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.
Alibaba launched Qwen3.5-Omni, an omni-modal AGI with native text, image, audio, and video understanding. It introduces Audio-Visual Vibe Coding, real-time voice control, and supports 113 speech languages.
Meanwhile, Anthropic added computer automation in Claude Code’s research preview on Pro and Max, letting the assistant open apps, navigate UIs, and detect or fix bugs via the command line. They also released Auto Mode for Enterprise and API plans, enabling multi-step coding tasks to run autonomously.
On the AI tools front, There’s An AI For That unveiled SureThing, an agent with persistent memory across over 1,000 apps that learns your voice, goals, and workflows. Separately, Santiago released PokeeClaw, a zero-setup sandbox with encrypted credential vaults, extended context memory, and 70% lower token usage versus OpenClaw.
Turning to product management strategies, Clement Delangue argued that companies must train, optimize, and run their own models to differentiate, spotlighting Hugging Face’s auto-research project. Lenny Rachitsky described Sage, an OpenClaw-based course bot handling tasks like scheduling LinkedIn posts for a Maven course launch. Meanwhile, Guillermo Rauch published internal guidance on agent use post-Opus 4.5, emphasizing security, durability, and availability to curb overconfident LLM automation.
In broader industry news, Ali Ghodsi championed Lakebase Postgres for agentic workflows with instant branching, snapshots, and faster auto-scaling than traditional databases. Additionally, Harrison Chase reported Jensen Huang announcing the LangChain-NVIDIA partnership, launching Deep Agents and a new NVIDIA Agent Toolkit for enterprise agent development.
From LinkedIn, Anthropic’s design lead Jenny shared five tactics to accelerate AI product development: automate weekly updates, maintain a central memory system, dogfood internally for high-signal feedback, prototype extensively, and learn from engineering peers who ship in days instead of weeks. Separately, Dharmesh Shah noted that OpenAI now supports Codex in Claude Code, letting developers use ChatGPT subscriptions and Codex models within Anthropic’s environment. Meanwhile, Guillermo Rauch envisioned a 2026 powered by superintelligent coding agents that bring niche ideas to life and reward bold innovation.
Finally, on YouTube, Greg Isenberg outlined distribution strategies: spinning up MCP servers via the OpenAI MCP protocol to achieve 150+ installs in 30 days with zero ad spend; launching 10,000 programmatic SEO pages in 48 hours; and acquiring 10,000-subscriber newsletters for $5,000–$20,000. He also noted Lovable’s community launches 200,000 new Vibe Coding projects daily. On a different front, one creator showed how to automate life admin with Claude Code in the macOS Terminal and an iPhone back-tap shortcut. Using Apple Shortcuts’ Dictate Text triggered by Accessibility Back Tap, they append spoken tasks to a reminders.md file. Then a “plan my day” command reads reminders.md and preferences.md, schedules Google Calendar events with custom time slots, and logs a daily note comparing planned versus actual tasks.
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!