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.
First on the product launch front, Claude Code celebrated its first birthday this week. Anthropic’s Boris Cherny marked the milestone and thanked the community for their support. Meanwhile, Claire Vo unveiled a new tool codenamed noodle—available on desktop, web, and via command-line—built on Claude AI and deployed on Railway to streamline multi-platform workflows.
In tooling news, Anthropic rolled out advanced tool calling. Jason Zhou detailed how programmatic tool invocation, dynamic filtering for web fetches, and deferred loading can slash token usage by up to half. Meanwhile, Claire Vo shared a security audit for OpenClaw, advocating a zero-permission default and manual key rotation to prevent unintended behaviors.
On the prototyping front, Peter Yang highlighted Nat Eliason’s OpenClaw agent Felix, which built a website, integrated Stripe, and pulled in over $14,700 in three weeks. A YouTube dive shows Felix generated $3,596 in four days on felixcraft.ai, plus roughly $80,000 in crypto fees. Felix relies on a three-layer memory system using Shopify’s QMD for long-term context, parallel chats for speed, secure API connections with Vercel and GitHub, and cron jobs to consolidate memory and monitor performance.
Carl Vellotti launched six free AI PM courses embedded in tools like OpenClaw, Claude Code, Claude Cowork, Cursor and Antigravity. Each module uses hands-on demos, runs three hours and includes access to a 25,000-member Full Stack PM community for briefs, Q&A and peer support.
Shifting to strategy, Julien Chaumond named human brain plasticity to AI as the skill of the year for 2026, urging PMs to blend domain expertise with adaptive, AI-driven workflows. Separately, content strategist Santiago warned that the economics of content creation are broken—creators build the training data, AI companies monetize it, then creators pay to reuse their own work.
In best practices, Marc Baselga outlined Millie’s two-tier review for PM-written code: minor UI tweaks go through standard approvals, while major features stay in sandbox until engineers sign off on scalability and security, keeping accountability uniform.
In industry headlines, Yann LeCun argued that science announcements find more traction on LinkedIn and Facebook, calling Twitter lost for science. And Sebastian Raschka highlighted the networking value of open source conferences for connecting with fellow builders.
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!