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.
AI product launches. Google AI launched a full-stack vibe coding experience in AI Studio. Cursor rolled out Composer 2, offering code generation at two tiers—Standard at $0.50 per thousand input and $2.50 per thousand output tokens, and Fast at $1.50 and $7.50—with improved quality and an early alpha UI. Mustafa Suleyman unveiled MAI-Image-2 on MAI Playground, ranking third on Arena and heading to Copilot, Bing Image Creator and Microsoft Foundry.
In AI tools and applications, LlamaIndex open-sourced LiteParse, a TypeScript CLI for layout-aware PDF, Office doc and image parsing with OCR. Cognition upgraded its Devin agent to orchestrate parallel sub-agents, breaking tasks into smaller chunks. v0 added a diff view for code changes across files. And Every Inc.’s Kate Lee introduced an AI-powered style guide to help writers self-audit drafts with feedback loops.
On the integration front, Peter Yang showcased Google Gemini in Workspace, from research and budgeting in Sheets to planning in Docs, auto-generating drafts and slides, and querying Drive—highlighting how embedding AI into productivity tools lowers adoption barriers.
In product management, Lenny Rachitsky noted that engineering now includes compute allocation; Aravind Srinivas warned that QA tasks will be automated. Teresa Torres detailed Medable’s Agent Studio, using retrieval-augmented generation, agents and GxP pipelines to compress a ten-year drug development process. And Ben Erez argued that AI fluency comes from building—urging PMs to spend hours on demos, adopt a full-stack builder mindset and focus on payers, value and ethical risk mitigation, as tested in OpenAI’s PM interviews.
In industry news, Nvidia overtook Google as Hugging Face’s largest contributor, becoming America’s new open-source AI leader. Peter Yang noted that Anthropic is aggressively challenging OpenAI’s offerings, a rivalry that benefits users. And DeepLearning.AI reported that OpenAI released GPT-5.4 Thinking and GPT-5.4 Pro with larger context windows and enhanced tool use, outperforming Google’s Gemini 3.1 Pro at a premium price.
On the experimentation front, Claude Code’s cloud code ran four sub-agents via Chrome DevTools to automate an Amazon search, solve a Google Recaptcha with a custom solver and register a meme Reddit account via tempmail. Google Stitch showed full UI/UX designs from text prompts or URLs in seconds, with interactive prototypes and markdown exports. Moritz Kremb optimized OpenClaw in Claude’s desktop app—uploading docs, enabling memory, configuring fallback chains and fortifying security. A continuous LoFi Beats mix proved a coding soundtrack, and famo.us’s GPU-accelerated CSS engine demonstrated how 4×4 matrices can bypass browser layouts.
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!