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 launches, Garry Tan released GBrain v0.13, offering smarter graph queries via OpenClaw and Hermes and automatic YAML property extraction for better data retrieval.
In AI-driven planning, Santiago demonstrated how Claude can interview PMs to surface edge cases, outline tradeoffs, and generate specifications from responses.
Meanwhile, Clement Delangue rolled out DFlash version 0.1.4 quantized inference kernels for Qwen models on Apple Silicon M5 Max and suggested integrating Localmaxxing benchmarks with Hugging Face.
On the product front, Shreyas Doshi announced one-day workshops on product taste, strategy, creativity, and customer empathy; PMs can register via Google Forms.
Separately, Logan Kilpatrick noted that his team is shipping every day, highlighting the power of rapid iteration for continuous improvement.
In security news, Guillermo Rauch revealed an AI-enabled breach at Vercel through a Context.ai account compromise, outlining defense-in-depth practices, secret rotation, and new dashboard tools for securing environment variables.
Santiago predicts that AI interfaces will soon move from command lines to rich graphical UIs, marking a major shift in user experience design.
On LinkedIn, Peter Yang showed how to build a tongue-in-cheek marketing page with Claude Design, and Colin Matthews detailed how its BM25-powered tool search optimizes agent loading when exporting to Canva.
In strategic insights, Becky Trevino reflected on day one of the Executive Playbook for AI in Engineering, Product, and Design, noting a shift to a lane-free structure where PMs, engineers, and designers converge, and urging PMs to upskill.
Greg Isenberg made the case that cybersecurity is the hottest startup category for 2026 as AI accelerates both innovation and attack sophistication, expanding the security attack surface and driving demand for new solutions.
A recent video demonstrated an end-to-end pipeline using Cloud Code, Surf Agent, Opus, and the Xcode simulator to research, build, test, and submit an iOS app within hours.
The Needle Collector app earned $33 from 18 downloads in its first three days.
The pipeline also handles assets, privacy policy, and App Store Connect upload, completing the process in hours and offsetting part of the $70 developer fee.
Product managers are transitioning from information movers to AI-powered builders, leveraging Claude and CodeX to automate routine tasks and focus on rapid testing.
According to a 2024 report, open product manager roles are at their highest level in three years; forecasts predict 30,000 corporate cuts and about 8,000 AI-first hires. Communities like Skip are automating workflows—from attendee matching to inbox management—using AI agents.
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!