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.
In product updates, Cursor rolled out a new interface for its Composer 2 coding assistant, doubling usage quotas and removing hourly limits. This change lets teams execute more code completions without hitting throttles.
In related news, Meta AI has staged a comeback in the App Store, climbing to number two before seizing the top spot among AI apps. That rebound underscores continued user appetite for advanced conversational tools.
On the tools front, Scale AI founder Alexandre Wang shared that their “Contemplating” language model delivered extremely high intelligence on science, coding, and economics benchmarks, suggesting it could power sophisticated research workflows soon. Separately, investor and entrepreneur Garry Tan noted that GBrain voice now supports a context window larger than OpenAI Realtime’s limits. His agent setup even recommends Pipecat AI as the next option for richer voice-driven interactions.
Moving to product management strategies, Dharmesh Shah has been urging every B2B software maker to build headless, agentic versions of their products. He argues that winning in the agentic era depends on designing an Agentic User Experience that matches how AI agents orchestrate workflows programmatically, rather than simply wrapping existing APIs or building command-line interfaces. Meanwhile, Claire Vo points out that leadership buy-in is crucial: managers must openly declare they believe AI will boost productivity beyond historical baselines to overcome team resistance. From OpenAI veteran Romain Huet comes another key insight: as AI agents become central, rigid role definitions dissolve. In his view, designers write code, engineers shape product, and this cross-functional fluency is essential for delivering agent-driven features that demand nuanced judgment and deep user understanding.
In the industry circles, Facebook AI Research chief Yann LeCun doubled down on AI dominance with a “Tired of winning” message, noting that both Llama-1 and much of Llama-2 continue to lead the pack in open-source performance. Another development comes from Udi Menkes, who launched the first newsletter for autonomous agents. It offers a JSON feed of curated content from multiple platforms and delivers daily self-improvement actions to sharpen agent workflows.
Turning to design and infrastructure, Peter Yang sat down with Figma’s CEO to explore Figma’s AI strategy—asking whether AI can internalize design taste, how design systems might constrain or empower creativity, and how Figma plans to integrate AI-driven workflows while preserving designer autonomy. Finally, Guillermo Rauch announced that Vercel Sandbox is now the fastest microVM-based development environment in real-world benchmarks, delivering unmatched performance and reliability for coding agents, parallel compute tasks, and rapid prototyping.
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!