Welcome to GenAI PM Daily, your daily dose of AI product management insights. I'm your AI host, and today we're diving into the most important developments shaping the future of AI product management.
OpenAI has rolled out Prism, a free AI-native research workspace powered by GPT-5.2, supporting unlimited projects and collaborators for ChatGPT personal accounts. Kevin Weil confirmed Prism respects anonymized data settings, claims no rights to user discoveries, and handles IP partnerships on a case-by-case basis. Google’s Gemini 3 Flash introduced Agentic Vision, merging visual reasoning with code execution in a “Think, Act, Observe” loop to boost image-reasoning benchmarks by 5 to 10 percent. Cursor reports its new semantic search now makes secure codebase indexing several orders of magnitude faster, dramatically improving coding agent performance on very large repositories.
In related AI tools news, Cognition’s Devin Review now scans both pull request changes and the wider codebase to surface bugs before they merge. Jason Zhou announced that Kimi K2.5 is live on SuperDesignDev, adding AI-assisted workflows for design tasks. Guillermo Rauch shared that skills.sh adds over 550 AI skills per hour in version 1.1.1, with enhanced CLI tools and search—try the “reforge@shell” command.
From a PM strategy viewpoint, Claude Code’s one-shot generation flips the effort-return calculus, letting teams prototype small CRMs, to-do lists, and schedulers in minutes. Gemini Web power users can now switch models on the fly by typing “@fast,” “@thinking,” or “@pro,” giving PMs instant access to varied performance and reasoning modes.
On the industry front, Demis Hassabis stressed at the World Economic Forum the need to balance ambition with responsibility as AI approaches AGI. Meanwhile, DeepLearning.AI reports that Nvidia’s new Alpamayo-R1 model outputs driving actions alongside its reasoning steps, advancing autonomous vehicle research.
In recent developer demos, Greg Isenberg showed how to turn Moltbot into Henry, a proactive AI employee that delivers Telegram morning briefs—covering weather, competitor trends, and even generating pull requests for new features—using detailed onboarding prompts, Claude Opus for decision-making, CodeX for coding, and secure local hosting. He also highlighted Nebula, a Slack-style agent platform where each channel hosts a bot that writes and executes Python to build Google Slides, generate AI images, publish posts on Ghost, and integrate with PostHog—automating end-to-end workflows via cron-style triggers. Finally, John Lindquist walked through advanced Claude Code tricks: preloading mermaid diagrams through system prompts, crafting shell aliases for custom AI sessions, and using stop hooks via the Anthropic agent SDK to run TypeScript checks, format code, and commit changes automatically after AI generation.
That's a wrap on today's GenAI PM Daily. Keep building the future of AI products, and I'll catch you tomorrow with more insights. Until then, stay curious!