SaaStr: “Software engineering accounts for nearly 50% of all AI agent tool calls. Healthcare, legal, finance, and a dozen other verticals are barely touched, each under 5%. That’s 300 vertical AI unicorns waiting to be built.”
WSJ: “Today, even with the rise of videogames, board games in the U.S. are more than holding their own. Thanks to Kickstarter, the crowdfunding platform, lower costs of production and online communities, players can enjoy hits like Settlers of Catan, Wingspan, Exploding Kittens and Ticket to Ride, a modern game about railroads that brings the capitalist theme of the 1800s full circle. People still play physical games because “they’re totally different experiences,” U.K.-based game historian David Parlett says. “Digital games have only extended the range of games available, not replaced it. Many people prefer to maintain the real-life experience of handling traditional materials in a communal, real-life setting.””
Notion CEO Ivan Zhao: “If your product cannot be used by agents, I don’t think the future is very promising for you.”
CollabFund on cognitive resourcefulness: “When resources are scarce, humans often bypass conventional thinking and take unfamiliar paths to solve problems. In this case, cognitive resourcefulness caused [NBC Sports’] Miller to reimagine what sports television could be. Without dollars to spend, he truly had to think. To solve. To create…The answer to a lack of resources is not to follow others. Rather, the answer is to be different. To be creative. To think outside the box.”
WSJ: ““The Powerful Primate” becomes important when the author departs prehistory for modernity. Hotter furnaces and better steel, he reminds us, produced powerful engines for agriculture and energy generation and led to dramatic gains in food production and long-distance transportation. Public lighting reduced crime. Mr. Ennos highlights the relationships between new energy technologies and improved material life. When natural gas replaced firewood and coal, for instance, home heating was improved. Fossil fuels unlocked the power needed for living standards to rise almost everywhere. Global energy production has grown sixfold since 1950, while the economic output of humanity has increased 15-fold in that period.”
