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(via DEV) Salesforce enters enterprise AI wars with Agentforce while China dominates open-source AI development amid growing industry skepticism. (via DEV)

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This is an excellent newsletter that demonstrates high-quality AI journalism. Here are the key strengths:

What Works Well:

Strategic Focus: The newsletter consistently emphasizes business implications, competitive dynamics, and career impact rather than just technical details. The Salesforce Agentforce story, for example, frames it as “enterprise AI wars” escalation rather than just a product launch.

Thoughtful Questions: The “Key questions for further exploration” genuinely challenge readers to think deeper. Questions like “What geopolitical risks does the AI industry face with such concentrated chip production in Taiwan?” go beyond obvious follow-ups.

Contrarian Element: While not explicitly labeled, there’s good contrarian thinking throughout – like highlighting how scientists who work with AI become more skeptical, which challenges the typical AI hype narrative.

Professional Tone: The writing is authoritative without being breathless or overly promotional, striking the right balance for busy professionals.

Comprehensive Coverage: Good mix of enterprise developments (Salesforce, Microsoft), infrastructure plays (TSMC, Google India), geopolitical angles (China’s open-source dominance), and regulatory developments (California AI companion rules).

Areas for Enhancement:

Missing Contrarian Section: While contrarian thinking is woven throughout, it would benefit from an explicit “🤔 Contrarian Perspective” section as specified in the prompt structure.

Could Strengthen Strategic Context: Some stories could better connect to broader industry power shifts. For example, the OpenAI-Broadcom partnership could be positioned more explicitly as part of the broader “vertical integration race” in AI.

Deeper Investment Implications: Stories like the Wayve funding could explore more explicitly what this means for other autonomous vehicle investments and valuations.

This newsletter successfully serves its target audience of AI professionals who need strategic insights rather than just news updates. The combination of immediate relevance and deeper analytical questions makes it genuinely valuable for decision-making.

Past Briefings

Feb 24, 2026

OpenAI Deleted ‘Safely.’ NVIDIA Reports. Karpathy Is Still Learning

THE NUMBER: 6 — times OpenAI changed its mission in 9 years. The most recent edit deleted one word: safely. TL;DR Andrej Karpathy â€” the engineer who wrote the curriculum that trained a generation of developers, ran AI at Tesla, and helped found OpenAI — posted in December that he's never felt so behind as a programmer. Fourteen million people saw it. Tonight, NVIDIA reports Q4 fiscal 2026 earnings after market close: analysts expect $65.7 billion in revenue, up 67% year over year. The numbers will almost certainly land. What matters is what Jensen Huang says about the next two quarters to...

Feb 23, 2026

Altman lied about a handshake on camera. CrowdStrike fell 8%. Google just killed the $3,000 photo shoot.

Sam Altman told reporters he was "confused" when Narendra Modi grabbed his hand at the India AI Impact Summit. He said he "wasn't sure what was happening." The video, which has been watched by tens of millions of people, shows Altman looking directly at Dario Amodei before raising his fist. He knew exactly what was happening. He chose not to do it, and then he lied about it. On camera. In multiple interviews. With the footage playing on every screen behind him. That would be a minor character note in any other industry. In this one, it isn't. Because on...

Feb 20, 2026

We’re Building the Agentic Web Faster Than We’re Protecting It

Google's WebMCP gives agents structured access to every website. Anthropic's data shows autonomy doubling with oversight thinning. OpenAI's agent already drains crypto vaults. Google shipped working code Thursday that hands AI agents a structured key to every website on the internet. WebMCP, running in Chrome 146 Canary, lets sites expose machine-readable "Tool Contracts" so agents can book a flight, file a support ticket, or complete a checkout without parsing screenshots or scraping HTML. Early benchmarks show 67% less compute overhead than visual approaches. Microsoft co-authored the spec. The W3C is incubating it. This isn't a proposal. It's production software already...