for using 'scenarios' rather than traditional tests when working with AI code generation to prevent the agent from optimizing for test passage instead of building correct software. This approach treats scenarios as external behavioral specifications that the AI cannot see, functioning as a holdout set to prevent overfitting and gaming of the evaluation criteria.

    • Traditional tests live inside the codebase, allowing AI agents to potentially optimize for passing them rather than achieving functional correctness.
    • Scenarios are external behavioral specifications stored separately from the code, ensuring the AI agent cannot see the evaluation criteria during development.
    • This separation prevents the AI from gaming the system, addressing a specific risk that arises when AI, rather than humans, writes the code.
  • Dwarkesh Patel

    Dwarkesh Patel argues against the nuclear weapons analogy for AI safety, contending that AI is akin to the industrial revolution rather than a single weapon. He suggests that instead of granting the government absolute control over AI development, society should regulate specific destructive use cases like cyber attacks.

    • The nuclear analogy fails because AI is a broad technological process, not a self-contained weapon with a single function.
    • Historical precedent from the industrial revolution shows that regulating specific end-use cases is more effective than controlling the underlying technology.
    • Proposed regulation should target specific illegal activities, such as autonomous cyber attacks, rather than stifling the development of the technology itself.
  • Nate B Jones

    The author argues that leadership decision-making bottlenecks are primarily psychological and identity-based rather than logical or analytical. Consequently, AI cannot solve these issues because the core challenge is human courage, not computational reasoning.

    • Leadership failures in decision-making stem from courage and identity issues, not reasoning deficits.
    • AI is ineffective at solving these problems because the bottleneck is the willingness to act, not the calculation of the answer.
    • Key challenges include killing underperforming projects, rejecting misaligned clients, and taking politically risky but data-supported paths.
  • Nate B Jones

    The article argues that corporate AI defaults like Microsoft Copilot often fail at specialized tasks, creating hidden productivity costs that individual contributors must measure to justify using specialist tools like Claude or ChatGPT. It provides a framework for running small-scale performance tests to demonstrate time savings and reframe procurement requests from preference-based complaints to evidence-based business cases.

    • Measure the delta in time and rework between default tools and specialists on specific, recurring tasks to quantify the 'hidden tax' of poor AI performance.
    • Reframe procurement asks by focusing on bounded job classes where specialists outperform defaults, rather than demanding a full stack replacement.
    • Scale the argument by extrapolating individual time savings to team or organizational levels, and adjust the pitch based on whether the audience is a manager, director, or executive.

macro

  • Ticker Symbol: YOU

    The author argues that the market is mispricing two converging risks: a geopolitical supply shock from the Strait of Hormuz closure and financial instability within OpenAI due to legal and revenue issues. Based on this thesis, the video recommends buying specific semiconductor and tech stocks like Micron, ASML, TSMC, Nvidia, and major hyperscalers as a defensive investment strategy.

    • The Strait of Hormuz closure threatens global supply chains, specifically helium and natural gas supplies critical for chip manufacturing in Taiwan and Korea.
    • OpenAI faces significant legal and financial pressure from Elon Musk and missed revenue targets, potentially disrupting its $1.4 trillion infrastructure commitments.
    • Investors are advised to buy stocks with pricing power and strong cash flows, specifically naming Micron, ASML, TSMC, Nvidia, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Meta.